June 11, 2020 Bible Study Suffering May Be the Result of Wrongdoing, But It Is Not Evidence of Wrongdoing

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Job 6-10.

While reading the Book of Job it is important to remember that in the end God confronts Job and condemns his three friends for their lack of compassion.  As a result, this is one of those parts of the Bible which most needs repeated reading to know where the person speaking is expressing a truth we should take to heart and where they are expressing a thought we should reject.  Keeping that in mind I believe that most of what Job says near the beginning of the Book expresses opinions we should value and only later in the Book does he begin to fall into self-pity.  When we suffer we are not sinning when we spend some time expressing how badly we feel.  It is OK to express our anguish.  Closely related to that, Job tells us that pointing out where someone is causing their suffering will hurt their feelings but has value.  However, telling someone that their suffering is because they have done wrong when we do not know anything they have done wrong is worse than useless.  Suffering is not evidence of wrongdoing on the part of the one suffering.

 

 

June 10, 2020 Bible Study The Accuser Tries To Convince Us That We Suffer Because We Are Not Good Enough To Be Loved By God

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Job 1-5.

I am sure that I have noted this in previous years, but the one who appeared before God and started Job’s suffering is literally the accuser.  Whether this is a title, or merely the role played by this individual is open to debate.  Personally, I believe that the decision by the translators of the New Living Translation to capitalize the word “accuser” in this is accurate and we should view the word “Satan” as it appears after this as “Accuser”.  That is what Satan is.  He is the Accuser.  He accused Job of only worshiping and praising God because he was wealthy.  Then later when Job continued to worship and praise God after losing all of his wealth, he accused Job of only doing so because he was healthy.  Yet, the Accuser was wrong.  Job continued to praise God even after he lost his wealth and continued to praise Him when he became sickly.  Even in the depths of depression which he began to suffer, Job did not stop worshiping God.

We should be willing to accept both the good and the bad from the hand of God.  In fact, we should rejoice when we experience what the world views as bad things because they mean that God has found us worthy to share in Jesus’ suffering.  There is another lesson to this passage as well.  All of us hear the voice of Satan when he accuses us of not being good enough, or of only doing good because of rewards.  The Accuser tries to convince us to give up because our sins count as more than God’s forgiveness.  Or to convince us that if only we did more good that is what it would take to gain God’s approval.  The Accuser tells us that our suffering means that God does not love us, but Jesus tells us that God does love us and suffering is one of the signs of God’s love.

June 9, 2020 Bible Study Haman and Mordecai, a Study In Contrasts

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Esther 8-10.

In a way, the Book of Esther is about the contrast between two men who rose to great power, Haman and Mordecai.  Haman spent his entire life seeking power in anyway that he could find it.  Mordecai, on the other hand, spent his life doing what he believed was right.  Haman sought continuously to expand his power.  When he discovered that Mordecai did not live in fear of him, Haman sought to destroy not just Mordecai, but all of his people.  In contrast, when Mordecai discovered a plot against the king, he reported it, and then returned to his regular duties without seeking reward or honor.  Even before that, he never made any effort to capitalize on his cousin and adopted daughter becoming Queen.  Both men rose to the highest rank short of becoming king.  Haman had sought that power for his own benefit.  Mordecai sought that power for the benefit of his people.

June 8, 2020 Bible Study Seeking To Be Honored for the Sake of Being Honored Will Lead To Downfall

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Esther 4-7.

It seems like everyone recognizes that the Book of Esther makes the point that God has put us into the situation we are in in order to fulfill His purpose.  And further that if we decline to take the risks which allow us to fulfill the role God has given us, He will accomplish those purposes in another way, but we will not benefit from His purpose.

However, I found another lesson in today’s passage which I have never heard anyone comment on.  Haman brought his fate upon himself because of his arrogance and pride.  We see how Haman started down a road to humiliation and death because he was unwilling to accept that others did not honor him.  Rather than doing things worthy of being honored because they should be done, he assumed that he was deserving of honor and sought ways to receive even greater honor.  I noted on this read through that we have not only the evidence of what Haman did, but how others reacted to him.  In yesterday’s passage, Haman became aware that Mordecai did not bow to him because other members of the court brought it to his attention.  Today, when the king turned on Haman, members of the court quickly pointed out the pole he had constructed intending to impale Mordecai upon it.

June 7, 2020 Bible Study There Is More To the Story of Esther Than We Usually Notice

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

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

Today, I am going to look at the unwritten backstory to the story told in the Book of Esther.  Perhaps I am seeing something which is not there, but I will let you be the judge.  Apparently the Jews throughout Persia were already subject to some level of persecution.  Otherwise, why would Mordecai have told Esther to keep her nationality and family background a secret when she was taken into the palace?  When Haman petitioned the king to allow him to kill the Jews, his petition suggests that this persecution resulted from the Jews sticking to the commands of God.  Finally, we see that Xerxes was a corrupt king.  He sold the lives of a large number of people (which unknown to him includes his queen) to Haman for a large sum of money.  Looking at this we see that God arranged for Esther to be Queen at this time for more than just to stop Haman’s evil plan.  In fact, while Haman’s plan would likely have never come about if Esther had not become Queen, sooner or later, someone else would have made a similar plot.  Esther becoming Queen allowed her to prevent Haman’s evil plot from coming to fruition, but it also brought the animosity to the Jews into the open where it could be addressed.

June 6, 2020 Bible Study It Only Takes One Corrupt Individual To Destroy Good Intentions

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

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

Every time I read the Book of Nehemiah, I assume that the beginning of chapter 11 is a follow up to the beginning of chapter 7.  To refresh your memory, early in chapter 7 it is noted that when the wall was completed Nehemiah discovered that few people lived in Jerusalem and that he registered all those that did.  Chapter 11 begins with what appears to be how he, and the Jewish people living in the area, solved the problem.  The people living outside of Jerusalem selected, by lot, from among themselves those who would move into Jerusalem.  Those who moved to Jerusalem were honored by those who did not.

As the final part of the plan which Nehemiah had made to restore Jerusalem, he appointed men to manage the offerings and their distribution.  Shortly after appointing these men, he returned to the court of the king of Persia.  Unfortunately, while Nehemiah was in the Persian capital some of those who had been put in charge of Temple storage allowed it to be used by those who had opposed the rebuilding of Jerusalem’s walls.  The passage does not say so outright, but I understand this to mean that Temple storage was being used for smuggling and/or to otherwise avoid taxes.  The result of this change was that food was not getting distributed to many of the priests and Levites who were intended to work in the Temple.  We see here the difference a single strong leader can make.  There were other leaders who could have confronted the actions of the corrupt individual, but they all looked the other way until Nehemiah returned and held their feet to the fire.

June 5, 2020 Bible Study Uniting And Taking Responsibility For Our Sins

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Nehemiah 9-10.

When the people had gathered at the beginning of the month to hear the Book of the Law read, their initial reaction was to mourn their failure to keep God’s law, but they were told that the time was wrong.  Instead they celebrated that they were able to gather, worship God, and hear His Law.  Then they studied His Law and celebrated the Festival of Shelters.  Finally, at the end of the month, they gathered once more to mourn and pray for forgiveness.  They confessed their sins and the sins of their forebears.  They acknowledged that their suffering was a result of their sins and vowed to behave better going forward.

Throughout Nehemiah the Jewish people came together to help each other, and when they recognized an example of mistreating each other they vowed to change.  When they discovered their fellow Jews enslaved to outsiders, they pooled their resources and bought them out of captivity.  When they realized that their own behaviors were causing their fellow Jews to be sold into slavery, they changed their behaviors.  They sought ways they could act to relieve the burdens on their fellow Jews.  And while they banded together to defend themselves against outside aggressors, at no point did they seek to attack those outsiders who might have been perceived as harming them.  We should take responsibility for how our own sins have led to our suffering, repent, and seek to follow God’s will more closely going forward.

June 4, 2020 Bible Study We Need To Listen To Experts On God’s Law, But Look At It For Ourselves As Well

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Nehemiah 7-8.

Once the walls and gates of Jerusalem had been rebuilt, Nehemiah invited (or perhaps ordered) all of the people under his authority to gather for a reading of the Book of the Law.  The passage sort of glosses over this, but the people who gathered reacted to the reading in a similar fashion to that of King Josiah.  They were saddened by their failure to keep God’s regulations.  However, Nehemiah and the religious leaders encouraged the people to celebrate their ability to gather and hear God’s Law rather than mourn their previous failure to follow it.

Then once this day of celebration was over, representatives of the people met to review the Book of the Law.  It was this group of laypeople who recognized the importance of the Festival of Shelters.  They saw how celebrating that Festival would help the people become more committed to serving the Lord.  This entire passage gives us an understanding of the importance of both trained and untrained eyes studying God’s Law.  Experts can give us an understanding of what the Bible says, but sometimes we need to see for ourselves how it applies to our lives.

June 3, 2020 Bible Study Some Leaders Use Their Position to Serve Their Own Interests, But Godly Leaders Use Their Position for the Interests of the People They Lead

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

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

Understanding that the walls of Jerusalem had been rebuilt once already since the return from exile puts the reaction of Nehemiah’s enemies in context.  One begins to understand that they were taking advantage of the disrepair of Jerusalem for their own purposes.  They wanted Jerusalem to be in a state of disrepair in order to facilitate their own illegal activities.  Initially they tried to discourage the Jews from repairing the walls by deriding their work as inadequate.  When that failed, they planned to send “bandits” to attack the city, destroying the work which had been done.  However, Nehemiah received word of their plans and implemented a defensive strategy.  The passage does not make it clear why Nehemiah’s enemies did not follow through anyway, but I suspect that a successful attack on Nehemiah’s defenses would have revealed that the attackers were not just bandits…or perhaps, their forces WERE just bandits and thus not up to taking on a well prepared force of defenders.  With the failure of this strategy they attempted to lure Nehemiah to where they could ambush him by threatening to lie to the King of Persia about his intentions.  This failed.  Part of the reason this failed was because Nehemiah had clearly laid out his plans to the King of Persia before he left to come to Jerusalem.

In the middle of the above, Nehemiah discovered that the poor among the Jews were being exploited by the wealthy and thus being driven even further into poverty.  When he realized this was true, he called the elites from among the Jews together and demanded that they stop.  But, he did not exempt himself from liability.  Rather, he recognized how his own actions contributed to the exploitation of the poor, even though that was not his intention.  Overall the portion of the passage where Nehemiah worked with the elites among the Jews to stop the exploitation of their poorer neighbors also provides us with an example for all leaders.  The passage points out how Nehemiah did not take advantage of many of the perks of his position which would have allowed him to become more wealthy in ways someone else would not be able to do.  Those perks were intended to allow a man of less wealth than Nehemiah had to fulfill the duties of his office.  However, reading between the lines one realizes that most people in a position similar to Nehemiah’s used those perks to make themselves even more wealthy and powerful.

June 2, 2020 Bible Study

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

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

It would be easy to think that the news which Nehemiah’s brother brought him from Jerusalem just represented the lack of rebuilding which had happened since it was sacked by the Babylonians.  However, if that were the case, he would have reported that the walls and gates had not been rebuilt.  Realizing that the walls had been rebuilt by the returned exiles and then destroyed once more puts some needed context on the rest of the passage. When Nehemiah received this news, he mourned, fasted, and prayed.  However, when Nehemiah was finished fasting and praying, he had a plan of action, which means that his definition of fasting and praying was different from what we normally think of when we talk about fasting and praying.  It is time to re-evaluate what God intends for us to do when He calls for us to fast and pray.