All posts by AttilaDimedici

November 9, 2018 Bible Study — If We Seek God, the Holy Spirit Will Show Us That Jesus Is the Way

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on John 14-16.

    Many people believe that there are many paths to God, even some people who consider themselves Christians. There are indeed many paths to God. However, they all lead to Jesus. When Jesus told His disciples, “I am the way, the truth, and the life,” He was expressing a basic truth about the Universe. Those who truly seek God will find Jesus, some sooner, others later. The same thing applies for those who seek truth or meaning in this life. The saddest thing I ever witnessed was someone who had been genuinely seeking God who turned away when that search led them to Christ. They had been so conditioned to believe that Christianity was a scam that they refused to accept Jesus when their search led them to Him. Jesus and the Father are one, so it is clearly impossible to know God without knowing Jesus. However, I firmly believe that the Holy Spirit will use the Satanic Bible to reveal Jesus to the individual who is genuinely seeking God if that is where they are looking.

    I was going to go on to Jesus telling us that we can ask anything in His name and He will do it (and I may still write something about that) but as I read the verses around that I was struck by what Jesus had to say about the Advocate whom God will send us (has sent us). Jesus tells us that the world cannot receive the Holy Spirit because it is not looking for Him and does not recognize Him. The Holy Spirit will teach ever greater truth to those who receive Him, but only those who are looking for Him will receive Him. However, we must not only look for the Holy Spirit, we must also recognize Him when He comes to us. In order for us to be capable of receiving the Holy Spirit we must love Jesus and love God. If we love Jesus and love God we will do as they have commanded. If we do not do as He has commanded we do not love Him. But we must be looking for the Holy Spirit as well. There are things which we need to know which are not wholly contained within the Bible.

    I could go on and on writing about what John has written in today’s passage, but I am running out of time. I will wrap up by mentioning that the Holy Spirit will live in us, if we let Him. By doing so He makes us one with Christ and one with God. Which is really the same thing, since they are One. Part of the gift of the Holy Spirit is the gift of peace, a peace which the world can never give us. If you find yourself troubled or afraid, call out to the Holy Spirit and embrace Him. As you learn to recognize that all that happens in this world comes from God, and that God causes all things to work together for those who love Him, you will find the presence of the Holy Spirit giving you the peace of which Jesus speaks. Iam going to use an old story about not worrying to sum up this lesson:

If you love God there is no need to worry because in life there are only two things to worry about: either you are well or you are sick. If you are well, there is nothing to worry about. If you are sick there are only two things to worry about: either you will get better or you will die. If you get better there is nothing to worry about. If you love God and you die you will go to Heaven, so there is nothing to worry about.

This is much easier said than done, but the doing is related to where Jesus earlier told us that those who lay down their lives will save them. The more we focus on doing God’s will at the expense of ourselves, the more we will have the peace which Jesus promised us.

November 8, 2018 Bible Study — Seeking Opportunities To Serve Others

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on John 12-13.

    One of the themes which is throughout the Gospel of John is the idea that people saw the miraculous signs which Jesus performed but still did not believe in Him. John seems to be saying that most of the people who witnessed Jesus ministry here on earth viewed it as great entertainment but did not take His teachings seriously. However, John points out that there were those who believed, even among the leaders of the Jewish people. Most of even those who believed were not willing to say so publicly because they did not wish to face the opprobrium they would receive from their peers for doing so. I wrote all of that as the setup for what I think is the central point of today’s passage and I still failed to actually set it up.
    Jesus tells His listeners in today’s passage that on the Day of Judgement it will not be Him, or even God the Father, who judges people. Rather, it will be the truth which Jesus has made known to us which will judge us. On the Day of Judgement all of the lies which we have used to shield ourselves from the truth which we do not want to acknowledge will be stripped away and we will be exposed naked to the cold, hard light of that truth. The more we allow the Holy Spirit to expose us to God’s truth in this life, the less harsh that day will be.

    Repeatedly throughout His ministry Jesus told His disciples that in order to be great in the Kingdom of God they needed to be a servant to others. In today’s passage He illustrates the meaning of this in a very profound way. As they prepared for their Passover celebration, Jesus took on the role of servant and washed each of His Apostles feet. If Jesus could do this for them, and, by proxy, us, how can they, and we, do any less? Jesus did not wait for an opportunity to serve others, He sought one out. Let each of us do likewise.

November 7, 2018 Bible Study — Listening to the Voice of the Good Shepherd

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on John 10-11.

    The account here of what Jesus said about the Good Shepherd, the sheepfold, and the sheep is a very mixed metaphor. In this metaphor Jesus is the shepherd, the gate, and the gatekeeper (OK, perhaps the gatekeeper is the Holy Spirit). First, Jesus is the gate, those religious leaders who do not come through Him and lead the sheep through Him are thieves and robbers. They do not have the best interest of the sheep at heart. Further those sheep who go in and out of the fold through the gate will find safety and comfort. Those who seek another way in or out of the fold will fail to get into the safety of the sheepfold and suffer hurt and injury when they attempt to go out for food and water. But Jesus is also the Good Shepherd. Those who are His sheep recognize His voice and follow His lead to good pasture and safety. The key understanding here is that those who do not follow Jesus’ voice are not part of His flock and thus will not gain entry into the Kingdom of God. He was willing to sacrifice His life for His sheep, those shepherds (Church leaders) who truly follow His lead will do likewise. Those leaders who are in it for the money and/or prestige will abandon their followers when trouble/persecution arises.

    We typically remember the Apostle Thomas as “Doubting Thomas” for his response to being told that Jesus had risen from the dead. However, in this passage he encourages the rest of the disciples to accompany Jesus back to Judea even though they all might face death for doing so. This is not the braggadocio of Peter during Passion Week, but a genuine call for the other disciples to stand with him at Jesus’ side in the face of perceived danger. I don’t want to make too much of either what Thomas did here or what Peter did later. Thomas is calling for the disciples to stand together with Jesus while Peter was claiming that he would stand alone with Jesus.
    Mary and Martha represent the faith challenge that most of us experience. We believe in Jesus, we believe in God’s power, but when it comes down to it we doubt that He will act. Here Mary and Martha believed that those who believed in Jesus would have eternal life, but doubted that their brother would rise from the dead.

November 6, 2018 Bible Study — Contrast Between Jesus’ Approach To ‘Sinners’ and His Approach To the ‘Righteous”

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on John 8-9.

    The story of the woman caught in adultery is not in the earliest, most reliable manuscripts of the Gospel of John, which means that it was unlikely to have been in the original. However, since God allowed it to remain in the Bible for as long as He did before this was discovered I believe that it provides material we can learn from. At the end, when all of her accusers had left, Jesus told the woman that He would not condemn her either and she should go and sin no more. Thus the passage provides us with a model for dealing with sinners. It is not our place to condemn them for their sins, but we should encourage them to stop sinning.

    In the next section Jesus’ interactions with people remind me of a friend of mine who is sometimes a jerk. Reading this it seems to me as if Jesus is intentionally antagonizing his audience. It is worth noting that John introduces the exchange by saying that Jesus told those who believed in Him that the truth would set them free and that they responded by saying that they had never been slaves. From there, Jesus starts a process where He says that they are not the children of Abraham, but are rather the children of the devil. He antagonizes them to the point where they want to stone Him. My point here is that there are times when it is appropriate to antagonize those who think they are righteous by attacking their assumptions about themselves.

November 5, 2018 Bible Study — Do Not Accept, Or Reject, the Truth of an Argument Based On the Authority of the One Making It

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on John 6-7.

    After Jesus fed the 5,000 the crowd followed Him seeking more free food. Jesus told them they should spend their energy seeking the eternal life which He could give them rather than perishable things like food. The crowd reacted to this by saying they wanted to do God’s works as well. Jesus told them that the only work God wanted from them was for them to believe in Him. At which point the crowd demanded a miraculous sign from Jesus, giving as an example the manna which Moses gave their ancestors in the wilderness. This was the same crowd which had witnessed Jesus feed over 5,000 people from five loaves of bread and two fish. How often do we do the same thing, respond to the miraculous things God does for us by demanding He do more for us?

    When Jesus was teaching in the Temple, the religious leaders sent the Temple guards to arrest Him. The Temple guards returned without arresting Jesus and told those who had sent them that they had never heard anyone speak the way that Jesus did. This led the religious leaders to ask them how they could possibly believe anything He said when none of the educated did? They were using an appeal to authority to dismiss Jesus’ teachings. They made no attempt to refute what Jesus taught. They merely expected people to accept it on their authority, because they were the ones educated in the Law and Scripture, that He was wrong. Even today we have people who wish for us to take it on their authority that Christianity is wrong. Unfortunately, there are many people who accept that argument.

November 4, 2018 Bible Study — Worshiping God In Spirit and In Truth

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on John 4-5.

    I find Jesus’ answer when the Samaritan woman asks Him whether the correct place to worship God is in Jerusalem or on Mount Gerizim interesting. First, He tells her that the Jews have a better understanding of God than the Samaritans. Here He acknowledges that the Samaritans do indeed worship the same God as the Jews (which I suspect that many Jewish teachers of the period would have denied) but tells her that they know very little about Him. Then He tells her that it no longer matters where one worships God. God is spirit, therefore He is not bound to a geographical location. Which means that we can worship God from wherever we find ourselves. Yet there are still conditions upon our worship. He says that we must worship God in spirit and in truth. John does not really tell us what that means here, but we get some idea of what he means throughout the rest of this Gospel. We must truly worship God, not the forms and rituals. One final point about this story. The rest of the Samaritans from the village came to listen to Jesus because of what the woman told them about what He had said. People today can also come to Jesus because of what we say about Him, but, like these villagers, they will not truly come to saving faith until they listen to Him with their own spirits.

    When I read what Jesus said at the end of today’s passage I thought about what Jesus said in Matthew 7:7-8: “Ask and it will be given to you; seek and you will find; knock and the door will be opened to you.” The Jewish leaders here did not believe what Jesus had to say because they were not truly seeking God. They searched the Scriptures for the key to eternal life, but were looking for what they had already decided was the answer. Many people today are guilty of the same thing. Even those who have chosen to follow Jesus sometimes make this mistake. On the other hand, those who truly seek God will find Christ, even if they are searching in the scriptures of other religions. Are we seeking God’s will or are we seeking to justify doing our own will? Are we seeking the truth, or are we seeking to prove what we want to believe?

November 3, 2018 Bible Study — When We Do Not Do Good, We Sin

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

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

The beginning of John’s Gospel contains a very complex understanding of God and His will for us. He refers to Jesus as the Word of God. In a way John refers to the Word as God (that is not quite right, but it is not completely wrong). When John uses “Word” here he uses the Greek word which is the root for the English word “logic”. I am going to try and unpack what I see John as meaning here. First, Jesus is the logic of God, the logic which was fundamental to the creation of the world. In his opening John both shows us that Gnosticism contains some truth and that it gets it wrong. Gnosticism gets it right when it declares that perfection is only found in the spiritual realm, but it gets it wrong by declaring that the material world is inherently flawed (this is a less than perfect explanation of this). John compares Jesus, the Word of God, the Logic of God to light. The Logic of God shines out and forces those who want to hide in ignorance to erect barriers to block It, just as those who wish to hide in the dark must erect barriers to block light. Or to put it another way, just as darkness is not a thing, is merely the absence of light, so sin is not a thing, merely the absence of doing good. When you do good, you do not sin. More importantly, when you do not do good, you are sinning.

When Jesus tells Nicodemus that we must be born again in order to enter the Kingdom of God there are many aspects to what He is saying. One aspect is related to what He meant when He told His disciples at other times that they must be like little children. We must return to the innocence and trust of childhood. But Jesus is also saying that we must start over. That we must give up what we have learned and learn how to live all over again. We must allow God to transform us into a new being, free from all of the sins which we had allowed to corrupt us.

November 2, 2018 Bible Study — Lessons We Can Learn From Jesus’ Death and Resurrection

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Luke 23-24.

    I am not sure that my post today is going to form a coherent whole as there are several points I want to talk about from this passage which are not, in my mind, completely related to each other. I will start by mentioning Jesus’ trial before Pilate. Pilate could find no basis under the laws for crucifying Jesus. Considering how Roman law worked by this time, that is saying something. All it would have required for Pilate to order Jesus’ crucifixion was some evidence suggesting that He was fomenting revolt, or even riots. The religious leaders knew that they did not have evidence to convict Jesus before Pilate. So, they stirred up the crowds to demand Jesus be crucified. The crowds did not know why Jesus should be crucified. They had just been convinced that He should be. When the crowds are screaming for something we should examine the evidence closely because oftentimes there isn’t any. Pilate did not have the courage to stand up to the crowd. Will we?

    When Jesus was on the cross, one of the two crucified beside Him lashed out at Him. That one said, “Oh yeah, you think you’re the Messiah. You’re just another one of those people who think you are too good for me. Well look at you now, up here dying just like I am. If you are all that, why don’t you save yourself, and me too?” The other one defended Jesus. He said, “Oh come on, we both did bad things. That’s why we are here, but this guy, He’s up here because He stood up for people like you and me. The people you’re angry with put Him up here just like they did to us, except we deserve it and He doesn’t.” The first one was angry at the world and wanted to make people pay, even as he was dying. The second recognized that he had done wrong and deserved death. He chose as his last act to defend someone who did not. Which of the two will we choose to be when our lives are on the line?

    When the two disciples on the way to Emmause met Jesus they did not know who He was. They revealed that they had thought that He was the Messiah, but concluded at His crucifixion that they must have been mistaken. Even though the women had come and reported that Jesus was risen they still did not believe it. They believed in resurrection of the dead in theory, but not really. How often do we find ourselves in the same situation? Our theology tells us to believe in some aspect of God’s power, but when it comes down to it, we can’t bring ourselves to do so.

November 1, 2018 Bible Study — Remain Alert

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Luke 21-22.

    When Jesus told His disciples that the day was coming that the Temple would be completely destroyed, they asked Him what sign they would see which would tell them it was about to take place. Most of Jesus’ answer was concerning what would happen leading up to the fall of Jerusalem in 70 AD. However, after saying that would happen He continues on to talking about His return. I believe that many aspects of Jesus’ prophecy here have been fulfilled again and again throughout history. To me there are only two elements of it which represent fixed events in history. The first of those is the destruction of the Temple in 70 AD. The other is His return, which has yet to happen. Throughout history there have been times when the Jewish people experienced great suffering similar to what Jesus describes here. There have also been times when those who follow Him have been persecuted for doing so. Perhaps the most important part of Jesus’ prophecy for us is His warning against allowing carousing or the worries of this life distract us from serving Him and watching for His return. I think that we should keep in mind that this prophecy comes immediately after Jesus praised the widow for giving her last two coins.

October 31, 2018 Bible Study — Zacchaeus Climbed a Tree

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Luke 19-20.

    The story of Zacchaeus climbing the tree to see Jesus was one of those which I learned as a child. The primary reason that we tell that story to children is because children instantly sympathize with the man who needed to climb a tree to see over the crowds. As a result of this emphasis when told as a children’s story we often overlook its primary message. Which is not to say that its use as a children’s story, where we emphasize the importance of eagerly seeking Jesus, is bad. No, the real point of this story is Jesus’ warm acceptance of sinners and how His doing so led some of them to repentance and transformation. In the children’s version of this story we encourage children to emulate Zacchaeus, which is not a bad thing. However, Luke told this story to encourage us to emulate Jesus. Let us seek to show God’s love to sinners, while eagerly seeking a closer walk with Christ.