“How
sweet are Your words to my taste, Sweeter than honey to my mouth!
Through Your precepts I get understanding; Therefore, I hate every
false way…Oh, how I love Your law! It is my meditation all the
day.” –Psalm 119:103-104; 97 (NKJV).
Do
you love God’s Word? Can you say with the writer of Psalm 119 that
it is sweeter to your mouth than honey? Can you attest that God’s
law is your meditation all the day? Do you cling to God’s
testimonies? Do you delight in His commandments? Do you yearn for
the Lord’s precepts? If you honestly say yes to all these
questions, then you do have a desire to know God’s Word, to cling
to it, to follow it, to keep it in your heart and mind. Such was the
desire of the writer of the longest Psalm, 119, which is a 176 verse
acclamation of the excellence of God’s Word and how the Psalmist
wanted to hide it in his heart, live by it, and gain delight and life
from it.
Isaiah
40:3 reads: “The voice of one crying in the wilderness,
‘Prepare the way of the Lord, Make straight in the desert a highway
for our God.’ ” Apply this verse to the present dearth of
the knowledge of and love for the Word of God—the spiritual
wilderness or desert in which we, by our own lack of study and
application of the Bible—allow ourselves to live. But there is a
voice in this wilderness. God has given us His Word. “All
scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for
doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in
righteousness: That the man of God may be complete, perfect,
thoroughly equipped for every good work.” (2 Timothy 3:16-17,
NKJV).
Paul’s
strong word about the inspiration of Scripture, and its value for
doctrine, reproof, correction and instruction in righteousness are
emphasized. We don’t have to wander in the wilderness of apathy
and spiritual dearth. We can be well-equipped with the knowledge and
guidance God’s Word provides us. Systematically reading and
studying the Word of God can supply a wonderful highway through the
desert of our spiritual dearth. Just like the shepherds of old came
upon a bee tree in Israel, and had the sweet taste of honey to
assuage their hunger, so the Word of God can satisfy our spiritual
hunger. It can go beyond providing for our spiritual hunger. It can
fill us to overflowing with the precepts, joy and guidance of the
Lord.
I
need to establish some necessary guidelines when I open God’s Word,
the Bible. When I approach it, I am entering holy ground. I am not
seeking an explanation for God. He is, and I am
seeking His voice. We need to pray, “Maranatha, Our Lord,
come!” (1 Corinthians 16:22). Maranatha is a word we
associate with the second coming of Jesus Christ. But it can also
mean, “Lord, come to me now; speak to me now.” Each time we take
the Word to study it, read it for inspiration, seek out its truths
for our edification, we are meeting the Lord. He is speaking
to us! Wonder of wonders, His “Word is a lamp unto my feet, and
a light unto my path” (Psalm 119:105). We would see a
difference in our churches, in our society, in families, in personal
lives of Christians if only we would take seriously our love for the
Word and be diligent in following its truths. As good as they are, a
few devotional verses a day may help, but they are not enough. A
deep-down, earnest, sincere study of the Word is what is needed. Can
you answer yes to the questions posed at the beginning of this
devotional? Would you like to? I hope you will say, “Maranatha,
Lord, come! Talk to me through Your Word!” Then we will say
with the Psalmist, How I love thy Law (Word)! It is my meditation
day and night!” --Ethelene Dyer Jones 11.16.2014
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