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Daily Bread

The lure of a message

The Philippine Star

You’re sitting in a darkened theater enjoying a concert, a play, or a film, when suddenly a smartphone screen lights up as a person reads an incoming text and perhaps takes time to reply. In his book The Shallows: What the Internet Is Doing to Our Brains, Nicholas Carr says that in our connected world, “The sense that there might be a message out there for us” is increasingly difficult to resist.

Samuel was a young boy when he heard a voice call his name and thought it was Eli the priest in the tabernacle where he served the Lord (1 Sam. 3:1-7). When Eli realized that God was calling Samuel, he told the boy how to respond. When God called his name a fourth time, “Samuel answered, ‘Speak, for Your servant hears’” (v.10). This attentiveness to God’s voice became the pattern of Samuel’s life as “the LORD revealed Himself to Samuel in Shiloh by the word of the LORD” (v.21).

Are we listening for God’s voice in our lives today? Are we more drawn by the vibration of a smartphone than the still, small voice of the Lord through His Word and His Spirit?

May we, like Samuel, learn to discern God’s voice and say, “Speak, Lord. I’m listening.”     — David McCasland

 

May we listen, Lord, to You

As You speak to us today

Through Your Spirit and Your Word—

Help us follow and obey. — Sper

 

READ: 1 Samuel 3:1-10

 

Don’t let the noise of the world

keep you from hearing

the voice of the Lord.

AS YOU

HIS WORD AND HIS SPIRIT

LORD

LORD. I

NICHOLAS CARR

OUR BRAINS

SAMUEL

THROUGH YOUR SPIRIT AND YOUR WORD

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