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In Love with the Bible

Learning to love God's Word

Past Posts

  • A Look at Proverbs 14:27

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January 7, 2017 by Marion

Getting into the Bible requires a certain investment of time and energy. I’d like to begin by looking at some things scripture says about itself as a way of saying it is time and energy well invested.

  • It’s life giving
    • Moses told the Israelites that man lives by every word that comes from the mouth of God (Deuteronomy 8:3) and that God’s law is not an empty word, but their very life (Deuteronomy 32:46-74)
    • Jesus said that his words are spirit and life (John 6:63)
  • Meditating on it helps us obey it (Joshua 1:8, Psalm 119:11) and be transformed by it (In Romans 12:2 we are told we are transformed by the renewing of our minds. Meditating on scripture is the best way I know of renewing our mind with God’s word.)
  • It can restore us to the right path (Psalm 107:17-20, Psalm 119:105)
  • It’s an offensive weapon in spiritual warfare (Ephesians 6:17)
  • It accomplishes God’s purposes (Isaiah 55:10-11)
    • Brings people to salvation (Romans 10:17, James 1:21)
    • Cleanses us (John 15:3, Ephesians 5:25-27)
    • Clearly reveals to us our inner person (Hebrews 4:12)
  • It is the power of God (1 Corinthians 1:18)

Bottom line: there are skills to be learned that help us get more out of the Bible. There are truths in the Bible that change us as we internalize them. Be willing to start where you are, knowing that what you are willing to put into it will affect what you get out of it. While it will not be a path of unbroken success, God gives his Holy Spirit to us; one of his tasks is to lead us into truth. We are not in this alone!

The first seven posts of this blog are about hearing, reading, studying, and meditating on God’s word (January and February 2017 posts). The rest of the posts are on specific passages that I’ve meditated on, along with what I’ve learned or how I’ve been changed by them.

 

Filed Under: Introduction Tagged With: why use the Bible?

1 Samuel 28

April 13, 2022 by Marion

In a recent reading of this passage, I found myself thinking about how King Saul, who begins so well, finishes in such a sad place. He is filled with fear, doesn’t hear from God, and doesn’t know where to turn. So, he goes to the occult—which he had banished from his kingdom, presumably because he knew God does not approve of such things. In his desperation for a word from the Lord he asks a medium to bring up Samuel. Samuel is not pleased and the word he speaks to Saul is that he and his sons will die as Israel’s armies lose to the Philistines. I cannot help but feel sorry for him at this point, but I wonder if this is the result of his failure to whole-heartedly follow God.

At some point, Saul seems to have become more concerned with his reputation than obedience to God. When Samuel spoke to Saul before he was anointed king, Saul responded to Samuel’s honoring by asking “Why have you spoken to me in this way?” He saw himself as being part of the smallest tribe, and of the humblest clan in that tribe. Yet after he has been king and experienced success in battle, there seems to be a different attitude. When Samuel told him that the kingdom would be taken from him because of his disobedience (when he had only partially done what God asked him to do) his response to Samuel was “I have sinned; yet honor me now before the elders of my people, and before Israel…” (1 Samuel 15:30) He begins trying to kill David after the women sing songs about Israel’s victories and they ascribe more slain enemies to David than to Saul. He tells Jonathan that it is wrong to protect David because David would take the kingdom from him—as if he had not already been told that his kingdom was being taken from him.

In thinking about this, I came to the conclusion that there is a price for whole-heartedly following God, but there is also a price for following God half-heartedly. Obedience may be costly at times, but so is disobedience. When life is hard, I do not want to be in the place of fear and desperation Saul found himself because he lacked connection to God.

Filed Under: inlovewiththeBible.com

2 Peter 1:5b-8

March 22, 2022 by Marion

2 Peter 1:5b-8

I posted about these verses before, but this time I want to focus on the first verse that tells us “Make every effort (or as another translation says, apply all diligence) to increase in the qualities of virtue, knowledge, self-control, perseverance, godliness, brotherly kindness and love.” I realize how easy it is for me to think of applying effort and diligence as drudgery; a plodding on when one really wants to be done. It sounds completely joyless. But I’ve come to realize there is another way to look at it. An athlete who wants to be at the top of his game spends a lot of time in conditioning and practice drills that will increase his skill. Knowing the value of the drills enables the athlete to be diligent in doing them without thinking of them as drudgery. His focus is on the skill building; he is looking for the benefits and growth that come from them. Peter says the benefit we get from being diligent in pursuing these attributes is a knowledge of Jesus that is both useful and fruitful. That is a worthy goal—one to keep in mind when I am making the effort to grow in them.

Filed Under: inlovewiththeBible.com Tagged With: 2 Peter 1:5b-8

2 Chronicles 29:3 &17

March 11, 2021 by Marion

Hezekiah’s father was a pagan. He closed up the Temple, followed the gods of other nations, and made altars to them on the corners of Jerusalem and in every city in Judah. When Hezekiah came to the throne, reestablishing worship of God appears to have been his first order of business. On the first day of his reign, he had the Levites begin cleansing and repairing the Temple. On the eighth day, the cleansing was complete and sacrifices to the Lord resumed. I found myself wondering what was the source of his zeal for God. Did he see the fruit of his father’s way, which included defeat at the hands of many neighbors and the resulting loss of territory and captivity of his people? Did he have a mother who was a believer and taught him the ways of God? Maybe he had godly counselors who were influential before he came to the throne? We don’t know. But we do know that on the first day of his reign his goal was restoring the worship of the true God. His own reign was not trouble free, but his faithfulness made a difference when Assyria attacked Jerusalem. I am reminded that God also deserves to be my number one priority. When he is preeminent in my life, the other claims on my life are in proper balance; it helps me live life in the best possible way.

Filed Under: inlovewiththeBible.com Tagged With: 2 Chronicles 29, meditation

Gratitude

February 28, 2021 by Marion

2 Chronicles 17:6 and Acts 16:25: I am currently reading in a devotional Bible that has daily readings from both the Old and New Testaments. These two passages appeared in one day’s reading. In the 2nd Chronicles passage we read that Jehoshaphat’s heart delighted in the ways of the Lord. As a result, he tore down the idols found in the land and sent teachers throughout the nation to teach people God’s ways. God rewared him by establishing his kingdom and keeping other nations from making war with Judah. In the Acts passage, Paul and Silas, imprisoned for proclaiming the word of God, were singing God’s praises. It reminds me that delighting in God is not tied to circumstances. When God gives great blessing, I want to respond with great gratitude and when God allows/brings trials, I want to respond with great gratitude. I think this is only possible if my focus is on him and not my circumstances. It is too easy to be complacent when life is good and too easy to grumble when life is hard, but if I maintain my focus on God, he will show me the right response to all of life.

Filed Under: Applying, Meditation, Reading

God’s Odd Ways

February 5, 2021 by Marion

God’s Odd Ways: In a recent reading of Genesis, it struck me that God made a plan to have a people for himself—and he began with a man whose wife was infertile. When God performed a miracle and a son was born to Abraham and Sarah in their old age, their son also had a marriage marked by infertility—20 years of it. God is clearly not in a hurry. It is one of the things that can be so frustrating to me as a believer. How many times in Scripture do we see people in circumstances that easily lead to the question, “Where are you, God?” Yet the Bible references God acting “in the fullness of time.” I find I need to just trust his timing, to believe he is working even if I don’t see it, and to remember that God knows the end from the beginning. He has a plan.

Filed Under: inlovewiththeBible.com

Hope

June 28, 2020 by Marion

I was recently reading in Romans and encountered three passages about hope that spoke to me. Romans 5:3-5 says sufferings produce endurance, which produces character, which produces a hope that does not put us to shame (because God’s love has been poured into our hearts). Romans 15:4 says the instruction of scripture is so we might have hope through endurance and through the encouragement that comes from scripture. Romans 15:13 is a prayer for the Romans that the God of hope would fill them with joy and peace in believing so that by the power of the Holy Spirit they might abound in hope.

Here is how they fit together in my mind: In my experience, the way God fills me with joy and peace in believing is through his word (the encouragement of scripture) where he reveals that he is sovereign, holy, loving, and faithful. Believing this helps me to respond to life’s pressures rightly and to trust him when I am faced with stresses and pressures requiring me to endure. I am never shamed that he is my hope because I am confident of his love (poured into my heart). I do not have a minimal hope, but I abound in hope because I am not creating the hope. Instead, I am receiving hope from the Holy Spirit who gives it without bounds.

I experienced total peace while waiting for the results of a biopsy a few years ago, and I feel at peace now when so many voices are saying that stress and anxiety are normal in this time of the coronavirus pandemic. God’s love surrounds me. It is poured into my heart. It is sufficient. More than sufficient.

Filed Under: Applying, Meditation Tagged With: hope, Romans 5:35

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Primary Sidebar

About me:

My personal background: Married to Paul in 1979, raised and homeschooled 6 children (whom I am enjoying so much as adults), and now spending time with my grandchildren every chance I get.

My background as a Christian: learned the basics of Christianity growing up as a Seventh Day Baptist, became a Lutheran after marriage, and have been a member of an ecumenical group called the Work of Christ Community since 1974.

Why I decided to blog: When I was new at being a Christian (around 20), I had a conversation with my sister in which I shared with her some insight I had gotten into a particular scripture through a book I had read. In her response she told me why she did not feel like she could buy religious books at that time in her life and that God was just teaching her through his word. I remember feeling extremely jealous. I had not yet experienced God saying anything to me directly through his word—and I deeply desired that he would. In the intervening years, I have experienced God speaking to me through his word and as a result, I have fallen in love with the Bible. It is my desire to use this blog as a way of sharing some of the things I've learned along the way. I will cover hearing, reading, studying, and meditating on scripture. Because I also want to keep the posts short, some of those topics will be take more than one post. Feedback, questions, and comments are welcome as long as they are also civil.

Marion

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