2016 picture of Ray Sparre

Insightful Musings on the Scriptures

by

Raymond P. Sparre
Northwest University class of '67



Tue Mar 29, 2022

Morning, Zane.

Just came back from my old man jog with the dogs. Whew! No pain no gain…they say. Does that mean I’m gaining because of all my aches and pains? I’m not so sure.

This account of Paul on a ship in a storm that ended in shipwreck is indeed an exciting story. Hollywood doesn’t have an exclusive edge on adventure and intrigue. Just read you Bible and allow those dramas to play out across the screen of your mind. I think it’s a lot healthier form of entertainment and imagination than disengaging the brain from objective thought and taking in all that a screenplay has to offer.

Have a great day. Love and prayers—Tua/Ray.


29 March
Acts 27:27-44
“Now I urge you to take some food. You need it to survive.” (Acts 27:34)

I can identify with this account. I have gathered some experience of my own at being in storms at sea in small vessels. Not fun. And life can often become like that—a storm at sea. Not fun. I’ve had some experience there too. In those passages there may be the winds of adversity and trouble. There may be the waves of persecution and opposition. There may be the contrary current of opinion and peer pressure. There may be the lurching of confusion and disorientation. There may come the utter exhaustion of tending to relentless survival details and the weakness caused by insufficient emotional and spiritual nourishment. Amidst those circumstances of life, Paul’s advice stands as good today as it ever was: “Now I urge you to take some food. You need it to survive. Not one of you will lose a single hair from his head.” About then, a little bald guy in the group piped up and hollered, “So what?! Who’s worried about hair at a time like this?!”

Oops! There goes my imagination again. I just made up the bald guy response. But I’m not making up the fact that your survival is not possible without nourishment—whether you think you have time for it or not. It’s not an option. And God’s Word is the perfect food source for soul and spirit—packed with all kinds of high-energy vitamins and nutrients when taken along with prayer, praise, and thanksgiving. Once again, let’s recall the words of Jesus when He quotes, “Man shall not live by bread (physical food) alone, but by every word (spiritual food) that proceeds from the mouth of God” (Matthew 4:4). Additionally, be reminded of the practical benefits of the Word as presented in Paul’s illustration in Ephesians 6. About that passage, someone has said, “With this application, you become a guaranteed victor. Without it, you become a guaranteed casualty.”

“The Bible is never a dry book for those who treat it as a source for living water.”