Welcome … this is the second part of a series about the value and beauty of reading God’s Word. If you missed the first part, you might want to read it now as it will hopefully offer context and insight into what I am sharing today. You can find it here: Come and Dine . This offering, although written simply and not as fully developed as it could be, was inspired by my love of allegories. This is the way I think and process through much of life but rarely do I share this manner of communicating my thoughts with others. Welcome to my world.
She lay just off the narrow path, nearly hidden as she huddled forlornly beneath a small tree, desperately seeking shelter from the passing storm. Her body weary and bruised, her supplies long depleted from days spent wandering aimlessly through the wilderness. It had been any days since her last meal. The feeble fire she had managed to build was barely flickering and the rains threatened to douse it completely. With eyes darkened with fatigue and body trembling from the cold, she curled up inside her tattered blanket as she stared hopelessly into the distance.
“What is the point?” she asked herself as she began to fall into a troubled slumber. “I’m so lost … I don’t know what to do anymore.”
She never saw the One who fed the nearly dead flames and then stood watch over her as darkness fell.
A lone traveler passed by in the early morning hours as the woman began to stir, her stomach rumbling with hunger. She cried out, pleading for help, but the traveler only stopped long enough to offer some aged dried meat and a few words of reproof before quickly continuing on her way.
The woman feverishly gnawed at the leathery meat as she tried to understand the words of the traveler, but her mind was far too weary and the meat, little more than gristle. In despair, both were soon cast aside.
Another night passed as the woman slept restlessly, remaining unaware of the One who continue to add just enough wood to keep the flickering flames alive.
A second traveler passed by the next morning, a cheerful sort of soul. She chattered endlessly with her companions as she kindly offered the woman some sweets from her bag, assuring her they were just what she needed. As the starving woman quickly devoured the food offered, the traveler continued on her way proclaiming how blessed she felt to have helped such an inspirational person.
Another night passed as the woman lay ill … sickened from the overly sweet foods her weakened body could not tolerate.
She no longer cared about the fire. In fact, she no longer cared for her life.
She lay is silence, waiting for the end as the last flame flickered out and only the embers remained.
Completely oblivious to the One who knelt by her, head lowered in sorrow.

Days went by before another traveler came down this path. She was a lone pilgrim on a long journey traveling a path that she had not chosen for herself. She saw the ill woman curled pitifully close to the burned-out fire, sleeping fitfully, shivering with cold. She looked just beyond her to see the One who stood guard nearby and, at his nod, drew in closer.
From the bag she carried, she pulled out dry kindling and soon stirred the coals back to life, until the flames once again began to provide a gentle warmth. Various supplies were next to emerge from her bag and soon she had a nourishing broth simmering over the fire. The woman began to stir as the aroma of the food awakened her. While the broth cooked, the pilgrim knelt beside her and, using fresh water from a nearby brook, she began to wash her bruised body, applying salve and bandages drawn from her bag. Then she gently helped the woman sit as she placed before her a simple meal of broth, bread, and honey. Carefully, she held the cup as the woman sipped the nourishing broth and then broke the bread and dipped in it honey for her to eat.
For days, the pilgrim cared for the woman with what seemed to be endless supplies from her bag and soon, strengthened from the food and companionship, they began to travel the path together, slowly and carefully. During the day, the pilgrim talked about the King of the land, as she shared stories from the journey he had sent her on. Then in the evenings by the firelight, the pilgrim would prepare a simple, yet filling, meal and read to the woman from the little book that never left her side. Every night, before she settled into sleep, the woman would drowsily watch the pilgrim as she silently prayed to the King of the land with that mysterious book lying open in her lap.

One morning the woman awoke to find herself alone, her pilgrim companion nowhere to be found. She frantically search up and down the path, crying out and calling for her, but she received no response.
Returning to the campsite, she sank beside the fire which now burned steadily and there she found that the pilgrim had left her precious book behind. She gently picked it up as if it were a priceless treasure and it fell open to pages the pilgrim herself had read so often. She sank to the ground as she began to drink in the words.
“Your word is a lamp to my feet
And a light to my path.” (a)
“Your ears will hear a word behind you, “This is the way, walk in it,”
whenever you turn to the right or to the left.” (b)
“Why,” thought the woman, “I didn’t know this was in here. Maybe this is how she always seemed to know which direction to go.”
She began to read more even as she pondered where she would ever find the food and water she needed now that the pilgrim and her bag had disappeared.
“This is the bread which comes down out of heaven, so that one may eat of it and not die. I am the living bread that came down out of heaven; if anyone eats of this bread, he will live forever; and the bread also which I will give for the life of the world is My flesh.” (c)
Jesus answered and said to her, “Everyone who drinks of this water will thirst again; but whoever drinks of the water that I will give him shall never thirst; but the water that I will give him will become in him a well of water springing up to eternal life.” (d)
As these words echoed through her mind, she began to recognize a hunger inside of her. It wasn’t quite a physical hunger, although her stomach was beginning to growl in complaint, but no, this was a different kind of hunger. Something deeper that could not be quenched by mere food and water.
Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness,
For they shall be filled. (e)
She ignored the rumblings within her body as she continued to read more from the pilgrim’s little book, which she eventually recognized as being the King’s book, filled with his writings and instructions crucial to a pilgrim’s journey. As she read, she learned more of him and began to understand why the pilgrim loved him so fervently and read so faithfully from the book. She studied the pages even as the day began to fade and the darkness began to fall, only then pausing to consider her circumstances.
“I don’t really know what I am supposed to do now,” she whispered quietly into the night. “I don’t have any food and I was so busy reading this book, that I forgot to gather firewood.”
With a sigh, she looked down at the book as her eyes gazed upon this directive…
Ask, and it will be given to you; seek, and you will find;
knock, and it will be opened to you.
For everyone who asks receives, and he who seeks finds,
and to him who knocks it will be opened. (f)
“Ask, and it will be given? Seek, and you will find? Knock and it will be opened?” She repeated over and over to herself and her mind puzzled through this charge.
Finally, in the silence of a moonlit night, the woman pulled herself onto her knees as she lifted her face to the starry skies above, and with a trembling breath, she began to speak:
“Oh King, it’s me. I don’t know if you remember me or if you can even hear me anymore. It’s been such a long time since I’ve tried to pray to you. I need your help. I wandered off the path you set me on and I got myself terribly lost and into some horrible messes. I’m sorry. Thank you for sending that little pilgrim along to help me but now she is gone and I am all alone once more. Please, I am asking you for help. I need you.”
A gentle whispering sound immediately stirred from the tall grasses nearby and the woman quickly rose to her feet, startled by the noise. But there, with a gentle smile and open arms, stood the King himself.
“I have loved you with an everlasting love;
I have drawn you with unfailing kindness. (g)
“So do not fear, for I am with you;
do not be dismayed, for I am your God.
I will strengthen you and help you;
I will uphold you with my righteous right hand.” (h)
The conversation that followed between the two could not be overheard nor transcribed, but once her tears were wiped away and a nourishing meal prepared from the supplies the King provided to her, the woman and her King stepped onto the path and began a new journey … together.
“Come to Me, all who are weary and heavy-laden, and I will give you rest.
Take My yoke upon you and learn from Me,
for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls.
For My yoke is easy and My burden is light.” (i)

All Scripture references are from the NASB unless otherwise noted.
(a) Psalm 119:105
(b) Isaiah 30:21
(c)John 6:50-51
(d) John 4:13
(e) Matthew 5:6
(f) Matthew 7:7-8
(g) Jeremiah 31:3 (NIV)
(h)Isaiah 41:10 (NIV)
(i) Matthew 11:28-30





