Thursday, May 22, 2008

Paying Attention in God’s Word

“Open my eyes, that I may behold wondrous things out of your law” (Psalm 119:18).

How often do I open God’s Word and read it and “behold wondrous things?” Almost every time I read I see something wondrous in Scripture. The question we should ask is, “Why don’t I behold something wondrous every time?” Is it really possible we can open the God-breathed Word of our Father (1 Tim 3:16) and not find something wondrous there? Then why don’t we see it?

The beginning of this answer is in verse 17, “Deal bountifully with your servant, that I may live and keep your word.” To behold wondrous things in God’s law is God dealing bountifully with us. So why would God not deal bountifully with us each time we open the Bible? Can God deal bountifully with someone who has unconfessed, unrepentant sin in their life? If I come to God’s Word with sin I have not confessed and repented of, then I open the Bible and read it, should I be surprised the words fall upon my mind, heart and soul with an icy coldness of indifference? God will convict us of our unconfessed sin when we read His Word, but He will not deal bountifully with us to behold wondrous things out of His law.

The other reason we may not always see something wondrous every time we read Scripture is our carelessness. In 1 Kings 19 we are told of the prophet Elijah meeting God at the opening of a cave. Four different environmental events occur and God is only in one of them. First is the powerful wind that can split rocks, then an earthquake, then a fire, and finally the sound of a soft whisper. God was not in the wind, earthquake or the fire, but only in the soft whisper. If God was only in a soft whisper with Elijah, where might he be with us? In the soft whisper of his word.

Perhaps when we read the Bible and do not behold something wondrous it is because we are in the whirlwind of activity. Maybe we are in the earthquake of rumbling and noisy distractions. Maybe we are in the consuming fire of preoccupation. Perhaps God is speaking in the soft whisper of His written word and we will only behold something wondrous if we are concentrating enough to hear His whisper. Why might God be so restrained in his communication to require our undivided attention? Because he will not share our devotion and His attention with anyone or anything, “I am the LORD; that is my name; my glory I give to no other, nor my praise to carved idols” (Isaiah 42:8).

Therefore, let us each and everyone cast away all that distracts us or will compete with God for our attention and listening ear when we open His word. Then let us each and everyone expect to behold something wondrous out of His law.

Just a few days after my meditating on this verse, Dr. Albert Mohler wrote a timely and penetrative article on distractions and attentiveness in our modern culture. You can read it at the link below.
http://www.albertmohler.com/blog_read.php?id=1155

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