Tag Archives: Psalm 12:1-8

January 14, 2015 Bible Study — God Will Give You the Right Words At the Right Time

For today, One Year Bible Online links here.

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Proverbs 3:13-15

    Wisdom is more valuable than any treasure you can obtain, silver, gold, or jewels. Nothing on the face of this earth which you may desire is of more value than wisdom. Make gaining wisdom a higher priority than gaining anything else. There will be time enough for other things after you acquire wisdom, and even if there isn’t, you will be better off with wisdom than with those other things.

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Psalm 12:1-8

    I read this psalm and it seems as if the psalmist is living today. It is a reminder that the Bible applies to us today as much as it did when it was written.

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Matthew 10:1-23

    It is tempting to take Jesus’ instructions to the Twelve when He sent them out as THE model for evangelism. This would be a mistake, because Jesus gives different instructions for evangelism elsewhere. However, it is A model for evangelism. There are times and places where this is how we are called to preach the Gospel. There are however some things in Jesus’ instructions here which do apply to us in every circumstance.
    Jesus tells us that we are going out as sheep among wolves. Therefore we need to not be naive. We need to be aware that people are going to attempt to take advantage of us
and we should not let them do so. However, we can allow them to think that they are taking advantage of us. We should be aware of the ways in which people are attempting to manipulate us and not allow them to do so. However, there is we do not need to reveal that we know they are attempting to manipulate us until they try to get us to do something that does not fit in with our mission.
    Jesus goes on to tell us that we will be arrested and face persecution. We will be brought before judges and rulers. This will give us an opportunity to preach the Gospel to some who would not otherwise listen. When we are in that circumstance we should not worry about what we are going to say because the Holy Spirit will guide our words. I do not think Jesus is telling us not to plan out what to say when we know in advance that we are going to speak in front of a hostile audience. Rather, He is telling us not to worry about what to say when we are put on the spot. I know that on several occasions I have been in a circumstance where to this day the only explanation I have for the words I spoke was the Spirit of God (quoting verses I have never memorized, saying things I had not realized I believed, etc).

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Genesis 30-31:16

    When Jacob decided, with God’s guidance, that it was time to leave Laban and return to Canaan, he did not claim that his wealth was the result of his hard work. Rather he credited God with being responsible for his success. Yes, Jacob claimed to have worked hard, but he acknowledged that all of his hard work would have been for naught if God had not aided him. Do we have a similar attitude? Are we willing to work hard in the knowledge that any success we have will nevertheless only come as a gift from God?

July 16, 2014 Bible Study — We Have All Fallen Short

For today, One Year Bible Online links here.

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Proverbs 19:13-14

    Our parents can give us material wealth, but a wise and understanding spouse is a gift from God. I thank God every day for giving me a wife who understands both my strengths and my weaknesses.

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Psalm 12:1-8

    This is another passage which reminds me that what is going on in the world today is not something brand new. The psalmist speaks here of a society where the godly are disappearing, where it seems like everyone has turned to evil. He refers to a society where there seem to be no negative consequences to lying and doing wrong. However, the psalmist reminds us that God will judge the wicked and deliver the oppressed. The people around us may look with favor on those who do evil, but God will still hold them to account.

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Romans 3:9-31

    Paul tells us here that everyone has sinned. We have all failed to live according to the standard which God has set for us. None of us has a basis to claim to be better than any other. No matter who we are, we do not have the right to boast about being righteous. Every single one of us has done something which stands between us and being right with God. However, God willingly offered Jesus as a sacrifice to fix the rift between us. He has made us right with Him by that sacrifice. Any righteousness which any of us has is a result of that gift given to us by God. I cannot boast about doing what is right because it is only when God’s Spirit moves within me that I do so. It is a testament to God’s wondrous love that I do what is right with any significant frequency and I pray to Him that He causes me to do so ever more often.

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1 Chronicles 22-23:32

    David desired to build a Temple in order to honour God. However, God told him that he had been too much a man of war to undertake that task. The Temple honouring God was to be built by a man of peace. This is something for us as followers of Christ to bear in mind. Today the Temple which is being built to honour God is in the bodies of those who follow and obey Jesus. If we are to build ourselves into a Temple to honour God we must be people of peace, not of war. God is honoured by us demonstrating His peace to those around us.

January 14, 2014 Bible Study — Be As Shrewd As Snakes, And As Innocent As Doves

     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. In order to make that possible I read the passages and write my thoughts a day, or more. in advance. My work schedule has recently changed, meaning that I may not have time every day to complete these. As a result, I am trying to get several days ahead. I hope this does not negatively impact the quality of these posts (if that is possible). If you have any thoughts or comments regarding these verses or what I have written about them, please post them.

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Genesis 30-31:16

     When Jacob’s eleventh son, Joseph, is born, Jacob negotiates with Laban for wages once more (he received Leah and Rachel as his wives from his initial negotiations). Jacob and Laban agree that all of the speckled and spotted goats, and all of the black sheep in the herds which Jacob tends for Laban will be Jacob’s going forward. However, Laban knows something about genetics, so, before the agreement starts, he removes all of the goats and sheep which have the characteristics which would mark them as Jacob’s from the flocks which Jacob tends. Jacob, however, took actions which increased the likelihood that the strongest lambs and kids born to the remaining sheep and goats under his care would express the characteristics which made them his. He was successful in doing this to such a degree that Laban’s sons were jealous of his success.
     God blessed Jacob despite Laban’s attempt to cheat him. Modern knowledge of genetics suggests that Jacob’s tricks to get more spotted and speckled goats and black sheep would have had no impact on the numbers of such offspring, nevertheless, Jacob’s flocks increased. The message I take from this passage is that God will look out for our interests, even if those around us attempt to cheat us.

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Matthew 10:1-23

     Jesus sent out the twelve apostles, the Greek term here means something along the lines of “sent ones”, to minister to the people of Israel. He gave them authority to cast out evil spirits and to heal physical problems. They were empowered to address the mental and physical problems of those they encountered. Jesus sent them out into the world to bring healing to the sick, to raise the dead, to cast out evil spirits, and to preach that the Kingdom of Heaven is near.
     This passage applies to us today in one way or another. Just as we have freely received from God the means to meet our needs, so we are to freely give to those in need, whether that need is physical, mental, or spiritual. Part of me says that not all of us are apostles, those sent by God. That some of us are called to be those in whose homes the apostles stay. And this is true. Yet part of me says that we are all sent out by Jesus to be His ambassadors, His messengers, His apostles. And this is also true. There are times when we are to accept hospitality as we deliver God’s message to those around us. And there are times when we are to provide hospitality to those who are bringing God’s message.
     There is a part of this passage that I am convinced wholly applies to all of us. When Jesus says that He is sending them out as sheep among wolves, He is talking to all of us. As He sends us forth into the world, He wants us to be innocent, but not naive. There is another very important message for us in this passage. Jesus tells us that we will be persecuted for our faith. He follows that up by telling us that when we are brought before the authorities, we should not worry about what we will say, the Spirit will speak through us, giving us the words to convey God’s message for that situation. I believe that this statement applies not just to when we are arrested, but also to any time when we are forced to make a statement. On the other hand, this instruction from Jesus is not meant to apply to those occasions when we choose to make a statement. In the latter case, we should very carefully select our words and plan what we will say, while allowing the Holy Spirit to guide us.

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Psalm 12:1-8

     We may live in a society that honors the wicked and rewards those who lie, but the psalmist reminds us that God will protect the oppressed and rise up to save the helpless. The wicked may think that none are able to stop them, but God will bring judgment upon them in the fullness of time. I will not be deceived into thinking that lies, deceit, and violence are the path to an easy life.

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Proverbs 3:13-15

     Some people expend their energy searching for gold, silver, precious gems, or other physical treasures. I will spend my energy seeking wisdom because it is more valuable than all of those combined. Wisdom will return benefits far beyond those of any material wealth.

July 16, 2013 Bible Study — All Have Sinned

     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.

The pool at the Reading Phillies game
The pool at the Reading Phillies game

1 Chronicles 22-23:32

     David decided that the place where the threshing floor of Araunah had been would be the place that the Temple of God would be built. He then gathered materials to be used in the construction of the Temple. Because he thought that Solomon would be young and inexperienced when he became king and David wanted the Temple to be grand and magnificent, David began making plans for the Temple. He instructed Solomon on building the Temple. David said to Solomon that God has told him, David, not to build the Temple because he had shed the blood of too many people. Rather David was to leave the building of the Temple to Solomon, who would reign in peace. David then gave orders to all of the leaders of Israel to assist Solomon in building the Temple.
     David took a census of the Levites and assigned them to one of three divisions based on the clans descended from the three sons of Levi. He assigned the majority of the Levites to the task of supervising the work at the Temple. A second smaller division was to serve as officials and judges. The third division was divided between those who were to be gatekeepers and those who were to be musicians praising the Lord. David did this shortly before he arranged for Solomon to be crowned to take the throne in his place.

Pictures with one of the mascots
Pictures with one of the mascots

Romans 3:9-31

     Having stated that there are benefits to being a Jew and to being circumcised, Paul asks if this means that Jews are better than other people. He answers his own question by saying resoundingly no. Paul tells us that all, both Jew and Gentile, are equally under the power of sin. He quotes several psalms in order to support this claim, pointing out that the psalmist tells us that:

No one is righteous—
not even one.

All have turned away;

Paul continues by telling us that the purpose of the law is to make us aware of our sin, no one can be made righteous by the works of the law because no one can keep it in its entirety.
     From there, Paul explains that God has now revealed the way to be made right with Him, without keeping every last requirement of the Law. We are made right with God by placing our faith in Jesus Christ. The Law and the prophets told us that this was coming. It applies to all who are willing to believe. Everyone has sinned and we all fall short of God’s standard. God presented Jesus as the sacrifice for sin and thus freed us from the power of sin. God will declare any sinner righteous who is willing to believe in and rely on Jesus for their righteousness. This means that our righteousness gives us no basis to boast, or to claim to be superior to someone else, because it is not based on anything we have done. It is something we receive solely on the basis of our faith in Jesus. However, this does not mean that we ignore God’s law. It is only as an expression of our faith that we are truly able to fulfill the law.
***

     There are two lessons that Paul is attempting to teach in this passage. The first is that we do not have any basis for considering ourselves better than someone else. There is no way that we have lived i\up to God’s standard well enough to be able to say to someone else, “Well, at least I didn’t do that!” Every one of us has something in our life that other people, no matter how steeped in evil they may seem, can point to and say the very same thing about us. no matter how hard we have tried, we have failed to meet the standard which God has set for us. Nevertheless, God has given each one of us the option of accepting His free gift of His righteousness. Which brings us to the second lesson Paul is teaching in this passage. Once we have accepted God’s gift of righteousness, we will be inspired to do God’s will by living a life faithful to God’s commands.

Reading Phillies conference on the mound
Reading Phillies conference on the mound

Psalm 12:1-8

     This psalm is a psalm of hope in a day when its opening line once more seems to be coming true.

Help, O Lord, for the godly are fast disappearing!
The faithful have vanished from the earth!

The psalmist tells us that the Lord has seen the violence done to the helpless and He will rise up and rescue them. The wicked may strut around displaying pride in their wickedness and evil may be praised throughout the land, but God will keep the needy safe and protect them from the wicked.

Reading Phillies vegetable race
Reading Phillies vegetable race

Proverbs 19:13-14

Fathers can give their sons an inheritance of houses and wealth,
but only the Lord can give an understanding wife.

I will not attempt to add anything to this, except to say that I have been blessed by God.

January 14, 2013 Bible Study –Freely You Have Received, Freely Give

     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.

Amaryllis Bud
Amaryllis Bud

Genesis 30-31:16

     After Leah had born Jacob four sons and Rachel none, Rachel became frustrated and demanded children of Jacob. Jacob responded that she needed to take the matter up with God. Rachel then had Jacob sleep with her maid, Bilhah, so that she could raise Bilhah’s children as her own. Bilhah gave birth to two sons. When Leah saw this, and that she had stopped bearing sons to Jacob, she gave Jacob her maid, Zilpah. Zilpah also gave birth to two sons. Leah had two more sons for a total of six sons. Then Rachel finally became pregnant and had a son. Over the course of this passage we see a family dynamic of unhealthy rivalry between the sisters that Jacob did nothing to improve (and very likely made worse). When I was growing up this passage was often used to explain why polygamy was a bad idea. I don’t know if that is the point, but it does show us how dysfunctional Jacob’s family was (which should come as no surprise considering how dysfunctional the family he grew up in was). This just goes to show that God can and will use those who dedicate themselves to Him, even though they have many human flaws.
     After Joseph was born, Jacob began negotiating with Laban for new wages. Jacob begins the negotiations by saying that he wants to go back to where he grew up. Laban replies that he knows that Jacob has made him wealthy and asks Jacob what he owes him (this is really Laban’s way of saying, I don’t owe you anything, I have already given you the wages we agreed upon). Jacob comes back telling Laban he has worked very hard for Laban and that Jacob has indeed made Laban very wealthy, but when can Jacob start working to build his own wealth. Laban asks Jacob what he wants. Jacob suggests that he get all of the speckled, spotted and black sheep and goats that are in the herds he tends for Laban. Laban agreed to these terms, but he immediately went out and removed all of those that fit the criteria from the flocks that Jacob tended for him and put them in the flocks his sons tended. The passage tells us that Jacob placed pieces of wood with the bark partially stripped off in the watering troughs when the flocks were about to mate and this led to an abnormally large number of speckled, spotted and streaked lambs. As a result of his careful management of Laban’s flocks so as to maximize those that became his, Jacob became wealthy.
     As Jacob’s wealth grew, the attitude of Laban and his sons towards Jacob began to turn sour. As Jacob noticed this change in their attitude, God told him to return to the land of his father and grandfather. Jacob called Rachel and Leah out to where he was tending the flocks (the passage does not say, but I am guessing they brought his entire household with them). He tells them that he works very hard for their father, but their father cheats him of his wages. Nevertheless God has blessed him and he has gotten wealthy. Jacob then tells them that God has told him it is time to return to the lands of his father. Leah and Rachel express resentment of the way their father has treated them since they married Jacob and support his decision to return to the land of his birth. This is perhaps the only time we see this family behaving harmoniously.

The Snow Outside
The Snow Outside

Matthew 10:1-23

     Jesus gathered His twelve disciples and gave them authority to drive out demons and power to heal the sick, He then sent them out to preach the Good News in the towns of Israel. They are to proclaim that the kingdom of heaven is near. In addition to the preaching they are to “heal the sick, raise the dead, cure those with leprosy, and cast out demons.” Jesus tells them to take no extra provisions with them but to rely on the people of the towns they preach in for sustenance. They should trust God to provide for them.
     It seems clear to me from the way this is written that Matthew sees Jesus’ instructions to the Twelve as applying to more than them when Jesus sent them out to preach. He tells us that we are sheep among wolves. We are to be as shrewd as snakes, but as harmless as doves. We need to recognize the tricks people use to take advantage of others, but we should not use them. We will be persecuted and put on trial, but that will be our opportunity to testify about God’s love to unbelievers and the authorities. Don’t worry about what to say, or how to say it. Just let God’s Spirit speak through you. I need to let God’s Spirit speak through me more.

Amaryllis Bloom Opens
Amaryllis Bloom Opens

Psalm 12:1-8

     This psalm feels as if it was written today:

Help, O Lord, for the godly are fast disappearing!
The faithful have vanished from the earth!

They say, “We will lie to our hearts’ content.
Our lips are our own—who can stop us?”

God answers that He sees the violence done to the helpless and hears the cries of the poor. We know that God will protect the oppressed, even though evil is praised throughout the land.

Snow On The Bird Feeders
Snow On The Bird Feeders

Proverbs 3:13-15

     Wisdom is more valuable than anything else we can acquire, gold, silver and precious gems pale in comparison. Nothing else we can desire compares to wisdom. Search it out in order to find true joy.

July 16, 2012 Bible Study

     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.

1 Chronicles 22-23:32

     David selected the location for the Temple to be built. He, also, began collecting materials to use in the construction of the Temple. He set aside large amounts of gold, silver, bronze, iron and cedar. David told Solomon that he had wanted to build a Temple for God, but God had told him it would not be appropriate for him to do so because of all of the men he had killed in his wars. David went on to tell Solomon that God had told him that his son, Solomon, would be a man of peace and would build God’s Temple. David instructs the leaders of Israel to assist Solomon in building the Temple for God. David then assigns duties relating to the Temple that will be built to the Levites according to their family lines.

Romans 3:9-31

     In yesterday’s passage, Paul said that it is not OK to sin. In today’s passage, he wrote that even though the Jews have received God’s Law, they are no better than anyone else. The purpose of the Law is show us how guilty we are before God. We cannot be made right with God by obeying the Law. All have sinned and fall short of God’s standard. We can only be made right with God by placing our faith in Jesus Christ. Paul wrote that we are made right with God by believing that Jesus sacrificed His life, shedding His own blood.
     No one has any basis for boasting of their righteousness, because we have all failed equally before God. We can only be made right with God through faith, not by anything we have done. Does this mean we can ignore the Law and go on sinning? Paul wrote that it certainly does not mean that. He wrote that through our faith, God gives us the power to fulfill and keep the Law. Through the Holy Spirit we are given the power to overcome sin and do what is right before God. We will sin from time to time, but we should strive to allow the Holy Spirit to change us so that we do not. When we discover an area where sin is able to control us, we should not say, “There is nothing I can do. I just have to accept that I am going to commit this sin.” Instead, we should ask God for the power and guidance to avoid that sin in the future. If we acknowledge our powerlessness to overcome that sin and request God’s help in freeing us from that sin, He will grant our prayer and remove the power of that sin over us.

Psalm 12:1-8

     The psalmist tells us that even when it appears that society is abandoning all pretense of righteousness and descending into glorifying sin and evil, God will rise up and cast judgement on those who do violence to the helpless. When I read this passage from the psalmist:

They say, “We will lie to our hearts’ content.
Our lips are our own—who can stop us?”

I cannot help but think of all those in our society today who say that there is no God. It reminds me of the pro-abortionists argument that a woman should have control over her own body. But the psalmist tells us that God replies:
“I have seen violence done to the helpless,

Now I will rise up to rescue them,…”

The psalmist tells us that God’s promises are pure as silver that has been repeatedly melted and had the impurities removed. God will protect the oppressed, even in a country where the evil brag of their evil and others praise them for it.

Proverbs 19:13-14

     These two proverbs are obviously related, but at first glance they seem to contain two unrelated ideas. The first is that a foolish child is a calamity for a parent. The second is that choosing a spouse correctly is important for future happiness. However, they are related, because the foolishness being discussed in the first part is that of choosing a spouse poorly. It is important that we turn to God and seek His guidance in selecting a spouse. I have known many men who have sought women as potential mates based on superficial characteristics, who have ended up with women who made them unhappy. I love having a beautiful wife, but am so glad that I allowed God to guide my selection.