Posted in Through the Bible Devotions

I’ll just have a salad

Photo by Nadine Primeau on Unsplash

Some “through the bible” thoughts from Daniel 1.

When Daniel and his friends are taken in to exile, they are quickly selected for education and training, to work in the king’s palace. Rather than the usually fare of food and wine, Daniel asks that they be given vegetables to eat and water to drink. In a place far from his home and family, he has little control over his destiny. This small request is a way of sidestepping food that may have been an offering to an idol. It is one small corner of his life where he can still have control and still be faithful.

After ten days, Daniel and his friends are in better health than any of their classmates. They also surpass the wisdom and abilities of all the other magicians and enchanters in the kingdom. In a sense, they become better Babylonians than the Babylonians!

In this account, a physical habit has a spiritual benefit. Their choice of foods becomes a way of being faithful, of demonstrating their trust as they obey the statutes of God.

So I’m wondering: What other physical habits benefit someone spiritually?

  • Closing our eyes to pray. Shutting out visual distractions heightens our other senses, helping us focus on both speaking and listening. The folding of hands brings us fully into that moment.
  • Walking in the morning heightens my awareness of the creation around me, which reveals God’s glory and power.
  • Some will fast to escape the habitual shopping for, preparing, eating, and cleaning up after meals to focus on prayer.
  • When I enter a church that burns incense, the aroma seems to say, “This is a sacred space.” The smell of candles and wine proclaims that reality, too.
  • Some of my best devotional thoughts have come to mind while walking or running.

Those are just a few things that come to mind. As people with both bodies and souls, our physical and spiritual selves are vitally connected.

Next time: how does spirituality affect our physical lives?

Posted in Through the Bible Devotions

A night with an angel and lions

Some “through the bible” thoughts from Daniel 6.

First, a summary of the classic Sunday School story. Then, some unorthodox thoughts that come to mind.

When other officials fail to dig up any dirt to discredit Daniel, they decide they will use his faith against him (Daniel 6:5). They set him up, getting the king to establish an ordinance that no one can pray to anyone else but him for the next thirty days. The penalty? Offenders will be cast into the den of lions (6:7).

When Daniel deliberately disobeys and prays to God has he always did, the king has no choice but to throw him into the den of lions, wishing him the best: “May your God, whom you serve continually, deliver you!” (6:16).

The next morning, Daniel is safe and sound, explaining, “My God sent his angel and shut the lions’ mouths, and they have not harmed me” (6:22). It’s not that the lions weren’t hungry. Those who conspired against Daniel, along with their wives and children, were immediately torn apart when they were thrown to the lions (6:24).

Wouldn’t you like to spend the night with an angel? I would. Perhaps I need to consider what radical faithfulness would look like for me, so that I could have that opportunity.

In the same vein, wouldn’t it be great to spend the night with lions, especially knowing that they wouldn’t harm you? We used to line up early for feeding time at the Philadelphia zoo, eager to see the lions sink their teeth into some large slabs of beef. How great would it be to stroke their manes and hear them purr?

Daniel got to experience both of those things by simply giving God thanks on a regular basis. That simple spiritual habit was not only courageous and faithful, but resulted in a night he would never forget!

Posted in Advent devotions

Just keep praying

Photo by Julie Wolpers on Unsplash

When Daniel revealed the meaning of King Nebuchadnezzar’s dream about a statue made of gold, silver, bronze, iron and clay that was toppled by a divine stone, he had no idea he’d live to see that dream come true. In Daniel’s lifetime, Babylon falls to the Medes, and King Darius takes over.

What did Daniel do in the meantime? He knelt down and prayed three times a day. It was no secret. Everyone knew it. As kingdoms fell and rose, Daniel’s devotion remained constant.

I believe it’s important to nurture your spiritual disciplines when life is good, so that when there are challenges, your spiritual muscle memory keeps you on track.

What did Daniel do when his colleagues conspired against him? What did Daniel do when the king decreed he couldn’t pray to his God? “He got down on his knees three times a day and prayed and gave thanks before his God, as he had done previously” (Daniel 6:10). His circumstances may have changed, but his habits didn’t.

King Darius had no choice. He wrote the law. He prescribed the consequences. He had to throw Daniel into the lions’ den.

Do you know what happened? (A lot of you do.) Darius didn’t get any sleep. Daniel got to see an angel! “My God sent his angel and shut the lions’ mouths” (Daniel 6:21). Someone had an amazing night!

I want to see an angel. But do I want to see one in the same context as Daniel? I’m not so sure about that. I’ve seen lions tear into a piece of beef at the zoo. I don’t want to be the next meal.

On the other hand, if angels show up where there are lions, then maybe…just maybe…I’ll check into the lion Airbnb.

What if angels only show up when the going gets tough? What if you only get to see angels when the whole world seems to be against you? What if an angelic presence requires the presence of a carnivore with big teeth and a loud roar?

What if…? I could ask that question all day. Life is filled with “What if’s?” What if your prayers bring you to a place with lions and angels? I could live with that!

Daniel gets an ornament on the Jesse Tree as a reminder that we can depend on god to save us from lions, from sin, death, and the power of the devil.

Posted in Advent devotions

Is it hot in here, or is it me?

Photo by yasin hemmati on Unsplash

Didn’t you hate it when your parents flipped your argument and used it against you? When you got in trouble for doing something, you justified your actions by explaining, “Everyone else was doing it.”

Your parents may have replied, “If everyone else was jumping off the top of a building, would you join them?”

Of course we want to say, “No,” but you and I know that it’s hard to swim upstream and not do what everyone else is doing. It’s hard to be Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego when the music starts playing and everyone falls down to worship the giant golden statue King Nebuchadnezzar set up. It’s especially hard when the consequence for noncompliance is the fiery furnace (Daniel 3:4-6).

I’ve often wondered if the Chaldeans had a dedicated furnace they kept on simmer for moments like this. I suppose it might have been a kiln that no one was using to fire pottery.

It couldn’t have been easy, but these three wouldn’t do it. They had no doubt that God was able to save them the furnace. But even if he didn’t, they were not about to worship anyone but him.

Nebuchadnezzar was so furious at their response that he turned up the heat seven times more than normal and tossed them in. When he and his advisors looked in, they were walking around the furnace with a fourth, most likely Christ himself in an Old Testament cameo. The one true God is not just someone you bow down before. He is someone who come alongside you in good and horrible situations.

Hundreds of years later, the devil would pressure Jesus to bow down and worship him. If Jesus would do that, for just a moment, the devil promised to relinquish all the kingdoms of the world and their glory. Jesus refuses. First of all, those were already his. Second, God’s word is clear: “You shall worship the Lord your God and him only shall you serve” (Matthew 4:10).

Since most of my readers live in the United States, where we have freedom of religion, we most likely will never be threatened with fire for our beliefs. But we will be influenced by what everyone else is doing.

So it’s a good idea to make every effort to be influenced by the best influencer of all, Jesus.

Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego get an ornament on the Jesse Tree, reminding us of the one who comes to save, Jesus Christ,.