Guidance from Overlooked Men and Women of the Bible

Category: Bible (Page 68 of 395)

Take a Stroll

Long walks are good for my soul. My wife and I have hiked parts of the Camino de Santiago in Spain several different years, leading groups of fellow pilgrims each time. I love the day after day rhythm of tramping along, one foot in front of the other, enjoying nature and letting regular life slide away for a time.

Ages ago a psalmist wrote of long walks as he praised to the Lord: Blessed are those whose strength is in you, whose hearts are set on pilgrimage.

I might rephrase this line as happy are those who walk and think about God. You don’t have to go to Spain to enjoy ambling with the Lord. A few steps out the door his creation waits with open arms.

Take a stroll. Spend time appreciating the world around you. Enjoy a few minutes in the presence of the Lord, and turn your outing into a pilgrimage.

Psalm 84 in Through the Bible in 2024

My wife and I will once again lead a group on the Camino de Santiago, June 7-15, 2025. If this interests you, visit our website for more information.

Photo by Ales Krivec

Bread on the Counter

I learned quickly after moving to Colorado not to leave my bread uncovered on the counter. Within a few minutes it turned stale. I left humid Missouri where bread stayed fresh for days, requiring little vigilance on my part. Oreos are the opposite. Leave them out in Missouri and they go soft, but in Colorado they stay delicious for weeks.

Jesus spoke of bread to a crowd asking him questions. I am the bread of life. Whoever come to me will never go hungry, and whoever believes in me will never be thirsty.

Jesus never goes stale. I pursue different substitutes, but I find they eventually crumble. My hopes in things other than Jesus, like financial security, or greater recognition, or simply a comfortable life, harden like bread sitting in an arid kitchen.

Only Jesus speaks words of eternal life. All other philosophies and pursuits go dry, but Jesus remains as fresh as when he walked this earth.

John 6 in Through the Bible in 2024

Photo by Stephanie Harvey

The Food on My Plate

My wife and I pause and give thanks when we sit down to eat together, but I rarely do so when I pour a bowl of cereal or grab a sandwich between meetings. I take for granted the abundance of fresh food available in my world.

Long ago a writer penned a psalm lauding God for his magnificent acts. He praised the Lord for creating the heavens, the seas that cover the earth, the sun, moon and stars. The psalmist made much of dividing the Red Sea and delivering from Pharaoh. He applauded God for placing Israel in the promised land.

Then, at the end of the passage the writer included this final thought: He gives food to every creature. His love endures forever. Give thanks to the God of heaven.

From the magnificent to the minute, the Lord is behind it all. Along with creating the universe and delivering his chosen, the Lord also ensures his creatures have food to eat. God is in the details, right down to the salt and pepper.

Lord, help me remember your goodness when I sit down to enjoy the food on my plate.

Psalm 136 in Through the Bible in 2024

Photo by Debby Hudson

No Sitting on the Fence

It’s yes or no when it comes to one eternal decision. What will we do with Jesus?

In the summary verse for his argument about people’s need for a savior, John wrote, Whoever believes in the Son has eternal life, but whoever rejects the Son will not see life, for God’s wrath remains in him.

Born into a sinful state, God’s judgement hangs over our heads until taken away by Christ. Not that we sense it on a day-to-day basis, but we live in the reality of a broken world. Spiritually problems exist which affect all of life, and they require spiritual solutions.

Rejecting Jesus carries the idea of a refusal to submit, to revolt against the message. This can take the form of active rebellion, of shaking my fist at the Lord. Or it could mean a life of passive indifference and ignoring God. I might get along pretty well in this state, but I’ll face a displeasure bending toward outrage when my physical life ends.

Believing in the Son involves mimicking his ways. I prefer the term Jesus follower to describe those who take their Christian faith seriously. Because we follow Jesus into an eternity far more fantastic than we imagine, while others reject him without comprehending the depth of their future despair.

John 3 in Through the Bible in 2024

Photo by Hasnain Babar

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