July 15, 2024 Bible Study — Fear of the Lord Leads to Humility

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Proverbs 22-24.

Throughout the Bible we are told to fear the Lord.  Today’s passage talks about the behaviors which follow from that.  The writer tells us that fear of the Lord leads to humility.  More precisely he tells us that if we are not humble it means that we do not truly fear the Lord.  Also, if we fear the Lord we will not envy the wicked, nor we will fret because of the apparent success of those who do evil.  Fear of the Lord will quell any desire we might have to share in their lifestyle because we will realize that they have no hope for the future.  As importantly, we will not gloat when misfortune comes upon those who have tried to bring us harm.  We will not rejoice when their actions come back on them.  Instead, we will mourn that one whom God loves is suffering.  The writer also tells us that those who fear the Lord will not turn a blind eye to injustice and mistreatment of the innocent.  When others are being led to their deaths, do not pretend that you do not see what is happening.  While this applies to not pretending that something like the Holocaust is happening, as some Germans did during World War II, it also means not turning a blind eye when people are being convinced to harm themselves.  Which brings me to one of those short proverbs which means more to me every day, and which all too many of those who speak in the “public square” today do not heed:
Buy the truth and do not sell it—
   wisdom, instruction and insight as well.
All too many who claim to be in the business of informing others willingly sell the truth for their own agenda and spread lies instead.  Often choosing to believe the lies themselves, even though they know them to be lies.

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

July 14, 2024 Bible Study — Listen Before Speaking and Depend on the Lord

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Proverbs 18-21.

When I started reading through the Book of Proverbs this year I intended to write each day about a summary lesson from the contents of the passage.  I am finding it difficult to come up with a summary lesson from the sections, such as today’s and yesterday’s which are collections of short proverbs.  I am going to try and go over the lessons which came to me as I went through today’s passage(not necessarily in the order they appear in the passage) and try to connect them to each other.

I am going to start by talking about the connection I see here between the ways in which fools (who are by definition in this context morally deficient) speak without thinking and do not have any desire to know what they do not know.  Throughout the Book of Proverbs the writer warns us that only fools speak without thinking or listening.  He also tells us that they do not desire knowledge or understanding.  From looking at the world around me, I realized how many people fail to pay attention to what those who disagree with them actually think and then wonder why they cannot convince them to change their minds.  These foolish ones spend a lot of time talking about why they think they are in the right, but refuse to listen to why their opposition thinks they are wrong.  Let us remember to listen to what those we disagree with say that they actually believe.  By doing so, we may learn that they are not so wrong, and/or we may learn how to show them a better way to attain their goal.  Which leads me to another point the writer makes.  Wisdom leads to patience, which makes one willing to overlook insult.  Those whose gullibility inclines them to evil do not learn from their own suffering, but they may learn to be more cautious when they see others suffering from the results of their wicked ways.  On the other hand those who seek knowledge and wisdom, learn when they are called out for their mistakes.

Early on in this passage we have these two short snippets:
The name of the Lord is a fortified tower;
    the righteous run to it and are safe.
And:
 The wealth of the rich is their fortified city;
    they imagine it a wall too high to scale.
Usually when I read this passage I see these as two separate lessons.  Today I realized that together they give us a better lesson than what can be gained from looking at them separately.  Wealth does provide some protection from the vagaries of life, but relying on wealth leaves one open to trouble when those troubles rise higher than the wall of our wealth.  On the other hand, if we instead run to the Lord and rely on Him for our protection, we will be safe.  The storms of this life will never rise higher than the walls which God will put around us when we turn to Him.

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

July 13, 2024 Bible Study — Even Fools Are Thought Wise if They Keep Silent

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

When I started reading the Book of Proverbs this year I became convinced that the link between foolishness and moral depravity which is implied by the Hebrew words used for “fool” and for “the simple minded” provided a key understanding of this book.  The wise build up, the foolish tear down.  Many of the ideas expressed in the proverbs in today’s passage relate to that idea.  Fools use their words to lash out at those whom they perceive as being in their way, while the wise choose their words in order to build others up.  Throughout today’s passage the writer contrasts the ways in which wise and righteous people speak to the ways in which foolish and wicked people use words.  I want to point out that to the writer saying wise and righteous is redundant, as is saying foolish and evil.  Being evil is foolish and wisdom teaches us to do what is right.  There is another word which the writer uses that our society views differently from the writer.  That word is “mocker”.  The writer considers a mocker to be a wicked person and a type of fool.  Whereas our society often admires those who mock others.  Mockers hold people up for scorn, while the wise seek to teach those who have made foolish decisions.  Wisdom teaches us to choose our words with care and to be silent when unsure of what to say.  The temptation to speak when we should remain silent sometimes leads us to say things which make matters worse.   There is one other important, and related, point which the writer brings up in today’s passage.  The wise seek to avoid quarrels and settle quarrels which come up between others.  Fools like to stir up quarrels between others and sometimes find amusement in angering others.

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

July 12, 2024 Bible Study — The Wise Welcome Correction

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Proverbs 9-13.

The writer tells us that both wisdom and folly invite the simple, the gullible, those inclined to evil, to come to them.  Wisdom offers discipline and hard work leading to insight.  Folly offers stolen water and secret pleasures.  Wisdom tells us that those who mock others and the wicked get angry when told that they have made, or are about to make, a mistake, while the wise welcome such advice.  In fact, the wise welcome being rebuked.  Those who seek righteousness listen to those who seek to correct their behavior, even when their behavior did not need correcting.  Wisdom recognizes that they can always gain more wisdom and listen to the advice of others, even when that advice seems foolish.  The wise embrace discipline and being disciplined while the foolish resent being corrected.  The writer also tells us that we find in others what we seek in them.  If we look for good in others, we will find it, but if we seek evil, we will find that.  In part this means that people will tend to respond to what we expect of them.  If we expect people to respond with goodness, and treat them accordingly, most of the time they will do so.  On the other hand, if we expect people to respond maliciously, they often will do so.  More importantly, if we expect people to be good, we will usually find ourselves around those who are good, while if we expect people to be evil, we will usually find ourselves around those who do evil.

 

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

July 11, 2024 Bible Study — Foolish and Wicked People Lack Discipline

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Proverbs 5-8.

The writer warns against adultery.  He speaks of the lure of an adulterous woman, but the same thing holds true of adulterous men.  He writes about how they offer what a pleasurable experience which disguises pain, hurt, and a loss of dignity.  The writer contrasts getting involved with an adulterer to acting with discipline.  He tells us how much better living a disciplined life is than living one of instant gratification.  Instead, the writer tells us we should reserve our most intimate activities to one to whom we have committed ourselves and who has committed themselves to us.  Our ways will be examined by God, and the wicked will be destroyed by their lack of discipline.  The writer speaks of how wisdom calls out to us.  As he does so, he reminds us once again that  being inclined to evil and/or being morally deficient leads one to act foolishly.  Those who give in to temptation have failed to exercise wisdom and have allowed themselves to be deceived by foolishness.  Those who act righteously and seek justice (and not justice in the abstract, but specific case by case justice) learn wisdom.

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

July 10, 2024 Bible Study — Lean Not on Your Own Understanding

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

The purpose of the Book of Proverbs is to help us gain wisdom and understanding.  It gives instruction on prudent behavior and how to do what is good and right.  Here in the introduction it tells us that these writings give prudence to the simple.  Then a little later it tells us that fools despise wisdom and instruction.  Both the word “simple” and the word “fool” have translator notes which tell us something important about them.  The translator note for “simple” says that the word translated there means someone who is gullible.  That is not that significant, since that is how we understand the word.  But, the note also says that it denotes someone who is without moral direction and inclined to evil.  Then the note for “fool” tells us that the word so translated implies someone who is morally deficient.  In our society today, we have a tendency to give the word simple, and to a lesser degree the word fool, the opposite connotation.  Our society thinks that someone who has clear moral direction and is inclined to do good is “simple” and that those who have moral principles are fools.  Once we understand that our society gets the meanings of those words exactly backwards we are on our way to true wisdom.  Doing so starts us well on the way to realizing the truth of the statement that fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge.  There is much more in this passage, but I am going to leave you with this quote from the passage:
Trust in the Lord with all your heart
    and lean not on your own understanding;

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

July 9, 2024 Bible Study — The Adversary Crushes Me, But I Will Trust in the Lord

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Psalms 143-150.

The psalmist cries out to the Lord.  He writes of how “the enemy” pursues him and crushes him.  A synonym for “enemy” is “adversary”, and the Hebrew word for “adversary” gives us the English word Satan.  So, we could read this passage as reading:
“Satan pursues me,
    he crushes me to the ground;
he makes me dwell in the darkness
    like those long dead.”
When depression hits us, when we feel overwhelmed by the troubles which life brings us, let us recognize that it is the Adversary pushing us into darkness.  The psalmist gives us the answer to dealing with such a situation.  Remember what God has done in the past and spread out our hands before God.  Thirst for His presence like the parched ground thirsts for rain.  Praise God for being dependable and training our hands how to serve Him.  Each generation tells the next of God’s mighty acts so that we can meditate on the glorious things that He has done.  We learn not to trust in governments, in humans who hold power over others.  Instead, let us turn to God and place our hope in Him.  After all, He is the maker of all that is, heaven and earth, and all that is in them.   God does not take pleasure in our strength, nor in our wealth.  Instead, He takes pleasure in those who fear Him and who put their trust in His love.  He is faithful to defend the oppressed and to give food to the hungry.  Let everything that has breath praise the Lord for He created them.

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

July 8, 2024 Bible Study — Give Thanks to the Lord Because No Matter Where We Go He Is Already There

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Psalms 136-142.

I echo the sentiments the psalmist expresses in today’s first psalm: give thanks to the Lord because He is good!  He has done wonderful things and His love endures forever.  When we call to Him, He answers.  He rescues us from our troubles.  More importantly, He has searched our hearts and knows us thoroughly.  He knows what we are going to do before we have the thought.  He knows us completely.  The way the psalmist expresses God’s knowledge of us is so powerful.  He writes that hiding from God is not possible.  There is no place we could go, or even a place we cannot go to, where God could not see us.  There is no place where God is not already there.  On the one hand, that means that we cannot hide from God and that it is pointless to try.  However, it also means that there is no place where God cannot reach us to save us from trouble.  The psalmist goes from there to explain that God not only knows our thoughts and our actions, but He knows how we are “put together”.  He knows the intricacies of our bodies and of our minds because He built them.  He understands how we have allowed sin to distort us from what He made us to be, and because He made us He knows how to put us right again after we have been damaged.  So, let us call on God to search our thoughts and desires in order to settle our anxious thoughts and lead us away from offensive thoughts so that we may serve Him faithfully.

 

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

July 7, 2024 Bible Study — My Help Comes From the Lord

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Psalms 120-135.

Today’s passage starts off with the psalmist asking God to save him from lying lips and deceitful tongues.  Now I realize the psalmist was talking about those around him who were dishonest, but when I first read:
“What will he do to you,
    and what more besides,
    you deceitful tongue?”
my thought was that I should pray to God that He keep me from having a deceitful tongue.  That thought did not come because I think of myself as dishonest, but because I want to never become someone whom others wonder if I am telling the truth.  As we read on, we read the psalmist telling us that our help comes from the Lord, the one who made all that is.  He will not let our foot slip.  If we seek His help, He will keep us from being deceitful, or from committing other sins.  He does not sleep, or even momentarily drift off.  Whatever plans we make, whatever effort we put into a project, if those plans do not further God’s plans, if that project is not part of what God is doing, all of our effort will come to nothing.  So, let us watch God closely to see what He wants us to do next.  Let us rejoice when we hear people say that they want to worship God.

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

July 6, 2024 Bible Study — Seek God With All of Your Heart and Keep His Statutes

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Psalms 119.

Today’s reading is just one psalm because Psalm 119 is the longest chapter in the Bible.  The emphasis throughout this acrostic poem is on the value of God’s law and God’s word.  If we seek God with all of our hearts and keep His statutes we will be blessed.  The psalmist reminds us that we can remain pure only by living according to God’s word.  However, we will only do so if God keeps us from giving in to temptation.  We need to give ourselves to God, give over control over our lives to Him.  We need God to keep us from deceit and evil, for Him to teach us His law.  As we study His word, His law, and the Scripture He has given us, we learn how to avoid sinning by learning to lean on Him.  We need to allow God to open our eyes to the wonderful things in His law.  I am sure that you know someone who is convinced that Scripture contains nothing of value and much to be decried.  Pray to God that He will open your eyes to see through their misunderstanding, and that He will open their eyes to what God’s word truly says.  Let us take comfort in what God says to us and pray that He gives us true understanding so that we will keep God’s law and obey it with all of our heart.  God’s word will light our path so that we do not trip on unseen obstacles.  Let us speak of God’s word and praise His actions before both the mighty and the weak, then we will not be put to shame.  I will trust in the Lord to keep me from going astray.

 

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