Skip to content

Most Recent Blog Posts

Dream Seed

David L. CookBy David L. Cook

Editor’s Note: This post is taken from Golf’s Sacred Journey: The Sequel—7 More Days in Utopia, which follows David L. Cook’s bestselling book, Golf’s Sacred Journey. (That book was the inspiration for the movie Seven Days in Utopia, starring Robert Duvall.) It is a modern-day parable about golfer Luke Chisholm and his rival, both pursuing their common dream of winning the US Open while tackling trials, overcoming fear, and experiencing redemption. Here we find Luke deep in thought the morning of day five in Utopia when his mentor Johnny shows up to dispense his usual dose of divine wisdom.

On day five I did what I always did when I couldn’t sleep. I began hitting balls at sunup. The morning air was fresh in the Sabinal Valley. The dew shimmered as the sun rose slowly over the eastern hills. The range is a golfer’s haven. It’s our go-to place to think, to figure things out. Johnny’s story about the Dream-Giver fueled my imagination, inspiring thoughts of greatness for the first time in a long time.

I had dreamed of winning the US Open, but it wasn’t “the” dream. I was beginning to understand that victories in the games of life were only a destination along the way to something much bigger. I also knew that the new swing was somehow a vehicle, not an end to itself.

At about eight Johnny showed up at the range in his old Ford pickup, slung open the door, and said, “Come on, let’s go for a ride. You’ll have plenty of time to practice this afternoon.” Somehow he knew that last night was a door-opening experience. Today was about walking through the door.

We drove deep into his ranch to a 25-acre oat patch. Leaving the truck at the gate, we hiked to the middle of the cool, green field of oats dotted with wildflowers. It was one of the few planting fields on the large ranch. Standing in the middle of the field provided a 360-degree panorama of the Texas Hills. This piece of ground was surrounded by ten oak-covered peaks. The field itself was flat and showed evidence of the many animals that tracked through this restaurant of choice during the winter and spring.

He propped one foot up on the large, white stone he often sat on to watch the sun rise. Chiseled into the stone was the number 33:3, a reference to Jeremiah 33:3. “Call to me, and I will answer you and tell you great and unsearchable things that you do not know.”

“I like this spot,” he said. “It’s out here, away from the distractions of the rat race, where I hear most clearly. It’s a place where I catch a glimpse of the supernatural revealing parables of life. Let me show you what I mean.

“This field has been plowed and planted in oats for nearly a hundred years. There’s no telling how many different plows and planters have been used, but let me show you one of them, the one that delivered a great revelation to me a few years back.”

We continued our walk to the opposite side of the field where Johnny opened a double gate that he used to access the field to plow. We walked down the fence line to an antique farm implement sitting among an encroaching persimmon bush, cactus, and a red ant bed.

“The rancher who worked this land years ago pulled this plow and seed bin out of the field the last time he plowed it. He unhooked it and left it here, never to do again what it was made to do,” Johnny said. “That was about 70 years ago.

“I walked this area before but never thought about the old plow and seed bin until one day as I was praying in the field.” He continued, “On that particular day as I was closing the gate I noticed this antique and was intrigued. As I walked over, I became curious about how it worked. I saw the plow and then this seed bin.”

Johnny encouraged me to look inside. As I lifted the lid, frozen with rust, it creaked and groaned. Sunlight filled the bin, revealing a treasure: oat seeds. It was half full of old oat seeds that were meant to be planted 70 years ago, stuck in the seed bin to never produce fruit.

“Dream seed,” Johnny said. “God plants dreams in the hearts of everyone, but for most of us, the seed gets trapped inside. Mostly it’s fear that traps it—fear that it’s too big, that I’m too small, that I might fail, that I might be laughed at, that the cost is too great.”

He dodged an assault from an angry red wasp that flew from his guard post in a dark corner of the bin. “The source of fear is the accuser, the dream-taker,” he said. “He is the true enemy of the dream seed.”

Carefully looking for other wasps, I reached in to feel the seed. I grasped a handful, allowing it to run through my fingers and let it fall back into the bin. I kept one seed in my hand, holding it between my thumb and index finger.

“Keep it,” I heard Johnny say.

“Take the seed and your journal and find an oak tree on the edge of the field to sit under. Quiet your mind and ask God about the seed, to identify it for you as well as the fears that prevented it from being planted. Use your journal to scribe all you hear from the Dream-Giver and plant the seed in the oat patch as a symbol to Him that you trust Him with your dream. The Scriptures say, ‘Unless a seed falls to the ground and dies, it cannot produce fruit.’ When we give it to Him we will see it fulfilled.

“One oat plant could produce ten or more seed heads easily. If one of the seeds left in the seed bin had been planted ten years ago and produced ten seeds, and each of those had produced ten the next year, and if this continued for ten years, that one seed would have produced ten billion seeds.

“The seed you hold in your hand represents the power of the dream seed inside of you to change history, to change eternity,” Johnny said. “On your last trip you buried the lies that had been holding you back in life. This time you are planting seed that will propel you forward to your God-given dreams. Just listen.”

I was drawn to a large oak on the south end of the oat patch. I spotted a nice patch of grass to sit on and leaned back against the trunk. Utopia is in the middle of nowhere, and this spot was about five miles from there. It was quiet. Butterflies and dragonflies moved about the oat patch. Rain lilies and miniature daisies dotted the landscape. Doves dove into the field, seemingly from out of nowhere. A Vermillion Flycatcher snatched up flying insects as though he were shagging flies from the cedar posts. I watched, taking it all in.

I felt connected with myself, connected with God. Then I heard Him speak. I heard it in my heart, in the deep place of my spirit. It wasn’t audible; it was clearer than that. It was peaceful and profound, like the weight of a warm quilt on a cold night.

“Golf is not your vocation; it is your platform. It is a place for sowing seeds of light, hope, and life, especially inside the ropes on tournament day where most players check out, allowing the selfishness of the moment and pressure of the day to close the door to true adventure and revelation.

“Don’t be afraid of the new swing. It is part of your platform, and it will set you apart. It will inspire seekers of truth in all walks of life to open the locked vault of false tradition’s stronghold. You will speak greatness into many as I flood you with insight. You will live life as a noticer as you listen to me. You will bring life where there is death, light where there is darkness, hope where there is pain, and freedom to those trapped in fear.

“Your fear is that if you do this, you will miss out, that you will not play well, that you will be wasting a career, and that you will look like a fool. But when you choose this path you will find life; you will be filled to overflowing with what victory can’t deliver. When you forget about yourself and focus on those with whom I cross your path, your performance will soar and you will play fearlessly, knowing neither failure nor victory has any hold on you. You will be relentlessly competitive yet full of grace, tenacious yet full of peace. And if you trust me instead of resisting, like Johnny’s horses, you will receive soul freedom.”

I knew I had just received the key for the true zone, a performance zone that defied typical wisdom. The revelation came in like a 220-volt current to a 110 outlet.

There is no experience like receiving a revelation, a call to greatness. No victory, no treasure, no person or object can compete with the overwhelming sense of security created by the Voice. To know that God is close and personal changes the game. This was the confirmation I had prayed for.

I had found new life on Easter morning on my first trip to Utopia. Today I received my place in the game. Everyone has a place in the game. The anxiety-driven lies of the dream-taker have relegated most to an unfulfilled destiny, wasted seed in an old seed bin.

To know that I was called to bring freedom to dreams trapped in rusty seed bins was profound. I had a choice: faith or fear. There was no other option. I chose faith, and in that instant I became a dream-guardian.

No longer was I afraid of the US Open. It was a platform on a journey of significance. I planted my dream seed five miles from nowhere. It became an open door to everywhere.

________

Golf's Sacred Journey: The SequelTaken from Golf’s Sacred Journey: The Sequel—7 More Days in Utopia by David L. Cook. Click here to learn more about this title.

Golf is more than a game. Behind every stroke and ace, there are hours of practice. Before every trophy, there is sacrifice. At every driving range, there are successes and failures. And inside every golfer, there is a story.

In Golf’s Sacred Journey: The Sequel, the book that follows bestselling Golf’s Sacred Journey, professional golfer Luke Chisholm returns to his winsome and wise mentor, Johnny Crawford for what he’s best at: advice. This time, Luke needs help of a different sort. He needs guidance on playing in the most difficult golf tournament in the world: the US Open. Victory is in sight.

From bestselling author and performance psychologist Dr. David Cook, Golf’s Sacred Journey: The Sequel is the fascinating byproduct of counseling thousands of athletes over the decades — from PGA Champions to Olympic athletes. His expertise weaves throughout this suspenseful and memorable sequel.

Luke’s story unfolds from the practice course of Utopia, Texas, to the fairways of the US Open. It’s there that T.K., Luke’s rival, re-enters the picture. Their rivalry comes to a head at the US Open. Their clash is epic, the payoffs and costs are great.

In this memorable book, you will acquire lessons about golf and life that you never expected as Luke and T.K. overcome gripping fears, trials, and brokenness as they pursue their God-given dreams. Golf’s Sacred Journey, the Sequel will deeply inspire you both on and off the green.

This is a story of two golfers. This is a story of redemption. And in the end, it’s not just about a game.

David L. Cook. Author, speaker, entrepreneur, and mental training coach are the roles Dr. David L. Cook has assumed over the past two decades. His clients have included NBA World Champions, National Collegiate Champions, PGA Tour Champions, Olympians, and many Fortune 500 companies. He is the author of the bestselling book Golf’s Sacred Journey. He and his wife, Karen, have been married for over 35 years, have two daughters, and live in the hill country of Texas.

Bible News Roundup – Week of May 6, 2018

Read this week’s Bible Gateway Weekly Brief newsletter
Bible Gateway Weekly Brief
Newsletter signup

Support Bible Gateway—Browse the Bible Gateway Store
BibleGatewayStore.com

Blacks More Likely Than Others in US to Read the Bible Regularly, See It as God’s Word
FactTank
Read the Bible on Bible Gateway

People Who Regularly Read the Bible Say It’s Better Than Coffee to Jump-Start Their Mornings
ABS News Release
State of the Bible 2018: Bible Engagement Segmentation Report

From Genesis to Revelation: Nursing Home Helps Break Public Bible-Reading Record One Book At a Time
McKnight’s Long-Term Care News
Read the Bible Gateway Blog post, Scripture Says Reading the Bible in Public is Important

Armenian Gospels on Display at Museum of Bible in Washington
Public Radio of Armenia
Read the Bible Gateway Blog post, A Collection of Bible Museums & Exhibits

After 40 Years of Bible Translation in Australian Outback Pitjantjatjara, Paul Eckert Says Goodbye
Eternity News
Read the Bible Gateway Blog post, SIL International and Zondervan Academic Working Together to Aid Global Bible Translation Efforts
Read the Bible Gateway Blog post, Bible Translation Organizations

Bible Society of Nigeria Marks Bible Week, Seeks Prayers For Nigeria
Independent

Israel’s Millennia-Old ‘Biblical Diet’
BBC News

See other Bible News Roundup weekly posts

Thousands already have! Try your 30-Day free trial today!
Remove banner ads and expand your Bible reading experience using our valuable library of more than 40 top resources by becoming a member of Bible Gateway Plus. Get biblically wise and spiritually fit. Try it free for 30 days!

Download Bible Gateway’s New Bible Audio App

Download Bible Gateway’s New Bible Audio AppBible Gateway’s new Bible Audio App now joins the award-winning Bible Gateway App in making Scripture as convenient and mobile for you as your smartphone or tablet.

With Bible Gateway’s Bible Audio App you can hear as well as read (at the same time) the Bible while on your daily commute, doing household chores, or as you drift off to sleep. Listen and read along with the Bible wherever you have an internet connection. It’s free and easy to use.

Bible Gateway’s Bible Audio App is a great tool to help you memorize Bible verses and passages. The verse text appears on your screen as you listen and changes when the spoken verse changes. And you can quickly swipe to navigate between verses.

Listen to a variety of Bible translations, including the

All versions are available in both text and audio.

Download Bible Gateway’s New Bible Audio App

  • Choose from multiple audio narration styles for the NIV, KJV, and NVI, including Dramatized and Voice-only.
  • Follow along as you listen with text and audio synchronization.
  • Navigate quickly anywhere in the Bible.
  • Memorize Scripture more effectively by setting chapters or verses to repeat.
  • Set a timer so you can establish goals to spend more time in the Word of God or so you can fall asleep while listening.
  • Speed up or slow down playback to listen to the Bible at your own pace.

For additional translations and offline access, simply upgrade to a Bible Audio Gold subscription for an introductory price of $1.99 USD per month or $19.99 USD per year.

  • With the Gold subscription, you’re able to download your favorite Bible translations for listening without encountering your phone’s data plan limits. Anytime. Anywhere.
  • Along with the NIV, KJV, NIrV and NVI, add the New King James Version (NKJV) and International Children’s Bible (ICB) translations to your library and listen to (and read) any of 10 audio Bible recordings.
  • Experience the Bible uninterrupted—enjoy listening to God’s Word without audio or banner ads.

 

Get biblically wise and spiritually fit by becoming a member of Bible Gateway Plus. Try it right now!

Quiz: Can You Identify These Bible Prayers?

   ■   The high priest Eli, seeing Hannah praying, initially rebuked her. Why?
   ■   Psalm 51 is a heartfelt prayer by David. What’s the theme of the prayer?
   ■   While praying for deliverance from an invading army, Hezekiah displayed what item to God?

How well do you know prayers in the Bible? The following 10-question quiz tests your Bible knowledge. Have fun taking it!

At the end of the quiz, be sure to sign up to receive the free email devotional, Praying Your Way to Spiritual Empowerment. This week-long devotional addresses important issues of prayerful living in the context of strong biblical scholarship. With studies drawn from the “Kingdom Dynamic” notes in the New Spirit-Filled Life Bible (Thomas Nelson, 2018), this devotional will shed light on key principles of Bible-centered, Spirit-filled life and ministry. Live the prayer-filled life that will empower you to bring about the kingdom of God in your community, your church, and your home!

Join Bible Gateway’s 25th Anniversary celebration

Take the quiz below to see how you do—and challenge your friends and followers to beat your score!

[Browse the Prayer Resources section in the Bible Gateway Store.]

Reading about the great prayers of the Bible—some of which changed the course of history in major ways—it’s natural to wonder why our prayer lives today can seem flat and ineffective by comparison. But it doesn’t need to be that way—your prayers can ring out with the same power and effectiveness that these Bible prayers did! If your prayer life could use a boost, here are more free email devotionals focused on prayer to sign up for:

  • The Daniel Prayer: A five-day devotional by Anne Graham Lotz that shows how you can learn to pray like Daniel did.
  • The Daniel Code: A one-week devotional by O.S. Hawkins that explores how Daniel survived and thrived in an ungodly society.

Both of these short devotionals look to the prayer life of the Old Testament hero Daniel as a model, and will show you how to cultivate a habit of earnest and effective prayer like he did.

You’ll become a master of Bible quizzes (because you’ll know the answers) when you join Bible Gateway Plus. Try it right now!

The Bright and Dark Sides of King David: An Interview with Mark Rutland

Mark RutlandThe Bible describes King David as “a man after God’s own heart,” yet it recounts David’s many indiscretions and sins. Do we really reckon with who he was? Have we reduced him to a shepherd boy with a slingshot? How do we come to terms with this flawed-but-mighty king in all his moral complexity?

Bible Gateway interviewed Mark Rutland (@DrMarkRutland) about his book, David the Great: Deconstructing the Man After God’s Own Heart (Charisma House, 2018).

Buy your copy of David the Great in the Bible Gateway Store where you'll enjoy low prices every day

Who is King David in The Bible?

Mark Rutland: It’s, in fact, impossible to grasp a comprehensive view of the history of the people of God without some understanding of David’s important role in that story. The Bible strongly makes the point that Messiah, namely Jesus Christ, was a descendant of David. Acts 14:23 is a perfect example. Throughout the Gospel accounts it’s clear that this reality was an important part of the understanding of first century Judaism. Even the “man in the street” knew Messiah would spring forth from David’s line (Luke 18:38). In addition to his place in the messianic story, the Bible reveals David, as a man, to be a multifaceted genius in genres as diverse as military strategy and poetry. He’s also the true founding monarch of his nation, Saul notwithstanding, and certainly the founder of Jerusalem (1 Chron. 11).

What do you mean that your book is meant to de-comic book David?

Mark Rutland: Many have only the child’s storybook version of David which is over-simplified, sanitized, and non-biblical. Many who remain biblically illiterate know and use the phrase “David and Goliath” and don’t even know it’s from the Bible. They think of little David and his sling shot as they think of Jack and the Bean Stalk. Likewise, others know the basic story of David and Bathsheba but think it’s from Shakespeare. Even some Bible readers have a VBS view of David—the cute kid stuck on a felt board—but lack the robust picture of the complex and often conflicted man and leader whom Scripture reveals.

Why is it important to understand David’s gritty side?

Mark Rutland: First of all, it’s important simply because it’s in the Bible. God included the darker stories of Scripture for a reason and we ignore them—any of them, and there are plenty—at great cost to ourselves. Biblical cautionary tales are neat to do precisely that: caution us. Furthermore, we should read of David’s darkest seasons because they reveal two great realities: the terrible cost of sin and the wonderful grace of God.

Describe the times in which David lived.

Mark Rutland: David was born, 3000 years ago, which places him at the end of the Bronze Age. The technology of iron was so new that the Bible goes out of its way to say that Goliath’s spearhead was made of iron (1 Sam. 17:7) while the rest of his armor was bronze. It was a primitive violent time of constant war, invasion, and conquest.

How do you see David as a strange boy?

Mark Rutland: I think it’s impossible that his elder brothers did not think of him that way when he told of his supernatural victories over dangerous animals which attacked his sheep. Furthermore, he was a child prodigy at music whose fame reached all the way to King Saul’s pavilion. They thought him a strange child and perhaps an arrogant little liar. Witness Eliab”s accusation in 1 Samuel 17:28.

Describe how the Bible recounts David’s dark side.

Mark Rutland: The Bible pulls no punches, not for David nor for anyone. David’s most notorious sin is certainly his affair with Bathsheba and his murderous plot to cover it up. However, that’s not his most destructive sin. The forbidden census which David ordered, against counsel, resulted in a horrible plague from which some 70,000 Israelis died. David was a violent man in a violent world, a polygamist, an adulterer, and a murderer. There just isn’t any way to avoid seeing that if we read and believe the Bible.

How can the Bible call that same person a man after God’s own heart?

Mark Rutland: That’s the question. THE question. The answer lies in David’s unwavering grasp of God’s character. In the face of his own horrible sin with Bathsheba he repented, confessed, endured the pain that followed and wrote Psalm 51 memorializing his sin forever, instead of hiding it. Furthermore in that great Psalm, David pleads for redemption through the blood, and sanctifying grace in the power of the Holy Spirit. David’s heart was after God’s heart. Certainly he sinned. Big time. But David’s deepest self knew the goodness and grace of God and never let go of it.

What do you hope to achieve in the lives of your readers?

Mark Rutland: Above all things I hope the readers of David the Great understand that the real story is not the greatness of David but the greatness and grace of David’s God. If we can understand that, we can believe that despite our own failings the grace of Almighty God can still bring us to our destiny, though certainly ours may not be as grand as David’s.

What is your favorite Bible passage and why?

Mark Rutland: Without question it’s Psalm 23. That may seem a trite choice to some, but that great poem of David is dear to my soul. In a previous book, 21 Seconds to Change Your World, I documented the redemptive ministry of Psalm 23 to my inner self, along with the Lord’s Prayer, at a difficult season in my own life.

What are your thoughts about Bible Gateway and the Bible Gateway App?

Mark Rutland: I’m proud to endorse Bible Gateway as a usable, accessible instrument of personal growth and discipleship. In this stressful and frightening century upon which we’re now entered, we need every vehicle through which persons can find, learn and grow in the power and truth of the Word of God. Among those using modern technology, none is better than Bible Gateway. Thank you for allowing me to share with your constituency the great complicated story of David the Great.


Bio: Mark Rutland, PhD, is a New York Times bestselling author of such books as David the Great, Most Likely To Succeed, Character Matters, and 21 Seconds to Change Your World and columnist for Ministry Today magazine. He is currently the president of Global Servants and the National Institute of Christian Leadership, having served previously as the pastor of a mega-church and president of two universities. Rutland and his wife, Alison, have been married and in ministry together for more than 50 years. They have three children and nine grandchildren. Through their ministry, Global Servants, the Rutlands established House of Grace home for tribal girls in Chiang Rai, Thailand, to protect little girls from child sex trafficking. Since 1986 House of Grace has been “saving little girls for big destinies.” Its work in West Africa, largely in remote villages, has built churches and village hygiene services in five countries. For speaking appointments Rutland is represented by Premiere Speakers Bureau.

You’re missing out if you’re not yet a member of Bible Gateway Plus. Try it right now!

How to Observe USA’s National Day of Prayer

How can a prayer-filled life empower you to bring about the kingdom of God in your community, your church, and your home?

In 2018, the National Day of Prayer in America was based on Ephesians 4:3, which challenges us to mobilize unified prayer to “Make every effort to keep the unity of the Spirit through the bond of peace.” Today, spend time in prayer and meditation. Read the following 5 great and memorable prayers in the Bible to use as inspiration today and in the future.

[Read the Bible Gateway Blog post, Be Bold in Prayer: An Interview with Susie Larson]

You’ll find another source of inspiration in Bible Gateway’s free email devotional series, called Praying Your Way to Spiritual Empowerment. This brief week-long devotional addresses important issues of prayerful living in the context of strong biblical scholarship. So check it out here.

Praying Your Way to Spiritual Empowerment
[Browse the Prayer Resources section in the Bible Gateway Store.]

#5: David’s Prayer of Repentance (Psalm 51)

Convicted of a terrible sin, the Israelite King David cried out to God with one of the most moving confessions and pleas for forgiveness in all of the Bible.

Have mercy on me, O God,
    because of your unfailing love.
Because of your great compassion,
    blot out the stain of my sins.
Wash me clean from my guilt.
    Purify me from my sin.
For I recognize my rebellion;
    it haunts me day and night.
Against you, and you alone, have I sinned;
    I have done what is evil in your sight.
You will be proved right in what you say,
    and your judgment against me is just.
For I was born a sinner—
    yes, from the moment my mother conceived me.
But you desire honesty from the womb,
    teaching me wisdom even there.

Purify me from my sins, and I will be clean;
    wash me, and I will be whiter than snow.
Oh, give me back my joy again;
    you have broken me—
    now let me rejoice.
Don’t keep looking at my sins.
    Remove the stain of my guilt.
Create in me a clean heart, O God.
    Renew a loyal spirit within me.
Do not banish me from your presence,
    and don’t take your Holy Spirit from me.

Restore to me the joy of your salvation,
    and make me willing to obey you. — from Psalm 51 (NLT)

#4: The Early Church Prays for Courage (Acts 4)

Continually harassed for their beliefs and activities—even for a miraculous healing!—the early church gathered to thank God for delivering them from prison or worse.

…they raised their voices together to God and said, “Sovereign Lord, who made the heaven and the earth, the sea, and everything in them, it is you who said by the Holy Spirit through our ancestor David, your servant:

‘Why did the Gentiles rage,
and the peoples imagine vain things?
The kings of the earth took their stand,
and the rulers have gathered together
against the Lord and against his Messiah.’

For in this city, in fact, both Herod and Pontius Pilate, with the Gentiles and the peoples of Israel, gathered together against your holy servant Jesus, whom you anointed, to do whatever your hand and your plan had predestined to take place. And now, Lord, look at their threats, and grant to your servants to speak your word with all boldness, while you stretch out your hand to heal, and signs and wonders are performed through the name of your holy servant Jesus.” When they had prayed, the place in which they were gathered together was shaken; and they were all filled with the Holy Spirit and spoke the word of God with boldness. — Acts 4:24-31 (NRSV)

#3: Solomon Prays for Wisdom (1 Kings 3)

If God offered to give you whatever you wanted, what would you ask for? The Israelite King Solomon was presented with just such an offer—but he didn’t ask for any of the things you might expect.

At Gibeon the Lord appeared to Solomon during the night in a dream, and God said, “Ask for whatever you want me to give you.”

Solomon answered, “You have shown great kindness to your servant, my father David, because he was faithful to you and righteous and upright in heart. You have continued this great kindness to him and have given him a son to sit on his throne this very day.

“Now, Lord my God, you have made your servant king in place of my father David. But I am only a little child and do not know how to carry out my duties. Your servant is here among the people you have chosen, a great people, too numerous to count or number. So give your servant a discerning heart to govern your people and to distinguish between right and wrong. For who is able to govern this great people of yours?”

The Lord was pleased that Solomon had asked for this. So God said to him, “Since you have asked for this and not for long life or wealth for yourself, nor have asked for the death of your enemies but for discernment in administering justice, I will do what you have asked. I will give you a wise and discerning heart, so that there will never have been anyone like you, nor will there ever be. Moreover, I will give you what you have not asked for—both wealth and honor—so that in your lifetime you will have no equal among kings. And if you walk in obedience to me and keep my decrees and commands as David your father did, I will give you a long life.” — 1 Kings 3 (NIV)

#2: Jehoshaphat Prays for Deliverance (2 Chronicles 20:5-12)

Faced by an overwhelming force of enemies bent on his destruction, King Jehoshaphat called out to God with a prayer that acknowledged his own powerlessness, and entreated God to intervene.

And Jehoshaphat stood in the assembly of Judah and Jerusalem, in the house of the Lord, before the new court, and said, “O Lord, God of our fathers, are you not God in heaven? You rule over all the kingdoms of the nations. In your hand are power and might, so that none is able to withstand you. Did you not, our God, drive out the inhabitants of this land before your people Israel, and give it forever to the descendants of Abraham your friend? And they have lived in it and have built for you in it a sanctuary for your name, saying, ‘If disaster comes upon us, the sword, judgment, or pestilence, or famine, we will stand before this house and before you—for your name is in this house—and cry out to you in our affliction, and you will hear and save.’ And now behold, the men of Ammon and Moab and Mount Seir, whom you would not let Israel invade when they came from the land of Egypt, and whom they avoided and did not destroy— behold, they reward us by coming to drive us out of your possession, which you have given us to inherit. O our God, will you not execute judgment on them? For we are powerless against this great horde that is coming against us. We do not know what to do, but our eyes are on you.” — 2 Chronicles 20:5-12 (ESV)

#1: The Lord’s Prayer (Matthew 6:9-13)

Jesus’ own prayer is certainly the most famous prayer in the Bible—and it’s noteworthy for being short and to-the-point. Asked to demonstrate for his disciples how to pray, here’s how Jesus responded.

Pray, then, in this way:

‘Our Father who is in heaven,
Hallowed be Your name.
Your kingdom come.
Your will be done,
On earth as it is in heaven.
Give us this day our daily bread.
And forgive us our debts, as we also have forgiven our debtors.
‘And do not lead us into temptation, but deliver us from evil. For Yours is the kingdom and the power and the glory forever. Amen.’ — Matthew 6:9-13 (NASB)

The NIrV Seek and Explore Holy Bible: Hunting for God’s Treasure

Buy your copy of the NIrV Seek and Explore Holy Bible: Hunting for God's Treasure Holy Bible in the Bible Gateway Store where you'll enjoy low prices every day

[See and sign up for Bible Gateway’s free email devotionals for families]

The NIrV Seek and Explore Holy Bible: Hunting for God’s Treasure (website) from Zonderkidz (@Zonderkidz) is about engaging the child’s whole being: heart, soul, and mind. Children are joined on their journey through the Bible by nine different animal friends who are each designed to help kids use one of the nine different ways of learning. Endearing art of an antelope, monkey, African elephant, meerkat, hippo, tiger, jaguar, panda bear, and zebra guide children from “Base Camp” to the different sites throughout the Bible that lead them through the story of God’s people.

Buy your copy of the NIrV Seek and Explore Holy Bible, Hardcover in the Bible Gateway Store where you'll enjoy low prices every day            Buy your copy of the NIrV Seek and Explore Holy Bible: Hunting for God's Treasure, Soft Leather-Look, Periwinkle in the Bible Gateway Store where you'll enjoy low prices every day            Buy your copy of the NIrV Seek and Explore Holy Bible: Hunting for God's Treasure, Soft Leather-Look, Chocolate in the Bible Gateway Store where you'll enjoy low prices every day            Buy your copy of the NIrV Seek and Explore Holy Bible: Hunting for God's Treasure eBook in the Bible Gateway Store where you'll enjoy low prices every day

Features of the NIrV Seek and Explore Holy Bible:

Leading your family in Bible study? Bible Gateway Plus equips you to explore & teach the Bible better. Try it free right now!

Bite-Sized Bible Knowledge: An Interview with Michael Heiser

Michael HeiserWhat if aspects of biblical scholarship could be distilled into understandable bite-sized insights you could read each in 60-seconds to unlock the Bible’s individual sections and main teachings?

Bible Gateway interviewed Michael Heiser (@msheiser) about the 60-Second Scholar Series (Zondervan, 2018).

Buy your copy of Brief Insights on Mastering the Bible in the Bible Gateway Store where you'll enjoy low prices every day

What is the 60-Second Scholar Series and for whom is it written?

Michael Heiser: The series has in mind any Christian who reads the Bible with regularity. Regular Bible readers want to feel confident in their ability to understand the Bible, and to not be totally dependent on others for spiritual food. They want competence in finding answers to questions, living biblically in the culture, and discerning what God wants them to know from his Word. In other words, the series targets people who read the Bible seriously and who want to think well about what they’re reading.

Because that’s who I had in mind, 60-Second Scholar is different than other books about Bible study. Buy your copy of Brief Insights on Mastering Bible Study in the Bible Gateway Store where you'll enjoy low prices every day There are hundreds of “Bible study” books that are actually studies designed to guide the reader to pre-determined conclusions. Then there are devotionals disguised as Bible study guides and “sermons in a book,” where readers are given a mixture of observations about a biblical book that are then translated into how the writer wants the reader to feel when they’re finished. The 60 Second Scholar series doesn’t steer readers to pre-conceived conclusions. It wants readers to experience the thrill of discovery. It doesn’t preach at readers—it informs the mind, not tugs on the heartstrings. 60-Second Scholar is a series of sound advice, frank do’s and don’ts, and specific strategies for thinking well about the enterprise of Bible study.

Buy your copy of Brief Insights on Mastering Bible Doctrine in the Bible Gateway Store where you'll enjoy low prices every day

How difficult was it to limit each chapter’s topic discussion to only two pages?

Michael Heiser: In most cases, it wasn’t difficult at all. I’m used to word count constraints having written over 100 articles for Bible Study Magazine.

What do you mean “let the Bible be what it is”?

Michael Heiser: I mean that the path to real biblical understanding requires that we don’t make the Bible conform to denominational preferences. We have to really embrace the obvious. The Bible is an ancient book (actually, a collection of books) written thousands of years ago, in specific contexts, by people whose worldview was dramatically different than our own.

God chose people from a specific time, place, and culture that have almost no resemblance to ours. Consequently, we need to mean what we say about interpreting the Bible in context. The right context for interpreting the Bible isn’t our own denominations, it’s not the Reformation, it’s not the Puritan era, it’s nothing in contemporary culture. No context outside the Bible’s own context is the correct context for understanding the Bible. Don’t filter the Bible through your worldview. Don’t make it sound modern. Don’t turn it into something it isn’t. Just let it be what it is. Bible study needs to be about understanding the Bible on its own terms.

What is the idea of genre in the Bible and why is it a crucial context for biblical interpretation?

Michael Heiser: Genre is a context that’s crucial for interpretation. We might recall from English lit’ class in high school or college that “genre” is a term that refers to a type of writing or document. The kind of writing something is dictates how we should understand what’s written.

To speak of literary genre is to speak of how any given piece of writing should be characterized in everyday life. Genre is how we describe a type of written document. In modern terms, all the following are examples of genres: email, blog posts, letters, receipts, contracts, poems, certificates, tax forms, wills, fiction, and non-fiction. Many of these can be categorized even more precisely. For example, fiction might include horror, sci-fi, comedic, historical, suspense, mystery, and so on.

Genre is crucial for context because the same word occurring across different types of literature or documents will be understood quite differently. Why? Because genre dictates the perspective for interpretation. If I was looking at the word “court” in a legal document I’d interpret the word much differently than if I was holding a tennis magazine. The word “treat” in a doctor’s note means something different than it would if you found it on a grocery list.

So, genre is a context, and we want to interpret Scripture in context.

Explain your statement, “Don’t second-guess God’s decision in inspiration” and how inspiration was a process, not an event.

Michael Heiser: Fundamentally, I mean we need to trust God’s wisdom in inspiration. If God had wanted to inspire Scripture in a modern age he could have done so. It was God who decided to prepare men living between the second millennium BC and the first century AD to produce the books of the Bible. It was God who decided that they were ready for the task, despite cultural attitudes that we would deem backward. It was God who didn’t require the writers to have advanced scientific and technological knowledge to write everlasting truth. These were God’s choices—do we believe they were good choices, or do we wish God had made other decisions?

My answer is that God’s choices were good choices. God is not incompetent. God intended Scripture to be applicable to people who would live well beyond the first century. He also intended Scripture to be understood by the people who received it originally. Since God is omniscient, he could have given writers living thousands of years ago advanced knowledge without their knowing it. But that knowledge could not have been understood by anyone reading the text until millennia later. Untold millions of people living prior to our time would have had no hope of understanding parts of their Bible. That would have defeated the communicative purpose of the Bible. The “whole counsel of God” (Acts 20:27) would not have been comprehensible, which undermines inspiration’s purpose (2 Tim. 3:17).

On the second item, because the Bible says quite clearly that it’s “God-breathed” (2 Tim. 3:16), we tend to think about inspiration as an otherworldly event. That’s a misconception.

The Bible is a divine book given what 2 Timothy 3:16 says, but it’s also a thoroughly human book. The notion that the words dropped from heaven or were downloaded into the brains of the Gospel writers is deeply flawed and, frankly, dangerous.

Why? Because that idea can’t accommodate what you actually find in the text of Scripture. For example, the notion that God handed out every word just doesn’t work with the Gospels. Three of them (Matthew, Mark, and Luke) overlap in content a lot of the time with respect to what they include about the life of Jesus. But they often have things in different order. Dialogue isn’t always the same. Even when it sounds the same in English, in the Greek text the same words might be used but they might be in different verb tenses or grammatical forms. Certain details of episodes in the life of Jesus might be in two accounts and missing in the third. And when it comes to the Gospel of John, 90% (literally) of what’s in that Gospel isn’t in the other three. The content clearly is not dictated, and if it’s “downloaded,” why would God keep tweaking it, changing it, removing parts of it, etc.?

The Bible never describes inspiration as some sort of paranormal event. What it describes are very human acts. Writers record events and thoughts. They build arguments. They express themselves in poetry. They use sources. They create links between their work and other parts of Scripture. The writers weren’t robots being programmed.

How is Bible doctrine ultimately about engaging the mind?

Michael Heiser: This is true because Bible doctrine is what’s produced by careful consideration of what the Bible says, what its stories imply, and what the behavior of the characters illustrate. In other words, Bible doctrine not only arises from the words of the text, but by thinking carefully about the words of the text—connecting dots, systematizing the content. No doctrine in all its fullness and precision can be found in a single verse. Doctrine is formulated by thinking carefully about the content of many parts of Scripture.

What do you mean Bible study isn’t like marriage?

Michael Heiser: That comment is based on a good piece of advice I got after I’d been married a while (that could have served me well even from the start). In a conversation about handling conflict in marriage a friend asked me this question: Do you want to be happy, or do you want to be right? I caught the drift. Winning a debate and making your spouse happy aren’t interchangeable ideas.

But that doesn’t work for Bible study. When it comes to interpreting Scripture, you want to be right. Flawed analysis and poorly-formed conclusions about what the Bible says aren’t going to produce Bible study bliss. And if we’re teaching others, our goal cannot be keeping people happy with what we discover are flawed beliefs and interpretations. Bible study is meaningless if we aren’t striving to understand God’s Word correctly.

What is your opinion of the importance of memorizing Scripture?

Michael Heiser: Memorizing Scripture is a good thing, but really understanding the meaning of a Scripture passage you might memorize is much better. This is an obvious truth that’s often missed. Memorization isn’t Bible study. Memorization is committing something to memory for later recall. But being able to recollect a verse with precision does not mean you understand it. You could memorize your tax forms, but would that mean do you understand the tax laws? Like I said, this is obvious.

Memorization and study are not interchangeable concepts. Real Bible study demands thinking. Memorizing words is not the same as pondering what words mean and then discovering their meaning.

Why do you recommend using more than one translation in Bible study?

Michael Heiser: First, we need to be clear about what I mean. The wording in the question is important. I’m not recommending to switch Bible versions from time to time when you study Scripture. Rather, I’m suggesting that you have several translations at hand while you’re studying.

Having several English Bible versions open is very useful for detecting things in a verse or passage that might deserve serious attention in your study. Let’s look at an example from Genesis 49:10:

  • NASB (1995) — The scepter shall not depart from Judah, Nor the ruler’s staff from between his feet, Until Shiloh comes, And to him shall be the obedience of the peoples.
  • ESV — The scepter shall not depart from Judah, nor the ruler’s staff from between his feet, until tribute comes to him; and to him shall be the obedience of the peoples.

The two translations are quite different in the boldfaced portion. If you were using more than one translation, you’d notice that easily. So using more than one translation is a good thing to do to spot items that need attention.

What is a favorite Bible passage of yours and why?

Michael Heiser: Psalm 82:1 – “God has taken his place in the divine council; in the midst of the gods he holds judgment” (ESV). When I finally came to understand what this verse was saying, it changed the entire way I read the Bible. I actually wrote a book about that (really, two), but the short answer is tucked away in one of the 60-Second Scholar books!

What are your thoughts about Bible Gateway and the Bible Gateway App?

Michael Heiser: I work for a Bible software company, so I don’t need to be persuaded that digital tools are tremendous assets for Bible study. Bible Gateway is an amazingly useful free online tool—now made accessible anywhere with the App. And it’s more than the Bible—you actually get resources to enable you to understand what you’re reading in the Bible. Honestly, if you’re enthusiastic about reading Scripture and knowing it better, why would you not take advantage of a tool like Bible Gateway?

Where can readers learn more about Scripture from you after they’re done with the 60-Second Scholar series?

Michael Heiser: We seem to be living in the era of podcasts, and I’m no different. I hope people will become avid listeners of my podcast: the Naked Bible Podcast. I post one episode per week and this year we’ll cross the 5 million download mark! If you like the 60-Second Scholar Series (and I know you will), you’ll love the Naked Bible Podcast.


The 60-Second Scholar Series is published by HarperCollins Christian Publishing, Inc., the parent company of Bible Gateway.


Bio: Michael Heiser is a scholar in the fields of biblical studies and the ancient Near East, and he is a Scholar-in-Residence at Faithlife, the makers of Logos Bible Software. Michael has an MA in Ancient History from the University of Pennsylvania, and he has an MA in Hebrew Studies and a PhD in Hebrew Bible and Semitic Languages from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He has published widely in scholarly journals and popular periodicals such as Bible Study Magazine, and he teaches ancient languages online at MEMRA. Learn more about Dr. Heiser and his writings at drmsh.com.

Study the Bible at your own pace by becoming a member of Bible Gateway Plus. Try it right now!

Bible Gateway 25th Anniversary Sweepstakes for May

Page sample from the NKJV Deluxe Reader's Bible. Learn more about it in the Bible Gateway Store where you'll enjoy low prices every day

Learn more about the NKJV Deluxe Reader's Bible, black imitation leather with slipcase in the Bible Gateway Store where you'll enjoy low prices every dayBible Gateway is celebrating its 25th anniversary with a new sweepstakes every month this year! Winners have already been selected for the months of January, February, March, and April. Enter every month!

This month enter for a chance to win a copy of the NKJV Deluxe Reader’s Bible, black imitation leather with slipcase (Thomas Nelson, 2018), which has a suggested retail value of $49.99 (see the NKJV Reader’s Bible website). Four winners will be selected at random. One entry per person; legal residents of the USA 18 years of age and older. Entry period: April 29, 2018 (midnight ET) – May 30, 2018 (11:59 pm ET).

[Read the Bible Gateway Blog post, New NKJV Deluxe Reader’s Bible Offers Elegant Experience of God’s Word]

Once you’ve entered, tell your friends and followers about Bible Gateway’s 25th Anniversary—and what Bible Gateway means to you—in your posts on Facebook, Twitter, and other social media; when you do, use the #MyBibleGateway hashtag to communicate the fun!

[Sign up to receive the New King James Version (NKJV) free email Verse of the Day from Bible Gateway]

[Read the New King James Version (NKJV) Bible translation on Bible Gateway]

Sweepstakes Links:

Bible Gateway’s 25 Years

Venture back to the year 1993. The first widely used graphical World Wide Web browser, Mosaic (later to become Netscape), was introduced, representing a major turning point in the Internet’s journey toward wide-scale user acceptance; US President Bill Clinton put the White House online; the first ever webcam connected to the Internet; and, topping the news in 1993, Bible Gateway, a fledgling idea in the mind of a college staffer, launched as an internal Bible research tool for college students.

Twenty-five years ago, the nascent World Wide Web accounted for only 1% of telecommunications information flow. By 2007, that number rose to 97%. Today, in the center of the information deluge flowing on the Web, sits BibleGateway.com (@biblegateway), the most-visited Christian website in the world; home to more than 200 Bible versions in more than 70 languages; and a trusted resource for more than 140 million people in more than 200 countries every year. Rely on it every day for all your Bible needs.

 

Everybody has questions about the Bible. With Bible Gateway Plus, you’ll be ready to answer them! Try it free today!

How to Find the Strength to Move Forward After a Crisis

Tom HolladayBy Tom Holladay

Finding the strength to start is the first step in putting it together again. That strength begins with our reaction to the problem we’re facing. Our greatest problem is not our problem; it is how we react to that problem. One of the keys to rebuilding is the way we look at problems.

Your reaction to a problem is determined by the way you see that problem. If you look at a problem and think, It’s a disaster; all is lost, then your reaction is going to be despair. If you look at a problem and think, It’s unnecessary; that shouldn’t have happened, then your reaction is irritation. If you look at a problem and think, It’s unfair, then your reaction is anger. If you look at a problem and think, It’s deserved; I did it to myself, then your reaction is guilt or shame.

There is a better way. We can look at every problem and think, It’s an opportunity to trust God. Then our reaction is faith. A faith reaction to our problems will radically change the direction of our lives. Warren Wiersbe wrote, “The optimist sees possibilities in the problems, and the pessimist sees problems in the possibilities. One sees the opportunities and the other sees the obstacles. But the real basis for optimism is faith . . . If we see only the problems, we will be defeated; but if we see the possibilities in the problems, we can have victory.”

Nehemiah describes the problem he was facing this way: “Those who survived the exile and are back in the province are in great trouble and disgrace. The wall of Jerusalem is broken down, and its gates have been burned with fire” (Nehemiah 1:3). The problem was that the people of God were living in disgrace, and the cause of the problem was that the walls of Jerusalem were in ruins.

In Nehemiah’s day, a city’s wall was not a decoration; it was its protection. With the walls in ruins, any enemy could easily attack. A city’s gates were more than an entrance; they were the civic gathering place—the place where the courts and government met. Without its gates, the city was without leadership.

As Nehemiah faced this problem, he faced the same question all of us face: Will I see only the problem, or will I see the opportunity to trust God in the problem? The Bible clearly shows that our problems are to be seen as opportunities for faith:

  • “Dear brothers and sisters, when troubles of any kind come your way, consider it an opportunity for great joy. For you know that when your faith is tested, your endurance has a chance to grow” (James 1:2–3 NLT).
  • “For our light and momentary troubles are achieving for us an eternal glory that far outweighs them all” (2 Corinthians 4:17).
  • “We also glory in our sufferings, because we know that suffering produces perseverance; perseverance, character; and character, hope” (Romans 5:3–4).

The important question always is, “How do we do this?” Nehemiah models some practical steps we can take to begin to react to problems in a new kind of way.

Reacting in a different way is more than just knowing we should think a certain way. That just creates a feeling of guilt. We find ourselves thinking, I know I should have more faith, but I don’t have more faith, and all I can see is the problem. What’s wrong with me? Nehemiah shares some practical things we can do to get out of that trap of guilt-laden thinking.

We see how Nehemiah began to move from the shock of a problem to a reaction of faith in Nehemiah 1:4: “When I heard these things, I sat down and wept. For some days I mourned and fasted and prayed before the God of heaven.”

There are three choices in this verse for beginning to see any problem as an opportunity for faith: mourn, fast, and pray.

  • Mourning is expressing your hurt to God.
  • Fasting is focusing your heart on God.
  • Praying is asking for help from God.

Moving to a place of faith is not accomplished by just flipping a switch. There is a process for beginning to see your problem as an opportunity for faith that includes mourning, fasting, and praying. You cannot choose most of your circumstances, but you can always choose your reaction to those circumstances.

When someone tells you to “just have faith,” although you know they may have your best interests at heart, it can sound like an unreachable platitude. If you could have had faith, you would have had faith, and the words just make you feel guiltier for not having faith! Nehemiah gives us a place to start in the process that gets us to the place of faith when we face a need to rebuild.

________

Putting It Together Again When It's All Fallen ApartTaken from Putting It Together Again when It’s All Fallen Apart: 7 Principles For Rebuilding Your Life by Tom Holladay. Click here to learn more about this title.

Life crises can throw you into a tail-spin—a lost job, a failed relationship, a struggling business, a financial mess. Where do you start? How do you pull it together? How do you begin again?

Tom Holladay experienced a catastrophe first-hand when a sudden flood in California destroyed his home, his church, and the homes of many church members. Tom and his congregation had to rebuild, and they used the principles in the book of Nehemiah to get back on their feet.

Now a teaching pastor at Saddleback Church, Tom will help you discover seven principles for putting it together again that will give you the direction you need to get rolling on that fresh start. Holladay will walk you through seeing every problem as an opportunity, facing the obstacles head on and taking your first step, knowing how to expect and reject opposition, build on your success, and dedicating yourself to the One who rebuilds our souls.

The task of starting again can seem impossible. And sometimes you just need to rebuild your confidence and regain a sense of purpose. If you’re trying to find the emotional energy, but you just don’t have it in you, let Holladay encourage you. He understands how difficult and rewarding the business of rebuilding is. This book is your encouraging how-to guide to starting again and stepping into a better future.

Tom Holladay is the senior teaching pastor at Saddleback Church in Lake Forest, California. Tom’s passion in ministry is to help people discover a love for the Bible and an understanding of God’s truth that changes the way they live. He also assists Rick Warren in teaching Purpose-Driven Church conferences to Christian leaders all over the world. Books he has written include The Relationship Principles of Jesus, Love Powered Parenting, and Foundations: 11 Core Truths to Build Your Life On. He also teaches DriveTime Devotions, a daily ten-minute podcast with more than 26 million downloads. He and his wife, Chaundel, have three children and six grandchildren.