December 1, 2025 Bible Study — Our God-Given Skills and Abilities Are Useless if We Do Not Love Others

Today, I am reading and commenting on 1 Corinthians 12-14.

In today’s passage Paul speaks of Gifts of the Spirit and our worship services.  He begins by pointing out that no one will be inspired by the Holy Spirit to speak against Jesus.  On the other hand, anyone who is inspired by a spirit to say that Jesus is Lord the spirit they are inspired by is the Holy Spirit.  Knowing this goes a long way towards identifying if the spirit which is bringing us revelation comes from God or the Adversary.  Then Paul begins writing about spiritual gifts by talking about three things.  I believe he does so because the things which the Holy Spirit brings us fall into different categories depending on the context.  Here Paul writes that there are different kinds of gifts, and different kinds of service, and different kinds of working, but all of them come from God.  The gifts are all distributed by the same Holy Spirit, the different kinds of service are all in service to the same Lord, and the different kinds of working are the work of the same God.  I could make this whole study about the implications of what Paul is writing there, but there are other points which I would rather write about today.

Paul then uses a metaphor to help us understand how these gifts work in the Church.  He writes that just as the different parts of the body have different functions, so to do the different members of the Church have different gifts from the Holy Spirit.  And the Church, which is the Body of Christ, needs each of those gifts as much as our own bodies need the different parts.  Just as the eye needs the hand to be part of the body, so to do those who have the more “glorious” gifts need the parts which seem less glorious.  The man with the gift to move hearts with his oratory and speech needs the usher and the janitor.  I love the way in which Paul, on one hand, calls on those who might see the gifts they have been given as making them more important to the Church than others as no better than anyone else. And, on the other hand, tells those who might think that their gift makes them unimportant that they are just as crucial to the Church as anyone else.  Paul points out that our bodies need both eyes and ears, and hands and feet.  He even points out that we take special care of the parts of the body which do things we do not talk about in polite society.  In the same way, we in the Church need to make sure we take special care of the members whose gifts lead them to the jobs we kind of wish weren’t necessary (like janitor).

I’ve already gone longer than I prefer, but I cannot conclude without mentioning how love interacts with the other gifts of the Spirit.  First, we often associate the thirteenth chapter with marriage (something I think would surprise Paul), but here Paul points out that love is a gift of the Spirit.  In fact, he tells us that it is the most important gift of the Spirit, one of the three most important gifts which the Spirit gives to each of us (or does if we are willing to accept them).  Those three gifts are faith, hope, and love.  They are more important than any other gifts of the Spirit.  Without them, especially without love, the other gifts of the Spirit have no value whatsoever.  In fact, no skill or ability we possess has any value if we do not exercise it with the love which comes from God.

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

I have created a Patreon page for those who would like to support me in writing these blog posts every day: https://patreon.com/AttilaSoldus

November 30, 2025 Bible Study — Using Our Freedom to Build up Others

Today, I am reading and commenting on 1 Corinthians 9-11.

Yesterday I wrote about how Paul writes that we as Christians are free to do anything, but that we should not do those things which are not beneficial.  In today’s passage, Paul expands on that theme.  He starts today’s passage by writing about the fact that he has the right as an apostle to be receive support for his living expenses from the Corinthian believers but chooses not to exercise that right.  He uses this as a lead in to further discussion about our freedom in Christ and how we should behave.  He writes about how we need to exercise self-discipline in order to get the prize after which we seek.  He gives himself as an example of such self-discipline.  I always find it challenging to explain what Paul is saying in this because it is too easy to understand what he writes here as contradicting to what he writes elsewhere about salvation being wholly a product of God’s grace.

Paul writes, again, that everything is permissible but not everything is beneficial or constructive.  We should choose our actions not by considering what is good for us, but rather what is good for those around us.  He illustrates his point here by talking about eating meat offered to idols.  He tells us that we should feel free to eat meat which we know was offered to idols.  However, if someone makes a point of telling us the meat was offered to idols we should then abstain from eating it.  There are two categories of people who would make a point of telling us that meat was offered to idols: fellow Believers who think that eating meat offered to idols is taking part in idol worship and non-believers who think that if we eat meat offered to idols we are joining in their idolatry.  In the former case, if we eat the meat after they told us, they might also eat and in doing so actually take part in the worship of the idol (since they believe that eating that meat is taking part in the worship of that idol).  In the latter case, if we eat the meat which they told us had been offered to idols they might believe that they can continue to worship their idols while following Jesus.  A similar problem can occur when we drink alcohol.  If we drink alcohol in front of a recovering alcoholic, they might feel compelled to join us and fall back into their dependency.  So, there are many behaviors which are acceptable for us to take part in as Christians, but we must make sure that we do not exercise our freedom in such a way as to lead others into sin.  In fact, we should exercise self-discipline in such a way as to use our freedom to bring others to Christ and to build up those who already strive to serve Him.

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

I have created a Patreon page for those who would like to support me in writing these blog posts every day: https://patreon.com/AttilaSoldus

November 29, 2025 Bible Study — Christians Are Not Called to Judge Those Outside of the Church

Today, I am reading and commenting on 1 Corinthians 5-8.

Today’s passage begins with Paul addressing an issue in the Corinthian Church which someone had brought to his attention.  From that he goes on to two topics which I am going to write about today.  In addressing the issue, he reminds the Corinthians that he had previously written to them that they should not associate with sexually immoral people.  He clarifies that by telling them that he was not referring to unbelievers when he wrote that, but to those who claim to be Believers.  He expands the list of behaviors which are unacceptable among Believers: sexually immoral, greedy, an idolater, slanderer, a drunkard, or a swindler.  Paul added those other things to what he was writing because as humans we often focus on sexual immorality as wrong while looking the other way to those other things (I will note that our society often focuses on some of those other things and looks the other way to sexual immorality).

Paul then concludes addressing that issue by saying that it is not our business to judge those outside of the Church, but that we are called to judge those inside it.  Which brings him to the next topic.  If we have a legal dispute with another Believer, we should not take it to the courts.  Rather, we should take it to someone in the Church.  In fact, he tells us that it would be better to allow ourselves to be wronged rather than take a dispute to the government courts to be heard by unbelievers, to be judged by standards which are not God’s.  So, if you have a contract with a fellow Believer and you believe that they have violated that contract, you should ask someone in the Church to judge between the two of you.  If they will not accept that mediation, let the matter drop and take the loss.  Paul accuses those who sue their fellow Believers of cheating and doing wrong.  I see all too many cases today of people who call themselves Christian taking their fellow Christian to court.

Once Paul has finished that he turns to another topic which grows out of that issue which he addressed at the beginning of today’s passage: sexual immorality.  Although, I think that his main point about sexual immorality can be applied to other issues as well.  He responds to those who claim that they are free to do anything, by acknowledging that they are correct.  In Christ we are indeed free to do anything.  However, not everything is beneficial and we should not do things which are not beneficial.  This is a rule which applies to many behaviors.  Paul goes on to point out that not only is sexual immorality nor beneficial, but that it actually harms our relationship with God.  As he writes about that he gives us a lesson which helps us understand why sexual immorality is wrong.  Paul points out that when we have sexual relations with someone it unites us to that person in some way.  I once heard this explained as, if we have sex with someone and then move on we are tearing off a piece of ourselves and leaving it behind (and conversely, tearing off a piece of them and taking it with us).  Each time we do this with another person we diminish ourselves.  Paul even explains why we tend to put higher emphasis on sexual sins than on sins such as greed.  Sexual immorality involves all aspects of ourselves.  It involves our bodies, our souls, and our spirits.

There is much more I am tempted to write on this, but that is enough for today.

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

I have created a Patreon page for those who would like to support me in writing these blog posts every day: https://patreon.com/AttilaSoldus

November 28, 2025 Bible Study — God Uses What This World Sees as Foolish and Weak to Display His Wisdom and Power

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

As I read this passage the first thing I wanted to write about was when Paul wrote that the message of the cross is foolishness to those who do not put their faith in Christ.  That is what I want to primarily focus on.  However, as I read in depth to get my thoughts together I noticed that Paul introduces that by writing: “For the message of the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God.”  The thing which I noticed was the word “For”.  That means that what he is about to write provides an explanation for what he just finished writing.  Paul had just finished writing that Christians should not allow themselves be divided because of their understandings of the teachings of different leaders, he even includes those who claim to follow Jesus directly but then divide themselves who follow Jesus according to the teachings of various other leaders of the Church.  So, why should we not allow our understandings of the teachings of particular leaders divide us from other Believers?  Because the Gospel message, the Good News of Jesus, is foolishness, and attempting to separate ourselves out from others by certain teachings is an attempt to appeal to human wisdom.  Some want miraculous signs and others want wise arguments.  Both find the idea that God’s power is displayed in Jesus’ death on the cross to be foolishness.  Nevertheless, God’s power is truly displayed in that event.  God does indeed give us wisdom, but it is not wisdom which is understood by those of this world.  God uses our weakness, and our foolishness (as understood by those of this world), to display His power and His wisdom.  Only by listening to God’s Spirit can we begin to understand God’s wisdom.

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

I have created a Patreon page for those who would like to support me in writing these blog posts every day: https://patreon.com/AttilaSoldus

November 27, 2025 Bible Study — Bear With the Failings of the Weak in Order to Please Others Rather Than Ourselves

Today, I am reading and commenting on Romans 15-16.

Today’s passage begins with Paul writing that the strong should bear with the failings of the weak.  He is restating what he wrote at the beginning of chapter 14, that we should accept the one whose faith is weak without quarreling over “disputable matters.”  With that context, Paul tells us that we should please our neighbors for their own good so that we might build them up in their faith.  We should accept one another just as Christ accepts us.  We should serve each other.  Paul also writes in his conclusion that we should watch out for those who cause divisions and keep away from them.  So, we should not argue over disputable matters and stay away from those who do.  Further, we should bear with and serve those whose weak faith leads them to follow certain rituals designed to remind them of their faith.  Our purpose in doing so is to build them up in their faith so that they can serve God better.

 

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

I have created a Patreon page for those who would like to support me in writing these blog posts every day: https://patreon.com/AttilaSoldus

November 26, 2025 Bible Study — As Far as it Depends Upon You, Live at Peace with Everyone

Today, I am reading and commenting on Romans 11-14.

Many use the rejection of Jesus by Jews, which Paul references here, as an excuse to be hostile to Jews. or are hostile to Jews for other reasons.  Paul warns against that in today’s passage, reminding us that God chose them as His people.  Paul repeatedly tells us that we should not think of ourselves as better than others.  Here he warns us that while the rejection of Jesus by Jews opened the way for Gentiles to be welcomed into the family of God, Gentiles should not think that makes them better than those Jews who reject Jesus.  If the rejection of Jesus by some Jews resulted in them being cut off from God so that we could be adopted into His family, then, if we begin to believe that we are entitled to be in God’s family, we can be cut off to make room for them if they turn to Him.  There are other things to be learned from this, but the take away which I want to remind people of today is that there is no room for the followers of Jesus to be hostile to Jews.

In light of what God has done for us, Paul tells us to offer our bodies as living sacrifices to God.  In doing so, we invite the Holy Spirit to transform us by renewing our minds.  I am not sure I ever noticed that Paul refers to the transformation of our minds as “renewing”.  Renewing means returning it to what it was when it was new, before sin entered our lives.  So, let the Holy Spirit transform your mind, as I strive to let Him transform mine, into the likeness of God.  In light of the fact that it is the Holy Spirit which is transforming us into the likeness of God, not our own effort, we should not take attempt to take credit for our goodness.  We should not think of ourselves as better than others.  Each of us has been given gifts from God so as to fulfill His purposes in this world.  Which means that we also should not think of ourselves as less than others.  Whatever gift God has given us we should diligently employ it to accomplish His purposes in this world.

There is a lot more worth writing about in this passage, but I am going to end with one last thing which Paul writes here: live at peace with everyone, as far as it depends upon you.  Paul is not telling us that we have to live at peace with everyone, just that we should not be the ones who initiate the hostilities.  And, even if someone else initiates hostility with us, we should seek bringing those hostilities to an end.

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

I have created a Patreon page for those who would like to support me in writing these blog posts every day: https://patreon.com/AttilaSoldus

November 25, 2025 Bible Study — Nothing Can Separate Us From God’s Love, So Let Us Go and Tell Others

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

In today’s passage Paul expands on his commentary about on living by faith.  Here he talks about how we must choose to live either by the Spirit or by the flesh.  If we set our minds on the desires of the flesh then we are living according to the flesh.  On the other hand, if we live according to the Spirit, we will set our minds on the desires of the Spirit.  One of the ways in which the Adversary attempts to draw us back into living according to the flesh is by causing us to focus on the fears of the flesh.  Those fears all too often distract us from pursuing the desires of the Spirit.  That is why we must allow God’s Spirit, which lives within us to pray for us.  We often do not know for what we should pray, but God’s Spirit does and will do so.  Further, Paul tells us some things which will help us resist the distractions of fear which the flesh uses to distract us back into serving its desires.  First, if God is for us, who, or what, can be against us?  Obviously, the problem with taking that to heart is that how can we know that God is for us?  Paul addresses that by reminding us that God loves us and nothing can separate us from His love.  The same power of God which assures us that nothing can overcome us if God is for us assures us that nothing can separate us from His love.  Paul gives us a list of things which he is convinced cannot separate us from God’s love: trouble, hardship, persecution, famine, nakedness, danger, sword, death nor life, angels nor demons, neither height or depth, nor anything else in all creation.  None of these things can separate us from God’s love, neither in the present nor in the future.

As Paul completes his commentary about righteousness being given to us by God through our faith in Jesus, he discusses his desire that all of the people of Israel would accept salvation through that faith.  He desires for this to happen with all that he has, to the point that he is willing to be separated from God for all eternity if that is the price required.  However, he points out that, when it comes to salvation, there is no difference between Jew and Gentile.  God is Lord of all and will bless everyone who calls upon His Name.  Paul then tells us something which we should all take to heart.  First, Paul tells us that no one can call upon God unless they first believe in Him.  Second, no one will believe in God unless they had heard about Him.  Next, Paul points out that no one will hear about God unless someone preaches to them.  Finally, no one will preach about God unless they are sent to do so.  So, there is place for all of us in that.  Those of us who are not yet called by God to preach should do what we  can to support, and to send forth, those who have been so called.  Those who have been sent forth to preach about God to those who do not know Him should do so with all that they are.  Those who hear about God should believe in Him.  Those that believe in Him should call on His Name.  Which brings us back to the beginning.  I want to note that all of us should be prepared to preach about God when the opportunity presents itself.  Not only prepared, but we should seek those opportunities in the activities to which God has called us.  At the end of Matthew Jesus gave His disciples the Great Commission.  Paul reiterates here that we should all follow that command to go and make disciples of Him in all nations, whether that is the one we are in, or another nation.

 

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

I have created a Patreon page for those who would like to support me in writing these blog posts every day: https://patreon.com/AttilaSoldus

November 24, 2025 Bible Study — Slave to Sin, or Slave to Righteousness, You Decide

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

Today’s passage begins with Paul telling us that Abraham believed God and it was credited to him as righteousness.  He goes on to explain that God justifies the ungodly.  Abraham was credited as righteous before God gave him the command to be circumcised, so clearly Abraham’s righteousness was not the result of him obeying God’s command.  Rather it was a result of his faith.  However, because God had made him righteous, Abraham followed the command of God.  Abraham became the father of many nations and all who believe are heirs to the righteousness which God credited to him.  While we were powerless to do God because we were enslaved to sin, Jesus died for us to free us from that sin.  As we were slaves to sin, let us now be slaves to righteousness.  If we continue to sin, we become slaves once more to sin, which leads to our death.  On the other hand if we enslave ourselves to righteousness, we will do the works of righteousness, which leads to eternal life.  Yet, as Paul points out, as much as we desire in our own will to do good, we all too often end up doing wrong.  It is only by putting our faith in Christ and turning control of our lives over to the Holy Spirit that we can overcome the desires of this body to sin.

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

I have created a Patreon page for those who would like to support me in writing these blog posts every day: https://patreon.com/AttilaSoldus

November 23, 2025 Bible Study — We Are Not Righteous Because We Do God’s Will, We Do God’s Will Because He Has Made Us Righteous

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

After greeting the Believers in Rome, Paul begins his letter to them by saying that he would like to see them so that he could impart to them some spiritual gift which would make them strong.  Then, realizing that this implies that he is somehow better than they are, he says that he hopes that they and he would be mutually encouraged.  This reflects an important element of our interaction with other Believers.  We need to recognize that we have much to learn from others, even from those who have only entered into a relationship with God very recently.  Paul actually shows us why that is true as he begins to get into the meat of what he wants to write, even though that is not the point he is making when he writes it.  Paul writes that God has made plain to everyone that which may be known about Him.  So, even those who until recently were far from God, know much about Him, more than they realize.  On the other side, we need to realize that when Paul says about people that they suppress the truth by their wickedness, that applies to us to at least some degree.  To varying degrees we all suppress what God has revealed to us about Himself in order to excuse our wickedness, even if only to ourselves.  Those who persistently seek to do good, will receive glory, and honor, and eternal life, while those who are self-seeking and reject the truth will receive anger and wrath.

If you (and I) rely on your knowledge of God’s law and will, but break His law and fail to follow His will, you(I) dishonor Him.  Each of us must ask themselves, “Is God’s name blasphemed because of me?”  It is not by relying on written code, or even a set of unwritten rules, that we enter into a relationship with God and gain eternal life.  Instead it is by allowing His Spirit to transform us into a better reflection of who He is.  It is not by following a set of rules, it is not by our actions, that we will be declared righteous.  Rather, God grants righteousness to all who put their faith in Jesus.  As a result, none of us can boast that we are better than anyone else.  Also, this does not mean that God’s Law and His will are irrelevant for us.  The fact that God grants us righteousness through our faith does not mean that His Law and will are nullified.  Instead, we are made better able to fulfill and follow His Law and will by our faith.

 

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

I have created a Patreon page for those who would like to support me in writing these blog posts every day: https://patreon.com/AttilaSoldus

November 22, 2025 Bible Study — Agrippa Knew Jesus’ Resurrection Was the Best Explanation of the Facts

Today, I am reading and commenting on Acts 26-28.

The first thing which I took particular notice of happened during Paul’s hearing before Governor Festus and King Agrippa.  When Paul spoke of Jesus rising from the dead, Festus interrupted to tell him he was crazy.  Paul responds by appealing to Agrippa’s knowledge of what had happened.  Paul’s exchange with Agrippa suggests to me that those with connections in Jerusalem knew that Jesus’ resurrection could not be dismissed out of hand, knew that there were facts for which the simplest explanation was that Jesus had indeed risen from the dead.  Agrippa was not ready to accept the implications of believing that Jesus had risen from the dead, but he did not dismiss the claim as crazy.  In many ways, Agrippa’s unwillingness to accept Christ is one of the saddest things we read in the Bible.  In his heart, Agrippa knew the truth, but was unwilling to give up the privileges of his life to follow Jesus.  Nevertheless let us be like Paul and never stop trying to bring people to the Lord.

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

I have created a Patreon page for those who would like to support me in writing these blog posts every day: https://patreon.com/AttilaSoldus