Tag Archives: 1 Chronicles

May 16, 2021 Bible Study Leaders Need To Not Only Avoid Impropriety, But Also The Appearance Of Impropriety

Today, I am reading and commenting on  1 Chronicles 24-26.

This is another one of those passages which I generally find hard to read and even harder to comment on.  However, skipping over this passage would be a mistake.  The passage discusses how King David assigned duties to the priests and Levites.  The passage tells us that he did so with complete impartiality by having his leadership team cast lots in the presence of representatives of all of the families.  This teaches us an important lesson: it is not enough to make decisions in an impartial way, people must also perceive that those decisions were made in an impartial way.  Again, King David and his advisers recognized that both halves of this formula must be met.  When leadership makes decisions they must equally be sure that there the decision is made fairly and without partiality and that people perceive such to be the case.

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

May 15, 2021 Bible Study King David, An Example Of Leadership

Today, I am reading and commenting on  1 Chronicles 20-23.

Every time I read one of the accounts about the census King David held and the plague which followed it I have unanswered questions.  None of the accounts clearly define what David’s sin was in holding the census.  However, today I want to focus on the place where the angel of the Lord which was spreading the plague stopped and where David built an altar to God.  The passage tells us that an angel of the Lord spread a plague over the nation of Israel, stopping as it approached Jerusalem at the threshing floor of Araunah the Jebusite.  The passage also tells us that David and the elders of Israel were dressed in sackcloth and fell face down when David saw the angel standing there with a drawn sword.  At this point David cried out to God asking that the punishment fall only on himself and his family, since it was his sin which brought it about.  The next verse has an angel tell David’s seer, or prophet, to build an altar on the threshing floor of Araunah.

So, the first thing I noticed about this was that David and the elders of Israel were already dressed in sackcloth when David saw the angel.  The passage has God telling the angel to stop before it mentions that David cried out to God to spare the people.  Yet, it is clear that David and the elders were already praying for just such an outcome.  In this passage David gives two examples which every leader of people should follow.  First, he acknowledges that the people he was leading suffered as a result of his sin, his mistake.  Second, he sought to suffer in their place.

I want to apologize for not getting into the selection of this spot to build an altar, but, as often happens, as I wrote this blog I found myself going in a different direction.

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

May 14, 2021 Bible Study Nathan Prophecies The Coming Of The Messiah

Today, I am reading and commenting on  1 Chronicles 17-19.

When David decided that he should build a Temple for God, God sent him a message through the prophet Nathan.  In that message, God told David that He had never asked any of the leaders of Israel to build Him a house.  Then God told David that He would raise up his offspring to succeed him.  That son would build a house for God.  The easy reading of this is that God was promising that Solomon would succeed David as king and build a Temple.  Yet, God goes on to tell David that this particular offspring will be established forever.  This leads me to conclude that while God was referring to Solomon, He was also referring to Jesus.  It was Jesus whom God set over His house and kingdom forever.

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

May 13, 2021 Bible Study David Consolidates His Power by Unifying the People of Israel In Their Worship of God

Today, I am reading and commenting on  1 Chronicles 13-16.

Today’s passage describes how David established himself as king of Israel.  Actually, the writer started the process of laying out the steps which David took to consolidate power under himself.  As I noted yesterday, David’s approach contrasted with that of Saul.  As yesterday’s passage noted, David started by conquering Jerusalem and making that his capital.  Jerusalem was not a traditional base of power for any of the tribes, so it could be perceived as belonging to all of Israel, not just one tribe.  Today’s passage starts with David getting the consent of the leaders of all of Israel to bring the Ark of the Covenant to Jerusalem.  At first, that goes badly and David gives the Ark into the care of a Philistine living nearby, who was apparently loyal to David.  After two attacks by the Philistine armies, each of which David defeated decisively, David decides to finish moving the Ark to Jerusalem. Once the Ark is established in Jerusalem, David instituted regular worship before the Ark in Jerusalem and at the Tabernacle in Gibeon.  By doing this David unified the people of Israel in their worship of God.  Unifying the people of Israel had the effect of consolidating David’s power.

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

May 12, 2021 Bible Study King David Saw Himself As A Member Of The Nation Of Israel, Not Just As A Member Of The Tribe Of Judah

Today, I am reading and commenting on  1 Chronicles 10-12.

The passage starts with an account of the death of King Saul.  This account echoes that given at the end of 1 Samuel.  It goes on to describe David becoming king over all Israel and the warriors who followed him.  This account shows us that David had a significant number of followers from tribes other than Judah even while Saul was king.  In fact, this passage suggests that warriors from the tribe of Benjamin formed a larger part of David’s war band than those from the tribe of Judah.  The fact that significant numbers of the tribe of Benjamin, which was King Saul’s tribe, defected to David tells us quite a bit about both King Saul and David.  I wonder if perhaps the fact that David had as much loyalty to all of Israel as he did to the tribe of Judah played a role in his animosity towards Joab and his brothers.  I have not previously noticed that Joab and his brothers put more emphasis on the interests of the tribe of Judah than other tribes, but I have not thought to look for it previously.

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

May 11, 2021 Bible Study Thoughts On What We Can Learn From These Genealogies

Today, I am reading and commenting on  1 Chronicles 7-9.

Today’s passage is more genealogies and a large part of why I am writing this blog.  If I was not writing this blog, this passage would be where my “reading the Bible in a year” would come to an end, if it hadn’t yesterday.  However, there are some useful names mentioned here which are mentioned elsewhere.  While I do not get much out of reading this passage, there is value in cross referencing to here from the other passages where these people are mentioned.  We also get a little bit more of an understanding about the early days in Egypt from this passage.  It mentions that two of Ephraim’s sons were killed when they went on a cattle raid against men born in Gath.  The other relevant thing which we learn from this passage is that this book was compiled after the return from Exile from other sources, sources which were still available for some time after this book was compiled.

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

May 10, 2021 Bible Study Random Thoughts On Today’s Passage

Today, I am reading and commenting on  1 Chronicles 5-6.

Once again I am unsure what to make of this passage.  So, I will just comment on the random thoughts I had while reading it.  In the list of Reuben’s descendants it lists four sons of Reuben, then it lists out descendants of Joel.  But it never tells us who Joel’s father was.  A little later the passage tells us that “All these were entered in the genealogical records during the reigns of Jotham king of Judah and Jeroboam king of Israel.”  What is not clear is if that refers to the names listed, or to the paragraph which follows about the 44,000+ men ready for military service (or both).  Further on it lists the descendants of Levi.  It gives two separate lists of those descendants.  A first glance suggests that the first list followed one line of descent while the second list follows another.  Without doing a detailed look carefully comparing the two lists, they do not seem to contain any conflicts.

As I said, random thoughts.

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

May 9, 2021 Bible Study Understanding Old Testament Genealogies

Today, I am reading and commenting on  1 Chronicles 2-4.

Today’s passage consists of more genealogies.  One thing we learn about the genealogies in the Old Testament is that we need to be careful about interpreting the number of generations between “father” and “son”.  This is not to dismiss these genealogies.  For example, it tells us that Achar (an alternate spelling of Achan) was the son of Kami, the son of Judah.  Assuming this is the Achan mentioned in the Book of Joshua, which is probable, we know he was more generations from Judah than his grandson.  This genealogy also tells us that Caleb was Judah’s great grandson, but we know that Caleb was more generations removed from Judah than that.  Now, the key here is that we know that the Hebrew words used to indicate that Caleb was the  son of Hezron and that Achar was the son of Karmi, can also just mean that they are descended from them.  We need to remember that Ancient Hebrew had very few words when compared to modern languages.  But even in modern English, we sometimes use the expression “child of” to indicate that someone descended from that person rather than to indicate that they are the following generation.

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

May 8, 2021 Bible Study Genealogy

Today, I am reading and commenting on  1 Chronicles 1.

I have little to write about today’s passage.  I do find it interesting that this passage lists the sons of Abraham as Ishmael and Isaac, but then it lists the sons of Keturah, Abraham’s concubine.  So, why is it phrased this way?  Perhaps because, Ishmael is Abraham’s eldest son and Isaac is the son of God’s promise to Abraham, while Keturah’s children were all born after the death of Sarah (or, at least, that is the way that the Genesis account reads).

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

May 17, 2020 Bible Study Learn to Know 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 1 Chronicles 27-29.

This passage lays out how David laid out his government of the Kingdom of Israel.  It lists those who commanded the forces he kept prepared against an unexpected attack (and probably sent out to deal with bandits who raided caravans on the trade routes) and those who he appointed to administer the various aspects of his government.  Perhaps the most interesting thing is how he included the leaders of each of the tribes into his government.  Certainly, that contributed to the division of the Kingdom when his grandson took the throne, but it also helped to make the people think of themselves as part of the Kingdom rather than just as part of the various tribes.

However, I want to spend a little time about something it relays from David’s instructions to Solomon.  Up until this point, most of what was written in this book was there to show how the Returned Exiles were connected to the Kingdom of David.  This was included as instruction on how they, and we, should live.  It includes a series of points which we should meditate on frequently:

  • Learn to know God intimately
  • Worship and serve Him with your whole heart and a willing mind
  • God sees every heart and knows every thought and plan
  • If you seek Him, you will find Him
  • If you forsake Him, He will reject you.

Part of me wants to expound on that, but everything I think to write seems to dilute the above.