Tag Archives: Read the Bible in a year

August 10, 2022 Bible Study — Don’t Let Your Faith Be Nothing More Than Window Dressing

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Jeremiah 10-12.

Today’s passage begins with Jeremiah comparing false gods to scarecrows. He writes something very similar to what is written in Isaiah 44.  Most importantly, Jeremiah tells us not to fear false gods because they can do no harm, nor any good.  Jeremiah goes on to point out that everything other than God which we might worship came into existence after the creation of the universe.  If you study the holy writings of every other religion, its gods came into being after something already existed.  Only the God of Abraham existed before anything else.  Even today, everything other than God which is worshiped came into being after the universe began.  There are those who worship the Sun or the Moon, and those who worship the Earth, and, of course, those who worship themselves, but all of these things did not exist before time.  None of these things can provide us with a basis for doing good because they exist only within time.  Only by listening to God can we learn what is truly good.

Ahhh! this seems so clear in my head, but I cannot type the words to make the point clear here.

Jeremiah tells us that the shepherds, those who should provide us guidance, are senseless because they fail to inquire of God before telling us what course of action to follow.  The prophet Isaiah largely prophesied against those who blatantly turned their backs on God and embraced the sins which God had proscribed.   Jeremiah, on the other hand, prophesied primarily against those who maintained the semblance of worshiping God, while embracing the sins which God had proscribed.   Jeremiah speaks out against those who use a veneer of godliness to hide their moral corruption, who come up with ways to justify their self-indulgence, or that of others.  And Jeremiah warns that God will uproot all such peoples.

However, today’s passage ends with a note of hope.  God promises that He will embrace and make part of His people all of those, from whatever nation or heritage, who learn His ways and choose to be identified as His.  Those He will establish and protect.

I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

August 9, 2022 Bible Study– We Harm Ourselves When We Sin

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Jeremiah 7-9.

Jeremiah prophesied against those who came to the temple to worship God.  They thought they were gaining God’s blessing by coming to the temple to offer sacrifices to God, without reforming their ways.  They thought that by offering sacrifices to God on the Holy Days, while stealing and murdering, committing adultery and perjury the rest of the time.  Jeremiah warned them that they were arousing God’s anger, but not because they were causing any harm to Him.  No, God was angry because they harmed themselves with their sins.  This passage presents two important lessons.  God does not give us commands arbitrarily.  He does not tell us “Do this, don’t do that,” just to make us jump to His tune.  He tells us “Do this” because He knows we will be better off if we do so.  And He tells us “Don’t do that” because He knows we will suffer if we do that.  God’s rules are not intended to limit our enjoyment of life, they are designed to enhance it.  But the prophet has a second message for us here: following the commands which cause other people to think we are righteous benefits us less than following those which no one notices us doing. Going to Church every Sunday won’t do you any good if you take advantage of people with limited options to save money.

I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

August 8, 2022 Bible Study — We Stand At The Crossroad, Will We Choose The Ancient Path Which Leads To Safety And Rest?

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Jeremiah 4-6.

I am going to write about two themes I read about in today’s passage, themes which I see applying to our society now.  On the one hand, the prophet calls on people to return to the Lord and give up detestable idols.  He calls for us to break up the unplowed ground of our hearts and plant a crop of righteousness so that nations and peoples throughout the world will invoke God and turn to Him.  On the other hand, he also tells us that instead of seeking God, everyone is greedy for gain and practice deceit.  As I read this I think of my friends who are quick to fall into “conspiracy theory” territory, blaming the ills of society on the deception and greed of the powerful, who work together to gain wealth and the expense of those without the connections to do likewise.  There is truth in what they say, but in many cases they are guilty of doing the same thing when they have the opportunity.  If you look around, everyone, from the least to the greatest, seeks to gain through fraud and deceit.  Those who should be calling people to account for their abuse of power, lie in order to favor their own interests, while those who should be calling people to serve God instead promote the behaviors which give them power and wealth.  Those who hold positions of authority apply bandaids where surgery is needed.  As a society we stand at a crossroad.  There are a few voices crying in the wilderness for us to follow the ancient path, tried and true, the path which has been shown to be a good way which leads to safety and rest.  But as a society we keep saying, “No, we don’t want to go that way. ”  And we do this despite the fact that anyone with eyes can see that the path we have chosen instead leads to disaster and those with ears can hear the disaster coming, because, as various Old Testament prophets prophesied, those with eyes do not perceive and those with ears do not listen.  Let us join with the prophet in pointing our friends and neighbors to the path which leads to righteousness, and let us walk that path, even if we must walk it alone.

 

 

 

I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

August 7, 2022 Bible Study — Turning To God Requires Admitting Your Sins

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Jeremiah 1-3.

When we read Jeremiah we tend to think of him prophesying to the people of Judah under the last few, wicked kings of Judah.  We overlook the fact that he began prophesying under King Josiah, who is recorded as having led a major revival in worship of God.  In fact,  Jeremiah begins to prophesy the year after King Josiah began his major reforms.  So, while King Josiah was busy having the altars to Baal and the Asherah poles throughout the land of Israel (including all of Israel, not just the portion which was the Kingdom of Judah), Jeremiah was prophesying against the people of Israel for worshiping idols and failing to worship God.  I believe that today’s passage is directed at those who embraced Josiah’s reforms without acknowledging their own sins; those who had happily worshiped Baal and other idols, in particular the gods of Assyria and Egypt, right up until King Josiah began his campaign to wipe out such worship, at which point they enthusiastically joined his campaign and became avid promoters of worshiping God.

Which brings me to another thing I noticed here: Jeremiah prophesied against relying on Assyria and Egypt.  I want to note the King Josiah died when he went out to prevent Pharaoh Necho from marching to support the Assyrian Empire in its battle against the Babylonians, who subsequently defeated the Assyrians.  It seems to me that perhaps Jeremiah was speaking out about the Assyrians and the Egyptians because there was a faction, a strong faction, in the court in Jerusalem which favored appeasing Assyria and Egypt, while King Josiah favored seeking to join the Babylonian alliance in its war against Assyria.  Jeremiah seems to be suggesting here that the faction which had previously backed being willing vassals of Assyria had now turned to being willing vassals of Egypt.  And that part of that vassalage was offering sacrifices to the gods of Egypt.

Finally, I want to point out that Jeremiah called the people of Judah, and all of Israel, to return to God and renounce their sins in genuine repentance.  His prophecy in today’s passage would have served to reinforce the revival which King Josiah was attempting to foster while rejecting those who embraced the revival for purely political reasons by taking up worship of God without truly rejecting idol worship.

I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

August 6, 2022 Bible Study — God Has Revealed Himself To Us, Whether We Wanted To Know Him Or Not

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Isaiah 64-66.

I will start with where the prophet tells us that no one has heard of, seen, or perceived in anyway another god like God.  One can interpret what the prophet says in different ways.  But, to me, it reminds me of the fact that all other gods that have been worshiped throughout human history have a mythology that have them coming into existence after the beginning of the Universe.  Only the Hebrews worshiped a God who existed before anything else.   But the prophet tells us that God is unique in more ways than that.  Unlike other gods, God acts on behalf of those who serve Him, and helps those who gladly do what is right.

The prophet goes on to write that God revealed Himself to those who did not ask for Him and was found by those who did not seek Him.  God presents Himself to us, despite the fact that we repeatedly reject Him.  He holds out His hands to embrace us, even after we have attempted to give His place to something else.  God invites us to come back to Him.  Yet we have a tendency to push others away from Him as too unclean to be near us, when we defile ourselves by sins without measure.  If we wish to accept God’s salvation we must humbly recognize our own sin, we must recognize that no one, let alone ourselves, have any righteousness of their own.

I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

August 5, 2022 Bible Study — The Year Of The Lord’s Favor And The Day Of God’s Judgement

Today, I am reading and commenting on Isaiah 60-63.

Luke records that Jesus read from Isaiah 61 when He returned to Nazareth after being tempted in the wilderness.  Jesus told those present on that day that Isaiah 61 verse 1 through the first part of verse 2 was fulfilled in Him that day.  So, Jesus declared that the year of the Lord’s favor had come.  Now, there is a Jewish tradition, which was prevalent in the First Century, that to quote part of a passage was to quote the entire passage.  So, if Jesus was following that He was also proclaiming the day of God’s judgement.  However, I have seen some commentators on Luke 4 say that Jesus stopped where He did on purpose because He was proclaiming the year of God’s favor, but not yet the day of God’s judgement.  There is some merit to that idea, both because of the way Jesus stopped reading where He did and because of the way the prophet presents it here.  Here, the prophet makes the statement proclaiming the year of the Lord’s favor and the day of God’s judgement then he spends the rest of chapter 61 and chapter 62 discussing what the “year of the Lord’s favor” means.  It is not until chapter 63 that he starts writing about the “day of God’s judgement.

So, was the prophet saying that the year of the Lord’s favor and the day of God’s judgement would come at the same time?  Or, was he saying, as some interpret the Luke passage, that the year of the Lord’s favor arrived with Jesus and the day of God’s judgement will arrive with Jesus’ return?  I suspect a bit of both.  I have noticed that many Old Testament prophecies have more than one meaning and apply to more than one occasion.  I am not sure of the answer, but reading the prophet we can see that we want to avoid the day of God’s vengeance (a term the prophet uses in parallel with judgement).  God loves justice and hates wrongdoing.  In chapter 63, while discussing the day of judgement, the prophet tells us that God looked for those who would support Him in His quest for justice and found no one.  So, let us support justice and work against injustice, otherwise we may find ourselves subject to God’s vegeance.

I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

August 4, 2022 Bible Study — Remembering What Is Acceptable To The Lord

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Isaiah 57-59.

I think I understand what the prophet wrote here, but I am not sure I can put it into words.  Today’s passage begins with the prophet writing that sometimes the righteous die young so as to be spared from suffering, or perhaps from falling into wickedness.  Then the prophet accuses those to whom he is primarily writing of seeking some other. any other, god to the true God.  They indulged their lust and sacrificed their children, exhausting themselves in pursuit of an alternative to doing God’s will, seeking a righteousness not of God’s making.  But, the prophet tells us, that seeking will be, and is, in vain.  When trouble inevitably comes the replacements we have for God will fail us.  Only those who take refuge in God will be saved from those troubles.  And yet, even that will not be of our own doing.  God will punish the wicked, which is all of us, as the prophet wrote previously (“All have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.”).  But God will heal us and give us peace.  Unfortunately, some will reject His healing because they are unwilling to humbly accept His deliverance, they are unwilling to admit that they sinned.

And this brings me to where it gets tricky and easy to get mislead.  The prophet actually condemns two types of people: those who reject God outright, and those who seek God on their own terms.   In chapter 57, he wrote of those who rejected God outright.  In chapter 58, he turns his attention to those who seek to clothe their own desires and wishes in God’s righteousness.  If you are reading this, I doubt you fall into the first group, but all of us must be wary of finding ourselves in the latter.  It is all too easy to take the path of visible righteousness, while profiting from injustice and wrong.  We see those reveling in sin and point our fingers at them, crying “Sinner”, without acknowledging our own sin.  The prophet makes clear what God asks of us; feed the hungry, clothe the naked, give shelter to the homeless.  Let us seek to do these things and we need not fear the coming turmoil.

I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

August 3, 2022 Bible Study — Do Not Fear Failure, Do God’s Will And Speak His Word And His Purpose Will Be Accomplished

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Isaiah 52-56.

The beginning of this passage discusses God’s redemption of His people.  In context, the prophet was writing about the return of the Israelites from Exile.  The prophet writes about the joy and blessing of those who tell the people of God that their God reigns, that our God reigns.  From there the prophet predicts that the people will leave their lives of Exile with deliberate, measured pace, not in haste and with no fear of pursuit.  I believe the prophet is contrasting this with the Exodus, not putting a negative light on what happened in Exodus but saying that this will be different.  I find it interesting that the prophet goes right from that to his message about the Suffering Servant.  When we read this we tend to stop at verse 52:12, and then start fresh at 52:13, as if the writer had put a full stop there and was starting new at 52:13.  But that is not how it actually reads.  No, the Suffering Servant described following verse 52:13 and through chapter 53 seems to be the one whose feet were beautiful for declaring the good news that our God reigns.

The writer transitions from writing about the suffering servant to the metaphor of the barren woman given numerous offspring.  From there he goes on to the call to everyone to come to God.  Isaiah 55 is a call and an offer.  God calls us to Himself and offers to fulfill our needs out of His storehouses.  He calls us to seek Him and to forsake wicked thoughts and actions.  He reminds us that He does not think the way that we do.  Just as the Suffering Servant exhibited great power when all we humans could see was weakness, so God’s power, and what He wants from us, does not look like what we recognize as power.  God’s way is above any of our ways and His thoughts are above our thoughts.  God’s words will accomplish the purpose for which He spoke them, whether we understand them, or their purpose, or not.  If we speak God’s words and do His will, we will be successful.  We may not accomplish the purpose we thought God had for us, but, as long as we seek God and speak the words He gives us, we will accomplish His purpose, even when we do not understand what it is.

 

 

I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

August 2, 2022 Bible Study — Wait In The Dark For God Rather Than Trying To Walk In Our Own Light

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Isaiah 48-51.

Many Bible scholars believe that this portion of Isaiah, starting with chapter 34, was written by someone other than Isaiah at a later time (usually, they believe after the fall of Babylon to Cyrus).  As someone who believes in the supernatural and miracles I have no problem believing that Isaiah wrote about the fall of Babylon before Babylon defeated Assyria.  However, there is merit to the idea that the writing style is different in this later portion of the book from the earlier portion.  I can also believe that a writer during the Exile might append their own thoughts to those of the prophet Isaiah.  Nevertheless, I am convinced that this portion was written before the fall of Babylon (although perhaps after the fall of Jerusalem).  The prophet predicted the fall of Babylon to Cyrus before it happened as evidence to those he was writing that God had more knowledge and power than any of the idols which some of them worshiped during the Exile.

Further down in today’s passage the prophet makes an interesting metaphor concerning light.  Usually, the writers of the Bible (Old and New Testament) refer to light as coming from God, but here the writer does something different.  He writes the following:

Who among you fears the Lord
    and obeys the word of his servant?
Let the one who walks in the dark,
    who has no light,
trust in the name of the Lord
    and rely on their God.
 But now, all you who light fires
    and provide yourselves with flaming torches,
go, walk in the light of your fires
    and of the torches you have set ablaze.
This is what you shall receive from my hand:
    You will lie down in torment.

Here, the ones who obey God have no light.  They are walking in the darkness.  Actually, I think he means that everyone walks in darkness, but those who do not rely on God attempt to make a light for themselves.  The writer tells us not to attempt to provide our own light.  He tells us that if we attempt to provide our own light we will lie down in torment.  Instead, we should rely on God and trust Him.   If we pursue righteousness and seek the Lord, He will instruct us and He will provide light to us by way of His justice.  So, the prophet is warning us against trying to make our own light, our own justice.  Instead, let us trust God and walk by the light He will provide us, walk in His definition of justice.  The prophet goes on to tell us not to be terrified by the insults of mere mortals.  Let us take God’s instruction to heart, even when others attempt to intimidate us into following what they call justice.

I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

August 1, 2022 Bible Study — The Pot Does Not Tell The Potter That He Made It Wrong

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Isaiah 43-47.

This passage begins with Isaiah telling us not to fear because God has redeemed us, He has called for everyone called by His name to be brought into His kingdom.  The prophet goes on to remind us that there is no other god, that no god preceded God, and no god has arisen since Him.  Everything else which people worship has no power.  Isaiah calls on us to return to God, because He has redeemed us from slavery to sin.  Let us act so that people all over the world may know that there is no god besides God.

Then the prophet writes that we should not quarrel with our Maker.  God has made us as we are for a reason.  He did not make a mistake.  I may not like what God has made me, but He has His reasons and nothing I can do will change what He has made.  No one can change what God has made you, nor can you.  He has formed your body, and my body, as He intends them to be.  Let us care for the vessel He has made for us and neither let it become useless through neglect, not mutilate it to look like something else.  We were born to be what we are.  The prophet warns us against thinking that we are God and can change the world contrary to His plans because God’s purpose will stand and He will do all that He pleases.  Those who believe that mankind can now make men into women and women into men are allowing their wisdom and knowledge to mislead them.  Instead of following such foolishness, and the tragedy which follows from it, let us turn to God and rejoice in being what He intended us to be.

I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.