Talk as You Walk
I love walking.
Apparently, it is one of the best forms of physical exercise.
Of course, walking is also a means, and for some people their only means of transport.
Walking for whatever reason is more enjoyable with someone else.
Walking and talking is a great way to communicate with family, friends, and also with God.
The point is that we are doing two things at the same time.
We are not just taking exercise or travelling.
As we walk together, we are in communion with one another.
Both Enoch and Noah ‘walked with God’ (Genesis 5:24; 6:9).
They didn’t just sit, kneel, or stand with God (the kind of actions we would often associate with spending time with God),
but they were also in communion with God when doing something else.
Don’t keep looking at the regrets behind you, the problems around you and the sin within you. Rather, lift up your head and see the Help above you – walk with your head held high, and your eyes fixed on Him.
While you are doing other things – working, eating, exercising, or relaxing – you can be in communion with God at the same time.
Personally, I also find it the best way to pray.
This has been my pattern for the last few years.
After reading the Bible each day, I go out and walk around our local park – which is almost deserted early in the morning.
I note down anything I sense the Holy Spirit saying as I pray.
You can pray as you walk to the bus stop or walk from one activity to the next. Talk as you walk.
The Bible has a great deal to say about walking with God. It is how you were intended to live.
God’s desire for you is that you walk humbly in a relationship with him (Micah 6:8).
This is what Jesus has made possible – for you to walk as Jesus did (1 John 2:6).
You may stumble from time to time, but one day you will walk with him ‘dressed in white’ (Revelation 3:4).
Talk as You Walk
Psalm 3:1-8 KJV
[1] LORD, how are they increased that trouble me! Many are they that rise up against me.
[2] Many there be which say of my soul, There is no help for him in God. Selah.
[3] But thou, O LORD, art a shield for me; My glory, and the lifter up of mine head.
[4] I cried unto the LORD with my voice, And he heard me out of his holy hill. Selah.
[5] I laid me down and slept; I awaked; for the LORD sustained me.
[6] I will not be afraid of ten thousands of people, That have set themselves against me round about.
[7] Arise, O LORD; save me, O my God: For thou hast smitten all mine enemies upon the cheek bone; Thou hast broken the teeth of the ungodly.
[8] Salvation belongeth unto the LORD: Thy blessing is upon thy people. Selah.
https://bible.com/bible/1/psa.3.1.KJV
Walk with your head held high!
David walked with God. But this does not mean that everything was perfect.
This psalm was written during a rebellion by David’s son Absalom that had been partly caused by David’s adultery (see 2 Samuel 12:11).
Yet David repented of what he had done, and God forgave him and his relationship with God was restored.
David did not have an easy life:
‘Lord, how many are my foes! How many rise up against me! Many are saying of me, “God will not deliver him.”’ (Psalm 3:1–2).
David cries out, ‘But you, God, shield me on all sides; you ground my feet, you lift my head high… ’ (v.3, MSG).
Like David, bring your fears and requests to God: ‘To the Lord I cry aloud, and he answers me from his holy hill’ (v.4).
In spite of his distressing situation God lifted up David’s head.
God does not want you to be downcast.
Don’t keep looking at the regrets behind you, the problems around you and the sin within you.
Rather, lift up your head and see the help above you – walk with your head held high, and your eyes fixed on him.
Talk as You Walk
David was able to say, ‘I lie down and sleep; I wake again, because the Lord sustains me.
I will not fear the tens of thousands drawn up against me on every side’ (vv.5–6).
In spite of all the troubles, he seems to have a deep peace – like a lake, where there may be rough waves on the surface, but deeper down there is a great stillness.
Lord, I pray that you will help me to walk with you daily in the way of peace, with my head held high, trusting you to supply all I need for the day ahead.
Matthew 2:19-3:17
Walk in step with the Holy Spirit
John the Baptist prepared the way for Jesus.
Whereas John’s baptism was symbolic, Jesus would ‘baptise you with the Holy Spirit’ (3:11).
This prophecy is then dramatically affirmed when the Holy Spirit descends on Jesus as he is baptised (v.16),
showing that he is the one John is speaking about and that Jesus is able to pour out this same Holy Spirit on you and me.
In many ways Jesus’ baptism was different from ours.
He did not need to be baptised ‘for repentance’, and he was already filled with the Holy Spirit.
John the Baptist was hesitant about baptising him (v.14) but Jesus said, ‘Let it be so now; it is proper for us to do this to fulfil all righteousness’ (v.15).
Jesus identified with us, sinful human beings, right from the start.
He did this so that he could bear our sin on the cross for us.
As a result, you are able to experience the Holy Spirit in a similar way and walk ‘in step with the Spirit’ (Galatians 5:25).
We see here something of what it means to walk ‘in step with the Spirit’:
Get refined in the fire!
John said that whereas he baptised with water, Jesus would baptise ‘with the Holy Spirit and fire’ (Matthew 3:11).
The Holy Spirit will come like a refining fire to bring power and purity in your life.
Knowing the refining fire of the Spirit in this life means that you can be free from the fear of the fire of judgment when Jesus returns (v.12).
Be filled with peace.
When Jesus was baptised and came out of the water, ‘heaven was opened,
and he saw the Spirit of God descending like a dove and alighting on him’ (v.16).
The dove is a symbol of peace, which the Holy Spirit brings to your life. The ‘fruit of the Spirit is… peace’ (Galatians 5:22).
Be assured of your adoption.
A voice from heaven said, ‘This is my Son’ (Matthew 3:17). Jesus is the Son of God in a unique way.
However, the Holy Spirit assures all of us that through what Jesus has done for us, we too are sons and daughters of God:
You receive the spirit of adoption. And by him you cry, ‘Abba, Father’.
The Holy Spirit himself testifies with your spirit that you are a child of God (see Romans 8:15–16).
Talk as You Walk
Know that you are loved by God.
The voice from heaven said ‘… whom I love…’ (Matthew 3:17).
And The apostle Paul writes that God’s love for you is poured into your heart by the Holy Spirit (Romans 5:5).
Feel his pleasure.
The voice from heaven says, ‘with him I am well pleased’ (Matthew 3:17).
Again, it was supremely true of Jesus but as you walk in step with the Spirit, you too can experience this sense of God’s delight and pleasure.
I love the moment in the film Chariots of Fire when the Olympic runner Eric Liddell says, ‘When I run, I feel his pleasure.’
Lord, thank you that you give me your Holy Spirit to refine me, to give me peace, to assure me that I am a child of God, to know your love and to feel your pleasure. Help me to walk ‘in step with the Spirit’.
Genesis 4:17-6:22
Walk in relationship with God.
Human beings are the pinnacle of God’s creation.
God created us to walk in relationship with him.
‘When God created the human race, he made it godlike, with a nature akin to God.
He created both male and female and blessed them, the whole human race’ (5:1–2, MSG).
However, sadly the human race went astray: ‘Human evil was out of control.
People thought evil, imagined evil – evil, evil, evil from morning to night… it broke \[God’s\] heart’ (6:5–6, MSG).
Evil starts in our thinking and imagination – that is, in our hearts.
It is a case of ‘garbage in, garbage out’.
We need to watch not just our actions but also our thoughts, attitudes, motives, and imagination.
In the midst of corruption and evil, it is possible to be different and to make a difference.
Enoch and Noah are two examples of those who did not go along with the crowd but ‘walked with God’.
It appears that ‘after he became the father of Methuselah’ (5:22), Enoch walked faithfully with God for the rest of his life.
Talk as You Walk
There is something so powerful, amazing, and almost miraculous about seeing the birth of our own children.
One of my very close friends became a Christian through experiencing the birth of his first child.
‘Enoch walked steadily with God. And then one day he was simply gone: God took him’ (v.24, MSG).
Noah also walked with God. He found ‘grace (favour) in the eyes of the Lord’ (v.8, AMP).
In spite of all the evil going on around him, ‘Noah was a good man, a man of integrity in his community.
Noah walked with God’ (6:9, MSG).
Noah believed God and built a boat, even though it was not raining and there was no water in sight.
But Noah did exactly what God told him to do (v.22).
Lord, help me to be righteous and blameless in my thoughts, words, and deeds, walking with you in a close relationship.
Help me to do everything you tell me to do.
Talk as You Walk
Also Read: What is your first question going to be? – Diademng (thediademng.org)