Category Archives: Daily Bible Study

I am using this website ( http://www.oneyearbibleonline.com/ ) to attempt to read through the Bible in a year. I am going to try to blog each day on the reading.

May 7, 2022 Bible Study — Even If It Is Too Late For The Nation,, We Can Still Inspire People To Serve God

Today, I am reading and commenting on  2 Kings 22-25.

Josiah may be my favorite king of Judah.  He used the power of his office to turn the people of Israel away from idol worship and evil practices and towards God.  He did this not for political power or for wealth, but because it was the right thing to do.  Josiah shows us that just because someone has evil parents, does not mean they will be evil (to be fair, perhaps Josiah’s mother was a good woman and contributed to his dedication to God).  Josiah’s father had been an evil king, perhaps the worst of the kings over any of Israel and Judah.  However, this passage also shows us that having a righteous ruler is not enough to save a people.  While evil rulers led the people to sin, and good rulers led them to serve God, the people still need to choose for themselves who they will serve.  As soon as Josiah had died he was succeeded by his sons and grandsons, none of whom followed in his footsteps.  Josiah knew that his actions would not be enough, but he still did the best that he could and strove to lead people to God.  Let us strive to do likewise.  It is never too late for people to turn to God, even if it is too late for the nation to do so.  I am not saying that it is too late for any nation today to turn to God, but even if it is, we should still make the effort to get people to turn to Him.

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

May 6, 2022 Bible Study — Are We Willing To Accept The Proof God Offers Of His Existence?

Today, I am reading and commenting on  2 Kings 19-21.

I have always loved the account of King Sennacherib’s threat to Jerusalem and  what followed.  Sennacherib, like many conquerors before and after him, became convinced that not even God could stand against him.  He declared that since the gods of other nations had failed to rescue their people from the armies of his predecessors, God would be unable to deliver Judah from him.  Yet, shortly after making this declaration, Sennacherib was forced to turn aside against a powerful foe and then returned to his capital without even besieging Jerusalem.  I am quite confident that Sennacherib died without ever realizing that he had been proven wrong, that God had indeed rescued King Hezekiah and the people of Jerusalem from his hand.  Those who choose to reject God will never see His hand in action.  This reminds me of a story I hear from time to time that goes like this.

An atheist professor was in front of his classroom telling his students that there is no God and he would prove it to them. He stood up on his desk, looked up at the ceiling, and shouted, “God, if you exist, knock me off of this desk right now.” He then stood there for a few minutes then looked at the students and said, “See, there is no God, but maybe you think I did not give him long enough.” He looked back at the ceiling and shouted once more, “God, if you exist, knock me off of this desk. If you cannot knock me off of this desk, then you clearly do not exist.” The professor stood there a few more minutes looking at the ceiling. Then just as he looked down and opened his mouth to speak again, a student from the back of the classroom tackled him and knocked him off of the desk.

The story as I heard it contains a bit more, but that is all the further we need go to illustrate the point I want to make.  Many people would say that the professor’s point was made, but was it?  He said that if God existed He should knock him off the desk, and the professor was indeed knocked off of the desk.  Some might argue that the student knocked him off the desk, not God, but how do we know that God did not move the student to act?  No, this story, if it really happened, does not prove that God exists, but if you told me that you had been the professor, I would advise you to be careful about what challenges you lay before God in the future.  Actually, Even if you are not that professor, I will advise you to be careful about what challenges you lay before God.  If you are going to challenge God’s power and existence, please do so in a way where proof of his power and existence brings you benefit, not harm.

Once upon a time, I questioned God’s existence.  I doubted that He was real and sought proof of His existence.  I found arguments which suggested that He might exist, but nothing rose to the level of proof.  Finally, I challenged God, but not as Sennacherib did.  Instead, I told God, “I am going to live as if You are real.  Prove to me that I am correct to do so.”   Within weeks of doing so, I had the proof I had been seeking for so long.  I cannot prove to you that God exists, but if you ask Him, and are willing to accept the proof He offers, He can.

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

May 5, 2022 Bible Study — Israel’s Downfall Was Because They Wanted To Be Like Everyone Else

Today, I am reading and commenting on  2 Kings 17-18.

Hoshea became the last king of Israel, the Northern Kingdom.   The writer tells us that he did evil in the eyes of the Lord, but not as bad as his predecessors.  Nevertheless, God had the Assyrians take the people of Israel into exile because of their sins.  God had told the Israelites to live holy lives and forbade them from imitating the nations around them.  Yet they did not listen and desired to be like those around them.   There are two different points I want to make here, maybe they will come together into one.  Initially the people of the Northern Kingdom made their own gods to worship, but kept most of the practices which God had commanded them.  But, over time they began to worship the gods of their neighbors.  First, those whose worship was somewhat similar to that which God commanded, but with sexual licentiousness.  Soon, they went on to gods whose worship called for them to kill their own children.   They had been called to live as an example to others, but they didn’t want to be different.  Rather than trust God to care for them, they tried to obtain success by being like the people around them.  This is a mistake that we make again and again, both as individuals and as nations.

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

May 4, 2022 Bible Study — Unity Of Worship Leads To Unity Of The Nation

Today, I am reading and commenting on  2 Kings 15-16.

I have thought about this from time to time, but I do not think I have ever written about it.  Up through King David, and even early in the reign of King Solomon, the Bible references various people, including David and Solomon, offering sacrifices at various places throughout the land of Israel, and does so in a positive manner.  However, after King Solomon there are numerous kings of Judah about whom the Bible says  some variation of this, “He did what was right in the eyes of the Lord.  The high places, however, were not removed; the people continued to offer sacrifices and burn incense there.”  The context seems to suggest that the writer considered that second sentence to reflect poorly on the king in question.  What changed?  Actually, the real question is, why weren’t the biblical writers as bothered by it in the times before King Solomon as they were after?

In Deuteronomy 12 Moses told the Israelites that they were to destroy all of the high places where the people they were dispossessing worshiped their gods and make their offerings at the place God will choose to put His name, and only there.   So, clearly, failing to get the people to stop worshiping at the high places violated that command.  But why was it not a problem for those leaders who preceded King Solomon?  The answer I think is twofold.  First the passage in Deuteronomy suggests that God would not choose that place until after He had given the Israelites peace.  Following up on that the writer of 2 Samuel clearly suggests when recounting David’s desire to build a Temple that this did not happen until Solomon was king (or, more precisely would not happen until David’s son was king, since that writer does not specify Solomon).  The second piece, which really is related to that first piece, is that while the Israelites worked together under Moses and Joshua, they were very much separate tribes until they started to truly become one nation under David.  The process actually started under King Saul and did not complete until Solomon was king (and then only lasted his lifetime).  The Temple represented the culmination of that unification and, of course, that was why Jeroboam felt it necessary to replace it with golden calves at both ends of the Northern Kingdom when he rebelled against Rehoboam.

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

May 3, 2022 Bible Study — Don’t Expect God To Be On Our Side, Strive To Always Be On God’s Side

Today, I am reading and commenting on  2 Kings 13-14.

The writer tells us that Jehu’s son, grandson, and great grandson did evil in God’s sight by following the sins of Jeroboam.  However, we are told that Jehu’s grandson, Jehoash was stricken by grief over Elisha’s death.  In addition, Elisha blessed him by prophesying victory by him over Aram.  Further, God used Jehoash’s son, Jeroboam, to restore the borders of Israel and rescue the people of Israel from their suffering.  On the other hand, while Amaziah, king of Judah, did right in the eyes of God, he became cocky after his defeat of Edom and lost a war he instigated with Israel.  Which should serve to remind us that those who serve God do not have a carte blanche to go up against those who do not serve God.  Or, as Abraham Lincoln is supposed to have said, we should not be seeking to have God on our side, rather we should seek to do that which puts us on God’s side.  King Amaziah chose to go to war with Israel, thinking that God would be on his side, never considering that by doing so he might not be on God’s side.

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

May 2, 2022 Bible Study –Jehoiada Failed To Prepare Joash For After He Was Gone

Today, I am reading and commenting on  2 Kings 10-12.

I like the account about how Jehu eliminated Baal worship in the Northern Kingdom and find the account of how Athaliah had all of her grandsons killed, except the one that her daughter (maybe step-daughter) hid from her, revealing about the House of Omri (the royal house of the Northern Kingdom which Jehu deposed).  However, I have always wondered how King Joash went from being an enthusiastic worshiper of God to an idolater.  For as long as the priest who had raised him and set him on the throne was alive, Joash was an enthusiastic worshiper of God, but when Jehoiada died Joash started listening to wicked advisers and reintroduced Baal worship in Judah.  Joash became wicked to the point that some of his advisers ended up assassinating him.  Today I gained some insight into what happened.

When Joash first became king, he ordered the priests to take the money they received from most of the offerings to repair the Temple.  The passage tells us that after twenty-three years the Temple was still not repaired, so Joash instituted a different way of distributing the money to have the Temple repaired.  In all of those twenty-three years, Jehoiada was high priest.  Clearly, Jehoiada made no effort to see that the Temple was repaired.   This leaves us to reach one of two conclusions about Jehoiada, or a combination of the two.  Either Jehoiada did not care enough about the Temple and the worship of God to see that the Temple was repaired, or, he was too busy managing the kingdom to see that the Temple got repaired.  Whatever the case, we see that Jehoiada’s failure to share Joash’s dedication to bringing glory to God left Joash open to falling under the influence of those more interested in what he could do for them as king than what they could do to make the kingdom a better place.

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

May 1, 2022 Bible Study — The Army Was Just Waiting For Someone To Overthrow Joram

Today, I am reading and commenting on  2 Kings 8-9.

I have read and re-read this passage multiple times trying to find something more interesting (to me) to write, but here goes with what I have today.  The first section of this story is a “confirmation” of the story about Elisha and the Shunammite woman.  It tells us that Gehazi, Elisha’s former servant, was telling the king about some of Elisha’s miracles when she returned to Israel and came to the king to appeal for the return of her house and land.

The account of Jehu killing King Joram and becoming king in his place contains some interesting tidbits.  So, King Joram had gone to war with Aram at Ramoth Gilead. where his father, King Ahab, had been killed in an earlier war.  King Joram was wounded in battle and retired to Jezreel to recover, leaving the army at Ramoth Gilead.  The army officers at Ramoth Gilead were gathered together when a prophet sent by Elisha arrived to anoint Jehu as king.  The prophet met with Jehu in private to do so, and fled the scene as soon as he had completed his mission.  Initially, Jehu tried to pass it off the prophet’s message as being that of a crazy man (we have numerous references in the books of Samuel and Kings indicating that the prophets were often viewed as insane), but the other officers were having none of that.  The point of going through all of this is that it suggests that the army officers were already debating (in their own minds, if not with each other) how to overthrow King Joram.  Note that Joram’s grandfather had become king after Zimri had killed the previous king, seized the throne ,and had the army revolt against him, which was followed by a short war between factions of the army.  The anointing of Jehu resolved the issue of who would lead the revolt against King Joram.  Then when King Joram sent messengers out to determine if Jehu was approaching peacefully, they fell in with Jehu as soon as they were offered the opportunity.  That suggests to me that the military force at Jezreel with King Joram also sought his overthrow.  Since I cannot imagine that King Joram approached Jehu with only King Ahaziah of Judah accompanying him when he did not know if Jehu approached in peace or to attack, I have to believe that when Jehu struck him down the rest of the military with him joined Jehu.  All in all suggesting that the army of Israel had had enough of the House of Omri.

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

April 30, 2022 Bible Study — Small Things Matter, And We Need Not Fear Being Outnumbered

Today, I am reading and commenting on  2 Kings 5-7.

Some of these stories contain lessons about our relationship with God which I feel led to write about today.  Each contains more lessons than what I am going to focus on, nevertheless I am going to limit myself to just a few points.  In the story of Naaman, Naaman was angry because not only did Elisha not personally come to talk to him about his illness, he told him to do something inconvenient, yet completely pedestrian.  Naaman’s servants pointed out that if Elisha had told him to complete some feat of valor in order to be healed, he would gladly have done so.  Which brings us to the lesson.  Sometimes God calls us to do things which are inconvenient and completely unnoteworthy.   We need to recognize that these things may be more important than any action we could do which might bring us glory.  There is a story about a boy who helped a neighbor boy he barely knew with his books one day in grade school, only to learn years later that the boy he helped was planning to commit suicide and chose not to because of his help.  If things had turned out slightly differently the boy who helped may have never learn the difference his actions made.  Sometimes, the inconvenient little things make a big difference.

In the story where the king of Aram sent soldiers to capture Elisha, Elisha’s servant was terrified when he got up in the morning and discovered their city surrounded by a small army.  Elisha told him not to fear because those with them were more than those against them.  Then Elisha prayed for his servant’s eyes to be opened and his servant saw a much larger host of fiery warriors defending Elisha.  In many ways this parallels God’s answer to Elijah when Elijah complained of being the only one left in Israel faithful to God.  On that occasion God told Elijah that He had reserved seven thousand who had remained faithful.  In the same way here, Elisha’s servant thought they were outnumbered by their enemies, but there were many on their own side who he did not see until Elisha had God open his eyes.  However, this contains another message as well.  In this case, the human army surrounding Elisha was not countered by a human army which had not revealed itself.  Instead, the forces of God surrounded Elisha and his servant, protecting them against those sent against them.  So, even if there are not many on our side of whom we are unaware (or if they are too far away to be of aid), still God has the ability to protect us against those who would do us harm.  Let us not fear to be faithful to God, even when we think we are outnumbered by those who wish us harm for doing so.

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

April 29, 2022 Bible Study — God Will Provide

Today, I am reading and commenting on  2 Kings 3-4.

When Joram became king of Israel, the writer tells us that while he did evil in the sight of God he was not as evil as his parents.  The writer praises Joram for getting rid of the sacred stone of Baal, but then condemns him for continuing the sins of Jeroboam.  This, combined with the other places where kings of Israel are condemned for following the sins of Jeroboam, suggests to me that the worship of the calves built by Jeroboam was closer to the worship of Yahweh than was the worship of Baal.  Along the same line of thinking, when Joram consulted Elisha during the invasion of Moab, Elisha told him to consult the prophets of his father and the prophets of his mother.  Elisha’s reference suggests that Joram had continued the worship of those gods, although he had reduced their prominence in the kingdom.

As I read the rest of the passage I was struck by how some of the miracles which Elisha performed were reminiscent of miracles recounted elsewhere in the Bible.  The account of providing for the widow with olive oil is reminiscent of Elijah and the widow of Zarephath, and Elisha raising the son of the Shunammite woman is reminiscent of Elijah raising the widow’s son.  Finally, Elisha feeding one hundred with twenty loaves of barley foreshadows Jesus feeding the 4,000 and the 5,000.  The similarities between these accounts does not mean that they were copied from each other.  Rather, it suggests that there are certain themes which accompany the display of God’s power.  One of those themes is that God has the power of life and death.  And He will sometimes restore life to those who have lost it at our request.  Another theme is that God uses our existing resources to accomplish more than seems possible, and provides to the extent that we can handle.  The widow did not stop having more oil to pour out of her jar until she ran out of containers to put it into.  Despite the amount of food provided being inadequate, the one hundred had enough to eat with leftovers.  In the same way, we should trust God to provide, whether what we have on hand is sufficient to the need or not.

 

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

April 28, 2022 Bible Study — Elisha Seeks To Continue Elijah’s Ministry

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

When he knew God was about to take him, Elijah attempted to go off by himself away from Elisha, but Elisha would not let him go.   Elisha insisted on staying at Elijah’s side to the very end, despite Elijah’s attempts to spare him.  On two of those occasions, other members of the group of prophets approached Elisha and asked him if he knew that God was going to take Elijah that day.  Elisha’s response was, “Yes, I know, so be quiet.”  There is something very significant in those two exchanges, but I am not sure what it is.  Perhaps those two exchanges were included here to show us how determined Elisha was to remain at Elijah’s side to the very end, but I can’t help but think there is more to it than that.  I have the further thought that it seems to me that those two exchanges are related to Elisha’s attempt to convince the community of prophets that there was no reason to send a search party out to look for Elijah, or his body.  Elisha knew that Elijah was gone, that God had taken him away, and was not happy about it, but was determined to carry on Elijah’s ministry.

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