All posts by AttilaDimedici

October 15, 2017 Bible Study — Do God’s Will As You Understand It, Further Understanding Will Follow (But We Don’t Have to Understand How It Works)

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

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

    I have been struggling to put together what I want to write today. I knew right from my first read through what I wanted to focus on, but am having trouble getting it to fit together. Jesus tells us that we need to pay close attention to what we hear of His teaching, of God’s will for us. The more we pay attention to what we understand, the more we will understand. The reverse is also true, the less we do of what we understand we ought to do, the less we understand of what God wants us to do. I have seen the former in my own life and the latter in other people. I want to be clear that my failure to see the latter in my own life may indeed be a product of that very thing. If I lost understanding of God’s will for my life because I failed to do things I understood Him to want, it is unlikely I would recognize it to be happening.

    Jesus tells two parables here about small things having large results, even without us understanding how it happens. We have a natural tendency to want to do big things which will make a big difference. There is nothing wrong with that, but the fact of the matter is that Jesus tells us that that is not how God’s Kingdom works. It is the small things which God uses to change the world, kind words to a stranger, the widow’s two pennies, etc. Small things grow into large things. Sometimes, the small thing we do inspires others to do things for others in a geometric, or even logarithmic, progression. Sometimes, the small things we do inspires others to do larger things. And sometimes, the small things we do open up the opportunity for us to do larger things. Do not try to figure out how the small things will bring about big results, just do them. You may never see all that results from the little things which you do, but do them anyway.

October 14, 2017 Bible Study — Jesus Was a Teacher of Judaism

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

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

    We know from the Dead Sea Scrolls that John the Baptist was similar to members of the group known as Essenes (a Jewish sect of the time). However, what we know of the Essenes suggests that they were more isolationist than John. They tended to withdraw from the rest of society and form isolated communities. While John separated himself from society, he engaged with society in order to call for people to repent. The Gospel writers tell us that John proclaimed that the Messiah would come shortly and declare John as the one the prophets had foretold as immediately preceding the Messiah. Further they told us that John pointed out Jesus as the Messiah. Jesus actively rooted His ministry in the teachings of John. This is an important understanding. John the Baptist was a preacher of repentance distinctly based in Judaism. Jesus intentionally started His ministry as an extension and expansion of John’s. This is important because, by starting his account of Jesus’ ministry with John the Baptist, Mark is declaring that Jesus taught a form of Judaism.

    Having said what I said what I said about Mark clearly and intentionally rooting Jesus and His teaching in Judaism, Mark also clearly stated that Jesus was doing something new. THis is made clear by Jesus’ response to questions about His disciples fasting. Jesus compares His teachings to new cloth and to new wine and the practices and traditions practiced by John’s disciples and the Pharisees to old clothing and old wine-skins. We can easily make too much of this distinction, since, before making that comparison, Jesus declared that His disciples would fast in the future. We get a better idea of what Jesus meant by referring to His teaching as new wine and the practices of the Jews of His day as old wine-skins from the two stories which followed. In those stories Jesus addressed the application of Sabbath Laws to the human situation. It is never wrong to do good. A modern example comes to us from the Las Vegas shooting incident. A man found a truck with the keys in it and used it to transport wounded victims to the hospital. Technically, he stole the truck, but when things were over the owner just wanted his keys back (and asked how the people taken to the hospital were). We should act as the man who helped others and react as the man whose truck was “stolen”.

October 13, 2017 Bible Study — Jesus’ Trial Before Jesus and the Manipulation of Crowds

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Matthew 27-28.

    The center of this passage is Jesus’ trial before Pilate. It is unclear to me why Jesus remained silent while the charges were levied against Him before Pilate. Perhaps it was because anything He said would be used to support further accusations. I do know that Matthew makes a point of mentioning Jesus’ silence in order to demonstrate the fulfillment of Isaiah 53:7. However, for me the key element of Jesus’ trial before Pilate is the crowd. The religious leaders manipulated the crowd into calling for the release of a murderer and for Jesus’ crucifixion. Now, since Pilate was attempting to find a reason to release Jesus it seems likely that he would have chosen an alternate(Barabbas) who was disliked by most of the common people. In addition, we know that Jesus was generally liked by the common people. They liked Him for the miracles He performed and for the way in which He managed to tweak the religious leaders for their hypocrisy. When we read this passage we need to recognize how the same thing can happen today. When the crowd is calling for immediate action, it is calling for something its members would not approve of in their calmer moments.

October 12, 2017 Bible Study — Taking Advantage of Our Opportunities to Care for Others to Give Ourselves More Such Opportunities

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Matthew 25-26.

    In today’s passage Jesus describes the Kingdom of Heaven using three parables: the ten virgins waiting for the bridegroom, the three servants each given a share of their master’s money to manage, and the Sheep and the Goats. We usually interpret these parables independently. The middle parable always bothers me because I often feel that, like the third servant, I have made poor use of the gifts which God has given me. However, it struck me today that in some ways we need to look at all three parables as progressively expanding on the same theme (which does not absolve me of having made poor use of my gifts, but changes the context in which that use is evaluated). Five of the virgins had failed to bring extra oil with them and when the arrival was delayed, they were unprepared. In light of the other two parables, these represent people who start out well but then think they have done enough. The second parable represents people who are offered opportunities to serve the Lord (feed the hungry, clothe the naked, provide hospitality to strangers, visit and look after those who are sick or in prison). So, in light of all three parables, have we used the opportunities to care for others to give ourselves more opportunities to care for others?

October 11, 2017 Bible Study — No Titles Among Equals

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

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

    This passage contains Jesus’ longest and most in depth teaching about avoiding hypocrisy. He begins by instructing His followers to listen to the teachings of the Pharisees and other teachers of the Law, but to under no condition follow their example. Just as He does in other places where He preaches against hypocrisy, Jesus warns us against doing things for show. We should not act so as to cause others to praise us for our righteousness. Actually, there is a part of this that is often overlooked which truly drives the message home. Jesus tells us not to style ourselves as “Rabbi”. or “Teacher”, or “Father”. He explicitly tells us not to call anyone on earth “Father” (I am pretty sure He is not referring to using “father” to refer to our actual father). Jesus starts out His teaching about not adopting titles by pointing out that all of His followers are siblings, are on the same level. Yet despite this, Christian denomination after denomination adopts the distinction between clergy and laity using special terms of address for the clergy, “Father”, “Reverend”, “Excellency”, and even “Pastor”. These terms are all designed to put those to whom they refer on a pedestal as somehow superior to the ordinary person.

    Jesus goes on from there with condemnation of the Pharisees hypocritical behavior. It is easy to look at that and think, “Oh, look how terrible the Pharisees were!” but that is not Jesus’ purpose here. However, Jesus is not telling us, “Look how bad THOSE people are.” He is giving us guidelines to judge our own behavior.

  • Do we come up with reasons why it is OK for us to do things we say are wrong for other people to do?
  • Do we work to convince others to teach the same rules we do, then encourage them to consider themselves a special case to whom the rules do not apply?
  • Do we put greater stock in the superficial expression of righteousness than the underlying structure which creates it?
  • Do we focus on measurable acts of goodness, while overlooking actually treating others well?
  • Do we expend great effort to appear righteous in public, while hiding immorality, hate, and other sins that we commit in private?
  • Do we condemn the actions of people long dead and claim that we would have behaved differently, while following the socially acceptable rules of today the way that they followed the socially acceptable rules of their day?

We can see examples of these things in the headlines today. While there is some value in looking at how after all of these years human nature has not changed, the more important thing is to examine our own lives and root out any ways in which we may be doing these things.

October 10, 2017 Bible Study — Entering Jerusalem Victorious

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

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

    When Jesus rode into Jerusalem on the back of a donkey He was making several statements. The first statement was that He was coming in peace. This aspect is something which the religious and political leaders of Jerusalem missed completely. I suspect that the Zealots, those who supported to violent opposition to Roman rule, did not miss this and that may have played a role in their apparent siding with the Pharisees at Jesus’ trial before Pilate. However, Jesus had another message which no one present seems to have gotten. Riding the donkey was a symbol that the war was over and the king had triumphed. When Jesus rode into Jerusalem on the donkey, He was declaring that the battle was over and that He was victorious.

    When Jesus arrived in Jerusalem he went straight to the Temple where He drove out those who profited by exploiting those who came to the Temple to worship. The fact that no one confronted Him about it until the following day suggests that these merchants were perceived as preying on their customers rather than as providing a service. The following day when the religious leaders did finally confront Jesus about His actions it is clear that they thought they had Him in a trap. They were confident that whatever answer He gave they could use against Him…and they were sure that this time He would have to answer them. I am going to take a slight detour here. I once heard a Christian apologist, I think someone from “Answers In Genesis”, say that when someone asks you for proof that God exists, ask them what they will accept as proof before you try to answer them, because if you do not they will just find a reason why your proof is not really proof. Jesus’ answer to the religious leaders was similar. He made it clear to everyone present that there was no answer which they would accept. No matter where He claimed His authority came from they were going to use it against Him.

October 9, 2017 Bible Study — What Does It Take To Be Great?

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Matthew 18-20.

    In this passage are two stories about Jesus explaining to His disciples what it takes, what it means, to be great in the Kingdom of Heaven. In the first story, when the disciples ask Jesus who will be the greatest in the Kingdom of Heaven, Jesus points them to a little child. But He does not tell them they need to be like a child to be great. He tells them they need to be humble like a child to even get into the Kingdom of Heaven. He then goes on to talk about sinning and temptation so that we generally miss the point. If you are considering yourself a candidate for being the greatest in the Kingdom of Heaven you are in danger of not even getting in! Then later, the mother of James and John asks Jesus to do her the favor of making her sons the two most important people in the Kingdom of Heaven after Himself. Jesus immediately turned to them and asked them if they were prepared to undergo the suffering which such a role entailed. When they responded in the affirmative, He told them that they would indeed undergo such suffering, but that He did not have the authority to choose who got those positions. Then HE called the twelve apostles together to explain what it means to be a leader. In this world, those with authority use it to force those under that authority to satisfy their needs and desires (you can see how this works by reading the headlines over the last week). However, Jesus explains that those who wish to be leaders in the Kingdom of Heaven need to use their authority to satisfy the needs and wants of those are under their authority, even at the expense of their own needs and wants.
    The best way I can explain this is by using the example of two managers in the company I work for. The first followed the world’s model. He had lots of great ideas about how to improve the business unit of which he was in charge. Whenever, he had one of these ideas, he would instruct someone to put it into practice. The other manager spent a lot of time getting his subordinates to come up with ideas to improve their area of the business unit of which he was in charge. Then when they did so, he used his authority and clout to empower them to accomplish their ideas. He worked to identify what his subordinates needed to do their jobs and then worked to get them those things. The latter is what we should do if we wish to be leaders. Identify what those we seek to lead need to do God’s will, then work to provide them with those things.

October 8, 2017 Bible Study — Basing Our Faith On a Solid Foundation

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Matthew 15-17.

    There is something I noticed for the first time about the first story in this passage. Some Pharisees and religious teachers came from Jerusalem to listen to Jesus, then they challenged Him about some of His teachings. There are a couple of interesting things about this. Their attitude suggests that they acknowledged that Jesus’ teachings were part of their tradition. They found little in His teachings which they could take issue with. However, they wanted to make sure that He understood that He had to stay in line with the “home office”. They were from Jerusalem after all, the center of all learning and authority concerning the worship of God. They chose carefully when they challenged Jesus. They chose a tradition which was not at all objectionable, even useful. It was a subtle, but not very subtle, attempt to establish their authority over Jesus’ teachings. However, Jesus was having none of that. He immediately confronted them about another tradition. One which was directly contrary to biblical commands. There are really three parts to this story: Jesus rejecting the authority of Jerusalem and tradition, Jesus establishing that God and Scripture are the final authority, and Jesus teaching that how we speak to and treat others matters more than following the correct ritual.

    There is a lot more that spoke to me this morning as I read this passage, but I am going to conclude by commenting on two more of the stories recounted here. The first is the feeding of the four thousand. It has only been a short time since the disciples witnessed Jesus’ feeding five thousand people from a small amount of food and yet they still questioned how He expected them to feed this crowd. Actually, now that I have written that I realize I am going to touch on a third story in this section. The story about the boy whom the disciples were unable to heal gives us an insight into their lack of faith(and ours) as well. We rarely, if ever, see miracles today like those Jesus performed and the answer given here is that this clearly demonstrates our lack of faith. I think that Jesus’ illustration about moving a mountain is instructive about our failure in faith. There are two elements to that instruction. If we believe that it is important to God’s plans that that mountain be over there, we will grab a shovel and a wheelbarrow and start moving it. That is, we will do what is within our power to move that mountain, even if the task seems overwhelming. In addition to that, we will plan and act as if, when the time comes that it matters, the mountain will be where we need it to be.
    The other story I want to touch on is Jesus telling the disciples to watch out for the yeast of the Pharisees and Sadducees. In the Sermon on the Mount Jesus had compared our faith to yeast in a positive way. Now here He is comparing the teachings of the Pharisees and Sadducees to yeast in a negative way. How does this work? The answer is an important one. Seeking to serve God and follow Jesus can have a positive influence on those around us, causing those who have no interest in God or doing His will to behave better than they otherwise would. However, the reverse can also be true, especially when it comes to ideas and teachings. It is easy to allow an innocuous seeming idea or teaching enter into our thinking and gradually undermine those teachings and ideas that we know are important.

October 7, 2017 Bible Study — Understanding Parables

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Matthew 13-14.

    In today’s passage Matthew recounts some of the parables which Jesus used in His preaching. It is clear from this passage that Jesus used a lot of parables in His teaching. His disciples asked Him why He used so many parables rather than using less ambiguous language. Jesus answered by saying that people hear what they want to hear and see what they want to see. As a result they do not understand God’s message and do not turn to Him for healing. I have always heard this explained to mean that Jesus taught in parables so that only His disciples, who received more detailed explanations, would understand. However, it occurred to me today that Jesus taught in parables because it is easier to understand a lesson explained in a parable than one without the parables. I come to this conclusion because while Matthew provides explanations for the meaning of some of the parables, he does not do so for all of them. This latter fact suggests that Matthew expected that once people understood the logic of Jesus’ parables they would understand the message of all the rest of His parables.

    I was not going to comment on the parables other than the above, but I have some thoughts I want to share today about the parable of the weeds, the parable of the treasure and the pearl. The parable of the weeds is exactly contrary to the saying, “kill them all, let God sort them out.” My understanding of Jesus’ point here is that we should not seek ideological purity within the Church, because in doing so we might eliminate some who would otherwise produce results in the service of God. This is tempered by Jesus’ teaching regarding Church discipline in Matthew 18 and Paul’s writings regarding the same matter in 1 Corinthians.
    Then we come to the twin parables about the great treasure and the pearl. In both parables Jesus compares the Kingdom of God to something which the individual greatly desired. The desire was so great that the individual in the parable was willing to sacrifice everything else they had in order to obtain the object of their desire. Jesus tells us in these parables that we should desire the Kingdom of Heaven so much that we are not only willing but eager to sacrifice everything else in order to gain entry. This is consistent with elsewhere where Jesus says that we must be willing to leave abandon our father, mother, children, or spouse in order to do God’s will. There should be nothing which we are not willing to give up if by doing so we can enter into doing God’s will.

October 6, 2017 Bible Study — The Small Commission

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

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

    Jesus’ sent the twelve apostles out to preach His message on their own. This was a sort of “student teacher” training for when He would alter give them the Great Commission. He sent them only to the Jews, expressly telling them not to go to the Gentiles, or even the Samaritans. He was sending them to those who believed in God and understood God’s commands. He did not send them to those who did not believe at all (the Gentiles), nor did He send them to those who believed in God, but did not understand His commands (the Samaritans). Later, when Jesus gave the Great Commission He removed this limitation. Here He instructed them to go out in faith that God would lead them to people who would provide for their needs. It occurs to me that I have often interpreted the application of Jesus’ instructions to His apostles too narrowly. They were being sent and they were not to worry about how they would pay their way. They were to go in faith that God would provide for their needs.
    As part of the instructions which Jesus gives here He tells us not to be afraid of confrontation, indeed we are to expect it. Jesus gives us some useful instructions on our behavior in these confrontations. The first part is that we are to be “as shrewd as snakes”. That means we are to use our wits, and to avoid falling into logic traps which those we are debating may try to set for us. However, we are also to be “harmless as doves.” Which means we should not let ourselves give into anger, nor should we attempt to humiliate or belittle those with whom we are debating. Finally, when we are brought before authorities to be held accountable for our beliefs, we should not worry about what to say. We do not need to rehearse our lines and/or stick to a script. Instead we should trust that the Holy Spirit will direct our words. This does not mean that we should not prepare ourselves and make sure we know our stuff, just that we should not worry, nor focus on getting the words “just right”. We are to stand up for what we believe in, even if that means we might lose friends, even if our families might ostracize us for it. Being willing to face confrontation does not mean that we have a free pass to be rude, or mean.

    We can learn a lot about how the Church is supposed to work from reading Jesus’ response to John the Baptist’s disciples. When they asked Him if He was the Messiah, Jesus did not ask them to believe based on what He said about Himself. He told them to look at what He was doing and decide for themselves. Let us look at what He told them to look for. First, the physical needs of people were being met, where a disability was keeping them from bettering themselves it was addressed. Jesus provided healthcare for those in need and the Church should do the same today. Jesus was able to provide miraculous healing and I believe that the Church should as well. However, where it does not, it should aid those in need to obtain healing from those who use more mundane techniques. Once physical healing had been provided, mental healing was provided as well. The poor were provided the training they needed to better themselves and just as our first choice in the physical realm was transformation, so is that our first choice in training. When we preach our primary focus should be on the transformation which God offers, but we need to follow that up with training in the habits necessary to succeed.