God Unveiled

God Unveiled

IF YOU WANT TO KNOW WHAT GOD IS LIKE, LOOK AT JESUS.

It had been a long, long time to be misunderstood. God yearned for His people to know Him, but early on they had chosen to walk away. They broke their connection with Him which left them fatally sick and spiritually blind. 

In rare honest moments, when something in them cried out for home, their hearts must have asked: Who are You, God? But they had lost their ability to see.

God wouldn’t give up. He began the long process of reintroducing Himself. Through Passover He painted a picture of His heart—“I am the God who rescues.” The powerful display at Mount Sinai declared: “I am the God of love and justice.” The Tabernacle pointed to His desire for intimacy, proclaiming: “I am the God of closeness.” 

God was showing the people who He was, but blind hearts can’t see even clearly-presented truth. God must have heard people talking about Him over the years—dialogs at synagogues and around dinner tables. How often He must have wanted to bust through to correct misunderstandings. To show Himself for who He really is. Who are You, God?

It had been a long, long time to be misunderstood. God yearned for His people to know Him, but early on they had chosen to walk away. They broke their connection with Him which left them fatally sick and spiritually blind. 

And then, when the time had fully comethe God who wants closeness came closer. God stepped off His throne in Heaven and stepped into a single cell in the womb of a woman. For nine months, Jesus grew. Then He was born. Thirty years passed while He walked among the people, experiencing life with them, hearing their misconceptions about Him with His own human ears, but not letting anyone know who He was. Patient, patient, patient.

And then, at age 30, the Head of the Angel Armies, the Possessor of All Authority, the King of Heaven and Earth, made His presence known. The invisible God had stepped into the visible—into something His blind people would be able to see. 

In Jesus, God’s heart was on full display. He was endlessly compassionate—the purest, most perfect Being turned no one away. The hemorrhaging woman reached out to touch Him. The blind man called out to Him for healing. The 10 lepers, considered untouchable, ran up to Him. Children crawled in His lap. The cast-aside, the overlooked, the contagiously sick, the overwhelmingly sinful, the arrogantly righteous, the hopelessly broken—they all came to Him. And Jesus, God Himself, lovingly welcomed them all.

People made fun of Him. People didn’t understand Him. People hated Him. People stood in awe of Him. But not one single person was afraid to come to Him, the One to whom angels bow. Not a single person. The misguided woman at the well accepted His living water. The righteous Nicodemus sought Jesus out despite the social ridicule he faced. The “greatest” of sinners—prostitutes, thieves, criminals given the death sentence—came to Jesus freely. God is welcoming, inviting, loving . . . good.

And then, the invisible God stepped into the visible—into something His blind people would be able to see—in the Person of Jesus, who was born into this world, walked among us without sin, and died for us.

For centuries, the hearts of humanity had wondered, Who are You, God? 

And in Jesus, God answered. “Here I am.” The Son is the radiance of God’s glory and the exact representation of his being (Hebrews 1:3).

Jesus unveils the reality of the universe: The one, true God is relentlessly, infinitely, lavishly good. He doesn’t want us to know about Him, He wants us to know Him. And He will stop at nothing to make that happen. Right now, from the throne of Heaven, God pours out a love and a desire for closeness so intense it’s humbling. 

If you encountered Jesus when He walked on the earth—if you pushed past the crowd, making eye contact with Him—you would’ve found this: an inviting smile and His welcoming, overwhelming love. And that same heart sits on Heaven’s throne today. 

If your heart ever echoes Who are You, God? look to Jesus for the answer: “Here I am.”

And then come to Him. He has been waiting for you. 

***
©2023, Walk Thru the Bible

Where is your heart?

Where is your heart?

GOD WANTS A LOVE RELATIONSHIP WITH YOU.

Here is one of the most mind-boggling truths of the universe: God—the God of everything—wants a relationship with you.

That’s an amazing truth—and a hard one to wrap our minds around.

We know what relationships are like. A relationship is about spending time together. It’s about conversations and experiences, sharing hearts and opinions, messing up and apologizing, loving and extending grace, and finding love and acceptance. It’s messy and organic, emotional and beautiful. It takes time, and it deepens over time.

The God of the universe—who knows everything, created everything, and is in charge of absolutely everything—wants that with you.

Amazing.

The God of everything wants a relationship with you. That’s an amazing truth, and a hard one to wrap our minds around.

But there’s a subtle shift in thinking where the focus of our relationship with God goes from heart-connecting with Him to just “being good” for Him. That shift is easy to make because it just feels right. Surely God must want something from us. Plus, following rules is easier than having a relationship with God. We’ve been following rules since we were toddlers, but there’s a lot of effort involved in a time-together, talking-over-stuff-together, walking-through-life-together relationship.

This very subtle shift in thinking—between “being good” for God and having a heart connection with Him—is a crucial one. “Being good” for God is actually a deadly lie, because we can start acting as if God is a standard to maintain, not a Person to relate to. And even if we still think of Him as a Person, we may start interacting with Him as our strict Parent instead of our loving Father. We might call Him “Father,” but we’d never call Him “Abba.” While we may obey Him, our hearts are far from Him.

But God isn’t after your obedience. He’s after your heart.

God isn’t after your obedience. He’s after your heart.

King Solomon chose to put other loves before his love for God. King Saul seem to have never loved God at all. But King David got it. He was God’s friend. He talked with God, spent time with Him, shared his heart with Him—because he loved Him. He followed God’s instructions, not to earn God’s love, but because he loved who God is. David knew that God was guiding him to the best way to live. David didn’t follow God perfectly. But when he sinned, he came back to God—the Friend he had hurt, not the rule he had broken—and he confessed his sins to Him. God forgave him, and they walked on together. Even in his imperfect life, David sought God with all of his heart.

What about you? Where is your heart? It will only be fulfilled if it loves God first. As you walk through life with Him as your closest Friend, you’ll find your life is richer than you ever imagined. He will become your greatest Treasure, what you’ve been looking for all along. And you’ll have the kind of relationship He wanted all along too.

Where is your heart? It will only be fulfilled if it loves God first. As you walk through life with Him as your closest Friend, you’ll find your life is richer than you ever imagined. He will become your greatest Treasure, what you’ve been looking for all along.

Irreplaceable You: Designed with a Purpose

Irreplaceable You: Designed with a Purpose

Irreplaceable You

GOD HAS DESIGNED YOU WITH A SPECIFIC PURPOSE.

When God designed irreplaceable you, He picked everything about you. Every single thing. God actually knit you together. (See Psalm 139:13). Knit as in hand-on-hand, stitch-by-stitch, every piece deliberately chosen. (It’s probably not a coincidence that DNA looks like strands of twisted yarn.) Your hair color? Hand-picked. Your height? By design. But it’s not just your physical appearance that God strategically chose. He also wove in your specific talents and abilities. Your strengths and weaknesses. He even picked the family that you live in (He also knew that some would be challenging!). And the town. And the time in the story of humanity in which you’d be born.

God has given you specific gifts for the specific time and place you’re in. Why? Because He has a very important purpose for you—a role that only you can fill.

Years ago, God introduced Himself to Moses and clearly told Moses his purpose—he was to lead God’s people out of captivity in Egypt to freedom (Exodus 3–4).

Like Moses and the people of Israel, we live in a captive world. God tells us in Genesis how it got that way. God had given Adam and Eve authority, but by disobeying God, they chose to follow Satan and surrendered that authority to him. When the world was under God’s authority—before the fall—it was filled with the goodness of God’s character—love, wholeness, joy, peace, kindness, and justice. But now, the whole world is under the control of the evil one (1 John 5:19). And it’s filled with the trademarks of its current master, Satan—hatred, pain, insecurity, loneliness, injustice, fear, sickness, and shame. We live in a broken, hurting world.

 

God has given you specific gifts for the specific time and place you’re in. Why? Because He has a very important purpose for you—a role that only you can fill.

Like Moses, we have a great purpose—a destiny. We, as Jesus-followers, are to go about reclaiming the territory of our lives for God’s Kingdom. Where there are scars and rifts and need, we are to help. Where there’s conflict, we are to make peace. Where there’s brokenness, we are to heal. We are to help the hurting, lonely, broken people of the world see and feel the God who loves them so deeply. We are to help the world look more like God’s Kingdom.

Years ago, in the desert at the foot of what would be known as Mount Sinai, God told Moses his purpose. The lowly shepherd was to confront the most powerful man on the planet, the Pharaoh, and to lead millions of God’s people out of slavery to freedom. Moses was terrified. In response to Moses’ fear, God asked him: “What is that in your hand?” (Exodus 4:2). God was asking him to show Him what he had—to show Him his gifts. All Moses had was a staff, but that’s all that God wanted. Moses surrendered his staff to God and with that staff, God ushered in plagues, parted seas, and freed His captive people. Moses surrendered his gifts and walked with God. And through Moses, God made the world look more like HIs Kingdom.

Like Moses, you have been called for such a time as this. You have been made—handcrafted—in God’s image for a specific purpose. He gave you specific gifts to help you reflect who He is to the world.

Like Moses, you have been called for such a time as this. You have been made—handcrafted—in God’s image for a specific purpose. He gave you specific gifts to help you reflect who He is to the world.

Today, you will run into various people on the path of life. You were chosen to, and only you can love them in the unique way God has gifted you. You are handmade—knit, woven, and wired—to show people a very specific part of who God is. As you surrender all you have and all you are to your great King, and as you follow His lead to use your gifts to show His love, you’ll find the deepest joy you’ve ever known. You’ll get to be a part of amazing things. Not necessarily the kinds of things that will make people on earth stand up and cheer, but Kingdom things. Mind-boggling things. The- angels-are-on-their-feet kinds of things.

Like Moses, you’ve been specifically gifted for a massive mission. And like Moses, you do not go it alone. God is with you, child of the King. Surrender all of who you are to Him, and be prepared as He walks with you through the most amazing adventures.

God is Good, even when we can’t see it!

God is Good, even when we can’t see it!

You might not have known it, but you were born into a battle. The history of this battle goes all the way back … to the Beginning.

In the beginning, when God made the world, everything was good. There was no sadness, no hardship, no pain, no death. Adam and Eve felt God’s love and peace and they lived in it. God was close and they knew it. It was an amazing and beautiful place to live.

God’s creation was good because He is good. That’s the most foundational and most important truth in the universe.

But God has an Enemy—Satan. Satan hates God, and he doesn’t want anyone to know God or love God. He’s out to slander God’s character and reputation. So, soon after creation, Satan entered into Eden in the form of a serpent, and he caused Adam and Eve to question God’s heart behind the one rule God had given them. Satan cast a shadow of doubt on God’s goodness. Adam and Eve chose to believe Satan, they disobeyed God, and the whole world fell under a curse of death and under the authority of Satan’s kingdom of darkness.

While creation resounded with the foundational truth of the universe—“God is good”—Satan slyly challenged, “Is He really?

This is the same debate that you will have in your heart and mind. It’s the main way this cosmic battle shows itself in your life.

“God is good.”

“Is He really?”

You, as a Jesus-follower, will have to fight to defend God to yourself. No matter what you’re facing in your life, the truth will always be this: “God is good.” Scripture tells us that God is light; in him there is no darkness at all (1 John 1:5). That means that God can never be evil or bad; that’s an impossibility for Him. Sometimes that will be hard to believe because you live in a broken world where hard stuff happens and because you have an Enemy who will urge you to believe that God isn’t good. 

Despite your circumstances, though, choose to trust God’s good heart. Believe His goodness. Defend His character in your mind and heart when doubts come. When times get tough, the “evidence” of your life will seem to point to the lie that God isn’t good. But that’s not what’s real. If you could see what was really going on, you’d see God right there with you, in the battle with you, fighting for you, working for good. Believe the truth, even if you can’t see it.

“God, are You here?” “God, have You abandoned me?” “God, are You keeping me from something good?” “God, do You care about me?” “God, do You really love me?” No matter the questions your heart is asking, trust the truth that God is good. Because on the other side of every battle, and at the end of your life, you will be able to see and declare the answer that has always been true:

“God is good.”

“Is He really?”

“Yes, He is.”

4 Tips to Maximize Your Bible Reading in 2023

4 Tips to Maximize Your Bible Reading in 2023

With the start of a new year, many of us have a renewed interest and commitment to reading the Bible. Whether we’re a seasoned Bible reader or we’re just getting started, reading the Scriptures can be overwhelming. While the Bible is a big and complex book, the Scriptures are designed to be accessible to all of us! I hope you are ready to jump in, or continue, your Bible reading in the new year.

As you begin your Bible reading for 2023, here are 4 tips to help maximize your reading of God’s Word this year.

Tip #1: Read big
With just a quick glance, it is obvious that the layout of most Bibles is very different from most of the books we read. Take a book from your bookshelf or book stack, open it, and compare it to the Bible. Most likely the Bible is formatted very differently. The majority of Bibles are printed with two columns of text (usually) on each page. There are numbers everywhere—big numbers that are for chapters and small numbers that are verses. Your favorite novel doesn’t have all those markings.

The history of Bible publishing and how we got our modern Bible is fascinating and revealing. The modern Bible is a very different experience than when it was originally written. For example, the writings of the apostle Paul were letters—letters written on parchment, delivered by a messenger. The letters were probably read out loud to a group of people who had gathered to hear them. There were no book titles. No chapters. No verses. No footnotes. No section headings. No study notes. No commentary. No leather covers. It was just a letter.

We’ve added a lot since then, especially in recent years.

Chapters were not added to the Bible until the 13th century by Stephen Langton, Archbishop of Canterbury. He was writing a commentary and used chapter numbers pragmatically as a way of finding things in his reference work. Verses were added some 300 years later in the 16th century, again as a pragmatic tool. In the history of the Bible, these are relatively modern features.

Since then, we’ve added a lot of other features: section headings, red letters, commentary. Bible publishers have been marketing the Bible in ways that grab our interests with specialty Bibles that have supplemental materials just for the niche reader.

None of that is necessarily bad, but some Bible scholars are beginning to question how our modern Bible has changed the way we read it.

One of the unintended consequences of all the things we’ve added to the Bible is that we read in small, bite-sized bits. We read a verse here and a verse there. Our eyes are trained to stop at section headings that create breaks in the text that the author may have never intended. We tend to read small sections of the Bible that correspond to a devotional guide or a Bible reading plan.

And these comments aren’t intended to be critical.  Walk Thru the Bible publishes Bible reading plans and devotional guides and Bibles to help you read through God’s Word.

However, we tend to read small—a few verses, maybe a section, perhaps a chapter. In reading small, we miss a lot. We miss the grand storyline of a book. We miss the broader contexts of what we are reading. We miss the opportunity to get lost in the beauty of the Bible the way we might as if we are curled up with our favorite novel. The Bible becomes a checklist to get done rather than a story to be mesmerized with.

As you read the Bible this year, I encourage you to try something new: read big!

Bigness refers to the amount of Bible we are reading. Find time to sit down and read large portions of the Bible. Don’t read verses or sections or even chapters. Read entire books at a time. Carve out some time and read a Gospel in one sitting. Or read Paul’s letters as if you had just gotten a letter from a friend that you wouldn’t put down until you are finished. Or read the entire book of Ruth at one time.

It may not be practical for you do that every day. But can you find time once a week to read big? When we read complete books or movements in the Bible, we will hear and experience and love this book in different ways that invite us to truly engage with God’s Word.

Tip #2: Read in community
How good are you at keeping New Year’s resolutions? If you are like the rest of us, then you’re probably not great at them either. The majority of resolutions made in a new year—like eating healthy, saving money, making time to exercise, reading more, starting a new hobby, learning a new skill—aren’t kept or accomplished. For many of us, they only last a few weeks. Sometimes it is just a few days.

A lot of Christians started the new year with a big dream of reading the Bible more—maybe daily or all the way through.

And for all of our good intentions, sticking with it is hard.

One of the best ways to stick with our Bible reading commitment is to read in community.

We find support systems for all sorts of new behaviors instead of going at it alone. Groups and support systems serve as a motivation and, most importantly, as accountability to stick with those new commitments. We know that motivation and accountability are important and will increase the likelihood that we stick with hard things, especially when we don’t do them alone.

Why should Bible reading be any different? Why do we think we have to do this alone?

If we know we need some accountability and community to exercise and eat healthy and lose weight, what if we found accountability and community to read the Bible this year?

Finding a small group of people (your Bible study group, family, friends) and reading on the same Bible reading schedule is a powerful motivation to stick with it—especially if you hold each other accountable by discussing what you are reading together.

Tip #3: Pray the Scriptures
What is the most unusual thing you’ve ever had on your Christmas list? When my oldest son was around 5 years old, he added a bag of dirt as a last-minute addition to his list. He wanted some dirt to build a track for his toy trucks, so we made sure he unwrapped some dirt on Christmas morning. However, we did get some strange looks when he told people what was on his Christmas list!

As a Christ follower, I wonder sometimes how God views the kinds of requests that we make in prayer. Do my prayers sound like a spoiled kid who asks for and expects everything? Or do they sound like random requests like asking for a bag of dirt for Christmas?

In John 15:7, Jesus makes a remarkable promise, “If you remain in Me and My words remain in you, ask whatever you wish, and it will be done for you.”

Our attention is usually drawn to the last part of that verse: Ask whatever you wish and it will be done for you. What a remarkable promise! But Jesus qualifies that with an often overlooked “if”—if you remain in Me and My words remain in you. 

How do we pray asking God what we wish for but doing so knowing that God’s Word has remained in us? The answer to this question is why I think it is important to pray the Scriptures—which is the third tip to maximize your Bible reading in the new year.

Praying the Scriptures is a longstanding discipline of using the Bible as our guide in prayer. As you read the Bible, pause and pray back to God the ideas or even the words you’ve read. It may be a prayer of thanksgiving as the Bible reminds us of God’s goodness in our life. Or it could be a prayer of confession when we’ve read something that convicts us. Or it may be a request that is prompted by what we’ve read. Or it may simply be a prayer of worship and adoration for what the Word has revealed about God.

Praying the Scriptures often requires a slow and deliberate reading of the Bible. However, it is one of the most effective ways to align our prayers with God’s will and God’s Word. If you’ve not been praying your way through the Bible, try experiencing the Scriptures through the lens of prayer in the new year.

Tip #4: Listen instead of read
There is an interesting, and perhaps too easily overlooked, instruction in 1 Timothy 4:13, “Until I come, devote yourself to the public reading of Scripture, to preaching and teaching.”

Most of us, especially in the west, have unlimited access to the Bible. From a copy of the Scriptures that we have in our homes or simply opening an app on our phone or even listening through the Word, we have the remarkable privilege of reading the Bible for ourselves.

The transmission of the Bible in the early church was done largely through public reading. In the first century, all throughout the Greco Roman world, there were public reading events as a means of how literature was commonly shared. Two thousand years ago in the early church, in the absence of digital media and when printed copies were hand written, public reading was the most efficient means of distribution.

One way to add variety to our Bible reading and experience the Bible in a different way is to return to how God’s Word was received for most early believers—listening to the Bible.

At Walk Thru the Bible, our prayer is that this year is a year where your passion for the Word of God is ignited in new and fresh ways. The Bible changes everything—and we hope you give it a chance this year to change you.

~ by Michael Gunnin, Walk Thru the Bible’s Chief Growth Officer

Finding Time to Read the Bible

Finding Time to Read the Bible

Turning the calendar into a new year often sparks a desire to step into new adventures, start healthy habits like exercising and eating well, read more books, get our finances in order, and more, with a renewed resolve for improving our lives.

Yet, it’s no secret that most of our best intentions don’t result in lasting change. Researchers vary on how long New Year’s resolutions will last, but it’s not promising. We all know it – resolutions usually don’t stick. Strava—the fitness app that is popular with cyclists and runners—deemed January 19 as “quitters day” because 19 days into the new year was when most people quit their new exercise commitments.

The desire to do something new in the new year isn’t enough for most people to stick with it.

The same is true of Bible reading. The beginning of a new year often stirs a desire within us to read through the Bible. There is no shortage of Bible reading plans that can guide you from Genesis to Revelation over the next 12 months. But more than a few of us who have wanted to read through the Bible in the new year never made it out of Genesis, or we got lost with the Israelites in the wilderness, or we got bogged down in the regulations in Leviticus.

For lots of would-be Bible readers who set out to read the Bible through in a year, one of the major reasons people give up Is the struggle to find time for daily Bible reading.

Bible reading commitments get squeezed out by all the other stuff that fills our days. Unfortunately, the new year doesn’t come with any extra minutes in the day.  To find time to read the Bible in 2023, we are going to have fit it into what is probably already a schedule that is too full.

But how? How can we do it? How can we find time to read through the Bible in 2023? Here are three practical suggestions.

Repurpose Your Time
A rather simple strategy to find time to read the Bible is simply to repurpose time.

My 11-year-old son often asks my wife to read the Bible to him in the evening. We love that he wants to hear the Bible! But after school, homework, sports practices, and dinner, finding time to read the Bible was becoming a challenge. So, my wife found a creative, yet somewhat comical solution. After he gets in the shower, she goes in the bathroom, closes the lid to the toilet, and sits there and reads the Bible to him while he shampoos his hair. He has heard a lot of New Testament this past year from behind a shower curtain!

Maybe bathroom Bible reading isn’t your thing, but where can you repurpose some time to find Bible reading opportunities? There are great audio Bible options to listen to the Bible during your commute or while driving kids to school and activities. Can you read the Bible as you eat your breakfast or lunch? We all spend lots of time waiting—waiting for the doctor, waiting for a hair appointment, waiting for meetings, waiting for flights, waiting in pick-up lines at our kids’ schools, and more. What if we used this waiting time to read the Bible in the new year?

Time is the great equalizer. None of us can create more of it. We all have the same amount each day. But it is our choice as to how we spend our time. Why not be more intentional this year about using some of that time to read the Bible in the new year?

Trim the Time Wasters
Throughout history there have always been temptations to waste time, but modern technologies provide no shortage of ways to simply let time slip by.

Some researchers suggest we spend on average more than two hours on social media sites every day. While at first that may not seem possible, 15 minutes scrolling aimlessly a few times a day can really add up. When you add in any time spent watching TV or time spent playing a game on your phone, this can be a lot of minutes that are simply lost. Most of us could easily sacrifice some time we spend on technology to use time in more productive ways.

Try making an appointment with yourself to read the Bible. Add it to your calendar. Or set an alarm at the same time every day. Treat that appointment or alarm like you would any other important meeting in your day. When we turn off the phone, shut out distractions, quiet the noise of daily life, we can focus on the most important thing in that moment—and that is spending time with our heavenly Father and His Word.

Finding time to read the Bible may not as complicated as we think. If you are looking for time to read the Bible in 2023, it may be a simple as just trimming those time wasters.

Make a Small Sacrifice
As the often-quoted adage goes: The only way to eat an elephant is one bite at a time.

The Bible can seem daunting, overwhelming to read—especially if we are trying to read all of it. However, for most readers, it only takes 12-15 minutes per day to read the entire Bible in one year.  Think about that…just 15 minutes a day and you could read through the Bible every year!

Making a seemingly small sacrifice may be all that is needed to find time to read through the Bible in 2023. Setting your alarm to wake up 15 minutes earlier or reading for 15 minutes before you go to bed or listening to the Bible on your commute is a small sacrifice. Yet this may be all that’s needed to read the whole Bible this year.

Where can you make a small sacrifice to find 15 minutes each day to read your Bible this year? We all get 1,440 minutes a day, each day. Making sure we spend 15 of them to hear from God seems like a wise choice in this new year.

When I’ve talked to people about why they don’t read the Bible, finding time to do it is an often-cited reason. And I get it. Our schedules are full. Our days are long. And the thought of trying to squeeze one more thing into our 24 hours just feels overwhelming. However, an intentional decision to be purposeful with our time—even just 15 minutes a day—means you could read the entire Bible in 2023.

And that decision might be the most important thing you choose to do in the new year.

Happy New Year!

– by Michael Gunnin