July 2, 2013 Bible Study — Let Everything That Has Breath Praise The Lord

     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.

Yellow rose on the rose bush
Yellow rose on the rose bush

2 Kings 20-22:2

     Hezekiah became very sick and Isaiah told him to set his affairs in order because God has said he was going to die. Hezekiah cried out to God for healing. Before Isaiah had left the palace, God told him to return to the king and tell him that he would recover. Shortly after Hezekiah’s recovery the king of Babylon sent emissaries to him with a letter and gifts. Isaiah came to Hezekiah and asked him who the emissaries were and what they had seen. Hezekiah told Isaiah that they were from Babylon and had seen all of the treasures of Jerusalem. Isaiah told Hezekiah that the day would come when all of those treasures would be carried off to Babylon and that Hezekiah’s descendants would be taken there as captives. Hezekiah greeted this prophecy as good news, since it meant that there would be peace and prosperity for the rest of his lifetime.
     Unfortunately, Hezekiah’s son turned to idolatry when he became king in Hezekiah’s place. Manasseh rebuilt the high places which Hezekiah had destroyed. He built altars to Baal and an Asherah pole. Manasseh built altars to “the starry hosts”(probably a reference to worshiping various astronomical phenomena) in God’s Temple. He practiced sorcery and divination. He even went so far as to sacrifice his own son in the fire. In addition to his idolatry, Manasseh was an oppressive, unjust ruler. He murdered many innocent people, filling Jerusalem with the blood of the innocent. It was during Manasseh’s reign that the prophets began predicting that destruction of Jerusalem and the exile of the people of Judah.
     Manasseh’s son, Amon, was as evil as his father. His own officials conspired against him and assassinated him. However, the people rose up against the conspirators and killed them, placing Amon’s son Josiah on the throne. We are told that Josiah served God and did what was pleasing in His sight. Josiah did not turn from doing what was right.

Yellow rose close up
Yellow rose close up

Acts 21:18-36

     When Paul arrived in Jerusalem he met with James and the other elders of the Jerusalem Church. Paul recounted his ministry among the Gentiles and the Church leaders were overjoyed. However, they were concerned about the rumors among Jewish believers in Jerusalem that Paul taught Jews living among Gentiles to abandon Jewish law. They asked Paul to join four men who had just taken a vow and pay for their purification rites. This would demonstrate that Paul still followed Jewish law. Paul agreed to this and went to the Temple the next day.
     The next day, Paul showed one of his Gentile traveling companions around the city before joining the four men at the Temple. A group of Jews from Asia who had seen Paul in the city earlier accused him of defiling the Temple by bringing a Gentile into it. By doing so, they started a riot. The rioters grabbed Paul, drug him out of the Temple and attempted to kill him. The commander of the Roman garrison received news that the city was in an uproar and brought his troops out to quell the disturbance. When the mob saw the Roman soldiers they stopped beating Paul. The commander arrested Paul and asked the crowd what he had done. The crowd gave conflicting answers. As a result, the commander ordered that Paul be taken back to the fortress. As they started up the stairs to the fortress the crowd became so violent that the soldiers had to lift Paul to their shoulders to protect him.

Butterfly bush and garden
Butterfly bush and garden

Psalm 150:1-6

     This is a short psalm and a reminder that we should praise the Lord and call on everyone to do so as well. Read the psalm. Let us praise the Lord with every means at our disposal.

Let everything that breathes sing praises to the Lord!
Let everything that breathes sing praises to the Lord!
Praise the Lord!

Butterfly Bush up close
Butterfly Bush up close

Proverbs 18:9-10

     The first of today’s proverbs was a bit of a challenge for me until I read the NIV translation. The NLT says that a lazy person is as bad as someone who destroys things. I have always thought of myself as lazy. However, the NIV says something very similar, but slightly different. The NIV says “One who is slack in his work is brother to one who destroys.” While I think of myself as lazy–I never work any harder than I need to, I also think of myself as one who, if the job needs doing, puts out the effort to do it right. There is a fine line between my self-perception and the laziness referred to in this passage and I do not always remain on the godly side of it, but there is nothing inherently wrong with making a job as easy as possible.
     The second proverb tells us that if we are in doubt about the dangers we face in this life, turn to the name of God and He will guard us.