Guidance from Overlooked Men and Women of the Bible

Author: Dave Dishman (Page 360 of 459)

Do I Prefer My Idea of Jesus, Or Will I Consider the Actual Words of Jesus?

Mostly I prefer my idea of Jesus, one nicely fitting my little world. Unfortunately, I sometimes read the actual words of Jesus.

Luke 6 brings a pause as I consider my relationship to this enigmatic teacher. To first show he possessed the right to challenge everything, Jesus healed a man’s withered hand on the Sabbath.

The Sabbath rules stipulated that no work could be done on that day. The Pharisees considered healing to be work, so they watched Jesus to catch him in the act. Jesus healed anyway, reminding them that it’s lawful to do good on the Sabbath.

But I don’t think healing was work at all for Jesus. Healing someone for Jesus was as easy as me telling my friend, “Grab us a couple Cokes from the fridge and come watch March Madness.” I did no work, I just directed my friend to get something we both wanted.

Healing was that easy, because Jesus is Lord of the Sabbath. He created the day, thought up the idea, laid out the laws to Moses. Jesus holds the world together. How does the manipulation of bones and flesh by his spoken word constitute work?

As I read the gospels I gain glimmers. Jesus lives as so much more than an idea, or a cultural icon, or an ancient teacher to quote when making a point. Jesus is Lord, and I must consider that fact deeply.

Week eleven of reading the Bible cover to cover

What Was the Leper Thinking?

A leper approached Jesus, fell on his face and begged to be healed. Jesus then reached out his hand, touched the leper, and healed him (Luke 5).

No one touched a leper. Unclean, they faced constant fear and loathing. Likely this leper hadn’t felt human contact for years. I cannot imagine the depth of loneliness this image-bearer of God face experienced.

Jesus reached out. Instinctively, without hesitation, and with full knowledge of the man’s disease.

I wonder, what flashed through the leper’s mind as Jesus stretched out his hand and touched him?

Week eleven of reading the Bible cover to cover

Christ cleansing a leper by Jean-Marie Melchior Doze, 1864

The Day of Saint Patrick

A word about Saint Patrick’s Day, one of my favorite days of the year – but not for the standard reasons. Today folks celebrate all things Irish by wearing green clothes and funny green hats and drinking green beer. Don’t get me wrong, I also love all things Irish, it’s part of my heritage, and the Irish people I know are some of the best in the world.

I celebrate Saint Patrick today because he stands as one of the first and best examples of a missionary in history. Here’s a passage about Patrick from my book, GO:

…about 400 years later, on an island far to the north, Irish raiders kidnapped a young English boy named Patricius and held him as a slave for several years. While he eventually made his escape and returned to England, something started to shift in his heart. The Lord, through visions, began to pull him once again to Ireland, this time to return as a missionary to his former captors. He sailed back to preach the gospel to the pagan Irish and eventually became Saint Patrick of Ireland, the first documented missionary outside the bounds of the Roman Empire. Patrick preached the gospel as far as he could go, “to the point beyond which there is no one,” to the western edge of Ireland. Only the sea remained…

If you lift a toast to all things Irish today, remember to lift one to Saint Patrick.

Week eleven of reading the Bible cover to cover

Know Them To Use Them

Satan tempted Jesus in the wilderness in ways I can’t fully comprehend. Satan is the master tempter – he knows how to prod for weaknesses, sow doubts, and make you believe your bad decision is your best decision.

Satan twisted scripture to entice, and Jesus spoke scripture to counter. Jesus, intimately knowledgable, defended against the lies of Satan by quoting truth from the Bible.

The scriptures on my shelf wait as a powerful resource – the only effective weapon available to me – as I attempt to resist Satan and follow the Lord.

However, I have to know them to use them.

Luke 4 in week eleven of reading the Bible cover to cover

Photo by Aaron Burden on Unsplash

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