Tag Archives: Proverbs 12:27-28

April 11, 2015 Bible Study

For today, One Year Bible Online links here.

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Proverbs 12:27-28

    The connotation of this proverb is that even if they do catch game, they cannot be bothered to put out the effort to cook it. On the other hand, those who are successful make use of everything they can from the game they catch and the plants they harvest. This proverb teaches us to make productive use of all the resources which come our way. This proverb is a challenge to find productive uses to put what is otherwise waste.

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Psalm 80:1-19

    This psalm gives us an example of how we should pray when we face difficult times. The psalmist calls on God for rescue, but he acknowledges that in order to be rescued by God people need to turn to God. I love this phrasing from the NLT:

Turn us again to yourself, O God.
Make your face shine down upon us.
Only then will we be saved.

He repeats it three times, each time exalting God even more…”O God”, “O God of Heaven’s Armies”, and “O Lord God of Heaven’s Armies”. Let us beg God to turn us again to Him, acknowledging His power and glory.

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Luke 14:7-35

    Jesus gives us warning against seeking honour for ourselves. Jesus warns us against assuming positions of high honour for ourselves because it will be incredibly embarrassing if we have to yield them to someone more deserving. Instead, we should assume positions of low prestige. If we do the latter, we will be even more honoured when the host of the event pulls us out to put us in a position of prestige. This advice is not just about events regarding this world. It is of even greater import in heavenly matters, where the host is God Himself.
    Accompanying that advice, Jesus advises us not to throw feasts for those who can reciprocate. Instead of inviting our family and rich neighbours to our parties, we should invite the poor, the blind, the lame, and the crippled, those who will be unable to repay us by inviting us to their parties. When He gives this advice, Jesus tells us that God will repay us for doing this. However, I think He was also making a point about how we invite the better off as a subtle way of holding ourselves up to be admired, “Look at all the A-list people who come to my parties.”

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Joshua 3-4:24

    It is easy to overlook the significance of the memorial which Joshua had the Israelites set up after they crossed the Jordan. After all what is the big deal about a stack of twelve rocks? The thing we forget is that these were large rocks, not huge, but large. And they were all water polished. Water polished rocks have distinctive characteristics and looks. Geologists use those characteristics to identify places where there used to be streams and rivers. The memorial the Israelites built would have been a testimony to the fact that they walked through the Jordan on dry ground.

April 11, 2014 Bible Study — Do Not Seek To Honour Yourself

For today, One Year Bible Online links here.

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Proverbs 12:27-28

    The lazy will not even take the effort to cook any game they catch, while the diligent will always find plenty to eat because they make use of everything they acquire. The godly follow a path which leads to life, they do not choose actions which result in death and destruction.

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Psalm 80:1-19

    Let us cry out to God and ask Him to turn us again to following Him. It is only by the power of His Spirit that we can be blessed and follow His will. We cannot do so on our own. It is only when God shows His face to us that we can experience the blessings that come from serving Him. I pray to God that He send out His Spirit and turn His people once more towards Him. I ask that He send His Spirit upon me and change me so that I serve His will in all that I do.

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Luke 14:7-35

    Jesus was at a feast when He noticed that everyone was trying to sit in the seats of honour. Jesus then gives some advice that is not just about seating at a feast. He tells us that we should not attempt to honour ourselves; we should not put ourselves forward as someone deserving of honour. Rather we should be humble and assume that everyone present is more deserving of honour than ourselves. Jesus goes on from that to tell us that it is better to good things for those who cannot pay us back for our kindness. These two lessons go together. Do not do good things in order to receive recompense, whether that recompense is material or something insubstantial such as being honoured.
    Jesus followed this up by telling the story about the man who prepared and threw a banquet. When He sent out word that the meal was ready to those who had initially accepted His invitation, they all replied that they were too busy to come now. This is a clear reference to those who have lived a “religious” or “righteous” life believing that they had an “in” with God. The important thing is not that we were invited to God’s feast, nor that we accepted to invitation. The important thing is that we are ready to do His will when He says that now is the time. If we do not respond when God tells us it is time, our place will be taken by the alcoholics, the druggies, the dregs of the earth (not just the unfortunate who life has dealt a raw hand, but those who have chosen a self-destructive path). I think it is wonderful news that God will include these, but I do not want to be left out because I failed to answer the call.
    Jesus goes on to tell the crowd following Him that if they wish to follow Him they need to be willing to give up everything in this life, to the point of suffering a horrible death. It is important for us to count what following Him will cost us before we set out. There have been those who fell away because they discovered that the cost of following Christ was higher than they were willing to pay. In some cases I believe that if they had realized the cost when they chose to follow Christ, they would have done so anyway and when the time came they would have continued on. But because they had not realized the price they would need to pay, when the time came they felt betrayed and fell away from Christ. Following Christ will cost us everything which we have, even our very lives. If we are not willing to pay this price, we may as well never start down that road.
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Joshua 3-4:24

    The people of Israel purified themselves the night before they were to set out to cross the Jordan. They went forth in faith and God stopped the flow of the Jordan River so that they could cross on dry ground. Unlike when they had crossed the Red Sea, this crossing was done where it could be witnessed by many people besides the Israelites. As they crossed the Jordan they gathered stones so as to make a memorial to remind future generations of what God had done for them. I will strive to purify myself when God has revealed that He is about to use me to demonstrate His power, even if it is only through something that does not deserve to be mentioned next to crossing the Jordan. In addition, this passage reminds us of the importance of creating memorials to remind ourselves of what God has done in our lives. These memorials will serve as a basis for strengthening our faith when we doubt and as an opportunity to tell others of the wonderful things God has done for us.

April 11, 2013 Bible Study — Will We Accept God’s Invitation To The Feast?

     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.

Hyacinth begins to bloom
Hyacinth begins to bloom

Joshua 3-4:24

     When the time came for them to cross the Jordan River, Joshua instructed the people of Israel to purify themselves. The following morning, at God’s command, Joshua had the priests take the Ark of the Covenant and walk into the Jordan River. As soon as the priests carrying the Ark entered the Jordan River the water stopped flowing from a point upstream of where they entered. The rest of the water continued flowing into the Dead Sea until the Israelites could cross the Jordan River on dry ground. The priests stopped in the middle of the Jordan River while the rest of the Israelites crossed over. Once all of the Israelites had crossed the river, Joshua had twelve men, one from each tribe, go to where the priests were standing and get a stone from the riverbed. They took theses stones and used them to build a memorial of the crossing. The people of Israel stood in awe of Joshua for the faith he showed, and the power God exercised on his behalf, when they crossed the Jordan. When all of the Israelites had crossed the river, Joshua had the priests come out of the Jordan. As soon as the priests left the riverbed and stood on high ground the river began flowing once more. The passage points out that this occurred when the Jordan River was at flood stage.
     It is worth noting that stones from a riverbed look different from stones that have not been in a riverbed. The flow of water over the stones smooths and rounds them, giving them a distinct appearance. This is why the memorial that Joshua had built would have been distinctive.

Magrat by the crocus
Magrat by the crocus

Luke 14:7-35

     Today’s passage takes up with Jesus at a feast at a Pharisee’s house (it is worth noting that despite His many teachings against the hypocrisy of Pharisees, Jesus associated with them). Jesus took note of the fact that everyone was trying to sit in the seats of honor near the head of the table. Jesus tells them that they should not take the seats of honor because it would be terribly embarrassing if the host comes to them and asks them to move because someone more distinguished has come. Rather they should seat themselves at the seat of lowest honor that way they will receive even more honor when the host comes and tells them in front of everyone to move to a better seat. Jesus then turned to His host and told him that when he holds a meal, he should not invite his friends, family and rich neighbors who will invite him back. Rather he should invite the poor, the crippled, the lame and the blind. If he does the latter God will reward him.
     I believe that both of these lessons are for us. We should not honor ourselves. Rather we should live our lives with humility and let others honor us, if and when we are deserving of honor. If we do not receive the honor we deserve in from our fellow man, we will receive it from God. The second lesson is that we should use our resources to help those who have less than we do.
     Someone then called out to Jesus that those who will eat at the feast in the kingdom of God were blessed. Jesus used this as the springboard to tell a parable about someone who announced a feast and invited many guests. However, when the time for the banquet arrived the invited guests all presented excuses as to why they could not come. When the man who was throwing the feast heard that his invited guests could not come, he sent his servants out to invite the poor, the sick, the crippled and the lame to his feast. When this was done his servants told him there was still room. So he sent his servants out onto the roads and the byways to compel whoever they could find to come to his feast, but those he had originally invited would not get to taste of the feast.
     There was a part of this parable that I had never noticed before. We all know the part where the original guests offer excuses and refuse to attend the banquet. And most of us know the part where the Master sends out invitations to the poor, the crippled, the sick, the blind and the lame. What I never noticed before is that after inviting those unfortunates, the Master still had room. It was then that He sent out His servants to compel others to attend His feast. The unfortunates are the ones whom God invites first to His feast. It is only after they have all been seated and there is still room that He invited those who were not such unfortunates received an invitation. This is the model we should use when preaching the gospel. We should preach the gospel to the unfortunates of this world and invite them to God’s bountiful table, we should do our best to provide for their needs from the bounty which God has given us. Our ministry to those who are well-off in this world should be a product, an after effect of our ministry to the unfortunates. This is a difficult thing for me to express correctly. It is not that God loves the well-off less, it is just that we should focus our ministry on those who cannot pay us back.
     Finally in today’s passage Jesus tells us that there is a cost to following Him. He tells us that we should look at that cost before we start the journey and recognize the price we will have to pay. Then He makes a statement that many people have trouble understanding. “Salt is good for seasoning. But if it loses its flavor, how do you make it salty again?” If we as Christians do not live any differently than those around us, what is the point of us being Christians?

Another shot of the crocus in bloom
Another shot of the crocus in bloom

Psalm 80:1-19

     This psalm is a cry for God to restore His people, to listen to their prayers. For me the key phrase is this:

Turn us again to yourself, O God.
Make your face shine down upon us.
Only then will we be saved.

It is only when God turns us back to Him and away from sin that we can be saved. I read that and think about the way that plants turn themselves to the sun when it shines down on them. In the same way, we need God’s face to shine down on us and we need to turn toward Him when He does so.

Magrat behind some forsythia
Magrat behind some forsythia

Proverbs 12:27-28

     I read this proverb and it reminds me of a trip I made with some friends many years ago. We were going up to a cabin in a remote area for an extended weekend. On the way, the car in front of us hit and killed a deer. The people in that car did not want the deer, so my friends, who were hunters, dressed the deer and took it along with us. When we got to the cabin, we butchered the deer (after contacting the state Game Commission). However, my one friend was angry with the others because they cut the best cuts out of the deer to cook and left the rest of the meat for him to cut up. I helped as much as I could, but not being a hunter myself I had little experience with butchering a deer. The thing I learned from that was the importance of preparing all of something at once or losing the opportunity. My friends who cut out just the good cuts they wanted to cook at that moment are like the lazy people in this proverb. My other friend was like the diligent. He made use of everything that was available to him from this chance opportunity. The diligent friend has done well with his life despite many struggles. The lazy friends have since ended up in jail.
     I will strive to be diligent and make use of every opportunity for good that God sends my way (whether that is good meat or the opportunity to witness to others).