August 12, 2025 Bible Study — Obey the Lord and Keep the Sabbath Day Holy

Today, I am reading and commenting on Jeremiah 16-18.

Jeremiah continues to prophecy that God’s anger will not be turned aside from Jerusalem to the point that God tells him to neither join in feasting celebrations, or in mourning the dead.  He reminds us that no matter how secretive we may have been, God sees our sins.  We cannot conceal our actions from Him.  Then he begins a slight turn in theme.  Jeremiah says that God will restore Israel to their land after banishing them to many nations.  In addition, people from all nations will turn to God after recognizing that the gods they had made were not truly gods.  Then Jeremiah tells the people of Jerusalem that if they were careful to obey God and keep His Sabbath, Jerusalem would remain inhabited forever.  So, despite having prophesied that Jerusalem and Judah would be destroyed with no chance of reprieve, here he says that if they were to truly reform and turn back to God that fate might be avoided.  Then in chapter 18, Jeremiah reconciles those two prophecies.  He tells the people if each one of them were to reform their ways and actions, God would relent the destruction He has declared, but that both Jeremiah and God know that they will not.  Jeremiah tells them that they have decided that there is no value in truly turning to God.  Here is how I see it.  Jeremiah started to prophecy while Josiah was king, when Josiah was reforming the religious practices of Jerusalem and Judah to serve God.  Josiah reined for thirty one years.  In that time, Jerusalem was not restored to the prominence it had when David was king.  Before Josiah, Jerusalem had been ruled for fifty seven years by kings who embraced evil, and the people had joined those kings in their evil.  They failed to see that to see the benefits of serving God we must commit to the long haul.  When thirty one years (actually less because it took years after he was crowned before Josiah was able to begin his reform) was insufficient to bring about the power for which they hoped, the people decided it was pointless.  It is never pointless to serve God, but we have to recognize that it may take years to undo the years of damage done by our sin.

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

August 11, 2025 Bible Study — Repent and Utter Worthy Words

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

God gives Jeremiah a prophecy that the people of Jerusalem and Judah have become worthless to Him because they have not listened to Him and have instead chosen to serve and worship gods who call them to practices contrary to His.  Rather than acting to bring honor and renown to God, they have brought contempt to His name.  A little further on, God tells Jeremiah not to pray for this people because they will not listen to His voice.  Jeremiah responds that the problem is that the prophets keep telling them that God will give them lasting peace, despite the sins they keep committing.  God tells Jeremiah that He will bring a special level of destruction upon those prophets, but the people who listen to them will still pay the price of their sin.  In all of this, the essence of the prophecy seems to be that it is too late for the people to avoid the death and destruction which God was bringing upon them.  I feel there is an element of this prophecy which applies today.  When I look at society around us I sometimes wonder if we are in a time more similar to that of Isaiah, where God says that time is running out for society to turn from its despicable sins, or a time more similar to that of Jeremiah, where God says that time has run out and He is going to bring death and destruction to society.

Having said that, the prophecy from Jeremiah in today’s passage contains an interesting follow up.  After telling Jeremiah that he was not to pray for the people because God had determined to bring death and destruction upon them no matter what they did going forward, God tells Jeremiah “If you repent, I will restore you that you may serve me.”  Now the easy explanation is that the first prophecy in today’s passage applies to the people around Jeremiah and this second prophecy applies to Jeremiah.  However, I think the first prophecy applies to the society around Jeremiah, not specifically to any of the people.  While the second prophecy here applies individually to any of the people around Jeremiah.  The society is doomed.  The majority of the people are going to experience death and destruction, but those who repent and utter God’s worthy words, will be restored to serve God.  In part, this second prophecy did apply to Jeremiah, but it applies to each of us.  We must repent and speak God’s worthy words, not the worthless words of the prophets to whom the people around us listen.  We must seek to get the people to turn to us, but not allow ourselves to be turned to them.  If we speak God’s worthy words, when the people turn to us, they will be turning to God.  However, if we turn to them, we will be turning away from God.  If we follow these instructions, God will save us from the hands of the wicked.

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

August 10, 2025 Bible Study — Worship the Maker of All Things, Not a Scarecrow in a Cucumber Field

Today, I am reading and commenting on Jeremiah 10-12.

Today’s passage begins with Jeremiah comparing idols to a scarecrow in a cucumber field (I find that image interesting, in America today we tend to imagine scarecrows in corn fields or pumpkin patches).  What Jeremiah says here bears a close resemblance to what the prophet Isaiah said. Isaiah said that those who worship such gods are blind and ignorant.  Here Jeremiah says that those who put their trust in something other than God are foolish and senseless.  While Jeremiah speaks specifically about idols, images which people have made in order to worship them, his prophecy applies to any man-made thing which people worship.  It may be an object, an idea, or an organization.  So, let us examine our lives and thoughts to see if we are allowing our thoughts to be formed by something or someone other than God.  Let us compare everything we hear to what God teaches us.  If the thought or idea does not come from God, let us reject it.  Let us seek God’s discipline before He becomes angry so that we might live according to what He has declared is best for us.

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

August 9, 2025 Bible Study — God Gives His Commands, All of His Commands, Because They Are in Our Best Interest

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Jeremiah 7-9.

Jeremiah told the people of Jerusalem that if they wanted God to bless them and give them peace, they needed to genuinely turn to Him.  They could not continue to treat each other unjustly and follow the practices of other gods, practices which led to their own harm.  It is not enough to go to Church on Sunday and take part in the worship service.  We need to obey all of God’s commands.  God has given us His commands, all of His commands, because they are in our best interest.  All too many think that they can pick and choose which of God’s commands they need to obey.  They think that they only need to obey those Scriptures which they like and can reject those which teach things they do not like.  They do not see how all of God’s commands are interconnected.  They do not understand how rejecting one of God’s instructions undermines the commitment to obeying all of them.  They preach that if we just obey this, or that, of God’s commands while rejecting others, all of our problems will be solved.  They fail to realize that they are placing a band-aid on a wound which requires surgery, antibiotics, and physical therapy.  I was tempted as I wrote that to give examples of the sorts of things which I have heard people focus on, but I realized that it is broader than that.  Unfortunately, there are people on all sides of most issues who are dishonest, and will use lies and deceit to convince others to take their side.

 

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

August 8, 2025 Bible Study — We Stand at the Crossroads, Ask for the Ancient Path Which is Good

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

Jeremiah continues his prophecy against the people of Jerusalem and Judah, a prophecy which we should take to heart.  God is looking for people who will turn from all other gods and will say in a truthful, just, and righteous way, “As surely as the Lord lives.”  We need to examine our lives and look for the places which have become hardened in doing that which is not God’s will.  We must allow God’s Spirit to enter into us and plow up those areas, breaking up the hard ground.  This comes in reaction to the verse which says,
Break up your unplowed ground
    and do not sow among thorns.”
I have always thought of the second part as being something that happened during plowing up the unplowed ground, which is not wrong.  However, it just occurred to me that we should also keep it in mind relative to Jesus’ instructions about sowing the Word of God.  We should recognize that we are not called to do God’s will in places where we cannot resist the temptation which is present there.  For example, if you are an alcoholic, you are probably not called to minister in a bar.  

That was in a way a side track from my main point today.  In chapter five, Jeremiah returns to the theme about God looking for and calling people to honestly serve Him.  God tells Jeremiah,
If you can find but one person
    who deals honestly and seeks the truth,
    I will forgive this city.
 Although they say, ‘As surely as the Lord lives,’
    still they are swearing falsely.”
Which tells us the importance of being honest and righteous and just, even when everyone else sins.  Just as when God spoke to Abraham about destroying Sodom and Gomorrah, it does not take many righteous people in a society to transform that society.  Jeremiah warns us that those around us are foolish and senseless, they have eyes but do not see what God has revealed, they have ears but do not hear the Word which God has spoken,  Going back to the verse about breaking up our unplowed ground, we must seek those areas in our life where we are resistant to doing God’s will.  We must seek justice by promoting the case of the fatherless and defending the just cause of the poor.  Actually, that contains something that too many miss.  Jeremiah does not tell us to “defend the cause of the poor.”  Rather he tells us to “defend the JUST cause of the poor.”  When you hear someone leave out that piece of the equation it is because they are practicing deceit in order to benefit themselves.  All too many leaders, even religious leaders, speak lies in the name of God, and rule as if their authority derives from themselves.  And too many of us follow leaders who we know are doing it that way because they tell us what we want to hear.  God tells us through Jeremiah to seek out the ancient paths, then ask which is the good way, and walk in it.  Not all of the ancient paths are the good way, but the good way is an ancient path.  All too often, we seek a new way, a new path, and end up following an ancient path which is not the good way.  We think we have found a new way which is better than the old ways, because we have not truly looked at those ancient paths.  So, begin by seeking the paths which mankind has trod over and over again.  Then ask, which of these has been shown to be the good way.  Follow that way, and our souls will find peace.

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

August 7, 2025 Bible Study — God Chose Us Before We Were Born

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

Jeremiah’s ministry began when God came to him and declared that He had known, and chosen, Jeremiah before he was formed in his mother’s womb.  Each and every one of our stories begins at the same place.  God knew His plans from us before we were conceived.  He knew who we would be, and He chose us for His purposes.  I want to note that Jeremiah began to prophecy while Josiah was king, Josiah who was recorded as leading a revival of worship of God.  Despite that, Jeremiah prophesied that the people had forsaken God.  He refers to the people as having forsaken God’s spring of living water in order to dig their own cisterns, cisterns which cannot hold water.  How does that apply to us today?  Many people have chosen to abandon the teaching of Scripture in order to create their own faith.  However, if you examine their belief system, it often relies on things taken from Scripture in order to look like a good thing.  All of those systems, in time, break down as the good drains out of them without a sound basis in Scripture.  They started by picking and choosing which Scripture to follow and as time goes on they choose to reject ever more because they have no basis to accept anything which tells them to do something they did not already want to do.  They have forsaken God in order to pursue their own desires.  However, let’s not make the mistake of thinking Jeremiah’s prophecy does not apply to us.  Let us examine our lives and confess our sins, because if we say, “I have not sinned,” God will judge us.  And one way we have sinned is by rejecting part of what God teaches us through Scripture.  God chose us before we were born for a purpose.  Let us seek to fulfill His purpose, acknowledging that we have not always been faithful.

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

August 6, 2025 Bible Study — If You Think You Are Righteous, You Have Missed God’s Call

Today, I am reading and commenting on Isaiah 64-66.

Isaiah calls on God to d wondrous things once more.  He tells us that in all of history no one has perceived any other god like God, who acts on behalf of those who remember His ways and gladly do right.  However, instead of doing so, Isaiah says that we sinned against God’s ways and made Him angry.  Despite this, He is the potter molding our clay, making us into vessels which serve His purpose.  Then Isaiah switches to speaking from God’s perspective.  God declares that He revealed Himself to those who did not seek Him.  He called out to those who refused to listen because they thought they were too good to associate with those He had chosen.  Isaiah speaks of the blatantly obvious sins committed by those who hold themselves too righteous to associate with others, but I think most of the sins he mentions are metaphors for sins which we all too easily dismiss as not a big deal.  Yet, for all of our sins, God is going to call some of us to be His servants.  He will call those whom the self-righteous think are too unholy to associate with.  God will call them from all nations.

 

 

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

August 5, 2025 Bible Study — Proclaim the Year of the Lord’s Favor, and the Day of His Vengeance

Today, I am reading and commenting on Isaiah 60-63.

When I read passages such as the first part of today’s I understand why some people believe that Christ’s millennial reign has already begun and that eventually everyone will come to Him.  As I read chapter 60, Isaiah prophesies that as God’s people reflect His light they will draw all nations to Him.  My first thought is to interpret this as a prophecy concerning the people of Israel, but I can imagine it applying to the Church.  If it applies to the people of Israel, then we are still waiting for the day when they all turn to Christ.  It it applies to the Church, then we should be inspired to live so as to draw people to Him.  Of course, even if it does not apply to the Church, we should strive to live so as to draw people to Him.

Chapter 61 is the passage which Jesus read from in the synagogue.  He read verse one and the first line of verse two.  So, He stopped after reading, “to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor”.  He did not read the next phrase, “and the day of vengeance of our God”.  I believe He stopped where He did in order to proclaim good things for those who choose to accept His witness.  However, those who reject Him will see the version expressed in chapter 63.  Those who refuse to embrace justice, who refuse to accept God’s gift, will be trod in the winepress of His wrath.  They will be trampled in His wrath.  He will save those who turn to Him, but those who choose to use others for their own ends will suffer His judgement.

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

August 4, 2025 Bible Study — Satisfy the Needs of the Oppressed

Today, I am reading and commenting on Isaiah 57-59.

Isaiah speaks with God’s voice in condemning those who have worshiped idols.  He lists out their various offenses.  Those who have mocked God, and mocked those who believe in Him.  Those who “burn with lust” every place they can find to do so.  Those who have put pagan symbols behind their doors and their doorposts.  I think the prophet this refers to those who put up the symbols of godly worship for the world to see, but hide their unrighteous practices behind those symbolic acts of righteousness.  As part of the Passover, the Israelites marked their doors and doorposts with the blood of the sacrificial lamb, I think this reference to putting pagan symbols behind the door and door posts is a reference to people following the public Passover behavior, but behind it doing ungodly things.  The thing is that the prophet tells us that God has seen our terrible sins, our hypocritical unfaithfulness, but He will heal us anyway.

Isaiah then turns his attention to those who think they are faithfully serving God, but are not.  He speaks of those who wonder why God does not answer their prayers.  He explains that while we may go to Church on Sunday, sing of how much we love God, pray for others, put money in the offering plate, and follow all of the other forms of worship, we go home after service and do as we please.  He accuses us of exploiting our workers and ending the day of worship in quarrelling and strife.  Perhaps you think, “I am a worker.  I don’t have any workers to exploit.”  But, do you buy meat that you know was packed at a meatpacking plant which exploits illegal immigrant labor?  Do you buy goods which you know were produced in countries which essentially enslave the people who work in the factories?  It’s not as simple as saying that we won’t buy goods made in China (or whatever other country known for poor working conditions we might name).  And there is no good way to know which companies exploit illegal immigrants.  Fortunately, God gives us some pointers in positive actions we can take. “Do away with the pointing finger and malicious talk.”  “Spend yourselves in behalf of the hungry and satisfy the needs of the oppressed.”

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

August 3, 2025 Bible Study — God’s House Is a House of Prayer for All People and All Nations

Today, I am reading and commenting on Isaiah 52-56.

I am going to start by writing about my first thoughts on Chapter 52.  To a degree, it reads as if the prophet is prophesying after Jerusalem has been sacked and its residents taken into exile.  Yet, Isaiah’s life ended while Hezekiah was king, well before the destruction of Jerusalem by the Babylonians.  Now, when I looked a little closer I noticed that the prophet also refers to the current oppressors of the Israelites as the Assyrians, not as the Babylonians.  Considering the wording of this portion of the Book of Isaiah, I could accept that this was written by a later prophet and appended to the works of Isaiah, but I see no reason to not accept that Isaiah wrote it.  It seems to me that, while scholars argue for a different author for chapters 40-66 based on literary style, their primary reason for believing it was a different author is because they do not believe that a prophet could have known about future events so accurately (such as Cyrus’ name).  Since I have no problem believing that God could give a prophet such knowledge, I do not see the changes in literary style being so convincing.  Which brings me to the next section which is often referenced as speaking of the suffering servant.  From a Christian perspective, it clearly speaks of Jesus and His redemptive suffering.  For anyone who accepts Isaiah as Scripture it is clearly a prophecy concerning the Messiah, the One whom God will send to redeem Israel.  Once someone has filled the role spelled out in Isaiah’s prophecy of the Suffering Servant, there will be no room for another to supersede Him.

Finally, in chapter 56, Isaiah tells us that no foreigner who seeks to bind themselves to God should find themselves excluded, nor should eunuchs feel excluded.  As I read this, I am going to accept that this prophecy concerning eunuchs is intended to apply to those who are sexually attracted to those of the same sex, as many progressive Christians claim.  However, Isaiah tells us something important about those who fit that category whom God is calling:
To the eunuchs who keep my Sabbaths,
    who choose what pleases me
    and hold fast to my covenant—
to them I will give within my temple and its walls
    a memorial and a name
    better than sons and daughters;
I will give them an everlasting name
    that will endure forever.”
That is followed with similar language concerning the foreigner.  So, we as the Church, as followers of Christ, should welcome among us ALL who seek to follow and obey Christ.  We should discipline those who struggle with the temptation to have sex with those of the same sex in the same way that we struggle those who struggle with avoiding sex outside of marriage, or with remaining committed to their marriage, or those who struggle with other sins.  Whatever temptation someone faces, we, as followers of Christ should walk beside them and, with the aid of the Holy Spirit, seek ways to help them overcome it, just as we should ask our fellow Believers to walk beside us and help us overcome our temptations.

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