Tag Archives: 1 Corinthians 9:1-18

August 14, 2015 Bible Study — Do Not Muzzle the Ox

For today, One Year Bible Online links here.

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Proverbs 21:11-12

    The foolish only change their behavior when they see someone get punished for that behavior. It is sufficient to inform the wise that you find certain behavior unacceptable. The wise will change their behavior out of respect for you.

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Psalm 33:12-22

    There is great joy for any nation whose people make God their Lord. God sees the whole human race and understand everything we do, even when we do not. It is not by our strength, our knowledge, our wisdom, nor our wealth that we will be victorious. It is God who will deliver us from defeat. It according to His will that those who fear Him will be successful in what they do. I will put my hope in God, not in my puny abilities. If my skill is sufficient to the tasks which God has given me, it is not to my credit, but to His. If my skill is insufficient to His tasks, I know that God will supply me with aid to make up for the lack.

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1 Corinthians 9:1-18

    Paul first makes a point that those who preach the Gospel and those who teach others how to live according to God’s word are entitled to be supported by those to whom they preach or teach (or both). This is an important thing to remember. We should all be willing to pay the support costs of those who lead the local Body of Christ. However, Paul then goes on to make the point that he not only never demanded such support from the Church at Corinth, he actively rejected it. He did not do this because he was too good for them. Rather he did this because he felt compelled to preach the Gospel to them. It was only by doing so at his own expense that he felt he was doing something worth mention.
    I have struggled with what Paul says here because he sounds like he is bragging. However, I am convinced that Paul is trying to inspire some to imitate him in this way. I have become convinced that, while the Church should willingly support its ministers, the Church needs some leaders who refuse to accept a salary for doing God’s work. Some of the movers and shakers in the larger Church body need to be people who receive no human recompense for the time they spend doing God’s work.

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Nehemiah 7:73-9:21

    After they had completed the rebuilding of the wall around Jerusalem, the people gathered to hear the Law of Moses read. I find it interesting to read how they arranged for multiple speakers to repeat what Ezra said as he read the Law. Each speaker had a copy of the Law and they read along as Ezra read. As the people heard what the Law had to say, they began to weep. The leaders encouraged them to refrain from sorrow because the festival they were celebrating was one of joy. This first celebration was to praise God and thank Him for bringing them back to Jerusalem.
    A month later, the people reconvened to confess their sins and express their sorrow for those sins. First they celebrated the wonderful things God had done for them. Then they expressed their remorse and sorrow for their sins. I do not think this is always the order we should follow, but there is an important truth here. There are times when we are called to celebrate the joy we feel because of what God has done for us, and there are times when we are called to weep and mourn because of the pain we have caused God and others. We should not always be joyful and we should not always be sorrowful.

August 14, 2014 Bible Study — Do Not Muzzle an Ox…

For today, One Year Bible Online links here.

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Proverbs 21:11-12

    Mockers and the simple-minded need to see or experience punishment in order to gain wisdom. Those who are wise listen to instruction in order to become wiser. Let us strive to be the latter rather than the former.
    We hear stories from time to time about households where terrible things were going on behind closed doors and no one knew. Well, God knows and will bring ruin upon those who hide their wickedness in their homes.

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Psalm 33:12-22

    If the people of a nation worship and trust God, that nation will be safe and secure. However, those who put their trust in their military might and disregard God’s word will discover that their might will fail them. If we put our hope and trust in the Lord, seeking to do His will, He will care for and protect us. Let us seek to teach our neighbors to fear and trust the Lord for that is the path to joy and security.

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1 Corinthians 9:1-18

    Every time I read this passage, I am struck by something other than the message most often taken from it, although that message is there as well. First, I will mention the message most often taken from this passage that we should never forget. Those who preach the Gospel and otherwise tend to the spiritual needs of the body of believers are entitled to financial and material support by the body of believers. We should contribute to their well-being to the best of our ability. However, Paul here states that he has refused such support (although elsewhere he acknowledges accepting support at times). The point I take away from this is that some of us are called to minister to the body of Christ without accepting support from said body. This is always a decision to be reached by the person so called. The body of believers who they serve should be prepared, and should offer, to provide them with financial and material support.

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Nehemiah 7:73-9:21

    The people’s initial response to hearing the words of the Book of the Law read and explained to them was to mourn. They were heartbroken when they realized how far they had fallen short of God’s commands. However, the leaders did not let them wallow in their grief. Rather, they reminded them that they had gathered to celebrate God’s wonderful power in returning them to Jerusalem and protecting them as they rebuilt the city. They encouraged them to share with those who had come less prepared. The people listened to their leaders and celebrated the feast, sharing with those around them.
    Later, they gathered another time to confess their sins and seek God’s forgiveness. This passage reminds us that there are times to celebrate God’s goodness and other times to bare our souls and grieve for how badly we have sinned.

August 14, 2013 Bible Study — Is Preaching the Gospel Voluntary?

     I am using One Year Bible Online for my daily Bible study. For today, One Year Bible Online links here. I have found that by writing this daily blog of what I see when I read these scriptures, I get more out of them. I hope that by posting these ruminations others may get some benefit as well. If you have any thoughts or comments regarding these verses or what I have written about them, please post them.

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Nehemiah 7:73-9:21

     Once the wall around Jerusalem was rebuilt and the people were able to settle into “normal lives in and around Jerusalem a gathering of all of the people was called. They asked Ezra the priest to bring out the Book of the Law and read it to them. Ezra read to them from daybreak until noon. Ezra was flanked by several Levites. The way I read the passage, they were standing some distance from him, repeating what he said so that those more distant from Ezra could hear what he was saying as well. In addition to reading the Book of the Law, Ezra explained what it meant.
     As the people listened to what Ezra was saying, they began to weep. Nehemiah told the people that they should not weep because the day was a sacred day of the Lord. He told them instead to go and celebrate with a feast, sharing their food with those who had nothing prepared. With further encouragement from Ezra and the Levites the people went from mourning to joy at having heard and understood God’s words. The leaders of the people, along with the priests and Levites, met with Ezra to go over the Law in greater detail. While studying the Law they discovered that the Law prescribed the Festival of Shelters in that month. When they realized this they sent out word and the people gathered and celebrated the Festival of Shelters as outlined in the Law. The people celebrated the Festival with joy. Ezra read from the Book of the Law each day and on the eighth day they all gathered for a solemn assembly.
     At the end of that month, the people gathered again for a day of fasting. They dressed in sackcloth and humbled themselves before God. Once more the Book of the Law was read to them. At the end of the three hour reading the people confessed their sins and worshiped the Lord for an additional three hours. Following that the leaders of the Levites called on the people to praise the Lord and led them in a prayer recounting the mighty miracles God had performed for their ancestors during the Exodus, miracles God performed for them despite their sins against Him.

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1 Corinthians 9:1-18

     Having just said that he would spend the rest of his life as a vegetarian rather than cause someone to stumble in their faith in Christ, Paul asks a rhetorical question of his readers. He asks them if he does not have the right to accept support from the churches where he has preached the Gospel. Paul goes on to show that Scripture does indeed teach that those who pastor/teach/lead a congregation are entitled to financial support from that congregation. He then points out that despite the fact that he was entitled to support from the congregations he preached the Gospel to, he never asked for nor expected such support. Paul then tells them that he has no intent to start asking for such support now. He tells them that while he has a right to such support, he would rather die than accept it. Paul tells them that the reason he does not want to receive their support is because that is the only thing he has to boast of. He cannot boast of preaching the Gospel because he is compelled by God to do so. Paul did not consider preaching the Gospel to be something he did voluntarily. Since he has no choice (at least in his own mind) but to preach the Gospel, what reward is he entitled to? His answer is that he is not entitled to any reward. However, by preaching the Gospel without accepting any remuneration. Paul both becomes eligible for a reward and received that reward in the same action. Paul considers preaching the Gospel free of charge to his reward.

***

     I was going to say that I wished that I felt such compulsion by the Spirit to preach God’s word that I could understand Paul’s emotion that it was not voluntary. Then I realized that I have from time to time felt compelled to share the Gospel. In particular there was one instance that finalized my understanding and surrender to the Holy Spirit. I was at a party at a long time friend’s house. I was somewhat intoxicated, to the point that I now consider to be beyond what fits God’s will for us. I was flirting with a young woman and started discussing what was wrong with the dominant world views. I explained that the problem with those who favored socialistic solutions was that they tried to pretend that greed could be done away with and that the problem with those who favored capitalistic solutions was that they tended to say that greed was good. After spending some time making these arguments, quite eloquently I believe, the young woman asked me what my answer to the world’s problems was. I was taken aback. I had thought I had done a good job of adopting the role of the well-meaning cynic. I did not want to reveal that I was a Christian, but I had no choice, not because I could not claim that there was no answer, but because God revealed to me, through the fog of intoxication, that He expected ME to be willing to declare Him before men (or in this case woman).
     It was not to my credit that I answered as I did when I answered her question by telling her that my answer to the world’s problems was God. It was an act of the Holy Spirit, and one of the moments of greatest blessings in my life. I had forgotten that incident until today, now I pray that the Spirit compel me to witness like that more often (and more blatantly).

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Psalm 33:12-22

     The psalmist tells us that the people whose God is the Lord will experience joy, not in a personal sense, but in a corporate sense. No matter how well equipped you are, nor how strong, nor what aids you may have in your endeavors, you will not have success unless God is on your side. I will put my hope in the Lord because no matter how powerful those who strive to harm me, God will defend me. I will trust in His name.

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Proverbs 21:11-12

     The simple gain wisdom by observing wrongdoers being punished, the wise gain wisdom by being instructed. God takes note of what the wicked think they are doing in secret and they will not escape the consequences of their evil.

August 14, 2012 Bible Study

© Image Copyright 2012, D.J. Hacker. All rights reserved.

Nehemiah 7:73-9:21

     Once the people got settled again after completing the walls around Jerusalem, they gathered on the first day of the seventh month (which by our calendar would have been early October) to listen to Ezra read the Law of Moses. The passage tells us that Ezra read the Law from early morning until noon to everyone who could understand and all of the people listened closely. While Ezra was reading from the Law there stood to either side of him thirteen Levites. I am not certain of this, but the passage reads to me as if these additional men were also reading the Law, with them spaced out so that everyone could hear what was being read (after all, this was in the days before amplifiers). As they read, they explained to the people what each passage meant, helping the people to understand what was being read. As they listened to the Law being read, the Spirit of God touched the people and they began to weep. We are not told why the people were weeping, but from the context I would guess it was as a result of their recognition that they had failed to live up to God’s commands. Nehemiah and the other leaders calmed the people and told them not to weep because this day was a day of sacred celebration and feasting. The leaders told them to go and celebrate with a feast and to share their feast with those who did not have.
     The following day, the leaders of the people met with Ezra to go over the Law in greater detail. As they studied they discovered that the Law had instructed the people to celebrate this festival by gathering branches and building temporary shelters in which to live during this festival. So, they instructed the people to do this and the returned exiles built such shelters and lived in them for the duration of the festival (which was seven days, with a solemn assembly on the eighth day).
     On the 24th day of the seventh month, they gathered again. This time they gathered for a time of penitence and mourning for their sins. The passage tells us that this time, they stood for three hours listening to the Law being read. Then, for another three hours they confessed their sins and worshiped God. And today we sometimes complain when our Sunday morning service goes over an hour and a half, most of which we spend seated on comfortable seats.

© Image Copyright 2012, D.J. Hacker. All rights reserved.

1 Corinthians 9:1-18

     Today’s passage is an interesting one. It appears that Paul is responding to rumors that question his authority and motives. He starts out by saying that while some might not view him as an apostle, certainly the Corinthian Church should. This makes sense here since the Greek word that is translated “apostle” (and which is the root for the word apostle itself) means delegated messenger. Paul was certainly God’s delegated messenger to deliver the Gospel to the Corinthians. Paul then goes on to give several examples which demonstrate that those who preach the Gospel are entitled to receive support from those they preach to. Paul points out that he was entitled to their support, but that he did not avail himself of it. He emphasizes that he does not wish to start doing so now.
     There are two things I take away from this passage. The first is that God calls on the Church to provide financial support to its preachers, teachers and missionaries. The second is one that people tend to overlook. Some people who are called into ministry are called by God to support themselves. The Church should call people into ministry and be prepared to provide support to those they so call. However, some fraction of those called are called by God Himself to support themselves, leaving those Church resources for use in other ministries. I do not know what percentage that should be, but it is a small number. I am sure the number would vary depending on the financial circumstances of those who make up the Church body which does the calling. I doubt it is ever much higher than 10% of those called to ministry and probably usually much lower.

© Image Copyright 2012, D.J. Hacker. All rights reserved.

Psalm 33:12-22

     The psalmist tells us that military prowess is not sufficient to maintain a nation that does not have God’s favor. However, he also tells us that if we put our hope in God, He will protect us, no matter what other forces are arrayed against us. No matter what forces and troubles we face, we can have confidence that God is more than equal to shielding us from them.

© Image Copyright 2012, D.J. Hacker. All rights reserved.

Proverbs 21:11-12

     The simple-minded need to witness punishment before they will learn wisdom, while the wise simply need to be instructed in order to become wiser. The righteous know what the wicked do and recognize that such behaviors lead to destruction.


© Image Copyright 2012, D.J. Hacker. All rights reserved.

     I am using One Year Bible Online for my daily Bible study. For today, One Year Bible Online links here. I have found that by writing this daily blog of what I see when I read these scriptures, I get more out of them. I hope that by posting these ruminations others may get some benefit as well. If you have any thoughts or comments regarding these verses or what I have written about them, please post them.