David Bahn – Reflections

Light from the Word and through the lens

  • 49 Week Bible Challenge – Day 89: The God who Sees


    Click here for an audio version of this devotion.

    I am using readings from the 49 Week Bible Challenge as the basis for these devotions. I encourage you to join me in this discipline. Today’s readings are Matthew 22; Exodus 3; Psalm 64; 1 Kings 5.

    Exodus 3:7-12

    Petunias  | Breckenridge, CO | June 2025

    His eye is on the sparrow: what a comforting thought! Hagar says, “You are a God who sees,” for she said, “Here have I really seen him who sees me?” (Genesis 16:13). And now here we read, “Then the LORD said, “I have surely seen the affliction of my people who are in Egypt and have heard their cry.” And these beautiful words of Psalm 139:

    Lord, you have searched me and known me!
    You know when I sit down and when I rise up;
        you discern my thoughts from afar.
    You search out my path and my lying down
        and are acquainted with all my ways. – Psalm 139:1-3

    On the other hand, think of Jonah. He would rather not have been seen by God. He took off rather than going where God had sent him, and ended up praying to God from the inside of a great fish. So much for not wanting to be seen or heard by God!

    My sister-in-law loves the song, His Eye is on the Sparrow. Jesus says that not one sparrow falls to the ground apart from the will of the Father. So when God sees his chosen people enslaved, abused, and distressed by the Egyptians, he is moved to act. Moses will encounter God in the burning bush. He will go to Pharaoh and ultimately gain their release. For God not only sees, he dispatches help for those in distress. The deliverance isn’t instantaneous. But it was a mighty act of God’s deliverance.

    This is but a shadow of the ultimate deliverance by Jesus of all those who believe in him. God saw us in our shame and sent his Son to save us. God sees. God acts. God saves. Thanks be to God!

  • 49 Week Bible Challenge – Day 88: Nard


    Click here for an audio version of this devotion.

    I am using readings from the 49 Week Bible Challenge as the basis for these devotions. I encourage you to join me in this discipline. Today’s readings are John 12; Deuteronomy 15; 1 Kings 1; Isaiah 39.

    Pansies  | Breckenridge, CO | June 2025

    Let my prayers rise before you as incense, and the lifting up of my hands as the evening sacrifice. – Psalm 141:2

    The house was filled with the fragrance of the perfume. – John 12:3

    Some people do not like fragrances. They become ill. They have a allergic reaction. Most people don’t really like smoke. It irritates the eyes and lungs. It obscures landscapes. Where it is there is fire.

    God, however, likes both. Prayers arising before him as incense are a good thing. Jesus recognized the aroma of the nard filling the house of Lazarus and his sisters for what it was: an offering of love and an anointing in anticipation of Jesus’ death.

    Lazarus, Mary and Martha knew something of death. They had seen it up close. They feared the smell of decay after four days. But the deep pain of death – at which Jesus himself wept – was replaced by the word of Jesus.

    Now, however, a even more grievous death loomed. Jesus would soon be dead. Nothing would prevent it. Nothing will delay it. So Mary who had sat at Jesus’ feet while Martha had served, sits at his feet again. This time she sits there to pour out the nard. Expensive. Fragrant. Prophetic.

    Judas will protest: this is wasteful. Others will wonder: why is he allowing her to do this? Jesus will put them all straight. Love is extravagant. It grows from hearts deeply touched by God’s love. It pours out expensive offerings. It moves the Lord of Creation to offer himself as the atoning sacrifice for the sins of the world. Love does that – no matter what criticisms may come.

  • 49 Week Bible Challenge – Day 87: God’s House of Prayer


    Click here for an audio version of this devotion.

    I am using readings from the 49 Week Bible Challenge as the basis for these devotions. I encourage you to join me in this discipline. Today’s readings are Mark 11; Isaiah 56; Jeremiah 7; 2 Chronicles 23; Ezra 3.

    Sulphur Cosmos  | Breckenridge, CO | June 2025

    It is engraved on the cornerstone of the worship center at St. John Lutheran Church – the church I served until I retired in 2021. We put it there because we had such a strong prayer emphasis. St. John has a n active prayer team, a beautiful prayer garden, and opportunity for prayer each Sunday. I don’t like to talk about the power of prayer as much as I emphasize the promises of God in regard to prayer.

    Jesus promises that when we pray in his name, the Father will hear us and give us those things he knows to be good for us and our neighbor.

    James tells us that we have not because we ask not.

    Jesus teaches us to ask, seek, and knock. And those verbs are ongoing actions, keep on asking….

    Jesus spent time in purposeful and dedicated prayer.

    “My house shall be called a house of prayer for all peoples” is truly a fitting verse for the cornerstone of a church building.

    But looking more closely at this passage – especially in the Isaiah quote – the focus is on both prayer and the opportunity that God’s house is to afford those outside the faith to come and pray to God. I believe Jesus was so upset not just because people were desecrating a holy place, but also because their desecration was hindering others from coming to God’s house – especially the sick, shamed, and separated people. He would that the weak, the lame, and the searching would find a place to come and pray.

    We know that God is present everywhere. He has promised to be especially present when two or three are gathered in Jesus’ name. His house is a place to which we may all come to worship, sing, praise, give thanks … and pray. God’s house is to be that for all peoples.

  • 49 Week Bible Challenge – Day 84: When Faith Takes its Hold


    Click here for an audio version of this devotion.

    I am using readings from the 49 Week Bible Challenge as the basis for these devotions. I encourage you to join me in this discipline. Today’s readings are Luke 19; Numbers 5; 2 Samuel 12; 1 Chronicles 27; Psalm 137.

    Sulphur Cosmos & Garden Lobelia | Breckenridge, CO | June 2025

    I have recently been in conversation with a very worried mom. Her son is checking out of Christianity. He says that he isn’t an atheist, but warned her that he might go there. He might, he told her, go down the dark atheism hole. Thankfully they are still talking, and he is engaging with her respectfully. I suspect he may be triggered by outside influences to dismiss the visible church, religious formalism, and what he sees to be so much hypocrisy among religious people.

    She is very afraid. She fears that the enemy – Satan – has gotten ahold of her son. And she knows what he wants to do with him.

    Contrast that with Jesus’ ministry to the likes of Zacchaeus and the sinners and other tax collectors he encountered. In fact, Jesus reserved his harshest criticism for the religious leaders. Their long tassels, large philactories, lengthy prayers, and outward show of religion were of no value before God.

    But how was it that people like Zacchaeus got not only Jesus’ attention, but even his praise?!? Jesus invites himself to Zacchaeus’ house. Then he says that salvation had come to Zacchaeus’ house. Jesus calls him a Son of Abraham. What gives here?

    Faith gives Zacchaeus a new outlook on life. He suddenly and dramatically gives away his possessions to the poor, refunds all that he had defrauded and more, and makes all that known. This kind of behavior is not forced. He didn’t do it because he had to in order to be saved. He did it because salvation had come to his house. He did it because faith took ahold of him.

    I hope and pray that the Holy Spirit will lead this young man back to Jesus—the One who welcomes the outcast, calls the sinner, and still walks into the homes of those others might write off. Even now, Jesus sees him, just as he saw Zacchaeus. And faith, when it comes, will not be coerced or manufactured. It will come as a gift, bringing new life, a new heart, and a new story—one marked by grace, not fear.

  • 49 Week Bible Challenge – Day 85: Camels and God’s Transforming Power


    Click here for an audio version of this devotion.

    I am using readings from the 49 Week Bible Challenge as the basis for these devotions. I encourage you to join me in this discipline. Today’s readings are Luke 18:15-43; Exodus 20; Psalm 123; Zechariah 5.

    Sulphur Cosmos & Garden Lobelia | Breckenridge, CO | June 2025

    You can get a camel through the eye of a needle. It will simply be dramatically changed in the process! Don’t you just love that image? Puree of camel! The trick would be reconstituting the camel after it makes it through the eye of the needle. This, obviously, is hyperbole. Camels cannot go through a needle’s eye. It’s impossible!

    That’s what the disciples say to Jesus when he makes that point even more clear. He says, “How difficult it is for those who have wealth to enter the kingdom of God!” The reason isn’t because they are necessarily more evil than those without wealth. They may or may not be more evil. The reason is that wealth blinds us to our need for God. Wealthy people rely on their wealth to take care of their problems. They call the doctor when they’re sick. They adjust the thermostat when they are uncomfortable. They go on exotic vacations when they are bored. They pay others to take care of the mundane tasks of life. They easily become demigods. They are in control.

    Living under the reign and rule of God is another matter altogether. It’s not that we cannot have wealth. It’s that we recognize whose wealth we hold as a sacred trust. It’s not a matter of eschewing air conditioning. It’s that we recognize who ultimately controls the weather – all the while being good stewards of the time, temperature, and seasons God gives us.

    In The Voyage of the Dawn Treader (Chronicles of Narnia by C.S. Lewis) Eustace is transformed into a dragon after succumbing to greed and sleeping on a dragon’s treasure. Later, he is “undragoned” by Aslan in a deeply symbolic and moving scene. Aslan tears away Eustace’s dragon skin layer by layer and then throws him into a pool, where he emerges as a boy again, cleansed and changed — both physically and spiritually. It is a painful process. But the results are delightful.

    It can be agonizing for someone to transition from a life driven by wealth and materialism to one that’s free from the grip of greed. But the real hurdle goes deeper than the pain. That’s where the power of God comes in. When the Holy Spirit convinces us to abandon our dragon-scales of greed and avarice, he also changes us – but not from the outside in, but from the inside out. He creates new hearts in us (cf. Psalm 51:10; Ezekiel 36:26). He helps us see how fleeting is wealth and human strength.

    We can not save ourselves – young or old, rich or poor, religious or spiritual. But what we cannot do, God has done in Jesus. He gives us eternal treasure that will not rust, fade, or corrode (Matthew 6:19-20), and frees us to love and serve him and our neighbor.

  • Please pray these psalms with me on this Lord’s Day

    Psalm 27:1-5

    The Lord is my light and my salvation;
        whom shall I fear?
    The Lord is the stronghold of my life;
        of whom shall I be afraid?

    When evildoers assail me
        to eat up my flesh,
    my adversaries and foes,
        it is they who stumble and fall.

    Though an army encamp against me,
        my heart shall not fear;
    though war arise against me,
        yet I will be confident.

    One thing have I asked of the Lord,
        that will I seek after:
    that I may dwell in the house of the Lord
        all the days of my life,
    to gaze upon the beauty of the Lord
        and to inquire in his temple.

    For he will hide me in his shelter
        in the day of trouble;
    he will conceal me under the cover of his tent;
        he will lift me high upon a rock.

    Psalm 57:7-11

    My heart is steadfast, O God,
        my heart is steadfast!
    I will sing and make melody!
        Awake, my glory!
    Awake, O harp and lyre!
        I will awake the dawn!
    I will give thanks to you, O Lord, among the peoples;
        I will sing praises to you among the nations.
    10 For your steadfast love is great to the heavens,
        your faithfulness to the clouds.

    11 Be exalted, O God, above the heavens!
        Let your glory be over all the earth!

    Psalm 87

    On the holy mount stands the city he founded;
        the Lord loves the gates of Zion
        more than all the dwelling places of Jacob.
    Glorious things of you are spoken,
        O city of God.                        Selah

    Among those who know me I mention Rahab and Babylon;
        behold, Philistia and Tyre, with Cush—
        “This one was born there,” they say.
    And of Zion it shall be said,
        “This one and that one were born in her”;
        for the Most High himself will establish her.
    The Lord records as he registers the peoples,
        “This one was born there.”                      Selah

    Singers and dancers alike say,
        “All my springs are in you.”

    Psalm 117

    Praise the Lord, all nations!
        Extol him, all peoples!
    For great is his steadfast love toward us,
        and the faithfulness of the Lord endures forever.
    Praise the Lord!

    Psalm 147:1-11

    Praise the Lord!
    For it is good to sing praises to our God;
        for it is pleasant, and a song of praise is fitting.
    The Lord builds up Jerusalem;
        he gathers the outcasts of Israel.
    He heals the brokenhearted
        and binds up their wounds.
    He determines the number of the stars;
        he gives to all of them their names.
    Great is our Lord, and abundant in power;
        his understanding is beyond measure.
    The Lord lifts up the humble;
        he casts the wicked to the ground.

    Sing to the Lord with thanksgiving;
        make melody to our God on the lyre!
    He covers the heavens with clouds;
        he prepares rain for the earth;
        he makes grass grow on the hills.
    He gives to the beasts their food,
        and to the young ravens that cry.
    10 His delight is not in the strength of the horse,
        nor his pleasure in the legs of a man,
    11 but the Lord takes pleasure in those who fear him,
        in those who hope in his steadfast love.

    The Holy Bible, English Standard Version.
    ESV® Text Edition: 2016. Copyright © 2001 by
    Crossway Bibles, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers.

  • 49 Week Bible Challenge – Day 83: Encouragement, Judgment, and the Generous Grace of God


    Click here for an audio version of this devotion.

    I am using readings from the 49 Week Bible Challenge as the basis for these devotions. I encourage you to join me in this discipline. Today’s readings are Matthew 20; 1 Kings 12; Isaiah 51; Jeremiah 49.

    Garden Petunias Close-up | Breckenridge, CO | June 2025

    Isaiah 51 is a chapter of comfort and encouragement to God’s people, especially those weary from suffering and exile. It speaks to those who long for God’s salvation and are seeking reassurance of his faithfulness and power. The tone shifts from judgment (earlier in Isaiah) to hope, restoration, and the certainty of God’s deliverance.

    Compare that to Jeremiah 49, which is a series of oracles in which God, through the prophet Jeremiah, pronounces judgment on foreign nations surrounding Israel. In this chapter, the focus is on several specific nations that had interacted – often adversarially – with Israel and Judah.

    Thus says the Lord:
    “Has Israel no sons?
        Has he no heir?

    Why then has Milcom dispossessed Gad,
        and his people settled in its cities?
    Therefore, behold, the days are coming,
        declares the Lord,
    when I will cause the battle cry to be heard
        against Rabbah of the Ammonites;
    it shall become a desolate mound,
        and its villages shall be burned with fire;
    then Israel shall dispossess those who dispossessed him,
        says the Lord.             – Jeremiah 49:1-2

    Milcom is the chief god of the Ammonites. Rabbah is the capital city of the Ammonites. These will surely face extreme justice and judgment. It will not be pleasant for them. They will be removed from their place of power and privilege. They remind me of someone who has stayed in a nice hotel for many days, and upon leaving think that they should take the furniture, TV, linens, pillows, and bathrobe. Sorry. Those are not yours. The Ammonites will have to learn this lesson.

    Israel will be returning to their home with all the joy and relief they so desired for so long. Sadly, however, that won’t last. Soon they will wonder how it is that the newcomers are getting the same benefits that the Jews had for many, many years.

    Now when those hired first came, they thought they would receive more, but each of them also received a denarius. 11 And on receiving it they grumbled at the master of the house, 12 saying, ‘These last worked only one hour, and you have made them equal to us who have borne the burden of the day and the scorching heat.’ – Matthew 10:10-12

    Perhaps even the disciples would wonder how late-coming people (like Paul) would also receive such grace after his severe persecution of the Christians before his conversion.

    The answer is grace. And that grace is for all who will repent and believe the Gospel, thank God. Yes, thank God for his amazing and abundant grace!

  • 49 Week Bible Challenge – Day 81: Jesus’ Personal Care


    Click here for an audio version of this devotion.

    I am using readings from the 49 Week Bible Challenge as the basis for these devotions. I encourage you to join me in this discipline. Today’s readings are Mark 10; Deuteronomy 24; 2 Samuel 11; Song of Solomon 3; 4.

    Garden Petunias | Breckenridge, CO | June 2025

    It is quite possible that the rich man here in Mark 10 is actually Mark, Peter’s secretary and scribe who recorded this gospel. The key to this idea: Only here in Mark’s gospel does it say that Jesus looked at him and loved him. It would seem only he would know that detail.

    As I read/listened to this account today, the tender care of Jesus for individuals caught my attention. That became even more apparent to me in Jesus’ dealing with the blind man. He asks, “What do you want me to do for you?” Can you imagine being asked that by Jesus? How would you answer?

    How might you discern that Jesus’ look toward you was a loving look? It would be in his eyes. It would be in the shape of his mouth. It would be in his facial expression. The fullest knowledge of Jesus’ love would be the larger witness of his actions. Washing the disciples’ feet. Forgiving penitent sinners. Healing the sick. Raising the dead. Going to the cross. Telling his disciple to take care of his mother. Dying in perfect faith and obedience. For us. Because he loves us.

    How would you answer Jesus if he were to ask, “What do you want me to do for you?”

    • A new car?
    • A new job?
    • A new body?
    • Health?
    • $1,000,000?
    • Nothing?

    The blind man’s situation was so clear and simple. Ours may be much more nuanced. So how about this: Treasure in heaven. It’s already there, being stored up for all who believe. Let’s follow Jesus together.

  • 49 Week Bible Challenge – Day 80: To Love and To Cherish


    Click here for an audio version of this devotion.

    I am using readings from the 49 Week Bible Challenge as the basis for these devotions. I encourage you to join me in this discipline. Today’s readings are Matthew 19; Genesis 1; Psalm 127; Song of Solomon 1; 2.

    Old Shed-2 | Breckenridge, CO | June 2025

    Some claim that Jesus didn’t speak to the issue of same-sex marriage. Clearly he did. “He who created them from the beginning made them male and female,” he said. Same-sex marriage was never part of God’s plan. And even though homosexual practices were not unknown in Jesus’ day, that was certainly not the issue at hand. Nevertheless, God’s design for marriage is clear: one man, one woman, as long as they both shall live. Jesus’ definition of marriage comes from Genesis 2:24, “For this reason, a man will leave his father and his mother and hold fast to his wife, and the two shall become one flesh.”

    But wait, there’s more. For this truth about marriage is not only about male and female relationships to the exclusion of same-sex relationships. The whole question that sets this discussion in motion is about divorce. And there we have a sticking point. Divorce has touched every part of our family and many friends as well. A good friend describes divorce as the gift that keeps on giving – and not in a good way. It gives heartache, heartburn, broken hearts, and broken lives. It is not a good thing.

    But, wait, there is even more here. For Jesus adds on another issue, pointing out that if a man “divorces his wife, except for sexual immorality, and marries another, [he] commits adultery.” This was sure to bring the self-righteous Pharisees up short. They were good with everything Jesus had said until that last part. Some, no doubt, had simply written off a previous wife for far less cause than sexual immorality, and gotten married again. 

    If you want a hard comeuppance yourself, read Romans 1 & 2. For there Paul lists being thankless to God, and disobedient to parents right along side of sexual immorality as sins that condemn. What hope do any of us have?

    The full understanding of Christian marriage is that it is a picture of the love of Christ for the church. He gave himself up for us so that we would be pure and perfect, without spot or blemish, holy and blameless before him. What we could never do – live a perfectly holy life as a man or woman, married or unmarried – Jesus has done. He is our righteousness, hope, and salvation. We, his church, are the bride of Christ. He will not divorce us. We are eternally his.

  • 49 Week Bible Challenge – Day 79: Time In Erodes Awareness Of


    Click here for an audio version of this devotion.

    I am using readings from the 49 Week Bible Challenge as the basis for these devotions. I encourage you to join me in this discipline. Today’s readings are Luke 18:1-14; Psalm 58; 88; Isaiah 58.

    Old Shed | Breckenridge, CO | June 2025

    Time in erodes awareness of. I share that observation with church leaders when I help them with their mission planning or in the process of calling a new pastor. The longer we are part of a church the less aware we are of our unique identity, the practices we take for granted, and even how we relate to one another and those outside the church. That’s why it is so important to listen to the observations of new people and take seriously even critical comments we might receive in online reviews. We may just be unaware of something we’re doing that doesn’t make sense or even causes confusion or even offense.

    Perhaps that’s what is going on with the people in Jesus’ day. The pharisees were so ingrained in their view of proper religious conduct that everyone thought they were the best of the best. This is what true religion looks like, they must have thought. Long robes. Long prayers. Large philactories. Pious poses.

    So then Jesus tells a parable about two men who went up to the temple to pray. One a smug self-righteous pray-er. The other a lowly tax collector – the lowest of the low. Some tax collectors would levy taxes on the people at a rate far beyond what was due. They would then keep the extra for themselves. They were considered to be greedy, dishonest, unclean, disloyal, and spiritually compromised.

    So I’m thinking that when Jesus tells this parable both the self-righteous Pharisees and the common folks were scandalized. The tax collectors might have snickered in dismissive rue at Jesus’ naiveté. Yeah, sure, they might have thought, like I and my buddies could actually be justified by means of that prayer. Or better yet, Why would I ever pray that prayer? If I did, I’d have to change my way of living.

    We may have become jaded by the repeat of this story (time in). We might be unaware (eroded awareness) of how truly radical Jesus’ prayer actually was.

    But let’s let this story arrest us. Let’s let the truth of God’s promises to humble and penitent people rest in our soul. Then let’s go sit with that tax collector and say with him, “Lord, be merciful to me a sinner.”

    Have a listen to this song and hear about the place where kings and those without a name sit down together. It makes me think of coming to the Lord’s Table to receive God’s grace there.