March 12, 2017 Bible Study

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

Today, I am reading and commenting on Joshua 5-7.

    Every time I read it I am surprised that none of the males born while the people of Israel were in the wilderness were circumcised until they crossed the Jordan River. It is interesting to note the progression here. The people of Israel crossed the Jordan River. The males were circumcised (something which had not been done since they turned aside from the Promised Land, possibly since they had left Egypt). The people of Israel celebrated Passover in the Promised Land. The people of Israel began eating food grown in the Promised Land. Manna stops appearing each morning.
    I am not sure why the males were not circumcised while the people of Israel were in the wilderness. However, upon entering the Promised Land they resumed the practice which marked them as distinct from the other people living there. Now that they had entered the land which had been promised to their ancestors they needed to mark themselves as different from the people living there. So, they rededicated themselves to being God’s chosen people by circumcising all of the males. Then they acknowledged what God had done for them by celebrating the Passover as a kind of bookmark on the end of their time in the wilderness (which began with the first Passover). This was followed by eating food harvested in the land God had promised them, which meant they no longer needed the manna which God had provided to sustain them in the wilderness.

March 11, 2017 Bible Study –Leadership, Faith, and Memory

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

Today, I am reading and commenting on Joshua 1-4.

    Today’s passage can be divided into three parts:Preparing to enter the Promised Land, Rahab and the spies, and Crossing the Jordan. There are two parts to the part about preparing to enter the Promised Land. I am only going to touch on the first part of that. God gave Joshua advice which every leader will benefit from. Meditate on God’s word day and night. Study it and follow its principles. If you do this you will be successful in everything you do. Remember that God will be with us in everything we do. God will not abandon us, nor will He fail us. This is not conditional on us studying and following His word. However, if we do not study and follow God’s word, we will fail ourselves.

    The story of Rahab and the spies gives us a great example of faith. Rahab acted to protect the spies before she extracted a promise from them to be kind to her and her family. Why di she do this? She tells us why. She had heard what God had done for the people of Israel and she recognized that He was the Supreme God above all other gods. She recognized God’s power and His will and acted accordingly. She did not wait for the promise of benefit to herself or her family to do what was right. She acted in faith with no assurance that she would receive any benefit from doing so.

    When the Israelites crossed the Jordan River they built two monuments to God’s power. One of them was an example which was probably never seen again. They built two stone altars. One in the middle of the riverbed of the Jordan River and one where they camped for the night after crossing the river. The second was built from stones taken from the riverbed of the Jordan River. These stones would have been distinctive, as any stones which spend any length of time in a moving body of water develop several characteristics. As a result for generations afterwards this altar would have stood as a testament to them crossing the dry river bed of the Jordan River. There are times when it is useful for us to do similar things in our lives, to build monuments to how God has used His power in our lives. Those monuments do not necessarily need to be physical.
    As an example, I struggled long and hard with whether asking my wife to marry me was God’s will. God assured me that I had made the right decision. This story is how He did that. Several things happened over the summer leading up to our wedding which made it clear where we should hold our wedding reception. When we reached out to the caterer to see if we could schedule his hall he responded by saying, “I am sorry but I am booked every Saturday for the next two years…except for September 23. The couple who had reserved that date just called yesterday and cancelled.” September 23 was the date we had chosen for our wedding. Whenever my wife or I question whether or not we made the right decision to get married, one of us says, “I’m sorry but I have no dates available for the next two years…except for the day you want.”

March 10, 2017 Bible Study — God Is the Lord and There Is No Other

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

Today, I am reading and commenting on Deuteronomy 32-34.

    The people of Israel belong to God, they are His special possession among the people’s of this earth. Despite the many things He has done for them, time and again they have turned to other gods. They have chosen to place their priorities on things which are not God. In response God has raised up peoples and nations against the people of Israel to show them the error of their ways. He has repeatedly held back from destroying them because their enemies would fail to recognize His role in their fall.
    There are many ways in which Moses’ song in this passage can be applied to those who have chosen to follow Christ. We too have been selected by God to be His special possession among the people of this earth. We too have witnessed God’s many marvelous acts on our behalf. Finally, we too have become fat and complacent when God has blessed us. We have turned from God and sought other things in His place. And we have learned that there is no god other than God. Let us return to loving God once more (if we have not already done so) and rejoice as He brings justice to the earth.

March 9, 2017 Bible Study — Today We Are Given a Choice

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

Today, I am reading and commenting on Deuteronomy 29-31.

    In yesterday’s passage, the blessings for following God’s instructions, and the curses for failing to do so, were laid out. In today’s passage, Moses reminds us that sometimes we will fail to follow God’s instructions and fall under the curses. However, we can always repent and turn back to God. If we recognize our failure, that the suffering we are experiencing is a result of our sin, and turn back to God, God will change our hearts so that we will love Him with all of our heart, mind, and soul. If we repent of our sin, He will welcome us back and allow us to experience His blessings once more.

    Today we are given a choice. We can choose to love the Lord and commit ourselves completely to Him. If we choose this, we are choosing life. If we choose not to do this we are choosing death. I love the way Moses lays out this choice for us. God does not ask us to do some difficult pilgrimage in order to find out what He wants from us. We do not need to find some guru who has gone to heaven, or across the sea, or climbed some high mountain to tell us what God commands us. God has sent His messengers to us and He will reveal in our hearts right where we are what He desires of us. Even when we are in the depths of sin, God will come to us where we are to make His will known to us. We only need to listen and obey…and the best part is, if we sincerely desire to obey God He will give us the strength and ability to do so.
    The hard part about this choice is that we have to make it every day. However, that means that if yesterday we chose not to do God’s will, today we get to change our minds and accept His offer of blessings. I pray that each and every one of you reading this chooses life today, and every day going forward.

March 8, 2017 Bible Study — Blessings and Curses

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

Today, I am reading and commenting on Deuteronomy 27-28.

    The passage contains instructions for an interesting “compare and contrast” exercise which Moses instructed the people of Israel to do once they crossed over the Jordan River. One half of them were to stand on Mount Ebal and one half on Mount Gerizim. Those on Mount Ebal were to declare curses on those who failed to keep the commands which God had given the people of Israel. Those on Mount Gerizim were to declare blessings on those who did keep those commands. The curses are the mirror image of the blessings. Doing God’s will results in positive consequences. Refusing to do God’s will has negative consequences. We do not always see the connection between doing, or not doing, God’s will and the consequences which result, but that connection is there nonetheless.

March 7, 2017 Bible Study –Economic Justice

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

Today, I am reading and commenting on Deuteronomy 24-26.

    Today’s passage is another one where it is a listing of miscellaneous commands, many of which are restatements of commands given previously. These commands contain a thread which goes through many of them in one way or another. One should not use one’s economic power to oppress those less fortunate. When we make loans we should not take as security for those loans the tools the other person needs to make a living, nor should we take things which the person needs to live. There is even a command against entering someone’s house to obtain the object they are giving as security against the loan. All of these commands are related to not using your stronger economic position to gain additional advantage over those less fortunate than yourself.
    Finally, there is the instruction regarding tithes. There are two aspects of the tithe instructions I want to mention. One aspect of our tithing is to acknowledge that God gave us the things we have. The tithe is but a returning to God what He gave us in the first place. Another aspect is to use our good fortune to help those who have been less fortunate by sharing with them. There is more to helping the unfortunate than just sharing from our wealth. We are also to manage our business so as to leave options for those less fortunate to gather the resources to care for themselves.

March 6, 2017 Bible Study

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

Today, I am reading and commenting on Deuteronomy 21-23.

    When I came to Deuteronomy I was expecting to struggle with what to write about it. After all, Deuteronomy means, more or less, “Second Law”, so I perceive it too a large degree as being a repeat of things said in earlier books (primarily Leviticus). I was pleasantly surprised as I read through it this year with the new perspectives on things I found there. Until today. Today’s passage contains a lot of miscellaneous regulations to which I see no common theme. That being said, I still believe there is value in reading through it regularly and I suspect that next year I will have a different perspective on it.
    There was one section that I want to expand on a little. When I was a child there was a saying we often used, “Finders keepers, losers weepers.” I knew many adults who used it as well (although, I am pretty sure my parents never used it and discouraged my siblings and I from using it). In this passage, God makes it clear that that saying is not His ideal either. If we find something of value, we should seek to return it to its rightful owner. If we know who they are and they live nearby, we should take it to them. If we do not know who they are, or they live more distantly, we should hold it for them until they can be identified and/or arrangements can be made for them to retrieve it. The next verse is on a similar theme. If we witness someone struggling with a task, we should assist them.

March 5, 2017 Bible Study — Avoiding Detestable Practices

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

Today, I am reading and commenting on Deuteronomy 18-20.

    God warned the people of Israel not to imitate the detestable customs of the people who were living in the land He was about to give them. The very first of those detestable practices which He singled out was that they were not to sacrifice their children. In many ways, all of the other practices He condemned here are intrinsically tied to that. All of the practices which are condemned here are attempts to warp the world around to serve our selfish desires. They are attempts to become gods, if only in a small way. I think in some ways we gain an understanding of this by comparing a prophet sent by God to those practicing the divination practices which were forbidden. The prophet sent by God is given a message from God concerning some future event so that his (or her) audience will more closely follow God’s will (Joseph received a prophetic message from God so that he would take Mary and Jesus to Egypt). The diviner seeks seeks to determine specific information about the future so that he, or those consulting him, can use it to their advantage. There are times when the line is a bit blurry, such as when we seek God’s guidance in making a decision, but even there we should be seeking to make the decision which most clearly adheres to God’s will, not the one which advances our desires. Sometimes that is the same thing and the closer our walk with God the more that will be true. More and more today I see people adopting the detestable practices God described here, practices which led God to drive the people living in the Promised Land out.

March 4, 2017 Bible Study — Providing Assistance To Those Suffering Involves More Than Just Giving Our Money

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

Today, I am reading and commenting on Deuteronomy 14-17.

    Today’s passage contains a restatement of many of the laws which had been given out earlier. I can understand why this makes some people believe that this book was written later than some of the others (I know there are other reasons in the literary structure of this book as well). However, there is a somewhat different emphasis in how each of these rules are presented here. Here there is a greater emphasis on providing those whose full-time job is caring for the community’s spiritual needs and caring for those who have suffered misfortune (the poor, the widow and the orphan, and refugees*).

    I am going to focus on the instructions concerning tithes and debt forgiveness. The first aspect of the tithes goes to their purpose. Tithes were to be used to hold a celebration honoring God and to support the Levites (whose full-time job was looking after the community’s spiritual needs). Every third year the tithe was to be used purely for supporting the Levites and aiding those suffering misfortune.

    However, it is in discussing how to handle loans that we see how this all fits together. After telling the people that they should cancel the debts owed to them every seven years, Moses states that their should be no poor among them. What Moses writes here reminds me of something my Dad said on the topic of Christians and wealth and poverty.

There is nothing wrong with a Christian being welfare if they need it. There is nothing wrong with a Christian being a millionaire. The problem is when there is a millionaire and someone on welfare in the same congregation.

He was very clear that we could not judge what the problem was in that latter situation until we were involved in it. The way he explained it went back to the way things were in the Mennonite Church when he was young. In those days, Mennonites were almost all farmers. If a Mennonite farmer was having trouble supporting his family, the Church would help out. The men of the Church would come in and help him run his farm. They would tell him what to plant, what animals to raise, and how to spend his money. They would also help him with all of the work that came with running his farm, making sure he knew how to do it and providing him the extra labor necessary to turn things around. They would also loan him the money to make it all work. But the key was, he needed to take their advice. If he refused to take their advice (unless he convinced them his ideas were better), the assistance dried up. The point of all of this was that those who were poor are generally poor because they have made bad decisions. The “price” of assistance is being willing to take the advice of those who have been more successful.
    Of course, sometimes the problem is that the wealthy are unwilling to provide assistance to those less fortunate than themselves. I am happy to say that in every congregation where there have been millionaires and those struggling, the millionaires always tried to help those who were struggling when they became aware of their struggles. However, I am sure there are congregations where this is not the case.

*It is interesting that at some places the people of Israel are instructed to have nothing to do with foreigners and here they are instructed to provide for the foreigners among them who cannot support themselves. I believe there is an important lesson here about how we as Christians should deal with non-believers. I will write a blog on it someday. In this passage I believe the foreigners being referred to would be refugees, but more importantly I think that these instructions involve our personal responsibility, not instructions for how the government today should work.

March 3, 2017 Bible Study — You Always Have A Choice

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

Today, I am reading and commenting on Deuteronomy 11-13.

    Today’s passage continues with Moses’ admonition to the people of Israel to love God with their whole being. These instructions are not for the children of those who have seen God’s wondrous power, and yet, in a way, they are. Those who have seen God’s wondrous power in action are obligated to talk about it and about God’s instructions for how we live our lives. We have seen, or, at least, I have seen, God do wonderful, powerful things. Things which changed the course of my life. As a result, I have an obligation to commit myself to God’s instructions. When people interact with me, when they come into my house, they should have no doubt in their minds that I seek to follow God’s instructions (I know I often fall short of this, but it is the goal I strive to meet).

    It is not enough to write and talk about God’s commands, we must follow them. And not just some of the time, but all of the time. Today we are given a choice. A choice between a blessing and a curse. If we obey God’s will for us, we will experience a blessing. If we do not obey His will for us, we will experience a curse. This is not a once and done choice. We are given this choice again and again. Even if we chose the curse the last time, and the time before that, and the time before that, we can choose the blessing this time, and every time going forward. We have the choice, if we have made bad choices in the past, we do not have to make bad choices in the present, or in the future. Choose the blessing.