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.

March 24, 2017 Bible Study — Judging People By Their Actions, Not By Who Their Parents Were

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Judges 11-13.

    There is a lesson in the story of Jephthah that I have not heard anyone speak about (although that is not surprising since he is rarely the topic of sermons). In yesterday’s passage we had Abimelech, the illegitimate son of Gideon, who was a bad ruler. In today’s passage we have Jephthah, the illegitimate son of Gilead, who was a good leader (or, at least, not a bad ruler). We could easily make the mistake of thinking that Abimelech should not have been trusted because of who his mother was. Yet, if the Israelites had done the same with Jephthah, they would never have trusted him (and to be perfectly honest, that is exactly what they initially did). We should judge people on the basis of what they do, not on the basis of who their parents were.

    There is another thing we begin to see here, or, at least, that I begin to see every year at about this point in the Book of Judges. During the time of the Judges the Israelites were not a unified people. Abimelech ruled over Schechem and the surrounding areas, but not over all of Israel. Jephthah ruled over Gilead, the land the Israelites controlled east of the Jordan River. As you look through the other judges, they also seemed to only rule over several tribes and not all of them. Here under Jephthah and earlier under Gideon we even see conflict between the tribes.

March 23, 2017 Bible Study — Paying the Price for Foolishly Choosing a Leader

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Judges 9-10.

    Once again we see how the failure of a leader to groom his successor leads to problems. Fortunately, the problems are usually not as bad as what is described in this passage. There is also a lesson here for those choosing a new leader. In this case, the leading citizens of Schechem chose to appoint Abimelech as their king because he was related to them on his mother’s side. However, it is even worse than that. Once they had chosen him as their leader, they gave him money to hire men to kill his half-brothers, sons of his father Gideon. The people of Schechem had knowingly chosen a leader without honor because they believed his interests would align with their own. They believed that they would profit from his lack of honor. It was not long before they learned their mistake, but by then it was too late. The people of Schechem chose poorly, and for bad reasons, when they chose to lend their support to Abimelech. They paid a high price for this mistake. It is important to carefully consider the character of those we choose to follow.

March 22, 2017 Bible Study — The Tasks God Calls Us To Can Only Be Accomplished With God’s Aid

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Judges 7-8.

    Gideon’s preparations for his victory over the Midianites is a lesson for us. Gideon’s preparation was designed to make sure that God received credit for his victory. God calls us to tasks where we will bring glory to His name. This means that we will need His aid in order to succeed. God told Gideon to send some of his men home because if he went into battle with that many men, Gideon and his men would have thought they won because of their own skill and power. When we look at the job which God has set before us, do we think that we have the skill and strength to accomplish it? Or do we feel completely overwhelmed by the task ahead of us acknowledging that it is only by the grace of God that we can succeed? If it is the former we are not aiming high enough.

March 21, 2017 Bible Study — The Importance of Leadership

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

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

    The Canaanite king Jabin was able to oppress the Israelites because of the military ability of his commander Sisera and the technological advantage of his chariots. Reading this story we see that there was one other factor which was key to their success, the lack of leadership among the Israelites. When God sent a message to Barak through Deborah to gather an army and fight against Sisera, Barak was unwilling to do so unless Deborah went with him to battle. We do not know why Barak insisted on Deborah accompanying him, but with her present to bolster his confidence and with God on their side the Israelites won an overwhelming victory. When we look at the battle, Sisera’s key force was his 900 chariots, Barak’s was 10,000 warriors. We do not have a record of how many more warriors Sisera had beside those on the chariots (although I suspect that he had two for each chariot, a driver and a fighter, and that was all he had). Barak maneuvered Sisera into a place where he was able to use his numerical advantage to neutralize the mobility which the chariots gave Sisera. This victory was one which the Israelites could have had at any time during the 20 years which Sisera helped his king oppress them. They just needed a leader to lead them.

    When God called Gideon to take leadership and rescue the Israelites the first thing He called Gideon to do was take spiritual leadership. The situation also illustrates the problem the Israelites had. They had not followed Joshua’s advice that they needed to choose a moral tradition to follow as a people. Some of the Israelites worshiped Baal and Asherah, some worshiped God. Gideon’s first step in leading the Israelites to freedom from their oppressors was to lead them to a renewed commitment to worshiping God. He did this by destroying those things which they were worshiping in place of God. Any of us called to lead God’s people are called to a similar mission. We must identify those things which God’s people are allowing to distract from doing God’s will and destroy them.

March 20, 2017 Bible Study — Grooming a Successor Is One of a Leader’s Jobs

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

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

    There are some inconsistencies regarding the timeline and discrepancies regarding events. None of these bother me because it is clear that they are part of the writer’s attempt to create a transition from the end of Joshua to the beginning of the period he is chronicling, a period of time which was not well documented. It appears to me that the author relied on different sources for information on this time, sources which were written from different perspectives and no knowledge of each other. For example, it is likely that the Jerusalem referred to as destroyed by the tribe of Judah was a different city from the one which the tribe of Benjamin failed to conquer, and both cities were probably called something other than Jerusalem by the non-Israelites who lived in them. All in all the point of this beginning section was that the Israelites continued to conquer more of the land after Joshua’s death, but failed to completely conquer the peoples living in the land.
    One of the things we learn here is that neither Joshua nor the judges who came after him established an effective method of grooming a leader to take their place after they were gone. Time and again God raised up judges who rescued the people from oppression and led them back to following God, but as soon as these men died the people fell away and began worshiping the gods of those around them. The entire Book of Judges is a lesson that leaders in the Church must groom leaders to take their place after they are no longer able to lead.

March 19, 2017 Bible Study — What Moral Code Will You Choose?

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

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

    Scattered throughout the Old Testament I see passages which acknowledge that the people of Israel will need to interact with those who do not worship God. Here Joshua tells the Israelites in his final address that there are still many people in the land who they have not yet conquered. Joshua told them not to worship their gods, not to even talk about their gods. I struggle with gaining meaning from passages like this. Throughout the Old Testament I find hints which suggest that God intended for the people of Israel to assimilate their neighbors, while at the same time avoiding being corrupted by them. My interpretation of this passage is that we need to avoid getting pulled into discussing issues framed from the perspective of our non-Christian neighbors.

    In the latter part of his address, Joshua tells the people that they need to choose what god(s) or God they will serve. Here he makes a powerful statement which often distracts us from the heart of his message (I will get back to that statement in a minute). Joshua’s primary message to the people of Israel was that they needed to pick one, and only one, religious and cultural tradition to follow. They could choose the gods and cultural mores of the Egyptians, or those of their ancestors beyond the Euphrates, or those of the people living in the land, or they could choose to follow God. They could choose any one of these, but if they did not choose one they would cease to be a people. This is true of any and every nation, they must choose one religion and the morals that go with it, or in short order they will cease to be a nation.
    Having told the people that they needed to agree on what religion they would follow, he told them that he would not follow their lead. Joshua proclaimed that no matter what choice the rest of the Israelites made, he and his family would choose the Lord. In many ways what Joshua did here is something we are called to do today. Our nation (here I am speaking of the United States, but this is true of many other nations as well) no longer agrees on a single set of basic moral principles. We need to remind our neighbors that they need to, as a group, choose what moral philosophy they want to follow. Then we need to tell that no matter what one they choose, we have chosen, and will continue to choose, to follow God and His moral code.

March 18, 2017 Bible Study — Creating Reminders That We Are All The Children Of God

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

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

    When all of the tribes had claimed land to settle (or, at least, were satisfied with the land they had, there is at least one passage in Judges which suggest that the tribe of Dan did not acquire thier land until much later than this) the warriors from the tribes with land East of the Jordan were sent home by Joshua. They had been at war for about five years. Just before they crossed back over the Jordan they built a large and imposing altar, one which people could not help but notice. They did not build this altar as a place to make offerings. Rather they built it as a reminder to their descendants and to the descendants of the rest of the tribes of Israel that they were one people, who all worshiped one God. They built the altar as a memorial to the fact that they too were the chosen people of God. There is a lesson here for us that we too need to create reminders that we are all the children of God.

March 17, 2017 Bible Study — Final Land Assignments

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

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

    After the tribes of Reuben, Gad, Judah, Ephraim, and Manasseh had taken control of the land designated to them (at least to some degree), there were still seven tribes which had not taken any land. Joshua asked them to send out scouts into the remaining land so that he could divide it up among them. When they returned, it was discovered that there was some land within that given to the tribe of Judah which had not been claimed. That land was given to the tribe of Simeon. Which means that the tribe of Simeon was within what later became the Kingdom of Judah. This is yet another example of what I said yesterday about how reading these passages about how the land was divided up can provide us insight into things which happened later.

March 16, 2017 Bible Study

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

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

    I struggle to know what to make of today’s passage. It is primarily a list of the territory given to some of the tribes. This is useful information for later when we read about the Philistines in Ekron and Ashdod, cities which were part of the land given to the tribe of Judah. There is also the story of how Caleb offered his daughter in marriage to the man who led the attack against one of the towns in his territory(the story gives us no idea of her age at the time, but it seems likely that Caleb was no longer young when she was born). The final item of note is that the tribes of Judah, Ephraim, and Manasseh were unable to completely drive the people out of the land they were given. Every time I read this I wonder if perhaps the Israelites should have conquered only the land they could fully control and then pushed the other people out over time as they expanded, rather than conquering as much of the total territory as they could leaving pockets of foreigners (foreign to the Israelites) which were too strong for them to overcome.

March 15, 2017 Bible Study — So, You Think You’re Too Old To Serve God?

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

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

    The passage describes the Israelite conquest of Canaan and mentions that Joshua was an old man at this time (considering that he was, at the youngest, not much younger than 20 when he left Egypt, he would have been at least 60 by this point). However, the thing that always strikes me was Caleb asking for his land. First Caleb recounts that he was one of those who had scouted the land over 40 years earlier and reminds Joshua that he was one of those who at that time believed that Israel could conquer the land. Despite being 85 years old, Caleb was ready to take the land which had been promised him, land which was inhabited by the people of whom the Israelites had been so frightened 45 years older that they resisted entering the Promised Land at that time. He was confident that with God on his side he would be able to take possession of the land, even at 85 years of age. At 85 years of age, Caleb was still a fighter for the Lord, will I be? Will you be?