Guidance from Overlooked Men and Women of the Bible

Author: Dave Dishman (Page 353 of 459)

Leap Ye Lame for Joy!

At the hour of prayer, Peter and John happened upon a crippled beggar. The man asked for money, but Peter helped the beggar to his feet, healing him in the name of Jesus.

The lame beggar’s response? After steadying himself against Peter, and feeling strength infuse his feet and ankles, he took a few tentative steps. Next, a careful bounce on his toes. Then – a leap!

What an extravagant pleasure! This man never walked in his life. Born unable to stand, he watched other kids run and play. As a grown man, he begged for his bread, carried to his station by others. This man leaped only in his dreams, then woke to his cruel reality in the morning.

Now walking. Now literally jumping for joy! Now proclaiming the power of Jesus.

This lame beggar’s life reflects our own. Born unable to solve our deepest problem, we wait for healing. When it comes, we join our fellow beggars in walking alongside Jesus.

Someday, thanks again to Jesus, I hope to move from this life to the next. There, alongside that no longer lame beggar, I will experience inexpressible joy.

I plan to look him up in that great city, and join him in leaping down some streets of gold.

Acts 3 in week sixteen of reading the Bible cover to cover

Photo by Etienne Boulanger

The Wrong Way to Get a Wife

A bizarre story closes Judges, perfectly illustrating the book’s theme of everyone did what was right in their own eyes.

After wiping out most of the tribe of Benjamin in civil war, then swearing to never give the surviving men their own daughters for wives, the leaders of Israel paused. None wanted to see the tribe of Benjamin fade away, and so they hatched a plan to provide the 600 survivors with wives.

First, they murdered everyone in a small town that failed to send anyone to fight with them against Benjamin, keeping only the young virgins. This provided 400 traumatized young women. Still short, the leaders encouraged the remaining bachelors to raid a festival and carry off whatever girl they could catch.

While the innocent women danced, each man caught one and carried her off to be his wife.

I am not making this up.

I wonder what these marriages were like? How did their kids turn out? What a great research study – how does a community, where every marriage was founded on murder and kidnapping, develop and grow?

One thing is clear. The philosophy of everyone does what is right in their own eyes, leads to chaos. The powerful, the aggressive, the hateful flourish, while innocent people bear the brunt.

Unfortunately, a similar view of hyper-individualism, personal autonomy, and living my truth abounds in our society. It’s trumpeted in advertising and blooms across social media. The fruit produced feels like the stories in Judges – broken, hurting people looking for the next fix to make us happy.

On the flip side, the Lord heard and responded to the cries of his people in Judges. Our cries reach the same Lord, and our hope rests in his hearing and response.

Judges 21 in week fifteen of reading the Bible cover to cover

Benjaminites seize wives from Shiloh – 1860 woodcut by Julius Schnorr von Karolsfeld

Hearing Good News in My Language

The crowds attracted to the sound of a rushing wind and a cacophony of voices stood dumfounded. Galileans, uneducated followers of Jesus, spoke boldly in the specific language of each hearer.

Due to the power of the Holy Spirit, each person present heard the gospel in their heart language – the language of home and family. Dialects of Asia, Africa and the Mediterranean world filled the air.

Oddly, no mention of English, Mandarin Chinese, Hindi, Spanish or French, the five most widely spoken languages in the world today. Yet I first heard the gospel in English, my native language (albeit of an Ozarks variety).

Bible translations exist in these five languages, along with thousands of others. Thanks to the tireless and at times dangerous (people died to provide me with the Bible on my desk) work of various Bible translators, and people like my friends at the Jesus Film Project, the gospel is available today in the heart language of most of the planet.

But not quite all. Some people still wait to discover that Jesus speaks their language. Hopefully, in our generation, everyone hears this good news.

Acts 2 in week fifteen of reading the Bible cover to cover

Whatever Is Right In My Own Eyes.

The incongruity seems obvious to anyone reading through the Old Testament. The mother of Micah took 200 silver coins, dedicated them to the Lord, then sent her son to cast them into an idol (Judges 17).

But the Lord specifically prohibited idols in the Ten Commandments – You shall not make for yourself a carved image (Exodus 20:4).

What happened between Mount Sinai and the hills of the promised land?

Time, complacency, and lack of reverence for the Scriptures given to Moses from the hand of God.

You and I face the same problem. The faith we follow remains only one generation deep. Young people reap encouragement to wander off into desolate fields, to carve their personal image to worship.

How do we show a better way?

The same writings of Moses, along with those of the prophets and the disciples, live for us today. I serve future generations by helping them study and live the Scriptures. I serve by passing down my reverence for the Scriptures to others. I serve by not just talking my faith, but walking my faith.

Hard, challenging, and slow, this type of life remains the only antidote to a world constantly encouraging me to do whatever is right in my own eyes.

Week fifteen of reading the Bible cover to cover

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