Tag Archives: Christianity

January 26, 2026 Bible Study — The Ark of the Covenant Symbolized the Difference Between the True God and Idols

Today, I am reading and commenting on Exodus 25-27.

I have a Youtube video of me reading the Scripture passage and my comments. Please check it out and let me know your thoughts.

I want to start by saying that recording a video of me reading the Bible passage really helps me with reading passages such as today’s.  I got more out of this passage than I have for years, maybe more than ever before.  As I was reading, I understood part of the reason why this passage is here in the Bible.  Now part of that understanding goes to something I heard a month or so back.  This description is, in and of itself, evidence for the Exodus occurring.  Not because the writing claims the Exodus happened.  Instead, this detailed description tells us that the writer(s) of the Book of Exodus were more heavily influenced by Egyptian practices than by practices in the land of Canaan, or elsewhere.  For example, the Ark of the Covenant described here resembles the thrones of gods which the Egyptians placed inside their temples.  The difference being that Egyptian priests “fed” and dressed the idol of the god each day and sat it upon the throne, then undressed it each night and put the idol “to bed”.  The symbolism there was that the priests cared for the needs of their god(s).  The symbolism of the Ark of the Covenant was that, unlike the gods of the Egyptians and other peoples, God did not need people to care for His needs.  He did not need to be fed, or dressed, and He did not sleep.  God is always on His throne.

Further, the Tabernacle itself resembles the tent which was used by Pharaoh Ramses II in the Egyptian army encampment at the battle of Kadesh.  The altar described in this passage also bore a closer resemblance to Egyptian designs than it does to altars used in the land of Canaan.  Overall, this passage, with its detailed descriptions of the Tabernacle and its furnishings, shows us that the writer(s) of the Book of Exodus were influenced more by Egyptian symbolism than by Canaanite symbolism.  Now, some might conclude from this that these designs were of human origin.  After all, why would we expect God to be influenced by the culture of Egypt?  The answer is rather simpler than one might think.  God used symbolism which the Israelites in the wilderness would understand.  The description I gave above about the symbolism of the Ark of the Covenant illustrates what I mean.  If the Ark had not resembled the Egyptian thrones of gods, no one would have noticed the symbolism that those gods needed humans to care for their needs, but that the God of Israel does not.  Nor would they have noticed the symbolism that false gods slept, but the God of Israel does not.  Without the resemblance of the Tabernacle to the tent of Ramses II (and probably other pharaohs) we would not see the fact that the Tabernacle symbolized that God is the ruler of Israel, not some human king (not even a human king who is believed to be divine).

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

January 25, 2026 Bible Study — Favor neither the Rich nor the Poor, and Strive to Know the Truth Before Telling Others

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

I have a Youtube video of me reading the Scripture passage and my comments. Please check it out and let me know your thoughts.

I am going to start by writing about what God tells us about justice in this passage.  What is written here is very relevant to how we deal with contemporary events.  At the beginning of Chapter 23 He says that you shall not spread a false report.  God goes on to say that you should not join to be a malicious witness or fall in with the crowds to do evil.  A straightforward reading of this says that if we know something to be untrue we should not spread it, but I think there is a little more to it than that.  I think that the idea of not spreading a false report means that we should check the facts about stories we have before we pass them on.  And I think there is more to what it says about justice.  In fact, when it talks about not being partial it starts by telling us not to be partial to the poor man.  Do not favor the poor over the wealthy.  Then a little later it warns us against perverting the justice due to the poor man.  I think this makes it clear that we should not side with the poor, or with the rich.  Instead, we should side with justice.

Then, in a related command, God tells us not to oppress the sojourner (many other translations say “foreigner”, I think being aware of both ways to translate the Hebrew helps us see this clearly).  This is relevant to the current controversy over immigration law enforcement in the United States, but not in the way that Anti-ICE protesters interpret it.  However, the other side dismisses it too lightly as well.  In order to understand why I think this command is a problem for those who oppose immigration law enforcement we need to look at one of the early arguments against deporting those who had not followed the legal procedures for entering the country: “But if we deport them, who is going to do those jobs?”  Those making that argument was an admission that those who did not have the proper documents to be in this country were being oppressed.  They worked for lower wages and in worse conditions than those who had legal authorization to work here would put up with.  On the other hand, many of those who support the deportation of those who do not have legal authorization to be here are unconcerned with reports that they are being mistreated by the authorities.

Which ties us back to the command to not spread false reports.  Part of the reason for that lack of concern is that those opposing the deportation of illegal immigrants spread stories which imply mistreatment, which turn out to be misstatements of the facts.  This has led those who disagree with them to dismiss ALL of their stories.  The same can happen the other way.  If those who support enforcement of immigration law (or any other position) do not confirm their facts before they tell others about what they hear, many of the stories they tell will also turn out to leave out important facts.  In the short term, you can win the “argument” with lies and false reports, but in the long run you will lose support for your position if you are not honest.  As Christians, we should strive for truth, because we serve the Truth and want to attract others to the Truth.

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

 

January 24, 2026 Bible Study — Consecrate Yourself When in the Presence of God

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

I have a Youtube video of me reading the Scripture passage and my comments. Please check it out and let me know your thoughts.

I noticed reading today’s passage that when God came down upon Mount Sinai, He warned the priests who come near to Him must consecrate themselves.  In the context this seems to refer to this time just before and immediately after God gave the Israelites the Ten Commandments.  I find that noteworthy because this was before God had Moses ordain Aaron and his sons as priests.  Which raises the question as to whether there were priests among the Israelites before Aaron and his sons were ordained as priests?  Perhaps this was merely a reminder to later priests that they needed to make sure they had consecrated themselves before they approached God.  It may also be more general, since in God’s first message to the people of Israel through Moses regarding their time at Mount Sinai He stated that He intended to make them a nation of priests (something truly fulfilled in Christ when He made all disciples of Christ priests).

I also want to take note of the fact that God spoke the Ten Commandments directly to all of the people of Israel.  After He did so, the people asked Moses that he listen to God and pass on God’s word to them rather than have God speak to them directly going forward.  This whole encounter with God, including the reaction of the people of Israel to God speaking to them, gives us an insight into how seriously we should take our encounters for God.  As Christians we, and I definitely speak for myself here, often fail to take our need to be consecrated before God with sufficient dedication.

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

And here is the link specifically to today’s video January 24, 2026 Bible Study Consecrate Yourself When in the Presence of God

January 23, 2026 Bible Study — God Trains Us to Do His Will

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

I have a Youtube video of me reading the Scripture passage and my comments. Please check it out and let me know your thoughts.

I had never before noticed, or, at least, not really thought about, that God told Moses that He was going to give the people of Israel manna in order to test whether they would walk in His law or not.  And we see that some of them failed the test.  What was the test?  The first part of the test was that God told them on the first day that they were not to keep any of the manna until the next day.  Yet, some of them did so.  Each morning, they collected as much as they needed to feed their household.  Then on the sixth day, they collected twice as much as they had on the previous days.  When this was reported to Moses, he explained that God had told them to save half of it for the seventh day, which was the Sabbath.  They were not to go out to collect any on the Sabbath, the seventh day, because there would not be any to collect.  Once again, some of them did not listen, but instead went out to gather manna and found none.  As I read this I realized it was not just a test to see if the people would follow God’s commands.  It was also training them to follow God’s commands (we will see later that the people of Israel were not very good students).  If the people did not obey God’s commands they had unpleasant, but not particularly painful, consequences.  If they kept manna overnight when He had told them not to, the next morning it had worms and stank.  If they went out on the seventh day to gather manna, they found none.  The effort of getting up and taking out what was needed to gather manna was wasted effort.  Nobody enjoys wasting effort.

There was a second training exercise which God put them through overlapping, and connected with this one I just mentioned.  God led the people of Israel out of Egypt and into the wilderness, where they initially found nothing to eat.  It was only after the people began to complain that they had been brought into the wilderness to starve that God provided them with manna.  Shortly after this, but long enough for the people to have gotten into the habit of gathering manna every day, except for the seventh, God led them to Rephidim, where they did not find water to drink.  Once again, the people complained that they had been brought out of Egypt to die.  This time from thirst.  Notice how the people failed to learn from their first complaint about being led out of Israel to due?  I believe that these overlapping themes illustrate the ways in which God attempts to train us to do His will and to rely on Him.

The Israelites did not just cry out to God for food, and then later for water.  They complained that God was going to let them die.  First from hunger, then later from thirst.  Despite God having shown them His power, first by causing the Egyptians to send them forth with great treasure, then by dividing the Red Sea to allow them to escape Pharaoh’s army, they failed to trust that He would provide for their need for food and water.  And when God provided them with food, they failed to follow His instructions regarding how to collect and store that food.

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

 

January 22, 2026 Bible Study — The Lord Is My Strength and My Song

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Exodus 13-15.

I have a Youtube video of me reading the Scripture passage and my comments. Please check it out and let me know your thoughts.

It occurred to me yesterday that when we celebrate Communion, or Eucharist, or the Lord’s Supper (whichever term you prefer for this celebration of Christ’s sacrifice for our sins), we should also be remembering the things for which the Passover feast, also known as the Feast of Unleavened Bread, served as a reminder.  In today’s passage, God tells Moses that they should celebrate this feast as a remembrance that God brought the people of Israel out of Egypt with a strong hand.  The Feast of Unleavened Bread was intended to remind the Israelites of the Ten Plagues which God brought down on Egypt in order to compel the Egyptians to let them go free, culminating in the death of all of their firstborn sons.  However, it also commemorated the way in which God further used His strong arm to rescue them from Pharaoh’s army.  When we celebrate Communion (the term I grew up using) we should remember these as well.  The Eucharist is a celebration of Jesus sacrificing Himself as the ultimate Passover Lamb.  As such, we should remember the song which Moses and the people of Israel sang the morning after crossing the sea:
I will sing to the Lord, for he has triumphed gloriously;
    the horse and his rider he has thrown into the sea.
 The Lord is my strength and my song,
    and he has become my salvation;
this is my God, and I will praise him,
    my father’s God, and I will exalt him.
 The Lord is a man of war;
    the Lord is his name.

The Lord is indeed my strength and my song and He has become my salvation.

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

 

January 21, 2026 Bible Study — If We Refuse to Accept God’s Correction Often Enough, We Will Stop Being Able to Do So

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

I have a Youtube video of me reading the Scripture passage and my comments. Please check it out and let me know your thoughts.

During the earlier plagues the passages tell us either that Pharaoh hardened his heart, or that Pharaoh’s heart was hardened, but beginning today with the eighth plague it tells us that the Lord hardened Pharaoh’s heart.  Initially, Pharaoh chose not to accept what God put before him, or allowed other things convince him not to believe.  But eventually Pharaoh lost the ability to choose to avoid further suffering from the plagues.  In order to explain my point I need to go back to something I chose not to mention yesterday.  Each of the plagues was a “refutation” of the power of the gods of Egypt.  Each plague was demonstration that God has power over an area which was supposedly under the domain of one or more of the gods of Egypt.  So, when Pharaoh hardened his heart, or had his heart hardened, he was denying the evidence that the God of the Hebrews existed and was more powerful than the gods of Egypt.  In the same way you will see today people who argue against Christianity will present arguments for rejecting Christianity, but when one of their arguments is refuted will turn to another argument without acknowledging that their argument failed.  Eventually, they become emotionally invested in their arguments and unable to reason about them at all.  In this passage we see that Pharaoh became overcome by his anger such that he stopped thinking rationally.  The end result being that the Egyptians plundered themselves of great wealth to get the Israelites to leave.

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

 

January 20, 2026 Bible Study — Signs From God Will Swallow up Fakery

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Exodus 7-9.

I have a Youtube video of me reading the Scripture passage and my comments.

When Aaron’s staff turned into a serpent, Pharaoh’s advisor’s did the same thing to their staffs.  When Aaron stretched out his staff over the Nile and the water turned to blood, Pharaoh’s advisor’s also turned water to blood.  When Aaron stretched out his staff and summoned frogs come up and cover the land, Pharaoh’s advisors also summoned frogs.  When Aaron stretched out his staff and struck the ground bringing forth gnats to the point where everyone was covered with them, Pharaoh’s advisors were unable to duplicate his actions.  However, by that point Pharaoh had become so convinced that Aaron and Moses were tricksters that he was sure that what they were doing was just tricks his advisors did not know.  Pharaoh had failed to pay attention to the fact that from the beginning there was something different about what Moses and Aaron were doing.  When all of the staffs turned into serpents, Aaron’s staff swallowed up the staffs of Pharaoh’s advisors.  When Aaron turned the water in the Nile to blood, Pharaoh’s advisors did it on a smaller scale.  When Aaron and Pharaoh’s advisors summoned frogs, it wasn’t Pharaoh’s advisors who ended the infestation.  It was Moses asking God which ended the infestation of frogs.  So, even when Pharaoh’s advisors were able to duplicate the signs which Aaron performed on behalf of Moses, God demonstrated that there was something different about what He was doing.  In the same way, when God gives us signs today, they may appear to be coincidence, or something which could be attributable to something else, but if we look closely we will see that the staff displaying God’s will swallows up those which try to dismiss it.  The people of Egypt suffered a lot because Pharaoh refused to listen.

There is a second way in which Pharaoh and the people of Egypt suffered because Pharaoh refused to listen when God first spoke to him.  Initially, all God asked of Pharaoh was that he allow the people of Israel to take a short trip into the wilderness to make a sacrifice to Him, returning after they were done.  Now God knew that Pharaoh would refuse that offer, but He made it nonetheless.  My point being that if Pharaoh had been the sort to allow the Israelites to take a three day journey into the wilderness to make sacrifices to God, who was not part of the pantheon from which Pharaoh’s power derived, the Israelites would not have been slaves in Egypt.  Since Pharaoh was the sort of fellow he was, God used him to demonstrate His power to the Israelites so that they would become His people.

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

 

January 19, 2026 Bible Study — God Calls Us to a Ministry for Which We Think We Lack the Skills

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

Today, I tried recording my reading of the passage before I began writing.  Previously, I had recorded my reading of the passage after I finished writing down my thoughts.  I decided to change it up because on several days I had additional thoughts about the passage while I was reading it with no time to put them into this.  Oh, I just realized that I had not announced on here that I have started recording my daily reading and thoughts and publishing those videos on Youtube.  So, feel free to check it out and tell me what you think.

This passage illustrates something which I heard a speaker say some years back, “If you think that you have the skills to accomplish the ministry to which God has called you, that is NOT the ministry to which God has called you.”  Moses felt like he was unqualified to do what God that to which God was calling him.  His attempts to convince God that he was the wrong person began in yesterday’s passage when he asked, “Who am I that I should go to Pharaoh?”  In today’s passage, Moses brings objections to being the one to undertake this task for God.  First, he says that the people of Israel will not believe that God has sent him.  I am sure that he was harkening back to the Israelite who asked him, “Who made you a prince and a judge over us?”  In any case, God answered that objection by giving Moses signs which he was commanded to perform to illustrate to the people of Israel that God had sent him.  Then Moses brought out what he thought was the key objection to God sending him, his lack of public speaking ability, or even ability to speak eloquently one-on-one.  We often have similar objections when God calls us to a ministry.  Our objection being, “I don’t have the skills/gifts to do that.”  Here is God’s answer to Moses when he said that he did not have the oratorical skills necessary for the ministry to which God was calling him, “Who has made man’s mouth? …Is it not I, the Lord? Now there go, and I will be with your mouth and teach you what you shall speak!”  God did not call Moses to lead His people out of Israel because Moses had the skills to do that to which God was calling him.  God was going to give Moses the ability to do what He was calling him to do.  God called Moses in order to demonstrate His power to Pharaoh, and to the Israelites.  In the same way, God does not call us to a ministry, to a task, which WE can accomplish by our own ability and power.  He calls us to do things which will demonstrate His power to us and to those to whom He has sent us.

As a final note, after God dismissed Moses’ final objection, Moses said what was really bothering him.  He didn’t want to do it and asked God to send someone else.  This made God angry.  But I want to note something we often miss.  God was already sending Aaron to meet Moses.  God had already started Aaron on his way to meet with Moses (check the verb tense in chapter 4 verse 14, “Behold, he is coming out to meet you,…”).  So, when God calls us to a task, he will provide us with the support we need to accomplish the task.

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

 

January 18, 2026 Bible Study — God, the Angel of the Lord, Calls Moses to Speak for Him

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

I thought about writing about how the Egyptians enslaved the Israelites because they feared them and parallels with other instances of slavery in history.  Then I thought about writing about how Pharaoh’s daughter almost certainly knew that the wet nurse she hired for the baby whom she named Moses was his mother.  I thought about other themes as well, but then I came to the account about the burning bush.  The reason I decided to focus there is because it starts out in a way which follows on from what I wrote about yesterday.  The account begins by saying that the angel of the Lord appeared to Moses in a flame of fire.  Moses saw the bush burning, but not being consumed.  So he went to look closer, and when he did the passage tells us that God spoke to him.  So, is it an angel or is it God?  I know.  I already talked about this yesterday.  The word translated as angel in the Old Testament means messenger.  Once again, we have the messenger of God, who is God, appear.    In the New Testament, and, to a degree, later in the Old Testament, the Spirit of God often brings messages from God.  Further, the “angel of God” appears in a flame of fire.  This reminds me of Pentecost, where the Holy Spirit came down upon the disciples in tongues of fire.  I believe that that comparison is not an accident.  It seems to me that God purposefully used tongues of fire to remind His disciples of when He appeared to Moses.  So, what we have here is the Old Testament portraying the Holy Spirit.  The point I want to make is that the New Testament portrayal of God as a Trinity is not foreign to the Old Testament Scripture.  Even before the birth of Jesus, God’s people understood that there were different aspects to Him.  I will try to show how the prophets expanded on this as we go through the Bible this year (I will note that I have had similar ideas about a theme I would touch on throughout the year where God has had other ideas…or, perhaps I just lost focus).

I was going to stop there, but then I was struck by the way in which Moses asked, “Who am I, that I should go?”  In much the same way, Jesus’ disciples had to wonder who they were to be sent with God’s message of the new covenant.  They were not men of great learning.  They were not men with a gift for oratory.  They were not men of standing in their community.  But they WERE the men whom Jesus had chosen.  In the same way that Moses was the man God had chosen, in the same say that the people gathered in that place on Pentecost were the people God had chosen, we are the people God has chosen to speak His message.  I do not know to whom you have been called to speak, but I know that you have been called.  I do not know to whom I have been called to speak, but I know I have been called.

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

 

January 17, 2026 Bible Study — Jacob Expresses the Trinity

Today, I am reading and commenting on Genesis 48-50.

My first thought was to find Jacob’s blessing of Manasseh and Ephraim in chapter 48 verses 15 and 16 interesting.  It seems almost Trinitarian.  Jacob  calls on God to bless them.  In particular the fact that he calls out God three times before asking Him to bless the boys.  First, he says “The God before whom my fathers Abraham and Isaac walked,” then he says, “the God who has been my shepherd all my life long to this day,” finally, he says, “the angel who has redeemed me from all evil, bless the boys;”  I’m not sure I would have noticed the way he seems to be referring to God as three persons in that blessing if he had not used the word “angel”, which means messenger, in the last of the three.  It is clear from the context that the angel in that third phrase is also God.  What made the connection for me was that we often think of the Holy Spirit as the aspect of the Trinity who brings God’s message to us.  Once I had made that connection, it occurred to me that the second mention of God is as a shepherd.  Which is one of the ways in which the Bible refers to Jesus, who is God the Son.  That brings me finally to the first of them, who Jacob refers to as the “God before whom my fathers…walked.”  Which ties the first mention to God the Father.  I know that this is a bit of a stretch, but I am also convinced that Jacob mentioned God in three different ways because he was aware of His three-fold presence.  Jacob really seems to see three aspects to God, aspects which were more than just different expressions of His Essence, and yet were not separate from each other.  He saw God as One before whom we walk, and as One who shepherds us, and as One who brings us messages.  Three in One, the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.

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