Psalm 23

What are you Acquiring?

“An intelligent heart acquires knowledge, and the ear of the wise seeks knowledge.”

Proverbs 18:15

I have been serving as a Certified Biblical Counselor for about 3 years now. God has allowed me the opportunity to serve Him through this ministry, and I have grown tremendously. I have said and will say again that even if my counselees do not change, I know that God has brought about change in my heart and life.

One of the things that I try to find out from counselees is what they are reading or listening to. Today, we don’t just listen to music we also listen to podcasts. We don’t just read books, we also listen to books. One of the greatest discoveries for me this year has been listening to books. The library has a wealth of books to listen to or to read the printed word on the page. These books can be checked out as physical books or as electronic books on an electronic device. There really is no reason why we do not read except that we do not prioritize it.

The reason I want to know what people are reading or listening to is because I want to know what is influencing them. What is influencing their thinking? What is impacting their actions or their words? We have all heard the phrase “garbage in, garbage out.” If we are not putting godly things into our brains, then we will not have godly thoughts, words, or actions come out. Every book that I read is not a “spiritual” book. I try to be careful that what I read or listen to would not go against the principles of God’s Word.

I just finished reading “A Shepherd’s Look at Psalms 23” by W. Phillip Keller and am currently listening to “Educated” by Tara Westover. The purpose of this post is not to give you a book report. What I want us to understand is that what we allow to enter our minds impacts our thoughts, words, and actions.

Our verse tells us that the wise acquire and seek knowledge. Why do they acquire and seek knowledge? So that they know better how to live. Wisdom comes from living out the correct knowledge and the Biblical principles that we know. It is one thing to have a wealth of knowledge, but quite another to live that knowledge out. It does no one any good to have a lot of book knowledge if they do not then translate that book knowledge into wise practice.

In “A Shepherd’s Look at Psalm 23” we get a glimpse into Psalm 23 from the perspective of a shepherd. The author better understands the Psalm because he is a shepherd. He understands how to care for sheep because he has the factual knowledge and the experiential knowledge.

We gain knowledge and understanding by being inquisitive and by being humble enough to search the Scriptures for the answer, spending time in prayer to seek the Lord for His direction, and by asking others to help us understand what we don’t know.

When we ask questions, do we desire to learn or do we desire to show off how smart we are? The truly wise person seeks to understand from a point of humility not from a point of being a know-it-all.

It has been an exciting year for me this year as I have had the world opened up to me by the power of listening to books. What is it that you are seeking to acquire in the 24 hours each day that God has given you? Are you seeking to acquire knowledge to puff you up or to help you better serve our Lord by understanding the world around you?

Posted by ddykema5@gmail.com in The Seasons of Motherhood, 0 comments
Journey with the Lord as my Shepherd

Journey with the Lord as my Shepherd

I love to travel. I love going to different places and staying at hotels and eating at different restaurants and meeting different people. I love to be at airports and see all the different people hustling to get to their next destination. I love an adventure. I love a journey.

I know that I probably like these things because I don’t have to travel for work, and if I did than I wouldn’t want to travel anymore. I love to be at home too.

I love the journey, not just the destination. What about you? Do you enjoy the journey or do you just want to get to the destination?

I have been on a journey this week, but not a physical journey. I have been on a spiritual journey, and it has been so amazing for my walk with the Lord. I just wanted to share with whoever wants to read this.

In Sunday school, we began a study on prayer. Prayer has been something I have been trying to focus on in my walk with the Lord. I am actually reading a book right now called Draw the Circle. It is about praying circles around the things you are praying for. It is taken from the idea of the Israelites walking around the wall of Jericho for seven days before God brought the walls down. Imagine the Israelites walking around a wall with their enemies towering above them. That would produce some major fear in anyone’s heart, but the Israelites followed God’s direction and did just as He commanded. Imagine how much prayer was going in the hearts and minds of these people as they walked.

Our Sunday school teacher challenged us to pray through Psalm 23 throughout the week. I was so excited to follow his direction. I have Psalm 23 memorized so it was easy for me to review and pray through this Psalm when I was driving or folding laundry or making dinner. But I also spent time on my knees with my Bible open to Psalm 23.

The things I began to see in this passage that I have missed in the past, and the beauty of using Psalm 23 as a guide to my prayers was transformational. This journey I have been on this past week has transformed my prayers.

As I considered each of the verses and used them to guide my prayers, I realized how I was praying God’s will for my life and for those that I was praying for. Don’t you sometimes wonder when you are praying if you are praying God’s will? I do. When I pray God’s word, though, I am praying His will back to him.

Psalm 23:1 “The Lord is my Shepherd, I shall not want.”

So often when I have thought about this verse, I thought about “wanting” as my “needs.” I have needs and since God is my Shepherd He will provide for my needs. How many times have you prayed for God to supply your needs, but what you thought was a need was not a need but a desire for things to go the way you wanted them to go?

I have written in the past about idols of our hearts. An idol of our heart is anything that we want that we do not have, and many times we are willing to sin to get that want satisfied.

If I am looking to the Lord to be my Shepherd, if I am worshipping Him for who He is, I won’t be wanting. If the Lord as my Shepherd is sufficient enough to meet my needs and I am worshipping Him as the Lord of my life, than I will not be wanting. If I am always looking to God to meet my needs, then I won’t be wanting.

If I am looking to anything other than God to meet my needs, than I will be wanting.

As I have prayed this verse for myself and others, I have realized how selfishly I pray for myself and quite honestly for others.

Psalm 23:3 “…He leads me in paths of righteousness for His name’s sake.”

The goal of our lives is to honor God in all we do. All we do needs to be for His name’s sake, not for our name’s sake. If the Lord is truly our Shepherd and we allow Him to lead us in paths of righteousness, not only will we not want we will also be living our lives for His name’s sake, not ours.

We will be living life for His glory. This may seem like we won’t get our needs met, but the contrary is true. I have found that the more I seek after my Shepherd and trust in His plan, not only will my needs be met but I will have an abundance that will be overflowing into the lives of others.

I want to challenge to get on your knees and open your Bible to Psalm 23 and begin to pray it through for yourself and all those on your prayer list. Then watch what God will do. You never know where this journey will take you.

Posted by ddykema5@gmail.com in The Seasons of Motherhood, 2 comments