Bible Stories With Moral
Bible Stories With Moral
Bible Stories With Moral
Lessons
by Joshua Travers
Bible stories are helpful for teaching children, and they also have vital moral lessons for
people of all ages.
The Bible is full of stories, from Genesis clear to Revelation. Entire books of the Bible are
dedicated to telling a specific story. Some of these are stories of good triumphing over evil,
while others are heartrending stories that tell of death and destruction. Some stories are
funny; some are poignant; and some just make you shake your head.
What is the purpose behind all of these stories? Are they simply fairy tales? Did God supply
the stories to break the monotony between genealogies and laws?
There is a purpose for the wide variety of stories. Every Bible story has a purpose—as would
be expected of a book inspired by the great and purposeful Almighty God.
The apostle Paul listed some of the purposes for the Bible in 2 Timothy 3:16: “for doctrine,
for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness.” Bible stories can make these
purposes and lessons come to life for all of us.
God also recorded these stories to help parents in the vital job of teaching their children. God
wants us to “remember His marvellous works which He has done” and to diligently teach our
children His good ways (1 Chronicles 16:12; Deuteronomy 6:7).
Whether for our education or to encourage us, there is always a reason God placed each story
in the Bible. Though some of the stories of the Bible, such as the parables, are illustrations
used to teach a lesson, all the examples in this article refer to real-life, historically accurate
accounts that God also recorded for our learning.
One purpose of Bible stories is so we can learn from the bad examples (1 Corinthians 10:6,
11). The Bible has many stories that reveal to us examples of humans trying to live life
without God or succumbing to one of many human weaknesses.
For example, in 2 Chronicles 26 we read the story of Uzziah, who was actually one of
Judah’s better kings. Uzziah became king when he was only 16 years old, and he had a long
reign that was full of military victories. He was one of the few kings who had a personal
relationship with God and was successful.
Yet he started to grow proud and went against God’s law. Proud because of his power and the
strength that God had given him, he decided that he would offer incense up to God,
something God had commanded that only the priests should do. When the priests resisted
Uzziah and tried to tell him that it was not his place, he grew angry with them. While he was
arguing with the priests who had dared to go against him, God cursed him with leprosy. He
was forced to live by himself for the rest of his life.
What’s the moral of this story, set long ago in ancient Judah?
Its purpose is so we can learn from King Uzziah’s example. His success caused him to grow
prideful, and he came to disregard God’s law. We have to be on guard so that pride doesn’t
strike us when God blesses us with success.
We have to learn from the bad examples if we don’t want to follow in their footsteps.
Of course, the Bible doesn’t just record the bad examples that people have left behind. There
are many good examples in the Bible as well.
When threatened with imminent destruction at the hands of the mighty Assyrians, Hezekiah
asked God for assistance. Instead of being arrogant like Uzziah had been, Hezekiah tore his
clothes and knelt before God. When he received a letter from the enemy, he laid it before
God and humbly asked God for His help (2 Kings 19).
If Hezekiah had relied on his own feeble strength to pull him through, he would have almost
certainly been annihilated. However, since he relied on God, his enemy was destroyed and
his kingdom was safe for many more years. (See the Bible story “King Hezekiah and the
Assyrian Bullies.”)
Another excellent example in the Bible is that of the heroine of the book of Ruth. After losing
her husband and father-in-law, Ruth stayed loyal to Naomi, her grieving mother-in-law, and
went with her to the land of Israel.
After arriving in Israel, she worked diligently to provide for both herself and Naomi. Her
loyalty and hard work were noticed by several, including a wealthy farmer named Boaz. He
made sure that Ruth and Naomi were taken care of, and he eventually married Ruth.
Ruth’s decision to worship the God of Israel and loyally serve her mother-in-law provides us
an excellent example. She was rewarded, and God greatly blessed her and the woman to
whom she was so loyal.
Ruth’s story is a Bible story about love and loyalty. (Read the article about Ruth in the
“Women of Faith” section of this website and see the Bible story “Ruth, Naomi and Boaz Are
Blessed.”)
Because God is a great, infinite and invisible Being, how do we come to comprehend who He
really is? How can we learn about God? How do we know who God is and what He is like?
We can learn about Him through what others say in the Bible. For example, Paul tells us that
God “cannot lie” (Titus 1:2), but that simple statement generally doesn’t fully sink in until we
read through an account like the story of the Exodus.
There we see the extreme measures to which God will go in order to keep His word. He even
took on Egypt, the world’s mightiest empire, by sending 10 devastating plagues. He did this
in order to free the enslaved Israelites due to a promise He had made to Abraham hundreds of
years before.
The Gospels also help us learn more about God. In the Gospels we see the Son of God—
Jesus Christ—as a very personable Being who ached, hurt and felt like we do. More than that,
these four books record His story for us to read. If you want to know what God is like, read
the accounts of Jesus’ life as a human in Matthew, Mark, Luke and John.
For example, most people know that Jesus Christ was a man of peace, but did that mean He
would just always let people disrespect God and His temple? We can find the answer in Mark
11:15-17.
It’s encouraging to know that God takes notice of not only the great, but also the small who
serve Him. During a visit to the temple in Jerusalem, Christ saw that there were profiteers
who were making money off of the poor, God-fearing people who came to worship their
Creator in the temple.
Angry over the situation and the mockery of God’s holy temple that was making it like “a
den of thieves,” Christ made a whip and herded the livestock out, as well as overturning the
tables full of money taken from the poor. (See the Bible story “Jesus Enters Jerusalem and
Cleans the Temple.”)
We know God better and more clearly through the real-life stories documented in the Bible.
An example of this is the story of the widow’s mites (small copper coins; Mark 12:41-44). In
the midst of all of the rich men giving large offerings to God in the temple, Jesus Christ took
the time to notice a poor widow who gave two little coins. He realized that it was everything
she had, and He pointed this out to His disciples.
It’s encouraging to know that God takes notice of not only the great, but also the small who
serve Him.
There are many encouraging stories of God miraculously delivering His people as well. For
example, Daniel’s friends Shadrach, Meshach and Abed-Nego, whom God saved from death
in an incredibly hot furnace (Daniel 3; see the Bible story “Shadrach, Meshach and Abed-
Nego and the Fiery Furnace”).
And there was the apostle Paul, who was stoned to the point that his enemies thought he was
dead (Acts 14). “However, when the disciples gathered around him, he rose up and went into
the city”! (verse 20). The great Creator God healed or perhaps even resurrected Paul!
These Bible stories are very encouraging, reminding us of God’s awesome power and His
love. They can lift up our spirits when times are tough.
There is another reason stories are in the Bible—to answer the challenging questions of
life. Why is there evil in the world? Why do the good suffer? There are Bible stories that help
us more deeply understand the answers to many questions like these.
The Bible tells us that there is evil in the world because of the rebellion and deceitfulness of a
demonic being called Lucifer and Satan (Isaiah 14). Once one of God’s greatest angels,
Lucifer became proud and turned into God’s greatest adversary. After swaying a third of the
angels to his evil way of thinking, he started a rebellion against the Almighty and was cast to
the earth.
After his original rebellion failed, Satan later tried to destroy humankind and ruin God’s plan
of salvation. Satan tempted the first two people to eat of the forbidden fruit (Genesis 3),
which set the pattern for humanity’s awful decisions and horrible sins since then. He even
tried to tempt Christ to disobey God (Matthew 4:1-10).
Without the Bible, the answers to these key questions of life would remain hidden or only
academic. The biblical stories bring the answers to life and give us hope.
The many stories in the Bible are given for a reason and a purpose. Whether it’s to encourage
us in the hard times or to help us learn a lesson the easy way, God has told us these stories for
our eternal benefit. There are Bible stories of love. There are Bible stories about patience.
There are Bible stories that give hope.