How can we apply Rebekah's example of service in Genesis 24:16 to our lives? Scripture Snapshot “Now the girl was very beautiful, a virgin—no man had had relations with her. She went down to the spring, filled her jar, and came up again.” (Genesis 24:16) Rebekah’s Readiness • Routine faithfulness positions a believer for divine appointments. • She carried the tools of service—a jar ready to be filled. • The text highlights her purity; inner character fuels outward ministry. • Without delay, she descended, filled, and returned, showing initiative rather than hesitation. Timeless Principles Drawn from the Well • Initiative honors God. Proverbs 3:27 urges withholding no good when it is in our power to act. • Availability outweighs ability. God often chooses the willing (Isaiah 6:8). • Purity and service walk together. “Blessed are the pure in heart” (Matthew 5:8) links character to usefulness. • Going beyond the minimum reflects Christ’s attitude (Matthew 5:41; Philippians 2:3-4). • Seemingly ordinary tasks become part of God’s larger plan (Romans 8:28). Living Rebekah’s Example Today • Start each day with tools ready—time, energy, resources—so service can begin the moment need appears. • Watch for God-ordained interruptions; moments that seem routine often carry eternal weight. • Act promptly when the Spirit nudges; delayed obedience easily becomes disobedience. • Offer more than asked—encouraging words, extra help, follow-up care—mirroring Rebekah’s generosity to water the camels. • Keep motives pure; serve for God’s glory, not recognition (Colossians 3:23-24). • Trust God to weave simple acts into His redemptive story, just as Rebekah’s hospitality led to her becoming part of the covenant lineage. The Power of Small Acts A single trip to a well became a turning point in salvation history. Consistent, humble service done in faith still advances God’s purposes today (Galatians 6:10; 1 Peter 4:9-10). |