Tag Archives: read the Bible in a year Bible study

December 24, 2015 Bible Study

For today, One Year Bible Online links here.

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Proverbs 30:24-28

    We can take lessons from various creatures none of which are powerful. Ants store up food when it is plentiful for times when it is in short supply. The hyrax (the word translates from Greek as “shrewmouse”, which gives you some idea what sort of creature they are) is weak, but it lives where it is hard for predators to get at it. Locusts have no leaders, yet they move as a group so as to overwhelm any attempt to stop them. Lizards are easy to catch, yet they turn up everywhere. Let us follow these examples as we seek to serve the Lord.

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Psalm 143

    If you are feeling depressed, this psalm is both a good prayer and a good meditation. Call out to God for rescue from your depression and from the things which are making you depressed. Then think about the great works which God has done, but not just about the great works, think about all of the things which God has done. If you trust God and give yourself to Him, He will show you where and how to walk. He will hide you and protect you from your enemies. He will teach you to do His will, follow those teachings and, over time, you will find your depression lifting.

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Revelation 15

    Those who resist the temptation of the beast, his statue, and his number will stand before God to sing His praises. If we are among that number God will give us the tools which will allow us to beautifully praise His name before all people. This passage is at least partially figurative. As we resist the temptations to give in to persecution we bring praise to God and encourage others to serve and praise Him as well. I will praise and glorify God in such a way as to encourage others to do so as well.

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Zechariah 6-7

    Zechariah is given the message that the gold and silver being brought from the exiles still in Babylon should be made into a crown for Jeshua, the high priest. Zechariah declared that Jeshua would rule over Jerusalem as a king and would also serve as high priest. What I find interesting is that Jesus is the Anglicized version of the Greek transliteration of Jeshua. So, it is possible to interpret this passage as a prophecy regarding Jesus. I believe that while this passage had meaning to the people of Zechariah’s day, it was also a prophecy regarding the coming of Jesus.
    There is an important message in this passage. Some of the Jews sent a message to Zechariah asking if they should continue to mourn and fast on the anniversary of the Temple’s destruction, since it had been rebuilt. Zechariah’s answer is one to which we need to place close attention. He tells them that they were not mourning and fasting for God, and their holy feasts were also for their own pleasure. What God wanted from them, and wants from us, is that we show mercy and kindness to one another. We must not oppress the powerless, the orphan, the widow, the foreigner, and the poor. Further we should not plot and scheme against one another. When I write this I keep thinking, “This is so obvious. I need to write something which shows how this is not just pablum.” Then I look at the world around me, even in parts of the Church, and realize that it may be pablum, but not enough people are listening and acting upon this pablum. All too many people think they are following God by putting on a show of righteousness, while failing to follow these instructions.

December 23, 2015 Bible Study — “Not By Force, Nor By Strength, But By My Spirit,” Says The Lord

For today, One Year Bible Online links here.

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Proverbs 30:21-23

    There are some things which cause trouble. When the oppressed rise to power they become an even worse oppressor. When a fool gets lucky, he will use it to claim that he was wise. When a servant displaces his, or her, master, they become worse than the one they replaced. The common thread in all of these are people who rise to a position upon which none of their experience has bearing. Often they have no desire to truly do a good job, but even when they do, they do not know how to tell if they are doing so.

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Psalm 142

    When we reach the end of our rope and no longer know what to do we can turn to God for guidance. Ideally however we will turn to Him before we reach that point and He will show us how to reach that level of despair. God always knows the actions we should take. He will guide us on His paths so that we can serve Him. If we faithfully serve God we will never find ourselves in a desperate situation because we will know that we have followed the righteous path.

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Revelation 14

    I am unsure what is meant by the 144,000. Is it literally only 144,000? Or is that number purely symbolic? The number is clearly symbolic, but I am not sure if it is also literal. However, there is a message here that is more than symbolic. There will be a number of people who are able to keep themselves pure (or perhaps are kept pure by the Holy Spirit). They will be rewarded by becoming members of the choir described in this passage. While even the most vile of sinners will be forgiven if they repent of their sin and turn to God, there is something to be said for not needing such extreme forgiveness, for struggling to maintain one’s purity to the extent which it is humanly possible.
    On a different theme which carries through John’s vision, those who succumb to the temptation and allow themselves to receive the mark of the beast will face God’s judgment. The writer reminds us that those who choose to serve Christ will face persecution and suffering. We must never allow ourselves to be seduced into worshiping the beast or its image. The context here makes me think perhaps I should revisit my understanding of the beast because it suggests that worshiping the beast is something which happens all throughout history, not just at some time just before the end. Let us be on guard so that we do not fall to the temptation to worship the beast.

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Zechariah 4-5

    While this passage was directed at Zerubbabel, I believe that it contains a message for everyone who strives to serve God. We will not accomplish God’s will by our strength, nor by our intelligence, nor by any other ability which we possess. While those things may serve us as we strive to do God’s will, it is only by relying on His Spirit and keeping ourselves focused on Him that we will accomplish anything of lasting value in this world.

December 22, 2015 Bible Study –The Number of The Beast

For today, One Year Bible Online links here.

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Proverbs 30:18-20

    We know scientifically how these things work, but just think about them from the viewpoint of your experience. Even though I know how an eagle flies, a snake slithers, and a ship sails, I do not really understand how they work. I cannot really convert them into how I move my own body. In a similar fashion I have trouble explaining how I love my wife. Yes, sex plays a role in that love, but there is something else to it as well. My love for my wife is different from my love for others in a way that is not fully explained by our sexual relationship.

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Psalm 141

    This psalm will indeed be my prayer. It is only if God will take control of my words and guard what I say that I will be able to truly serve Him. I know that when I control what I say I will say the wrong thing at the wrong time. It is all too easy to drift into evil. I pray that God prevent me from that drift.

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Revelation 13

    It is noteworthy that the first beast will have authority for the same length of time as the two witnesses from Revelation 11. Are the two beasts in authority at the same time that the two witnesses are prophesying? Or do they come later? I am not sure what meaning to ascribe to the two beasts in this passage and I wonder about their relationship to the two witnesses from Revelation 11. The two beasts and the two witnesses are clearly meant to be seen as parallels to each other. The two witnesses are servants of God and the two beasts are in opposition to God.
    I am not sure what the meaning of most of the metaphors** in this passage. However, it is important to read this passage and to be familiar with its imagery. What do the seven heads and ten horns of the first beast mean? Is the beast a person? Or an organization? Or a government? What does the wound which appears to be fatal mean? Does it represent a leader who survives an apparently fatal injury? Or does it represent that an organization appeared to be destroyed and comes back from that destruction? Personally, I lean towards the former, but it could be the latter. What is meant by the mark of the beast? Is it some kind of tattoo? Is it some kind of technological device which is implanted in people? Or is it some kind of figurative mark that is not literally visible? My inclination is the second of the three options. Is there a relationship between this mark and the seal which was put on the foreheads of God’s people earlier in Revelation? As I said, there are a lot of questions about the meanings of the things talked about in this passage. It is important to read this passage and be familiar with the imagery which John uses here. When we see things happening which fit the imagery presented here, we need to sit up and take notice.

**Please note that I use the word “metaphors” to describe the imagery here not because I do not believe that these things will happen literally as described but because there is meaning behind the imagery. I do believe that when these things happen it will not be immediately obvious that they are the things described in this passage, even though those who are faithful to God will recognize them as wrong.

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Zechariah 2-3

    I truly believe that this prophecy is a prophecy about the coming of Christ, but it is also a prophecy about the restoration of the nation of Israel. In it Zechariah speaks of a day when people of many nations will join themselves to the Lord and God will count them as His people as well. The prophet continues by speaking of God living among His people. I am convinced that this is a prophecy about the those who follow Christ. Further on the prophet speaks of the high priest of his day being a symbol of things to come. This is a prophecy of the coming of Christ Himself.
    Beyond that the prophet also prophesies that the day will come when the people of Jerusalem will number so many that they will live outside of the walls of the city. But they will not need the walls because God will be their protector. Look at the city of Jerusalem today. Large numbers of the people live outside of what once were the walls of Jerusalem. And none of them feel any fear because of living outside of the walls.

December 21, 2015 Bible Study — Those Who Hate Have Been Deceived By Satan

For today, One Year Bible Online links here.

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Proverbs 30:17

    At first glance this proverb warns against mocking and scorning your parents. That reading is not wrong, but it is incomplete. I believe it is also a warning against those who mock and scorn other people’s parents. I do not think this is about mocking someone who is a parent. The warning is about encouraging someone to mock their own parents, to scorn their parents teaching.

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Psalm 140

    This psalm makes a great prayer. I will call on the Lord to rescue me from evildoers. I do not rely on my ability to keep me and my loved ones safe. I know that only the Lord can accomplish that. I know that God will help those whom the wicked persecute and bring justice to the poor. Yes, I will call on the Lord and praise His name.

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Revelation 12:1-17

    There are many lessons to be learned from this passage, but the one which strikes me is that Satan is a deceiver. He deceives the whole world. It is Satan, the devil, the dragon from this vision who is responsible for Anti-Semitism and the persecution of Christians. It is the deceit of Satan which leads people to persecute one group or another. In particular, Satan deceives people into persecuting Jews because he failed to destroy Jesus. When he is unable to get at Jews, he turns that persecution against those who faithfully follow Christ. Satan seeks to deceive all people. He uses deception to get us to hate those who have succumbed to another of his deceits. Whenever we allow ourselves to hate our fellow humans, even those who hate us, we have fallen for Satan’s deception.

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Zechariah 1

    From time to time throughout history, God has raised up nations to punish the Jewish people. Time and again those nations go beyond the mandate they were given and persecute the Jewish people beyond the bounds which God had set. When those nations do so, God brings judgment against them and peace to His people. In many ways He uses the the excesses of those who persecute the Jews to bring good things to the Jews. This does not excuse the excesses of those who persecuted the Jewish people and God will bring punishment upon them.

December 20, 2015 Bible Study — Serve God First

For today, One Year Bible Online links here.

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Proverbs 30:15-16

    The lesson here is that some problems cannot be fixed by giving them more. You do not stop a fire by feeding it more fuel. You will not fix a desert by pumping water into it. In both of these cases the solution is more complicated. You stop a fire by removing its access to fuel. While you may be able to fix a desert, it is complicated (and I do not think that is the writer’s point). Overall, I believe the point here is that there are some enemies with whom giving them what they want is not a viable path to peace.

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Psalm 139

    Another psalm to meditate on. God knows every detail about us, even more than we know about ourselves. No matter where we are, or where we go, God is able to see our actions and our thoughts. If we want to get away from God, there is no place we can go to do so. If we want to turn to God, to call upon Him, He will be there for us, no matter where we are. He planned out every aspect of our bodies and our lives before we were born. There is nothing about our bodies that does not serve God’s purposes (if we allow it…and even if we don’t). Every aspect of our personality will be used by God if we choose to serve Him. God loves us deeply, is always thinking about us, and seeking to show us how to live joyously.
    I will ask God to show me the things I think and the things I do which offend Him. With His help, I will strive to remove those things from my life so that I can follow the path He has for me.

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Revelation 11

    This passage is worth some careful thought. Are the two witnesses in this passage two individuals? Or is there something more symbolic about them? My inclination is that they are two individuals. As I read this, I wonder how anyone will fail to recognize them when they appear? Or if there appearance is more subtle than the most literal reading of this passage suggests, how will I recognize them when they appear (assuming they appear during my lifetime)?
    My experience leads me to believe that when God moves in this world He does so in a manner which allows those who reject Him to come up with logical explanations for events which do not require His existence. It requires at least the acceptance of the possibility of God to see Him working in the world. Therefore, I believe that when these two witnesses appear there will be those who call themselves Christians who will not recognize them. On the other hand, I also believe that there will be those who falsely present themselves as these two prophets. So, my fear is that I will either fail to recognize the real thing or fall for the imposters.

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Haggai 1-2

    The lesson of this passage is that if we put taking care of our own needs ahead of serving God we will never have enough to give to God. It does not matter what the resource is, whether it is material goods, or time, or any other resource which we perceive to be in limited supply. We need to put God first. As soon as our most basic needs are met–shelter from the weather (even if it is only the most basic), clothes to wear (even if they are ill fitting and unfashionable), food to eat (even if we don’t like what it tastes like)– we need to start looking for ways in which we can serve God. And, when we hear the call to serve God, we should, at least sometimes, put that ahead of our needs. When Elijah went to the widow in Zarephath she was about to use the last of her food for a final meal. He told her to first prepare him a meal. As a result of serving God in this way, the meal she prepared was not her final meal. God provided her needs. He will do the same for us.

December 19, 2015 Bible Study — A Call To Repentance

For today, One Year Bible Online links here.

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Proverbs 30:11-14

    Some people blame their parents for everything that is wrong in their lives and refuse to credit them for anything that has gone right. These people are sure that they are pure as new fallen snow, when in fact they are as corrupt and venal as anyone. They proudly proclaim how much they have overcome, sure that they are much better than their parents. The truth is that they use others for their own gain, no matter what the cost to those others. No one is truly good until they recognize the debt they owe to others, especially their parents, and take responsibility for their own sins.

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Psalm 138

    This is a great psalm to meditate on. I will indeed thank God with all of my heart. I will praise Him in the presence of those who think that they are gods. God is greater than all others, but He cares for the humble and lowly. His plans for my life will come out exactly as He planned. I will praise His name and thank Him for what He has done every day of my life.

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Revelation 10

    John describes how next he saw an angel with one foot on the sea and one foot on the land. This angel held a small scroll, which he gives to John. However, before he did that something interesting happened. The “seven thunders” spoke something in response to the angel’s shout. What is interesting about this is that John was told not to record what they said. Everything else which John witnessed in this vision he was encouraged to write down for us, but not this.
    When John was given the scroll he was told to eat it. He was also told that when he ate it, it would be sweet in his mouth but sour in his stomach. John tells us that he did eat it and it was indeed sweet in his mouth, but sour in his stomach. John was then told that he must prophecy concerning many peoples, nations, and kings. This makes me think that the small scroll represents the word of God which He gives to some among us to speak to our fellow man. It is often sweet to us when we speak it, because there is a certain pleasure and self-satisfaction which comes from speaking God’s word to others. However, when we really digest what we have been given, we get a sense of our own short comings and failings which we did not have before.

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Zephaniah 1-3

    The core of this passage is in the beginning of chapter 2 when the prophet calls the people to gather together in repentance. I think the message here is similar to the one contained in the small scroll in Revelation. It is a call for us to gather in repentance of our sins. The call goes out to humbly seek God and follow His commands, to live righteously and humbly. We are not called to identify what sins others are committing. We are called to identify the sins which we are committing and to repent of those sins.

December 18, 2015 Bible Study

For today, One Year Bible Online links here.

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Proverbs 30:10

    This proverb warns against slandering an employee to their employer. The key word in this is “slander”. Slander is falsely accusing someone of wrongdoing. If you falsely accuse someone to their boss, you will cause them trouble which they do not deserve. You may get away with it once or twice, but it will catch up with you eventually.

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Psalm 137

    As the Jews in Babylonian Exile could not forget Jerusalem, we should never forget what Jesus has done for us. The unbelievers around us will encourage us to make light of the serious matters of faith. Let us take joy only in God and never make light of that which is serious.

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Revelation 9

    When the fifth and sixth trumpets blow, those who have not been marked with God’s seal will suffer tremendously. After the fifth trumpet there will be a plague which causes such suffering that people will wish to die, but will be unable to do so. After the sixth trumpet, one third of the people on the face of the earth will die from another plague. Despite these torments, those who remain will not repent of their sins and turn to God. This right here is a lesson to us that there are those who no matter what the evidence will not repent, will not believe in God. We can, and should, mourn for them, but we must recognize that there is nothing we can do to get them to change.

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Habakkuk 1-3

    When those who claim to be God’s people are corrupt and evil, refusing to live justly and righteously, God will raise up foreigners who will overthrow them. However, if those foreigners are arrogant and proud, and God tells us that they will be, He will bring them down likewise.
    The message at the heart of this passage is that those who put their trust in their own strength and in wealth, those who believe that they can consume everything and everybody in the pursuit of their own pleasure will face God’s judgment. He will bring them down. God will bring disgrace upon them and make them regret their lives.
    Habakkuk concludes this book by reminding us that God’s judgment against the wicked is not so much intended to punish the wicked as it is to save the righteous from the wicked.

December 17, 2015 Bible Study

For today, One Year Bible Online links here.

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Proverbs 30:7-9

    The writer here asks two things of God. The first thing is something that we ordinarily think is within our own power. He asks that God keep him from ever telling a lie. Let us remember that we will only succeed in being totally honest, and that is what the writer is asking for, if we have God’s help in doing so. The second thing is two part. Most of us would certainly ask the latter portion of it, because no one wants to be poor. However, few people would think that there was such a thing as too rich. The writer points out that those who have great wealth often times think that they do not need God in their lives.
    Yes, I will agree with the writer and ask God to help me to be always honest. Further, I will ask God that I be neither too rich to remember Him, nor so poor that I am tempted to sin to obtain my needs.

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Psalm 136

    The psalmist tells us to give thanks to the Lord. He then proceeds to list some of the things which God has done for which we should be thankful. The most important one of which he repeats over and over: “His faithful love endures forever.”

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Revelation 8

    When the seventh seal is broken, the prayers of God’s people will rise up to God as a fragrant offering. This analogy once more makes me think that perhaps the vision of the Lamb breaking the seals on the scroll represents something which has already happened/is happening. Elsewhere in the Bible our prayers are compared to a fragrant offering or an incense offering to God. So, how can it be that only at some time in the future will the prayers of God’s people be offered up as a fragrant offering to God?
    Having said that about the seals and the scroll, I do believe that the seven trumpets represent something at the end of days. The idea of living through those days frightens me, even though I know that God cares for those who love and fear Him. I trust in God to care for me, and my loved ones, even if we go through the times mentioned here. However, there are people I care about who have yet to turn to God. I desperately want them to learn to know and serve God before those times begin, because without God those times will be unbearable.

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Nahum 1-3

    The prophet Nahum reminds us that no matter how powerful a person, no matter how powerful a nation, if they turn against God, He will bring them down. The Assyrians were a mighty people. The kings of Nineveh led mighty armies. Wherever they turned their attention, nations fell. They accumulated wealth beyond count. However, when God had finally had enough of their wickedness they were destroyed to the point that archaeologists and students of history believed that they had never been. Those who did not accept the Bible as truth were convinced that the writers of the Bible who spoke of Assyria had made them up because there was no record of them in the histories kept by other nations. Such is the fate of those whom God destroys.

December 16, 2015 Bible Study — Let Us Walk Humbly With Our God

For today, One Year Bible Online links here.

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Proverbs 30:5-6

    God’s words always prove true. It is only when religious leaders add words which they think God should have said that lies enter in. When that happens it is not very long until those added words are revealed as lies.

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Psalm 135

    I will praise and honor the Lord for He is both great and good. Every other thing which people worship is merely something which God created, or composed of things which God created. I will worship God, who is the real deal.

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Revelation 7

    As I read this I was struck by the comparison of the 144,000 from the tribes of Israel who were marked with God’s seal before the final destruction and the vast crowd who emerged from the great tribulation. I have never fully understood the meaning of the 144,000. It is clearly significant, but is it literal, or merely symbolic? I can clearly see the symbolism. There are 12 tribes and 12 thousands from each tribe, but I am not sure what that symbolism means. I can think of numerous interpretations of the symbolism, but none of them provide me with any particular insight into living out my faith.
    However, the great crowd in the next part represent a clear lesson to me. They are those who went through great suffering here on earth for their faith. It is possible that they represent just those who went through a particular time of suffering, but I believe they represent all of those who suffered for their faith throughout history. The day will come when those who suffered will stand before God and He will comfort them so that they will never suffer again. He will grant them joy and remove all sadness from them.

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Micah 5-7

    The summation of what the book of Micah is about is contained in chapter 6 verse 8. There Micah writes that God has told us what is good. Since God told us what is good, we know what is right. Therefore God wants us to do what is right, what is just, and to love mercy. He is not looking for us to make grand sacrifices. God just wants us to humbly walk with Him as we treat our fellow man with respect and dignity.

December 15, 2015 Bible Study

For today, One Year Bible Online links here.

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Proverbs 30:1-4

    It has taken me a long time to understand the gist of these verses. Today I finally realized that the author is being self-deprecating in countering arguments made by those who claim to be smarter and wiser than he. I am going to paraphrase what I think the writer is saying here:

You are right. I am not very bright and have failed to master human learning, let alone being enlightened. So, tell me, since there is no God, who made the world? Who is it who controls nature? You are so wise, explain it to me.

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Psalm 134

    When we serve God, let us praise His name. We should not serve God with a “martyr complex”. We should praise God for every opportunity we have to serve Him and others. I will recognize that the opportunities God gives me to serve Him through serving others are a blessing, not a cross I need to bear. I will praise Him for honoring me by giving me the opportunity to serve others.

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Revelation 6

    In the past, and in every interpretation I have ever seen of today’s passage, I have viewed this passage as a prediction about what is to come. Today as I read this, I saw it as a vision of what happened when the Lamb, who is Jesus Christ, came unto the scene. As He opened the scroll to read God’s word, the events listed took place. The Four Horsemen are not sent forth by the opening of the scroll. Instead they are revealed as the seals on the scroll are broken. They were already present in the world and as the seals on the scroll are broken, revealing that they are not the way to bring about God’s will in the world. As I write this I am realizing that what I am writing is not quite correct. The point I do think is correct is that the things which John sees as the seals on the scroll are broken are not the contents of the scroll. The opening of the scroll is not some future event. It is what happened when Jesus was raised from the dead. I am not sure that all of the seals have been broken yet, but the process of breaking the seals has already begun.

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Micah 1-4

    The prophet prophesies primarily against two groups of people: the wealthy and powerful who oppress others, and the leaders of the people. These two groups are not exactly separate groups, especially not in the situation for which Micah condemns them. The wealthy and powerful use their wealth and power to take what they want from those less powerful than themselves. They do not exchange fair value for what they want. The leaders are condemned for taking part in this. Rather than use their positions to lead the people in doing right and forsaking wrong, the leaders use their positions to take what they want and to live off of the hard work of others. Instead of encouraging people to do what is good and right, they encourage them to do what is evil.
    However, the common people are not innocent in this. They have told those who warn them against doing such things to shut up. They do not want to hear from those who tell them that if they want to be successful they must work hard and put off their own gratification. They are looking for “prophets” who tell them they can drink and spend and not worry about tomorrow because someone else will take care of tomorrow. The people follow leaders who tell them that they can live off of the hard work of others, never thinking about what will happen if no one does the hard work.