Tag Archives: Christianity

December 9, 2021 Bible Study — Rejoice In the Lord, Again I Say Rejoice

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

Paul refers to those who preach the Gospel out of selfish ambition and concludes that he does not care why someone preaches the Gospel, so long as the Gospel gets preached.  We should take a similar attitude towards the pastors of mega-churches today.  Just as Paul says in this passage, some of them preach out of goodwill and love, while others preach out of the desire for self-aggrandizement.   As long as they preach the genuine Gospel, why should I care.  Some of these men who preach in order to gain fame and wealth bring many people to the Lord.  Paul wrote to the Corinthians that he disciplined his body so that after he had preached to others he would not be disqualified. I fear that some of these preachers will find themselves disqualified after having trained others to win the race.  Nevertheless, the Gospel is being preached.

So, while we should praise God that the Gospel is being preached by those who do so for their own selfish ambition, we should not imitate them.  Instead we should humbly and lovingly value others more than ourselves.  Let us put aside ambition and vanity in order to serve others just as Christ served us.  Let us do that which God gives to do without grumbling or arguing.  Rather, we should rejoice that God thinks us worthy of tasks which others think are demeaning. I will say that I struggle with this, but I strive to rejoice in all God brings to me.  And then Paul gives us the mantra which should be ours: “whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable—if anything is excellent or praiseworthy—think about such things.”  If we discipline ourselves to only think about such things we will find it easier to rejoice in the Lord.

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

December 8, 2021 Bible Study — Unity In Christ Comes When We Humbly Do The Will Of The Lord

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

Today Paul expands on his teaching about unity among Believers.  We should be humble, gentle, and patient in our dealings with others, always keeping in mind that there is but one name through which we can be saved, one Lord whom we serve.  The unity of the Spirit grows out of us living to be worthy of our calling by Christ.  Paul explains that we live such a life because we have put off the sinful life we lived before God called us and have put in the new life which God has given us.  That old life which we have hopefully taken off like a suit of dirty clothes is one  of sensuality, impurity, and greed.  Living the new life means speaking truthfully, and allowing only those things which are helpful for building up others come out of our mouths.  Paul calls on us to strive to live without even a hint of sexual immorality, impurity, or greed in our lives.  Instead of such things, Paul urges us to find and do that which is pleasing to the Lord.  We find once again one of the key points of serving God: if we keep ourselves busy doing good, we will not have to do that which is not.

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

December 7, 2021 Bible Study — Pray To Him Who Is Able To Do Immeasurable More Than We Can Ask Or Imagine

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

Paul writes that we were dead in our sins when we lived to gratify the cravings of our flesh, but that God made us alive by raising us up with Christ.  God has done this by His grace, it did not happen by our effort, or works.  However, when He raised us up, God made us new creations for the purpose of doing good works.  We were not, and are not, saved by doing good works.  We were, and are, saved in order to do good works.  Before, we were of different races, nationalities, and ethnicities, all in conflict with each other.  When God raised us with Christ He joined us together to build a Temple for worshiping Him.  We are no longer Jew or Gentile, Black, Hispanic, Asian, or White.  God has erased those differences and made us all part of His family.

God has given His Spirit to those whom He has saved through His grace in Jesus.  Through that Spirit He gives us great power which we can access by prayer.  Let us allow that Spirit to open the eyes of our heart to God’s power at work within us.  That power which is at work within us is able to immeasurably more than we can ask or even imagine.  I want us to think about what that means.  First, God can do more than we can ask or even imagine.  I don’t know about you, but I can imagine a lot and I know people who can imagine even more.  Yet Paul tells us God can do even more than that.  Which brings us to the second thing.  Not only can God do more than we can imagine, He can do immeasurably more.  Immeasurably is one of those words that takes a little thought to understand.  It is like infinity.  Infinity as a number is so incredibly large that infinity-1 is still immeasurably large.  When something is immeasurably large, that does not just mean that it is too big to measure with available tools, it means that it is too large to be measured at all.  God’s power is like that.

I want to touch on one last thing.  Several times in this passage, Paul talks about praying for the Ephesian believers.  He prays for them to receive God’s Spirit so that they may know God better.  He prays that they have the power to understand the magnitude of Christ’s love and be filled with the fullness of God.  Prayer allows us to apply God’s power, which can do immeasurably more than we can imagine, to the good works for which we have been made new creations.

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

December 6, 2021 Bible Study — Defeating Arguments Against The Gospel

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Galatians 1-6.

I have struggled to follow what Paul says in the first two chapters of his letter to the Galatian Believers.  One could easily interpret what he wrote as being disparaging of the Apostles who followed Jesus when He was on earth.  However, that would be to misunderstand what Paul means to say here.  Paul emphasizes that he did not learn the Gospel he taught from the other Apostles.  Rather, he learned it from the Holy Spirit and his study of the Jewish Scripture.  Nevertheless when he and the original Apostles, those who learned the Gospel directly from Jesus, compared notes, they discovered that they were preaching the same message.  I suppose one of the reasons I never fully put that together before is because I never read it trying to understand the argument Paul to which Paul was responding.  As I read this I realized that those whose arguments Paul was attempting to counter had built their case against Paul, and the Gospel he taught, on two contradictory claims.  The first part of the claim was that Paul was teaching falsehood he had been taught by the original Apostles, who had invented it themselves.  The second part was that Paul was teaching something different than the true teachings of the Church.  Paul never addresses the contradiction between these two claims, he merely demolishes both of them.  Further, the way Paul addresses both arguments tells us that the arguments were never made as direct claims.  Instead, those who made them did so by assuming they were true and proceeding from there.  Paul exposes the logical inconsistency by demolishing both claims.

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

December 5, 2021 Bible Study — Sow Generously In Order To Reap Generously

Today, I am reading and commenting on  2 Corinthians 9-13.

The passage begins with Paul continuing the discussion on giving which he began in yesterday’s passage.  He goes to great effort to make sure that the Corinthian Believers understand that he does not think that they need to be convinced to give, he is merely writing to remind them to gather the moneys they wish to donate.  Pastors who struggle with preaching on giving can take heart that Paul similarly struggled.  For the rest of us, what Paul writes about reaping according to how we sow.  This is one of those passages which can be hard to fully understand.  Paul is not promising that if we give generously we will become rich.  He is promising that if we give generously, God will reward us greatly.

I have always wondered how to write about Paul’s “boasting” in this passage.  I finally realized today how to express that.  Paul was telling them not to be impressed by credentials, but by the content of the speaker’s argument.  “The other guy tells you to be impressed because he is an Israelite.  So am I. Not important.”  Paul goes on from there to show that while he has every bit as good credentials as those who were trying to turn the Corinthian Believers against him, he never made a point of those because they were not important.  Those who were arguing against Paul were guilty of two logical fallacies.  First, they appealed to their own authority based on their credentials, rather than asking their listeners to evaluate the validity of their arguments.  Second, they made ad hominem arguments by claiming that Paul was trying to take advantage of the Corinthians.  Paul points out that this second attack was also hypocritical because those making them were profiting more from the Corinthians than he ever had.

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

December 4, 2021 Bible Study — Do Not Partner With Unbelievers

Today, I am reading and commenting on  2 Corinthians 5-8.

Throughout his letters Paul references how our resurrected bodies will be different from our current bodies.  Here he compares our current bodies to a tent, contrasting that with an eternal house which will serve as our permanent homes after our resurrection.  I think his metaphor here does a wonderful job of making his point.  A tent can certainly be home, and a place where we have great comfort.  But a permanent building, a house, has much greater possibilities for comfort.  In the same way, we have a certain comfort living in our bodies, but we should desire the much greater comfort of living in the bodies which God will give us.  We should seek to live as Paul did, eagerly awaiting leaving our home in this physical body to be at home with Christ.  That means living in this body so as to prepare ourselves to spend time with Him.

In this passage Paul tells us not to be yoked together with unbelievers, a passage which when I was young was interpreted to me as meaning that a Christian should not marry a non-believer.  While the idea that a Christian should not marry a non-believer is correct, I have come to realize that is not what Paul is writing about here.  Rather, Paul is warning us against partnering with unbelievers to accomplish the ministry which God has given us.  One example of what he was writing about comes to my mind.  Many years ago, when I was still a young man, some young women I knew became active in an organization of Christian women who were fighting against pornography.  Some time after they became active in this group and had risen to leadership positions within it, they were approached by a secular feminist group which also was working to oppose pornography for the two organizations to work together.  The two organizations made common cause to combat pornography.  Because the two organizations were composed primarily of women (perhaps entirely, it has been too many years for me to remember one way or the other), their focus became the ways in which pornographers exploited women.  After another period of time the secular feminist group began using the partnership to advocate for abortion.  The Christian women failed to recognize that the secular feminists with whom they had partnered did not care about the immorality of pornography and opposing it was merely one more way of promoting their ideology.  This is but one example of where a group of Christians made common cause with non-believers to work on a goal which served God’s will only to have the cause coopted to for other purposes.

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

December 3, 2021 Bible Study — Do Not Distort The Word Of God, Nor Use Deception To Promote The Gospel

Today, I am reading and commenting on  2 Corinthians 1-4.

There are a couple of minor points I want to highlight out of what Paul writes in today’s passage.  Paul begins by mentioning that he had gone through some terrible troubles in Asia, troubles which were so severe that they were more than he could withstand.  Paul writes that he experienced such troubles in order to experience God’s comfort in such troubles and to teach him to rely on God rather than on himself.  His experience gave him confidence that God would carry him through any future troubles which he might experience, and it gave those who witnessed it comfort from knowing that God had rescued him and would do likewise for them in similar circumstances.  Paul transitioned from that to speak about why he did not visit Corinth as he had originally planned.  As I read what Paul wrote, he did not visit Corinth as planned because he was not sure that he would be able to control his anger over the situation and might have said something he would later regret.  We should follow his example and avoid allowing our emotions to influence us when we debate in the Church.

Later in today’s passage Paul writes that his confidence comes from Jesus and that he has no competence in and of himself to claim anything.  Any competence which he has to accomplish anything comes from God working through him.  As a result of this knowledge, Paul refuses to use any deception or distortion to convince others of the gospel.  I think that his point here is one of utmost importance.  We are not smart enough, knowledgeable enough, or wise enough to know how to “massage” the facts in order to get others to make the right decision.  Therefore we should present the facts and the truth plainly about whatever subject we are discussing.  Let us trust God’s Spirit to make clear to those who hear us what is the right decision for them to make.  We must not make the mistake of thinking we are enough smarter or wiser than those to whom we speak to make their decision for them by distorting the facts which we present to them.  This is important on whatever issue we discuss, but even more so when presenting the Gospel.

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

December 2, 2021 Bible Study — If Christ Did Not Rise From The Dead, Christianity Is A Lie And Of No Value

Today, I am reading and commenting on  1 Corinthians 15-16.

This passage contains one of Paul’s best descriptions of what the good news of the Gospel is. It is right up there in importance with Romans 10:9-10 where he writes, “If you declare with your mouth that Jesus is Lord, and believe in your heart that God raised Him from the dead, you will be saved.”  Here Paul writes that we must hold firmly to the gospel which he preached.  That gospel was, and is, that Jesus died for our sins, that He was buried, and that He was raised from the dead on the third day.  Paul expands on to make clear that he means a literal, physical raising from the dead, not a spiritual, or figurative raising from the dead.  The gospel message has no meaning or value without that part, and without the part where we who put our faith in Christ will also experience such a literal, physical raising from the dead.  The suffering and hardship of this life become pointless if our existence ends with our death.  So, let us preach to those around us and seek to draw them into faith in Christ so that they might also experience the joy that comes through oneness with Him and the eternal life which He offers.  This message was the part which was “foolishness to the Greeks.”  And all too many today want to find wisdom in the Gospel without being willing to accept the “foolishness” of the resurrection of the dead.  As Paul tells us, if Christ was not resurrected from the dead, the entire New Testament is built upon lies and has no redeeming value.

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

December 1, 2021 Bible Study — Our Spiritual Gifts Must Be Built On A Solid Foundation

Today, I am reading and commenting on  1 Corinthians 12-14.

I love the fact that chapter 13, the “Love Chapter”, is in the middle of today’s passage, because that allows us to see it in the context Paul intended.  Obviously, this placement lets us know that love is a gift from the Holy Spirit.  Equally obvious, if we read it in this context we do not miss Paul’s message that love is the most important spiritual gift, that without love all other spiritual gifts have no value.  However, there is one point about what Paul tells us about love that we miss most of the time: we have a limited ability to choose which spiritual gifts we receive. Certainly, each and every one of us can ask the Holy Spirit for the gifts of love, faith, and hope in the knowledge that the Spirit will grant our request.  We can even be confident that the Spirit will give us more of those three if we ask for it.  If we desire other spiritual gifts we may ask for them as well, and if our request is truly to serve the will of God, we will likely be granted the gift we request.  There are limits to this ability to request the spiritual gifts we desire, because as Paul points out, the Body only needs so many eyes, or ears, or fingers.  So, aside from faith, hope, and love, there are conditions as to whether the Holy Spirit will grant us the gift(s) we desire.  The first condition being that our desire for that particular gift must be rooted in faith, hope, and love (most importantly in love).  The second condition being that the Body of Christ must not already have enough members who have that particular gift.  In fact, Paul tells us that we should look at the Body of Christ around us through the lens of love and request that gift which it is most in need of at this moment.  This may mean joyfully embracing a role which the world would consider demeaning.  Those who truly love as Paul describes love will never see it that way.

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

November 30, 2021 Bible Study — Self-Discipline And Being Wise As Serpents And Innocent As Doves

Today, I am reading and commenting on  1 Corinthians 9-11.

Well, I know what parts of today’s passage I want to comment on.  I even have an idea about how those parts fit together.  Now I just need to see if I can put my thoughts down in writing.  Paul writes about his freedom and self-discipline.  He tells us that he has freedom to do as he pleases, but he uses that freedom to serve those who hopes to convince to follow Christ.  He continues by saying that he disciplines himself to serve Christ and others so as to not miss out on the eternal life which comes through faith in Christ.  Having given these examples from his own life, Paul goes on to write about how we should use our freedom.  The important part of his message is that while we have the freedom in Christ to do anything, we should only do those things which are beneficial and/or constructive.  Further, he writes that we should seek to do not what is in our best interests but what is in the best interests of others.

He applies this lesson to his message on our approach to the idol worship going on around us (and do not fool yourself, idol worship is just as much a part of modern society as it was in Paul’s day).  I like how he makes his point.  First, he makes the point that we cannot consciously take part in the ceremonies of idol worship, but we need not worry about doing so as an incidental part of our lives.  He tells the Corinthian Believers that while they may know full well that most of the food available in the market was offered to idols as part of its preparation, they need not worry about that.  Go ahead, buy the food and consume it without asking whether or not it had been sacrificed to idols.  For that matter, if your pagan neighbor invites you to share a meal with them, go ahead and join them.  Eat what they give you without inquiring whether or not it was part of a sacrifice to idols (which Paul points out would be a sacrifice to demons).  But, if they, or someone else, should inform you that eating it is part of their worship of other gods, then abstain.  Paul points out that the point of your abstinence is not your own well-being, but a service to the one who made you aware of the idol worship you were being asked to join.  I see Paul’s instructions here as a practical application of Jesus’ command to be “wise as serpents, but innocent as doves.”

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