My friends know that I am a huge admirer of pastor and author Robert Morgan, even since stumbling upon his work 100 Bible Verses Everyone Should Know by Heart. He recently released a new book on meditating on Scripture entitled Reclaiming the Lost Art of Biblical Meditation: Finding Peace in Jesus.

Psalm 119:148 states “My eyes stay open through the watches of the night, that I may meditate on your promises.”

Morgan adds,

“Meditation is not new, and it is not new age. God, not the gurus, devised it, and it’s based on the Bible, not on Buddha. Biblical meditation is an antidote to the unprecedented stress of our age. In a world where everyone is overwhelmed and undervalued, our survival, sanity, and saintliness depend on reclaiming the lost art of biblical meditation…Meditation is staying our minds on the Lord, loving Him with every thought, fearing Him, and delighting in His commands.”

He then adds a wonderful anecdote to accentuate his point.

When Harry Truman became president, he worried about losing touch with common, everyday Americans, so he would often go out and be among them. Those were in simpler days, when the president could take a walk like everyone else. One evening, Truman decided to take a walk down to the Memorial Bridge on the Potomac River. When he grew curious about the mechanism that raised and lowered the bridge, he made his way across the catwalks and came upon the bridge tender, who was eating his evening supper out of a tin bucket. The man showed absolutely no surprise when he looked up and saw the best-known and most powerful man in the world. He just swallowed his food, wiped his mouth, smiled, and said, “You know, Mr. President, I was just thinking of you.” According to Truman’s biographer, David McCullough, it was a greeting that Truman adored and never forgot.

 The Lord adores it when He finds us just thinking about Him. As we read God’s Word each day and deliberately think about it—focusing our minds on His person and claiming His promises—we’re built up, and we come to understand our world and ourselves more clearly.

This should be our personal aspiration: to be daily in the Word, meditating on it, claiming its promises, gleaning its wisdom, being sanctified and accordingly comprehending more clearly the world and ourselves.

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