8.27- Letters Home
8.27-
Letters
Home Nehemiah 8:5-12 Tim Gustafson
Far from home and training for World War
II, American recruits in basic training turned to humor and correspondence to
cope with the challenges they faced. In one letter home a young man described
the vaccination process with wonderful exaggeration: “Two medical officers
chased us with harpoons. They grabbed us and pinned us to the floor and stuck
one in each arm.”
Yet one soldier began to realize that humor
could only take him so far. Then he received a Bible. “I enjoy it very much and
I read it every night,” he wrote. “I never realized you could learn so much
from a Bible.”
Long ago, the Jewish exiles returned home
after years of slavery in Babylon to find their problems came with them. As
they struggled to rebuild Jerusalem’s walls, they faced opposition from
enemies, famine and their own sin. Amid their troubles, they turned to God’s
Word. They were surprised at what they learned. When the priests read from the
Book of the Law of God, the people were moved to tears (Jeremiah 8:9). But they
also found comfort. Nehemiah the governor told them, “Do not grieve, for the
joy of the Lord is your strength” (Nehemiah 8:10).
We don’t need to wait for trouble to hear
from God. The Bible is where we learn about His character, His forgiveness, and
His comfort. As we read it, we’ll be surprised at what God’s Spirit will show
us in its pages.
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