Tag Archives: Bible Study

February 25, 2017 Bible Study — Jumping To Conclusions and Correcting Misunderstandings

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Numbers 32-33.

    The members of the tribes of Reuben and Gad wished to settle in the land the people of Israel had conquered east of the Jordan River. Moses assumed that their reason was because they were afraid to face the people then living in the land of Canaan in battle. However, they made clear that they were perfectly willing to go to battle in the land of Canaan along with the other Israelites, but that they did not wish to migrate across the river. Moses was guilty of jumping to conclusions. It is worth noting that the Reubenites and the Gadites did not get offended when Moses did this. They merely corrected Moses’ misunderstanding. They did not even get offended by Moses repeating that they would be in the wrong if they did not help their fellow Israelites conquer the land of Canaan.
    There are important lessons here for us for dealing with situations where misunderstandings occur. When our motives are misunderstood, we should calmly explain what our true thinking is. On the other side, when someone comes to us telling us that we have misunderstood them, we should take them at their word. In addition, both sides were willing to restate what is was to which they had agreed. Finally, Moses explained the agreement he had reached with the two tribes to a third party in front of them. This final step ensures that the everyone is on the same page about what has been agreed.

February 24, 2013 Bible Study — Think Carefully Before Committing Yourself

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Numbers 30-31.

    I really struggled with what to make of this passage on taking an oath. Here it says that if a man takes an oath, he is stuck with it, but if a woman does so, she can get either her father or her husband to nullify it for her (as long as they were not aware of it before she wants out). That is an oversimplification and turns the way we would normally read this passage on its head, but it has some truth to it. The people for whom this passage was originally written would have read this as a woman not having the right to commit herself to an oath against her father’s, or her husband’s, wishes. They would have been correct.
    Nevertheless, the reading of it I started the previous paragraph with teaches us an important lesson. None of us, man or woman, should commit themselves to a binding course of action without first having someone else (father/mother, husband/wife, trusted friend) go over with us our reasons for, and the consequences of, that decision. This passage gave women an out, at the expense of them having the authority to make decisions for themselves. That is another lesson for us. We can only gain protection from the consequences of our actions by yielding up some of our freedom. Usually, the amount of freedom we give up is greater than the protection we receive.

February 23, 2017 Bible Study — Strengths and Weaknesses In 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 Numbers 27-29.

    The first part of this passage lays out what happens to a man’s property if he dies with no sons. It is a little more complicated than that because the inheritance being referred to was land which was to be given to the man, and his descendants, from land which the people of Israel did not yet control. The situation from a case brought before Moses by the daughters of a man who had no sons. The passage illustrates the importance of having a clear system for how our property and interests will be divided up when we are no longer around to manage them.

    When God declared to Moses that he would soon die, Moses asked God to appoint someone to take his place. Now Moses had a candidate in mind for this role because Joshua had been his assistant since they left Egypt. This does not indicate that Moses’ request of God was perfunctory. God did indeed choose Joshua for the leadership role. However, God did not give Joshua the same authority which He had given Moses. When Moses needed guidance from God, he went directly to God and asked. Joshua, on the other hand, was instructed to go to Eleazar the priest when he needed guidance from God. Eleazar would then consult with God using the Urim (an object which is never clearly described).
    This suggests that Joshua was someone who had a firm grasp of tactics and strategy, and a gift for getting people to follow his lead, but perhaps a limited ability to discern what was the right thing to do in circumstances where there was grey areas. However, it also suggests that while Eleazar was apparently gifted at discerning God’s will in cases where the situation required a judgment call he was limited in his ability to lead people and make tactical and strategic decisions. This division of duties between Joshua and Eleazar is a lesson to those who are in leadership. It is important to know your own strengths and weaknesses, and those of the people around you. Share power with those whose gifts compliment your own. Seek out those who have strengths which compensate for your weaknesses.

February 22, 2017 Bible Study — Sexual Immorality Leads to Idolatry

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

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

    Shortly after the incident with Balak and Balaam the Israelites camped near Shittim (or The Acacia Grove). While they were camped there some of the Israelite men began having sexual relations with Moabite women. These men began attending sacrifices and feasts honoring the Moabite gods. I am going to guess from the context that to some degree they invited their friends along. It got to the point where men were not even hiding their behavior. It got to the point where one man brazenly took such a woman into his tent in front of the leadership of the entire people who were gathered to decide what to do about it.
    The man referenced in this story who was killed by Phinehas attitude was, “It’s my life. I will live it the way I want. There is nothing you can do to stop me.” Phinehas proved him wrong. I am not advocating that we imitate Phinehas, but as God’s people we need to take a stand against sexual immorality, especially when such immorality leads to idolatry. As I am writing this, I know the point I am trying to make, but I keep wanting to rewrite what I have written because there is so much which needs to be clarified. We need to take a strong stand against sexual immorality (and other sins) among believers and yet we need to deal lovingly with those struggling to overcome sin. A clear point here is that the man Phinehas killed was not only not struggling to overcome sin, he was flaunting his sin in the face of the elders (I want to repeat that I do not think that we are called to kill sinners, not even those who flaunt their sin).

February 21, 2017 Bible Study — What Did Balaam Do Wrong?

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Numbers 22-24.

    It is easy to understand why Balak was overwhelmed by the numbers of the people of Israel when they showed up on the doorstep of the land he controlled. The largest city in the world at the time had about 100,000 people and here was an encampment of over 1,000,000 people, or 10x the size of the largest city in the world at the time. Having seen what they did to the other peoples they had encountered, Balak knew that he could not take them on militarily and was sure that they would strip the land bare if he allowed them to pass through his territory.

    Reading this passage it is easy to miss what Balaam did wrong. When God told him to send Balak’s messengers away the first time, he did so. However, the first sign of what he did wrong is how he responded to the second set of messengers. He told them that he could not do anything beyond the command of God, but he followed that up by telling them to spend the night while he tried to convince God to let him do something which would lead them to pay him (I will admit to doing a little reading between the lines here). The suspicion that Balaam was looking for a loophole is confirmed by the angel from whom he was only saved by the actions of his donkey the following day. Even after that confrontation and warning, Balaam still tried three times to find a way to curse the people of Israel. The third time he even tried to bypass going to God, since he knew that the message God gave him directly was not going to have any wiggle room he could turn into at least the appearance of a curse so that Balak would pay him. How often do we try to find wiggle room to do what we know is wrong?

February 20, 2017 Bible Study –Different Actions Provoke Different Reactions

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

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

    Every time I read the description of how the Israelites were to make and use the water of purification I wonder whether the rules were symbolic in order to remind the people of the importance of maintaining purity before God, or if they were practical as a means of preventing the spread of disease, or perhaps some of both. Reading the description of the process of creating the water of purification it strikes me that it might be mildly soapy water or lye water (depending on how much wood ash was part of the ashes from burning the heifer), or it might be just slightly ashy water.

    I am always struck by the difference between Edom and the nations which Israel conquered in this passage. When the Israelites requested permission to cross through territory controlled by Edom, the king of Edom told them “No” and mobilized his army, but that was all. On the other hand, the Canaanite king sent troops, attacked them, and took some of them prisoner when they passed near to territory he controlled. King Sihon of the Amorites refused the Israelite request, but, unlike the king of Edom, he accompanied his refusal with an attack. In the former case, the Israelites turned aside and went a different direction. In the latter cases the Israelites completely destroyed the nations which attacked them.

February 19, 2017 Bible Study –What Are Our Motives When We Question 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 Numbers 16-18.

    We tend to have this view of the people of Israel being led through the wilderness by God and Moses with only the occasional questioning of Moses’ leadership. We know this is not true if we actually read the accounts given in the Bible, but it generally does not sink in. It is clear that the people of Israel had the same jockeying for position that happens in any large organization. From time to time, various people acquired a power base and attempted to usurp leadership over the Israelites from Moses. The sin of Korah and his followers was not that they questioned Moses’ leadership. Their sin was that they did not seek God’s guidance before they did so. They did not oppose Moses because they believed that he was leading them in a direction contrary to God’s will. They opposed Moses because they wanted the people of Israel to follow their lead rather than his.

    This passage is a warning to us today about examining our motives when we question Church leadership. Do we question Church leadership because we genuinely believe that God’s will for the Church is other than the direction those leaders are leading? Or, are we questioning Church leadership because we think that we deserve to be in their position in their place? If we truly follow God’s direction and He intends for us to be leaders among His people, He will cause those He intends to follow our lead to follow us.

February 17, 2017 Bible Study –Focusing On What Has Gone Wrong

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

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

    This passage is about how we as people tend to complain about our hardships rather than give praise for our blessings. The people of Israel complained because they did not have meat to eat, only the manna which God provided them. Moses complained to God about having to listen to, and being responsible for, all of the Israelites complaints. Miriam and Aaron complained because Moses had married a woman who was not an Israelite and was held in higher esteem than they themselves. The scouts, except for Joshua and Caleb, complained that the people living in the land God had promised to the Israelites were too powerful for them. In each case, those involved complained about what they did not like rather than seeking a solution to the lack. The Israelites did not ask God (or Moses) for meat to eat, they complained because they did not have meat to eat. Moses did not ask God for help bearing the burden of managing the people of Israel’s many problems, he complained that the job was too hard. The scouts did not ask God how they could overcome the obstacles they saw, they complained that the obstacles were too great. In each case, they complained because they did not have sufficient faith to believe that God could give them what they needed/wanted.

February 16, 2017 Bible Study — Dedicating the Levites

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Numbers 8-10.

    I am struck by the logistics of the people of Israel as a nomadic people. In today’s passage the dedication of the Levites is described. The first step in that process was that someone (I read that someone as Moses, but it is possible that it was not limited to Moses) was to sprinkle them with the water of purification. We know from an earlier chapter that there were 22,000 Levite males one month and older. Even if the dedication only included the men between 25 and 50 years of age it was still a very large number of people. Another step in the process was that the people of Israel were to lay their hands on the Levites being dedicated. Again from earlier in Numbers we know there were over 600,000 fighting men among the people of Israel. The image of them all being assembled for this ceremony of dedication is overwhelming. Thinking about conducting a ceremony with this large number of people is mind boggling.

    When it came time to celebrate the second Passover, the first one in memory of the rescue of the Israelites from Egypt (the first Passover was part of that rescue), some of the men of Israel were ceremonially unclean. However, they still wanted to celebrate this event. So Moses went to God and asked what they should do. The answer Moses received was that those who were unable to celebrate the Passover for legitimate reasons at the appropriate time should celebrate it one month later. The interesting thing here is that these men did not view celebrating the Passover as an onerous ritual which they were glad to get out of. Rather it was something they wanted to do and were disappointed that they were unable to celebrate. We should have a similar attitude towards our various worship services.

February 15, 2017 Bible Study — Maintaining Balance Between Groups

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Numbers 7.

    The leaders of each of the tribes of Israel(not counting the Levites), selected to help take the census of the tribes, got together and brought offerings for the dedication of the Tabernacle. The offerings from each leader was the same, despite the great disparity in the sizes of the tribes (there were almost 75,000 fighting men in the tribe of Judah, but only just over 32,000 from the tribe of Manasseh). This reflects the idea that each of the tribes was equal despite their varying sizes. There is an important lesson here for us in creating federations of smaller groups. If we want those smaller groups to each be equal in the larger group, they must each contribute equally to the larger group. The tribe of Manasseh could have claimed that because they were smaller, their share of the offerings of dedication should be smaller. However, if they had done that there would have been a perception that because they were smaller they counted for less. With each tribe giving the same offering of dedication for the Tabernacle it was established that each tribe had an equal share in the Tabernacle.