January 17, 2015 Bible Study — It Is Always Lawful To Do Good

For today, One Year Bible Online links here.

DSCN7528

Proverbs 3:21-26

    The writer reminds us to keep our eyes on wisdom and understanding. Let us strive to preserve our sound judgment and discretion. These are the tools which will help us to walk a straight path and avoid stumbling. If we remember to act according to wisdom and understand, sound judgment and discretion we will not fear when we lie down on our beds to sleep.

DSCN7529

Psalm 15:1-5

    I love this psalm. It gives us a nice checklist of things ways to behave in order to please God:

  • Lead blameless lives
  • Do what is right
  • Speak the truth from the heart
  • Do not speak slander
  • Do no wrong to a neighbor
  • cast no slur on another
  • Despise the vile
  • Honor those who fear the Lord
  • Keep our promises, even when it hurts
  • Lend money to the poor without interest
  • do not accept bribes against the innocent

These are things for which no one can be condemned. If we do all of them we will be able to stand firm even when the ground around us collapses.

DSCN7530

Matthew 12:1-21

    We have two stories in today’s passage which give us insight into the limits of rules used to guide behavior. In the first story, Pharisees accuse Jesus’ disciples of breaking the law because they casually broke off heads of grain and ate them on the Sabbath. The Pharisees said they were harvesting on the Sabbath. In response, Jesus’ points out exceptions to the Law found in scripture. He then quotes Hosea 6:6 to them to show that God does not desire slavish obedience to the letter of the Law. God does not desire our sacrifices, He desires us to show mercy and love.
    The second story occurs in the synagogue of these same Pharisees. When He entered the synagogue, Jesus took notice of a man with a crippled hand. The Pharisees asked Him if the law allowed someone to heal on the Sabbath, with the implication that healing was work (and the Law banned working on the Sabbath). Jesus then asks a rhetorical question. If one of your animals fell into a well on the Sabbath, wouldn’t you work to get it out? Jesus then answers the question by telling them that, of course, they would. They would neither let the animal suffer, nor risk the loss of their asset, in order to wait for the end of the Sabbath. To sum up His teaching: it is never wrong to do good.

DSCN7531

Genesis 35-36:43

    After the confrontation with the people of Schechem over the rape of Jacob’s daughter Dinah, Jacob moves to Bethel. Jacob was worried about the people of the area around Schechem mustering and attacking him and his family in response to his sons taking revenge on the people of Schechem for his daughter’s rape. God appeared to him and told him to move to Bethel and build an altar. In response to God’s direction, Jacob tells his family and servants to purify themselves and get rid of all of their pagan idols. As a result they gave him all of their idols and their earrings, which Jacob then buried under an oak at Schechem. I find it interesting that they gave Jacob both their idols and their earrings. I don’t know what the significance is of that, but I find it interesting. The more interesting thing is that rather than destroy the idols, Jacob buried them under a tree which could be used to find them again later.
    Bethel was the place where Jacob had had the vision of the staircase to heaven while he was fleeing Esau many years earlier. His return here is symbolic, intentionally so on his part. He has returned to reaffirm his dedication to serving God. He was reminded at Schechem of the promises which God had made to him those many years ago, and of his promise in return. Getting rid of the idols in his household was part of keeping those promises he had made those many years ago as he rededicates himself and his household to God.