Jesus said in Matt 4:4, “Man does not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceeds from the mouth of God”
Are you hungry for God’s word? If you think you are not, that is probably an indication of just how anemic, how weak and how starved you truly are! But if you’re hungry, why aren’t you eating? Because you have an enemy who is determined to do whatever it takes to keep you from being nourished in God’s word. If you are fed regularly, then you might become an effective Christian. He doesn’t want that.
Satan’s favorite thoughts to plant in us are:
- I don’t have time….
- I don’t really feel like it……
- It’s kind of boring…….
- It’s so overwhelming, that I don’t know where to begin!
The above FEEL like our own thoughts, but they are not. They are the enemy’s suggestions that he has silently sewn in our minds. But we do NOT have to submit.
In view of the approaching New Year, I am offering an example from real life: a man, a West Pointer who was not only a military hero, but a Christian soldier.
The following excerpted directly from an on-line essay by Dr. John Barnett when I googled General Harrison.
“Lt. General William K. Harrison was the most decorated soldier in the 30th Infantry Division, rated by General Eisenhower as the number one infantry division in World War II. General Harrison was the first American to enter Belgium, which he did at the head of the Allied forces. He received every decoration for valor except the Congressional Medal of Honor – being honored with the Distinguished Silver Cross, the Silver Star, the Bronze Star for Valor, and the Purple Heart (he was one of the few generals to be wounded in action). When the Korean War began, he served as Chief of Staff in the United Nations Command – and because of his character and self-control was ultimately President Eisenhower’s choice to head the long and tedious negotiations to end the war.
General Harrison, a soldier’s soldier who led a busy, ultra-kinetic life, was also an amazing man of the Word. When he was a twenty-year-old West Point Cadet, he began reading the Old Testament once a year and the New Testament four times. General Harrison did this until the end of his life. Even in the thick of war he maintained his commitment by catching up during the two- and three-day respites for replacement and refitting which followed battles, so that when the war ended he was right on schedule.
When, at the age of ninety, his failing eyesight no longer permitted his discipline, he had read the Old Testament seventy times and the New Testament 280 times! No wonder his godliness and wisdom were proverbial, and that the Lord used him for eighteen fruitful years to lead Officers Christian Fellowship (OCF).
General Harrison’s story tells us two things: it is possible for the busiest of us, to systematically feed on God’s Word. No one could be busier or lead a more demanding life than General Harrison. His life remains a demonstration of a mind programmed with God’s Word. His closest associates say that every area of his life (domestic, spiritual, and professional) and each of the great problems he faced was informed by the Scriptures. People marveled at his knowledge of the Bible and the ability to bring its light to every area of life. He lived out the experience of the Psalmist:
OH, HOW I LOVE YOUR LAW! I MEDITATE ON IT ALL DAY LONG. YOUR COMMANDS MAKE ME WISER THAN MY ENEMIES, FOR THEY ARE EVER WITH ME. I HAVE MORE INSIGHT THAN ALL MY TEACHERS, FOR I MEDITATE ON YOUR STATUTES. I HAVE MORE UNDERSTANDING THAN THE ELDERS, FOR I OBEY YOUR PRECEPTS. (119:97-100)”
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We are well-acquainted with how tempting it is to make a New Year’s resolution. We also tend to think about the concomitant disappointment that follows when we break it. But this is different. You CAN resolve to read your Bible every day and not fear. As Christians, we have the gift of repentance as a WONDERFUL tool. So if you miss a day, repent, ask for God’s help and begin again. Keep Satan’s offense in mind. He would love for us to miss a day and have that turn into a week and then in despair give up. His seed/thought is ready to be fertilized in our souls, “I’m just not the kind of Christian who can consistently read her Bible” NOT TRUE!!! Fight on!
Post a comment or send me an email if you would like me to pray that you would stay committed! We need each other’s prayers.
May God bless and enrich your spiritual mealtime and put MEAT on your bones through regular feeding in 2011. Bon appétit!
Jan 15, 2016 @ 00:01:56
Looking through some of your “The Word” posts. 🙂 I love to think about the Bible as being my daily food. We eat three times a day, and still have moments when we think we’re “starving”! I wrote this post about a year ago, using that same illustration of being hungry for the word: http://journeyoftheword.com/2015/03/06/how-i-survive/.
Jan 15, 2016 @ 02:00:34
Thanks for reading. And for directing me to your post. Nothing satisfies like God!