Tag Archives: Deuteronomy 12

March 3, 2024 Bible Study — Remind the Young of What God Has Done, and Remember What Those Who Went Before Us Told Us About What God Had Done for Them

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Deuteronomy 11-13.

Today’s passage reminds us that those who are children have not seen the wonders which we have seen God perform.  But not just those who are children, many of those younger than ourselves may not have seen wonders which we have seen God perform.  We need to teach those too young to have seen what God has done in the past.  When we listen to them we need to keep in mind what examples of God’s power they have seen, and what examples of it happened before their time.  The passage goes on to remind us that if we faithfully obey God, He will provide for us.  Our memories of how we have seen God work in the past will help us have faith that He will act in the future.  More than that, when we read this passage we need to consider whether we are in the place of the children who did not see God’s wondrous power.  If that is the case, then we need to keep in mind the stories which the generations which went before us shared with us.  Let us study the ways in which God has acted in the past so as to remain faithful, trusting that He will act similarly in the future.

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

March 3, 2023 Bible Study — Do Whatever It Takes To Remember And To Obey The Commands Which God Has Given You

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Deuteronomy 11-13.

Moses begins today’s passage by reminding the Israelites that they were the ones who had seen God’s wondrous signs and experienced His discipline for disobedience.  We must remember this, we have seen God’s wondrous works (at least, I hope that you have, I know that I have).  Others may not have, so let us be careful about how we let them influence us.  But whether others have seen God’s great signs or not, if you have you are responsible to remember what those signs mean.  Be careful not to be enticed to worship and/or serve other gods.  Do whatever you need to do to remember, and follow, the commands which God has given to us.  If that means attaching them to you hands, or writing them on your forehead, then do so.  And let us talk about God’s commands, to our children and to our friends, when we are at home and when we are away from home.  Talk about them in the evening as you get ready for sleep, and in the morning as you prepare for the day.  In every waking moment, think about what God’s commands mean for what you do next.

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

March 3, 2022 Bible Study — Those Who Fail To Keep God’s Commands Destroy The Environment

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Deuteronomy 11-13.

This passage starts the hits coming by telling us that those of us who have experienced God’s power first hand have an obligation to communicate that to the next generation, to teach the next generation to love and obey God.  If we take those experiences to heart and obey God’s commands, the land God has given us will provide for our needs.  I love the way in which Moses sums up God’s commands here–love and serve God with all of our heart and with all of our soul.  Another important point which I see referred to from time to time is that obeying God means that we do not destroy the environment around us.  However, what I have never seen anyone comment on is that those who disobey God will destroy the environment around them.  What makes this promise especially interesting is that few of the Laws laid down by Moses directly address our interaction with the environment around us.  I like the remedy which Moses offers to avoid being enticed to worship other gods, and therefore destroy our environment.  He tells us to fix the words of God’s Law in our hearts and minds by tying symbols on our hands and binding them to our foreheads if necessary.  We should talk about God’s commands when we sit at home and when we travel. when we lie down and when we get up.  Basically, we should be talking about God’s commands all of the time, no matter where we are or what we are doing.  A little later while discussing his instructions to worship in a central location, Moses says something which I believe goes along with what I have written above and will help us to talk about God’s commands, and to keep them.  Moses told the Israelites that they should rejoice before the Lord in everything to which they put their hand.  So, let us rejoice before the Lord in everything we do.  Doing so will help us keep and talk about His will for us.

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

March 3, 2021 Bible Study Do Not Allow Ourselves To Be Enticed To Worship Other Gods

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Deuteronomy 11-13.

Once again Moses emphasizes loving and serving God with our entire being.  He also reiterates the idea of thinking and talking about God’s commands morning, noon, and night, at home and on the road.  At the same time we should talk about the things God has done for us, both the wonderful blessings He has given us and the discipline He has inflicted on us when we sinned.  We should do these things because otherwise we may be enticed to worship and follow other gods.

Moses goes from talking about not allowing ourselves to be enticed to worship other gods to instructing the Israelites to only conduct their sacrifices at the one place chosen by God from within the land.  They were not to conduct sacrifices and offerings upon any random hill or mountain, but only at the one place chosen for the entire nation to come together.  To me, this resonates with the passage in Hebrews which tells us not to forsake gathering together.  By gathering together people can see how little things which seem innocent are tempting us away from God.  We see that the gathering to worship was for this purpose because Moses goes from talking about gathering to instructions about rejecting those who attempt to entice us to worship other gods.

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

March 3, 2020 Bible Study — Talk About God’s Word All of the Time

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Deuteronomy 11-13.

I want to focus today on what Moses told the Israelites in chapter 13 verses 18-20: “So commit yourselves wholeheartedly to these words of mine. Tie them to your hands and wear them on your forehead as reminders.  Teach them to your children. Talk about them when you are at home and when you are on the road, when you are going to bed and when you are getting up.  Write them on the doorposts of your house and on your gates,…”  While I do not think today we are called to take this literally, we should strive to follow this.  We should talk about God’s Word when we at home and when we travel.  We should talk about it in the evening as we end our day and in the morning when we get up, and all the time in between.  We should be thinking about what God wants us to do wherever we are, whenever we need to make a decision.  I was embarrassed to learn that someone I worked with for several years a few years back had not known I was a Christian while we worked together.  It is not that I think all of my co-workers should be aware of my faith, but this was someone I worked closely with day in and day out for a couple of years.  My failure to communicate my faith to them over that time is something I must work to ensure never happens again.  However, there is more to the importance of what Moses says here than just making others aware of our faith.  In fact, others being aware of our faith should just be a side-effect of making God’s Word an integral part of our day to day life.  

March 3, 2019 Bible Study Responding to God’s Power and Love

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

Today, I am reading and commenting on Deuteronomy 11-13.

Moses focused his comments to those of us who have seen and experienced God’s power and love.  While I have not experienced anything comparable to the parting of the Red Sea, on numerous occasions I have seen God act in my life when I was desperate for change.  This experience has made me a firm believer that if we are faithful to God He will meet our needs.  However, as Moses said in yesterday’s passage and again in today’s passage, if we begin to believe that our good life is a product of our own worthiness and turn away from God disaster will strike.  If we have seen God’s power and love in our lives we must be strive to obey God’s will with all of our being.

From time to time I encounter someone who claims that Judaism was not monotheistic until relatively late.  They base this upon the biblical accounts which describe how the Israelites often worshiped other gods along with God once they entered the Promised Land (and on some of the stories in Genesis).  However, such an opinion overlooks the repeated focus on monotheism throughout the first five books of the Bible.  It is true that the Israelites tended towards polytheism through most of their history before the Exile.  However, the command in today’s passage for the people of Israel to worship God in a central location was designed to address that.  Sacrifices were only to be offered at that designated central location.

I had intended to stop at that point, but I was struck by a lesson the modern Church could learn from.   If anyone was discovered to be trying to seduce people away from following God’s commands they were to be put to death.  I do not believe that God calls us today to kill those who violate His commands.  However, I have been struck by the number of people who attempt to convince the people of God to stop calling one sin or another a sin who remain in good standing with their Church after their argument has been defeated.  Many of them fail to accept that God has spoken through the Church and continue to strive to change the Church’s teachings after the Body has rejected this change.  Those who reject the teachings of the Church, which have been its teachings since the First Century should be cast out with those who refuse to stop practicing those sins.  I want to make an important distinction here between those who fall into sin and acknowledge that God is calling them to change and those who sin and proclaim that there is no reason to stop doing so.  Even the best of us will fall into the former category but those who fall into the latter category must be exposed as not seeking to follow God’s will.