June 11, 2023 Bible Study — Fear Of God Causes Us To Appreciate That He Has Given Us A Mediator

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

Every time I read today’s passage I am struck by what Job says in chapter 9 verses 32 through 35.  I know I have touched on it previously, but I want to look at it closer this year.  Here Job expresses a wish that there was a being which could act as a mediator between himself and God.  He expressed that desire after describing how no mortal can argue their case before God because He is so much more powerful, just, and righteous than any of us can possibly be.  Standing in the presence of a Being such as God is, leaves even the most upright mortal trembling in fear.  This leads Job to desire a being which could act as a mediator so that the terror of being in God’s presence would not leave us tongue-tied and unable to speak.

Which leads us to two lessons.  If we truly understand who and what God is, we will tremble and be paralyzed by our inadequacy and sinfulness before Him.  The first step to salvation, to being more than a broken, useless thing, is to fear God with a “hide under the table” sort of fear.  Before we can learn of His love and truly understand it we must feel the overwhelming terror of being in His Presence and feel in our bones the need for Someone to mediate between ourselves and God.  And from His Grace and Love, God has provided just such a mediator in Jesus Christ.  Once we perceive our complete inadequacy in the face of God’s omnipotence, we can understand the love which led Him to become human and come to us on our level.  Job cried out of our need for a mediator, and God revealed that He would provide just such a mediator.  Every time I read this passage, I praise God for sending Jesus to be such a mediator between myself (and every other human being) and God.

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

June 10, 2023 Bible Study — The Lord Gives And The Lord Takes Away; May The Name Of The Lord Be Praised

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

I find it challenging to write about today’s passage because it contains so many lessons for us.  First, some will attempt to belittle our faith and the righteousness which God had given us by claiming that we only have faith, and only behave righteously, because life has been good to us, because God has blessed us.  They will claim that if we face hardship in this life we will turn from God and commit many acts which God condemns.  And, if we suffer hardship, others will claim that we do so because we have committed horrible, terrible acts.

Job himself gives us a lesson on facing hardship.  When he lost all of his wealth, including his children, he mourned his loss and then worshiped God.  He acknowledged that everything he had lost had come from God in the first place, so God had every right to take it back from him.  In fact, in the middle of mourning his loss he praised the Lord.  Then, when his health was destroyed and he experienced pain all day, every day, he refused to blame God, instead choosing to accept the suffering he experienced just as he had accepted the blessings he had previously experienced.  We should follow Job’s example.

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

June 9, 2023 Bible Study — Remembering And Celebrating The Times When God Has Rescued His People

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

I have a tendency to view today’s passage as just the wrap up of the story being told in the Book of Esther.  I suspect that many others join me in that.  We do that because the “exciting” stuff happens before today’s passage.  However, there really is some stuff for us to think about in today’s passage.  The first thing I always think about is how many people of other nationalities became Jews in response to these events.  We should always think about how God’s saving power can draw others to worship Him.

Further, at Mordecai’s prompting, the Jews took it upon themselves to establish an annual festival where they would give presents of food to one another and gifts to the poor in remembrance of God’s deliverance.  They committed themselves, their descendants, and those who would join them to continuing this reminder of God’s goodness.  We should similarly celebrate the ways in which God has delivered us from disaster and include those who join us after the events we are celebrating.  Perhaps we should join the Jews in celebrating Purim, remembering not just when God rescued his people from Haman’s plot, but every occasion when God has rescued His people.

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

June 8, 2023 Bible Study — Learning From Haman’s Example

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

Usually when I read this passage I like to focus either on the fact that Esther had been put in her position in order to bring about salvation for the Jews from Haman’s plot, or about how the Jews of Susa prayed and fasted for Esther before she approached the king.  However, today I want to look at how Haman’s lack of humility led to his evil behavior and downfall.  Until today I only ever really saw part of what the story about Mordecai being honored had to do with the overall story.  Previously, I had seen how Haman’s arrogance led to him being humiliated, in his own perception if in no one else’s, when the king chose to honor Mordecai.  However, I had not realized how the writer included it to show us how Haman’s lack of humility led to all of his evil.  It was arrogance and lack of humility which led Haman to become so angry at Mordecai’s failure to bow before him that Haman decided it was insufficient to punish Mordecai, but it was necessary to kill him and all of his people.  It was Haman’s arrogance and lack of humility which led him to become so angry when he once again saw that Mordecai would not honor him that he decided to build the pole upon which he would himself be impaled.  It was Haman’s arrogance and lack of humility which led him to propose honoring Mordecai in a manner which led to his own humiliation.   So, let us learn the lesson that arrogance and a lack of humility will lead to our own humiliation and downfall.

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

June 7, 2023 Bible Study — Respect And Support The Authority Of Government, But Do Not Worship It

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

The Book of Esther can be tricky to interpret because at no point does the writer make mention of God, or indicate that any of the individuals act out concern for Him.  Nevertheless, I choose to believe that Mordecai was a deeply religious man whose actions were motivated bu his faith.  On the basis of that, I see an interesting lesson about our interaction with government from Mordecai’s actions as recorded in today’s passage.  First, while waiting at the king’s gate to gain news of his cousin Esther, Mordecai overheard a plot to assassinate King Xerxes.  He chose to report the plot to Esther to pass on to the king, and the king took action to thwart the plot.  Perhaps he did so in order to protect Esther from what might happen to her after such an assassination, but I believe he did so out of loyalty to an authority, the king, he felt had been established by God.  Somewhat later, Mordecai refused to bow down before Haman in defiance of an order given by that same authority.  So, while Mordecai respected and supported the authority of the government, he held that there were limits to that authority.  The passage does not tell us why Mordecai refused to bow to Haman, but I believe because he felt that he should only bow before God.  In that view, bowing represents a form of worship.  In the same way, we should respect and support the authority of government, as an institution established by God, but we must resist its efforts to put itself in the place of God.

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

June 6, 2023 Bible Study — Keeping The Sabbath Holy Is Fundamental To Serving God

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

After Jerusalem’s wall had been rebuilt and dedicated, Nehemiah returned to the court of Artaxerxes, as he had promised when he first proposed going to rebuild Jerusalem.  Then after a period of time he went back to Jerusalem to discover that the Jews in Jerusalem had neglected maintenance of the temple in his absence and allowed nonbelievers to use the temple for commerce.  As Nehemiah looked around he saw that they had stopped being faithful to God in many other ways.  As I read this passage, Nehemiah realized that their failure to keep the Sabbath holy played a central role in their falling away from God.  In much the same way, I suspect that the failure of Christians in the United States to keep Sunday as a holy Sabbath contributed to their inability to take a stand against other sins.  The first step in bringing people back to God is for those who seek to faithfully serve Him to set one day a week aside purely for maintaining their relationship with Him.

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

June 5, 2023 Bible Study — Characteristics Of God

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

In yesterday’s passage, when the Jews gathered in Jerusalem to hear the Book of the Law of Moses read after rebuilding Jerusalem’s walls, they responded to hearing God’s commands by weeping.  The leaders convinced them to put off their mourning because that gathering was one of celebration.  So, they gathered a second time to once more hear the Book of the Law and mourn their sins.  That right there contains a lesson for us, but is not what I want to write about today.  When they gathered the second time it was to confess their sins and renew their covenant with God.   However, before I get into my main point for today I want to touch on how this gathering also emphasizes my point from yesterday’s entry.  The version of the covenant this group entered into with God specified that all those who had separated themselves from the neighboring peoples along with their wives, and their sons and daughters who were old enough to understand were agreeing to this new covenant.  That is, this renewed covenant was being entered into by men and their wives on an equal footing.

As part of that renewed covenant they recounted the many wonderful things which God had done for their ancestors, and the ways in which their ancestors had turned from God.  We can learn from this that our human nature leads us to turn away from God when times are good,  which leads to suffering and hard times.  Yet, when we do fall on hard times and cry out to God, He will come to our rescue time and again.  I especially want to draw your attention to the characteristics of God which they describe here.

  • God gives life to everything
  • God gave us regulations and laws which are just and right, and good
  • God is forgiving
  • God is gracious
  • God is compassionate
  • God is merciful

The first two are important reminders for us and the other four are characteristics we should seek to emulate.

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

June 4, 2023 Bible Study — All The People Came Together As One, Both Men And Women

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

I am not quite sure where I am going with what I am going to write today.  So, I am just going to write about a few things which struck me and see if they flow together into a theme.  I will start by noting that Ezra was a contemporary of Nehemiah.  While Ezra arrived in Jerusalem before Nehemiah, it seems clear to me that the two of them being in Jerusalem at the same time was critical to both of their successes.

The description in this passage of what happened when Ezra read the Book of the Law of Moses to the assembled people contains many things which can be useful lessons for us.  However, today I want to take note of something which I never particularly noticed before.  When the passage tells us who was there for the reading, it says that the assembly was made up of “men, women, and others who could understand.”  This struck me because the “others who could understand” appears to refer to children who were old enough to understand God’s Law.  However, as I began to write that down, I realized that the first part of this was just as important.  The people who had come together as one to hear the words of God’s Law were men and women on equal footing.  There was no expectation that men only needed, or were able, to learn what God commanded.  No, hearing, learning, and understanding what God wants us to do is for men, women, and children who are old enough to understand, with no difference in their responsibility to listen and act.  This passage runs counter to the claim that the Bible is misogynistic and that it presents women as less able to understand God’s Laws.  In fact, this passage presents men and women as being equally able to understand God’s Law.

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

June 3, 2023 Bible Study — Nehemiah Made Plans To Overcome All Obstacles, But Refused To Think He Was More Important Than Anyone Else

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

Before I get into my study of today’s passage I want to make note of something I only really became aware of after I started writing these blogs:  Nehemiah did not come to Jerusalem to rebuild the walls which had been destroyed during the Babylonian conquest which immediately preceded the Exile.  Rather, he was rebuilding the walls which had originally been built by those who first returned under Cyrus.   So, when Nehemiah got the Jew started rebuilding the walls of Jerusalem, their enemies, Sanballat and Tobiah the Ammonite, ridiculed them for even trying to rebuild the walls.  As we read on we realize that part of the reason Sanballat and Tobiah thought the rebuilding effort was a joke was because previous governors of Jerusalem(I am unsure what the correct title was for Nehemiah and his predecessors) were corrupt.    In fact, we even see that a significant number of the Jewish leaders with whom Nehemiah had to work were corrupt, or on the side of Tobiah and Sanballat for other reasons.  n any case, Nehemiah encouraged the workers who were building the wall and they continued to work hard at it.  This led Tobiah and Sanballat to plot, or perhaps, just plant the rumor that they were plotting, to attack the builders when and where they were unprepared.  Nehemiah met this threat by making sure the men who had come with him could be clearly seen to be prepared to repel attackers, and got the rest of those working on the wall to do likewise.

In the middle of today’s passage, which is mostly about the attempts to prevent the rebuilding of Jerusalem’s walls and how Nehemiah countered those attempts, we have a bit where Nehemiah learns that the elites of Jerusalem, including himself, were oppressing their fellow Jews who were poor.  Initially, it seems like a separate issue from Nehemiah’s efforts to get Jerusalem rebuilt and functioning.  However, I realized today that this bit in the middle explains why Nehemiah was successful in building the walls while his predecessors had left them in ruins.  When Nehemiah realized that he was getting rich off of the misfortune of others, he immediately changed his business practices and convinced the others who were doing likewise to follow his example.  By behaving in this manner, Nehemiah showed the people that rebuilding the walls was not a vanity project for Nehemiah.  He wanted to rebuild the walls because he cared about the protection this would offer the people who could not afford armed guards.  Nehemiah pushed rebuilding the walls because he believed it was in everyone’s best interest to do so.  Which led those who liked things the way they were, because they profited from the vulnerability of others, to attempt to assassinate Nehemiah, or failing that to make him look like he put his interests ahead of those of everyone else.  Despite having been appointed by the king of Persia to govern Jerusalem, and being the leader who could inspire the people to restore it to being a major city, Nehemiah refused to act like he thought he was more important than anyone else.  We should seek  to follow Nehemiah’s example…and its flip side, we should refuse to view ourselves as less important than anyone else.

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

June 2, 2023 Bible Study — Fasting, Praying, And Planning

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

Today has a follow-up theme to yesterday’s.  When Nehemiah received news about the state of things in Jerusalem, he sat down and wept.  Once he had wept for a short time, he began to fast and pray.  After fasting and praying before God for “some days”, Nehemiah went before the king of Persia, Artaxerxes, with a plan.  Interestingly, he does not tell us he had a plan, but we can tell that he had one because he was able to answer Artaxerxes when the latter asked him when he would return.  Further, once Nehemiah knew that Artaxerxes looked favorably on his mission, he had a list of things he requested of Artaxerxes.  So, when Nehemiah prayed to God asking God to fix the terrible situation in Jerusalem, he did not just petition God, he listened to God speaking to him and followed the plans he heard God giving him.  We see more of the way Nehemiah combined prayer, faith, and thought from his account of what he did when he got to Jerusalem.  When he got there, he did not tell the people there the purpose of his coming to Jerusalem until he had time to assess the situation.  First, Nehemiah went out and inspected the walls so that he would have an idea of what the project would entail before he began talking to the leaders who had been here all along.  So, likewise, we should not just pray about the problems which God places upon our hearts.  We should pray, and sometimes fast, and listen to God telling us what actions He wants us to take.  Then, while still praying and fasting (if fasting is called for), we should begin planning how we can carry out what God has laid on our hearts to do, listening to God’s prompting the entire time.

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