September 1, 2025 Bible Study — Everyone Belongs to God

Today, I am reading and commenting on Ezekiel 17-19.

I did not know what I wanted to write about today, and my day was busy so I had to put it aside until later than I normally like to have it finished (note: I write these blogs the day before the date on them so that I can have them published for most people around the world early in the day).  When I came back to it now, I was struck by chapter 18.  Which starts with Ezekiel quoting the parable,
“The parents eat sour grapes,
    and the children’s teeth are set on edge.”
Through Ezekiel God tells the Israelites that they would no longer quote this parable, because everyone belongs to God, both the parent and the child.  Then He says “The one who sins is the one who will die.”  The rest of the chapter explains what he (and He) means by this.  If a father sins, it is he whom God will hold accountable.  If that sinful father’s son lives a righteous life, God will not punish him for his father’s sins.  If that righteous son then has a son of his own, this son will not inherit his father’s righteousness.  Rather the third generation will be judged by God according to his actions.  If he sins, God will judge him for his sins.  On the other hand, if he is righteous God will judge him accordingly.  Children will not share in the guilt of their parents, nor will parents share in the guilt of their children.  None of us will be condemned because of the evil committed by our parents.  However, the opposite is also true, none of us will be exonerated of our guilt for our sins because of the good performed by our parents either.  Further, if we are currently behaving according to God’s will and turn to evil, God will bring judgement against us for our wickedness.  Or, if we are currently behaving wickedly and turn from our wickedness to doing God’s will, He will bless us for doing so.

Going back to what God said to explain WHY each person, parent or child, would be judged according to their own sins: “For everyone belongs to me,…”  The implications of that for how we treat each other are immense.  If everyone belongs to God, then if we bring harm to another, we are damaging God’s property.  If we bring harm to ourselves, we are damaging God’s property. If I belong to God, then I cannot belong to someone else.  If you belong to God, then you cannot belong to me, or to anyone else.  I will leave you with one final thought.  If we belong to God, it means that God values us.  If God values us, we have value.  In fact, we have so much value that He was willing to die for us.

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

August 31, 2025 Bible Study — Do Not Sacrifice the Blessings God Gave Us in the Pursuit of Temporary Pleasure

Today, I am reading and commenting on Ezekiel 16.

Today’s passage contains a metaphor about the people of Jerusalem and the kingdom of Judah.  It describes how God found them as an abandoned baby, took care of them, and raised them into a beautiful woman.  Then, instead of remaining faithful to God who had blessed them with a wonderful life, they turned to other gods and other beings.  Rather than find happiness in serving God, they chose to seek pleasure in things which He had forbidden.  Not only did they seek pleasure in things God had forbidden, they sacrificed the blessings He had given them in the pursuit of that pleasure.  I was struggling with how to apply this to my life and to write something which you could apply to yours.  Then as I wrote that I realized the application.  Let us examine our lives for the ways in which we sacrifice the blessings which God gave us in the pursuit of pleasures which are fleeting and separate us from Him.  Pleasures which God forbids because they bring harm to us, and often to others as well.  God has made atonement for our sins, let us recognize what He has done for us.  Let us acknowledge Him as our Lord and serve Him.

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

August 30, 2025 Bible Study — Rebuild the Walls With Solid Materials, Don’t Just Whitewash the Sheet Rock

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

Today’s passage starts with a prophecy against false prophets, against those who give spiritual guidance out of their own imagination rather than listening to what God has to say.  Rather than repair the breaches in the wall of people’s faith with solid materials, they have patched them over with sheet rock.  Then they have whitewashed their repairs in order to make it look solid, but when the enemy assaults the walls he will break through with almost no effort.  I read this and I think of those who today preach that sexual practices which God condemned are beautiful and of those who preach that being righteous is a path to wealth.  There are others, too numerous to list, who preach what people want to hear rather than call out their sins.  I think of those who are struggling with various mental and spiritual problems whom spiritual leaders are telling that it’s not really a problem.  People who are struggling with sinful behaviors who are being told, “That’s not a sin.  God loves you just as you are.”  The second part is true, and that is why He wants you to stop sinning.

Which brings me to the second prophecy in today’s passage: those who seek God’s guidance while worshiping an idol they have set up in their heart.  We need to examine our hearts for the things we place ahead of God in our lives.  Do we worship our country?  Our government? Our wealth (or, perhaps, wealth which we do not have)?  Is there an ideology we put ahead of serving God?  Do we already know that what we are doing is wrong?  There is an additional important point in Ezekiel’s message to the leaders who consulted him about the Lord’s will while secretly worshiping idols.  It was a message for religious leaders whom hypocrites reach out to for spiritual guidance.  When those who are putting on the appearance of serving God while going against His will approach someone for spiritual guidance, the answer from God is, “Repent and renounce ALL of your detestable practices.”  Really, if you are reading this blog you probably need to put yourself on both sides of this prophecy.  First, repent and renounce all of your practices which God finds detestable (by the way, He finds them detestable because they bring harm to yourself and to others).  Second, when someone who is practicing sinful behaviors comes to you for spiritual guidance, tell them to repent and renounce all of their practices which God finds detestable (don’t forget to remind them that God finds them detestable because they cause harm to the person who does them and harm to others).

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

August 29, 2025 Bible Study — God Will Give Us an Undivided Heart

Today, I am reading and commenting on Ezekiel 9-12.

In yesterday’s passage, God showed Ezekiel the people of Jerusalem doing detestable things in the temple.  Then Ezekiel saw that God marked those who were grieved by the detestable things being done.  God sent judgement on those who were not so marked.   He told those delivering His judgement to begin at the temple.  Perhaps I am reading too much into this, but it seems that God will bring His judgement first against those who practiced detestable things who claimed to faithfully worshipped God.  So, let us be grieved by the detestable practices which are practiced around us and put aside those which we may have been drawn into.  So that God may give us an undivided heart and we may follow His decrees.

 

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

August 28, 2025 Bible Study — What Idols Do We Have Which Provoke Jealousy?

Today, I am reading and commenting on Ezekiel 5-8.

When Ezekiel has a vision of the temple in Jerusalem in today’s passage, he initially sees an “idol that provokes to jealousy” in the temple gateway.  This was a place where those who claimed to serve and worship God publicly took part in the worship and veneration of other gods.  It is not clear what Ezekiel was referring to with that reference, but it is clearly a reference to some practice contrary to what God commanded which the people of Jerusalem incorporated into their public worship.  However, as detestable as God found what they did in public, they had practices in private which were even more detestable.  Those who practiced private sins, private idolatry were the spiritual leaders of the people.  Ezekiel describes how the people of Jerusalem placed some things as a higher priority than God.  In what ways do we put things of this world ahead of doing God’s will?  Earlier in the passage, Ezekiel warned that our wealth will not save us from God’s judgement.  So, let us examine our lives and remove from our lives those things which God might find detestable.  Let us put nothing ahead of God.

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

August 27, 2025 Bible Study — Live By the Words Which God Gives Us to Speak

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

I love the beginning of Ezekiel.  It starts with his vision of the four living creatures and “the likeness of the glory of the Lord.”  This is followed by Ezekiel’s call to be a prophet.  I truly believe that much of Ezekiel’s call applies to most of us.  We have not been called to people of obscure speech and strange language,  Rather we have been called to speak God’s words to people whose language we understand and who understand the words we speak.  Then there is the image of the scroll which Ezekiel is given to eat, the words of which he is to speak to the people.  I have long understood that to mean that God is telling Ezekiel that he needs to take God’s words into his heart to live by them before he speaks them to others.  Perhaps I should state that a little differently.  We need to accept that the words which God gives us to speak to those around us apply to us as much as they do to them.  Let us take God’s words into our hearts, bodies, and minds so that they nourish us and guide our steps just as we speak them to guide those around us.  There is one more part of Ezekiel’s call that we need to take to heart.  When we see those around us doing evil that will result in their harm, if we do not warn them, God will hold us accountable for the harm they suffer.  If we do warn them, perhaps they will change their ways and avoid the harm, but even if they do not, God will hold us blameless for the harm they suffer.

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

August 26, 2025 Bible Study — When Suffering Comes, Wait for the Lord

Today, I am reading and commenting on Lamentations 3-5.

The writer speaks of his great despair and the suffering he has experienced.  In the middle of his deep depression he reminds himself, and us, that God’s compassion never fails and His faithfulness is great.  He determined to wait on the Lord.  He tells us to examine ourselves, acknowledge our sins, and return to the Lord.  If we do so, and call on the Lord, He will hear and come near to us.  If we return to Him, God will take up our cause and redeem us.  Indeed, He has already redeemed us, we merely need to accept His redemption.  The writer then goes on to speak of the suffering of God’s people, which resulted from their failure to faithfully do God’s will.  God reigns forever and will restore His people in His time.  So, let us return to the Lord, and call His people to do likewise.

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

August 25, 2025 Bible Study — Do Our Prophets Expose Our Sins?

Today, I am reading and commenting on Lamentations 1-2.

I find the Book of Lamentations a bit depressing and usually struggle with what to write about it.  However, today as I read it, verse fourteen of chapter two really spoke to me:
The visions of your prophets
    were false and worthless;
they did not expose your sin
    to ward off your captivity.
The prophecies they gave you
    were false and misleading.
This verse tells us that that which happened to Jerusalem which led to the lamentations of this book resulted from the failure of the religious leaders to convey God’s words of correction to God’s people.  Thinking about that makes me wonder to what degree this may be true today.  Once more I will point out that most prophets are sent to God’s people.  So, are the prophets whom God is sending to the Church today calling out our sins?  Or, are they lying to us?  Are we listening to the prophets like Isaiah and Jeremiah today?  Or, are we listening to those like those who argued that Jeremiah and Isaiah were wrong?  We need to be willing to those who expose our sin, rather than those who encourage us to sin.

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

August 24, 2025 Bible Study — Flee From Babylon

Today, I am reading and commenting on Jeremiah 51-52.

The first thing I want to write about is the end of chapter 51.  There it tells us that Jeremiah had written his prophecies against Babylon on a scroll which he sent to Babylon with Seriah, who went to Babylon with Zedekiah after the fall of Jerusalem.  There Seriah was to read the scroll aloud then tie a stone around it and throw it into the Euphrates River.  This makes this seem as a follow-on prophecy to the one which Jeremiah had sent to those who had been taken into exile earlier.  In that prophecy he told them to make themselves at home and seek the prosperity of the land in which they found themselves because they would be there for a long time.  Now, he tells them that they should not allow themselves to be completely assimilated, they should remain God’s people because in due time God was going to destroy Babylon.  We should keep this in mind today.  We should seek the prosperity of the society in which we live, which means seeking to draw them to the Lord.  However, we should not allow ourselves to lose our identity as the people of God, separate from the world around us.

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

August 23, 2025 Bible Study

Today, I am reading and commenting on Jeremiah 49-50.

When I think of the area ruled by the ancient Israelites, I think of the area of modern Israel plus Gaza and the West Bank territories.  Yet this passage makes clear that even in the time of Jeremiah, when the Kingdom of Judah was at its weakest, they still considered the land settled by Gad. Reuben, and half of the tribe of Manasseh to be part of the land of Israel.  That is basically the land east of the Jordan River which makes up the Jordan River valley and is now part of the nation of Jordan.  I’m not sure that has any significance today, but it reminds me that the land of Israel in the Old Testament was larger than I tend to think of it.  The last couple of days I have written about Jeremiah looking like an agent of Babylon because of the way he prophesied the downfall of Jerusalem.  However, today we see that Jeremiah also prophesied the downfall of other nations, including Babylon itself.  The reason that most of his prophesies were directed at Judah was because the people of Judah thought of themselves as the people of God.  In the same way, a prophet today will have more to say to those who consider themselves the people of God than to the society around us, but that does not mean that he will not have a message for society as well.

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