Tag Archives: Bible Commentary

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

November 21, 2025 Bible Study — Give Respect to Those in Authority While Defending Your Actions

Today, I am reading and commenting on Acts 23-25.

In today’s passage we have a contrast between Paul’s behavior and that of his enemies.  First, we have Ananias, the high priest ordering Paul to be struck, contrary to the Law of Moses, for saying he stood before the Sanhedrin with a good conscience. After this, some Jews conspired and took an oath before God to kill Paul.  Some members of the Sanhedrin conspired with them in order to bring Paul to where they could carry out their plan.  Later, some of the chief priests and elders requested that the Roman governor transfer Paul back to Jerusalem for trial because they had a plan to have him ambushed on the way to that trial.  Paul, when he was before the Sanhedrin and after being told that the man he called “a whitewashed wall”(almost certainly a reference to Ezekiel 13), apologized for speaking ill of the high priest.  Later, when he was tried before the Roman governors, Paul clearly defended himself as innocent of the charges brought against him by challenging his accusers to bring forth witnesses to support their accusations.  It is worth noting that Paul was basically accused of angering those who disagreed with him so much that they started riots.  So, we had a high priest ordering someone struck for declaring themselves innocent.  We had other people taking an oath to God to murder someone.  Then we had people who held themselves up as the arbiters of moral rectitude conspire to help those people murder Paul.  Let us follow Paul’s example, who modeled what Peter wrote about in his first letter.  “Submit yourselves for the Lord’s sake to every human authority.”

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 20, 2025 Bible Study — Actually Listen to What Someone Has to Say Before You Judge Them

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

I have never paid close attention to what the elders of the Jerusalem Church said to Paul when he arrived in Jerusalem.  First, they tell Paul that the thousands of Jews who have become followers of Jesus in Jerusalem zealously follow the Law of Moses.  Second, they tell Paul that those Jewish converts had been told that Paul tells the Jews living among the Gentiles to not follow the Law of Moses.  What I had never noticed before was that the controversy was not over whether or not the Gentile followers of Jesus needed to follow the Law of Moses.  The controversy was over whether or not Jewish followers of Jesus should follow the Law of Moses.  The implication of this exchange is that Paul did not teach Jewish followers of Jesus to abandon the Law of Moses.  In fact Paul appears to have generally followed the Law of Moses in his personal life.  Luke tells us in Acts 18 that Paul took Nazirite vows.  Further, a few verses later, Luke reports that some Jews from Asia had seen Paul in the city with an Ephesian Gentile and assumed that he had brought him into the temple (in violation of Jewish Law).  Until today, it never occurred to me that the Jews who started the riot which led to Paul’s arrest may have believed the same thing which the Jewish Believers in Jerusalem believed.  They did not really know what he taught, but they thought that they did.  Let us not be like them, prepared to hate someone for what someone else tells us they believe.  Paul refused to compromise his message just because people distorted what he said.  If we are not called to imitate Paul, let us at least encourage others to actually listen to what he, and those like him, has to say.

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 19, 2025 Bible Study — Receiving the Holy Spirit

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

Today’s passage begins with Paul’s second visit to Ephesus.  It mentions that Paul met twelve men who were “disciples” who had not heard of the Holy Spirit.  These men appear to have been disciples of John the Baptist and only somewhat aware of Jesus.  Although another possibility is that they became believers after hearing Apollos preach before he learned of the baptism of the Holy Spirit.  I am still inclined to think that they were disciples of John the Baptist who had never heard the Gospel of Jesus, but were fully prepared for it by John’s teaching.  It was only after Paul spoke to them that they were baptized in the name of Jesus and received the Holy Spirit.  No matter what understanding we have of these believers (were they disciples of John the Baptist who were only a little aware of the Gospel of Jesus, or were they disciples of Jesus who had not heard of the Holy Spirit?), we see the importance of receiving the Holy Spirit.

Reading this passage, I realized that I always thought that Paul spent more time in Corinth than anywhere else on his missionary journeys.  However, I noticed today that he spent over two years in Ephesus.  Paul decided to leave Ephesus after an incident which led to the Believers in Ephesus to give up their occult practices.  The incident involved some Jewish exorcists being overpowered by a demon-possessed man after they tried to drive the demon out in the name of “Jesus whom Paul preaches.”  The contrast between the way these exorcists drove out demons and the way in which Paul did led them to realize that the power of Jesus was not in rituals or special incantations.  They realized that those things were a form of idolatry which came between them and God.  Luke tells us that they destroyed 50,000 drachmas worth of paraphernalia, which comes out to over 130 years of wages for the average person.  The reason I mention this is that shortly after Paul decided to leave Ephesus (but before he did so), a riot broke out inspired by craftsmen who felt economically threatened by the growing Christian Church.  I suspect that Demetrius, who started the riot, saw what the Believers did with their sorcerous paraphernalia and perceived that such would impact his business in time.  All of this highlights how we as Christians need to subordinate our economic interests to 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 18, 2025 Bible Study — Paul and Apollos, Two Different Conversion Stories

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

Luke tells us that when Paul was in Thessalonica, some of the Jews were jealous of him, but were unable to muster enough supporters through reason to interfere with his ministry.  So, they found some discontents in the marketplace and started a riot.  When Paul went to Berea, it was only when some of his opponents from Thessalonica followed him there to stir up trouble that he had any problems there.  In Athens, Paul debated the philosophers of Athens and gained a few converts.  In Corinth, again some of the Jews opposed Paul and brought him before the courts, but the court administrator refused to hear the case.  From Corinth, Paul went to Ephesus and appears to have spent only a day or two there before moving on.  In most of the cities where Paul was forced to move on due to violence, his companions were able to stay to wrap things up before following him.  As we read the Book of Acts, it becomes clear that Paul courted confrontation.  That does not mean that he was wrong.  Paul’s willingness to aggressively preach in the face of opposition helped to spread the Gospel.  Of course, many of us are called to be less confrontational as well, supporting those whose style produces hostility in those who do wish to stop the spread of the Gospel.

I wrote more on that than I intended because I think we do not give Apollos enough attention.  As I read this passage, Apollos had learned about Jesus and understood what He taught without being brought into the Church.  Apollos appears to be a kind of counterpoint to Paul.  When Paul, as a faithful Jew, learned of Jesus, he was angered and offended by what he heard, only becoming a follower after being directly confronted by Jesus.  Apollos, on the other hand, when he heard of Jesus examined the Scriptures and found Jesus there.  When he learned about Jesus, Apollos did not join the Body of Believers, apparently considering them just Jews as he viewed himself.  Yet, he went out and preached the Gospel, apparently accurately despite not receiving a thorough training in it.  Paul came to faith in Christ because Jesus appeared to him.  Apollos came to faith by studying the Old Testament Scripture.  Both were thoroughly trained in those Scriptures and used that knowledge to bring others to Christ.

 

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 17, 2025 Bible Study — The Jerusalem Council

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

When Paul and Barnabas got back to Antioch in Syria they got into an argument with some people who had come from Jerusalem who were teaching that the Gentile Believers needed to be baptized.  The fact that Luke refers to those who taught circumcision here as “certain people” suggests that perhaps he did not consider them Believers.  In any case, the debate got so heated that the Church in Antioch decided to send Paul and Barnabas to Jerusalem for guidance from the Church there.  The first thing we see here is that the Church in Antioch chose to be held accountable to the larger Church body by seeking guidance on a disputed doctrine from those who had been Believers longer than they.  In Jerusalem the apostles and Church elders gathered to discuss this controversy.  Some initially argued that Gentiles needed to be circumcised and obey the rest of the Law of Moses.  Then Peter got up and argued against that, citing his experience at Cornelius’ house and the vision which preceded it.  After Peter spoke they listened to Paul and Barnabas relate what they had witnessed among the Gentiles.  Finally, James got up and gave his judgement on the issue that the Gentiles did not need to be circumcised.  James bases this judgement on both the testimony of Peter, Paul and Barnabas regarding the working of the Holy Spirit among the Gentiles and on the words of the prophets saying that Gentiles would bear God’s name.  The important thing about this decision is that the Church debated and prayed about it and then made a definitive decision about it.  We in the Church today need to follow this example on controversial topics.

Now I want to bring up that Luke tells us that when Paul asked Timothy to join him in his journey, he had Timothy circumcised.  Paul got Timothy to be circumcised because the Jews in that area knew that Timothy’s father was not a Jew.  Since Paul was one of the champions of the decision to not require Gentiles to follow the Law of Moses, the fact that he had Timothy circumcised is noteworthy.  It gives us insight into Paul’s desire to work with people as he found them.  Since the Jews would view Timothy, as the son of a Jewish woman, as a Jew, Paul had Timothy follow the prescription of the Law of Moses to be circumcised.  Which reflects on what Paul later writes about being all things to all people.

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 16, 2025 Bible Study — Barnabas Brought Saul to Antioch to Teach the Old Testament to the Gentile Converts

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

Reading today’s account is interesting.  We do not exactly know how long it was between Peter baptizing Cornelius’ household and the believers from Cyprus and Cyrene preaching to Gentiles in Antioch.  However, it is apparent that even after the Jerusalem Church recognized that the Gospel was for the Gentiles as well as the Jews it took some time for the Believers to begin reaching out to them.  The Church in Jerusalem sent Barnabas to teach these new Believers the basics of what Jesus taught.  Once Barnabas had given them a crash course, he realized they needed a deeper grounding in what we call the Old Testament than he felt able to provide.  So, he went to Tarsus to get Saul, who had been a student of Gamaliel.  Here is the thing: these new converts did not know anything about the Old Testament.  So, Barnabas, one of the men responsible for the early Church realizing that the Gentile converts did not need to follow the entirety of Mosaic Law (r even most of it), went and got Saul, the other one of the men responsible for that, to teach them the Old Testament.  Those who think we can follow Jesus without learning what the Old Testament says about God, have not actually read the New Testament either.

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