Guidance from Overlooked Men and Women of the Bible

Author: Dave Dishman (Page 271 of 458)

Storms and Decisions

One of the most riveting books I’ve ever read is Sebastian Junger’s The Perfect Storm. His true story of a fishing boat caught in a massive storm kept me awake several nights in a row. The sheer power of the sea and wind defied anything I knew. Even floating in a swimming pool felt dangerous for a time.

The apostle Paul lived through his own disaster at sea, involving days of peril and ending in the loss of the entire ship and its contents.

Earlier in the voyage Paul warned against continuing to sail so late in the season. But the men in charge (Paul was only a prisoner on board) decided to press on. Luke records the decision: The centurion, instead of listening to what Paul said, followed the advice of the pilot and of the owner of the ship…the majority decided we should sail on.

Most disasters start with a bad decision. Which is followed by another bad decision, and the subsequent cascading actions prove harder and harder to overcome. Paul’s ship might have harbored earlier along the route to Rome, but profit and desire pushed the crew forward.

How many times have I made snap decisions when the wiser choice would have been to pause? Some decisions call for immediate action. But others benefit from waiting for better circumstances. Wisdom involves discerning the difference.

The captain and owner of the doomed ship both survived the shipwreck. I hope the wisdom gained from this catastrophe helped them avoid the next.

We all deal with the fallout from poor decisions, but the ability to learn from our mistakes yields the depth and maturity and wisdom needed as we go through life.

Acts 27 in reading the Bible cover to cover in 2022

Photo by Yevhen Buzuk

Share and Share Alike

As a parent I famously learned that when two kids both wanted the last brownie, to let one kid cut the brownie in half, and let the other kid choose his piece first. The kid with the knife carved the brownie in half with surgical precision. This turned out to be one of the best parenting tips I ever learned. Of course, I sometimes avoided the whole problem by eating the brownie myself before the kids got up.

David faced outrage about the fairness of dividing spoils after a raid. Those who faced the enemy wanted a greater share than those who stayed behind and guarded the baggage. Close to coming to blows, David cooled the mob with these words: The share of the man who stayed with the supplies is to be the same as that of him who went down to the battle. All will share alike.

David displayed wisdom and bravery in a tense situation. He set a policy that remained in place for generations. His fairness certainly engendered good will among his people, invaluable for a leader. His generosity (if bigger shares were given, he deserved the most of all) brought many to his side.

Courage and care shine from David’s leadership practices. Here he set policy with firmness and decisiveness, while creating a situation where everyone benefited.

That’s the type of leader I can follow.

I Samuel 30 in reading the Bible cover to cover in 2022

Photo by Amanda Lim

Driven to Madness

After his arrest in Jerusalem, Paul spent time in prison where various officials repeatedly drug him in for questioning. No one could figure out what to do with this former Pharisee turned wild man preacher.

As Paul related his story of meeting Jesus on the Damascus road, he shared I am saying nothing beyond what the prophets and Moses said would happen—that the Messiah would suffer and as the first to rise from the dead, would bring the message of light to his own people and the Gentiles.

This proved too much for Festus, one of the local rulers who shouted back, You are out of your mind, Paul! Your great learning is driving you mad!

Paul’s schooling didn’t make him crazy—Jesus did. And this message about a risen from the dead Messiah drove Festus and his buddy Agrippa and his wife Bernice crazy as well. The story seemed preposterous, yet it rang of truth and spread through the country. Society, and its rulers, trembled under the weight.

The message of Jesus still sounds insane. But his craziness is worth catching.

Acts 26 in reading the Bible cover to cover in 2022

Photo by Alfons Morales

Whatever Pleases Me

Do you ever read a verse in the Bible and without realizing it find it subtly changed in your mind? Here’s one I read this morning:

The Lord does whatever pleases him, in the heavens and on the earth, in the seas and all their depths.

I found myself thinking instead—The Lord does whatever pleases me...

The gods of our age inspire this second translation. I’m promised by both secular influencers and TV preachers a god who exists to bless me. As a result I’m free to pursue the lifestyle I desire, the sexuality I crave, and the self-indulgence I’m told is good for me.

But read the line from the text again—The Lord does whatever pleases him…

I’m afraid god is not an app I open up when needed. If the Lord exists, and indeed does whatever pleases him, then it makes sense for me to spend time investigating what he finds pleasing. And only a few minutes of reading my Bible reveals it’s not all about me.

The Lord is a wild, unpredictable, unmanageable force, a loose cannon on the deck of our lives, a being we bow before in reverence and fear. He struck down the firstborn of Egypt—how does that sit with the image of a god we use as we please?

My advice? Be careful when you read, and don’t get verses like this mixed up in your head.

Psalm 135 in reading the Bible cover to cover in 2022

Photo by Viktor Forgacs

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