August 12, 2017 Bible Study — It Is Too Late To Turn Aside the Coming Disaster…It Is Never Too Late To Turn To God

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Jeremiah 16-18.

    Jeremiah continues his rant against the sins of the people of Jerusalem. He tells them that disaster is coming, that it is no longer avoidable. They would suffer because their ancestors had abandoned the Lord, but not just because of their ancestors sins. The disaster was coming because their sins were even worse than those of their ancestors. Jeremiah’s entire point was that each generation added new sins on top of those which came before. Mankind follows this same pattern time after time. Each generation pushes the envelope of sin further than the last until finally the pile of sins becomes so high that it topples over on them in a disaster which spreads suffering onto just about everyone. Then people rediscover God and righteousness and the cycle resets.

    In these times of disaster (and even in the good times) we must choose where we will put our ultimate trust. Where will we look in order to determine right from wrong? If we look to humans, ourselves or others, as the source which determines right from wrong, we will be like a tumbleweed in the desert. Blown ever further from the truth. Our hearts will deceive us into thinking that what we want to be right is right, even when we know it is wrong. On the other hand, if we look to God as the source for determining right from wrong, we will be like a tree planted by a body of water. Firmly rooted with no need for concern when the dry months come. God can look into our heart and see where our selfishness leads. If we look to Him for knowledge of right and wrong He will reveal our selfishness to us and guide us to the path of success.

    Once again in this passage Jeremiah uses a metaphor to communicate the message which God has given him. This metaphor is of a potter shaping clay. In the same way which a potter shapes clay, so does God shape people, and nations. And, just as a potter may change his mind about the way in which he is shaping the clay, so may God change His mind about the form into which He is shaping us, or our nation. In explaining that metaphor, Jeremiah explains that, even though he has been prophesying that it is too late for Judah to avoid the judgment which God is about to mete out on them, it is always worth repenting of our sins and turning to God in obedience. While God may be planning to bring disaster on us, and/or our nation, because of our sins, if each and every one of us turns from our sins He will change His mind and withhold that disaster. In the same manner, if God was planning to bless us because of our faithfulness and we turn from Him to sin, He will withhold from us that blessing and pour out disaster upon us. No matter how evil we have been, there is always value in turning from our sins to serve and worship God.

August 11, 2017 Bible Study — Using The Gifts Which God Has Given Us

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Jeremiah 13-15.

    The prophet Isaiah spoke words of condemnation, mixed with words of hope. If the people of Jerusalem would turn back to God and obey Him, God would turn aside the coming judgment. The prophet Jeremiah spoke words of even greater condemnation, with much less hope. It was too late for the people of Jerusalem to avoid the coming disaster, but if they would turn back to God, God would provide them comfort in the coming day of judgment. As a result, I am finding it much harder to know what to write each day about the passages from Jeremiah than I did with the Book of Isaiah. I do not believe that the United States has reached the point where the Kingdom of Judah was when Jeremiah prophesied.

    Having said that, I do have something to write about today’s passage. The passage starts with Jeremiah creating a visual metaphor for the people of Jerusalem. He wore a loincloth for several days. Then, he took it and buried it. A lengthy period of time later, Jeremiah went back and dug up that loincloth, at which point, it was rotted and useless. This is what happens to us when we do not do what God instructs us to do. God has created us for a purpose. He calls us, gives us gifts and abilities to serve that purpose, and sends us to do what He tells us. If we refuse to listen to His words and do as He instructs, we will become as worthless as a loincloth which has been buried. What gifts and abilities has God given us that we are not using to their full potential? Are we allowing those gifts to rot?

August 10, 2017 Bible Study — Is There a Point Where We Should Stop Praying For People?

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Jeremiah 10-12.

    The prophet belittles those who make idols and then worship them as gods. I used to think that this was an obsolete practice, that no one worshiped idols made by human hands as gods, but I know now several people who do that very thing. They spend time reconstructing the worship practices which were abandoned by their ancestors, claiming they are returning to that religion. Those I have spoken with about it acknowledge that they can never fully reconstruct what their ancestors believed or practiced because the records are incomplete. Yet they claim their religion is more “genuine” than Christianity (or Judaism), for which there is thorough documentation of the beliefs and practices of our predecessors. They even admit that the gods they worship did not make the heavens and the earth, yet they will not consider worshiping the God which did.

    I had a point to make when I started the previous paragraph, I am not sure I made it. Jeremiah tells us that God called on the people of Judah to obey Him, but they would not. Instead they turned to the idols of the people around them and ones which they themselves created. Today, God is calling on us to obey Him and all too many of us are turning to gods of our own devising rather than doing so. Judah’s multiplicity of gods failed to save them when disaster struck and the same will be true today. If we do not turn to God and obey His decrees when times are good, He will not save us when disaster strikes. God instructed Jeremiah to stop praying for the people of Judah because He would not aid them. There comes a point where we should stop praying for people who refuse to do God’s will. Actually, that is not quite true. There comes a point where we should stop praying for God to save people from the consequences of their sins. We should never stop praying that people repent and turn to God for His salvation. As Jeremiah points out at the end of this passage, everyone has the opportunity to declare that God is their God and to obey Him. Those who do, no matter who they were before that, or what they did, become the People of God.

August 9, 2017 Bible Study — Are We Ashamed Of Our Sins? Or Are We Just Ashamed That We Got Caught?

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Jeremiah 7-9.

    Jeremiah warns the people of Jerusalem that God will bring judgment against them for their sins. There were those among them who thought they were safe because the Temple was in Jerusalem, that God would never let Jerusalem fall because the Temple was there. However, Jeremiah told them that unless they stopped exploiting foreigners, orphans, and widows God would bring suffering into their midst. Today in this country if you listen to the debate over illegal immigration you realize that we are guilty of exploiting the foreigners among us. Further, one realizes that the reason for the issue even being debated is because the foreigners are being used to allow those in positions of power to exploit the least powerless among us, the orphans and the widows(although, not just the orphans and widows). With few exceptions, those in power propose solutions appealing to one side or the other in the debate which serve to further this exploitation not correct it. There is one further point which the prophet makes on this specific subject. Those who are oppressing the foreigner, the widows, and the orphans (the powerless) are harming themselves. We will only turn away from our sins when we recognize that they cause more harm to ourselves than whatever pleasure they bring us. We will only convince others to repent of their sins when we both recognize and communicate this fact.

    Jeremiah speaks of the people of Jerusalem, from the least to the greatest, who are not ashamed of their sins, of their detestable conduct. Look around at our society today and you will see the same thing. People are not ashamed of having done wrong when they are caught. They are ashamed that they were caught doing wrong! They condemn others for doing wrong, but when they are caught doing the same sort of things, they place the blame on those who revealed their wrongdoing. They attempt to convince people that the person who revealed their wrongdoing did worse by revealing it than they themselves had done. It is easiest to see this behavior among our political leaders, but everyone does it. Until we value honesty in ourselves more than we value anything else, this problem will continue.

August 8, 2017 Bible Study — The Winds Of Destruction Are Beginning To Blow

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Jeremiah 4-6.

    Today’s passage is a warning and a condemnation of the people of Jerusalem. It is worth noting that Jeremiah began prophesying during the reign of King Josiah, the last righteous king of Jerusalem before the Exile. Yet even during the reign of Josiah, Jeremiah condemns the people of Jerusalem for their dishonesty and wickedness. Jeremiah tells us that the common people dealt dishonestly with each other. They would speak oaths in the Lord’s name that they had no intention of keeping. He goes on to tell us that the elites, the educated, and those from “good” families were just as guilty. I want to repeat, Jeremiah made this prophecy during the reign of Josiah, a righteous king who sought to lead the people to serve the Lord. As a result of this prevalent dishonesty, Jeremiah prophesied the fall of Jerusalem and the exile of its people.

    Jeremiah condemns the people saying that from the least to the greatest they were greedy for gain. They bandage over serious problems rather than actually treating them. They call for peace and unity when there are deep divisions. Jeremiah’s description of the people of Jerusalem sounds like the people of today. God is calling on us to walk in His ancient path of righteousness, promising that if we do we will find rest for our souls. But people refuse to do so. God has sent prophets to call us back to Him, to warn us of the coming destruction. Yet, as a people we refuse to listen. If we do not soon change our ways, God will bring destruction upon us as He did upon Jerusalem so many years ago.

August 7, 2017 Bible Study –A Broken Cistern, Or a Fountain of Living Water? Which Will You Choose?

First and foremost,

Happy Birthday to my lovely wife. I thank God for you every day.

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Jeremiah 1-3.

    In Chapter 2 verse 13 Jeremiah uses a metaphor which illustrates the main point of this entire passage. Jeremiah tells us that people abandon God, the fountain of living water, and dig cisterns which will not hold water to use instead. The first aspect of this metaphor is that just as people do not have to be told to drink water they do not have to seek spiritual things. They will do so. The prophet compares the spiritual libation provided by God to water from a cold mountain spring. He then compares spiritual libations which we obtain from other sources to water from a cistern. Most people today are unfamiliar with cisterns so they fail to understand the full extent of this metaphor. Water from a cistern is warm and flat, often with a taste which can best be described as “muddy” or stale. However, not only do we exchange God’s spring of fresh water for a cistern of stale water, it is a cistern which will not hold water.

    I want to unpack this metaphor a little further. Francis Schaeffer refers to the way in which human philosophies refer to the spiritual aspects of human life as “borrowing spirituality”. What he means by this is that human philosophies lack any actual spiritual element. As a result they use words borrowed from religion, often from Christianity, to imply a spirituality which they do not actually possess. Christianity uses a lot of words which derive their meaning from where they fit into Christian theology. Take away the theology and they lose their meaning. This is why the spiritual “cisterns” built by humans are broken. They get their spiritual “water” by borrowing words from Christianity. These words seem to provide a spiritual element to life for awhile, but the longer they are removed from the theological context which gives them meaning the less useful they are for satisfying the spiritual needs of people. As a result people who reject God have to constantly create new philosophies because the previous ones quickly run dry.

August 6, 2017 Bible Study — Having a Humble and Contrite Heart

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Isaiah 64-66.

    Do not blame God if your troubles overwhelm you. He is ready to help if you ask Him for it. Do not claim that God does not make Himself obvious when you are not even looking for Him. People claim that God does not help them when they are unwilling to follow His commands. They claim that there is no evidence for God when they do not wish to find Him. People who are busy defiling themselves isolate themselves from those they consider impure. When I first read this I saw it as applying to two groups, but as I started to write I realized that both groups are variations on the same mistake. When the prophet condemns those who say, “Don’t come too close or you will defile me! I am holier than you!” he is speaking to everyone who will not associate with those they consider unclean. There are those who call themselves Christian who will have nothing to do with those who do not because they are afraid it will defile them. There are those who will not associate with those who hold differing political views because they think those others are evil. We cannot serve as God’s hands and feet to reach those He desires to draw to Him if we will not associate with those who do not yet know Him. IF we think we are holier than others, we are defiling ourselves. It is only when we have a humble and contrite heart, when we acknowledge our unworthiness before God, that we will begin to experience the holiness which comes from Him. It is then that He will transform us into holy people.

August 5, 2017 Bible Study — The Year Of The Lord’s Favor Has Come, Can The Day Of His Anger Be Far Behind?

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Isaiah 60-63.

    When Jesus returned from being tempted by Satan in the wilderness He read from this passage. My understanding of First Century rabbinical traditions (which is limited) suggests that Jesus did not mean that just the verses He read were fulfilled, but I am unsure how much more of the passage He was saying was fulfilled (although I think His listeners would have had a pretty good idea). The passage which Jesus quoted seems to be the culmination of what was in the previous chapter which is addressed to the people of Israel (or perhaps the people of Jerusalem). In light of Jesus declaring this passage fulfilled in Him I believe the previous passage is addressed to those who chose to make God their God.

    When Jesus quoted from this passage He quoted a message of hope. However, the very next sentence contains a warning for those who resist God’s will. The prophet has made several references to the day of God’s vengeance (or, as the NLT puts it here, anger), the day when He would exact justice on those who oppressed and tortured others. Chapter 63 in today’s passage contains powerful imagery about that day. The beginning of this chapter has always reminded me of the “Battle Hymn of the Republic” and vice versa. It is a song which has dimmed in popularity because of its connection with militarism, which is a shame (although understandable) because it contains some powerful lines. God’s truth is indeed marching on and the American Civil War was most certainly a day of God’s Judgment. The people of the United States paid a heavy price in blood and treasure for their sins as a people up to that point, but that price is as nothing next to the one that is coming due.

August 4, 2017 Bible Study — The Righteous Do Not Fear Death

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Isaiah 57-59.

    The passage begins with a short explanation that sometimes the reason good people suffer an untimely death is to save them from experiencing evil later on. For those who love the Lord, death is not a terrible thing. For those people, death is not the end. They will enter into the presence of God and know peace that we can never experience in this life. It is worth noting that the prophet contrasts the untimely death of the righteous with the lives of wickedness and sin lived in an attempt to avoid what they dread and fear. Yet, in the end they will fail to escape judgment. They will experience that which they fear and dread.

    Chapter 58 contains a great summation about hypocrisy. Fasting does not serve a useful purpose if we do not use the time to examine our lives and see how we can better serve God. God does not want us to fast, or pray, or go to Church, or any of many other things for themselves. Going to Church and worshiping God are good things, but if we do not come out of them inspired to care for those in need our worship is empty. I want to emphasize that this about examining our lives to see how we can feed the hungry, free the oppressed, or clothe the naked, not to condemn others for not doing so. I just realized that most of the time when people go over this passage they stop before they get to the end of this passage, where the prophet says exactly that, “If you do away with the yoke of oppression, with the pointing finger and malicious talk,…” Notice how he puts blaming others for doing wrong right alongside of oppressing people yourself. The writer actually expands on this in chapter 59. If we do not make our arguments with integrity, if we attempt to win with deception and lies, then God will not give us justice. Yet, God will come, indeed he has come, as a redeemer for those who repent of their sin.

August 3, 2017 Bible Study — God “Gets It”…Even When We Don’t

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Isaiah 52-56.

    Starting in chapter 52 verse 13 through the end of chapter 53 is the passage that is often referred to as the “Suffering Servant” passage. It is one of those clearly messianic passages which as a Christian I see as a reference to Jesus. However, there is a lesson not directly related to the Messiah for us in this passage. It tells us that God’s Servant had nothing about him to attract us to him, that he was despised and rejected. No one cared that he died. Yet, it was because of Him that we are counted as righteous. How many other people do we treat as the prophet tells us that the Messiah was treated? How many of them are, also, God’s servants? Truly understanding this passage should cause us to seek to be friends with the outcasts, with those whom society says are “untouchable”.

    Isaiah 55 is one of the greatest chapters in the Bible. I absolutely love the way it reads in the NIV. The first couple of verses are a foreshadowing of what Jesus said in Matthew 5:6. Actually, I suspect that what Jesus said there is partially derived from the beginning of Isaiah 55. However, the key part of Isaiah 55 begins with verse six. Each one of us has a window of opportunity to turn to the Lord. I will not pretend to understand how it works, but if we choose to turn away from God when He makes His present felt by us, we may never get another chance to turn to Him. Never pass up an opportunity to do God’s will, you may not get another one.

    I am hoping my thought processes here make sense to you. There is a connection between what I wrote in the first paragraph of yesterday’s blog and chapter 55 here. We often think that we know better than Scripture how to do God’s will.

“For my thoughts are not your thoughts,
neither are your ways my ways,”
declares the Lord.

The idea is continued and expanded on through the rest of the chapter. God promises that if we stay true to His word, listen to His word, and preach His word, as He has given it to us in Scripture, it will accomplish the purpose for which He gave it. It is important to remember that this means actually reading and teaching what is actually written, not what we think what was actually written means. It is OK to do the latter, but only as long as we start by recounting what it actually says. I cannot emphasize that enough, we need to make sure that when we teach God’s word we refer to the written word and not rely on what we think it says.