When David said, “Thy rod and thy staff they comfort me,” he wasn’t talking about punishment; he was describing a Shepherd who stands between His sheep and danger, who guides and rescues, and who is always for us, even in the darkest valleys.
In today’s episode, we slow down with Psalm 23 to explore the real meaning behind the Shepherd’s rod and staff. These ancient tools aren’t about breaking sheep, but protecting them. The rod was a club to drive off predators, a symbol of God’s fierce protection. The staff, with its gentle curve, was for rescue and gentle guidance, not harm.
We’ll challenge the harmful idea that God “breaks” His children to teach them lessons. Anyone who has cared for livestock knows you don’t injure what you value; you protect it. God’s heart is to heal, not hurt; to guide, not shame.
You’ll hear my own story from missionary life in Peru, where God’s goodness showed up in an unexpected gift—two acres of land, provided at less than the cost of our old rental, simply because He loves to care for His own. This is what “goodness and mercy following us” looks like in real life.
If you’re walking through a valley right now, let this episode be a reminder: God is not out to break you. He’s beside you with rod and staff, protecting and guiding, bringing you safely home. The Shepherd’s comfort is real, even when the path is dark, because at the heart of it all is this unchanging truth: God is love, and the Lord is good.
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