HE KEEPS HIS PROMISES

Wednesday - August 11, 2021

Posted
“Not one of all the LORD's good promises to the house of Israel failed; every one was fulfilled.” – Joshua 21:45
 
The treaty of the Hong Canal (203 BC) was one of the shortest-lived peace treaties of all time. It was an agreement between Liu Bang of Han and Xiang Yu of Chu, in which they agreed to split the old Qin Empire between them. Towards the end of 203 BC, the main armies on both sides were facing each other close to Xingyang. Liu Bang had a stronger position and better supplies, but Xiang Yu was the better battlefield commander. Liu Bang also had a second army, under Han Xan, operating in the former kingdom of Qi  (northeast of Ancient China) from where it threatened Xiang Yu’s northern borders.
In 204 BC, while he was besieged in Xingyang, Liu Bang had offered to split China, with Xiang Yu getting the east and Liu Bang getting the west. At the time Xiang Yu had dismissed this peace offer, but late in 203 BC, he agreed to the same terms. The dividing line was to be the Hong Canal (meaning either the Canal of the Flying Geese or Far-Flung Canal), which linked the Yellow River near Kaifeng (east of Xingyang) to the Si River, then a tributary of the Huai River,  itself then a major river that ran into the sea (the courses of both rivers have since been disrupted by changes in the course of the Yellow River). 
The treaty was broken almost as soon as it had been agreed. While Xiang Yu appears to have been happy with its terms and began the march east back to Chu, Liu Bang (or his advisors) decided that this gave them a chance for an easy victory. Instead of returning home, Liu Bang invaded Xiang Yu’s new kingdom, eventually defeating him at Gaixia (202 BC) in the decisive battle of the Chu-Han Contention.
 
The Lord is faithful in all that He promises; His promises stand throughout eternity. Today in prayer, thank Christ that you can depend upon His promises and He is true to His Word.
 
“The message of promise is the beginning and end of everything that is included in the Bible. It undergirds every word, sometimes openly, sometimes subtly, but it is always there. God’s promises are the common thread that unites the Old and New Testament, the core that makes sixty-six books into one.” – Mark Tabb
 
God’s Word: “God is not a man, that he should lie, nor a son of man, that he should change his mind. Does he speak and then not act? Does he promise and not fulfill?” – Numbers 23:19