Daily Devotional Index

Daily Devotional Index > Chapter 16 > Verse 8

Daily Devotional For September 28, 2025

And the fourth angel poured out his bowl upon the sun, and he was authorized to scorch the human race with fire. And the people were scorched with great heat, and they blasphemed the name of God, who had authority over these plagues, and they did not repent in order that they might give Him glory. Rev 16:8-9.

           One of life’s great miseries occurs when the temperature swings way out of normal. But this is particularly true when you aren’t used to one or the other extreme. If you have always lived in Singapore, 90 degrees Fahrenheit (33-34 Celsius) with 80-90 per cent humidity seems rather normal. If you have always lived in Siberia, twenty degrees below freezing can seem balmy. But both places can feel miserable to those not used to the climate.
           A friend of mine had spent his whole life in Southern California. When he moved to Andrews University, he experienced real winter for the first time. Cold waves of air swept over the windshields of the cars every night and covered them with ice. Michigan locals all have ice scrapers handy to shave the ice off the glass in their cars. But Jim had a “better” plan of attack. On “cold” California mornings in his youth, he had seen his father go out and put water on the windows, and that would melt the ice instantly.
           Feeling more than a little smug, Jim headed out to his frigid car one morning with a pan of cold water. Imagine how dumb he felt when the cold water he poured onto the windshield immediately froze and added to the problem he was trying to solve. He discovered that there was a major difference between the “cold” of California and the “freezing” of Michigan.
           But Jim confesses that he was slow to learn about the differences in climate. When his family moved to the Philippines, Jim was warned that clothes and leather goods would get mildewed in the high heat and humidity. He checked the closets after a couple of days and everything seemed all right so he did nothing about the advice he had received. A few weeks later, there was enough mold on everything to perform scientific experiments! He discovered that he needed to rig up some low powered lights in the closets to make the air a little drier. Now his closets emit a soft glow at night and the clothes are nice and fresh.
           He has learned from this the importance of a teachable spirit.1 There is a great big world out there and most of us know very, very little about it. The Lord “guides the humble in what is right and teaches them his way” (Psalms 25:9). The victims of the seven last plagues are those who have consistently resisted the Lord’s teaching in their lives. The plagues prove that no matter what God does for them, they refuse to learn and refuse to repent.

           Lord, I want to have a teachable spirit today. Instead of complaining when things are not comfortable, help me to see each discomfort as an opportunity to learn.

1 Based on an email from Jim Park, January 11, 2004.