OUR DAILY BREAD : BECOMING WHOLE
Posted: Sat May 29, 2010 5:51 pm
May 25
Tuesday
BECOMING
WHOLE
READ:
John 5:1-9
_____________________________________________________________
Do you want to be
made well?
__John 5:6
____________________________________________________________
John Steinbeck's Pulitzer prize-winning novel The Grapes of Wrath begins with a scene in drought-ravaged Oklahoma during the Great depression. With the crops dying and the land choked by dust, the women watched the men to see if they would break under the strain. When they saw the men's will to carry on, they took heart. Steinbeck writes, "Women and children knew deep in themselves that no misfortune was too great to bear if their men were whole." The issue was not happiness, prosperity, or satisfaction, but wholeness. This is the great need of us all.
In the King James Version of the Bible, the word whole is often used to describe Jesus' work of physical healing. When the Lord encountered a man who had been an invalid for 38 years, He asked, "Wilt thou be made whole?" (John 5:5-6 KJV). After Jesus healed the man, He challenged him to also embrace spiritual wholeness: "See, you have been made well. Sin no more, lest a worse thing come upon you"(v.14).
If we only want something Jesus can do for us, our relationship with Him will be limited. When we want Jesus Himself, He brings completeness to our lives. Christ wants, first and foremost, to make us whole.
__David McCasland
_____________________________________________________________
`````````````````I thank Thee for Thy precious Word``````````````
```````````````````Where Thou didst make me see```````````````
```````````````````My sinful self, my helpless soul,```````````````
````````````````Made whole by trusting Thee. __Anon.````````````
_____________________________________________________________
Only Jesus can give wholeness to a broken life.
****************Today's Bible REAding __ John 5:1-9*************
1 After this there was a
feast of the Jews, and Jesus
went up to Jerusalem.
2 Now there is in Jerusalem
by the Sheep Gate a
pool, which is called in
Hebrew, Bethseda, having
five porches. 3 In these
lay a great multitude of
sick people, blind, lame,
paralyzed, waiting for the
moving of the water. 4 For
an angel went down at a
certain time into the pool
and stirred up the water;
then whoever stepped
in first, after the stirring
of the water, was made
well of whatever disease
he had. 5 Now a certain
man was there who had
an infirmity thirty-eight years.
6 When Jesus saw
him lying there, and knew
that he already had been in
that condition a long time,
He said to him, "Do you
want to be made well?
7 The sick man answered
Him, "Sir, I have no man to
put me into the pool when
the water is stirred up; but
while I am coming, another
steps down before me."
8 Jesus said to him, "Rise,
take up your bed and walk."
9 And immediately the
man was made well, took
up his bed, and walked.
And that day was
the Sabbath.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>INSIGHT<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
The last part of verse 3, "waiting for the moving of the water" and
verse 4 are not found in the earliest extant manuscripts (before AD
400). That is why they are bracketed (in the NASB) or omitted from
the main texts, appearing as footnotes in the later translations (like NIV,
Good News Bible, ESV, NLT). This was background information added
later to explain the people's belief (superstition) concerning the
healing power of the pool. __SIM KAY TEE
Tuesday
BECOMING
WHOLE
READ:
John 5:1-9
_____________________________________________________________
Do you want to be
made well?
__John 5:6
____________________________________________________________
John Steinbeck's Pulitzer prize-winning novel The Grapes of Wrath begins with a scene in drought-ravaged Oklahoma during the Great depression. With the crops dying and the land choked by dust, the women watched the men to see if they would break under the strain. When they saw the men's will to carry on, they took heart. Steinbeck writes, "Women and children knew deep in themselves that no misfortune was too great to bear if their men were whole." The issue was not happiness, prosperity, or satisfaction, but wholeness. This is the great need of us all.
In the King James Version of the Bible, the word whole is often used to describe Jesus' work of physical healing. When the Lord encountered a man who had been an invalid for 38 years, He asked, "Wilt thou be made whole?" (John 5:5-6 KJV). After Jesus healed the man, He challenged him to also embrace spiritual wholeness: "See, you have been made well. Sin no more, lest a worse thing come upon you"(v.14).
If we only want something Jesus can do for us, our relationship with Him will be limited. When we want Jesus Himself, He brings completeness to our lives. Christ wants, first and foremost, to make us whole.
__David McCasland
_____________________________________________________________
`````````````````I thank Thee for Thy precious Word``````````````
```````````````````Where Thou didst make me see```````````````
```````````````````My sinful self, my helpless soul,```````````````
````````````````Made whole by trusting Thee. __Anon.````````````
_____________________________________________________________
Only Jesus can give wholeness to a broken life.
****************Today's Bible REAding __ John 5:1-9*************
1 After this there was a
feast of the Jews, and Jesus
went up to Jerusalem.
2 Now there is in Jerusalem
by the Sheep Gate a
pool, which is called in
Hebrew, Bethseda, having
five porches. 3 In these
lay a great multitude of
sick people, blind, lame,
paralyzed, waiting for the
moving of the water. 4 For
an angel went down at a
certain time into the pool
and stirred up the water;
then whoever stepped
in first, after the stirring
of the water, was made
well of whatever disease
he had. 5 Now a certain
man was there who had
an infirmity thirty-eight years.
6 When Jesus saw
him lying there, and knew
that he already had been in
that condition a long time,
He said to him, "Do you
want to be made well?
7 The sick man answered
Him, "Sir, I have no man to
put me into the pool when
the water is stirred up; but
while I am coming, another
steps down before me."
8 Jesus said to him, "Rise,
take up your bed and walk."
9 And immediately the
man was made well, took
up his bed, and walked.
And that day was
the Sabbath.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>INSIGHT<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
The last part of verse 3, "waiting for the moving of the water" and
verse 4 are not found in the earliest extant manuscripts (before AD
400). That is why they are bracketed (in the NASB) or omitted from
the main texts, appearing as footnotes in the later translations (like NIV,
Good News Bible, ESV, NLT). This was background information added
later to explain the people's belief (superstition) concerning the
healing power of the pool. __SIM KAY TEE