September 20th, 2014 · No Comments
2 Chronicles 6:18 (New Living Translation)
“But will God really live on earth among people? Why, even the highest heavens cannot contain you. How much less this Temple I have built!”
The magnificent Temple in Jerusalem is completed. It is built to honor YHWH God. The builder first admits that it is almost useless as it cannot contain God.
This is a “so what” for us today, but was significant at the time. Gods of that time had homes built by the people who worshiped them. Those gods dwelled in those homes. People went to those places to speak to those gods.
YHWH God was different—vastly different. YHWH was everywhere all the time. YHWH was radically different and more powerful than any other god worshiped by any people.
Sometimes we tend to forget the power and magnificence of God. What a shame.
Tags: 2 Chronicles · Old Testament
September 14th, 2014 · No Comments
John 4:25-26 (The Living Bible)
25 The woman said, “Well, at least I know that the Messiah will come—the one they call Christ—and when he does, he will explain everything to us.”
26 Then Jesus told her, “I am the Messiah!”
These verses are part of the conversation between Jesus and the woman at the well or the Sycharian woman. The woman knows something about the promised Messiah or the Christ.
Jesus tells her plainly, “I am the Messiah.”
Reaction: Yeah, right. Sure you are. The glorious Messiah is sitting here at a well in the middle of the day at Jerkwater, Palestine. Sure.
That is a reasonable reaction. It makes sense. In contrast, the “I am the Messiah” statement makes no sense. I guess that is a good description of Christianity: it really makes no sense. But, it is real and has dominated human thought, belief, and action for centuries.
God does things in ways that make no sense to us. I guess that passage about His thoughts being above and beyond our thoughts makes sense.
Tags: John · New Testament
September 13th, 2014 · No Comments
John 3:26 (The Living Bible)
So they came to John and said, “Master, the man you met on the other side of the Jordan River—the one you said was the Messiah—he is baptizing too, and everybody is going over there instead of coming here to us.”
These are follows of John the Baptist. They are concerned about a few things, so they come to John to ask a few questions. Notice how they describe Jesus:
the one you said was the Messiah
These followers don’t yet believe that Jesus is the Messiah, the Christ. John the Baptist said Jesus was the Messiah, but these followers aren’t yet convinced.
Slow? Dim-witted? Human? The answer to all three is, “yes.”
Tags: John · New Testament
Nehemiah 2:7-8 (The Living Bible)
7 Then I added this to my request: “If it pleases the king, give me letters to the governors west of the Euphrates River instructing them to let me travel through their countries on my way to Judah; 8 also a letter the Asap, the manager of the king’s forest, instructing him to give me timber for the beams and for the gates of the fortress near the Temple, and for the city walls, and for a house for myself.”
And the king granted these requests, for God was being gracious to me.
The King of Persia liked Nehemiah, a good and faithful servant. Nehemiah asked the king for many things. That is an understatement; Nehemiah asked for a lot of things. The King of Persia gave Nehemiah what he requested.
Wow. What a kind king. What a good persuader Nehemiah was.
The conclusion:
God was being gracious to me.
Excuse me? This was all between Nehemiah and the king. Right? Where was God in this conversation?
God was everywhere in this conversation. God is everywhere in every conversation I ever have. I infer that God is in every conversation between every group of persons everywhere all the time. Sometimes, well, make that almost all the time, we tend to omit God’s part. We tend to omit the graciousness that is available from God. How stupid are we? How stubborn are we? How arrogant are we?
And God still loves us—the wonder of the grace of God.
Tags: Nehemiah · Old Testament
Malachi 1:2-3 (The Living Bible)
“I have loved you very deeply,” says the LORD.
But you retort, “Really? When was this?”
And the LORD replies, “I showed my love for you by loving your father, Jacob. I didn’t need to. I even rejected his very own brother, Esau, and destroyed Esau’s mountains and inheritance, to give it to the jackals of the desert…”
The first part of these verses show how stupid we can be. “Really God, when did you love us?” How can a person be so dense as to even ask such a question? Well, I’m glad that today we aren’t as pitiful as those people back then (not). We’re worse than they were.
The second part of these verses shows how God sometimes rejects some people. He chooses through whom He will perform works on earth. When he chooses some, he rejects others for that work. Today, He chooses some people to travel the world and preach. He chooses some other people to stay home and trudge through their daily employment to earn the money to send the others. In the same example, He chooses some to stay home and live near their adorable grandchildren while He sends others out of the country to rarely see their friends, children, and adorable grandchildren.
He chooses some; He rejects some. Our plight is to play our role the He has chosen. And, while doing our role, let’s be thankful for a task that he has chosen.
Tags: Malachi · Old Testament
Zechariah 9:9-10 (New Living Translation)
9 Rejoice, O people of Zion!
Shout in triumph, O people of Jerusalem!
Look, your king is coming to you.
He is righteous and victorious,
yet he is humble, riding on a donkey—
riding on a donkey’s colt.
10 I will remove the battle chariots from Israel
and the warhorses from Jerusalem.
I will destroy all the weapons used in battle,
and your king will bring peace to the nations.
His realm will stretch from sea to sea
and from the Euphrates River to the ends of the earth.
Here comes the King! I guess, sort of. There must be something wrong with this King as he isn’t arriving in a remodeled 747 with satellite communications and bedrooms and everything else. Instead, he comes in on a rusty bicycle with slightly bent wheels. He has no secret service or other guards or entourage. He is empty handed. There are no signs of a conquering army or a conquering hero.
How do you combine humility and grand victory? I don’t know. I haven’t seen it in my life. Perhaps that is why the vast majority of the people who did see it didn’t recognize it.
What else does God do in my life everyday that I don’t recognize?
Tags: Old Testament · Zechariah
Zechariah 14:12 (New Living Translation)
And the Lord will send a plague on all the nations that fought against Jerusalem. Their people will become like walking corpses, their flesh rotting away. Their eyes will rot in their sockets, and their tongues will rot in their mouths.
As I read this, it hit me—this is a description of zombies or the walking dead. So this is where all the mummy, zombie, etc. literature originates. Where else?
Much of Western and other cultures on earth come from the Bible. We don’t read the Bible enough to recognize these things as they come and go and come and go in their endless cycles.
People are creative and innovative and all that. Still, much of the creativity that we admire among people comes right from God. It’s just that we have forgotten God and what He put in our minds.
Tags: Old Testament · Zechariah
Psalm 131:1-3 (New Living Translation)
1 Lord, my heart is not proud;
my eyes are not haughty.
I don’t concern myself with matters too great
or too awesome for me to grasp.
2 Instead, I have calmed and quieted myself,
like a weaned child who no longer cries for its mother’s milk.
Yes, like a weaned child is my soul within me.
3 O Israel, put your hope in the Lord—
now and always.
I find this Psalm to be a statement of maturity. The writer has found a way to calm himself, to quiet himself. He is no longer a crying child.
The writer ends with a small, quiet encouragement for his fellow man:
Put your hope in the LORD, now and always.
Yes, a little maturity. Yet, a little maturity can go a long ways.
It is a great gift to be able calm yourself in the face of agitation (often self-imposed). Thanks be to God for the gift.
Tags: Old Testament · Psalms
2 Samuel 5:1-2 (New Living Translation)
Then all the tribes of Israel went to David at Hebron and told him, “We are your own flesh and blood. 2 In the past, when Saul was our king, you were the one who really led the forces of Israel. And the Lord told you, ‘You will be the shepherd of my people Israel. You will be Israel’s leader.’”
Funny how we remember and forget. Here we have all the tribes of Israel telling David that he was the one who “really led the forces of Israel.” Hence, the all are loyal to David and all recognize David as the one true king.
David was in Hebron seven years fighting against some of the tribes of Israel. Seven years. For seven years the didn’t seem to remember David’s past accomplishments. Now, however, they shout that David really was the leader all along.
Funny how we remember and forget. Yet, God still grants us His grace.
Tags: 2 Samuel · Old Testament
1 Samuel 22:1-2 (New Living Translation)
So David left Gath and escaped to the cave of Adullam. Soon his brothers and all his other relatives joined him there. 2 Then others began coming—men who were in trouble or in debt or who were just discontented—until David was the captain of about 400 men.
David raises an army of 400 men. That is quite a feat, and should make David comfortable and safe. Note, however, the characteristics of the men in the army:
- in trouble
- in debt
- discontented
Not quite the individuals I would want in an ideal army. Still, the LORD provided this for David and the LORD made it work for David. Still, David needed a lot of faith to look about him and claim them as his army.
Tags: 1 Samuel · Old Testament