Every Step an Arrival
eBook - ePub

Every Step an Arrival

A 90-Day Devotional for Exploring God's Word

  1. 192 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Every Step an Arrival

A 90-Day Devotional for Exploring God's Word

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About This Book

Take ninety days and walk through the pages of the Bible with the definitive voice today in Christian spirituality. Eugene Peterson provides brief commentary and challenging thoughts to stir the biblical imagination and encourage even the weary believer. Each devotional sheds light on one of two main themes: your life and God's nature, and is followed by a pause of sorts - sometimes a question, sometimes a reflection. Readers can use the words there to form their own prayer for the day - certainly not as an ending point, but rather as a beginning for the arrivals that await them.

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Information

Publisher
Hodder Faith
Year
2018
ISBN
9781529319330

DAY 1

The Contrast of Darkness and Light

God created the Heavens and Earth—all you see, all you don’t see. Earth was a soup of nothingness, a bottomless emptiness, an inky blackness. God’s Spirit brooded like a bird above the watery abyss.
God spoke: “Light!”
And light appeared.
—Genesis 1:1–3
There is significance in the first day’s creative act: God said, “Light!” And light appeared. The universe is established with God’s light shining through everything. There is a profound understanding of this in the way in which a day is described in Genesis and subsequently in all Jewish life. “There was evening and there was morning, one day” (verse 5, RSV). An odd way to describe a day, but not if you see it as a victory of God’s light. Evening has the sense, in Hebrew, of termination, bringing to a conclusion. A day is described first as the conclusion of the creative work of God, then night, a time of sleep, the incursion of darkness, a threat to the order of creation, a sign of chaos to come. Does night or light have the last word? The answer is in the phrase “and there was morning, one day.”
Morning in Hebrew has the meaning of “penetration.”1 God’s day is not complete until light shines again, penetrating the darkness and dispersing the shadows. The creative action of God is light, which encloses and limits a temporary darkness. All that we see as a threat to God’s creative action is held in check and controlled by his light. The shadows are there—night descends upon life—and there is that which seems to defy God, to disturb his order and his purpose: sickness, death, trouble, and sorrow. But it does not have the last word: “And there was morning, one day.”
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Identify an area of your life in which you need God’s light to penetrate the dimness. Will night or light have the last word? Talk with God about the clarity you seek.

DAY 2

The Best Start in Understanding Ourselves

God created human beings;
he created them godlike,
Reflecting God’s nature.
He created them male and female.
God blessed them:
“Prosper! Reproduce! Fill Earth! Take charge!
Be responsible for fish in the sea and birds in the air,
for every living thing that moves on the face of Earth.”
—Genesis 1:27–28
When we Christians want to understand ourselves accurately and deeply, we don’t put ourselves in front of a mirror. Persons who stand before mirrors are not famous for the accuracy or depth of their self-understanding. Friends can give valuable insight, but each insight is only a fragment of the reality. When we want to sharpen and deepen self-understanding, we look at Adam.
I hope when I pronounce the name Adam you will not think of a nude figure strolling through a semitropical garden with flowers woven through his hair, murmuring small talk with lions and parakeets, and plucking an occasional pomegranate for a snack. No, Adam is you. Adam is the point at which our self-understanding begins. The Bible does not describe the anatomy of Adam; it does not discuss the psychology of Adam; it does not give us the history of Adam. In those respects, Adam is a great mystery. What we get are a few lines that set forth the meaning of Adam. We discover in him the essentials of what it means to be a human being: we are a result of God’s creative work, we are created to be in relation with other people, and we are responsible for the world around us.
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Often our confusion about the world begins with a lack of clarity regarding who we are. Who are you in relation to others, in relation to God, and in relation to the world? Ask God to make clear to you who he made you to be and what it means to be fully human in his eyes.

DAY 3

Our Faithful God Is Changeless

Until you return to that ground yourself, dead and buried;
you started out as dirt, you’ll end up dirt.
—Genesis 3:19
We desperately need this reminder. It sounds just a bit archaic and is denied by many present circumstances. We are constantly reminded and inevitably impressed with our power. We can do nearly anything we want. No longer bound to the cycles of the seasons, we create our own heat in winter and cold in summer. No longer restricted by the natural rhythms of night and day, we produce our own light and work where we will. We are born in immaculate, germ-free hospitals; grow up in controlled, managed environments; and live our lives dominated by machines, gadgets, inventions, and constructions. We are not dependent on God’s creation and scarcely give it a thought, and then only on vacation.
Meanwhile, a tragic thing has happened to us: we’ve grown fearful. And panic follows terror and leaves a legacy of anxiety that has become the permanent spiritual characteristic of our age. Our times are marked by spiritual disorientation and a haunting soullessness. It is not easy to remember that we are dust, even if we want to. So what do we do?
Here is a single and concrete suggestion: pray a penitential prayer. Psalm 102 is a good place to begin. Read it aloud, start to finish. Remember that you are dust. And remember that the Lord is “enthroned for ever; [his] name endures to all generations” (verse 12, RSV).
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Awakened by restlessness in the night, we fail to shut out our fears. We are taken to our most vulnerable place, the place where we acknowledge we have no control over our destiny. Release your vulnerabilities and fears to God as you pray through Psalm 102.

DAY 4

Unexpected Evidence of God’s Love

GOD told him, “No. Anyone who kills Cain will pay for it seven times over.” GOD put a mark on Cain to protect him so that no one who met him would kill him.
Cain left the presence of GOD and lived in No-Man’s-Land, east of Eden.
—Genesis 4:15–16
The natural course of sin is damnation and death. Left to itself, it avalanches to its own destruction. Resentment breeds resentment, greed begets greed, anger causes anger, lust provokes lust, reprisals ignite worse reprisals, and deceit is matched by deceit. The cycle of sin spirals, increasing in intensity and rushing to destroy itself by its own acts. Anybody can see that, and everybody experiences it.
But then God breaks the cycle. He intervenes in this relentless, compulsive, cause-effect sequence with “Not so!” God does this divinely creative act, placing a mark of his redeeming love on man the sinner so that there is an opportunity to respond to love and grace. Cain was not relieved of the loneliness, the wandering, and the sense of loss that followed his murdering his brother. But he was able to go to a new place and found a city and became ancestor to a series of creative giants. The mark God placed on him enabled him to live beyond the guilt and judgment he well deserved but God did not permit. Cain carried with him the consequences of his sin, but he did not carry God’s continuing anger. It was just the opposite: Cain was marked with the sign of God’s protective care.
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Think about the ways you are living with the consequences of things you have done and said. Ask God to help you make amends, to make restitution to those you have wronged. As you do this, ask him to show you the marks of his love placed on you.

DAY 5

God Is Not a Problem Solver On Call

GOD did to Sarah what he promised: Sarah became pregnant and gave Abraham a son in his old age, and at the very time God had set. Abraham named him Isaac.
—Genesis 21:2–3
As simple as they are, birth stories do some things for persons of faith that need doing over and over and over again, for our tendency is to do one of two things with God. One is to flatten him down into the banal and the humdrum. We lose all sense of mystery. We reduce him to morals or platitudes or a genial source of good advice. We lose all sense of the transcendent or the glorious or the beyond. The other tendency is to sentimentalize God into diversion or entertainment. We fantasize him and hope for an escape from whatever we don’t like about what is happening to us at the time. Most of us do one of these two things alternately, yet our lives are unchanged.
The message of the gospel is that God invades us with new life, and the life changes what we presently are. He is not a means by which we solve problems. He is not a means to avoid problems. He creates new life. He is not a problem solver but a person creator. These birth stories are all around you—in the person of your child or your wife or your husband or your friend or your parent or your brother or your sister or your neighbor. Be observant. Be aware.
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God is “not a problem solver but a person creator.” Have you viewed God as a means to an end, a divine solution to problems rather than a Creator who walks with you through life? Ask him to birth a holy awe in your life.

DAY 6

Roadblocks Mean Nothing to God

I’ll bless you—oh, how I’ll bless you! And I’ll make sure that your children flourish—like stars in the sky! like sand on the beaches! And your descendants will defeat their enemies. All nations ...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. About the Author
  3. Title Page
  4. Copyright
  5. Contents
  6. Letter to the Reader
  7. DAY 1: The Contrast of Darkness and Light
  8. DAY 2: The Best Start in Understanding Ourselves
  9. DAY 3: Our Faithful God Is Changeless
  10. DAY 4: Unexpected Evidence of God’s Love
  11. DAY 5: God Is Not a Problem Solver On Call
  12. DAY 6: Roadblocks Mean Nothing to God
  13. DAY 7: Resurrection Faith in Song
  14. DAY 8: Moving Aside to Give God Room
  15. DAY 9: Begging for an Idol
  16. DAY 10: What Really Happens in the Desert
  17. DAY 11: Serving God Involves Being Served by Him
  18. DAY 12: Defilement and Damnation
  19. DAY 13: Saying Right While Doing Wrong
  20. DAY 14: The Messiah Is Light and Power
  21. DAY 15: Forgiving Disobedience, Renewing Life
  22. DAY 16: God Links Your Past, Present, and Future
  23. DAY 17: A Spiritual Skill That Can Renew Your Life
  24. DAY 18: God Ordains Strength and Courage
  25. DAY 19: Memorialize God’s Work in Your Life
  26. DAY 20: If You Know God, Miracles Aren’t Mysterious
  27. DAY 21: Justice and Mercy Go Together
  28. DAY 22: Choose Because You’re Chosen
  29. DAY 23: God Knows Our Needs from Our Wants
  30. DAY 24: Obedience Means Adhering to God’s Promises
  31. DAY 25: A Subplot to the Story of Salvation
  32. DAY 26: A Biblical Complaint Against God
  33. DAY 27: Life Is Righteous When It Benefits Others
  34. DAY 28: Make Our Needs and Wants Known
  35. DAY 29: Finding Unity Under God’s Kingship
  36. DAY 30: God Surpasses Earthly Power
  37. DAY 31: Allegiance to God Shows in Your Life
  38. DAY 32: Be Careful to Avoid the Seeds of Failure
  39. DAY 33: A Character That Counts
  40. DAY 34: Worship Sanctifies Time and Space
  41. DAY 35: False Substitutes for God’s Rule
  42. DAY 36: Love Involves a Commitment to Others
  43. DAY 37: Humans Are Intensely Emotional
  44. DAY 38: King David’s Words to Live By
  45. DAY 39: The Tragedy of Rejecting God’s Wisdom
  46. DAY 40: Faith and Experience Dispel Doubt
  47. DAY 41: Prayer Lessons from History’s Wisest Person
  48. DAY 42: Tarnishing God’s Glory
  49. DAY 43: A Very Human Messenger of God
  50. DAY 44: What Gets in the Way of God’s Work?
  51. DAY 45: Religion Versus Knowing God
  52. DAY 46: How Sin Distorts the Fight Against Evil
  53. DAY 47: God Speaks in a Whirlwind of Loss
  54. DAY 48: Condemning Others to Justify Ourselves
  55. DAY 49: Our Significance in Light of God
  56. DAY 50: The Danger of Poorly Aimed Zeal
  57. DAY 51: Can Enthusiasm Substitute for Wisdom?
  58. DAY 52: Praying, Again, in Desperation
  59. DAY 53: Moods Are Fickle, but God Is Faithful
  60. DAY 54: Longing for God’s Freshness
  61. DAY 55: God’s Actions Prompt Worship
  62. DAY 56: Seek God, Not His Creation
  63. DAY 57: God’s Forgiveness Unifies Our Lives
  64. DAY 58: God Joins Us in All of Life
  65. DAY 59: God’s Word Explains His Actions
  66. DAY 60: God Became Human to Elevate Us
  67. DAY 61: God Gives Us Life in Place of Death
  68. DAY 62: God Is Our Only Help
  69. DAY 63: We Were Created for Lives of Faith
  70. DAY 64: A Giver Receives the Gift of Happiness
  71. DAY 65: God Made Us for Community
  72. DAY 66: Nothing Is Unimportant to God
  73. DAY 67: Gossip and Hurry Are Our Enemies
  74. DAY 68: Wisdom Brings Harmony
  75. DAY 69: Wisdom Is Life
  76. DAY 70: The Family Is a Place of Healing
  77. DAY 71: God Calls Us to Be Healers
  78. DAY 72: The Intimacy of Teaching Others
  79. DAY 73: We Grow in Relationship to Others
  80. DAY 74: God’s View of Women Breaks Barriers
  81. DAY 75: Everything Is Part of God’s Time
  82. DAY 76: When Faith Becomes Institutionalized
  83. DAY 77: We Alone Can Accept God-Given Joy
  84. DAY 78: We Are Made to Live in Love
  85. DAY 79: God Sees Our Competencies Clearly
  86. DAY 80: The Thankless Task of Helping Others
  87. DAY 81: How God’s Unfairness Saves Us
  88. DAY 82: When Common Sins Get Free Passes
  89. DAY 83: What a Covenant Means to God
  90. DAY 84: God’s Gracious Way of Invading Our World
  91. DAY 85: God’s Coming Salvation
  92. DAY 86: Leaders Should Beware the Justice of God
  93. DAY 87: Ezekiel Saw God’s Work in Advance
  94. DAY 88: God’s Mercy and Natural Consequences
  95. DAY 89: God Is Not a Celestial Robot
  96. DAY 90: The Offended Initiates Forgiveness
  97. Conclusion
  98. Footnotes