Though the word of God remains the same, advances in technology and transportation have drastically changed the way Christian and church ministry is done. We have gone from having one church in a large parish with one preacher to a global deluge of sermons and services we can tap into without leaving our bedroom. When I was a kid at our church we had a "tape lending library" where the Sunday sermon was quickly recorded on cassette tapes to buy, borrow or share with others. Because Christian radio programming was rare in our area, people would listen to the same cassette throughout the week and bring it back to church on Sunday where it was erased and updated with the most recent offering.
It used to be a family would have to go to a church building to hear a sermon, and during the week as they farmed or conducted business their minds would think back upon what they had heard. I believe we are in an age when we must again refine the simple art of rumination. Think of a cow in a paddock, chewing the cud with contentment. Over and over the ox munches the same bite of grass, regurgitating and chewing again and again until most of the nutrients are absorbed. We live in a day of binge-watching a whole season of shows over a weekend and look forward impatiently until the next installment. For many, gone are the days of listening to the same sermon over and over, reading the same chapter or verse of the Bible again and again. And some Christians have never known a day other than ours, a day of click-bait titles and an insatiable thirst to hear something new. Some have never read through the entire Bible while others speed through several times a year.
So we move on from a sermon and on from a passage of scripture, seeking a new revelation from God when there is priceless wisdom from God we have glossed over in our haste. Like a person orders from a menu at a restaurant, we can scroll through messages to a popular sermon by title. Within minutes we can choose to close the message and look for something of interest. For all our hearing there can be little growing, and our stunted growth causes us to doubt the usefulness and practicality of--imagine it--even a message from God because of the messenger or style of delivery. Familiarity with a passage dupes us into thinking we know it already when the reality is a foreign concept to our lives. Knowing and doing are two different things as the story of the wise and foolish builders Jesus told reveals.
David wrote of the blessed benefits of careful and patient consideration of God's law in Psalm 1:1-3: "Blessed is the man who walks
not in the counsel of the ungodly, nor stands in the
path of sinners, nor sits in the seat of the
scornful; 2 but his delight is in the law of the LORD, and in His law
he meditates day and night. 3 He shall be like a tree planted by the rivers of water, that
brings forth its fruit in its season, whose leaf also
shall not wither; and whatever he does shall
prosper." See the blessing of meditation on God's word? God told Joshua in Joshua 1:8, "This Book
of the Law shall not depart from your mouth, but you shall meditate in it day
and night, that you may observe to do according to all that is written in it.
For then you will make your way prosperous, and then you will have good success." God commanded Joshua to speak God's word, meditate on it day and night, and do what it said. If Joshua met God's conditions, his way would be prosperous and could be successful in all endeavors God called him to do.
Let us develop our skill of ruminating on a passage of God's word so our understanding and lives will be fruitful. Read the scriptures again and again: observing what the text says, interpreting scripture with scripture and putting God's divine wisdom into practice personally. And it must be personal; it will require patience and perseverance, but no one can argue with the results because what God promised He will perform. A cow ruminates because God created it to do so, and we have a choice what we will ruminate or meditate upon. Humans have always had a terrible propensity to ruminate on what worries and troubles us rather than on God and the good word spoken to us. As a farmer cleans the rust from the blades of the plough by directing it through hard earth, let us develop our skill of rumination by putting it into practice in heeding God's word as we break up the fallow ground of our hearts.
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