March 3, 2019 Bible Study Responding to God’s Power and Love

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Deuteronomy 11-13.

Moses focused his comments to those of us who have seen and experienced God’s power and love.  While I have not experienced anything comparable to the parting of the Red Sea, on numerous occasions I have seen God act in my life when I was desperate for change.  This experience has made me a firm believer that if we are faithful to God He will meet our needs.  However, as Moses said in yesterday’s passage and again in today’s passage, if we begin to believe that our good life is a product of our own worthiness and turn away from God disaster will strike.  If we have seen God’s power and love in our lives we must be strive to obey God’s will with all of our being.

From time to time I encounter someone who claims that Judaism was not monotheistic until relatively late.  They base this upon the biblical accounts which describe how the Israelites often worshiped other gods along with God once they entered the Promised Land (and on some of the stories in Genesis).  However, such an opinion overlooks the repeated focus on monotheism throughout the first five books of the Bible.  It is true that the Israelites tended towards polytheism through most of their history before the Exile.  However, the command in today’s passage for the people of Israel to worship God in a central location was designed to address that.  Sacrifices were only to be offered at that designated central location.

I had intended to stop at that point, but I was struck by a lesson the modern Church could learn from.   If anyone was discovered to be trying to seduce people away from following God’s commands they were to be put to death.  I do not believe that God calls us today to kill those who violate His commands.  However, I have been struck by the number of people who attempt to convince the people of God to stop calling one sin or another a sin who remain in good standing with their Church after their argument has been defeated.  Many of them fail to accept that God has spoken through the Church and continue to strive to change the Church’s teachings after the Body has rejected this change.  Those who reject the teachings of the Church, which have been its teachings since the First Century should be cast out with those who refuse to stop practicing those sins.  I want to make an important distinction here between those who fall into sin and acknowledge that God is calling them to change and those who sin and proclaim that there is no reason to stop doing so.  Even the best of us will fall into the former category but those who fall into the latter category must be exposed as not seeking to follow God’s will.