SPIRITUAL NAVIGATION
READ:
Psalm 119:97-106
Your word is a lamp to my feet and
a light to my path. –Psalm
119:105
Dava Sobel’s award-winning book Longitude
describes a dilemma faced by early
sailors. They could readily determine
their latitude north or south of the equator by the length of the day or height
of the sun. Calculating east/west
longitude, however, remained complex and unreliable until English clockmaker
John Harrison invented the marine chronometer.
This was “a clock that would carry
the true time from the home port…to any remote corner of the world.” thus enabling
sailors to determine longitude.
As we navigate the seas of
life, we also have a reliable source of spiritual direction-the Bible. The psalmist wrote, “Oh, how I love Your law! It is
my meditation all the day” (Psalm
119:97). Rather than
occasionally glancing at God’s Word, he spoke of pondering the Lord’s
directions throughout each day: “Your testimonies are my meditation” (v.99). This was coupled with a commitment to obey
the Author: “I have sworn and confirmed
that I will keep Your righteous judgments” (v.106).
Like the mariners of old,
we need a constant guide to help us find our way and stay on course. That’s what happens when we seek the Lord
day by day with an open heart and a willing spirit that says, “Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light
to my path.” –David McCasland
We need God’s guidance from above,
His daily leading and His love;
As we trust Him for direction,
To our course He’ll give correction. –Fitzhugh
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With God as your navigator,
you’re headed in the right direction.
INSIGHT
In today’s reading, we find a portion of the psalmist’s great
homage to the Word of God. The verses
describe the Word as commandments (v.98), testimonies (v.99), precepts (vv.100,
104), and judgments (vv.102, 106). He
also pictures the Word as honey (v.103) and a lamp (v.105). One idea repeated in this text is that of the
singer’s response to the Word, which is meditation (vv. 97, 99). The word meditate means “to reflect on.” It is a
common theme in psalms that speak of the Scriptures-beginning with Psalm 1,
which describes the blessed person as the one who meditates on the Word “day and night” (v.2). The word for meditate comes from the Hebrew
word Habah, which means “to be preoccupied with,” and is also used of a cow chewing its cud in
order to more readily absorb the nutrients.
Have a blessed day and week
ahead.
God Our Creator’s Love
Always.
Unity & Peace
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