"When the Bad Guys Win" March 1 Readings: Numbers 13-14, Mark 6:30–44, Psalm 31:1–4, Proverbs 7:13-20

  


Reading the Bible in 2025

Each day this year we will read a selection from the Old Testament, the New Testament, a portion of the Psalms, and part of Proverbs. By the end of the year, you will have read the entire Bible. We read this way to give you a bit of variety. 

NOTE: If you get behind, do not give up. Read today's readings and try to catch up when you have a chance. The goal is not to "accomplish a task" but to meet God in his word. Read the word. Also, if you are short on time, READ GOD'S WORD and skip my devotional!

Bible Readings: Numbers 13-14, Mark 6:30–44, Psalm 31:1–4, Proverbs 7:13-20 

    Scriptures linked to Bible Gateway in ESV version 

Daily Devotional: When the Bad Guys Win

It was one of the more despicable acts of history. John the Baptist was a man of God and a man of courage. He identified sin and called people to repentance - even powerful men like Herod Antipas. Believing he was above both human and divine law, this sinner had taken his brother's wife (Herodias) and committed adultery with her. Neither Herod nor Herodias were going to put up with such hubris - no one would call attention to their sin and get away with it!  And they made sure that he did not.

It was Herod's birthday and Herodias sent her own daughter (Herod's niece and step-daughter) out to do a dance that would please him, and likely arouse his passions. Is there anything lower than using your own daughter in such a way? And Herod, who cared little about right and wrong and more about satisfying his desires, fell for it. He offered the young girl any reward she wanted for her dance. With her mother's manipulation, she asked for the Baptist's head on a platter. Herod gave her exactly what she asked for and John was put to death.

John died because a dirty old man couldn't control his lust. After all, he was a pig, and because an evil woman manipulated his wicked heart. Sick, sick, sick. You have a man of God who does everything right, who lives with conviction, and who demonstrates courage. On the other side, you have depravity, adultery, whiffs of incestuous lust, scheming and manipulation, and murder. You just can't get any lower than Herod and Herodias, can you?

And they won. The good guy died and wicked schemers got their way. They got away with it. Darth Vader killed Luke. Sauron got the ring. The bad guys won. That's not the way it's supposed to go, is it? We want to believe that "what goes around comes around." It shakes our sensibilities and notions of justice when people get away with it, but that is how life sometimes is in this wicked world.
Very bad things can happen to people, even though they are doing exactly what God called them to do. 
Jesus never sinned and was brutally crucified on Calvary's tree. Peter, James, Stephen, Paul and every other apostle except for John died martyrs' deaths according to tradition. Church history is filled with stories of people who loved God and still suffered horribly for their faith.

The common idea that serving God will guarantee that only good things will fill your life is not from God or his word. We do not serve God as some kind of insurance against any bad thing that happens to us. We serve God because he is God, because he redeemed us from our sins, and because it is the right thing to do. Yes, God blesses and he rewards, but he does not guarantee that his servants will escape all earthly pain and suffering.

We are called to obey and serve the purposes of God, even if that leads to sacrifice and suffering. We are blessed by the presence and power of God, but godliness is no guarantee against suffering. In fact, the world will hate us as it hated Christ. Don't be shocked in a sinful world, child of God, when the world strikes back. And do not be discouraged. The blessing comes to those who persevere to the end.

Ah, but here's the rest of the story. One day, Herod and Herodias both stopped breathing. It is appointed to man to die once and then face judgment. God was there to greet them. Her scheme may have worked on earth, but no amount of scheming can get you out of that appointment. She may have looked like the winner to earthly eyes, but when she closed those eyes and opened them in eternity, she had lost, utterly, completely, and infinitely.

Eternity changes our perspective on everything. John lost to Herod and Herodias...or did he? If there is an eternity, and a God, and justice, then he wins for all eternity! Worldly eyes can never see the truth. Only the eyes of faith.

Doing what is right is no guarantee of worldly success or protection from suffering. But serving God produces an eternal reward that makes any suffering we encounter worth it all.
Lord, forgive me for my deceitful heart that sometimes serves you for selfish reasons - thinking that I can gain worldly reward or avoid suffering for walking in your ways. Instead, let me serve you simply for your glory and for the sake of the Kingdom. If you bless me with good things, I will glorify you. If you bring suffering to me, may I still glorify your name. 

Consider God's Word:

Which of these four passages spoke most clearly to you today? 
Is there sin in your life that needs to be confessed and dealt with that was revealed in one of these passages? 
Is there something in your life that needs to change?
Is there a struggle in your life that one of these passages spoke to? 

Think through situations in your life today, especially ones in which there is great injustice. Remind yourself of the eternal perspective on those situations. See them as God sees them.

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