Tag Archives: Bible Study

February 8, 2016 Bible Study — Making Sure That the Poor and the Foreigner Has the Opportunity to Provide for Their Own Needs

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading. I had been using One Year Bible Online, but it was time for a change.

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

    Today’s passage contains more details on how the children of Israel should apply some of the rules God had given them previously. Among the instructions given here were instructions about how they were supposed to care for the poor among them. They were told not to harvest the grain along the edges of their fields, leaving it there for the poor. There were a couple of other things in this instruction. The point is that they were to leave the poor the opportunity to work to provide for themselves. Actually, as I read it, it was intended that they were to create opportunities for the poor to work to provide for themselves. A little later they are instructed not to favor the poor in legal matters, but neither are they to be partial to the rich and powerful. Overall, I think the passage makes it clear that God wishes us to make sure that everyone has the opportunity to provide for their, and their family’s, needs.

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    There are two ways this applies. First, we should run our businesses in such a way as to leave opportunities for the poor to make a living “around the edges”. We should not run our business so as to capture every little efficiency and every dollar possible. We should strive for the “high margin” aspects of the business, allowing those less fortunate to capture the “low margin” productivity around the edges. I will note that this allows the more industrious among the poor to perhaps find a way to turn those “low margin” things into “high margin” things and thus move themselves out of poverty. The second way this applies is that the government should not establish laws and rules which freeze the poor out of finding ways to provide for themselves.

February 7, 2016 Bible Study — Finding a Scape Goat To Carry Our Sins Away

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading. I had been using One Year Bible Online, but it was time for a change.

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Today, I am reading and commenting on Leviticus 16-18.

    Once a year, the high priest was to conduct a ceremony of cleansing for all of the people of Israel. It is instructive how this was to be done. First, the high priest needed to make two sacrifices for himself. Then he must sacrifice a sin offering for the people. As part of both of these sacrifices he must purify the Most Holy Place and all of the Tabernacle. Once he has done this he places his hands on the head of the scape goat and has it driven into the wilderness. I think the scape goat gives us an interesting metaphor. We need to drive our sins from us. We need to drive them out into the “wilderness”. It is not enough to repent of them. It is not enough to make restitution for them. We must drive them away from ourselves into a “place” where we will not go to retrieve them. In this passage the scape goat was a metaphor, although one which was carried out literally. When I say that we must drive our sins away from ourselves, I am not talking about resurrecting this metaphor (or something similar). I am talking about a psychological process whereby we recognize the damage and danger of our sins and do not make excuses to continue them.

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    After describing the yearly ritual for purifying the people of Israel the passage goes on to describe a list of sexual sins that are to be avoided at all costs. I am not going to list the sexual sins listed. I want to note that homosexuality is on that list, as is bestiality. However, those sins are the last ones on the list. I read this and it tells me that there are a lot of sexual sins about which we should be more concerned than homosexuality or bestiality. The point here is that we should be equally concerned about all sexual sins. I think we have a tendency to focus on the sinfulness of those sins to which we are not tempted. When we do that we are getting it exactly backwards. We need to focus on the sinfulness of the sins by which we are tempted.

February 6, 2016 Bible Study — Preventing the Spread of Disease

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading. I had been using One Year Bible Online, but it was time for a change.

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Today, I am reading and commenting on Leviticus 14-15.

    In today’s passage it describes what a person who had a skin disease should do when a priest finds that he has been cured. The result of these commands is that the officiating priest has an incentive to find the person cured. On the other hand, the incentive is not nearly enough to encourage the priest to find someone who is clearly contagious as cured. It goes on to address dealing with a house which has become contaminated with mildew or mold (we assume mildew, the word used is the same as the word used to describe skin diseases). We know today that several types of mold are unhealthy and that if allowed to become too prevalent in a house they can never be gotten rid of. Finally the passage discusses actions to make sure that people are not accidentally exposed to the bodily fluids of others. Once more, we know today that many diseases can be more easily spread through exposure to the bodily fluids of someone who is infected with them.

February 5, 2016 Bible Study — Diagnosing Contagion

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading. I had been using One Year Bible Online, but it was time for a change.

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Today, I am reading and commenting on Leviticus 13.

    The passage starts out by describing how to diagnose various types of skin diseases. The word used to describe these various skin diseases in Hebrew is the same word. However, we now consider these various diseases separate things. The word is traditionally translated as leprosy. The same word is used to describe mold or mildew on clothing, fabric, and leather. In all of these cases the word is used to describe a condition which is contagious and is likely to spread from the contaminated person (or item) to other people (or items). The passage describes how to minimize the chance of it spreading and how to tell if the risk has passed.

February 4, 2016 Bible Study — Learning To Fear God

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading. I had been using One Year Bible Online, but it was time for a change.

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

    Two of Aaron’s sons were struck down for using the wrong fire in their incense burners. This story is a reminder of the importance of fearing God. Aaron’s sons figured that because no person would notice what they did, it did not matter. However, what they overlooked was that the command they violated was not a human command. Rather it was a command from God. God always notices. We need to have the sort of fear of God which this incident surely inspired in those who witnessed it. This passage reminds us to fear God. The best summation of what I believe about fear of God is summed up by this line from the song “Amazing Grace”:

Twas grace that taught my heart to fear, And grace my fears relieved.

We cannot truly comprehend how great God’s grace is if we have not first come to understand how fearful God truly is.

February 3, 2016 Bible Study — The Effort Necessary For Us to Be Made Right With God

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading. I had been using One Year Bible Online, but it was time for a change.

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

    This passage gives us an idea how much work it was to become right with God under the Old Testament. First, Moses had to ordain the priests by making the offerings for them and then purifying them. The ordination took seven days. When it was completed the priests, Aaron and his sons, then had to make a sin offering for themselves. It was only after this that they could start the process of making the offerings necessary to make the rest of the people right with God. It seems that we forget what a wonderful gift Christ provided us by taking away the necessity of following such a procedure to become right with God. I think that we, all too often, fail to understand the magnitude of the gap which separates our sinful selves from God, a gap which can only be overcome by the blood of Christ.

February 2, 2015 Bible Study — Restoring Our Relationships With God and Man

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading. I had been using One Year Bible Online, but it was time for a change.

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

    This is another passage that I would probably skim over, or not even read, if I was not committed to writing this blog (I apologize from now if this refrain becomes repetitive over the next few weeks). However, the first thing which struck me was that it is a sin to refuse to testify about something which you have knowledge of. We have an obligation to testify about things we have seen, or know about. We should testify if we know something that will exonerate the person on trial and if we know something which will incriminate that person.

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    The passage then goes on to describe how to make good when we have defiled or stolen property, or defrauded someone out of value. In these circumstances God’s commands is to make restitution of the value we destroyed for someone else, plus 20%. Then His command was to make an offering to God. While we no longer practice the sacrificial system laid out in the Old Testament, there is still something to be learned from these guidelines. When we steal from or defraud others, we have sinned both against them and against God. It is not enough to restore what we took from them, we must give them more than we took. Then we must make right once more our relationship with God. Fortunately for us, God has since this was written offered the sacrifice necessary to restore our relationship, but we must still acknowledge that we damaged that relationship.

February 1, 2016 Bible Study — Our Offerings Must Be Items With No Defects

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading. I had been using One Year Bible Online, but it was time for a change. Today’s passage and quite a few over the next month or two are why I did not use this approach before.

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Today, I am reading and commenting on Leviticus 1-4.

    This passage describes four types of offerings that the children of Israel might offer to God. Those four types are: burnt offering, grain offering, peace offering, and sin offering. A careful description was given about how each of these sacrifices was to be prepared for offering. It is interesting to compare what could be offered for each of these offerings. The burnt offering could be from the cattle herd, or from the sheep or goat flocks. However, the key factor was that it needed to be a male with no defects. The peace offering could be male or female from the same animal categories, also with no defects. The type of offering for the sin offering depended on who was making the offering. If the high priest (or perhaps any priest, the translation is unclear) needed to make a sin offering, or if one needed to be made for the whole community, the sin offering was to be a young bull. If the person making the offering was one of the leaders of the nation, the offering was to be a male goat. If the person making the offering was one of the common people, the offering was to be either a female goat or a female sheep.
    I wish I could tell you the significance of these differences, but I cannot. However, there is one factor common to all of these offerings. The offering was required to be an animal without defect. Our offerings to God are not from our extra, from that which we would otherwise throw away. Our offerings are to be from that which we could use productively.

January 31, 2016 Bible Study — No One Is Called To Do It All By Themselves

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading. I had been using One Year Bible Online, but it was time for a change.

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Today, I am reading and commenting on Exodus 39-40.

    Today’s passage continues describing the preparation of the Tabernacle. In particular, it describes how the craftsmen prepared the clothing to be worn by the priests. It is interesting that I find I can read this and imagine how it would look, while I found my eyes glazing over when I tried to do the same with the description of the making of the Tabernacle itself. The passage goes on to describe Moses setting up the Tabernacle. I think this gives us a good example of the limits of reading the Bible literally. It says that Moses set up the Tabernacle. A literal reading of it would imply that Moses did all of the work of setting up the Tabernacle by himself. However, going back and reading the description of the making of the Tabernacle reveals that to be unlikely. The place where this is most obvious is where it states that Moses brought the Ark of the Covenant into the Tabernacle. Go back and read the description of making the Ark. It would have been too heavy for a single man to move, and it would have been too awkwardly shaped for a single person to move. The important point to remember here is that no one is called to do it all by themselves.

January 30, 2016 Bible Study — It Took Great Craftsmen to Build the Tabernacle

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading. I had been using One Year Bible Online, but it was time for a change.

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Today, I am reading and commenting on Exodus 36-38.

    As I read the description of the work which Bezalel, and his assistants, did to build the Tabernacle and its furnishings it strikes me that they were skilled in many areas. There were those who could sew, those who were woodworkers and metalworkers. I know that I fail to give this passage the full appreciation it deserves. As I read it my eyes begin to glaze over at the detail given. This is not because the detail serves no purpose. Rather it happens because only a few verses in I realize that I so lack the skill to replicate this work that I cannot even visualize the Tabernacle in its true glory. I would love to see someone build a replica of the Tabernacle as described here, but I know that I do not have the skills to make something that bears even a faint resemblance to what is described.