March 12, 2022 Bible Study — The Fall Of Jericho Foreshadows The Events Described In The Book Of Revelation

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Joshua 5-7.

I noticed in today’s passage something I have never noticed before, nor have I heard or seen anyone comment upon it.   When the Israelites marched around Jericho they had seven priests blowing seven trumpets.  That isn’t the part I just noticed.  What I realized today was that the symbolism of these seven trumpets was similar to the symbolism of the seven trumpets referred to in the Book of Revelation.  I am sure that someone else has noted this, but I have never come across a reference to that.  I was going to stop there, because I was not sure how that symbolism tied together.  Bot now that I have written that I realized more about the symbolism which will really help us understand the Book of Revelation.  So, at Jericho all seven trumpets were sounded at once, but they were blown on seven consecutive days.  In the Book of Revelation, the seven trumpets are sounded successively rather than all together.  At Jericho, for six days the trumpets were sounded and life went on as before, on the seventh day the trumpets were sounded seven times.  On the seventh time on the seventh day, the walls of Jericho fell and life ended for everyone living there, except Rahab and those who “belonged to her” (everyone sheltering in her house).  In Revelation, the first six trumpets are sounded, and things pretty much go on as before (not entirely, but bear with me here).  When the seventh trumpet is sounded, the earth will be destroyed and the everyone living there will die, except for those who belong to Christ (simplifying again). So, we see that the destruction of Jericho foreshadows the end of the earth.

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

March 11, 2022 Bible Study — Do Not Be Afraid Or Discouraged

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

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I always enjoy reading the introduction to the Book of Joshua.  After the death of Moses, as Joshua took over the reigns of leadership, God told him to be strong and courageous and to carefully follow the law which Moses had given the Israelites.  We too should be strong and courageous in doing God’s will.  Joshua was to meditate day and night on God’s commands, we should do likewise.  God told Joshua not to be afraid or discouraged, advice which we should also take to heart.   Let us seek to do God’s will and He will be with us always.  Advice which I need to take to heart right now.  I have recently changed jobs and need to move closer to the job location.  So, I am house hunting and the few houses which I am finding which might do, someone is going higher than I am willing to go.  Yet, I will put my trust in God and continue to seek His will.

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Then we come to the story of Rahab.  She had heard the stories about the Israelites, and knew that they were coming to her land.  She could have been frightened and discouraged, and perhaps she was.  But she had also heard about their God and when the opportunity came to act, she took it.  She believed that God would give them victory and chose to side with Him.  I want to note that she hid the Israelite spies before she made her deal with them.  Then, as soon as they left, she hung the scarlet cord out her window as a symbol of her alliance with God and His people.  Do we have the faith to act?

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

March 10, 2022 Bible Study — God Blessed Us And We Turned Away

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Deuteronomy 32-34.

In many ways Moses’ song recorded here applies to us today.  God had blessed us, but we turned from Him to false gods.  After World War II, Christians used the opportunities provided by the opening of the world to bring God’s word to places where it had rarely been heard.  That message was warmly received in many of these places and people throughout the world were greatly blessed.  In the 1970s and 80s great strides were made reducing hunger throughout the world.  Then. we put our trust in things which were not God, were not even gods, and God has brought calamity upon the world.  God is challenging us to take shelter from the “gods” we have chosen, gods which cannot shelter us, and, to be perfectly clear, would not if they could.  As He said through Moses God is once more telling us:

See now that I myself am he!
There is no god besides me.
I put to death and I bring to life,
I have wounded and I will heal,
and no one can deliver out of my hand.

God is calling us once more to turn to Him, listen to His word, and obey His instructions.   Let us once more pray to God for discernment, and when He offers it to us let us follow what it tells us.

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

March 9, 2022 Bible Study — We Have A Choice To Make Today, And Every Day

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Deuteronomy 29-31.

As the Israelites prepared to cross the Jordan River into the land of Canaan, and Moses prepared for his death, they renewed the covenant which they had made with God at Mount Sinai.  A key part of that covenant was a warning that anyone who thought that they could gain the benefits of this covenant while continuing (or beginning) to worship other gods would suffer grievously.   This warning applies today to those who wish to gain the benefits of following Christ without giving up the idolatrous sinfulness they followed before coming to know Him.  Later in the passage, Moses tells the Israelites that he, and God, knows that they will break the covenant.  However, Moses had also told them that if they turned back to God after their rebellion He would hear them and bring them back to Himself.  The lesson here is that it is never too late, but that works both ways.  It is never too late for us to turn back to God, and we can never “rest on our laurels” and say, “Well, I obeyed God yesterday, so I don’t have to now.”  Today we have the choice of either life and prosperity, or death and destruction, the choice between obedience or disobedience.  There is one final piece to the message of this passage which I want to write about.   Moses told the Israelites that knowing God’s will was not difficult; God had written His Laws on their hearts, and on our hearts.  If we wish to do God’s will, we only need to examine our hearts to know what it is.  But we must truly desire to do His will and not pretend that our desires are His desires.

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

March 8, 2022 Bible Study — Blessings For Obeying God, And Curses For Disobeying

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Deuteronomy 27-28.

Today’s passage describes the first of several altars which Moses instructed the Israelites to set up in the land to remind them of what God had done in giving them the land.  They were to build an altar on Mount Ebal and write the words of the Law on it.  After they had built the altar half of the Israelite were to stand on Mount Gerizim and half on Mount Ebal.  Those on Mount Gerizim were to speak the blessings which come from following God’s Law while those on Mount Ebal were to speak the curses which would come upon those who disobeyed God’s Law.  Reading the blessings and curses described here I get the same sense that I got when I read Deuteronomy 11-13: the blessings and curses are built into the way in which God created the world to work.  Those who obey God’s commands will be blessed because that is how He created the world to work.  Those who disobey God’s commands will be cursed because they have done things which result in those bad things happening to them.

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

March 7, 2022 Bible Study — Treat Others As You Would Wish To Be Treated If You Were In Their Circumstances

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Deuteronomy 24-26.

This passage contains multiple miscellaneous laws.  However, many of them have a similarity: do not mistreat the foreigner, the fatherless, or the widow.  Those three have one thing in common, they would have had little to no power to defend themselves.  Which gives us a theme running through most of these laws, do not take advantage of those weaker than yourself.

  • Do not take advantage of hired workers who are poor and needy, pay them promptly
  • Do not deny the foreigner or the fatherless of justice
  • When harvesting, leave the hard to gather crops for the foreigner, the fatherless, and the widow
  • When making a loan to a neighbor, if they are poor return their pledge to them before you go to sleep that night.
  • When making a loan to a neighbor, do not enter their house to retrieve their pledge.  Wait for them to bring it out to you.
  • When making a loan, do not take as security the tools the person uses to earn an income.

At several points the passage tells the Israelites to remember that they were slaves in Egypt.  We too should remember when we, or our ancestors, suffered hard times.  We should remember that, but for the grace of God, we too might be dealing with being weak and having trouble providing for ourselves.  Let us treat those weaker than ourselves as we would wish to be treated if we were in their circumstances.

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

March 6, 2022 Bible Study — Sex And Marriage Are Inextricably Entwined With Each Other

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Deuteronomy 21-23.

We are often horrified at the idea that the Bible allowed the Israelites to take women they captured in battle as their wives.  As a result we often miss a rather revolutionary idea which is contained in today’s passage: the only provision in the Law of Moses for someone to have sex with a woman captured in battle was for him to take her as his wife.  And once he had done that he could no longer treat her as a slave.  He could not sell her to someone else, as he could with other captives he had acquired.  He could divorce her, but if he did she was free to go where she chose, he could not keep her as a slave.  Because of our modern distaste for slavery we often overlook how this passage indicates that if a man has sex with a captive woman, he is making her his wife.   It further reinforces the idea that a man should only have sex with a woman who is his wife.

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

March 5, 2022 Bible Study — God Condemns Sacrificing Children, Practicing Witchcraft, And Divination

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Deuteronomy 18-20.

Moses warned the Israelites against imitating the “detestable ways” of the people already living there.  To make sure we would know what he meant describes those “detestable ways”.  First, he calls sacrificing their children detestable.  Then he lists a bunch of methods for either determining or controlling the future: divination, sorcery, interpreting omens, witchcraft, casting spells, consulting the dead.  We have long considered sacrificing children to be something horrific (although I would argue that many today no longer do so as long as the sacrifice takes place before birth), but dismissed the others as relatively minor misdeeds by the uneducated.  However, this is not the only place in the Bible where we are told such acts are serious sins, comparable to sacrificing a child.  We must place our faith in God.  When He desires for us to know more about the future than what He has revealed in the Bible He will raise up a prophet to give us His message.  We will know that such prophets are from God because the message they give us will be consistent with what He has already revealed and the predictions which they make will come to pass.

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

March 4, 2022 Bible Study — Providing For The Poor And Studying God’s Law

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Deuteronomy 14-17.

Moses laid out God’s rules for canceling debts every seven years.  First, he specifies that all debts should be canceled in the seventh year.  Then he talks about being openhanded and generous towards the poor.  Jesus was referring to this passage when He said that we would always have the poor among us, but this passage also tells us to act so as to aid the poor.  Throughout this passage we are told to provide for those who cannot provide for themselves.  Earlier the passage speaks about taking a tenth of our harvest and consuming it as a celebration before God, but a third of that tithe should be given to those who do not have sufficient to feast themselves.   It speaks of freeing those who sold themselves into servanthood because they could not care for themselves.  However, it is not enough that they be freed, those who own them are instructed to send them away with the supplies which they need to make a new start for themselves.

Moses also lays down instructions for judges and rulers.  He instructed judges to judge fairly and to not pervert justice.  The passage describes two ways in which justice might be perverted: showing partiality and accepting bribes.  But the passage makes clear that any other perversion of justice should be avoided as well.  The passage goes on to lay out rules for kings, but I think these rules provide good guidelines for anyone in authority.  In particular, the passage instructs kings to make their own copy of the Book of the Law by copying an existing copy with their own hand.  Then, once they have written out their own copy, they  were to keep that copy with them and read from it regularly.  From this study, the king, or any other ruler, should strive to follow God’s commands and not consider himself better than others.

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

March 3, 2022 Bible Study — Those Who Fail To Keep God’s Commands Destroy The Environment

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

This passage starts the hits coming by telling us that those of us who have experienced God’s power first hand have an obligation to communicate that to the next generation, to teach the next generation to love and obey God.  If we take those experiences to heart and obey God’s commands, the land God has given us will provide for our needs.  I love the way in which Moses sums up God’s commands here–love and serve God with all of our heart and with all of our soul.  Another important point which I see referred to from time to time is that obeying God means that we do not destroy the environment around us.  However, what I have never seen anyone comment on is that those who disobey God will destroy the environment around them.  What makes this promise especially interesting is that few of the Laws laid down by Moses directly address our interaction with the environment around us.  I like the remedy which Moses offers to avoid being enticed to worship other gods, and therefore destroy our environment.  He tells us to fix the words of God’s Law in our hearts and minds by tying symbols on our hands and binding them to our foreheads if necessary.  We should talk about God’s commands when we sit at home and when we travel. when we lie down and when we get up.  Basically, we should be talking about God’s commands all of the time, no matter where we are or what we are doing.  A little later while discussing his instructions to worship in a central location, Moses says something which I believe goes along with what I have written above and will help us to talk about God’s commands, and to keep them.  Moses told the Israelites that they should rejoice before the Lord in everything to which they put their hand.  So, let us rejoice before the Lord in everything we do.  Doing so will help us keep and talk about His will for us.

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