Tag Archives: Bible Study

November 5, 2016 Bible Study — Will We Believe The Miracles We See?

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

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Today, I am reading and commenting on John 6-7.

    There is something I never noticed in this passage before (although, now that I think about it, I believe that I vaguely remember one or more speakers pointing it out). The morning after the feeding of the 5,000, the crowd realized that Jesus was not there, and that He had not left with His disciples on the only boat. A large number of them then crossed the Sea on boats which arrived that morning. When they got to the other side, they discovered Jesus had arrived there before them. Then when Jesus, in response to their request to know what they should do in order to do God’s works, told them to believe in Him, they asked Him to perform a miraculous work.
    This tells us a lot about human nature. These people had witnessed Jesus feed 5,000 people with 5 loaves of bread and two fish. They had even eaten some of that food. Which was followed up with Jesus, somehow, getting across the Sea of Galilee ahead of them without leaving the shore in a boat. All of this less the 24 hours before this. Yet, when asked to believe in Him, they wanted yet another miraculous sign. They had seen this miracle and that miracle, but it was not enough. For those who are seeking proof of God’s power, no amount of miracles are ever enough.

November 4, 2016 Bible Study

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

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

    When Jesus spoke to the woman at the well, He went against social norms. It is worth noting that Jesus did not make this contact in the interest of outreach. He made this contact simply because He was thirsty. It never crossed Jesus’ mind that this woman was someone He should not talk to…and it should never cross ours. His willingness to interact with this woman, this outcast, just as part of a casual interaction led to the salvation of many.

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    When the disciples returned to Jesus, He spoke to them of the harvest. He told them that the fields were ready for harvest. Now is the time to reap the harvest by bringing people the message that leads to eternal life. Jesus was clearly talking about the world around them and the people of the day. The same is true today. The fields are ripe for harvest and God is calling for workers who are willing to gather His harvest for Him.

November 3, 2016 Bible Study — Being Cleansed of SIn

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

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

    I have several thoughts about today’s passage. I am not sure how many of them I am going to put into today’s blog yet. The first chapter of John puts the essence of the Incarnation into a few words. As humans we have a desire to put distance between ourselves and God. In a manner of speaking we still do what Adam and Eve did in the Garden after they first sinned. We try to hide from God. We seek to put something or someone between ourselves and God. The Incarnation is God trying to reclaim the relationship He had with Adam and Eve before they sinned. It is our constant struggle to accept that God wants us. It reminds me of the thoughts I have occasionally when I look at my wife, “She wants to be with me. She really wants to be with me. How absolutely amazing, this beautiful woman actually wants to be with me.” However, that thought with God is so much more amazing. God wants to be with us. He wants to be our friend and something much more than that. The first chapter of John explains both that this is true and gives a glimpse of how amazing it is that it is true.

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    When Jesus speaks about being born again, He is telling us that we need to start over. We need to let the Holy Spirit transform us into innocent babes who have none of the smear and smudge which sin brings into our lives. The Christian message is about being cleansed from sin, but I think we rarely comprehend what that really means. Being cleansed of sin does not just mean being forgiven, or even just letting go of sin and not committing sins. It means all of the twists and distortions in our character that our the result of our sins, and of the sins of others, are washed away and we are returned to the innocence of childhood. If we allow the Holy Spirit to do so, He will clear away all of the debris which sin has left in our lives.

November 2, 2016 Bible Study — Death and Resurrection

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

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

    When Jesus was brought before Pilate for trial, Pilate could find no reason to crucify Him. However, because of the crowd threatening to riot he sentenced Jesus to death. This should be a warning to every political figure, and to us as ordinary citizens. When the crowd is crying for blood, it is usually innocent blood they are crying for. It is also worth noting that Pilate’s attempt to appease the crowd only served to rile them up more.

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    When Jesus was hanging on the cross, those who had dismissed His many miracles pretended as if they would believe if only He performed one more and came down off of the cross. They were the sort of people who demand proof of God’s existence, yet have a reason to dismiss any that is offered them. The crowd which had come out to see the spectacle of a crucifixion went home disappointed.

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    I think that Luke’s Gospel brings to the forefront of the strangeness of the Resurrection story. All of the accounts record that it was women who first discovered that Jesus had risen. Here Luke points out that the men, the Apostles, did not believe the women. They thought they were speaking nonsense when they told them what they had seen at the tomb. Even when the women recounted what the angels had told them, including the part about Jesus predicting this very thing, they were not believed. The two men who walked home to Emmaus were baffled, but did not believe that Jesus had risen. Again, even as Jesus showed them from Scripture what had happened they did not see. They could not believe that the women were right. If the story was made up, it would have been Peter, or one of the other prominent Apostles who discovered the empty tomb.

November 1, 2016 Bible Study

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

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

    I am not sure that today’s blog entry will have any continuity. As I read the passage there were several things which I wanted to comment on that are not connected in my thoughts. The passage begins with Jesus’ commentary on the widow’s offering. Entire sermons have been, rightfully, written on this three verse passage. We have no basis for taking any pride in our giving until our giving means we may miss a meal because we cannot afford it. Jesus is not saying that we should give to the extent which the widow did. However, His message throughout was that serving God should mean more to us than having food to eat.

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    In discussing the coming trials and struggles which His followers will face Jesus warned us that people would appear claiming to be Him, or claiming to fulfill His role. He assured us that there will be no mistaking when He returns. Everyone will know. We will not need someone to tell us that Jesus has come back.
    This passage also contains Luke’s account of the Last Supper, which was the Passover Meal. Here Jesus says something to which I do not think we pay enough attention: ” For I tell you now that I won’t eat this meal again until its meaning is fulfilled in the Kingdom of God.” A few years ago, the pastor of the congregation I was attending preached a sermon series on Passover, including the meaning of the meal. I can think of one or two other times in my life where the meaning of the Passover Meal was discussed. I have been as guilty of this as any. I do not think I have put much thought into the meaning of the Passover Meal, even when I am writing on the passages in the Bible where it was instituted.

October 31, 2016 Bible Study — Seek And Save The Lost

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

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

    The story of Zaccheaus is the perfect model of Christian outreach. First, Jesus did things which made Zaccheaus curious enough to look to see what was going on. Then Jesus reached out to Zaccheaus and treated him as a friend, not as a pariah. The people condemned Jesus for associating with someone as corrupt and evil as Zaccheaus. Jesus responded by indicating that He came to seek and save the lost. This is an important lesson for the outreach we conduct today. We are not called to make our congregations better than others so that people will change from those others to ours. We are called to seek those who have not yet come to know the Lord. This theme continues in Jesus clearing the Temple. Those selling animals for sacrifice had turned the courtyard of the Temple into a stockyard, making it inhospitable to worship by Gentiles, who were allowed no further into the Temple.

October 30, 2016 Bible Study — Faith, Persistence, and Prayer

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

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

    Right after telling His disciples that if they had faith like a mustard seed they could tell a tree to be uprooted and it would happen, He tells them that they should not expect to be praised for doing as He commands. If our faith is true we will do as God commands because it is our duty to do so, not because we expect to be rewarded for doing so. Looking at the connection which Jesus makes here between the impact of our having faith on doing God’s will gives me a new insight into the parable of the persistent widow. In that parable Jesus tells us to learn from the woman who got justice from an unjust judge because she was persistent. In the same way, we are to be persistent in our prayers. The thing which connects this to the earlier teaching about faith is that Jesus wraps up this teaching by asking how many He will find with faith when He returns. Do I have enough faith to be persistent in my prayers?

October 29, 2016 Bible Study — Counting The Cost

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

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

    In yesterday’s passage the leader of a synagogue where Jesus healed a woman reprimanded the woman, and the others present, for seeking healing on the Sabbath, saying that healing was prohibited because it was work. So, in today’s passage, Jesus asked the religious leaders who were present if it was lawful to heal on the Sabbath. I had not touched on it in yesterday’s passage, but the main thrust of Jesus’ teaching on this subject is that it is never wrong to do good for others. From there Jesus transitions to talking about puffing ourselves up. I see an important connection between what Jesus says here and His teachings about those who serve others being the greatest. If the most important question we ask when deciding whether or not to do something is “What’s in it for me?” we have failed at the most basic level to understand what Jesus taught.

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    As followers of Christ, each and every one of us is called to obey the Great Commission. We are to go forth into the world and make disciples. However, sometimes in our eagerness to make new disciples we downplay the difficulty of being a follower of Jesus. Jesus tells us that it is important that we be aware of what it will cost us to be His follower. No one should be encouraged to start following Jesus without first knowing the trials and suffering which they will face as a result. Our eagerness to bring others to the Lord is not misplaced, as Jesus makes clear in the parables He tells in chapter 15. However, we must make sure that we do not convince people to follow Jesus under false pretenses. The cost of following Jesus is high, higher than most are willing to pay. We know the reward is worth it, but that is a decision which each person must make for themselves.

October 28, 2016 Bible Study — Decide For Ourselves What Is Right

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

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Today, I am reading and commenting on Luke 12-13.

    Jesus teaches that we should not, that we need not, worry about material possessions because God knows our needs and will care for us. In fact, He tells us that we should expend our material possessions to help those in need and thus store up possessions in Heaven. From there He goes on to give two illustrations about being ready for His return. Then Peter asks Him if those illustrations were just for the disciples, or for everyone. Rather than answer outright, Jesus gives yet another illustration about a servant who has been placed over other servants to await their master’s return. The traditional interpretation of all three of these illustrations is that Jesus should find us doing as He instructed when He returns, and this is correct. However, I realized today that it is incomplete. Looking at how these illustrations come on the heels of Jesus telling us to store up wealth in Heaven, it occurred to me that Jesus was also telling us that we should be ready to help those in need when the opportunity presents itself to us.

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    Jesus’ third illustration, which He gave in response to Peter’s question, indicates that those, such as the disciples, who have been given authority over others will be held to a higher standard. Jesus’ third illustration on this subject teaches us that those who have been given more authority, more wealth, more knowledge, or more of something else will be held to a higher standard. Jesus even puts in a bit about those pastors, and other leaders, who abuse their position to benefit themselves at the expense of those over whom they have been given authority. If we know what God’s will for us and do not act accordingly, we will suffer much greater punishment than those who do not know His will.

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    Jesus goes on to tell His disciples that He did not come to bring unity. He says here that He came to bring division. This passage is directly aimed at those who argue that we should acquiesce on this or that point in the name of unity. My understanding of what Jesus means here is significantly influenced by the fact that immediately after saying this to the disciples Jesus turns to the crowds and asks them why they cannot decide for themselves what is right. We are to decide for ourselves what is right, not take the word of our pastor, or some other leader. Don’t take my word for what is right. Read the Bible, pray, listen to how others interpret it, and allow the Holy Spirit to move in your heart to understand what God wants you to do. But that is not going to lead to unity because some of us will see things one way and others will see it another, and some people will push for us to accept things which they know are wrong.

October 27, 2016 Bible Study — The Harvest Is Great, But The Workers Are Few

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

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Today, I am reading and commenting on Luke 10-11.

    “The harvest is great, but the workers are few.” I was going to say that is even more true today than it was when Jesus said it, but that is not true. However, much to our shame it is as true today as it was when Jesus said. And why is it so true? Because we do not pray enough(more on that in the next paragraph), nor hard enough for the Lord to send more workers. Look around at our society, if your heart does not break for those who do not know and serve the Lord, my heart breaks for you. I want to make it clear that when I say “we do not pray enough” I am most definitely including myself in that “we”. I think it is time for me to stop just praying where I am when the conviction comes upon me to pray and for me to get down on my knees to pray. I need the Spirit to fully overcome me so that I speak God’s word to those in need of it around me.

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    There is much in today’s passage which connects to how we should approach the “harvest”: the story of the Good Samaritan talks about how we go about the harvest, as does the story of Mary and Martha. Then Jesus teaches us about prayer. Notice how sparse and clean is the example prayer which Jesus gives us. Our prayers are not better for being wordy. The contrary is true. Let us keep our prayers simple and direct. We do not need to tell God why it is His will to answer them. He knows that already. However, Jesus does remind us of the importance of persistence. Keep on asking. Keep on seeking. Keep on knocking. If we believe that what we are asking for is God’s will, why are we not asking for it again, and again, and again, and again. If we believe that what we are looking for is necessary to perform God’s will, why do we give up when we do not find it after a day or two. We should keep on looking until we find it, even if it takes decades. If we believe that God wants us to go through that door, why do we stop knocking when nobody answers it the first time? Instead let us make sure our ring is turned in and knock harder, look for a doorbell, find a stick so that our knocking can be louder, and keep knocking until someone opens the door. And if we do not believe it is God’s will, why were we knocking in the first place?