August 12, 2018 Bible Study — Keep The Sabbath Holy

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Jeremiah 16-18.

    In today’s passage Jeremiah confronts the people of Jerusalem about their failure to maintain the Sabbath. I remember a time when almost no one in this country did business on Sunday. Not only were most businesses closed, but most people chose not to frequent those which were open. Little by little people made exceptions for themselves for certain kinds of businesses, until now there are few people who set aside a day where they do not ever do business. The change has been both on the business side and on the consumer side. Years ago few businesses were open on Sunday and few people would have done business with them if they were. Today, few businesses are closed on Sunday and there are few people who refuse to do any business on that day. My limited observations suggest that few businesses actually do more business by being open on Sunday. I worked for a store that made the transition from being closed on Sunday to being open on Sunday. The result was that their Saturday sales volume dropped by about the amount of Sunday sales they gained, perhaps a little more. I am not sure where I am going with this, except to say that each one of us should set aside a day where we do not do business, where we focus on serving God. That day does not need to be Sunday (or Saturday).

August 11, 2018 Bible Study — Influence the World, But Do Not Allow the World To Influence You

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Jeremiah 13-15.

    Every day since I began reading Jeremiah this year I have struggled while reading the passage to see what I would write about. And every day as I was reading I saw an isolated verse or phrase which spoke to me. The same thing has happened again today. Having found that one passage (some days there were two or three, but not today) I went back and read the passage again and found something else I wanted to comment on.

    Jeremiah’s story about the loincloth and its message is as relevant today as it was when he first told it. We, every last one of us, was made to cling to God, to obey and serve Him. Our pride leads us to reject our role with God, seeking instead a role of greater prominence with other gods. However, rather than gaining greater value, we become something which must be discarded. We cannot change ourselves. Only by humbly accepting the role which God created us for can we attain any value. We must allow Him to change us into what He desires us to be.

    Now I come to the phrase which struck me and I see that it connects, to a degree, with what I just wrote. If we return to God, He will restore us. As rotten and worthless as our sin and pride have made us, God is capable of restoring us to being a garment which serves Him. We must speak the words which God will give us, not the worthless words which those around us want to hear. We live among people who refuse to listen to God, our calling is to influence them, but we must be careful to not allow that to go the other direction. We must not allow them to influence us.

August 10, 2018 Bible Study — The Worship of Idols

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Jeremiah 10-12.

    The beginning of this passage contains a description of building an idol. When I was a child I learned that people do not worship idols made that way any more. Now, as an adult I know people who do. The interesting thing about this is that at least some of those people complain about Christians rejecting science. It tells us a lot about human nature that this is happening in a society which also produced people who worship science.

    Jeremiah tells us that people who worship such “gods” are stupid and foolish. I believe that he is correct. However, the people I know who have taken up such worship have done so in order to establish a sense of community. This reflects poorly on the Church in America. Although I will say that part of their perceived need for this results from their a priori rejection of Christianity.

August 9, 2018 Bible Study — Sin Is Self-destructive

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Jeremiah 7-9.

    The people of Jerusalem thought that they were safe because the Temple was in Jerusalem. However, Jeremiah told them that they were mistaken. If they did not stop wallowing in evil thoughts and deeds they would indeed suffer the consequences. Jeremiah spelled out the sins which would lead to disaster. That list could be taken from the headlines today. Time and again we hear about how people are not treated with justice, and there are always those who are cheering on the injustice. We have a major debate going on over illegal aliens. No one involved appears to care that they are being exploited and are being used to allow others to be exploited as well. As a people we worship many things other than God, to our own detriment.

    Jeremiah goes on to condemn the people of Jerusalem for killing their own children as offerings to their idols, much as our society today does in the name of convenience. Rather than turn back when we have discovered that we have chosen the wrong path we compound our self-destructive behaviors. Even those who claim to follow God twist His words to support doing wrong. Our wise counselors tell us that our problem is our feeling of guilt, not the sin which leads to it. Rather than teach people to change the behaviors which destroy their lives, they teach people to not feel bad for doing wrong.

    Jeremiah reminds us that if we must boast we should not boast of our wealth, or our power, not even of our wisdom. The only thing which truly counts is whether we know God and understand that He is Lord (“the one to be obeyed”). As Paul states in Galatians what counts is whether we have been transformed into a new creation by God’s Spirit. If we are going to boast, let us boast about God. When I speak to those around me who suffer from emotional and psychological distress, my lack of similar distress does not come from me being wiser, richer, more powerful than they. My lack of similar distress is the result of God transforming me. My lack of suffering is not because I am better than others. It is because God’s Spirit has changed me as He will do for them if they but ask.

August 8, 2018 Bible Study — Choose the Old, Godly Way

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Jeremiah 4-6.

    The passage begins with Jeremiah predicting the coming destruction of Jerusalem. He writes of people who, rather than mourn and turn to God, attempt to act as if all is well as disaster overtakes them. Then he goes into the cause of the coming destruction. God sought honest people among the people of Jerusalem and did not find them. The same warning applies to us today. Honesty is no longer practiced. When you look among the poor and downtrodden you do not find it, but perhaps that can be understood because they have so little. The poor see themselves as having nothing to gain from honesty and do not understand the connection between it and success. So, you look among the wealthy and the leaders, but there we do not find honesty either. They believe that they can lie and cheat because no one can hold them to account.

    How did it come to this state? Jeremiah provides the answer to that as well. People became obsessed with sex. They have turned away from God and rejected His decrees because they did not like what God said. Look at our society, you can no longer tell people that God’s commands about how we exercise our sexuality are for our benefit. God does not tell us to refrain from adultery and homosexuality in order to limit our pleasure. He does so in order to enhance our joy. God does not tell us to be upright and honest to limit our opportunities for advancement. He does so because an upright and honest life is more fulfilling than any other kind. More importantly, a society which values and honors the upright and honest, where the majority follow that lifestyle, is more prosperous and powerful than one where everyone seeks to deceive others for their personal benefit.

    If you look around the evidence is everywhere that those who live by God’s commands are better off than those who do not. If you listen to people talk you can hear that most of their troubles in life come from not following God’s guidelines. Yet despite this, people do not see it and they do not hear it. Time and again people come to the crossroads where they must choose their way.
“Choose the old way, the godly way,” they are told.
“No,” they reply, “we want something new and different.”
People keep telling us that we need to change with the times, but they fail to recognize that change for change’s sake is not a good thing. All too often, I see people refuse to change sinful behaviors, but reject godliness because it is old-fashioned. The godly way may be old-fashioned, but it is proven to lead to happiness.

August 7, 2018 Bible Study –Do Not Be Afraid of Those To Whom God Has Sent You

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

Happy Birthday to my wonderful wife, Alanna.

Today, I am reading and commenting on Jeremiah 1-3.

    The calling of the prophet Jeremiah contains several elements which apply to each and every one of us. God knew us before we were conceived and He formed us in our mother’s womb to fulfill the purpose for which He would call us. When the time comes for us to answer God’s calling He will put His words in our mouth and will guide our hands to the task He has for us. But the thing which struck me the most today was God’s instruction to not be afraid of those to whom He sent us to speak. If we allow fear of our listeners to temper the words God has given us, He will make us look foolish in front of them. Time and again I have seen people who declare a truth make fools of themselves by partially or fully retracting it when those to whom it applies take offense. This does not mean that we should not be willing to apologize when we offend someone by misspeaking or even saying something wrong. But if what we said was the truth we should stand by it.

    The topic I want to write about requires care because what I want to say can easily be taken incorrectly. Where Jeremiah wrote about bringing the people of Israel into a fruitful land which they promptly defiled I thought of the original settlers in what is now the United States. When those original settlers arrived they found a fruitful land much of which was now uninhabited because those who lived there had been killed by disease. However, rather than accept the bounty which they had been given and serving God in that land they soon tried to drive out those few people who remained. Those settlers did not do anything which is not common to man throughout history, but they had the opportunity to mold something which was so much better. I believe that time and again God has called the people who live in what is now the United States to serve Him, and time and again some fraction of them have answered that call. As a result those who live here have been blessed. However, time and again the majority of people living here have squandered God’s blessings in their idolatrous worship of themselves.

August 6, 2018 Bible Study — We Are Not Good Enough

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Isaiah 64-66.

    Isaiah starts today’s passage by calling out for God to intervene in the world once more as He did in years long ago. The prophet acknowledges that each and every one of us has sinned and that our acts of righteousness are like filthy rags. The first step in accepting God’s salvation is acknowledging that we are NOT good people. Despite the inadequacy of our righteousness, despite the fact that our sins mean that we deserve God’s judgment, we do not beg God for mercy. I want to note that despite Isaiah saying that no one calls on God, he does exactly that in the very next phrase.

    Isaiah notes God’s response to calls. God is ready to welcome people with open arms, but no one seeks His aid. And God is not just passively waiting for us to turn to Him, He is actively calling out to us that He is right here for us. Rather than turn to God for His help to become righteous, people go from one sin to an even worse sin. Meanwhile one person tells another to keep their distance because the second is too sinful and would pollute the “righteousness” of the first. We have deliberately and openly sinned, right in front of God.

    All of us have sinned and none of is are righteous, none of us has even truly called on God. Yet God says that some of us are worth saving. He will save a remnant. What qualities determine eligibility for that remnant? God will save those with a humble and contrite heart who tremble at His words. In light of what this passage says we can see part of what God means. Those whom God has saved know that they are no better than anyone else. We will not be saved because we are good people. God saves us because we recognize that we need saving. God does not save us because we are more deserving of salvation than others. In order to receive God’s salvation we must acknowledge that we do not deserve to receive it. When we tell others of God’s salvation, part of our message must be that if we, as bad as we are, qualified to receive God’s salvation, then surely they qualify. Our message must NOT be, “If only you were to make yourself as good as I, you too could receive God’s salvation.” No, our message is, “If I, as bad as I am, received God’s salvation, then surely you can receive it as well.”

August 5, 2018 Bible Study — God’s Truth Is Marching On

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Isaiah 60-63.

    When I read the beginning of today’s passage (chapter 60) I wonder if this prophecy about the future of Israel takes place before or after God creates the new Heaven and new Earth. And if before, is it meant to be taken literally or figuratively. Like many of Isaiah’s prophecies I suspect that this passage is intended to foretell more than one point in history. I see elements of the establishment, and current state, of modern Israel in this passage. The passage describes ships from the ends of the earth bringing the people of Israel home to their land. However, there are also many aspects of this passage which contain elements of the descriptions of the New Heaven and the New Earth which God will create.

    Beginning with verse one of chapter 61 we have a passage which Jesus explicitly quoted as being fulfilled in Himself. This passage was Jesus’ mandate, and, if we are imitators of Him, ours as well. We are true followers of Christ if God’s Spirit is upon us to bring good news to the poor, comfort the broken-hearted, and proclaim that slaves are to be freed. Jesus brought that message to us. Now we are to take that message, in His name, to the rest of the earth. But there is also a warning that goes along with that message. God loves justice and hates wrongdoing and robbery.

    When I read the final chapter of today’s passage I am reminded of “The Battle Hymn of The Republic”. Specifically, I am reminded of the images of the horror of the Civil War which it evokes for me. In particular, verse 3 brings that to my mind, and what we can expect if we allow similar injustice to occur again (or perhaps I should say allow such injustice to continue). Verse 3 says, “I have been treading the winepress alone; no one was there to help me.” If you do not understand what I am talking about, read some of the descriptions about how horrific the battlefields of the Civil War, or World War I. Those are two examples of when God unleashed His fury at mankind and began trampling His enemies. The Battle Hymn of the Republic was written, and used, in order to make the Union Army seem like the arm of God’s vengeance, but by the end of the war, I believe that many of the Union soldiers realized that they too had been trampled as part of God’s vengeance on His enemies.

August 4, 2018 Bible Study — Are Those Who Believe In God Gullible?

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Isaiah 57-59.

    Today’s passage begins with a condemnation of those who mock believers as credulous fools while themselves believing in many implausible things. I remember a comedian who made a name for himself by mocking Christians as gullible and believing incredulous things. It turned out that he himself was willing to believe the incredulous, as long as those making the claims did not believe in God. In my experience, those who most emphatically do not believe in God are often the most gullible when it comes to other claims. However, perhaps even more relevant to how today’s passage starts are the people who spend their lives looking for spiritual fulfillment. Often times, they started their search for spiritual fulfillment by rejecting Christianity without ever actually learning what Jesus taught. Despite the fact that people often rejected God without ever listening to what He had to offer, if they accept it from Him, He will heal them.

    Worse than those who pursue other gods rather than worshiping the one true God are those who go through the motions in order to appear righteous. They worship God in order to advance their own interests, not to serve Him. God does not want our worship to be about going through the motions or performing the correct rituals. God wants us to treat our fellow man well and care for those in need. In many ways what Isaiah is talking about here reminds me of those who practice “Prosperity Gospel”, who think that being a Christian is a way to become prosperous. Serving God is not about what is in it for me. The benefit of serving God is doing good for others. Perhaps the part of this which strikes closest to home for me is Isaiah’s command to keep the Sabbath Day holy. Isaiah tells us not to pursue our own interests on that day, but we should still enjoy it. I do not believe that the Sabbath Day must be celebrated on either the 7th day of the week, as Jews generally do, or on the 1st day of the week as Christians generally do. However, I do believe that we should set aside one day a week to dedicate to God. That does not mean that we need to spend the whole day at worship services, or reading the Bible, but it does mean that we should not spend time on that day doing things we just did not get to on another day.

August 3, 2018 Bible Study — God’s Ways Are Higher Than Our Ways

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Isaiah 52-56.

    Those who bring the news of God’s salvation to people are beautiful to those who receive their message. We should never forget this because the reverse is true as well. Those who know the news of God’s salvation and fail to pass it on are ugly to those who suffer for not hearing it. If we do not share what we know about God’s saving grace to those we know, they will, rightfully, condemn us in days to come. Let us not fail in our duty.

    I have been really stuck for a bit figuring out what I want to write about chapter 53. It is a very strongly prophecy of the Messiah and for Christians it clearly points to Jesus and His suffering. The word pictures which Isaiah paints here of what Jesus went through in order to reconcile us with God should touch our souls. They are meant to touch our souls. God seeks to restore our relationship with Him, and through Jesus He has made that possible. And yet, so many of us still refuse to listen to the love He offers us.

    Then we come to chapter 55, which gives us a great idea of how good God will be to us. Communism tries to embody what God is offering here. The problem is that Communism wants to do it without turning to God. If you are hungry or thirsty, come to God and He will provide what you need. If we turn to God, He will do great things for us. In order to enjoy God’s offer of bounty, the wicked must change their ways, and, from what was written earlier in today’s passage, the “wicked” includes every one of us.
    Communism fails because God’s thoughts are not like our thoughts and His ways are not like our ways. Communism only works if everyone buys in wholeheartedly, but it provides no mechanism to transform wicked humanity into the godly people needed for it to work. God’s system on the other hand only requires each of us individually to “buy in”, and God will transform those who allow Him to do so. We do not, and cannot, understand how it works, but God sends out His word into the world and it transforms people. We can never predict how that transformation will take place. God’s Spirit reaches out and transforms people we would never expect. His words never fail to accomplish the purpose for which they were spoken.
    I want to write more, but I must move on to other parts of my day. Read the passage, especially chapters 53, 55, and 56. If we wish it, God will give us a place in His family.