Tuesday - March 14, 2023

Kris Baker

SCRIPTURE


Romans 15:4


For everything that was written in the past was written to teach us, so that through the endurance taught in the Scriptures and the encouragement they provide we might have hope.


WORDS OF HOPE


How do you read the Bible? As a series of stories? As children we were read “Bible stories”. A story is defined as “a narrative, either true or fictitious, in prose or verse, designed to interest, amuse, or instruct the hearer or reader. That definition offers us a lot to unpack. “To interest, amuse, or instruct” provides many different levels of engagement and commitment with the words that we, as the receiver of the story, hear or read.


And discerning truth from fiction, especially when it comes to the stories of the Bible, opens up a great big can of worms. Some read the Bible as if every word is absolute truth. (Well, except those words that require them personally to believe or live in ways that they find uncomfortable.) And others read the Bible as if it is a collection of tales that likely are not factual. In the end, does it really matter which way an individual engages with the stories that we call holy scripture?


The Bible certainly contains both interesting and even amusing stories, but its primary purpose is to instruct. A well-crafted story does not have to be true for us to learn something from it. It only must speak to our human condition in a way that is relevant and purposeful. To debate the literalness of biblical stories is to miss altogether the point of the stories themselves. As children, most of us read the story of Charlotte’s Web, one in which Charlotte, a barn spider, weaves words into her web, with the help of Templeton the rat in an effort to save their friend Wilbur the pig from being sent to slaughter. We all know that this story is not true, that rats cannot spell and spiders cannot weave words into their webs. Yet, we are all drawn into this world of friendship, love, and self-sacrifice. Though in the end, Charlotte the spider dies of old age, she leaves her egg sack to Wilbur so that a part of her will live on in the barn and her offspring will continue to keep Wilbur, the humble pig, company. This is the importance of story. Stories keep people and places in our hearts and minds. They keep our thinking and feeling active. Most importantly, they keep our hope alive.


Whether you believe the stories of the Bible to be fact or fable, they provide a moral compass to guide our daily living. And if we become active characters in this way of being, we are afforded a means by which hope is kept alive through the generations.


Today is Write Your Story Day. Like Jesus and every other character in the Bible, we too have a story, a story that is unique to us. If you were to write your story, what would the plot look like? Who or what is the protagonist? What details are important to include in the writing of your story and which are best left to mystery? Should the reader expect a plot twist? And


perhaps most importantly, what is the moral of your story? What part of your story will be carried into future generations? Each of our stories is just as important and can be just as powerful when shared with others as are those found in the Bible. We might even think of ourselves as the next chapters of scripture, like the baby spiders that Charlotte left for Wilbur.


PRAYER


Creator God, author of many stories, guide my thoughts today as I reflect on my unique story. Help me to see that my story is integral to yours, that I and all those that you have created, are important and loved characters in your still developing plot. AMEN


DEVOTION AUTHOR


Kris Baker

Order of St. Francis and St. Clare



Previous Posts

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