Where’s the Hope in Economic Uncertainty?
Several years ago I spoke at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. Two thousand of the brightest people in the world were brought in to discuss the conditions of the world with this theme: “Committed to improving the state of the world.” There’s only one problem. When you remove God from the picture, all you’ve got left is politics. That has failed for the last 100 years. You’re not going to solve the state of the world until you first deal with the souls of people. You can’t legislate change. You can’t force people to change. You can’t make a law that makes people be nice to each other. They have to change their worldview.
People need God. And they need truth. They’ve built their houses on shifting sand, and when the crisis comes they’re going, “Where’s the hope?” They’re like a group of people who’ve been walking across the Sahara Desert for weeks without water. Their throat is parched and their lips are cracked, and they’re going, “Would somebody please give me a drink of living water? Will somebody please show me how my life can have meaning and significance and purpose? I’m successful, but I don’t feel significant.”
We have what they need. We have the Living Water of God’s truth that refreshes and restores and rejuvenates and revitalizes and changes our lives. We have the message. We have to know what we believe and why we believe it, share it, and then live it. That, friends, will change the world.
Would you pray this prayer today? “Dear God, thank you that you have given us truth on which to build our lives. I want to learn the truth. I want to discern what is false. I want to turn from the world to the Word. I want to concern myself with your agenda and what you’re doing in the world. Help me to know what I believe and then help me to live what I believe. In Jesus’ name. Amen.”
http://purposedriven.com/blogs/dailyhope/i...

Thank you for an inspiring post. If the absorption of God's Word can be soaked up many of thousands would surely become totally different. Many today in the world only have a swipe and leave much of the water on the table. One must become doers in their daily life.