Tag Archives: Daily Bible Study

February 15, 2023 Bible Study — Similarities Between The Way The Levites Related To The Other Twelve Tribes And The Way Jesus Related To His Twelve Apostles

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Numbers 7.

In today’s passage we once again see the Children of Israel divided into the “twelve plus one” groupings I mentioned a couple of days ago.  In fact, the twelve plus one nature of the tribal divisions is more obvious in today’s passage.  Here the leaders of each of the “twelve” made offerings for the upkeep of the tabernacle.  The first part of these offerings were a cart for every two of the leaders of the “twelve” and an ox from each of them (two of the oxen to pull each of the carts).  These oxen and carts were given into the care of the “one” in order for them to transport the tabernacle and its furnishings.  In addition, the leader of each of the “twelve” offered items to be sacrificed by the leader of the “one”.  I believe it was this passage with the tribe of Levi handling the offerings made by the other twelve tribes which caused me to see a connection with Jesus and His twelve Apostles.  There is more to this parallel between the relationship of the Levites to the rest of Israel and the relationship of Jesus to the Twelve Apostles, but I do not yet have a clear enough understanding of it to write about it.

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

February 14, 2023 Bible Study — Embracing God’s Blessing And Placing It On Those Around Us

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Numbers 5-6.

I want to write about the blessing which priests were to say over the Israelites.  We should especially place this blessing upon our brothers and sisters in Christ.  However, if we understand it correctly, also upon everyone we encounter.  The first aspect of this blessing, “The Lord bless you and keep you;” means that we ask God to bring good things into the life of the recipient.  And what could be a better thing than for an unbeliever to become a Believer?  We are also calling on God to care for them and protect them.  Next we ask, “the Lord make his face shine on you and be gracious to you;”.  When I try to think about what this means, I think about a cat lying in a beam of sunshine, feeling its warmth and basking in the light.  When God’s face shines upon someone it dispels the darkness of any evil which might be around them.  The root word of “gracious” is grace, so asking God to be gracious to someone is once again asking Him to give them His grace and draw them into a relationship with Him and His Son.  Finally, we have, “the Lord turn his face toward you and give you peace.”’  Asking God to turn His face toward someone is asking Him to watch them so that He can come to their aid when they stumble or when enemies attack them.  With God watching, He can, and will, discourage enemies from approaching them and can give them the peace not to worry about what may go wrong.

So,I will leave you with the blessing

“The Lord bless you
    and keep you;
the Lord make his face shine on you
    and be gracious to you;
the Lord turn his face toward you
    and give you peace.”’

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

February 13, 2023 Bible Study — Thinking About What The Censuses Of The Levites Tells Us

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Numbers 3-4.

After completing the census of all males twenty years old and older for the rest of the Israelites, Moses conducted two censuses of the tribe of Levi.  In the first of these censuses Moses counted every male a month old or more.  The result of this census was 22,000, making the tribe of Levi the smallest tribe by a wide margin.  This number worked out for the best because God chose the Levites as redemption for the first-born sons of the rest of Israel.   The first-born sons were God’s because He spared them when He killed all of the first-born sons in Egypt on the first Passover (there is significance in that worth talking about, but it is not what I feel led to write about today).   Upon completing the reconciliation of the number of male Levites with the number of first-born male of all of the Israelites, Moses conducted a second census of the Levites.  This second census was of all of the Levite males between the ages of thirty and fifty.  This second census of the Levites was to count those who would come to serve in the work of the tabernacle.  While I do not believe that we should think that the work of the Church should be done only by those in that age range, we should recognize that the bulk of the work of the Church probably will be done by those in that age range.  Or, perhaps I should say, something is wrong when that age range is not doing the bulk of the work of the Church.

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

February 12, 2023 Bible Study –Thinking About What Moses’ Census And Camp Organization Tell Us

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

The Book of Numbers begins with the account of the census which Moses took of the Israelites.  The census was a count of the men 20 years old and older, except for the Levites who were excluded from this census.  Interestingly, this passage is one of those places where the Israelites are divided into thirteen groups, twelve plus one.  The tribes of Manasseh and Ephraim are counted along with the other ten tribes, and the tribe of Levi is set aside as separate and different.  A few years ago I was struck by how this “twelve plus one” division of the tribes reflects the twelve plus one nature of Jesus ministry on earth where He traveled around with His twelve Apostles.  I have never reached a conclusion about the meaning of that comparison, just noted it for future reference.

The previous paragraph was meant to be an aside before I got to my main point (which is not any more ground breaking).  I have had a perception about the relative sizes and significance of the tribes of Israel.  For example I always thought that the tribes of Judah and Ephraim were large and important and that the tribes of Dan and Benjamin were small, and not very important.  Yet, when a look at the census results I see that the tribe of Ephraim had only 40,500 men counted, only the tribes of Benjamin and Manasseh had fewer men in this census.  While the tribe of Dan had 62,700 men, second in size only to the tribe of Judah.  Not only that, but the twelve tribes were divided into four camps and one of the tribes was designated as the lead for that camp.  Dan was designated as lead for one of the four camps.  So, not only was the tribe of Dan much larger relative to the other tribes than I thought, it was one of the more important tribes.  None of this is particularly important, but it shows how we need to read the Bible carefully because some of the general impressions we have do not reflect what the Bible actually says.

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

February 11, 2023 Bible Study — Obeying God Is Hard, But I Will Take That Over The Alternative

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Leviticus 26-27.

I like how in this passage the consequences of a people obeying God are simple and straightforward: we will have enough to eat, we will have no reason to fear anything, and we will be successful (as followers of Christ our definition of successful is different from that of others).  On the other hand, the passage tells us that the consequences for a people of disobeying God are progressive.   First, it tells us that we will have to work harder to supply our needs.  Then, if we continue to refuse to obey God, we will suffer natural disasters and tragedies.  If that does not turn the people back to God, we will suffer plagues, shortages, and defeat at the hands of our enemies.  Finally, if we still refuse to turn to God, we will suffer famine, destruction, conquest, and exile.  But even when we reach this last stage, God will remember us, and if we confess our sins and turn to Him, He will welcome us back and start us on the path to prosperity once more.  So, let us turn from our sins now and beg the Lord to make us able to live righteously.

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

February 10, 2023 Bible Study — Remember That The Earth Is The Lord’s

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Leviticus 24-25.

God commanded the Israelites to practice a Sabbath year every seventh year, and a Jubilee year every 50th year.  Actually, I am not quite sure how the timing of the Jubilee year was supposed to work.  So, it is clear that the year after the seventh Sabbath year was supposed to be a Jubilee year, but did the next Sabbath year come six years after the Jubilee, or did the counting for the Sabbath year start over with the Jubilee year.  Which brings me to the next thing I find interesting about the schedule of Sabbath years and the Jubilee: the Jubilee year is the year following the seventh Sabbath year.  That means there would be two years in a row where nothing was planted or harvested.  For those two years the people would live off of what the land produced without any crop management.   I want to spend a little bit of time looking at the idea of the Year of Jubilee.  The Year of Jubilee leveled the playing field by canceling debts, freeing slaves, and returning land to the family to whom it originally belonged.   In among the rules for the Year of Jubilee there are rules allowing people to redeem land which they have sold.  Finally, I want to take note that the reason why land could not be permanently sold was because it does not belong to us, it belongs to God.  We should recognize that the land we live upon is on loan to us from God and treat it accordingly. As servants of God, we should seek to return the land to Him in as good or better shape than when He first gave it in to our care.  In fact, I believe that we should treat all property which comes into our possession as on loan from God, using it to further His will for us on this earth.

 

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

February 9, 2023 Bible Study — The Importance Of The Sabbath And Seeing The Connection Between Easter And Passover

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Leviticus 22-23.

I think we can learn something from the appointed festivals the Israelites were supposed to observe.  First I want to note that there were seven of these festivals.  We tend to forget that the Sabbath was as much one of the festivals ordained by God for the Israelites as was Passover.  I am not sure how Jews view these festivals, but the Christians I know who think about them tend to focus on Passover, the Day of Atonement, and, perhaps, the Festival of Tabernacles, mostly forgetting that the Sabbath is one of these Festivals.  I think that the importance of remembering that the Sabbath is the first of these Festivals cannot be overstated.  The importance of Passover for Jews, and Easter for Christians, cannot be overstated.  In fact, I think the fact that the English language uses Easter for that event, rather than a word derived from Passover as most other languages do, causes us to to make less of a connection between Jesus’ death and resurrection and Passover than we should.  Similarly, our failure to take notice that the Sabbath was the first of these Festivals established by God causes us to fail to take seriously God’s call for us to dedicate one day a week to worshiping and thinking about Him.

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

February 8, 2023 Bible Study — Being Holy Because The Lord Our God Is Holy

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

Every time I read this passage I am struck by the very first of the commands it contains: “Be holy because I, the Lord your God, am holy.”  Then throughout the rest of the commands concerning the average person some variation of the phrase, “I am the Lord” is repeated.  I believe that the phrase “I am the Lord” is repeated in order to refer us back to that first command.  As I read this passage I see that, for the most part, these commands all serve as instructions on how to be holy as the Lord our God is holy.  In fact many of them are summed up by what Jesus says is the second most important command, “love your neighbor as yourself.”  And while those many other commands can be summed up with “love your neighbor as yourself”, those other commands are a reminder that at least some of us need about what it means to love our neighbors. So, let us seek to be holy even as God is holy…and the first step in doing that is to love our neighbors, even those we think of as unlovable.

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

February 7, 2023 Bible Study — Thoughts On The Difficulty In Translating Hebrew

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

I want to spend a little time today looking at the Hebrew word translated as “scape goat” in chapter sixteen verse 8.  The same word is used again, twice, in verse 10, and finally in verse 26.  These four occurrences are the only time this word, azazel, appears in the Hebrew Bible.  Further, all of the other writings we have where this Hebrew word is used appear to base its meaning on that writer’s understanding of what it means here.   Some have concluded that azazel is the proper name of something, and later tradition has made this some thing to be a demon.  The basis for this conclusion is that lots were cast between the goats.  One lot was “for Yahweh”, the other lot was “for azazel”.  This can be problematic because it suggests the Israelites had been commanded to make a sacrifice to a demon (there are other problems for orthodox theology with this interpretation as well).  So, despite not being a Hebrew scholar, or even particularly knowledgeable about Hebrew, I decided to see if I could determine the meaning of the Hebrew words from which azazel is derived.   One possibility is that azazel derives from the Hebrew words “el”, which means god (often times referring to God, but not always), and “azaz”, which means strong.  That would mean that azazel means something along the lines of “God is strong”, or “strength of God”.  In this interpretation, azazel might be a proper name, Azazel,  similar to Gabriel and Michael, two of God’s messengers who appear elsewhere in the Bible, although if that were the case I would expect it to be Azaziah, because that is the form used elsewhere in the Hebrew Bible.   Or, it might just be a descriptive term making the passage read something like this:

He is to cast lots for the two goats—one lot for the Lord and the other for the strength of God. Aaron shall bring the goat whose lot falls to the Lord and sacrifice it for a sin offering. But the goat chosen by lot as the strength of God shall be presented alive before the Lord to be used for making atonement by sending it into the wilderness as the strength of God.

That does not seem to me like it fits the context of the rest of this passage.  Another possible derivation for azazel is from the word “ez”, which means female goat, and the word “azal”, which means go away.  This interpretation results in something very close to the translations which we currently possess.

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

February 6, 2023 Bible Study — Do Not Expose Others To Our Illness, And Cleanse Ourselves Of Spiritual Crud

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

I am really unsure where to go with today’s blog, but I am going to focus on one verse near the end of the passage: Leviticus 15 verse 31. My first thought when reading that verse was that we today should make sure that we do not expose our brothers and sisters in Christ to infection when we are sick.  If you are sick, don’t go out and spread it to others.  However, I also see another lesson here as well.  We should separate ourselves from spiritual uncleanness, and take the effort to get clean again after exposure.  The Israelites went to a lot of effort to make sure that they were cleansed after becoming unclean, we should be willing to do whatever we need to do to be cleansed as well.

This passage is a perfect example of why I write this blog.  If I was not writing this blog, I would have skimmed over this passage without truly registering what it said.  And right about now, if not sooner, I would have lost my discipline to continue reading the Bible every day.

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