Lessons From The Story Of Balaam’s Talking Donkey

Lessons From The Story Of Balaam’s Talking Donkey

Laughing Balaam's Talking Donkey

Balaam’s talking donkey is a Bible story that fits well into a cartoon or sitcom. But the Bible? And yet, there it is. So what does an ancient talking donkey teach us today?

The story takes place as Israel approaches the nation of Moab on its way to the promised land. And this made King Balak of Moab nervous. Because Israel was conquering everyone in their path. And Moab was up next. So King Balak called on Balaam, a pagan prophet to curse them.

Balaam was a greedy, unethical man that practiced divination and magic arts. For him, this was a way to earn fast, easy cash.

But God threw a wrench in the deal by forbidding Balaam to curse Israel. Because Israel had His blessing.

The Bible Story Of Balaam’s Talking Donkey Teaches You Can’t Thwart God’s Sovereign Will

God wouldn’t let Balaam curse Israel, but gave him permission to visit King Balak. Although Bible scholars suggest he didn’t intend to obey God’s instructions. Therefore, God sent an angel to block the road. And impress on Balaam that He was serious about those instructions. Deadly serious.

So the angel blocks the road and Balaam can’t see him, but the donkey can. And doesn’t try to pass, even though Balaam beats him. Which is when the donkey speaks up–literally! And after the conversation, Balaam sees the angel in the road with a sword and realizes the donkey saved his life.

The point is, God is sovereign. And what He ordains will come true. He has a plan for the end of this world. For eternity. And for you.

Of course, you have free will too. And can make choices and changes within God’s permissive will. But not His sovereign will. Balaam finally got the message. Although it took a drastic event to get his attention, open his eyes and listen to God.

What might this look like today?

The Bible Story Of Balaam’s Talking Donkey Teaches That God Can Be Creative In Accomplishing His Will

God is not a stuffed shirt. An angry old man tossing lightning bolts. He’s creative. Has a sense of humor. And introduced a talking animal long before any of our TV shows. And it’s not the only time God used quirky methods to carry out His divine plan.

He told Gideon to cut his army of over 30,000 down to 300. Armed them with trumpets and torches. Had them surround the army of their enemy, blow the trumpets, hold up the torches and shout. He had Joshua march around the city of Jericho once for 6 days straight. And on the 7th day, march around it 7 times, blow trumpets and shout.

Can you imagine how ridiculous the Israelites must have looked? And felt?

The point is, God often tests your faith by asking you to trust Him. He invites us to join in working for His Kindgom. But often chooses unlikely leaders and surprising methods to carry out His will.

The Bible Story Of Balaam’s Talking Donkey Teaches That God Expects Us To Live By Conviction

God expected Balaam to stand by his convictions. And expects us to do the same. Of course, standing by convictions assumes you have moral standards. Which is the whole point of the Bible. It sets out God’s plan, purpose and path for this life and beyond. It’s His divine instruction manual.

The problem for Balaam is he appeared to lack convictions and moral standards. He was all about pursuing money. And since blessing Israel was part of God’s sovereign will, God made sure Balaam followed through on it.

Unlike the story of Balaam, God usually lets you choose to obey Him or not. Although there are encouragements and warnings about the benefits and consequences for when you do and don’t.

But living by Godly convictions is not easy. Especially in a world driven by material gain. Which is why the Bible is such an important resource. Because it provides instructions, principles and yes, commands for us to follow. Not to overwhelm us with rules, but to guide us in living holy lives that maintain good relationships with others.

It shows you how to live your best life now and forever.

About Chip Tudor:

Chip Tudor is a freelance copywriter, published author, playwright and pastor. He publishes drama at www.chiptudor.com, books on Amazon.com, and articles on his blog.

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A Biblical Prescription For The Healing Of America

A Biblical Prescription For The Healing Of America

Scripture offers a Biblical prescription for the healing of America. Healed, not fixed. Although it’s clearly broken. Because we are individually broken. And national healing is the cumulative result of individual healing on a mass scale.


Although this Scripture passage specifically addresses the covenant between God and Israel, it still offers a remedy for America. Because there is brokenness within the heart and soul of every American. And where the healing starts.

If my people, who are called by my name, will humble themselves and pray
and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven,
and I will forgive their sin and will heal their land. —2 Chronicles 7:14

A Biblical Prescription For The Healing Of America Responds To God’s Call

God calls us into a relationship with Him. That’s what’s broken. It’s not about achieving perfection. Or following religious rules. But responding to God’s invitation for a restored relationship through Jesus Christ.

And this makes you part of a greater community–the church. Which, according to the Greek word “Ekklesia” means, the called out ones. Also, known as the Bride of Christ.

As this community grows–those who call themselves “People of God”–perhaps other name calling will decline.

A Biblical Prescription For The Healing Of America Seeks Humility

Humility is other centered. Puts others first. And gives them the benefit of the doubt. It’s not thinking less of yourself, but thinking of yourself less.

Which is difficult because we’re naturally self-centered.

But it begins by acknowledging I am imperfect. You are too. And we all fall short of God’s standard. That Jesus Christ is the only one who met it. So we pause before rushing to judgement. And look for ways to extend grace.

Knowing Jesus is the perfect example of humility we should imitate.

A Biblical Prescription For The Healing Of America Involves Prayer

Prayer is more than presenting your list of wants to God. It’s entering His presence to both speak and listen. Seek His will. And obey. Which also counters the natural tendency to demand our rights.

It includes personal confession and intercession. Recognizes that God is sovereign. And that prayer engages God’s power in ways that are both mysterious and miraculous.

A Biblical Prescription For The Healing Of America Requires Repentance

The people of Israel had a history of falling away from and returning to God. Repentance was the key difference between national prosperity and bondage. When Israel turned their backs on God, hard times followed. When they acknowledged their sin and turned back to God He restored them as a nation.

In the Greek, repentance means to turn from and turn to. In other words, a change of direction. Away from sin and towards God. More than an emotion, it’s an act of will. Done individually. But with a profound, spiritual impact when many people turn towards God together.

The good news is that God forgives. And change is possible. When we individually own our part. And collectively turn back to God. Perhaps then, we’ll be heading in a new and better direction.

About Chip Tudor:

Chip Tudor is an author, blogger and professional writer. He publishes books, humorous Christian drama, and thought provoking blogs from a Christian worldview. This blog is originally published here.

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What The Bible Story Of Ruth Teaches About Godly Love

What The Bible Story Of Ruth Teaches About Godly Love

Hands form heart Bible Story Of Ruth Teaches

The Bible Story of Ruth teaches about Godly love. It starts with the love of a daughter-in-law for her mother-in-law. Then between a man and woman. And finally, the redeeming love of God for mankind.

The Bible Story Of Ruth Teaches Godly Love Makes God A Spiritual Priority

In the Bible story, Ruth and Orpah were the daughter-in-laws to Naomi. All became widows. And life for a widow during this ancient time was difficult. Because women had little access to gainful employment. And were therefore, highly dependent on husbands and family members for support.

Naomi was a Jew, but Ruth and Orpah were a Moabites. So Naomi urged them to return to their families in Moab where they had a better chance of finding other husbands. While Naomi planned to return to her home in the land of Judah.

So Orpah returned to Moab, but Ruth stayed with Noami. Making it clear she would not only follow Naomi; she would also follow Naomi’s God.

It was not a practical decision. Because the prospect for two widows with no means of support was bleak.

For Ruth however, it was a spiritual decision. One that exercised faith. Not just in Naomi, but in Naomi’s God.

When God is a spiritual priority and you make decisions on faith, it often looks impractical from a secular viewpoint. But you do so because you know God has your back. And you don’t measure the size of your problems, but the size of your God.

The Bible Story Of Ruth Teaches Godly Love Is Redemptive

According to Jewish law at this time, a kinsman-redeemer was a male relative who acted on behalf a relative in trouble, danger, or need. And Naomi and Ruth qualified for all three.

Ruth ended up gleaning for food in the fields of a rich, Jewish man named Boaz, who just happened to be a distant relative of Naomi and qualified as a kinsman-redeemer.

And Ruth caught his attention. Not just because of her physical beauty, but also the inner beauty of her character. Like every good love story, the two fell in love, married and had a son named Obed. And in his line of descendants was Jesus Christ.

That’s why the story of Ruth is so important. It illustrates, not just how people demonstrating Godly love can redeem others, but how God redeems us.

As people separated from God by sin, we too are in spiritual need. And Jesus Christ rescues us as our kinsman-redeemer.

The Bible Story Of Ruth Teaches Godly Love Is Sacrificial

Ruth’s faith decision required a willingness to sacrifice. What if she had gone back to Moab with Orpah?

That would mean no marriage to Boaz. No son Obed. No Jesus Christ. And where would that leave us?

Of course, Jesus made a significant sacrifice too. Which involved dying on a cross and resurrection three days later. Which he did willingly to demonstrate God’s love for us.

It’s remarkable isn’t it? How God weaves what looks like so many random stories into a very clear, intentional work of redemption for mankind. But God doesn’t just care generally about humanity. He cares specifically for you. And your story. And wants to change it from bondage in sin to freedom in Christ.

But like Ruth, you have to make a spiritual decision. On faith. And accept the redeeming gift of Jesus Christ.

And when you do, you’ll experience a new kind of love story. One with a happily ever after. That lasts for eternity.

About Chip Tudor:

Chip Tudor is a freelance copywriter, published author, playwright and pastor. He publishes drama at www.chiptudor.com, books on Amazon.com, and articles on his blog.

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What The Bible Story Of David And Bathsheba Teaches About Faithfulness To God

What The Bible Story Of David And Bathsheba Teaches About Faithfulness To God

Couple together Bible Story Of David And Bathsheba

The Bible story of David and Bathsheba teaches about faithfulness to God. Yes, it’s a story about faithfulness in marriage. But the covenant of marriage is used in the Bible to illustrate the covenant between God and His followers. The result when faithfulness is broken. And how it can be restored.

The Bible Story Of David And Bathsheba Teaches That Failure in Faithfulness Is Not A Deal Breaker

What a relief, right? Because we’ve all been unfaithful to God in some way. Maybe not in marriage. But in a multitude of others. You pick.

And there’s irony in the story. Because David’s whole rise to fame and popularity was because of his faithfulness to God. He killed Goliath in an epic, one on one battle. And from there, he distinguished himself as a military leader and was eventually crowned the king of Israel.

Where he had it all. Money. Power. And God’s blessing in his life.

And yet, he messed up royally by seducing the wife of one of his soldiers. She became pregnant. And to cover it up he had the man killed.

It’s a sober reminder. We’re all one bad decision away from destroying our lives. And yet, while David violated his faithfulness, God does not completely shut him off. Not because of David, but who God is. A heavenly Father full of grace and mercy. Who wants to restore us.

The Bible Story Of David And Bathsheba Teaches Faithfulness To God Strives for A Proactive Spiritual Life

How did David create such a mess in the first place? He started by slacking on self-discipline. When he should have been out leading his army, he elected to stay home and take it easy. And became passive, bored and self-indulgent.

Sure. It’s okay to take vacations. Enjoy pleasurable activities. Pursue things you like. But ongoing faithfulness to God requires spiritual self-discipline.

David let down his guard. Like we all do at times.

Which is why faithfulness to God requires spiritual diligence. And is best practiced in a proactive manner. Rather than focusing on the negative—what are the things I shouldn’t do? It focuses on the positive—what are the things I should do?

The Bible Story Of David And Bathsheba Teaches That Faithfulness To God Is Restored Through Humility and Repentance

David was confronted with his sin by the prophet Nathan. Did David know he was sinning with Bathsheba? Probably. Just like we often know when we are sinning, but choose to ignore or rationalize it. Maybe David was doing the same thing.

But to his credit, when confronted by the prophet Nathan, he quickly confessed and repented of his sin. And that is the key to restoring a relationship with God.

The Story Of David And Bathsheba Teaches That Faithfulness To God Accepts But Is Not Defined By Consequences

The child born out of David’s sinful behavior died shortly after birth. David accepted the consequences and then worshipped God.

In other words, David did not let his sin define him. He didn’t make excuses, shift the blame or let the consequences keep him from pursuing God.

He returned to a life of faithfulness to God. Which is why he is called a man after God’s own heart.

And the story offers hope to all of us. Because despite our best intentions, we all still sin. But God’s grace is abundant and his forgiveness unmeasured. So even when we fail, we can return to a life of faithfulness to God.

About Chip Tudor:

Chip Tudor is a freelance copywriter, published author, playwright and pastor. He publishes drama at www.chiptudor.com, books on Amazon.com, and articles on his blog.

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Grow Beyond The Natural Confines Of Your Box!

Grow Beyond The Natural Confines Of Your Box!

You can grow beyond the confines of your box. Because sometimes in business, you operate within a box. In my line of work there are two familiar expressions: “Think outside the box.” “Don’t put me in a box.”  

I’d like to suggest we encourage people to grow beyond the natural confines of their boxes rather than seeking to abandon them or deny they exist.

Growing Beyond The Confines Of Your Box Begins With Recognizing You’re In A Box 

“Think outside the box.” I hate this phrase. My clients hire people to work inside well-defined boxes or roles. These boxes aren’t randomly constructed or poorly designed. Those doing the hiring aren’t really looking for people to think outside that box, despite what they might say during a brainstorming session. They want people who think creatively inside the box. Unfortunately, “Think creatively inside your box” doesn’t have the same ring or crowd-pleasing support of autonomy.

“Don’t put me in a box.” I assure those who have completed a personality assessment that the box identified by the assessment is quite large, with plenty of room for many pursuits.

If it’s Myers-Briggs Type Indicator, then there are 16 boxes for 7+ billion people. If DiSC, then either 4 or 12 boxes depending upon how you slice the results. Enneagram offers 9 possible outcomes with variants of each. So, perhaps an assessment places you in a box, but you’ll never suffocate within it and I’ll never know your favorite flavor of ice cream because I know the letter(s) or number(s) associated with your box.  

What interests me most, however, is growing beyond the natural confines of my box. Using DiSC as an example, I encourage each respondent to “own their dot” on the DiSC globe rather than spending life trying to move to another part of the globe they think would be better. Ds (Dominance on DiSC) need to be healthy mature Ds and not look to become Ss (Steadiness on DiSC).

Growing Beyond The Confines Of Your Box Includes An Expansion

I do encourage people to “enlarge their territories.” A strong D needs to own her dot but expand her territory, learning to pick up characteristics and behaviors associated with the other three quadrants (Influence, Steadiness, Conscientiousness).  

Here’s a simple example of how I’ve grown beyond the natural confines of my box. As a parent, it was always easier for me to say “no.” I wanted to limit options, avoid complications, and minimize commitments. Blame this on my Myers-Briggs “J-ness” (Judging preference rather than Perceiving).  

One year I told my wife Judy that on our family vacation I was going to say “yes” whenever possible. Thankfully my kids didn’t know about this experiment because they would have taken full advantage. What I found was that I had a wonderful time on vacation and enjoyed saying “yes” as often as I could. I’m sure my children thought another person was inhabiting my body or that a doppelganger with a different personality had made the trip.

Growing Beyond Your Box Includes Personal Development

I get it. I really do. You want to be free to think outside the box and would prefer to not be placed within a box at all. The way I see the world is that we all inhabit boxes – personalities, roles, expectations, relational commitments – but that these boxes need not keep us from becoming healthy mature versions of ourselves. We need to “own our dots” while “enlarging our territories.”  

Embrace who you are and seek to maximize your strengths, while recognizing that we are all on a journey to greater health, deeper maturity. On that journey, choose to grow beyond the natural confines of your box without denying that it exists or believing that life would be better without it. Encourage others to do the same.  

[Final Note: Of course, my appreciation for my box as the home base from which I venture and to which I return, is consistent with my personality. While for some, the rejection and outright denial of boxes is reflective of the boxes they inhabit.

About Julian Consulting

Dr. Stephen Julian is President of Julian Consulting, a firm specializing in team health, effective communication, and leadership development. He has worked with leaders and their teams for nearly 30 years in a variety of settings – including Africa, South and Central America.

https://www.julianconsulting.org

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Lessons From The Bible Story Of David And Goliath

Lessons From The Bible Story Of David And Goliath

The Bible Story of David and Goliath
Image by Jeff Jacobs from Pixabay

The Bible Story of David and Goliath is one of the most popular stories in the scriptures. Because we naturally root for the underdog. But the story offers spiritual lessons too. Here are three of them.

The Bible Story Of David And Goliath Teaches You To Maximize Your God-Given Strengths

It seems like common sense, right? Focus on what you do best. Maximize your strengths. But it’s easy to lose sight of this. Pursue the latest trend, coolest technology or fashionable idea. Even when you’re not properly trained in how to effectively use them.

So what ability are you overlooking? What skill are you underestimating?

Even though King Saul gave David the latest in military equipment, David used what he was most familiar with it. It seemed woefully inadequate against the modern equipment Goliath had, but let David perform his best. And ultimately led to his success.

Goliath laughed at David. Mocked him. And David responded with a head shot that rocked his world.

The Bible Story Of David And Goliath Teaches That God Empowers Followers Who Call On Him

On a human level, the story is a clear mismatch. Goliath was a massive soldier in his prime. A confident, war veteran. Well equipped and combat proven.

David was barely a teenager. A sheep herder. But not completely without skill. He was good at his job. Which included killing a lion and a bear. So he had reason for confidence. Yet was still, woefully outgunned.

But that’s the thing. It’s not simply a human level story. And David’s real confidence was not in himself, but in his God. The key to this battle was neither his weapons or skill. It was calling on the name of his Almighty God.

Calling on the name of God assumes a sense of dependence. It requires submission and faith. And recognizes that God is sovereign. Which means there’s no guarantee of earthly success. Because some heavenly victories are won on the other side of this life.

But calling on the name of God engages the power of God. For the Kingdom of God. And puts you on the right side of eternity.

The Bible Story Of David And Goliath Teaches That God Is A Deliverer

God used David to defeat Goliath and deliver Israel from their Philistine enemies. Like He used Moses to deliver Israel out of Egypt. Delivered Daniel from the lion’s den. Along with many other stories of spiritual liberation.

Throughout history, and even today, God uses His followers to accomplish His will. To use their gifts and talents to advance His Kingdom. By calling on the power of His name.

In the ultimate battle for the souls of mankind. To deliver this world from the bondage of sin through the sacrificial death of David’s most well-known descendant–Jesus Christ. Who offers eternal deliverance.

About Chip Tudor:

Chip Tudor is a freelance copywriter, published author, playwright and pastor. He publishes drama at www.chiptudor.com, books on Amazon.com, and articles on his blog.

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