Tag Archives: Psalm 65:1-13

March 22, 2015 Bible Study — Forgiving Sins

For today, One Year Bible Online links here.

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Proverbs 11:23

    The godly can look forward to good things in their future. The wicked will face judgment. Proverbs like this one are good reminders for us that if we do God’s will, He will reward us and those who mistreat others will pay a stiff price.

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Psalm 65:1-13

    No matter where we are on earth God will hear and answer our prayers. If we present our needs to God and place our hopes in Him, those needs will be taken care of. We have a choice, we can choose to come to God now, or we can come to Him when He summons us. However, everyone must stand before God to account for their actions.
    Yet another psalm where I cannot come close to expressing in words what it says to me as I read it.

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Luke 5:12-28

    When the man with leprosy approached Jesus for healing, he had no doubt that Jesus was able to heal him. He just was not sure of Jesus was willing to do so. Jesus answered that He was willing and healed the man. God is willing to heal us, the question is, are we willing to be healed? I always struggle with understanding what to believe about God’s healing, but I think the two stories about Jesus healing in today’s passage provide us with some insight into how God heals.
    In the story about the man carried to Jesus, Jesus forgave the man’s sins before He healed him. I understand this to indicate that before God can heal us we need to accept His forgiveness. Of course, before we can accept His forgiveness we need to acknowledge that we need forgiveness. Part of acknowledging that we need forgiveness and accepting that forgiveness is recognizing that we need to change the behavior for which we are being forgiven (and being willing to change that behavior).
    Having said that, I do not understand why we in the Church do not see more of God’s miraculous healing. In some ways this brings me to another aspect of what I think this passage means. My understanding here is less complete. I believe that God has given all who call on Jesus’ name the same power to perform miracles which Jesus had (there are several places where Jesus tells His disciples that they will perform the same sorts of wonders He did). This story seems to me to suggest that we have the power to convey God’s forgiveness to people. We are empowered to say to people, “Your sins are forgiven.” There is a little more to it than that. It is clear, both from the Pharisees’ reaction and Jesus’ answer to them, that Jesus was forgiving the man at that moment. This means that when we offer God’s healing to people, we need to forgive them for their sins. Are we willing to forgive sinners? Even when they have not yet recognized that they are sinners?

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Numbers 33:40-35:34

    When the Israelites camped on the eastern side of the Jordan River as they prepared to enter the Promised Land, God instructed them to drive all of the people from the land as they entered it. Yet, we know from other passages that God encouraged them to welcome foreigners who chose to worship Him among them. The key to understanding the meaning of this is the sentence which immediately follows that instruction (and is actually part of that instruction). God tells them to destroy all of the idols and shrines where the people worshiped gods other than Him. The essence is of this passage is the opposite of “multiculturalism”. The Israelites were being warned to not adopt any of the cultural practices of the people living in the land because idolatry was so thoroughly integrated into their culture. We face the same problem today. As Christians we need to separate ourselves from the culture around us because so much of it has idolatry and sinfulness “baked in”.

September 21, 2014 Bible Study — Share Each Other’s Burdens…Carry Your Own Load

For today, One Year Bible Online links here. I wish to apologize for yesterday’s blog being published late. I thought I had published Friday evening my time, but apparently I failed to actually do so.

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Proverbs 23:24

    A godly child brings joy to their parents and a wise child gives them pleasure. I have for most of my life striven to bring pleasure and joy to my parents, not always successfully.

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Psalm 65:1-13

    Let us praise God for His greatness. He will answer our prayers with awesome deeds. When we pray to God, let us not expect small, little answers. When we pray to God, He will answer our prayers with bold, powerful actions. After all, our God is the God who formed the mountains and quiets the storms. He inspires joy from where the sun rises to where it sets, from one end of the earth to the other. God will care for the earth and water it as it needs. The river of God has sufficient water and more to supply our needs, even if we live in the desert. God will provide for the needs of those who honour and praise Him.

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Galatians 6:1-18

    Paul in this passages says two things which appear contradictory, but which actually sum up the way in which we should behave. In verse 2, he tells us that we should share on each other’s burdens. Yet in verse 5 (according to the NIV) he tells us that we should carry our own load. As I said, these appear to be contradictory. However, let us work backwards from the second of these verses to the first. Here the NLT will help us. The NLT translates verse 5 y saying that we are responsible for our own conduct. We are responsible to do our best to deal with the lot in life which we have been dealt. We have no right to blame others for not helping us, we do not have the right to demand their help. When we face difficulties and problems, it is our responsibility to seek out ways in which we can overcome those difficulties and problems. If we do not have enough money to pay our bills, it is our responsibility to seek out a way to earn that money. It is not the fault of others for not helping us.
    However, in verse 2 Paul tells us that we should help others as much as we are able. If we see someone facing a difficulty that we are able to help with, we should do so. Another way to look at how both of these verses work is that both are about individual responsibility. I am responsible to help those in need as much as I am able. My needs are my responsibility. My needs do not give me the authority to demand your help. Nor do your needs give anyone else(except for God Himself) the authority to demand that I help you. This is about individual responsibility not corporate responsibility.
    I do not believe their is any such thing as “corporate responsibility”, except insomuch as it represents the lumping together of the individual responsibility of the members of a group. If I see someone with a need I have two options open to me. I can help them myself to the best of my ability. Or, if I cannot help them sufficiently, I can ask others to help them. I cannot, however, demand that others help them. Most especially, I cannot demand that others help them in the way in which I think they should be helped. It is up to each individual to help others in the manner in which they think best. This does not mean that we do not seek guidance and counsel from others in choosing the way in which we help. As a matter of fact, I would encourage everyone to do so. What it means is that you do not have the right to tell me how and when I should help (even though it may be wise of me to ask your advice before I act), nor do I have the right to tell you how and when you should help. I will go further and say that it is fine to offer your unsolicited advice about how someone can help, as long as you are aware that they are not obligated to follow your advice (you should also do your best to make it clear to the one you are offering the advice to that you do not think they are obligated to follow your advice).

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Isaiah 37-38:22

    The king of Assyria commanded to mightiest army on the face of the earth. There did not exist an army that could stand against him when he brought his full might to bear, certainly not the force commanded by Hezekiah. It was obvious to everyone on the face of the earth that when the king of Assyria turned his mind to conquering Jerusalem that it was only a matter of time, and that not very much time, until Jerusalem would fall to him. The king of Assyria was not shy about telling Hezekiah and the people of Jerusalem that such was the case.
    However, there was one thing which the king of Assyria, and the pundits of the day (if there were any), underestimated in their calculations. It is something which the movers and shakers of the world still often underestimate, dismiss, or overlook when they make their plans for exercising their power. Those who believe, as the king of Assyria did, that they can accomplish their goals despite the opposition of the Lord of Heaven’s Armies will discover that they are mistaken. The king of Assyria told Hezekiah and the people of Jerusalem that there was nothing that could stop him from conquering Jerusalem. Looking at the situation from a purely human perspective he was correct. Yet that night, 185,000 of his soldiers died in camp (we are not told how they died) and he was forced to return to his capital, where he was killed before he could raise another army. There was nothing Hezekiah could do to stop the king of Assyria, except for the one thing he did. When faced with overwhelming odds, Hezekiah cried out to God. God answered his prayer. God will do the same for us today. When we see the evil in this world overwhelming the good, with no hope that the good can withstand it, let us cry out to God. He will answer our prayers.

March 22, 2014 Bible Study — Levi Got Up, Left Everything, and Followed Him

    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 11:23

    I prefer the NIV translation of this proverb. The righteous desire only things which lead to good for themselves and others. The wicked on the other hand hope for things which bring about wrath and judgment.

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Psalm 65:1-13

    Praise belongs to God for His greatness. God faithfully answers our prayers with mighty deeds. I do not deserve the things which God has done for me. I have sinned beyond any legitimate expectation of forgiveness. Yet God forgives me. He offers me redemption and calls me into His arms. I will praise God every day of my life and look forward to living in His presence. God inspires shouts for joy in all of the earth.

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Luke 5:12-28

    I was going to talk about the faith of the leper mentioned in this passage and about the paralyzed man whom Jesus forgave, but it is the call of Levi, the tax collector, which struck me. As Jesus left town, He passed Levi the tax collector. Tax collectors were known for using their position to extort excessive payments from people and for their sinfulness. Yet when Jesus passed Levi all He saw was a child of God who desired to serve God. Jesus told Levi to follow Him and be His disciple. Levi, the sinner, immediately left everything and followed Jesus. This is just two verses, but it contains a powerful message. Are we willing to leave everything to follow Jesus? Perhaps more importantly, are we willing to follow Jesus’ example and extend His invitation to follow Him to those we pass who are deep sinners? Do we call the “tax collectors” of today to follow Jesus? Or do we think that they are too steeped in sin to respond to His call?

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Numbers 33:40-35:34

    This passage emphasizes the importance of justice. First it emphasizes that it is just to take the life of someone who intentionally kills someone. Then it sets up a system whereby those who kill someone by accident pay a price for that mistake, but are able to avoid being executed for it. Finally, it emphasizes the importance of being positive that a person is guilty of the crime before taking their life for it.

September 21, 2013 Bible Study — Bear One Another’s Burdens

     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 37-38:22

     After receiving a detailed report from his emissaries regarding what the Assyrian field commander had said Hezekiah expressed deep sadness and sent them to the prophet Isaiah. Isaiah told the king’s emissaries that God had heard what the Assyrian had said and would act. Isaiah told them that Sennacherib, the Assyrian king, would receive word that he was needed at home. He would return home, where he would be killed by the sword.
     Soon afterwards Sennacherib received word that the king of Cush(essentially modern-day Ethiopia) was leading an army out to engage him. Before marching to meet the Cushite army, Sennacherib sent a letter to Hezekiah. In the letter he told Hezekiah that God was no more able to protect Jerusalem from him than the gods of other nations had been able to protect them. Hezekiah took the letter to the Temple and spread it out. Hezekiah prayed to God, asking Him to deliver Jerusalem. Hezekiah acknowledged to inability of the other gods to save their peoples, but called on God to demonstrate that He was more than those other gods made of mere stone and wood.
     Isaiah came to Hezekiah with a message from God. Isaiah told Hezekiah that because he had prayed about Sennacherib God had spoken against him. Sennacherib thought he was something because he had conquered many nations, but God told him that this was merely according to the plan God had decided long before. Those peoples had so little power against Sennacherib because that was according to God’s plan, not because Sennacherib was such a powerful man. Then Isaiah wrote one of the great passages about those who defy God:

But I know you well—
where you stay
and when you come and go.
I know the way you have raged against me.
And because of your raging against me
and your arrogance, which I have heard for myself,
I will put my hook in your nose
and my bit in your mouth.
I will make you return
by the same road on which you came.


God went on to tell Hezekiah that the Assyrians would not do enter Jerusalem, they would not even besiege it. Instead, the Assyrians would return to their capital by the road they had come.
     That night, 185,000 Assyrian soldiers died in their camp. In the morning when the survivors got up they found the bodies. Sennacherib broke camp and returned to Nineveh, his capital. While he was there, he went to worship his god in his temple. Two of his sons attacked him there and killed him with swords.

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Galatians 6:1-18

     Paul wrote that if a fellow believer is caught in sin, we should work to restore them. We should do so gently, cautiously, and humbly, being careful not to fall into the same temptation. We are to bear one another’s burdens. We need to avoid thinking that we are better than the sinner we are trying to help. It is wrong to compare ourselves to others, either to think we are better than they, or to think that they are better than ourselves. We need to carry our own burdens, not expect others to do it for us. We will reap what we saw. If we plant in order to satisfy our sinful desires, we will harvest the destruction that comes from such actions. On the other hand, if we plant good in due time we will harvest the reward of good behavior. Therefore we should do good to all people, especially our fellow believers.

***

     Paul makes two apparently contradictory points here. First, he says that we are to bear one another’s burdens. Then a few sentences later he says that everyone must carry their own load. These are not actually contradictory. We are to help each other as much as we can, but we cannot prevent someone else from suffering the consequences of their own actions. In addition, Paul is saying that I am to help you as part of my Christian duty, but I have no right to demand that you help me. This does not mean that I should reject your help, if you offer it. It merely means that I should not expect others to take up the burdens I have in this life.
     In some ways Paul’s teaching about harvesting what we plant is related to this. He is saying that actions have consequences and we should do those things that have consequences we desire. Lois McMaster Bujold(a fiction author) expressed what I believe Paul is saying here in one of the best ways I have ever seen. One of her characters said the following (my paraphrase), “Actions have consequences. So, if you desire something, choose those actions which have that something as a consequence.” This seems to me what Paul is saying here.
***

     Paul then concludes his letter by telling the Galatians that those who are trying to convince them to be circumcised are only doing so in order to avoid persecution and to claim the Galatians as their disciples so they can boast. Paul replies to that by saying that he wishes to never boast of anything other than the cross of Christ. Specific rules are not what is important, what is important is to be transformed to live as a new creation, living in love (although elsewhere Paul points out that there are certain behaviors that are always contrary to love).

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Psalm 65:1-13

     This is a psalm with a lot in it. If you are reading this for a synopsis of it, stop, follow the link and read the psalm. God is worthy of praise and will receive it. Sooner or later everyone will come before God, whether they wish it or not. If we approach Him with humility and remorse, He will forgive our many sins. God’s power reaches to the ends of the universe. No matter how far from home we go, God will still be there to answer our prayers. There is no place on earth, and no person, that is distant from God. No matter who or where you are, if you turn to God He will answer your prayers and meet your deepest needs.

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Proverbs 23:24

     If you want to give your parents joy, show wisdom and lead a godly life.

March 22, 2013 Bible Study — Jesus Heals Paralyzed Man

     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. I hope that the Spirit is moving in others through these posts as the Spirit has definitely been convicting me.

Magrat enjoying the sun
Magrat enjoying the sun

Numbers 33:40-35:34

     The passage finishes the summary of the travels of the Israelites through the wilderness. Then while they are camped near the Jordan River, across from Jericho, God gives Moses commands regarding the boundaries of the land they will be given and how to divide it up among the tribes. Out of the land given to the other tribes a total of 48 towns and their surrounding pastureland are to be given to the Levites. Six of the Levitical towns are to be cities of refuge, where a person who has accidentally killed someone can flee for safety.
     Moses gave the people specific commands from God regarding the cities of refuge. If someone accidentally kills someone they may flee to a city of refuge. The community is to gather and judge whether the person killed the victim by accident or on purpose. They must have at least two witnesses to testify that the killing was intentional, otherwise they are to escort the slayer back to the city of refuge where he must remain until the death of the high priest. If the slayer leaves the city of refuge before the death of the high priest and is killed by a relative of his victim it was not to be considered murder. However, once the high priest dies the slayer is free to return to his lands. The law specified that all murderers are to be put to death, but only on the testimony of two or more witnesses. The law also specified that they were to never accept a payment to allow someone convicted of murder to escape death, nor a payment to allow someone who accidentally killed someone to return to their lands early. The law was to apply the same to everyone.

Tulips poking their heads up
Tulips poking their heads up

Luke 5:12-28

     In one of the villages where Jesus went to teach a man with an advanced case of leprosy approached Jesus and requested that Jesus heal him. The man begged Jesus for healing and said that he knew that if Jesus was willing, He could heal him. Jesus was willing and healed the man. Jesus told the man not to tell anyone about his healing. Instead Jesus told the man to follow the Laws instructions regarding being examined by a priest and the sacrifices for cleansing that the Law specified. This did not stop the spread of word about Jesus’ healing power, rather it made it spread even more rapidly. People came from all over to hear Jesus and be healed by Him. It was such that Jesus had to withdraw to lonely places to find time to be alone and to pray.
     One day while Jesus was teaching in a house, some men tried to bring a paralyzed man in to the house to Jesus. Pharisees and teachers of the law from all over Galilee and even some from Judea and Jerusalem were sitting there listening to Jesus such that the men could not get in to see Him (the phrasing of the passage suggests there was more to the crowd than just the Pharisees and teachers of the law). So, the men took the paralyzed man up onto the roof and removed some of the roof tiles and lowered the man to Jesus from there. When Jesus saw the faith expressed by the man’s friends, he told the man that his sins were forgiven. The Pharisees and the teachers of the law were offended that Jesus told the man his sins were forgiven, since only God can forgive sins. Jesus recognized what they were thinking and asked them which was easier, to say “Your sins are forgiven,” or “Stand up and walk”? Then to demonstrate that He had the authority to forgive sins, He told the man to get up and walk. The man immediately got up, picked up his mat and praised God as he went home.
     Shortly after this Jesus saw Levi sitting in his tax collector’s booth and called him to follow Him. Levi immediately got up, left everything and followed Jesus.

Hyacinth poking its head up
Hyacinth poking its head up

Psalm 65:1-13

     A psalm of praise for all peoples. There are several verses here that I love. There is verse 5, where I find the NLT to reach me the most:

You faithfully answer our prayers with awesome deeds,
O God our savior.
You are the hope of everyone on earth,
even those who sail on distant seas.

And then verse 8 where I prefer the NIV:
The whole earth is filled with awe at your wonders;
where morning dawns, where evening fades,
you call forth songs of joy.

God’s power calls forth songs of joy from my heart.

Pepper and tomato plants waiting to go outside
Pepper and tomato plants waiting to go outside

Proverbs 11:23

     The things that the righteous desire bring good to everyone, while the wicked hope for things which bring wrath upon themselves.

September 21, 2012 Bible Study

     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.

Tabitha checks out the chair

Isaiah 37-38:22

     When King Hezekiah received the report of what the king of Assyria’s agents had said, he immediately sent word to Isaiah asking him to pray for the people. Isaiah replied that God Himself would respond to the blasphemous statement by the king of Assyria’s messengers. The king of Assyria would return home and be killed by the sword. Soon after this King Sennacherib received word that an Ethiopian army was approaching and he left Judah to fight them. Before he left, King Sennacherib sent a letter to Hezekiah stating that God could not protect Jerusalem from his armies. Hezekiah took this letter and spread it out before the altar and prayed for God’s deliverance. Through Isaiah God promises that Assyria will not attack Jerusalem nor lay siege to it. In Isaiah’s prophecy of how God will force King Sennacherib to leave Jerusalem alone is some great imagery of how God controls the behavior of those who choose to defy His will.

“I will put my hook in your nose
and my bit in your mouth.”

The imagery here is of how a man may control an animal that is much larger than himself and force it to go where he desires rather than where it would wish. The implication is not that God needs these devices to control someone more powerful than himself. Rather the implication is that resisting God’s will is futile, we can buck and fight, but in the end (and that end will not be long coming) we will be forced to do as God has decided. More than that, if we fight against that will we will suffer pain in the process of being turned to that path.
     King Sennacherib is promptly forced to return to his capital. About this time, Hezekiah becomes ill and God sends Isaiah to tell Hezekiah that he will not recover. Hezekiah responded to this message by petitioning the Lord for healing. God sends Isaiah another message that He has heard Hezekiah’s prayer and will heal him. Hezekiah responded to being healed with a song of praise.

Barony Wars, more fencing

Galatians 6:1-18

     Paul here tells us that if someone falls into sin, we should humbly and gently lead them back into the path of righteousness. That certainly does not mean haranguing them about the sin. It does mean acknowledging that we also suffer temptations to sins just as bad as any that those we are attempting to correct are committing. It does mean acknowledging that we struggle with sin ourselves. Paul tells us to be careful not to fall prey to the same temptations that we are attempting to guide someone else away from. We should share one another’s burdens. We should not fool ourselves into thinking we are more important than we are.
     Here we come upon an interesting statement by Paul. Just a couple sentences back, he told us that we should bear one another’s burdens, yet now he tells us that each person must bear their own burden. People may argue about what he means, but to me it seems obvious. We should do our best to help others, but we should not feel that others are obligated to help us. To phrase it another way; as Christians we are obligated to help others, others are not obligated to help us.
     If we spend our resources satisfying our sinful nature, we will reap decay and death. If on the other hand we spend our resources doing the will of God we will reap everlasting life and blessings. We should take every opportunity to do good, especially for our fellow believers.
     Finally Paul closes the letter by writing his own words. This suggests that some people had claimed that those who wrote some of his previous letters had put words into his mouth. He points out that those advocating that Gentiles become circumcised do not follow the whole law. Paul says that they are advocating circumcision in order to avoid persecution and in order to boast of those who follow their teachings. He says that he will only boast of the cross. It does not matter whether we have been circumcised or not. What matters is whether we have been transformed by God into a new creation. I pray every day that God continue to transform me into a new creation.

Tabitha and Gandalf play

Psalm 65:1-13

     What a wonderful psalm of praise! God does answer our prayers. I sin time and again, relying on my own strength rather than turning to God. I, once more, dedicate myself to relying on God rather than myself. I know that God will once again forgive me this sin, just as He has my others. In many ways it shames me that I have so much experience with His forgiveness.

Barony Wars, yet more fencing

Proverbs 23:24

     Children give your parents joy by seeking God’s wisdom.