How To Love To Read The Most Influential Book Of All Time

Which book?

According to Guinness World Records as of 1995, the Bible is the best-selling book of all time with an estimated 5 billion copies sold and distributed.

Have you read it?

If you have a copy, could dust be blown off the cover?

Yeah, mine had that problem too.

In fact, J.I. Packer, in Knowing God challenges us to admit it if we don’t love reading our bibles.

To not put our backs to our dusty bibles and to our vague feelings of guilt. “I SHOULD love reading this book but ACTUALLY,” we think…

I realized that even though I have been a Christian for decades, I hated reading the Bible.

(!)

This honesty, like all honesty, proved key to finding my true joy.

I asked for help from the older couple in the church.

You know the ones.

They have been sitting at the back of the church for decades. They attend the prayer meetings. They loved you the first day you arrived.

I asked them why they love to read their Bibles.

At their encouragement, they suggested that I read The Psalms and highlight words that seemed to stand out to me.

How do we read the Bible with Holy Spirit at our sides, nudging our elbows as we read? How does the Bible come alive in our hearts?

I still have many things to tell you, but you can’t handle them now. But when the Friend comes, the Spirit of the Truth, he will take you by the hand and guide you into all the truth there is. The Message

I diligently highlighted a mishmash assortment of odd words that seemed to be highlighted in my soul as I read: Deep. Water. Heart.

And I was still confused.

“God! If you are trying to speak to me, could you please be clear!!”

But [the disciples] didn’t get it, could make neither heads nor tails of what he was talking about. The Message

If the disciples were always confused when Jesus was speaking, why couldn’t I also expect confusion when Holy Spirit may be speaking to me?

But speaking He was.

When the guest speaker showed up at our church many months later singing a new song that she had created, with the theme of many of these words that I had highlighted in my Bible, I knew God was whispering to my heart.

That is His way.

God delights in concealing things The Message

He doesn’t want to bark a clear order to obey, but to pour a little rain into our parched souls, that awakens our hearts and gives a spring to our steps. His words refresh as His love sinks a little deeper into the soil of our hearts.

He clothes His words in love so that we have to come to Him again and again, asking for understanding. And a little of His love sticks each time we run back to Him.

And without our knowing it, as we allow the rain to sink deep, fruit is produced in our lives.

This fruit nourishes us and others.

And makes us run back to His word again and again.

We are hungry.

And we receive nutrients from His word.

Are you hungry? Do you also, like me, need to come off the baby’s diet of milk, and learn to eat?

You’re . . . capable of nothing much more than nursing at the breast. The Message

And when we learn to enjoy solid food, then reading the bible and prayer gets exciting.

Joy is coming. Do you feel it?

Forget about what’s happened; don’t keep going over old history. Be alert, be present. I’m about to do something brand-new. It’s bursting out! Don’t you see it? The Message

Prayer Is More Fun Than Saturday Night Dancing

Five steps to grow to love prayer are:

1. Be still and listen. Expect him to speak. We expect the unexpected. What is on God’s heart as we come humbly to Him with our empty plates, our stomachs rumbling again? We learn to discern the words of God from the mumbo jumbo that our inexperienced ears hear by opening His Message to us, the Bible.

2. Love our bibles. How? I used to hate reading my bible, though I felt guilty as I had been a Christian for decades. Now, I love my Bible and treasure it more than any other thing. How to learn to love our Bibles will be discussed in a future post.

3. Worship and thanksgiving clean out our ears. Prayer does this too. Most of the gunk that weighs us down seems to rest in our ears. When we clean out the gunk, our whole selves can lift like a helium balloon up to the loving Father.

Treat my prayer as sweet incense rising; my raised hands are my evening prayers. The Message

Then we can simply open the door when Jesus knocks. We are in a state of rest, not striving

4. Remind Jesus what He has been saying and ask for more. What is on His heart as He tries to wake us, spiritually? These are the things that he has been saying to us. Similarly, we remind Him of our empty plates, our growling bellies, and of our need for Him to fill our plates with His promises.

5. Surrender to His plan for our life. What is God saying that we get to obey? What flower will grow on our plants as a result of this obedience, is the question of hope that keeps us running back to Him. Prayer brings life.

God, just like Froot Loops that don’t satisfy us two hours after we have eaten them (No offense Big Food but your food really stinks), God you have oatmeal for us to eat. The really good stuff. The stuff that keeps us satiated for hours. Change our taste, Lord. Help us to love to eat that which is good.

Teach us to pray.

May we seek and search until we have found that precious jewel that is You.

God’s kingdom is like a treasure hidden in a field for years and then accidentally found by a trespasser. The finder is ecstatic—what a find!—and proceeds to sell everything he owns to raise money and buy that field. The Message

Help us to recognize the difference between junk food and healing food. We pray.

“But there is nothing more dreadfully unimpressive than extemporary prayer which leaps about on the surfaces of things, a disorderly dance of empty words, going we know not whither,–a mob of words carrying no blood, bearing no secret of the soul, a whirl of insignificant expressions, behind which there is no vital pulse, no silent cry from lone and desolate depths.” The Preacher His Life and Work

Happy Easter (Every) One!

It’s kind of disturbing to me that my post with the most readers (and you know who you are – shame on you!) was a post where I had written the smallest amount. Take that to its logical conclusion! Are you trying to say that the less I write, the better it is? Huh?? Huh??

I’m joking, of course.

I love all one of you.

Well, actually back at Christmas time, I only had one reader, but now I have many more!

Yes, many of them live in my household, and I do cook for them, so yes, I do have manipulative capital. “Have you read my post yet? No, you can’t eat.”

I’m not saying I would do that (family members – no comments, please) but that is one strategy to increase readership!

It’s OK. I’m actually having so much fun writing this stuff that I don’t seem to care much if anyone reads it because writing is proving cathartic to me.

Maybe I should pay you to read this stuff because I feel so much better after I write?

Ha! Nice try!

Wow. Marketing is everywhere!

Now, let me get back to ignoring you so I can write properly.

What were we talking about? Oh yes, Easter.

Happy Easter!

And since my most enjoyed post was the shortest I’ll leave it at that.

May your heart long for more, spiritually, in this season. May chocolate eggs no longer satisfy. May everything else that you have put your hope in, like a bridge that will eventually collapse with too much weight, be seen for what it is. May we learn to cast our burdens, cares, anxieties, and joys upon Jesus, His back broken for our sin.

And because He was broken, because it is Easter again this year, we have a strong arm to grasp hold of as we walk through the tribulations of this life.

Lift up your eyes! He is risen!

I look up to the mountains; does my strength come from mountains? No, my strength comes from God, who made heaven, and earth, and mountains. He won’t let you stumble. The Message

Don’t Be Ashamed That You Hate To Pray

We all RUSH to the prayer meeting, right? We all LOVE to pray, right?

Now, I know- I hear groans of guilt emanating from your gut. I know, I know. We SHOULD pray more, but we don’t.

And maybe by opening up the problem layer by layer, we can discover the root of the issue.

Exposure is the place of healing.

Please – let’s remove the guilt or shame and look at the true longings of our hearts dispassionately.

The How To Be A Good Christian handbook, which is several hundred pages long that every Christian receives on the first day they get saved, says on Page 1, “A good Christian person reads their bible every day.”

Great advice, right?

The only problem is that there is no record of Jesus doing that every day.

And yes, yes, let’s set aside the fact the Gutenberg printing press hadn’t been invented yet in Jesus’ time, and all that.

What we do know is that Jesus PRAYED.

A LOT. He valued prayer more than sleep.

Let’s start there.

[Jesus] dismissed the people. With the crowd dispersed, he climbed the mountain so he could be by himself and pray. He stayed there alone, late into the night. The Message

Our How To Be A Good Christian handbook SHOULD instead say on Page 1 that every Christian should PRAY.

But that is too hard, so we cross out PRAY and substitute READ THE BIBLE.

We don’t like prayer.

Ah! I said it out loud

(It’s OK. God already knows)

YOU DON’T LIKE TO PRAY!!

And look, God didn’t run from you offended, but He drew nearer, offering you His hand. He knows that we don’t initially love to pray. Us trying to hide the fact with spiritual embarrassment only keeps Him at bay.

He is the God of truth and He promises that the truth will set us free. Yes, even about this.

He will draw near to us, put His arm around us, and tell us to rest, in His arms, as small children do. We can stop trying to build a mansion when we are 2 years old, or similarly, to try to wear the armor of a prayer warrior that is too big for us, yet.

We will only frustrate ourselves. Thankfully, the expectations the 2-year-old has for himself are not the expectations the parents have for their child. It’s the same with God.

He just expects us to sit, to be still with Him, and to receive nourishment from Him, as a baby receives milk from her mother. What word of scripture nourishes you, this day?

Can we simply sit, with that scripture passage, and rest in His arms, meditating on His word, on His spiritual milk?

God, I’m not trying to rule the roost,
I don’t want to be king of the mountain.
I haven’t meddled where I have no business
or fantasized grandiose plans.

I’ve kept my feet on the ground,
I’ve cultivated a quiet heart.
Like a baby content in its mother’s arms,
my soul is a baby content.

Wait, Israel, for God. Wait with hope.
Hope now; hope always!
The Message

This resting in the arms of our loving Father is true prayer.

Are you ready to be comforted?

Five steps to help us learn to truly love to pray will be discussed in the next post.

(After the Easter Bunny visits us, that is).

Three Attitudes To Usher in God’s Kingdom

Photo Credit: Washington Post

I was in my living room by myself one evening, minding my own business, when God’s spirit ushered into my life and shook me. Wake up, He seemed to be saying. There is more.

It reminds me a bit of Asbury, Kentucky. If you haven’t been following the news, a bunch of regular kids attended a church service. It was an uneventful day. But God‘s spirit rushed in and grabbed them, gently shaking them with a deeper awareness of Him. There is more, He seemed to be saying. The kids stayed and worshiped.

We know someone who attended that event. She said that the sense of God‘s presence was palpable as soon as you entered the building.

I guess others felt it too.

Over 50,000 people came to the sleepy 6,000-person town over a period of two weeks because God‘s presence was felt in a more tangible way.

In the sermon that was preached just before this outbreak at Asbury, the speaker said, “Make sure you experience God‘s love. Don’t leave this building. Don’t graduate until you have experienced God‘s love.”

The time when God touched me, powerfully, exactly like what is happening in Asbury, I also experienced a deeper understanding of God‘s love just prior. I had listened to a sermon by Rolland Baker. He said that many of us are seeking outpouring, seeking even what is happening in places like Asbury, but what we need to seek is simply God.

God himself. We don’t seek the experience of God, we simply seek God.

And so this touch of God that is shaking the world at Asbury, that is waking us up to say, there is more, is possible within each of our hearts and in our homes. Many of us have experienced something similar.

And so how do we escape the judgment of God, and help to usher in His Kingdom instead?

1. Thirst. We become thirsty for more of God, for more of what God wants to say, for more of God’s love.

2. Honesty. We confess our sins. The outpouring of God‘s love at Asbury has been characterized by a deep confession.

There are many marriages on the brink of break up that easily confess the sin of the partner. My partner did this wrong. My partner is a jerk. This is not the kind of confession that brings healing to a marriage.

The confession that brings healing to the marriage is the humble confession that admits that I have done wrong. I have failed.

In the same way, the kind of Christianity that brings cultural healing is the Christianity that says I have done wrong. Not pointing fingers at others and saying they have done wrong.

3. Surrender. We need to obey what Holy Spirit is saying to us, as He whispers when we draw near to Him. That’s it. It’s not complicated.

Christianity is not God plus our agenda. Fill in the blank for what that agenda could be.

God asks rhetorically, “Who among us can survive this firestorm?” Are you ready for the next few lines?

The answer’s simple: Live right, speak the truth, despise exploitation, refuse bribes, reject violence, avoid evil amusements. This is how you raise your standard of living! A safe and stable way to live. A nourishing, satisfying way to live. The Message

God help us to put down our metaphorical guns, our finger-pointing. May we focus instead on the mess within our own hearts. We lay down our agendas for what Your Kingdom looks like. May we instead follow Your love, giving away the extra love we cannot hold as we journey.

Let’s Not Hide From God’s Fatherly Correction – Find Joy Instead

Who among us can survive this firestorm? The Message

God loves to surprise us.

He will not be molded into our own image.

The wise men, who brought their gifts to baby Jesus, expected a ruling King. Everyone did. But Jesus did not live up to expectations.

Instead of assuming His rightful role as king, Jesus befriended outcasts and then died so we would have a ticket to his Kingdom.

He will not be who we expect.

Christian culture, at times, loves to accentuate certain parts of the message and neglect other parts of the message.

Our modern sermons are full of speech about the love of God.

And so it should be.

If humans could grasp even a drop in the waterfall of God‘s love for us, and pour out this love from our overflow, we would enjoy more cultural heaven on earth.

But God is often fuller and greater than a culture chooses to see. In the same way, there is an analogy of blind men who describe an elephant. One describes the ear, one describes the leg, one the tail, etc. No one person can grasp the fullness of the elephant in this metaphor.

The ear of the elephant, or for example, the consequences dished out by God our Father, has been preached frequently in former epochs. The sermon Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God preached by Jonathan Edwards, in 1741 feels like a different religion from the sermons that we listen to.

But this sermon was a catalyst for a global spiritual awakening.

Perhaps the sermon was a piece in the puzzle that helped that generation understand more about who the true God is?

Our culture doesn’t want to talk about God judging us. It doesn’t easily fit into our modern worldview.

God is the Father of love.

Because He is the Father of love, He is also the Father of consequences.

It’s the child he loves that God corrects; a father’s delight is behind all this. The Message

And if we are, potentially, living in a season of consequences for our actions being played out within our culture, then how do we live in joy before a holy God?

The way forward, the way of joy in the presence of a holy God, is to seek spiritual thirst, honesty, and surrender. These three attributes will be discussed in the next post (maybe not the VERY next post because we need a funny post soon. All of this end-of-the-world natter would get me down if I actually re-read what I wrote . . .

Are you allowed to joke when you’re talking about the end of the world? Maybe I should edit these posts? . . . Nah too much work. . . )

Ahem . . . back to a serious topic . . .

Lord help us be aware of the times that we live in. Help us to long for your rebuke as a wise child seeks correction from a loving father, we pray. After a moment of stillness, consider asking God how he may be calling you to awaken our culture, both outside of and within the church.

Take a lesson from the fig tree. From the moment you notice its buds form, the merest hint of green, you know summer’s just around the corner. So it is with you: When you see all these things, you’ll know [the Son of Man is] . . . at the door. The Message

Do You Hear Thunder? Is Lightning Coming?

Like the three-year-old, cutting, pasting, and gluing pieces of paper, we make things. We mold the clay. The stubborn clay doesn’t bend when we ask it to. We add more water, pushing, and pulling. The clay will be shaped into our own image. Clay squeezes out in the wrong places and between our fingers. The clay does not obey us.

It is impossible to mold God into our own image.

And yet we try.

Our sweat is visible. We push and pull the clay. “You must obey us!” we yell to the clay. Finally, we give up in despair and sit beside our clay. Finally, we ask for help. When we remember our humanity, we are ready, finally, to hear from God.

We have forgotten who God is because He doesn’t look like us.

We don’t point the finger at one another and judge.

And so we try to create God into our own image, as One who does not judge.

“Don’t Judge Me!” we yell indignantly.

Then we remember sheepishly that we’ve been talking to God, the potter, not God the clay.

What if we set aside our expectations about how God should act and listen to what God is saying about Himself? God describes Himself as fire.

God is . . . actively cleaning house, torching all that needs to burn, and he won’t quit until it’s all cleansed. God himself is Fire! The Message

Is God as a fire a good thing or a bad thing?

Sometimes God uses fire to judge His People when they are stubborn. His fire is sent to clean up the place, mostly our hearts.

And yet, we can’t read God like a child’s picture book either. His ways can’t be distilled down to an essential oil, a fragrance that allows us to say with certainty – cause and effect – “When this happens, God will do that.”

Sometimes fire is evidence of God’s favor. Sometimes His fire is sent to guide us. And so, we can’t figure out God or create a checklist to foreshadow how God will react.

All we can do is examine our own hearts, and ask Him, humbly, to show us the charred regions. Lord, are the wildfires, so rampant in Canada, California, Australia, and many other places, the seeds, or evidence, of your judgment of us, as a culture? What do you think He is saying?

Now I’m glad—not that you were upset, but that you were jarred into turning things around. You let the distress bring you to God, not drive you from him. The result was all gain, no loss.

Distress that drives us to God does that. It turns us around. It gets us back in the way of salvation. We never regret that kind of pain. But those who let distress drive them away from God are full of regrets, end up on a deathbed of regrets.

And now, isn’t it wonderful all the ways in which this distress has goaded you closer to God? You’re more alive, more concerned, more sensitive, more reverent, more human, more passionate, more responsible. The Message

Dolly Parton recently had a dream about God on a mountaintop speaking to us, as a Father speaking sternly to his children, saying, “Don’t make me have to come down there.” She wrote a song about it. What are your thoughts?

And so, if you search your pockets and find only a bit of change there, and you don’t find enough wisdom in your pockets to know how to live with a holy God, a God who may be judging us even now, then read on to the next post, which outlines three ways to live with a clear conscience before a holy God.

Find a Church To Rebuke – They Need You

Is it possible to separate Christian culture from Kingdom living? And what exactly do I mean by those terms? Christian culture refers of course, to expected behavior among a group of Christian believers. Of course, this varies by country and epoch.

For example, putting lots of chickens into a cage, cutting off their beaks, and letting them defecate on each other for their entire caged lives so that we can have our chicken sandwich for $1.99 instead of $2.56 has at times, been my Christian culture. This is not Kingdom living.

Kingdom living says:

Good people are good to their animals; the “good-hearted” bad people kick and abuse them. The Message

And so we dig a bit deeper into our pockets, to the place where it hurts, and place a few more coins on the counter for our lunch. OR heaven forbid, we eat a few more vegetables instead of another chicken sandwich because it’s cheaper than another piece of chicken, when we consider the true cost of paying for cage-free birds.

This is an example of an aspect of church culture (a common behavior) that I find frustrating.

There are a lot of unhealthy churches out there because there are a lot of unhealthy people out there. And people are what constitute the church. And I do understand that some church cultures are more unhealthy than others.

Some of the very wise, and my heart goes out to you dear friend, say, “That is not a healthy place” and do not return to church. I do not blame you. God does not blame you, I believe, though He is still pursuing you, dear friend.

Keep looking.

There are safe places to rest. But it might take a bit of seeking. And God will be healing you in the process of finding a safe group of Jesus-seeking people to belong to. Who you started out as won’t be the same person as who you end up as. That’s half the joy of the process, actually.

And there will still be annoying parts of church culture to correct no matter where you call home.

It’s the reason you’re there.

It’s the reason they need you.

Instruct and direct one another using good common sense. The Message

Been disgusted by Christian culture, or church culture lately? I have too. Jesus was, too. His harshest comments were for the leaders of His church. Ouch.

May our rears be sore from the spanking that Jesus gives us because it is better to have a sore rear than for our entire selves to be oozing puss from our unhealed diseases – the diseases of pride, love of money, prestige- that we are too proud to ask Jesus to heal.

However within the mess and the brokenness of Christian culture, in pockets of beauty, is the joy of Christ’s message, which is Kingdom living.

Thank you, Lord, that you love the mess that is your church, the mess that is me. Thank you that even here, in the charred remains of my heart, there lies an ember of love that you can fan into flame. Do your good work, dear Jesus. Help us to become Kingdom people, and not merely robots of Christian culture, we pray. Help those who have been rightly offended by Christian culture to find a home, in You, and with other broken people who are loved by You, we pray.

Celebrate Flabby Muscles!

It’s hard seeing anything get older. My sweet little golden doodle, so full of excitement to be a part of the family fun only a few years ago, could barely raise his little head when I came close this morning. And he is not THAT old, but he is older. His energy dial is turned down, way down. Sometimes he still gets frenzied like a puppy, but less often. He is limited by his little, tired body. But maybe this is a strength, I realized this morning. I had a light bulb moment. Let me explain.

“Moses . . . did exactly what God commanded. Moses was eighty . . . when [he] spoke to Pharaoh.” The Message

Moses was eighty years old! That’s kind of old, to be stepping out in faith, starting the new thing that God is calling someone to. And God used Moses so powerfully that the world still reverberates with the impacts of His obedience. We all at least recognize his name, over 3,000 years later.

God used an old, decrepit guy to lead an entire people group out of slavery and into freedom. The full story can be read HERE.

The point? Maybe the age of Moses wasn’t a liability to him, but a strength, through God’s eyes. I mean, God is God, right? He could have told Moses to start his God journey when he was young, strong, and energetic. But instead, he chose the old guy sitting on the couch. The guy who can barely stand without a few groans.

Being that old, Moses would have known that he desperately needed God to accomplish the tasks that God was asking him to do. And there lies his strength. So maybe the handicaps that we think we have – age (too old or too young), physical hardships, emotional wounds – are exactly the strengths that God will use to shine His power through. Knowing that we need to lean on God is our super strength power.

And so my golden doodle was used by God. He taught me a lesson about strength in weakness, even as he lay there on the couch. His infirmities smacked me awake. Will I step out, in faith, as Moses did, holding desperately to the hand of Jesus? Will I turn my worldview upside down? It’s not the bodybuilders who are strong in God’s eyes, but those with metaphorical flabby muscles, knowing they need to lean on God.

“My grace is enough; it’s all you need. My strength comes into its own in your weakness. Once I heard that . . . I quit focusing on the handicap and began appreciating the gift. It was a case of Christ’s strength moving in on my weakness. Now I take limitations in stride, and with good cheer, these limitations that cut me down to size—abuse, accidents, opposition, bad breaks. I just let Christ take over! And so the weaker I get, the stronger I become.” The Message

Consider listening to the song, Where the Light Shines Through by Switchfoot, and notice the lyrics “. . . your scars shine like dark stars. Your wounds are where the light shines through.” Consider asking God, “What scars do I have that are not a hindrance, but a strength in Your eyes, as I join my life to Yours? “

Three Gifts God Offers To Exchange For Our Suffering (Do You Want Them?)

I don’t think there’s any comparison between the present hard times and the coming good times . . . the joyful anticipation deepens. The Message

Is it true that we can lift up our broken things to God, as a child offers a broken toy to a parent? Is it true that God will mend what is broken? Can we lift our suffering to Him?

Three gifts God offers to exchange for our suffering are (1) thankfulness, (2) empathy, and (3) hope.

The bad news, at least for me, is that God wants us to have continually thankful hearts. I have tried to grow in thankfulness, like putting a slip of paper in my pocket time and again to remember to keep it near. But no matter my efforts, the paper keeps falling out of my pocket. I can’t seem to maintain a thankful heart.

The good news is that thankfulness ironically gets a lot easier in suffering.

Suffering strips away what we take for granted.

I made supper for my family after two days of lying on the floor with a herniated disk in my back. In my health, my attitude was too often grumpy while I made supper for my family. It was another to-do item at the end of a long day, when I was already tired.

But this time, with a little suffering added to my day, thankfulness burst from my heart against my will. “I can serve my family! What a delight!”

And who is this person? I wondered, looking at myself in awe. A seed of thankfulness was planted in my heart, sprouted, and grew roots in a few short days of suffering. What else did I take for granted that I needed to be thankful for instead?

A few days later, I actually found myself thinking, “I can’t believe I was able to clean the bathroom!” Need I say more?

And joy continued to blossom in my garden.

The second way I looked at myself, wondering “Who in the world are you?”, during this short time of mild suffering, was noticing a growth in empathy.

You wouldn’t have done that before, God seemed to say, encouraging me to notice how I had grown in empathy. I waited for the elderly couple and offered to move my car so they could park closer to the event. I could empathize with their difficulty walking. My heart grew two sizes that day.

And so there is a little more love in the world because I have suffered.

There is a third gift God offers in exchange for our suffering.

Jesus said that even as he suffered, we also will suffer.

Jesus said, “In this godless world you will continue to experience difficulties. But take heart! I’ve conquered the world.” The Message

He offers us the transformation of our suffering, if we choose this, even as his suffering was transformed to give us a ticket from death to life.

We follow in the footsteps of our suffering Saviour, and so our physical ailments prepare us for the glory that is to come as we plead with God to use our suffering for His good.

And so the third gift that God offers in exchange for our suffering is hope.

When we turn aside and leave the group because we won’t join in the gossip, we suffer rejection, but even an action this small has the power to transform culture. When another martyr loses their life, this suffering also has the power to transform culture. And so every suffering, whether physical, emotional, or spiritual, whether large or small, contains within it the gift of hope.

Will you allow God to exchange His good gifts for your suffering?

He is holding out the gifts of thankfulness, empathy, hope, and many others. Will you put these gifts into your heart today, and give Him your suffering? Ask Him how. Share your hurt and heartache with Him. He longs to wrap His arms around you and show you His path forward from here. Will you take His hand?

Will you listen to His comfort? Draw nearer, He is saying to you.

Will you come?