Many bloggers take advantage of this time of the year to reflect on their most popular posts. Now we know there is a time to follow the crowd (Zech 8:23), and a time not to follow the crowd (Ex 23:2). And I believe the present time to be akin to the former and not the latter. So here we go.
This post lists the top 10 viewed posts this year, from among the posts we wrote this year. Next week, we’ll list the top 10 viewed posts from the full KW archive. May these lists enable you to be warm and well fed while you celebrate the season with joy and delight.
10. Can You Focus on the Bible Too Much?
Technically, this post wasn’t written in 2023. But I republished this older piece for a vacation week, and it got some attention. The easy answer to the title question is: of course you can—if you miss Jesus in the process. But the more difficult answer is that when you use the Bible properly it’s not possible to focus on it too much unless it’s also possible to focus on Jesus too much.
9. The Wisdom of Avoiding Strife
The first of five posts on Proverbs to make the list this year, this piece describes the many causes of strife. Knowing those causes enables you to do the first thing Proverbs recommends you do with strife: avoid it. This post is referring not to everyday disagreements, but to the sort of disagreements that look like knock-down, drag-em-out fights, that turn people into enemies of one another. The book of Proverbs refers to such situations as “strife.”
8. How to Prevent a Spiritually Dry December
This was another re-post for a vacation week, and it came quite late in the year, but it still made quite a splash. This post reminds us of why we study the Bible in the first place, offering some practical suggestions for the dark and difficult winter months.
7. Studying the Bible is not Code Breaking
Just as the title says, the Bible is not a secret code. God wants to be known, so he wrote to us plainly. This doesn’t mean the Bible is trivial or obvious. It takes serious work. But treating it like a code to crack is taking the easy — and foolish — way out.
6. Beware the Leech’s Daughters
Since the Bible is not a code, it’s obscure statements must be interpreted in light of the context and not some secret meaning. Proverbs 30:15a makes sense in light of what comes before and after it. Is it the rejection of ancient wisdom that causes the perpetual dissatisfaction of a generation of leeches? Such that, when you lose your grounding in the reality of God’s world, you have nothing left but to make increasing demands of the people and the world around you? The leech has two daughters. Not only in ancient Israel, but quite alive and well today.
5. What We Miss When We Skip the Book of Nehemiah
Ryan enjoys motivating people to give attention to the obscure parts of the Bible. In this post, he explains how Nehemiah can help us with prayer, God’s word, and money. You won’t want to miss that, so don’t skip it! For insight into other books you wouldn’t want to skip, see: Ezra, Lamentations, Numbers, and the Prophets.
4. Overcome Your Enemies by Dying
As a follow-up to #9 above, this post examines what Proverbs teaches about the sort of strife that can’t be avoided. When you have adopted the fundamental mindset that we can control only what we do and not what others do, there are five tactics that will help you to “win.” Warning: You’ll have to lose first.
3. 5 Misconceptions about Wealth
More help from Proverbs, to help us live well in the world God made. Let’s set aside these detrimental misconceptions, such as: It will make my problems go away. It’s something I ought to feel guilty about. It doesn’t matter whether someone has it or not.
2. The Problem with Proverbs
This year’s most-viewed post on the book of Proverbs describes the pain of trying to read and study this book of wisdom. It’s wild practicality blinds us to its covenantal context. The scattershot jumble of topics cause very little logical flow or coherence (at least, after chapter 9). And the widespread misconception that proverbs are not promises but only probabilities just needs to go, lest we fail to hear what the Proverbs are really saying. Studying this book along its natural contours yields a wealth of results, as it leads us to Jesus, in whom are all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge (Col 2:2-3).
1. Overlooked Details of the Red Sea Crossing
This most-read post from 2023 had nearly twice as many views as #2 on the list. By looking at four crucial ones in the narrative of Exodus 14, Ryan demonstrates why the details matter. In them we see God’s hands-on involvement in the crossing of the Red Sea. God rescued his people and closed the door to any possible return to Egypt. In tangible ways, the Lord fought for his people as he promised. When God sets out to deliver his people and gain glory for himself, he will make both happen.
Previous years’ top tens: 2022, 2021, 2020, 2019, 2018, 2017
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