Today's Daily Bread
Initial Point
If you drive south of our home in Boise, Idaho, you’ll see a
volcanic butte that rises out of the sagebrush on the east side of the
road. This is the initial point from which the state of Idaho was
surveyed.
In 1867, four years after Idaho was organized as a territory,
Lafayette Cartee, the Surveyor General of the United States,
commissioned Peter Bell to survey the new territory. Bell took a sledge
and drove a brass post into a little knob on the summit of that butte,
declaring it to be the initial point from which he began his survey.
The survey established the language of land description in Idaho:
Townships are designated north and south of the initial point; ranges
are designated east and west. With such descriptions, you always know
exactly where you are.
We may read many books, but the Word of God is our “initial point,”
the fixed reference point. John Wesley read widely, but he always
referred to himself as “a man of one book.” Nothing can compare to the
Book of books, the Word of God. When we allow the Bible to be our guide
in all of life, we can say with the psalmist, “How sweet are Your words
to my taste, sweeter than honey to my mouth!” (Ps. 119:103).
Dear Lord, we are grateful for Your Book. In it
we learn of You and find guidance and direction
for our lives. Help us to learn to love Your Word
and to eagerly dig into its pages. Amen.
we learn of You and find guidance and direction
for our lives. Help us to learn to love Your Word
and to eagerly dig into its pages. Amen.
The Bible is like a compass:
if followed, you’re going in the right direction.

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