Tag Archives: forgiveness

February 21, 2013 Bible Study — Touch the Hem of His Cloak

     I am using One Year Bible Online for my daily Bible study. For today, One Year Bible Online links here. I have found that by writing this daily blog of what I see when I read these scriptures, I get more out of them. I hope that by posting these ruminations others may get some benefit as well. If you have any thoughts or comments regarding these verses or what I have written about them, please post them. I hope that the Spirit is moving in others through these posts as the Spirit has definitely been convicting me.

Shakespeare vs the Bunny
Shakespeare vs the Bunny

Leviticus 11-12:8

     The passage gives an account of what types of animals may be eaten. It does not list out all of the animals that may be eaten. Rather it gives the characteristics that determine whether an animal may be eaten. In order to make clear what types of animals may and may not be eaten it gives examples of both and why they fall into the category they are in. The rules then go on to spell out what to do if a clean or unclean animal dies and touches containers (or clothing) made of various materials. Based on what we know today about food preparation and disease transmission, these rules make very good sense for a culture with the technologies that were available to the Israelites (and for many centuries after).
     The passage goes on to describe the length of time a woman is ceremonially unclean after giving birth. This is the time that her husband cannot have sexual relations with her, she cannot prepare food for others or handle clothing or utensils that others will use. People have often used this passage about a woman being ceremonially unclean after childbirth as an example of a biblical law which mistreats women. However, this law actually enforces that a woman be given a period to rest after she gives birth. I am not sure why she is given longer when she gives birth to a daughter, perhaps to offset the greater social prestige of giving birth to a son.

Lillia makes Po do all of the work
Lillia makes Po do all of the work

Mark 5:21-43

     This passage is one that has an account of a healing inside of an account of another healing. It starts off telling us that the leader of a local synagogue, Jairus, came to Jesus and pleaded for Him to come and heal his daughter. Jesus accompanied Jairus along with a large crowd that pressed in on Jesus from all sides. In that crowd was a woman who had suffered bleeding for twelve years. She had suffered a great deal and had spent large sums of money on many doctors, but she only got worse. When she heard about Jesus and that He was coming nearby, she thought that if she could just touch the mere edge of His clothing she would be healed. She approached Jesus from behind in the crowd and touched His cloak. Immediately the bleeding stopped along with her other symptoms. Jesus turned around and asked who had touched Him. His disciples response was, “In this crowd, who can tell?” However Jesus was aware that someone had been healed so He continued to look around. When the women realized what had happened to her, she fell at His feet and told Him the entire story. Jesus responded to her story by telling her that her faith had healed her and to go in peace.
     This has always been a story that indicated the power and importance of faith to me. However, a year or two ago, when my wife was struggling with something, she would start to pray, “Just let me touch the hem of His cloak.” This opened up a new insight into this story for me and gave it greater meaning. The woman in this story did not feel that she needed Jesus’ full attention, she just wanted to be in the bare periphery of His presence, the merest touch of His cloak. Do I have similar faith that if I can merely touch the edge of God’s presence, my struggles will be resolved? Do I have the same desire to fight my way through the crowd so that I can experience just the very periphery of God’s presence? There is more to the story than just that. All the woman desired was just the merest touch of Jesus’ cloak, that was all she needed. But when she touched it and experienced His healing, that was not enough for Jesus. He wanted to know who she was and what her story was. It is the same with God, we may be satisfied with just the barest touch of His presence, but He is not. We often feel that God is too big and has more important things to deal with than our little problems. This story is about how Jesus made time for this woman. I will touch on more of that in a moment.
     As this interruption came to a conclusion, some people came from Jairus’ house and told him that his daughter was dead, there was no point in bothering Jesus anymore. The delay had cost him his daughter’s life. Except, Jesus didn’t see it that way. He told Jairus not to be afraid, just to have faith. Jesus allowed only Peter, James and John to accompany Him the rest of the way. When He got to the house, Jesus saw the commotion made by the people going into great show of mourning. Jesus asked them why they were making such a fuss? He told them that the girl was merely sleeping. They laughed at Him. They thought He was crazy. He made them all leave. Then He took the mother and father and the three disciples that were with Him in to where the girl lay. He called out to the girl and told her to get up. She did so. Jesus told the parents to not talk about it and to give the girl something to eat.
     Notice what happened here. Jesus was delayed and now it was too late, the girl had died. There was nothing more to be done. But that’s not the way it works with God. He does things in His own time and it is never too late as long as we have faith and patiently wait for His action. God may have more important things to deal with than our problems, but He has all the time He needs to deal with our problems and those more important problems. We also need to remember that we do not know which problems God thinks are more important. I am tempted to tell a story here to illustrate the point I am about to make, but the story is too long and takes too much explanation. The point is that we should never be afraid to “interrupt” God with our problems because He cherishes us bringing them to Him. And not just our problems, but our successes and joys. That is what Jesus meant when He said we should be like children. Think about how little children are constantly following their parents around and interrupting them with their joys and their sorrows. That is what God wants from us.

Keeping out of reach
Keeping out of reach

Psalm 38:1-22

     The psalmist cries out to the Lord for rescue. He expresses how his troubles are more than he can bear. He calls on God because he is at the end of his strength and cannot go on. He acknowledges that his troubles are the result of his sins and confesses to God that he has failed to live according to God’s commands. He lays himself before God and begs for His forgiveness. The psalmist has faith that God will answer his plea and patiently awaits God action. I will strive to depend on God and wait for Him, even when I am desperate and nearing the end of my strength,

Another picture of Magrat
Another picture of magrat

Proverbs 10:8-9

     Today’s proverb tells us that the wise accept commands, while the fool is busy talking about why they should or should not follow the instructions they have been given. The wise understand that there is a time for taking action and doing what those in charge instruct and a time for talking about why things are done the way they are. Those who want to debate every action, no matter how minor, before it is taken are foolish.
     Those who have integrity walk in safety and do not need to fear their motives being revealed. Those who attempt to use indirection to get their way will, sooner or later, be caught out as people realize that their stated goals are not what they are truly striving for.

January 28, 2013 Bible Study — How Often Should I Forgive Someone?

     I am using One Year Bible Online for my daily Bible study. For today, One Year Bible Online links here. I have found that by writing this daily blog of what I see when I read these scriptures, I get more out of them. I hope that by posting these ruminations others may get some benefit as well. If you have any thoughts or comments regarding these verses or what I have written about them, please post them. I hope that the Spirit is moving in others through these posts as the Spirit has definitely been convicting me.

Variegated Amaryllis
Variegated Amaryllis

Exodus 5:22-7:25

     The people complained to Moses about the results of his meeting with Pharaoh. Moses went to God and said, “I did what you asked and not only haven’t your people been freed, but things have gotten worse.” God replied to Moses that He was God Almighty and the Lord of All. God told Moses to tell the Israelites that He would free them from their slavery and demonstrate His power in such a manner that no one would be able to deny that He was supreme over all the earth. When Moses reported this to the Israelites, they did not listen to him because they were discouraged from the hard labor. How often do we do the same things? When things don’t work out the way we expected, we turn to God and say, “I thought this was what You wanted me to do, why are things getting worse?” God does not promise that things will get better right away when we do His will. He promises that He will show His power and those around us will know that we serve God Almighty.
     However, God was not done with Moses. He told Moses to go to Pharaoh once more. Moses argued back, asking why Pharaoh would listen to him since he was so bad at public speaking. God’s answer to Moses was that Moses should just say what God had commanded him to say and Aaron could dress it up for Pharaoh. God told Moses not to worry because Pharaoh was not going to let the people go based on anybody’s fancy argument. Pharaoh was going to let the people go because God was going to demonstrate His power and Pharaoh would be afraid to not let them go. So Moses and Aaron went back to Pharaoh another time.
     Aaron spoke to Pharaoh in the manner which God had commanded completing his presentation by throwing his staff upon the ground, where is became a snake. Pharaoh summoned his wise men and magicians. They also threw down their staffs and they each became a snake. The snake that had been Aaron’s staff, swallowed the snakes that had been the Egyptian magician’s staffs. Nevertheless, Pharaoh was not impressed and refused to listen to Moses’ and Aaron’s request. God instructed Moses to return to Pharaoh in the morning and once more tell him that God was requesting that He let God’s people go into the wilderness to worship Him. As a demonstration of God’s power Aaron was to stretch out his staff over the Nile, when Aaron did this, God would turn all of the water in the Nile to blood. Moses and Aaron did as God commanded and Aaron turned all of the waters of the Nile to blood. However, once more Pharaoh summoned his magicians and they also turned water to blood. And again Pharaoh refused to listen to Moses and Aaron.
     How often do we see this pattern followed in the world around us? Christians call on God for something and God performs a miracle. However, those of the world dismiss the miracle because they can give it a naturalistic explanation. It is tempting to dismiss these miracles as nothing special because they could have happened without divine intervention. Notice however that there are always differences between the divine intervention and the natural event: Aaron’s staff swallowed the staffs of Pharaoh’s magicians; Aaron stretched out his staff and turned all the water in the Nile and its tributaries to blood, Pharoah’s magicians merely changed a smaller amount of water to blood (necessarily, since the Nile and its tributaries were already blood and therefore they needed to work on some water that was not part of that). Moses and Aaron could have given up. They could have said to God, “You aren’t doing anything that these other gods can’t do. Why should we continue to face the hardship of following You?”

Team Reports On Trip To Honduras With MAMA Project
Team Reports On Trip To Honduras With MAMA Project

Matthew 18:21-19:12

     Peter came to Jesus and asked Him how often he should forgive someone who sinned against him. Peter had given this some thought and thought he knew the answer. It seemed to him that since the number of perfection was seven, that would be the number of times to forgive someone. Seven times was being generous in Peter’s mind, and in ours. You know the person Peter was talking about. The person who does the same thing over and over and every time begs for your forgiveness. You just know that if you forgive them this time they will do the same thing to you again. Jesus tells us that we are to go ahead and forgive them, this time and every time, even before they ask us. Jesus illustrated His point by telling a parable. I am not going to retell the parable, follow the link and read it for yourself. The point of the parable is that we have sinned so much against God that the amount that any one person, or even group of people, has sinned against us pales in comparison. Since God has forgiven us so much, why are we even thinking about not forgiving our fellow-man the relatively minor wrong they have done to us? The other good thing about this parable is that it reminds us what it means to forgive. When we forgive someone it means that we are giving up any claim to recompense for what they have done to us. If we have forgiven someone it means that we will not treat them any worse than we would treat a complete stranger. That’s a tough one.
     After this Jesus left Galilee and went into Judea. Crowds of people came out to see Him and He healed them. Some Pharisees came to test Him by asking Him what the conditions were for divorce. While I was studying this today I came across something I had been unaware of. There had been a debate between two rabbis on the conditions that justified divorce. The passage that was the core of the debate was Deuteronomy 24:1. The rabbi Hillel argued that if a man’s wife became displeasing to him for any reason, he could divorce her. The rabbi Shammai held that a man could only divorce his wife if she was sexually unfaithful. Jesus basically sided with Shammai, but He took it further. Both Shammai and Hillel based their position on their understanding of the passage in Deuteronomy. Jesus based His position on the Creation account in Genesis. Since a man leaves his parents, is united with his wife and the two become one flesh, it is a violation of God’s desire for them to divorce. Those whom God has joined together no man has the right, or power, to separate. The only grounds for divorce that Jesus accepts are marital unfaithfulness and even then He seems to be saying that remarriage is not an option. The disciples certainly viewed His position this way since they thought His teaching suggested that it was better not to marry. I am not completely sure of how my reading of this passage applies today. However, I am utterly certain that God intended for marriage to be a lifetime commitment with no opt out clauses.

Bright Red Amaryllis
Bright Red Amaryllis

Psalm 23:1-6

     Today’s psalm is Psalm 23. Anyone who is familiar with any part of the Bible is familiar with this passage and for good reason. This passage is a source of great comfort for those who love the Lord. The passage tells us that God is our shepherd and He will provide for our needs. There is a little more here than we usually notice. A shepherd provides for the needs of the sheep by driving them to where the things they need are to be had. Sheep often don’t want to go where the shepherd drives them. The shepherd makes it unpleasant for the sheep to not go where he wishes them to go. Despite the fact that we often do not want to go where God drives us, those are the places that we need to go in order for our needs to be met.

Building A Fire In The Fire-pit
Building A Fire In The Fire-pit

Proverbs 5:22-23

     Those who do evil become trapped by their actions into doing more evil. Lack of discipline and unwillingness to accept the consequences of one’s actions leads to death. The folly of being unwilling to admit that one has done wrong, leads one to do more wrong.