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time to time I reminisce about the opportunities I have had to live in
France. I remember places I’ve visited,
friends I’ve made, and conversations I’ve had. However, my daily surroundings
remind me that I am no longer in Paris . Yet, it’s not the fact that I can’t visit the
Eiffel Tower ; it’s not the fact that everyone
around me is speaking English, and it’s not the fact that I can drive a car
instead of taking a metro. None of these
facts, while true, are as poignant a reminder as the fact that I cannot run
down to the local bakery and buy a freshly baked French bread! I guess you could say I am addicted to the
stuff.
Every
morning in Paris, I ran down to one of several bakeshops in the neighborhood
and bought fresh bread and fresh croissants!
It was the best part of the day and one I eagerly anticipated! You might say, I became a regular customer of
the small bakery located just at the end of the street. In fact, I referred to it as my boulangerie
(bakery)!
A
trip to this bakery was always an ordeal because it always involved somewhat of
a dilemma. The place was always busy.
People from the neighborhood were busy buying their breads, desserts, and
sandwiches for the day ahead. For me,
the bread selection was easy; it was the pastries that posed the problem. Would it be a croissant, an apple turnover, a
flan, a small quiche, etc.? The
possibilities were endless! Thank goodness, the patience of the lady behind the
counter was not! Finally, I would decide
and hurry out of the place before deciding to purchase something else. But no matter what else I had in my hand, I
always had bread with me.
Bread,
it seems, is the quintessential staple of life.
No matter the culture, no matter the language, no matter the country, bread
is simply one thing we all have in common.
Perhaps this is why Jesus spoke so often of bread. The word bread appears 63 times in the NIV version
of the New Testament. But the
most well-known reference is found in Matthew 6:11
where Jesus teaches his followers to pray.
In this verse, Jesus simply says, “Give us today our daily bread.”
Two
important ideas are presented to us in this small passage from Matthew’s
gospel. First, we see Jesus asking God
to supply our bread. This means we do
not provide it for ourselves! Far too
often in the Christian life we try to be self-sufficient, trying to discover
ways and means to provide for our needs. We say we trust God yet we attempt to do
everything for ourselves. Jesus simply
asked God to supply the bread, the very staple and the most basic need of life. After all, that is God’s promise, isn’t
it? He promised to meet the needs we
have in life and He is faithful to that promise.
The
second lesson we need to grasp is the frequency with which this bread is
delivered. Jesus did not pray for weekly
bread, monthly bread, or for a bread truck that would delivery on a
pre-determined schedule. No, he prayed
for daily bread! He wanted his followers
to understand that we need God every day, not once a week, once a month, or
just when we get into trouble. We need
Him every moment of every day and Jesus used the picture of daily bread to
teach this every elementary but most important point about God. We must partake of Him daily as the most
basic and quintessential part of our lives.
Early
every morning, I went in search of fresh bread and every morning I was rewarded
for my efforts of getting up, getting dressed, and walking to the bakery. The same principle is true for us today. We must get up, open God’s word, plumb into
its depths, partake of it, and make it the most integral and central part of
our lives each day. God stands ready
each morning to provide your daily needs so trust Him and take Him at His
word. Have
you made a trip God’s bakery today?
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