Into the Forest I Go: Why I Never Stop Reading the Bible

Nothing helps one gain perspective on just how little knowledge they really have like walking through an environment or landscape that is unfamiliar to them. Even when it’s something we’ve seen hundreds or thousands of times, if we’re willing to make an honest assessment, we’ll admit what we know is a fraction of what is there is be discovered.

This is true whether our place is an African jungle, a Florida swamp, a New York city sidewalk, or the coffee shop around the corner.

For me, it’s a mountain destination. My family has been coming to the same mountain forest every summer for years. We’ve hiked the trails too many times to count. And yet, yesterday as we walked along one of the most familiar ones, we were drawn to new details we hadn’t noticed in years past.

To know the forest thoroughly or intimately after only a few visits is impossible. It is like the proverbial onion that must be peeled back a layer at a time.

The same is true of the Word of God. Some people assume if they’ve read it once, they’ve seen all it has to share. But like a forest forever filled with an endless list of new things to discover,

the Bible is not a horizontal journey accomplished with a reading or two. It is a vertical journey taking us both deeper and higher the more time we spend with it.

The forest is a complex ecosystem full of sights, sounds, smells, feels, and tastes (if you’re smart enough and brave enough to choose wisely). To detect every nuance of color and texture in a single visit would simply overwhelm our senses. Instead, our senses will capture the big things… the height of the trees, the sound of stream, and the smell of the pines. But as we continue to return again and again, we notice increasingly intricate details. The more familiar we become with the forest, the more it opens to us in richer detail.

The Bible works for us in the same way. When we are new to our faith, to take in and understand it in its entirety would be overwhelming. Like an infant who needs milk and not steak, we aren’t ready to digest everything God has to say. The frustration some feel when they see themselves as unable to fully grasp everything the Bible has to say, or when they believe they are too far behind where their peers seem to be, is a sad trick of the enemy to keep them from pressing on.

Friend, if you are coming to your Bible open to whatever God has to say to you in your time there, then you are exactly where God wants you to be. You are not behind, and you cannot get ahead of God’s desire for you. When we long for His knowledge and understanding, He is good to fill us with what we need. Not always what we want, but exactly what we need.

God’s communication with us starts out as a simple language, but it always becomes richer and deeper the more grow in Him.

Consider the way adults communicate with children. We first speak to them in the words they can understand. We tell them not to climb on top of the table because it will hurt when they fall off. We don’t yet share with them Newton’s Law of Gravity. The conversations I can have with my two-year-old grandson are not at all like the ones I have with his parents. But they are good and wonderful and exactly where he needs to be for his age and readiness.

If we are willing, every trip we take through the Bible will reveal to us new details. God, in His wisdom, has buried treasures throughout as an invitation to us to never stop searching.

May we never be content to say “I have read the Bible,” but rather may our declaration be “I read the Bible.”

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9 Comments

    The Conversation

  1. Andrew Budek-Schmeisser says:

    I’ve been concussed so many times
    that reading’s gotten really tough,
    but I’m admitting in these rhymes,
    I don’t read the good book enough.
    Sure, I know ’bout audio,
    but I’m pretty deaf, you see,
    and listening’s worse than reading, so,
    this is where I find I be,
    making my excuses
    and hoping that I get a pass
    for this thing I chooses,
    but I’m afraid the looking glass
    tells a story to my eye
    of a man who just won’t try.

    • laltebaumer says:

      Andrew, you get an A+ for honesty! I had to make a similar confession a couple of weeks ago in regard to why I don’t have more Scripture memorized. As always, thank you for your insightful and poetic contribution to the conversation.

  2. Laura Conner Kestner says:

    I’ve often found this true as well, Lori. God’s word revealed – just what I need, and when I need it. Thanks for a thought-provoking post!

    • laltebaumer says:

      Thanks for sharing and joining the conversation. I love how God is revealing things to us always when we’re looking for it.

  3. Lana Burton says:

    I love this article! Yes, I read my Bible every day! And, I love to talk to the Lord, too!

    • laltebaumer says:

      Thank you for commenting and joining the conversation. Isn’t wonderful how much deeper out conversations with God go the more time we spend in His word and in talking to Him? Blessings and keep on reading!

  4. Tiffany Ward says:

    I love where you say we are not behind, but exactly where He wants us to be. But even more so, how you are so right in the fact that I can’t get ahead of His desire for me. I genuinely desire to become more Christlike, but recently am resting in the peace of being in His perfect timing. Like you said, there are many hidden treasures just waiting to be discovered as we continue to press in to His word and never stop learning, growing and being shaped more and more into His image.

    • laltebaumer says:

      Isn’t it such a comfort to know we can trust God to keep us right where we need to be for the lessons He wants to teach us. He walks us through our spiritual growth with such love.

  5. […] There is something restorative about hiking in the forest. The crisp mountain air scented with pine and the earthy aroma of the forest floor, the quiet babble of a mountain stream, the solitude, the magnificence. Some people find the beach or the city or a coffee shop good for their soul, but for me it’s the mountains. (I shared how the forest helps me gain perspective in a previous blog you can read here.) […]