Posted in Through the Bible Devotions

Do you need some help?

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A “through the bible devotion” from Exodus 17 and 18.

It was so easy to do too much. I remember too many “perfect storm” Sunday mornings when not only was I preaching, but also opening up the church, playing guitar to lead contemporary worship, teaching a Sunday School class, and taking out a bag of garbage someone forgot to put in the dumpster. It too me a while to learn that if I spread myself too thin, I really wasn’t doing anything well.

I’ve learned to always answer, “Yes,” when asked, “Do you need help?” I don’t need to be independent and self-sufficient. I used to hate group projects. Now I’d much rather be part of a team.

Moses had to learn this lesson, too. He needed help holding up his hands so Israel could defeat the Amalekites (Exodus 17:8-13). He needed help settling endless disputes among the people (Exodus 18). He couldn’t – and didn’t have to – handle all the responsibility of leading a nation.

I guess it’s pride that makes us think we have to do it all and do it alone. A more honest word might be conceit. And if we’re honest, it’s idolatry.

Thank God for all those who are there to help!

Posted in Through the Bible Devotions

Today’s lesson: food!

Photo by Dushawn Jovic on Unsplash

A “through the bible” devotion from Exodus 16.

There’s truth to the saying, “You’re not yourself when you’re hungry.”

A cute baby turns into a monster when he or she decides they want to eat. children get restless as snack time approaches. Your dog or cat sits and stares until you relent and fill their food bowl. Wedding guests get snarly as table after table is called to the buffet line ahead of them. “Just wait till I get my hands on whoever ate my lunch from the break room refrigerator!”

Hungry people are irritable, rude, impatient, and nasty.

“The whole congregation of the sons of Israel grumbled against Moses and Aaron in the wilderness. The sons of Israel said to them, ‘If only we had died by the Lord’s hand in the land of Egypt, when we sat by the pots of meat, when we ate bread until we were full; for you have brought us out into this wilderness to kill this entire assembly with hunger!’” (Exodus 16:2-3)

Suddenly you wish you were back in Egypt making bricks? Your taskmasters fed you that well? You miss Pharaoh’s home cooking?

Probably not. But now you’re ready a theology lesson. “The Lord spoke to Moses, saying, “I have heard the grumblings of the sons of Israel; speak to them, saying, ‘At twilight you shall eat meat, and in the morning you shall be filled with bread; and you shall know that I am the Lord your God.’” (Exodus 16:11,12). One of the best ways to get to know God is to be hungry and then eat. Then you’ll know that he is the Lord your God.

If that’s the case, then I’m learning about God all the time. I get hungry a lot. I often forage in the kitchen for a meal or a snack. That’s my kind of education. It sure beats sitting in a seminary classroom!

Over time I’ve become a lot less demanding and much more grateful for my daily bread. Some of that comes from having to buy and prepare the food myself. But it’s also because I’ve grown in grace and knowledge of the Lord.

Posted in Through the Bible Devotions

Tap water

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A “through the bible” devotion from Exodus 15.

“I fill my cup with tap water.”

To me, that seemed like a benign comment. However, I’ll bet I offended those in the car with me. Everyone had brought along their favorite bottled water. One passenger suggested we stop to buy a six-pack of water with added electrolytes. There was a moment of silence when I threw out, “I filled up my cup with tap water.”

It’s not quiet when the grandchildren get thirsty. They demand, “Where’s my drink?” And if we do not provide water at the right temperature in the right container, they turn up the volume, “Where’s my drink?”

I never did that. It’s a generational thing. If I had said that to my parents, in our non-air-conditioned, AM radio, crank down the windows by hand, bump-in-the-middle-seat station wagon, my parents would have threatened corporal punishment.

I chuckle when I read about the nation of Israel’s thirst in the wilderness. It’s been three days since God parted the Red Sea for them so they could escape the Egyptian armies. But it’s been three days since they’ve found any drinkable water. “What are we going to drink, Moses?” (Exodus 15:24)

I’m thinking, “Oh, boy. You’re going to get it now.” But God provides drinkable water. He’s a lot more patient and slow to anger than I am.

I take my water for granted. Too many people in this world do not have drinkable water. When I Googled this, I learned that twenty-five percent of people on planet Earth do not have access to clean water. I don’t even think about it, so I rarely thank God for the gift of water.

But I should be grateful every morning when I get up and drink a glass of water, start up the coffee maker, wash my face, and flush the toilet. It’s all a gift of God.

Posted in Through the Bible Devotions

We’re number one!

A “through the bible” devotion from Exodus 15.

I got my first taste of marching band in seventh grade. Most of us had two years of instrument lessons and elementary band experience when we took the field for the fall football season. The first thing we learned was how to march “eight to five” (eight steps for every five yards). Second, we learned the school fight song, which I later learned was the Notre Dame fight song. Pretty much every junior high marching band adopted that fight song for their own. Those who didn’t used “On Wisconsin.”

The first song in the bible is a fight song (Exodus 15:1-18), sung by Moses and the people of Israel after God routs the Egyptians in the Red Sea (Exodus 14). As I read it, I hear shouts of victory and proclamations of “We’re number one!”

While fans exhibit religious devotion for a favorite sports team, few worshipers want church to sound like a football game. Having said that, churches do sing about our powerful God and victory over the opposition. The crowds celebrated Saul’s and David’s military victories with songs (1 Samuel 18:7). I always imagine that scene to be like a stadium full of soccer fans, chanting and waving huge flags. Later, David sings about offering up sacrifices with shouts of joy (Psalm 27). Even God, a victorious warrior, rejoices over his people with shouts of joy (Zephaniah 3:17).

We’ve toned it down for most of our worship services. But no one can turn down the volume when every creature in heaven and on earth praises the Lord (Revelation 5:11-14)!

Posted in Through the Bible Devotions

What about today?

A “through the bible” devotion from Exodus 14.

Mindful. Present. Situational awareness. In the moment.

No matter how you express it, it’s a challenge to live in the right now. Maybe you’re reflecting on the past with satisfaction or regret. Or your view of the future is filled with anticipation or dread.

But what about now? What’s going on right now? What does your today look like?

The nation of Israel had seen so much. The plagues decimated Egypt. God’s power was clearly displayed for all to see. And yet, when they get to the bank of the Red Sea, with the Egyptian armies in pursuit, they lament, “We’re all going to die!”

Moses reigns in their fears and announces, “Stand by and see the salvation of the Lord, which He will perform for you today” (14:13).

I know that Jesus saved me in the past. I’ve got the cross. I know he’ll save me in the future. There will be a resurrection for me on the last day when he returns. He proved and promised that the grave cannot hold God’s people.

But what about today? Doesn’t the bible say, “Now is a day of salvation”? How does God save me today?

  • I’m probably not aware of all the ways he protects me with his angels. They are with me so that the evil foe has no power over me. Who knows how many close calls they’ve nudged me from?
  • God saves me from a life of futility. In other words, my life has meaning, purpose, and significance. I’m not just taking up space. I’m here for a reason. I make a difference. I’m his workmanship, created to do good things.
  • And I am forgiven. He doesn’t count my sins against me. That applies to today or any day.

I’ve decided that my dogs are the best teachers in this area. They never dwell on the past. It’s irrelevant to them. They never worry about the future. I’ll fill their bowls with food tomorrow. They live in this moment, filled with chew toys, food under the table, tummy scratches, walks in the rain, and snoozes in the recliner. They live in today.

And so should I.

Posted in Through the Bible Devotions

He just won’t give up

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A “through the bible” devotion from Exodus 7-10.

How stubborn are you? When do you finally give in? What does it take for you to admit you’re wrong, to say, “I’m sorry,” or admit, “It was my fault”?

It’s hard to find someone more stubborn than the Pharaoh of Egypt in Exodus. Imagine what life was like. The water is bloody, the smell of dead frogs is everywhere, you’re crops are decimated, the itching never stops, and you can’t escape the swarms of bugs. But Pharaoh still won’t let the people of Israel go.

But guess who is more stubborn? God. He won’t give up. He keeps forgiving, healing, and giving his people another chance. They don’t follow his instructions. They don’t like the way he does things. They really don’t trust him. Yet God still loves them, provides for them, leads them, and stays with them.

It’s good to personalize this truth. I’m not obedient. I question God’s ways. I give into my fears rather than trusting him. And yet his love, his provision, his protection, and his presence are the same yesterday, today, and tomorrow. Talk about stubborn.

I once had a friend ask me, “Did you tell someone I was stubborn?”

I answered, “Yes. But that’s not necessarily a bad thing. It means you hold on to your convictions. Few people are like that.”

You’ll never outlast God. His love endures forever. You might as well give in.

Posted in Devotions, prayer

Keep the conversation going

Photo by Alexander Grey on Unsplash

A “through the bible” devotion from Exodus 8.

You know how it goes. Once you start feeling better, you stop taking the medicine, right? Yeah, that’s not now it’s supposed to go. You’re supposed to take all the antibiotics the doctor prescribed. You have to keep taking blood pressure medication daily for the rest of your life. It’s hardly ever a one and done.

Once we get into the plagues God sends to show his power to both Israel and Egypt, we get into that same kind of pattern. The plague hits, Pharaoh says you can go, the plague stops, and “when Pharaoh saw that there was relief, he hardened his heart and did not listen to them, just as the Lord had said” (Exodus 8:15). It happens again and again and again.

Of course we are good pray-ers when it’s hard or when it hurts or when we’re scared. Not so much when we feel better or the storm has passed or we’ve arrived safely at our destination. Yeah, that’s not how it’s supposed to go. My good day prayers are just as important as my terrible, horrible, no good, very bad day prayers.

Over time, God’s people developed prayers for the beginnings, endings, and in-betweens of every day. These prayers kept a divine conversation going throughout the day, rather than only kneeling for a need or in a crisis. In a world teeming with distraction, they pull us back into the relationship that matters the most, the one we have with our Creator, Savior, and Helper.

Posted in Through the Bible Devotions

Anyone can do that

A “through the bible” devotion from Exodus 7.

We can do so much.

Doctors, surgeons, hospitals and medicine can cure diseases. Infertile couples conceive in vitro. We grow meat in labs, view atoms in microscopes, travel in space, light up dark rooms, and fly through the skies. I can have anything I want delivered to my home by tomorrow.

So what do we need God for?

Pharaoh’s sorcerers and soothsayer priests can do all the tricks Moses can. They can turn a staff into a serpent, make a hand leprous, and turn water into blood (Exodus 7:11,22). So Pharaoh isn’t concerned about Moses’s God at all (Exodus 7:23).

I think it’s interesting that so many pursue power, knowledge, influence, and adoration. In other words, we try to be gods. We try to be what we think a god ought to be.

The truth is, other than doing a few tricks, we don’t know much about being gods. What’s God like? The only way to find out is to get to know Jesus. In Jesus, God became like us so that we wouldn’t settle for cheap imitations, but the real thing.

What kind of a god is Jesus? Merciful, slow to anger, and abounding in steadfast love. Instead of a few science fair projects, try being like that.

That’s right, no one comes close.

Posted in Through the Bible Devotions

Did you hear that?

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A “through the bible” devotion from Exodus 6.

A long time ago, I discovered that most people aren’t listening. Young or old, I learned that it’s best to say their name and get their attention before you ask or tell them something.

If I say, “What do you want for supper, John?” I’ll probably get the response, “Huh?”

But if I ask, “John, what do you want for supper?” I’ll hear, “Pizza!” (Or whatever they’re hungry for.)

So why aren’t you listening?

There are plenty of reasons you’re not listening. You’re on your phones, scrolling through whatever. You’re working on something else that demands your attention. You’re distracted by another voice or some noise.

Moses had some good news. He passed along God’s promises to bring the people out of slavery in Egypt and bring them back to the land he promised to Abraham. But “they did not listen to Moses, because of their broken spirit and harsh slavery” (Exodus 6:9).

I think they heard what Moses said. It just didn’t sink in. The people were despondent. They were exhausted. They had no hope. So Moses’ words were just noise.

Don’t let God’s promises be little more than noise in your life. When you come across one, insert your name at the beginning, and listen.