BREAD OF HEAVEN
The Lord taught His disciples to pray, “Give us this day our daily bread.” It is true that this refers to our daily provision of food, but more importantly, I believe God was referring to His Word that He speaks daily to us. Just as man cannot survive for long without natural food, neither can he survive spiritually without the Word of God. Our natural life subsists on one kind of food, but our spiritual life subsists on another kind of food altogether. Jesus told the devil during His temptation in the wilderness, “Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God.” He also refers to Himself as the “Bread of Life” in John 6. Therefore, this daily bread is the portion of Himself that He reveals to us through His Word to make us strong spiritually. After all, Jesus is the Word made flesh. Without a daily dose of the Word, we will grow weak and undernourished as Christians.
You see,
salvation is a process, a road that we follow with the Lord. Our Christian experience does not merely
consist of accepting Christ and going to heaven – there is a whole journey in
between. To be “born again” implies that
we are babies to begin with, but it is not God’s intention that we remain
babies forever. He desires that we grow
and mature into the measure and the stature of Jesus Christ. To accomplish this great task, it is
essential that we feed daily from the “Bread of Life.”
When the
Israelites were wandering in the wilderness under Moses’ leadership, God
miraculously sent manna to them daily to satisfy their hunger and to sustain them. It was sent every morning and fell on the
ground like the dew. The people only had
to venture out and gather it in baskets.
If they gathered too much, however, and tried to use it the next day, it
would rot, stink, and be useless. They
had to gather it new every day. Every
sixth day was the exception, though. They
could gather twice as much on that day only, and it would keep through the
Sabbath so that they did not have to gather on that day and could devote
themselves to God.
God gives us here
a clear indication of how important it is that we hear a fresh word from Him
every day – something vibrant, something alive, something that speaks to our
heart and spirit, and challenges us to be more like Christ. We should never settle for something day-old
that does not speak to our soul or our present need. The Word that we heard yesterday spoke to the
needs of yesterday, but does not fit the needs of today. What we desperately need is to get before the
Lord daily, learning to hear from Him
and see Him, and not just give Him
our daily to-do list!
The prophet Amos
told of a time when there would be a famine in the land. It would not be a famine of bread or of meat,
but of hearing the words of the Lord. (Amos
8:11). Could it be that in a time when
God’s Word is everywhere – in print, in the pulpits, and on the airwaves – that
many Christians haven’t discovered how to hear from God in a personal way and
are starving to death? Remember, faith
does not come from listening to the
Word of God, but from hearing the
Word of God. Hearing is being actively
engaged in what the speaker is saying, and applying it to our personal
condition. This is the thing that will
sustain our spiritual life. Christianity
is not a ritual or a set of habits, but a relationship with the one true Giver
of life.
Some Christians
tend to shy away from the “hard sayings”
of God: the things that challenge them and require a change in their habits or
nature. The Word is like a double-edged
sword, though, that divides the soul and spirit and discerns the thoughts and
intents of the heart (Hebrews 4:12). It
reveals our true motives. Sometimes
those motives are very self-serving, and we may mask them so much in a guise of
doing good that we are unaware of our true intent ourselves. God’s Word will cut through the falsehood and
reveal the truth, but, at the same time, encourage us and give us grace to be
better. We must be willing to be naked
and open before the eyes of God so that He can then transform us a little more
into His image each day.
Psalm 94:12
tells us, “Blessed is the man whom Thou
chasteneth, O Lord, and teachest him out of Thy law.” The book of Hebrews
also states that, “Whom the Lord loveth
He chasteneth, and scourgeth every son whom He receiveth.” (Hebrews 12:6). There is a great deal of work that God wants
to do in you and me through His Holy Spirit’s tutelage. We need to be trained, and sometimes we need to
feel the rod of correction! The good
news is that God wouldn’t bother if He didn’t love us and have something good
planned for us. What greater honor is
there than to be trained by God Himself?
Let us, therefore, gladly receive the Daily Bread from His hand, and
grow and be nourished by our Heavenly Father in all things. Let us learn what Jesus meant when He said, “As the living Father hath sent Me, and I
live by the Father: so he that eateth Me, even he shall live by Me.” (John 6:57).
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