Tag Archives: Psalm 64

September 20, 2015 Bible Study — Live In Freedom

For today, One Year Bible Online links here.

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Proverbs 23:23

    Seek the truth, and when you find it do not trade it for any possible reward. Truth is more valuable than anything else you can have, followed closely by wisdom, self-discipline, and good judgment. If you possess these four things your life will be complete.

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Psalm 64

    The wicked plot their actions carefully and in secret, confident that no one will discover that it is they who are behind the crime. Despite their most cunning plans, God will know who is to blame. He will strike them down. Then, as people watch and listen, the wicked will be tripped up by their own words. We see this happen time after time. Someone carefully plans a wicked act in secret. Their plans are carefully concealed and the blame is initially placed elsewhere. Then, out of nowhere, a revelation will come and, through their own words, it will become obvious who is truly responsible for the wicked act.

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Galatians 5:13-26

    Paul reminds us that we have been called to live in freedom, not enslaved to a set of rules. However, he tells us that we should not use our freedom to satisfy our sinful nature, instead we should use our freedom to serve one another in love. If we allow the Holy Spirit to guide our actions we will not do what our sinful nature desires. Paul goes on to point out the results of following our sinful nature. We should all regularly read that list because Paul tells us that anyone living that lifestyle will NOT inherit the Kingdom of God. Paul then goes on to describe the lifestyle we will live if we allow the Holy Spirit to guide our lives. It will be a life full of love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control.
    If we truly live this lifestyle we will not become conceited, we will not provoke one another, we will not be jealous of one another. Last week, I wrote about Paul’s instructions to the Corinthians, and us, to examine ourselves. This is the first step in such an self-examination. Am I conceited? Do I provoke my fellow believers by what I say, or what I do? Am I jealous of others? Either for what they have, or the position they hold?

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Isaiah 33:10-36:22

    Isaiah prophesies of a time when the Lord will act on His anger at the sins of the world. I am convinced that there has been more than one time in history when God’s message in this passage applies. I believe that we are once again living in a time when God will, and already is, express His anger with the sins of this world. He will destroy the nations and armies of this world. Everything will be dedicated to Him, those people and things which bring glory to God will blossom and be glad. Those people and things which do not bring glory to God will be destroyed completely.
    Once more God will act to bring salvation. This will not be a new act. It will be a revival of those who worship Him. Just as when Jesus walked this earth, God will move on this earth:

he will open the eyes of the blind
and unplug the ears of the deaf.
The lame will leap like a deer,
and those who cannot speak will sing for joy!
Springs will gush forth in the wilderness,
and streams will water the wasteland.

If those of us who worship His name will just faithfully pray to Him and seek to do His will, God will pour out His Spirit throughout the world. He will show His might and use us to bring glory to His name.

March 21, 2015 Bible Study — Who Interfered With Whom?

For today, One Year Bible Online links here.

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Proverbs 11:22

    Beauty in someone who is thoughtless and heedless of others is not attractive. Those who think their beauty gives them license to treat others poorly will learn otherwise to their sorrow.

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Psalm 64:1-10

    Those who are evil think they are clever. They believe that their plans are so cunning that no one will catch them out. They may be able to come up with a plan which will hide their evil from their fellow man, but God will see and strike them down.

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Luke 4:31-5:11

    I note that in this passage the man possessed by the demon began demanding to know why Jesus was interfering with him before Jesus had made notice of him. I find it interesting how often people today do the same thing with people of faith. I have often seen people promoting sinful behavior. Then, when someone mildly comments that they think such behavior is wrong, accuse the person of interfering with their freedom. Yet if they had not made a point of publicizing their behavior, the person who does not approve would never have known about it.
    To repeat: in this passage, Jesus did not seek out the demon possessed man in order to drive out the demon. Rather, the demon-possessed man made a scene in front of the crowd and accused Jesus of interfering with him. In the same way today, if you take a stand and say that, because you believe a certain behavior is wrong, you will not do it, some people will accuse you of interfering with their freedom to undertake that behavior. I believe that when people draw attention to their sin that it is our responsibility to tell them that it is sin and to call on the Holy Spirit to convict them of its sinfulness.

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Numbers 32-33:39

    I have read over the account of the tribes of Reuben and Gad requesting that they receive their inheritance on the east side of the Jordan River several times today. I feel like there is a lesson there for us, but I just can’t put my finger on what it is. At first I thought about the fact that Moses misunderstood their intentions because of how their parents had responded to the reports of the spies, but I could not actually figure out what the lesson was there. Then I thought about how the two tribes committed to accompanying the rest of Israel across the Jordan to fight, but could not figure out what that lesson was either. So, I guess I will just leave it at that.

September 20, 2014 Bible Study — The Fruit of the Spirit

For today, One Year Bible Online links here. I added a “Ministry Links” tab to my blog. On it I am going to link to the websites of various Christian Ministries which I support to one degree or another. Currently, it has a link to the congregation I attend and of which I am a member and a link to a ministry which does wonderful work in Honduras and elsewhere: MAMA Project

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Proverbs 23:23

    Seek the truth and when you find it, do not let it go, no matter what you are offered to accept something else, or to say something else. Do the same with wisdom, discipline, and sound judgement. No matter what someone may promise you, it is not worth giving up what you know to be the truth. The same can be said for wisdom, discipline, and sound judgement. Nothing anyone can promise you, let alone actually deliver, is worth going against what those tell you to do.

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Psalm 64:1-10

    Let us cry out to God when wicked people plot against us. The wicked may think that their plots will go unnoticed, that they have come up with the perfect plan to defeat the righteous. but God will not overlook their plotting. No matter how carefully they hide their planning and their acts, God will see what they are up to. The wicked are sure that no one will connect them with the evil they do. Yet, their plots will be revealed by their own words. God will make it clear that this world belongs to Him so that no one can mistake. When the wicked are struck down, it will cause the godly to rejoice and the righteous to praise God.

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Galatians 5:13-26

    We have been called to live in freedom. As Paul says elsewhere, we are free to do anything. However, he exhorts us not to use our freedom to satisfy our sinful desires. Instead we should let the Holy Spirit guide our lives. The Spirit wants us to do the opposite of what our sinful nature wants. It is important to recognize the battle going on within us between the desires of our sinful nature and the desires given to us by the Holy Spirit.
    We must make a choice which kind of fruit we want our lives to bear. If we follow our sinful desires the fruit are clear…and undesirable. I will not repeat Paui’s list here, but no one holds up someone for honour for doing these things. On the other hand if we allow ourselves to be dominated by the desires the Holy Spirit gives us the fruit are also clear: love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control. Whenever someone meets a bad end because of allowing their sinful desires to bear fruit there seems to be someone talking about how they exhibited one or more these latter fruits. Let us give control over our lives to the Holy Spirit so that we may bear all of these fruit and bring glory to God.

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Isaiah 33:10-36:22

    The day of God’s judgement is coming. It will be a day when scorching fire will come over the earth. People will see it coming and ask, “Who can survive this all-consuming fire?” thinking that the answer is “No one.” But they will be wrong. The prophet tells us who will survive this coming fire and destruction of God’s wrath:

Those who are honest and fair,
who refuse to profit by fraud,
who stay far away from bribes,
who refuse to listen to those who plot murder,
who shut their eyes to all enticement to do wrong

Will we be among that number?

March 21, 2014 Bible Study — Fishing For People

    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. In order to make that possible I read the passages and write my thoughts a day, or more. in advance. If you have any thoughts or comments regarding these verses or what I have written about them, please post them.

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Proverbs 11:22

    The message in this proverb is for us both in considering ourselves and in considering our companions. Someone who possess beauty, but lacks discretion is of no value to anyone. When reading this proverb I often overlook the fact that to the writer of this proverb, pigs were not even a food source. Putting a gold ring in its nose would not change that. In the same way, beauty does not make a person who fails to be discrete someone with whom it is beneficial to spend time.

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Psalm 64:1-10

    The evil plot and plan in secret. They are careful to make sure that no one can discover what they are up to. However, no matter how careful they are, no matter how well they hide their plans, God will hold them accountable. He will strike them down and use their own words against them. It may look like the wicked will get away with their wicked deeds, but God will strike them down. He will not do it in secret, but in plain view for all to see. We will see God bring justice to the wicked and all will realize His great power.

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Luke 4:31-5:11

    Luke tells us that Jesus was preaching in Capernaum and that the people there begged Him not to leave. However, He told them that He needed to preach the Gospel in other towns. Luke then tells us that He traveled around preaching in synagogues throughout Judea. This seems strange since, the very next story takes place in Galilee. However, it strikes me that Luke’s readers were probably familiar with Judea, but not with Galilee. I think Luke saying “Judea” is sort of like someone using “Washington” to refer to someone spending time in Bladensburg, MD, Hyattsville, MD, and other towns in Maryland inside the Beltway. In the same way, I think that many people living distant from the land of Jesus’ birth would view Galilee and Judea as “Judea”, the territory where Jews lived.
    Luke then gives his account of how Simon Peter, James and John came to be Jesus’ disciples. It is clear that this was not the first time Jesus had met Simon because a few verses earlier Luke told the story of Jesus healing Simon’s mother-in-law. On this occasion Jesus asked Simon to allow Him to preach from the boat a few feet away from the shore. When Jesus was done speaking, He asked Simon to put out into deeper water and catch some fish. From the context it appears that Simon was merely humoring Jesus when he put back out to fish. Simon did not expect to catch anything, they had been fishing all night and caught nothing. Since they had caught nothing during the best time for fishing, Simon was sure they would not catch anything now, and said so. However, not only did they catch fish, they caught so many that the nets began to tear and, when James and John joined them with their boat, both boats were at risk of sinking.
    Simon’s response to this was to ask Jesus to leave him, because he, Simon, was too sinful to be around Jesus. I am trying to put into words what I see in this story. First, Peter did not believe that anything would come of what Jesus asked him to do, but he did it anyway. Sometimes what God asks us to do seems pointless, but we need to be like Peter and do it anyway. Second, when Peter saw the results of doing what Jesus asked, he did not take credit for them. Peter realized that he had just been going through the motions, yet God had rewarded him far beyond his desserts. Am I willing to give God credit for the results He produces in my life? The final thing in this story is that Jesus called Simon, James and John to a new career. Am I willing to change the path of my life at God’s call?

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Numbers 32-33:39

    When Moses was preparing to divide up the land that they were about to invade among the tribes of Israel, the tribes of Reuben and Gad requested that instead of land west of the Jordan, they be allowed to claim the land which Israel had just conquered east of the Jordan River. Moses was concerned that they were afraid to join the rest of the tribes in invading the land. Moses was afraid that if he allowed them to stay east of the Jordan, it would discourage the rest of the people from invading. However, the tribes of Reuben and Gad assured Moses that they would join the rest of the people of Israel in conquering the land west of the Jordan, even though they already had the land they wanted. I see in this passage the importance of working with others to fulfill God’s will, even after our “part” of the task is “finished”.

September 20, 2013 Bible Study — We Are Not Worthy To Be Saved

     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. In order to make that possible I read the passages and write my thoughts a day in advance. If you have any thoughts or comments regarding these verses or what I have written about them, please post them.

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Isaiah 33:10-36:22

     Isaiah prophesied the downfall of Assyria. He said that their own policies would kindle and feed the fire of their destruction. He predicted that they would be completely burned up in the fire. The interesting thing is that Assyria was so completely destroyed that in the 19th Century historians thought references to it in the Bible were evidence that the Bible was fable because they thought Assyria had never existed. Isaiah further prophesied that the sinners in Jerusalem would be terrified by the fire which destroyed Assyria.
     The prophet predicted that the question that would be asked would be who could survive the fire which destroyed the Assyrians? The answer he told us was those who are honest and fair, those who refuse to do wrong, no matter what incentive they are given. They will be sheltered from the coming fire and supplied with food and water. A fire such as the one which destroyed the Assyrians is coming once more. Once more the only ones who will be able to survive this fire will be those who are honest and fair, those who refuse all enticement to do wrong.
     The prophet goes on to say that God’s wrath will not be limited to Assyria, the mightiest nation of the day. He will pour out His anger on all of the nations which have oppressed those who serve God. The wilderness and the desert will bloom in the days after God’s wrath is revealed. We are to say to those who have been struggling to be righteous in a wicked world that God is coming. Let us strengthen those who are tired from the long fight, encourage those whose strength is failing, and give courage to those who are frightened at the evil in this world. God is coming to save them. God is about to lay out a straight road through the wilderness for those who are walking in His ways. Indeed, this prophecy has been fulfilled. There is a straight and direct road to God and soon we will see Him face to face. When that day comes, all sorrow and mourning will pass away and those who do His bidding will be filled with joy.
     The prophet changes gears and recounts some historical events. During the reign of Hezekiah, the Assyrians began to invade the Kingdom of Judah. The king of Assyria sent some of his officials with a large army to confront Hezekiah at Jerusalem. Hezekiah sent some of his courtiers to parlay with them. The Assyrian field commander asked them what made Hezekiah confident that he could stand up to the Assyrians? Did he think that Egypt could protect them? The field commander told them that Pharaoh was unreliable and would cause them harm without aiding them in any way. He then asked if Hezekiah thought God would help him? The God which the Assyrians perceived Hezekiah as having insulted by insisting that the entire kingdom worship only in Jerusalem. The field commander finished his message from the king of Assyria by claiming that they were attacking Jerusalem at God’s direction.
     Hezekiah’s envoys then asked the Assyrians to address them in Aramaic rather than Hebrew so that the people on the walls would not understand what was being said. The Assyrian field commander replied that he intended for the people on the wall to understand and began shouting in Hebrew. Initially he had said that God would not protect Jerusalem because He had directed the Assyrians to attack, but now he revealed what the Assyrians truly believed. He told the people not to allow Hezekiah to trick them into believing that God would rescue them. The Assyrian told them to trust him and open the gates. They would be taken into exile to a fruitful land where they would lead lives of leisure. Then he told them, do not be fooled into thinking that God will rescue them, or that He even could rescue them. The Assyrian asked them what had happened to other nations, had any of their gods rescued them from the Assyrians? Likewise, he said, their God was not able to rescue them from his hand.

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     This passage illustrates how some of our enemies will first attempt to make us question whether we deserve God’s salvation. It is only once they have gotten us to doubt whether we are worthy of God’s salvation (we aren’t, but that doesn’t matter), that they will tell us that God is not able to save us anyway. This strategy often works. If they first tried to tell us that God was unable to save us, we would reject that argument. However, if they convince us that God will not save us because we are not worthy of being saved, our human reaction is to then go for “sour grapes”; “Well, he couldn’t have saved me anyway.”
     However, I have an answer for those who try to convince me that I am unworthy of being rescued by God. That answer is, “You are absolutely correct. I am a sinner, who does not deserve God’s grace. But God does not care. Out of His wondrous love, He has chosen to do so anyway.” As long as we remember that God’s promise to rescue us does not rely on our deserving it, we will not fall for this line of reasoning.

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Galatians 5:13-26

     We have been called to live in freedom. However, Paul tells us not to use our freedom to indulge our sinful nature. Rather, he tells us to use our freedom to serve one another in love. If we allow the Holy Spirit to guide our lives, we will find that we are not doing what our evil nature craves. The Spirit gives us desires that are the opposite of those of our sinful nature. These two are in constant conflict, the desires of the Spirit in conflict with the desires of our sinful nature. Paul goes on to list the actions that show we have given in to our sinful natures. Many of them we are very familiar with, sexual immorality, impurity, jealousy and drunkenness to name a few. But some of them we tend to overlook, dissension, divisiveness, outbursts of anger, and selfish ambition. We know that these latter are there, but we often focus on the ones that are harder to disguise.
     Then Paul wrote about the fruit that we will bear if we allow the Holy Spirit to guide our lives: love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control. As followers of Christ, we nail our sinful desires to His cross and crucify them there. Then we strive to follow the leading of the Spirit in all aspects of our lives. Rejecting conceit and jealousy of each other, we avoid provoking our fellow believers to anger.

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     Every time I read this passage it reminds me of something I learned a few years back. I learned that the way to stop doing those things that I know I should not, but find hard to resist, is to fill my time doing those things that I know that I should be doing. Some years back, I struggled with a substance abuse problem. I was not a drug addict or an alcoholic. It did not effect my daily life, but I had started smoking marijuana in college and I could not resist the temptation when the opportunity arose. I had some friends who smoked and felt no leading to stop associating with them, yet whenever I was with them, I would smoke pot. At the same time there were some things I was feeling called to do, but I felt like I would be a hypocrite if I did them while still smoking marijuana. I struggled with this for about a year. Finally, I cried out to God and asked Him to take the temptation away. Soon after, the Spirit convicted me that I was to do those things He was calling me to (teach Sunday School, become involved in some Church leadership positions, a few other things), even though I was still doing something I knew I shouldn’t be. I followed that leading and started doing those things. Six months later, I realized that I had not smoked marijuana in six months. To this day, it amazes me. Looking back, I know what happened. When I started doing the things that God was calling me to do, I spent less time with my friends who still smoked marijuana. That made it easier for me to say no when they passed the marijuana around without condemning them, or implying I was better than they. But the point is that I did not reduce the time I spent with them in order to stop smoking marijuana. I reduced the time I spent with them because I was busy doing the things God called me to do. When we do the things the Holy Spirit directs us to do, we don’t have time to gratify the desires of our sinful nature.

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Psalm 64:1-10

     When I read this psalm it reminded me of an exchange I have with some of my friends when we part:

Me: “Stay out of trouble.”

Friend: “That’s no fun.”

Me: “You’re not in trouble if you don’t get caught. And it doesn’t count if you like what happens when you do get caught.”

I started this because of a similar response to the opening phrase being, “Be good.” However, as time went by and I began to have a closer walk with God it took on new meaning. Today’s psalm contains pieces of what that exchange means to me now. The psalm talks about people who think they have a clever plan that no one will figure out. They are sure that they won’t get caught. The psalm assures us that if we do wrong, we will get caught. That, while other people may never know, God knows and He will hold us accountable. At the end where I say, “It doesn’t count if you like what happens when you get caught,” there is a corollary. That corollary is, “If you don’t like what happens, you got caught.” Sometimes I get an opportunity to make a longer exposition of what the phrase means to me. When that happens, I tell people that if someone else gets hurt, physically, mentally, or spiritually, you got caught.

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Proverbs 23:23

     Today’s proverb tells us to get the truth, wisdom, discipline, and good judgment and never sell them. I interpret this in two ways. We should strive to obtain the truth, wisdom, discipline, and good judgment and refuse to give them up for anything. But more importantly, when we know the truth we should not tell others something other than the truth, no matter what we are offered. The same goes for wisdom, discipline, and good judgment, we should not allow anyone to convince us to pass off as those something that we know is not. We should give the wisest advice we know, encourage others to live disciplined lives and exercise good judgment.