Sabbath School
Growing in a Relationship with God
How to Study The Bible
Lesson 6 - Tuesday
Walking With God in an Ordinary Day
“Enoch walked with God; and he was not, for God took him” (Genesis 5:24).
That single line is one of the most intriguing descriptions of a human life in all of Scripture. When you read Genesis 5:22–24, the details about Enoch are surprisingly few. We’re told he lived in a broken world, just like everyone else listed in that chapter. We’re told he had a family. We’re told how long he lived. But what sets him apart is not how long he lived—it’s how he lived. Twice the Bible says it plainly: Enoch walked with God.
That phrase is worth slowing down for. It doesn’t say Enoch occasionally visited God, or that he remembered God only in crisis. It paints a picture of steady companionship—step by step, moment by moment. Walking implies movement, direction, consistency, and closeness. You don’t walk with someone from a distance. You walk side by side.
What’s striking is how ordinary Enoch’s setting was. There’s no record of him leading a nation, building an ark, or confronting kings. He lived, worked, raised a family—and in the middle of that, he walked with God. That means his relationship with God wasn’t reserved for dramatic spiritual moments. It was woven into everyday life.
That raises a hard but honest question: if Enoch could walk with God in his day, what’s really stopping us in ours?
We tend to compartmentalize our spiritual lives—prayer in the morning, maybe Scripture at night—but Enoch’s life suggests something deeper: ongoing communion. Not just scheduled time with God, but shared life with Him.
Walking with God today might look like whispering a prayer while driving. It might mean pausing before a conversation and asking for wisdom. It might be turning your thoughts toward Christ in the middle of a busy task instead of letting your mind drift aimlessly. It could be gratitude in a quiet moment, or surrender in a stressful one.
The point isn’t perfection—it’s connection.
If you’re waiting for the perfect time or setting to pray, you’ll miss most of your day. Enoch didn’t wait. He walked.
So as you go about your day today, ask yourself:
Where can I invite God into this moment?
While you’re working—“Lord, help me do this with excellence.”
While you’re stressed—“Jesus, give me peace right now.”
While you’re grateful—“Thank You for this gift.”
While you’re struggling—“I need You here.”
These aren’t long, polished prayers. They’re the quiet footsteps of a life walking with God.
Enoch’s story ends in a way no other life in Genesis 5 does: he didn’t just die like the others—God took him. It’s as if his daily walk with God simply continued…just in a different place. A life of steady communion on earth prepared him for uninterrupted communion in eternity.
That’s where this kind of walk leads.
Prayer:
Father, teach me to walk with You, not just visit You. Help me bring You into the ordinary moments of my day—the small decisions, the quiet thoughts, the hidden struggles. Remind me that You are near, always ready to listen. Give me a heart that turns toward You again and again, until walking with You becomes as natural as breathing. In Jesus’ name, amen.




