Tag Archives: Psalm 54

September 10, 2015 Bible Study — Here I Am. Send Me.

For today, One Year Bible Online links here.

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Proverbs 23:1-3

    When you dine with powerful people pay attention to what is going on around you. Do not let the food take all of your attention or you may be tricked into agreeing with something against your interests.

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Psalm 54

    This is a good psalm for meditating on. I really need to spend more time meditating on some of these psalms. God is indeed my helper. It is He who sees me through difficult times.

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2 Corinthians 11:16-33

    I have been struggling with what message we should take from this passage. I finally figured out how to put it in words. No matter what credentials of righteousness we have, our birth in good families, our good training, our dedication to God’s laws, Paul has them matched or beat. No matter what persecution we have suffered, Paul has suffered more. If Paul does not think his “resume” is worth boasting about, than ours certainly isn’t. Rather let us boast of the ways in which God has worked through us despite our weaknesses and failings.

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Isaiah 6-7

    The passage begins with a great scene. Isaiah was caught up in a glorious vision, but then he realized that he was in the presence of the Holy God. Isaiah is overwhelmed by his guilt. I am not quite sure of the symbolism of the hot coal taken off of the altar. However, it seems to me that there is dual symbolism here. The first part is that the coal transfers righteousness to Isaiah from the holiness it had by being on the altar. The second part is the “sterilization” that comes from the coal being fiery hot, so hot that a seraphim had to use tongs to handle it. I think this twofold purification tells us something about what we go through as God grants us His salvation. There is a transfer of His holiness to us, but there is also a searing to sterilize and kill the sin in our lives.
    The scene then transitions to one of the most poignant scenes in the Bible. God asks who He shall send as a messenger and Isaiah responds, “Here I am. Send me.” This is a great scene and it should inspire us to offer ourselves up to God’s service. There is a great hymn based on this which never fails to move me. It really is a great song. However, its message does not match up with this passage. Because as soon as Isaiah offers himself to be God’s messenger God tells him that His message is that the people will not understand what God has to say to them. We are being sent with God’s message, knowing that the following is true:

“they will not see with their eyes,
nor hear with their ears,
nor understand with their hearts
and turn to me for healing.”

Yes, even knowing that, when God says “Whom shall I send?” I want to stand forth and shout, “Here I am. Send me.” Unfortunately, all too often I look around sheepishly and quietly whisper when I realize there is no one else, “I’m here, I can go.” But you know what, God can use even me.

May 11, 2015 Bible Study

For today, One Year Bible Online links here.

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Proverbs 11:5-6

    If you are honest and upright your path will be clear. Those who attempt to get ahead by lies and deceit will find themselves under ever heavier burdens.

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Psalm 54:1-7

    I will put my trust in God. He is my helper who rescues me when trouble abounds. I will make offerings to Him, not in an attempt to bribe Him, but as a statement of thanksgiving. I have nothing to give God that was not already His. I will offer it back to Him because I am grateful for all that He has done for me.

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Mark 15:1-47

    When Pilate asked Jesus if He was the King of the Jews, he expected Jesus to make some grand pronouncement, perhaps about how the people would rise up to avenge His death. Instead Jesus responded with what was essentially a shrug. When the crowd arrived to ask/demand that Pilate release a prisoner as had become his tradition, he was reminded of the throngs which had followed Jesus into the city the previous week. He expected this crowd to ask for Jesus’ release. He was caught by surprise at their refusal and demand that Jesus be crucified. He didn’t really care, so he took the course of least resistance.
    If it was not for the way the Gospel of Matthew emphasizes the connection to Psalm 22 I do not know if I would have noticed them here. Nevertheless there are clear references to Psalm 22. There is the obvious one when Jesus cries out, “My God, my God, why have you abandoned me?”. But there is also the reference to the soldiers dividing His clothes and dicing for them. There is also the reference to the crowd mocking Him and saying that He should save Himself in terms very reminiscent of the psalm.
    Marks account of the Roman officer reacting to Jesus death is even more striking than in Matthew or Luke. This soldier would have seen Jesus before Pilate and when the soldiers had mocked Him before bringing Him out to be crucified. The officer made his statement based on how Jesus behaved all through this day. Do we conduct ourselves in such a manner when we face trouble that people see God in us?

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Numbers 15:17-16:40

    There is a bit of simple politics in all of the times when Moses’ authority was challenged, but Korah’s is the most blatantly so. Korah used his position as a leader among the Levites to attempt to acquire more. Korah questioned Moses’ right to stand in authority over other Israelites, yet strove to use his standing as a Levite to stand above them.
    Korah made some legitimate points when he asked why Moses had authority over others. However, he made it clear that he was not really looking for an answer to that question. Rather Korah was questioning Moses’ authority in order to take it for himself. It is not inappropriate to question authority and to hold those with authority accountable. However, when we attempt to use holding authority accountable as an excuse to not be held accountable ourselves, we risk being judged by God.

September 10, 2014 Bible Study — The Lord Asks, “Whom Shall I Send?”

For today, One Year Bible Online links here.

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Proverbs 23:1-3

    I actually think that the footnote to the NIV makes the most sense of this proverb. When you sit down to a meal with the movers and shakers of this world, pay attention to who else is there and to what they say and do. If you allow yourself to be caught up in the pleasure of eating the food set before you, you may as well kill yourself because you will miss some interaction which is important. Do not become so enamoured of eating with the movers and shakers that you are willing to give up what is important to you.

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Psalm 54:1-7

    God is my helper. He is the one I will call on when trouble arises. I will count on Him when enemies attack me. Those who plot against me because I serve Him will have their plans to blow up in their faces. Even when times are good, I will serve the Lord. I will give to the work of the Lord, not because He demands it but because I love Him.

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2 Corinthians 11:16-33

    Paul points out that whatever others may have to boast about their faith and righteous service of God, he had as much or more. Yet despite all of this, Paul does not want us to believe his message on the basis of any of that. He wants us to judge him on the basis of what God has done through him despite his weakness, not because of his strength. God does not choose us because we are strong, wonderful people. Rather God has chosen us to demonstrate His willingness and ability to heal the weak and broken. It is only my willingness to admit my flaws and failures that has any value to God. If God can use me to accomplish His purpose in this world, then He can surely use you to do even more.

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Isaiah 6-7:25

    When Isaiah found himself in the presence of God he was sure that he was doomed. He realized that he was a sinful man in the presence of righteousness. What is interesting is that Isaiah recognized that his sinfulness was expressed by the words he spoke. When Isaiah acknowledged his sinfulness before God, God cleansed and forgave him. Having forgiven Isaiah, God asks who He can send to deliver His message. God is asking this question today. Whom shall He send? Having been forgiven, will I answer as Isaiah did? Whenever I read this passage, I cannot help but imagine Isaiah standing there going, “Me, Me, send me! I’ll go!” Although sometimes I also imagine Isaiah looking around, seeing no one else there and saying quietly, “Well, I’m here, you could send me.” In both cases I imagine Isaiah having some doubt as to whether or not he was truly qualified, if God will really want to send him. We may feel the same way, I certainly do. But God’s answer to us is the same as His answer to Isaiah, “Yes, go, and say to this people…”
    The question is not whether God wants us to deliver His message. The question is, are we willing to go?

September 10, 2013 Bible Study — Whom Shall I Send?

     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.

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Isaiah 6-7:25

     Today’s passage begins with one of my favorite “scenes” from the Bible. Isaiah had a vision of God seated on a throne in the Temple. Isaiah’s response was to express fear and despair because he knew that he was a sinful man in the presence of a holy God. In particular, he expresses concern about his filthy lips. In response, one of the seraphim in attendance to God flew to him with a burning coal taken from the altar and touched it to Isaiah’s lips. The seraphim told Isaiah that his sins had been removed by the touching of the coal to his lips and they were forgiven.
     When Isaiah’s purification was completed he heard God call out, “Whom shall I send as my messenger? Whom shall I send?”
     Isaiah replied, “Here I am. Send me.”
     God gave Isaiah the message he was to deliver. The message to the people was that they would hear, but not understand. They would look, but not see. Isaiah was to tell the people that they would refuse to listen to God’s message and to see the signs He was giving them. If they were to truly listen and genuinely see what was happening, they would turn to God and be forgiven. However, they would not do so.

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     This passage starts by showing how we respond to finding ourselves in God’s presence if we are honest with ourselves. Isaiah responded in fear and despair. He knew that he was a sinful man whose mere presence placed a stain upon a holy God. God responds to Isaiah’s fear in a manner which would be unexpected if not for the revelation of the Bible. God sends one of His agents to purify Isaiah. The method of purification is symbolic in two ways. The first is that a burning coal touched to human lips would be expected to inflict great pain. As the seraphim approached Isaiah, he would have expected to experience a searing pain for an extended period of time (considering that he speaks moments after this, we conclude that the pain did not occur, or was fleeting). The second is that the heat of a burning coal would cauterised a wound and/or kill the infectious agents present where it touched. By applying a burning coal, the flow of sinful words would be stopped, the ability of the sin present on Isaiah’s lips to infect others would be eliminated.
     Having purified and forgiven the sinner in His presence, a purification needed more for the sinner to feel able to be in God’s presence than for God to allow the sinner in His presence, God asks for someone to be His messenger. Having just been purified of his sins, Isaiah responds that since he is here, he is willing to go. We respond in the same way to God’s purifying us from our sins. If we have accepted the purification of our sins, we will find ourselves responding to God’s call for a messenger, not just by volunteering, but by enthusiastically volunteering. Isaiah’s response was not, “Well, if you’ve got no one else, I guess I could do it.” No, Isaiah’s response was “Ooh, Ooh, pick me! I’ll go! Send me! Let me do it!” All the while jumping up and down with his hand in the air. That is what happens to us when God purifies us of our sins, we want more than anything else in this world, or the next, to serve God however we can.

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2 Corinthians 11:16-33

     Paul says that he does not wish anyone to think him foolish, but since some apparently do think him foolish, he will indulge in some foolishness. He has been called a fool and others have boasted of how the believers should follow their teachings rather than Paul’s because of the credentials they have. Paul tells the Corinthians that whatever credentials these “super-apostles” (as Paul referred to them in yesterday’s passage) claim to have, he has it in spades. He is just as much a Hebrew, an Israelite, a descendant of Abraham as anyone. Paul goes on to tell them that he has worked harder and suffered more in service to Christ than any of these men would even claim, let alone have actually done. Paul makes all of these boasts almost under protest.

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     Paul taught through almost all of his writings that we should be humble and only boast of God’s working in and around us. Here he breaks from that. He does this because apparently teachers have arisen who are claiming great credentials and are claiming to have greater understanding of the Gospel than Paul. However, they are teaching things which are contrary to what Paul had taught. These were not people from among the disciples that had followed Jesus while He was preaching in Galilee and Judea.
     In this passage Paul gives us a standard by which to measure people who claim to be speaking on behalf of God. First, he asks us to measure what they preach against what we have already learned. If it is consistent with what we already know, all well and good. If, however, it contradicts what we already believe regarding the Gospel, he provides us with standards by which to compare those who teach the competing doctrines. What kind of fruit does each preacher bear? Do they demonstrate concern for those in need? Have they suffered privation themselves in order to reach the lost? Paul continues this in tomorrow’s passage.

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Psalm 54:1-7

     A psalm to remember when we face troubles and difficulties. If we put out trust in God and serve Him to the best of our ability, we can cry out to Him and know that this will be true for us:

Behold, God is my helper;
The Lord is the sustainer of my soul.
He will recompense the evil to my foes;(NASB)

I will praise the Lord, for He will help me in times of trouble.

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Proverbs 23:1-3

     When invited to dine with the politically powerful, pay attention to what you are fed and who you are eating with. Do not let the food and entertainment distract you from what else is going on.

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