October 3, 2016 Bible Study — Jesus, the Origins

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

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

    I do not know why I went here this morning. If you were to make a series of superhero style movies out of the Book of Matthew, today’s passage would be the basis for the “Origins” movie. I think it has the potential to make an interesting movie. First we have the opening scene showing that Jesus is descended from Abraham. I am not quite sure how you would make this compelling, but I think it has possibilities as a series of montages (I was going to list some of the scenes, but realized that I am not sure how to make it work). The next scene is Mary becoming pregnant and Joseph planning to divorce her quietly then the vision telling him to marry her anyway. Up to here should take no more than 15 minutes total, and probably less than 10 minutes. Next would be two scenes with the astrologers from the east. One with them in Jerusalem, one with them in Bethlehem. Then would come the first action scene where Joseph and Mary hurriedly leave Bethlehem, followed a short time later by Herod’s soldiers sweeping down and killing all of the young children in the town.
    The first half of the movie would end with Joseph bringing the family to Nazareth with a transition scene showing the young man Jesus with His family in the house in Nazareth (so that the audience can see the connection of the actor playing the grownup Jesus with the baby). The next scene is John the Baptist preaching along the Jordan, clearly showing him condemning the same sort of men we saw advising Herod earlier. Cut to Jesus in the audience coming forward to be baptized. John sees the dove and hears the voice, but it is clear that no one else does (except perhaps one or two of John’s disciples). While John continues to baptize others, Jesus heads out into the wilderness. I am not sure how I would do the temptation scenes. They could be either realistic or vision/hallucination scenes. I suspect I would do the latter, allowing the audience to decide for themselves if they were visions or hallucinations. When Jesus comes out of the wilderness He hears of John’s arrest and heads for Galilee. In Galilee we see Him on the shore speaking to one or two people, more people come over as they hear what He is saying. When He finishes speaking He heads down the shore and calls the first disciples. Then we have a scene in a synagogue where Jesus heals someone followed by ever increasing crowds when He speaks in synagogues and following Him as He travels. Initially, He is invited to speak at synagogues by people trying to get more people to come to their services. Eventually, the crowds are too large for Him to speak in buildings and the “Origins” movie ends with Him speaking on the side of a mountain with His disciples moving out and repeating what He says so that those farther away can hear.

Plow Up the Hard Ground Of Your Hearts

Every week I receive the bulletin for the upcoming Sunday worship service in my email. It contains the announcements and the Scripture reading which our pastor is going to base his sermon on. In August, I decided to read the scripture passage and write a blog entry containing my thoughts on the passage as a way to prepare for Sunday morning worship. I do not know how long I will continue doing this, but I have enjoyed doing so up until now. I feel like a hypocrite as I write this because I believe that it is important to make it to church each Sunday (with there being allowances for special occasions…this applies to what I believe that I should do, not necessarily what others should do). Yet, all too often I do not make it to church on Sunday morning for reasons that just are not good enough.

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This weeks scripture passage is Jeremiah 4:1-4; 5:23-31.

    Every time I read Jeremiah 4:3 I am reminded of Jesus’ parable of the Sower. When I read this I think about plowing up the hard ground so that the seeds of God’s word can take root and produce crops. However, in the very next phrase Jeremiah tells us not to waste good seeds among thorns. Jesus, in His parable, compared the thorns to the cares of the world which choke out the plants which produce the crops of God’s will. Having said all of this, I want to point out that that is not exactly Jeremiah’s point. Jeremiah’s point in this passage is that while we need to change our hearts, it is not that easy to do. We could change our hearts, but we won’t. Our hearts will only get changed, will only get plowed up, when we allow the Holy Spirit to do so. Because as the prophet tells us, we have stubborn and rebellious hearts. We resist doing God’s will, even as we know and acknowledge that we should.