Guidance from Overlooked Men and Women of the Bible

Category: Bible (Page 49 of 356)

Let’s Do Some Good

At one point in his wanderings, Jesus came upon a man with a shriveled hand. The ever-present Pharisees were looking for a reason to charge Jesus with a religious crime, so they asked him a specific question intended to tie him down, Is it lawful to heal on the Sabbath?

Jesus sat with a man desperately hoping for a miracle, yearning for a hand that would allow him to work and earn a living and stand up for himself. The Pharisees failed to see the man at all, but merely hoped to criminalize Jesus’s behavior.

Jesus answered, It is lawful to do good on the Sabbath. Then ordered the man to stretch out his hand, which healed before their eyes. The Pharisees stomped off, while the man flexed his strong fresh hand.

Jesus replied expansively to a narrow question designed to force him into a corner. No matter what strictures were drawn around the Sabbath, it was always appropriate, indeed lawful, to do good on that day. Perhaps Jesus throwing the word lawful back on those who manipulated the law angered the Pharisees the most.

Jesus uncomplicates situations. It’s always lawful to do good. When I see some good that needs doing, then I ought to step in and help. It sounds too simple, but as we go through our day, let’s keep our eyes open and do some good.

Matthew 12 in Through the Bible in 2024

Photo by Rémi Walle

Even the Babies

On a recent hike in Spain my wife and I found ourselves on a narrow path with a steep drop to one side. Neither of us realized this section would be so precarious (although the name of this region should have clued us in—Costa da Morte—the Coast of Death). Beauty pulled my eyes upward, but I forced my attention back to the trail. We carefully picked our steps, leaning away from ledge and praying between breaths.

In desperate situations most everyone mouths a prayer. It’s said there are no atheists in foxholes, meaning the fear of imminent death sparks hope in an unconsidered God. Many of us pray when walking a ledge. We often find the Lord at the end of our wits.

The nation of Judah faced a desperate situation with an invading army rolling across the land. The king declared a fast and prayed in public. The people gathered with him—All the men of Judah, with their wives and children and little ones, stood there before the Lord.

I love this picture of looking to the Lord. These weren’t perfect people—far from it. But in their time of need they gathered everyone, even the babies, and stood together asking God to intervene.

God responded and averted disaster. The coalition of invaders fell apart, turned upon each other and wiped themselves out. The people of Judah gathered again and remembered this line from the Psalms: Some trust in chariots and some in horses, but we trust in the name of the Lord our God.

Even if you haven’t done so for awhile, it’s ok to approach our God—he’s patient through our wanderings. Because with no where else to turn, it’s time to turn to the Lord.

2 Chronicles 20 & Psalm 20 in Through the Bible in 2024

Photo from our hike on the Costa da Morte (click on title to see the photo if you’re reading this on email).

Ever Present

This assurance from the Psalms remains one to hold close, to read when days get long, to memorize when we walk through the valley of the shadow of death:

God is our refuge and strength, an ever-present help in trouble.

The Lord remains close at our side, a fixed residency. The concept of omnipresence comes to mind, how God exists everywhere at the same time. Or you might say that the Lord can be constantly encountered anywhere in the universe by everyone in the universe all in the same instant.

No matter where I am, or what I’m facing, God is my refuge and strength—always.

That’s good news, a profoundly simple promise within our grasp.

Psalm 46 in Through the Bible in 2024

Photo by Wilfried Santer

Rend the Heart

God once punished the waywardness of his people in a way that reverberated for generations—an invasion of locusts. What the locust swarm has left the great locusts have eaten; what the great locusts have left the young locusts have eaten; what the young locusts have left the other locusts have eaten. The insect scourge horsewhipped those ignoring the Lord.

God, however, left an open passage back to him. Rend your heart and not your garments. Return to the Lord your God, for he is gracious and compassionate, slow to anger and abounding in love, for he relents from sending calamity.

True contrition—a change in heart—gains the Lord’s attention. In stories throughout the Bible God responded to a broken spirit, or a submissive request for forgiveness, with mercy and love. This despite heinous crimes on the part of those returning to the Lord (think of David following the murder of Uriah).

The humble plea Lord have mercy on me, a sinner, resonates through the heavens. If you truly mean it, it’s never too late to pray it.

Joel 2 in Through the Bible in 2024

Photo by Massimiliano Sarno

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