By Elisa Morgan, Publisher, FullFill™
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As a child, I had a love/hate relationship with spaghetti.
While my mother was rather unpredictable in much of her mothering, she strictly enforced the two-bite rule in our house. The two-bite rule means you have to take two bites of everything on your plate, no matter if you like it or not.
Cept I think the last part of the rule was a true "Paige" (that was my mother's name) add-on. Her version of the two-bite rule was "You have to eat two bites of everything on your plate and then one day maybe you'll be big enough to like it." This "Paige-ism" offered a kind of magic to an otherwise boring rule. After all, you never knew, did you, if you might be "big enough" this time to like the unlikeable?
When I was a child, I didn't like spaghetti. I know, kinda weird. It might have been the tomato taste. Every "spaghetti night" I approached my dinner with a kind of wonder - Maybe this time? I'd watch my older sister wolf down her plate. I'd look at her long limbs and budding womanhood and then at my own skinny legs and flat chest and yearn for "initiation". She was so mature!
I'd fork into the pile of red stuff and slurp it into my mouth - always following it in disgust with a giant gulp of milk as I discovered once again - I did NOT like spaghetti. Still.
Two bites after two bites after two bites, the years passed. Finally one day, after dutifully shoveling in a bite, I stopped, chewed and swallowed. Eureka! I liked spaghetti! I quickly looked down at my flat chest with crestfallen hope. I was still far from mature.
Silly? Maybe to some. But to me, the two-bite rule has come to apply to many things in life with its underlying principle: keep trying something you don't like so much and one day you just may be "big enough" to like it.
I discovered the two-bite rule applied beautifully to reading the Bible. Two bites. And one day you might be big enough to like it.
What are the two bites? Two questions: "What?" And "So what?"
First: "What?" Take a section of scripture and ask "What is it saying?" Literally. For example, let's look at Matthew 5:3, "Blessed are the poor in spirit for theirs is the kingdom of God." What is this saying?
Literally the sentence says that those who are poor in spirit - literally the word is "bankrupt" are blessed - chosen, happy, in a good state - because they have the kingdom - or presence - of God and his purposes.
Okay. Hmmm. The first bite is "What?"
Second, fork in the second bite: "So what?" What difference does the "what" make? Apply it to your life.
Well, if I'm spiritually poor - or bankrupt - rather than being disqualified or cut off from God and his world - I'm actually closer to possessing it. Wow! That's pretty huge! The "what" becomes an amazing "so what?" in the second bite.
Obviously, no one can live and thrive off of two bites a day. We need more than that - a full balanced meal - to grow fully in our relationship with God. But two bites are a good way to begin.
"What?" And "So what?" Two bites that can help us all grow up to be big enough to like studying the Bible.
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Elisa, Your Bible application is great at the end, but I tell you what I love most is the Paige-ism, telling the kids to try it every time and once they are old enough they will grow to like it. I'm going to use that with my kids!
ReplyDeleteBut as I wrote that I thought of myself and church music. I am the pianist at our very traditional church. I naturally would love to have crazy emotional worship, hands raised, doing some dancing, shouting to Jesus. But that isn't where God led me and my family. So, I pray four or five traditional hymns each Sunday. I used to fight against this within but lately I've asked God to let me sense His Holy Spirit within these inspired songs. Some of them are fantastic -- the words are incredible. And my worship has been deepened (though I am so looking forward to heaven where I can dance and dance and dance). So, I think this is kind of the two-bite approach. Thanks.