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The Long Walk Home, Part 1

March 13, 2026
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The Word of God tells us that there are two life roads—one leads to eternal life, the other to eternal death. There is an art to staying on the right road. There will be pitfalls and enemies who seek to trip us up and distract, divert, and destroy us along the way. But Jill Briscoe shows us that the Holy Spirit will guide, direct, and empower us to keep on walking in the everlasting way!

References: Psalms 119:9-15

Guest (Male): There are two roads you can take in life: one with Jesus and one without. Which one will you choose? Today on *Telling the Truth*, Jill Briscoe shares the message "The Long Walk Home." There’s an art to staying on the right road no matter what obstacles lie in your path, but it does depend on the Holy Spirit walking with you, as Jill explains in just a moment.

Today’s culture is a revolving door of ever-shifting views and beliefs. That’s why it’s so important to test new ideas against the timeless truth of Scripture. It’s the best defense against the world’s confusion. We want to help ground you in the foundations of your faith by sending you Stuart Briscoe’s six-message series on the book of 2nd Peter, "Six Things We Must Never Forget."

The "Six Things We Must Never Forget" series is our thanks for your gift to help keep *Telling the Truth* going strong, sharing life-giving teaching from Stuart and Jill with more people all over the world. So request your copy when you give today and get help staying grounded in truth in today’s shifting culture. Call 1-800-889-5388. That’s 1-800-889-5388, or you can give online at tellingthetruth.org. Now, here’s Jill Briscoe with her message, "The Long Walk Home."

Jill Briscoe: I want to talk about having got on track, got on the right road. What you do when an obstacle comes or you run off the side of the track or you just get exhausted or something happens. We’re talking about living in the Word, folks. We’re talking about taking this book and making it part of us—in our hearts, in our lives, in our thinking, in our doing, in our breathing, in our dreaming, in our sleeping, in our awakenings. The Word of God—that’s what we’re talking about.

And we’re running a race. We’re getting on the right road—right road, wrong road. Jesus said, "I’m the right road, the right road," not a right road. And no man comes to the Father but by me. Remember, many ways to Jesus, only one way to God, and that’s through Jesus. One way to God, and that’s through Jesus.

And so once you come to Jesus and He gives you His life, then that’s the power you need to run the race to go all the way home. And the Word of God that tells us that there are these two roads also tells us that staying on course is a spiritual art. It takes the Holy Spirit. It’s a spiritual art, not a human art. We cannot keep going in this long walk home, in this race home.

There’s one man in the Old Testament that comes to mind when you talk about walking, and that’s Enoch. He lives before the flood. And so apparently, longevity of life was a possibility. It was only after the flood that God said your years shall be threescore years and ten. And so people were living, if you read all of those Genesis chapters, incredible many years—800 years. Enoch only lived 300 years; he was just a mere child, a little boy.

And he didn’t die. It says God took him away. I love that. God just took him away. And it says he walked with God. And it’s using the walking as a description of living in the Word, if you wish, living in the spirit. He walked with God. And he and God used to have a wonderful time talking together and chatting together. And he did it for 300 years.

We know this because he’s in the heroes chapter in chapter 11 of Hebrews. What did he do? Did he fight a lion? Did he put an army to rout? Did he rescue somebody and risk his life? Why is he in the heroes chapter? Because he walked with God. It’s the only reason.

What’s he doing in Hebrews 11? It says that he had faith and he walked with God. And God was pleased. And they were just walking along one day, God and Enoch, and it was getting dark. And God says, "Come home to my house tonight." And he did. God took him without death. Wonderful. He walked with God. Oh, to walk with God. You’re one of God’s heroes if you manage to do that, if you live in the spirit, in the Word, and you just finish the course.

God knows our weakness. So what part does the Word of God play in this walk, in this longevity that we need to just keep on keeping on until we walk right through the front door into glory? Well, Psalm 119, there are some wonderful words that I learned by heart about a week after I came to Christ because the girl that led me to the Lord was getting me to memorize Scripture. Wonderful. Thank you, Jenny.

And this was one of the passages, and so I know it in the old King James. That’s where I did all my memory. That’s all right. "How can a young man cleanse his way by taking heed thereto according to thy word? Thy word have I hid in mine heart that I might not sin against thee. Thy word have I hid in my heart that I might not sin against you. Praise be to you, O Lord. Teach me your decrees. With my lips I recount all the laws that come from your mouth. I rejoice in following your statutes as one rejoices in great riches. I meditate on your precepts. I consider your ways. I delight in your decrees. I will not neglect your word."

You see all those words about the same thing? The Word of God, the Word of God. And what we’re supposed to do is treasure His Word. How do we do that? How do we treasure His Word? Well, we put it in the heart bank. You’ve got to get your heart in it. You’ve got to be serious about this. But hide it in your innermost being. Memorize it. Go to sleep on a pillow of Scripture. Wake up and say, "Give me my waking thought," as you’re coming into consciousness.

Give me my waking thought, Lord, before you let your mind start on anything. And you’ll be amazed what happens when I have gone to bed—which I try to make a habit and have all my life—with my head on a pillow of Scripture, if you wish, saying or reading a Scripture. I don’t have to memorize it. And I go to sleep on that. I wake up with it. It’s amazing, absolutely amazing, or something to do with it. And so I’ve hidden it in my heart—heart being soul, mind, all of me, not a little part of it. Treasure His Word. Bank on it and put it in the bank. Bank on His promises.

So if you’re going to ask, how do I do that? Memorize, meditate—it goes all the way through Psalm 119. Meditate, think, put your heart in it, soul in it, bring all of you to it. And so David asked a very important question: "How can I live a clean life?" And basically, David is going to be asking God to clean him up, clean up his act, clean up his life.

Apparently, if he is writing this when he’s young, and we don’t know he is, he’s talking about a young man. How can a young man keep clean? How can a young man keep pure? He might be looking back on his life or he might just be talking to other young men—maybe his own sons, people in the palace, etc. "How shall a young man cleanse his way by taking or living according to your word?" That’s almost Stuart’s text from John 8:31, isn’t it? If you live in my word, you will know the truth. You will be my disciples, and the truth will make you free.

And so here it is again. David says, "How can we keep pure? How can we keep on track? How can we not be diverted by things that we shouldn’t be diverted? How can we keep our eyes on the goal and go straight ahead? I’ve hidden your word in my heart that I might not sin against you." Now, how does learning Scripture stop you sinning? Well, of course, Scripture doesn’t. You stop the sinning. You have to cooperate with the command. God is not going to pick you up and make you do it. That’s our part. It’s called obedience. We have to respect authority and do what we’re told.

Thy Word, His Word—it’s not any old person’s word, this is God’s Word. So He has like a map. This is like a map. It tells you how to get places. Anything that does that interests me. It’s like a map. This is a map. How are we going to get to the place where we’re obedient? How are we going to get to the place of walking on that everlasting road, bringing joy to the Lord’s heart instead of sorrow? Is He glad He saved us? Ever wondered about that?

Guest (Male): Don’t go anywhere. There’s more life-giving truth from the Briscoes headed your way. Tellingthetruth.org and the *Telling the Truth* app are great resources to help you grow in your spiritual life. Packed with videos like "Ask the Briscoes," articles from Stuart and Jill, and encouraging audio teaching content, you’ll find a treasure trove of resources to encourage you and others in your faith.

And while you’re there, you can also request this month’s featured resource when you give a gift to help more people around the world experience life in Christ. So visit us online or download the app today. We look forward to connecting with you. Now, once again, here’s Jill Briscoe.

Jill Briscoe: I read Genesis 6 where it says that God looked down and saw the evil in everybody’s heart and it was only evil all the time, and He was sorry that He made us, or them. Sorry that He’d made us. How sad. But Noah—I know Noah when you get to heaven, because of Noah we’ll be there, right? But Noah found grace in the eyes of the Lord.

Is He ever sorry He made us? Are we like disobedient children just picking a promise and picking good things that we want and not heeding His commands and His Word? Well, this is indeed like a map. Scripture Union I talked about, and those people listening in Europe and anywhere outside of America know Scripture Union far better than we do because it’s been very lately those Bible reading notes have come here. They’re wonderful. You look, you read a passage of Scripture, and you look for warnings to heed, a promise to claim, a command to obey, something about Jesus, something about me.

And it’s very simple. And so you color your Bible—green for warnings and blue for obedience and all of this—very exciting. When you open your Bible, it’s just wonderful because, oh my word, all those promises. I always did mine in yellow. And then I’ve got a whole lot of green, which is warnings, and I sort of do the promises first and then the warnings. And then there’s blue for commands, and I do those last usually. Yeah, I just go for the promises. Just go for the promises.

Parents, are you getting your kids in the Word? Or is family devotions like family commotions and it doesn’t work in your house? Have a look at that. So treasure His Word. Hide it in your heart. Bank on His promises. Put it in the bank. Do what you’re told. Find out what He wants from you. And I’ve given you all these references here.

I said last week that God knows if you’ve any intention of doing what He tells you to do before you read. And you’ll get nothing out of your Bible unless you bring a surrendered life to it, a yielded life. "Lord, I might be scared. I might not want it. I probably don’t want to listen, but I just need you to know that I will try."

And all those words are in here: "I’ve hidden your word in my heart that I might not sin against you. Teach me your decrees. With my lips I recount all the laws that come from your mouth. I rejoice in following your statutes. I meditate, I delight." And then he goes on in the next section to say, "I’m trying. I really am pushing."

So it isn’t easy for David. Wasn’t easy for him as a young man. Wasn’t easy for him to be left out with the sheep, and wasn’t easy for him when his older brother was always putting him down. But of course, then God was putting him up. And it doesn’t matter who’s putting you down if God’s putting you up. You do all right. You become a giant-killer. And he worked all of that out because David said, "His Word. It’s His Word. It’s what I’m about. You want to know what I’m about? I’m David, King of Israel, but it’s His Word. That’s me."

I want to be looked at like that. I want people to look at me and say, "There’s a woman, and I know what she’s about: His Word." Living in His Word, doing what He’s told, revering and respecting Him, and realizing that sin offends God and that there are many facets to the truth.

Psalm 19—wonderful Psalm. First of all, it’s talking about the world: "The heavens declare the glory of God. The skies proclaim the work of his hands. Day after day they pour forth speech. Night after night they display knowledge. There’s no speech or language where their voice isn’t heard. Their voice goes out into the end of the earth, their words to the ends of the world." Remember Stuart said in his first session that God reveals Himself through creation, through Christ, the living Word, and the spoken Word.

David says, "Just fingerwork. Just fingerwork for Him. All of this." When I just see the stars and what am I? He sat there as a child and he looked at that magnificent sky in the Middle East where everything is ten times brighter than anywhere else. And he was totally overwhelmed with the majesty of God. And then he was conscious of his own sin. Grace—grace.

That’s what Psalm 19 starts with: the world declares the glory of God. And then look at this: the Word. "The law of the Lord is perfect, reviving the soul. The statutes of the Lord are trustworthy, making wise the simple. The precepts of the Lord are right, giving joy to the heart. The commands of the Lord are radiant, giving light to the eyes. The fear of the Lord is pure, enduring forever. The ordinances of the Lord are sure and altogether righteous. They’re more precious than gold, than much pure gold. They’re sweeter than honey, than honey from the comb. And by them is your servant warned. In keeping them there is great reward."

"Who can discern his errors? Forgive my hidden faults. Keep your servant also from willful sins. May they not rule over me. Then I will be blameless"—and that word means righteous, it means forgiven, actually. "Then I will be righteous, innocent of great transgression. May the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart be pleasing in your sight, O Lord, my Rock and my Redeemer."

If you want a little bit of homework, take each of those words and it will give you another facet of the Word of God—what the Word of God is, the decrees, the ordinances. Each one has a different slant. If you think of a diamond—if you imagine me holding a diamond—and light is suddenly put on the diamond. I am here and I’m looking at these facets of the diamond, just the one the light is hitting. I turn the diamond and there’s another facet altogether, and you know what? Another color. And you just turn it again. There are all these facets.

And that’s what decrees, ordinances, statutes, laws—they’re all facets of the Word of God. And each one benefits us in some way, and each one has that nuance. This is an incredible, incredible book. So we revere and respect Him. His Word is like a many-faceted diamond. And we need to be teachable, and we need to be true. We need to learn from the past and we need to pass on the lessons. Which lessons? Well, the lessons hopefully that we have been learning, or even just today from His Word. What would you say? What would have been the one thing, or a one thing out of many? What would it have been? Don’t discard history. Maybe you have forgotten to remember a truth.

Guest (Male): Now Jill’s here to go a bit more in-depth with a few ideas from today’s message. Jill, why is it important to take time to memorize Scripture?

Jill Briscoe: I think with the internet, memorization has fallen on hard times because you can get the answer without remembering it. It’s at your fingertips. So the facts that you have to learn for an exam, you pick up your internet helper, whatever it is, your smartphone or whatever it is, your iPad, and it gives you the answer instantly, so you put it down. You don’t then spend time—what does that mean? You’ve got the right answer, and you haven’t thought it through. If you don’t think it through, you won’t remember it.

And I am on a crusade to use journal and handwriting again. For example, young moms—kids say such cute things, and they call you if you’re a grandmother and say, "Do you know what Johnny said today?" And it’s cute and it’s funny. And over and over again I told my children when their children were little long time ago: "Write it down." "Why, Mom?" "Write it down. I bet you if you don’t write it down, you’ll have forgotten next Wednesday." And that’s why we need to write it down. If you just put it on your computer, will you ever look it up again? It just gets lost. And so don’t lose the art of writing something out personally in a personal journal, and it helps you memorize—helps you to remember.

Guest (Male): Jill, you said today that we’ll get nothing out of our Bibles unless we approach Scripture with a surrendered and yielded life. How do you do that?

Jill Briscoe: Well, yes. If we read a Bible passage having absolutely no intention of doing what we’re told to do, then what do you expect to get out of it? And God sees our heart. He sees us sit before Scripture. He sees us read it. In that piece of Scripture, there will be, as I continually say, something to do—a command to obey. There will probably be somewhere in there, if you think and meditate on it enough, a warning to heed.

If it’s a story in the Old Testament, it might be, "Lord, help me never to do that, never to be drawn away by friends who are anti-God." Maybe that’s the story that is applied to your heart. Talk to Him about it. Have this conversation as you’re reading Scripture. And you will find that if you start to gloss over a command to obey, it might be because you don’t want to give God that part of your life. If that happens, then God will be silent. If you harden your heart, watch out, because one day God might harden it, and that’s it, like Pharaoh. He sent Moses, God, and Pharaoh hardened his heart. He sent Moses, Pharaoh hardened his heart, on and on and on until in the end it says, "God hardened Pharaoh’s heart." And that should scare all of us. And so if we just let Scripture tell us and tell us and we do nothing about it, watch out—you are hardening your heart.

Guest (Male): Thanks for listening to *Telling the Truth* today. We’re so glad you’ve joined us, and we pray this message has helped you experience more of the abundant life Jesus promised. Today’s culture is a revolving door of ever-shifting views and beliefs. That’s why it’s so important to test new ideas against the timeless truth of Scripture. It’s the best defense against the world’s confusion.

We want to help ground you in the foundations of your faith by sending you Stuart Briscoe’s six-message series on the book of 2nd Peter, "Six Things We Must Never Forget." This series will anchor you in six time-tested truths from God’s Word so you can stand strong in your beliefs as you remember the deep spiritual truths that are foundational to your faith.

The "Six Things We Must Never Forget" series is our thanks for your gift to help keep *Telling the Truth* going strong, sharing life-giving teaching from Stuart and Jill with more people all over the world. So request your copy when you give today and get help staying grounded in truth in today’s shifting culture. Call 1-800-889-5388. That’s 1-800-889-5388, or you can give online at tellingthetruth.org. We’re so glad you’ve listened today. Be sure to come back next time for more encouraging biblical truth with the Briscoes. Experience life right here on *Telling the Truth*.

This transcript is provided as a written companion to the original message and may contain inaccuracies or transcription errors. For complete context and clarity, please refer to the original audio recording. Time-sensitive references or promotional details may be outdated. This material is intended for personal use and informational purposes only.

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About Telling the Truth

Telling the Truth is an international broadcast and internet ministry that brings God's Word into the lives of people all over the world. Stuart and Jill Briscoe are the featured Bible teachers, encouraging and challenging listeners to study the Word of God and be drawn closer to Christ. Gifted with wisdom, discernment, and a bit of English humor, the Briscoe's bring God's Word to life. With distinctly different teaching styles, you'll be moved by the emotional appeal of Jill and the compelling logic of Stuart, as they boldly proclaim God's sovereignty, grace, and love.

About Stuart and Jill Briscoe

Stuart Briscoe uses wit and intellect to target your heart, capture your attention and challenge you to grow! You will find his logic compelling as he brings a fresh, practical perspective to the Scriptures. Born in England, Stuart left a career in banking to enter the ministry full time. He has written more than 50 books, received three honorary doctorates and preached in more than one hundred countries. He was senior pastor of Elmbrook Church in Brookfield, Wisconsin, for thirty years, and currently serves as minister-at-large.

Jill Briscoe was born in England and found Christ when she was 18 years old. She never looked back. Upon graduating from Cambridge University, she began working as a teacher by day and had a vigorous street ministry to the youths of Liverpool by night.

She met Stuart at a youth conference and they married in 1958. In the 50 years since, Jill has become a highly sought-after Bible teacher and author who travels around the world ministering to under-resourced churches and speaking at international seminars and conferences. Since 2000, she and Stuart, who was formerly senior pastor of Elmbrook Church for 30 years, have had the joy of equipping and encouraging believers across the globe in their roles as ministers-at-large for Elmbrook.

Jill has authored more than 40 books including devotionals, study guides, poetry and children's books. Her vivid, relational teaching style touches the emotions and stirs the heart. She serves as Executive Editor of Just Between Us, a magazine of encouragement for ministry wives and women in leadership, and served on the board of World Relief and Christianity Today, Inc., for over 20 years.

Jill and Stuart call suburban Milwaukee, Wisconsin their home. When they are not traveling, they spend time with their three children, David, Judy and Peter, and thirteen grandchildren.

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