Dave Dishman

Guidance from Overlooked Men and Women of the Bible

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Ask For Splendor

I ask for lots of things from the Lord, like wisdom in a hard decision or patience to get through the day. I pray for God to provide financially and I give thanks for my food (for which I’m truly grateful—I enjoy my times at table).

But I rarely pray for God to show me his splendor. Yet Moses, in his psalm, asked for this very thing: May your deeds be shown to your servants, your splendor to their children.

Moses experienced God’s splendor like no other. From a burning bush to the angel of death, walking through an ocean laid bare and forty days consumed in smoke and fire on a mountaintop. In his prayers, Moses asked that following generations would experience the Lord’s splendor as well.

The Lord’s splendor is all around—if my eyes are open. But most days I focus downward and inward, unable to perceive much beyond myself. So I’m asking the Lord to show me. If Moses made the request, perhaps his prayer will bear fruit for me.

Ask to see the Lord’s splendor. Pray for eyes open to the magnificence of the Lord. What can it hurt? By doing so we’ll gain a fresh appreciation for God’s work in the world and his personal attention to you and me.

Psalm 90 in Through the Bible in 2024

Photo by Explore with Joshua

A Running Dialogue

I keep up a running dialogue with my phone throughout the day. I use my phone for checking emails, sending and receiving texts, and even taking calls. I watch my phone for flight updates when I travel and scout out places to eat on the road. I keep my eyes on the news and of course, whatever’s happening in the world of sports.

Paul encouraged us to keep up a running dialogue with the Lord. He wrote this encouragement to the church members in Ephesus: Pray in the Spirit on all occasions with all kinds of prayers and requests. With all this in mind, be alert and always keep on praying for all the Lord’s people.

Just like we do with our phones, check in with the Lord throughout the day. Pray anytime, pray for whatever’s on your mind. Talk with the Lord. Pray for friends and family, pray for each other, and always pray for God’s people wherever they may be.

But mostly pray, pray, pray.

Ephesians 6 in Through the Bible in 2024

Photo by Jacek Dylag

Greed and Goodness

Greed, for the lack of a better word, is good. This quote from the 1987 movie Wall Street pops up regularly in our cultural narrative. Greed drives our economy and pushes people to advance, yielding respect and comfort and power. Or so we’re told by successful, greedy people.

But the Scriptures mention greed as a terrible attribute. Paul writes, Among you there must not be even a hint of sexual immorality, or of any kind of impurity, or of greed, because these are improper for God’s holy people.

Why is greed so bad?

Greed ignores the ways of God in a rush for wealth. Commandment #1 states, You shall have no other gods before me. Those who grab more and more make idols out of their possessions. When we embrace greed our goods become our gods.

Greed takes what God intended for others and hoards it for ourselves. Greed feeds cravings and creates animosity. Greed reveals our lack of care for those around us, and ultimately our lack of faith in God. The greedy cannot do unto others as would be done unto them, because they cannot see others as anything more than objects to use.

Despite the messaging, greed is not good. I can combat greed in my life in two ways. First, by asking the Lord to point it out, and second, by giving stuff away. Giving pushes back my tendency towards greed. Donating money, clothes from my closet, time and energy all help me remember who blessed me in the first place.

Beat back greed, and watch the Lord open new doors to goodness and success.

Ephesians 5 in Through the Bible in 2024

Photo by Joel Muniz

When Hungry Leads to Hangry

Most of us growl in hangriness when our stomachs endure periods of emptiness. The ads showing a person transform from a monster back to a human being after enjoying a candy bar strike home—we’ve all experienced the same phenomenon.

The Israelite community grew hangry as they moved further and further from Egypt, and grumbled against Moses and Aaron. The Israelites said to them, “If only we had died by the Lord’s hand in Egypt! There we sat around pots of meat and ate all the food we wanted, but you have brought us out to this desert to starve the entire assembly to death.”

These folks forgot about foraging for straw and beatings from slave masters. Miracles and plagues and a walk through the Red Sea faded in their hunger. The stomach overwhelms good intentions.

How did the Lord respond? Not with anger or frustration, but simply said to Moses—I will rain down bread from heaven. Which he did for forty years.

I overlook this blessing. When I’m hungry I satisfy my stomach. While I don’t go out and collect manna, I do find plenty to eat in my fridge. In fact, I strive not to overeat. My daily walk to the kitchen reflects a fundamental gift from our loving God.

Which is why we say grace before we eat, to thank the provider of manna—and mashed potatoes—for his daily goodness to us.

Exodus 16 in Through the Bible in 2024

Photo by Parnis Azimi

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