Week
of 6 Epiphany - Even (Variable)
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Book of Worship two-year Daily Lectionary for personal
devotions p.179-192, Augsburg Publishing House, Minneapolis, 1978.
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Podcast Download: Week of 6
Epiphany - Even
Sunday
6 Epiphany - Even
First posted
02/14/04;
Podcast: Sunday 6 Epiphany - Even
Genesis 29:20-35 - Jacob marries Leah and Rachel;
1 Timothy 3:14-4:10 - False teachers;
Mark 10:23-31 - Demands and rewards of discipleship;
Genesis Summary:
Jacob worked for his uncle Laban for seven years for permission to
marry Laban’s daughter Rachel. When he had fulfilled his obligation,
Laban tricked him and gave him his older daughter Leah instead.
Jacob did not discover the switch until the morning. He confronted
Laban, and Laban claimed that according to the custom of the land he
could not give the younger Rachel until her older sister was
married.
Laban told Jacob to complete the week of the marriage festivities
with Leah, and then he would give Rachel to Jacob also, in return
for serving Laban another seven years. Jacob loved Rachel more than
Leah, but Rachel was barren, while Leah quickly bore Jacob a
succession of sons, of which four are recorded here.
1 Timothy Summary:
Propriety regarding the conduct of Church administration is
essential, considering its role as the household of the living God
and the custodian of the truth and the central mystery of the faith
which is Jesus Christ. The Holy Spirit prophesied that false
teachers would arise, proclaiming false doctrines and leading some
astray. Paul’s response was to trust in the goodness of God and rely
on the Scriptures and in fellowship with the Lord in prayer. He
urged Timothy to be a good minister of Christ by applying what Paul
had taught him, nourished by the scriptures and the good doctrine
which he had received. Timothy was advised to have nothing to do
with theological speculation and spurious doctrines, but to train
himself in godliness; to apply the teachings of Lord to his daily
life, because godliness will be of value both now in this present
life, and also for the eternal life to come.
Mark Summary:
Jesus told his disciples that it will be difficult for those who
love material possessions to enter the kingdom of God. The disciples
were amazed at his statement, so he said that it isn’t easy to enter
the kingdom of God. They were even more astonished, and asked Jesus,
who then could hope to be saved?
Jesus answered that salvation is possible because God makes it
possible; it does not depend on man’s achievement, but salvation
does require us to submit to God (we must come to God like children;
Mark 10:15). We must be willing to give up our will and submit to
God’s will (Mark 10:28). Those who are willing to do so will be
lavishly compensated, both now and eternally, although we cannot
expect following Jesus to be without persecution and suffering.
Commentary:
Jacob was treated unfairly by Laban. He had spent seven years of his
life working for Laban in return for permission to marry Rebekah,
the woman he loved, and then was tricked into marriage to the older,
homely Leah instead. Then Laban insisted that he work another seven
years for Rebekah (although Jacob didn’t have to wait the seven
years to consummate the marriage to Rebekah). Jacob did what was
noble and right. He kept the wife he didn’t want and fulfilled his
responsibilities to her, and he served his father-in-law another
seven years for the woman he loved.
There are lots of false doctrines and false teachers in the world
today. The same remedy Paul recommended to Timothy applies today:
followers of Christ need to spend time daily in fellowship with the
Lord in Bible reading and prayer. We need to hold on to good
doctrine, and the only way to do that is to know the Bible.
We need to read the entire Bible first. There are many "Bible in one
Year" study plans (see Free Bible Study Tools, sidebar, top right,
home). This is a good time to begin the habit of daily Bible study.
Then we need to seek guidance daily through daily devotional Bible
study. Many denominations publish quarterly booklets for daily
devotions. This "My Daily Walk" devotional is one option.
Find a Bible-preaching Church; many churches today are sadly
neglecting the Bible. Too often sermons are more entertaining than
enlightening, based on a verse or two of scripture which may be the
only instance of scripture in the service. There is a lot of
emphasis on the grace of God, but very little mention of the cost of
discipleship. We need to realize that Christians are called to be
disciples of Jesus Christ. We need to apply God’s Word to our daily
lives; we need to practice godliness.
Jesus told his disciples that only those who sincerely submit in
obedience to the Lord will enter eternal life in the kingdom of
heaven. Jacob had seen Rachel and loved her. He was willing to give
up seven more years of his life, his chance to do what he wanted to
do, in order to do what Laban told him to do, so that he could have
Rachel. If we have seen the Lord and loved him, shouldn’t we be
willing to do what is right and noble, even if we are treated
unfairly by others, in order to obtain what has been promised?
Is Jesus your Lord (Matthew 7:21-23; Luke 6:46)? Are you Jesus'
disciple (John 8:31)? Are you trusting and obeying Jesus (John
14:21)? Have you received the indwelling Holy Spirit since you first
truly believed (Acts 19:2)? Are you making disciples of Jesus Christ
and teaching them to obey all that Jesus commands (Matthew
28:18-20)? Do you know with certainty where you will spend eternity
(1 John 5:11-13; Ephesians 1:13-14)?
Monday
6 Epiphany - Even (Variable)
To Be used only if there is a 7 Epiphany Sunday - Otherwise skip
to 8 Epiphany.
First posted 02/15/04;
Podcast: Monday 6 Epiphany
- Even
Genesis 30:1-24 - Birth of Jacob’s sons;
1 John 1:1-10 - Right attitude toward sin;
John 9:1-17 - Healing the man born blind;
Genesis Summary:
Rachel was jealous of her sister Leah, because Leah had borne sons,
but Rachel was barren. Rachel blamed Jacob for her situation
(Genesis 30:1). Rachel gave Jacob her maid in order to obtain
children through her maid. The maid conceived and bore Dan and then
Naptali. Leah had ceased bearing so she gave her maid to Jacob, and
Leah’s maid bore Gad and then Asher. Reuben, Jacob’s first-born son
by Leah found mandrakes (believed to be aphrodisiacs and to
stimulate conception) and gave them to his mother.
Rachel bargained Jacob’s favors with Leah for the mandrakes, and
Leah became pregnant with Issachar. (Giving the mandrakes to Rachel
was apparently more beneficial to Leah’s fertility than it was to
Rachel!) Leah bore Jacob a sixth son, Zebulun, and later a daughter,
Dinah. Finally Rachel became pregnant and gave birth to Joseph.
[Later she died giving birth to Benjamin (Genesis 35:16-20). These,
including Benjamin, and the sons of Leah mentioned in Genesis
29:31-35, are the twelve sons of Jacob, which became the twelve
tribes of Israel. Jacob’s name was later changed to “Israel.”]
1 John Summary:
John’s purpose in writing this text was to share his eyewitness
experience of the Christ, so that his readers might also share in
the joy of fellowship with God the Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.
God is completely righteous and there is no evil at all in his
nature. One cannot continue to participate in evil and maintain
fellowship with God. Those who claim to do so are lying.
If we are to maintain fellowship with him we must give up evil ways
and walk according to God’s will, and our sins will be forgiven
through the blood of Jesus. If we claim that we have not sinned we
do not know the truth, but if we acknowledge our sinfulness the Lord
will forgive and cleanse us. By denying our sinfulness, we call God
a liar, and prove that his truth does not abide in us.
John Summary:
Jesus and his disciples encountered a man who had been born blind,
and the disciples, in the prevailing thinking of the time that
suffering was the result of sin, asked Jesus whose sin was
responsible for the blindness. Jesus said that the important thing
was not to establish who was to blame for this man’s condition, but
to use the opportunity to bring God’s healing into the man’s
situation.
Jesus said that while he was in the world that he was the light of
the world. Work must be done in the light; one cannot work in
darkness. Jesus anointed the blind man’s eyes with mud made of dust
and spittle (spittle was thought to have medicinal properties, and
this type of anointing was common among healers of that time) and
then sent the man to wash in the pool called “sent.”
The man returned having received his sight. When his acquaintances
saw him, some of them believed that he was the former blind man, but
others thought he only resembled the man. They asked him how his
eyes had been opened, and the former blind man told them what Jesus
had done.
They brought the man to the Pharisees and the man repeated what
Jesus had done for him. The Pharisees denied that Jesus was of God,
because Jesus had made “mud” on the Sabbath, but others pointed out
that if he were a sinner he would not have been able to heal the
man. So the Pharisees asked the former blind man what he thought
about Jesus and the man declared Jesus to be a prophet.
Commentary:
Rachel wanted very much to have children. She felt devalued as a
wife, even though Jacob loved and vastly preferred her over Leah.
She seemed to be getting most of the conjugal attention from Jacob.
I suspect that Leah’s cessation of childbearing (Genesis 30:9) had
more to do with inattention on Jacob’s part than infertility, which
never seemed to be her problem. When Leah negotiated a conjugal
visit from Jacob in exchange for mandrakes for Rachel, she got
pregnant again.
Rachel tried everything she could to conceive: she told Jacob to try
harder (Genesis 30:1), she gave him her maid as a consort, and she
traded Jacob’s favors to Leah for fertility treatments. She wanted
what she wanted, and she refused to accept that it was not God’s
will or timing (Genesis 30:2). Eventually, in God’s timing she was
able to have a child, but when she became pregnant a second time she
died in childbirth.
That’s our problem, too. We want our will to be done. But in order
to have fellowship with the Lord, we have to give up what we want in
order to do what the Lord wants. We can’t continue in fellowship
with him while satisfying our own worldly desires.
Jesus doesn’t come to condemn us, but to save us from our sinful
nature (see John 3:17). Jesus told the blind man to wash in the pool
called “sent,” and as the man did as Jesus had commanded he received
his sight. Some of his acquaintances refused to believe, choosing
instead to believe that this man merely resembled their
acquaintance. The Pharisees weren’t pleased that a sufferer had been
healed; instead, they blamed Jesus for disturbing their Sabbath
rest.
We’re all sinful; we all have sought our own selfish interests, and
have disregarded God’s will. Ultimately, pursuing our own will
results in our eternal death (Romans 6:23). Jesus came to bring
sight to the spiritually blind. If we want to be healed, and saved
from eternal death, we must listen to Jesus and do what he says. We
must be willing to give up those things which are contrary to his
will, in order to have fellowship with him, the assurance of
forgiveness of sins and eternal life.
Is Jesus your Lord (Matthew 7:21-23; Luke 6:46)? Are you Jesus'
disciple (John 8:31)? Are you trusting and obeying Jesus (John
14:21)? Have you received the indwelling Holy Spirit since you first
truly believed (Acts 19:2)? Are you making disciples of Jesus Christ
and teaching them to obey all that Jesus commands (Matthew
28:18-20)? Do you know with certainty where you will spend eternity
(1 John 5:11-13; Ephesians 1:13-14)?
Tuesday
6 Epiphany - Even (Variable)
To
Be used only if there is a 7 Epiphany Sunday - Otherwise skip to
8 Epiphany.
First posted 02/16/04;
Podcast: Tuesday 6 Epiphany
- Even
Genesis 31:1-24
- Jacob flees from Laban;
1 John 2:1-11 - Obedience and love;
John 9:18-41 - The man born blind;
Genesis Summary:
The Lord had prospered Jacob as he worked for his
father-in-law/uncle, Laban. Laban had given all the unusually
colored animals of the flock to Jacob as his wages, and the Lord
had caused the ordinarily rare colorations to predominate
(Genesis 31:8-9; see also Genesis 30:25-43). As a result, Laban
and his sons were jealous of Jacob, who had grown wealthy at
their expense.
God told Jacob in a dream to return to the Promised Land, so
Jacob called his wives out into the field and discussed it with
them, and they agreed to leave with Jacob. While Laban was
out tending his flocks, Jacob gathered all his flocks and his
possessions and fled, without letting Laban know he was going.
When Laban found out that they had left, he and his kinsmen
pursued Jacob for seven days, following close after him into
Gilead (east of the Jordan River, and south of the Sea of
Galilee). But God warned Laban in a dream not to say a word,
either good or bad, to Jacob.
1 John Summary:
The goal of Christian life is to live in complete harmony with
God’s will; that is, without sin (disobedience of God's Word).
If we sin (unintentionally) we have forgiveness through Jesus
Christ, who has already paid the penalty for the sins of all
people. Whoever knows Jesus as Lord will keep his commandments;
whoever claims Jesus and yet does not keep his commands is a
liar.
The commandment to love is not new; it has been God’s
commandment from the beginning. But in Jesus Christ it has
succeeded the law as the chief commandment. The darkness of sin
is passing away, and the kingdom of light is coming. Those who
are walking in the commandment of love are already living in the
kingdom of light, and the light makes it possible for them to
avoid stumbling. But those who continue to hate one another are
still in the kingdom of darkness, even if they claim to be in
the kingdom of light.
John Summary:
After Jesus had healed the man born blind, the religious
authorities refused to believe that the man had been healed.
They called his parents to verify that the man had been born
blind. His parents had heard that they intended to remove from
membership in the synagogue anyone who confessed Jesus to be the
Messiah, so the parents declined to answer them, and told them
to ask their son, because he was an adult and could answer for
himself.
The leaders summoned the man and told him to praise God instead
of Jesus, declaring Jesus to be a sinner. The man said he did
not know if Jesus was a sinner, but he knew that Jesus had
healed him. When they asked him the details of how Jesus had
healed him, the man asked them if they wanted to be Jesus’
disciples.
They chided the man for being a disciple of Jesus; they declared
that they were disciples of Moses. They were confident in Moses’
source of authority, but not of Jesus’. The man was amazed that
they could not see that Jesus’ power must be from God, in the
face of the evidence of the miracle. But they rebuked him,
saying that he had been born in utter sin; how dare he presume
to instruct them. They excommunicated him from the synagogue.
Jesus heard that the man had been expelled from the synagogue,
and he came to him and revealed himself to the man as the “Son
of man” and the man believed and worshiped him. Jesus declared
that his mission was to bring spiritual sight to the blind who
believed in him, and spiritual blindness to those who reject
him. Rejection of Jesus is evidence of spiritual blindness.
Denial of spiritual blindness is evidence of guilt.
Commentary:
Jacob had been guilty in the past of treachery against his own
twin brother in taking advantage of Essau’s hunger to obtain his
birthright (Genesis 25:29-34), and then deception to cheat him
out of his blessing (Genesis 27). But Jacob had reformed his
ways and had dealt honorably with Laban, whereas Laban had
tricked Jacob into working for him for seven years to marry
Laban’s daughter Rachel, and had then substituted the older,
homely, Leah, and required another seven years labor for Rachel
(Genesis 29:15-30). Laban had taken advantage of Jacob’s labor
and had benefited because God had prospered Jacob’s stewardship
of Laban’s flocks.
Laban had withheld his permission for Jacob to return to the
Promised Land (Genesis 30:25-28). Instead he negotiated a deal
with Jacob which gave Jacob all the unusually colored animals of
the flock as wages for his continued labor (Genesis 30:32).
Laban thought he was getting Jacob’s labor cheaply, but God
prospered Jacob, and then Laban became jealous of Jacob’s
growing wealth. Jacob’s honesty in the division of his wages
would be obvious for anyone to see (Genesis 30:33). Jacob had
been obedient to God’s will, and had conducted himself
honorably, but Laban refused to acknowledge what rightfully
belonged to Jacob.
God’s righteousness is manifested in Jesus for everyone to see.
He has made a covenant with us to forgive our sins, through
Jesus Christ, who had paid the penalty for our sin. The
requirement is that we trust in Jesus Christ and obey his
commandment. His commandment is that we love one another.
If we know and love Jesus, we will keep his commandment, and our
fulfillment of the commandment will be obvious for anyone to
see. The purpose of the law was to compel us to treat others as
if we loved God and our neighbor. If we know and love Jesus we
will fulfill the requirements of the law without the compulsion
of punishment, because we love him.
The man who had been born blind could see that Jesus was of God,
but the religious leaders who considered themselves righteous
and educated, could not. They didn’t love God or their neighbor,
the man who was born blind. What do we say about Jesus? What
does what we do say about us?
Is Jesus your Lord (Matthew 7:21-23; Luke 6:46)? Are you Jesus'
disciple (John 8:31)? Are you trusting and obeying Jesus (John
14:21)? Have you received the indwelling Holy Spirit since you
first truly believed (Acts 19:2)? Are you making disciples of
Jesus Christ and teaching them to obey all that Jesus commands
(Matthew 28:18-20)? Do you know with certainty where you will
spend eternity (1 John 5:11-13; Ephesians 1:13-14)?
Wednesday 6
Epiphany - Even (Variable)
To
Be used only if there is a 7 Epiphany Sunday - Otherwise skip to
8 Epiphany.
First posted 02/17/04;
Podcast: Wednesday 6 Epiphany - Even
Genesis 31:25-50 - The Covenant of Mizpah;
1 John 2:12-17 - True relationship to God;
John 10:1-18 - Jesus the good shepherd;
Genesis Summary:
Jacob had taken his family and possessions and had fled without
telling Laban he was leaving. Laban and his kinsmen pursued and
caught up with Jacob as he camped in Gilead (east of the Jordan
River, south of the Sea of Galilee) Laban’s daughter Rachel had
stolen Laban’s household gods when she left. God warned Laban in a
dream not to speak to Jacob either good or evil, but Laban
confronted Jacob about the missing household idols.
Jacob replied that he felt he had to leave without notice or Laban
would have prevented his daughters from leaving. He told Laban to
search through Jacob’s camp and swore to punish with death anyone
found with Laban’s idols, because he did not know that Rachel had
stolen them. So Laban checked all of the tents of Jacob’s household,
and found nothing, but when he entered Rachel’s tent, she had placed
the idols in her camel’s saddle and sat on them. She claimed to be
menstruating and therefore unable to rise, so Laban did not discover
his property.
Since Laban was unable to produce any evidence of the theft, Jacob
became angry and upbraided Laban for the way he had treated him.
Laban replied that all that Jacob had belonged to Laban but that he
was helpless in the circumstances to assert his claim (referring to
a legal type of marriage where the man joins the bride’s clan).
Laban proposed a covenant where God was invoked to enforce the
conditions, since neither Laban nor Jacob trusted the other; his
concern was that Jacob not mistreat his daughters or have any other
wives.
1 John Summary:
John reminds his Christian flock that in Jesus Christ their sins are
forgiven, they have fellowship with God, and victory over Satan. He
warns us not to love the things of this world, because that would
interfere with love for the Father. All that is worldly, all carnal
desires, all covetousness, and all pride of self, is in opposition
to love for the Father. The world will pass away along with worldly
desires, but those who do God’s will abide forever.
John Summary:
Jesus is the good shepherd. He calls his sheep, and his sheep
recognize his voice and respond. He leads them and they follow him.
Jesus is the door to the sheepfold. Those who enter by him will go
in and out and find pasture. Others, who come, pretending to be the
Messiah, are thieves and robbers. They come to kill and destroy.
Jesus came to give life. Jesus laid down his life to save the sheep.
Jesus loves his sheep; he’s not like a hired person who abandons the
sheep and flees at the first sign of danger. Jesus willingly laid
down his life for the sheep in obedience to God’s will and plan,
trusting that he would rise again to eternal life.
Commentary:
Laban loved his worldly possessions, and he tried to hang on to
them. He expected that he would gain a son (and a cheap laborer)
when Jacob married into his clan; he didn’t anticipate losing his
daughters. Although he gave Jacob part of the flock as his wages,
Laban supposed that he would continue to be in control of all of it
as the head of the clan.
It wasn’t God’s will or plan for Jacob to continue to live in Aram
(present-day Syria) with Laban forever. Jacob was the descendant of
Abraham, through whom God’s promise to make a great nation which
would inherit the Promised Land would be fulfilled. God had promised
to bring Jacob back to the Promised Land (Genesis 28:15). When Laban
realized that he could not prevent Jacob from leaving, and he could
not personally control Jacob’s treatment of Laban’s daughters, he
made a covenant with Jacob in which Laban surrendered his control
over what he had considered his possessions, and relinquished to God
his authority to enforce justice.
If we love the things of this world and try to hang on to them, they
will interfere with our love and obedience to God. Material things
pass away. Our physical bodies die. What counts eternally is faith
and obedience to God.
Jesus is our example of faith and obedience to God. He didn’t allow
material things, including his own physical life, to get in the way
of obedience to God’s will. Instead, he surrendered everything,
including his own flesh, and trusted God to bring forth justice in
his behalf. His overriding focus was to serve and trust God. Jesus
is the good shepherd. He is the only door to the Father and eternal
life. Only through Jesus do we have forgiveness of sin, fellowship
with God, and victory over Satan. Jesus is the way, the truth, and
the life; no one comes to God the Father but through him (John
14:6).
Is Jesus your Lord (Matthew 7:21-23; Luke 6:46)? Are you Jesus'
disciple (John 8:31)? Are you trusting and obeying Jesus (John
14:21)? Have you received the indwelling Holy Spirit since you first
truly believed (Acts 19:2)? Are you making disciples of Jesus Christ
and teaching them to obey all that Jesus commands (Matthew
28:18-20)? Do you know with certainty where you will spend eternity
(1 John 5:11-13; Ephesians 1:13-14)?
Thursday
6 Epiphany - Even (Variable)
To
Be used only if there is a 7 Epiphany Sunday - Otherwise skip to
8 Epiphany.
First posted 02/18/04;
Podcast: Thursday 6 Epiphany - Even
Genesis 32:3-21 - Jacob’s
reconciliation with Essau;
1 John 2:18-29 - Hold fast to true faith;
John10:19-30 - Jesus’ oneness with God;
Genesis Summary:
Jacob was returning to his home in the Promised Land
after twenty years in Aram (present-day Syria). He had
fled to Aram after he had tricked his brother Essau
out of his birthright as the firstborn, and Essau had
sworn to kill Jacob. Jacob was returning as a wealthy
head of a household, and he was worried about what
Essau might do. Jacob sent messengers to Essau to seek
reconciliation with Essau, and they returned to tell
Jacob that Essau was coming to meet him with four
hundred men.
The news made Jacob even more afraid, so he divided
his caravan up into several groups, thinking one might
escape in the event of an attack. Essau prayed to God,
recalling God’s promise to be with him and bring him
back to the Promised Land. Jacob confessed that he was
unworthy, but asked the Lord to deliver him from his
brother’s anger. He also separated a large number of
animals from his herds as a gift and had them driven
off in groups herded by his servants to meet Essau,
hoping to appease him.
1 John Summary:
John warned believers about false teachers, and urged
them to stay in true faith. Those who have been filled
by the Holy Spirit (“born again;” John 3:3, 5-8) are
enlightened by the Spirit. The Gospel of Jesus is
truth. Those who deny that Jesus is the Christ are
liars and do not know the truth. They are dominated by
the spirit of the antichrist, who denies the Father
and the Son. No one who denies the Son has the Father;
he who confesses the Son has the Father also.
We must hold fast to the true, scriptural (recorded in
the Bible) apostolic (as proclaimed by the Apostles)
Gospel, and we will remain in the fellowship of the
Son and the Father, and will receive the eternal life
which has been promised. John wrote this as a warning
about those who would deceive us, but he acknowledged
that those who have truly been filled with the Holy
Spirit will be taught and led by the Spirit and will
not need (nor rely) on the teaching of men, but should
follow the Spirit. Believers who abide in the Lord
will have no reason to shrink from him in shame at his
coming. The Lord is righteous, and those who are in
him will do what is right.
John Summary:
The Jews were divided in opinion about Jesus. Many
thought Jesus had a demon and was crazy. But others
said that his words and deeds were not those of a
crazy person. Some came to Jesus and asked him to end
the controversy by telling them plainly if he was the
Christ. Jesus replied that he had told them, but that
they did not believe. Jesus said that the works which
he did, he did in the name of God, and the works
testified to him, but they had not believed. They did
not belong to his “sheep.” Jesus’ sheep are those who
hear his voice and follow him; and Jesus will
acknowledge them. Jesus' followers will have eternal
life; they will never perish, and no one can snatch
them away from Jesus, because God has given them to
Jesus. Jesus declared, “I and the Father are one”
(John 10:30).
Commentary:
Jacob had sinned against his brother, and he had
knowledge of his guilt and reason to fear his brother.
He sent emissaries ahead to try to achieve
reconciliation. When he heard that Essau was coming to
meet him with powerful forces he was afraid. He had
been obedient to the Lord’s direction in returning,
and he trusted and held on to the Lord’s promise to be
with him and protect him and bring him back to the
Promised Land.
We are heading toward the Promised Land of the kingdom
of God. Jesus is going to be coming to meet us, and
he’s going to have a powerful army of angels with him.
We’ve all done things in our past which weren’t right,
but if we have believed in Jesus, have trusted in his
promises and are following his directions, our sins
have been forgiven and we are reconciled to God. We
will receive the fulfillment of the promise of eternal
life in the Promised Land of Heaven with Jesus. But
those who have refused to accept the reconciliation
that Jesus offers will not receive the promise; they
will receive eternal destruction in Hell as punishment
for their sins.
Who Jesus “is” is still controversial. It’s the
eternal life-or-death question which each of us must
settle for ourselves. The problem is not that there
isn’t enough information; it’s a matter of who we
listen to and what we make of that information.
Do you know Jesus? Is Jesus your Lord (Matthew
7:21-23; Luke 6:46)? Are you Jesus' disciple (John
8:31)? Are you trusting and obeying Jesus (John
14:21)? Have you received the indwelling Holy Spirit
since you first truly believed (Acts 19:2)? Are you
making disciples of Jesus Christ and teaching them to
obey all that Jesus commands (Matthew 28:18-20)? Do
you know with certainty where you will spend eternity
(1 John 5:11-13; Ephesians 1:13-14)?
Friday 6 Epiphany - Even (Variable)
To
Be used only if there is a 7 Epiphany Sunday - Otherwise
skip to 8 Epiphany.
First posted 02/19/04;
Podcast: Friday 6 Epiphany - Even
Genesis 32:22-33:17 - Jacob wrestles with
the angel;
1 John 3:1-10 - Our response to God’s love;
John 10:31-42 - Who Jesus is;
Genesis Summary;
Jacob was returning to the Promised Land to face his twin brother,
Essau, who had sworn twenty years earlier to kill him when Jacob had
tricked him out of his blessing. Jacob sent his family across the
Jabbok River (east of the Jordan River, north of the Dead Sea), and
Jacob spent the night on the northern side of the Jabbok, and he
wrestled with an angel until dawn. Jacob nearly prevailed, because
of his great strength, so the angel touched Jacob’s thigh and put it
out of joint. Even so, Jacob would not let the divine being go until
he had blessed Jacob.
The angel asked Jacob what his name was, and when Jacob told him,
the angel gave him the new name, “Israel,” (understood here to mean
“he who strives with God”) saying that he had striven with God and
Men and had prevailed. (Jacob means “supplanter.”) Jacob asked the
angel what his name was, but the angel refused to tell him, saying
“Why is it that you ask my name?” (Genesis 32:29) Jacob named the
place Peniel (“the face of God”), saying that there he had seen God
face-to-face and had lived. Jacob left the place limping because the
angel had dislocated his thigh. Israelites maintained a taboo
against eating the corresponding thigh muscle of animals as a result
of this incident.
1 John Summary:
God loves us and considers us his children, which we are. The world
does not acknowledge that because the world does not know God. We
are God’s children now; but what we will become is not yet apparent.
When he appears we know that we will be like him; we will see him as
he is. Everyone who hopes in Jesus purifies himself as Jesus is
pure.
Those who commit sin are guilty of lawlessness. Jesus came to take
away sin. No one who abides in Jesus commits sins. No one who sins
has either seen or known Jesus. Righteousness is in doing what is
right in God’s judgment. Those who sin are of the devil, whose
nature is sinful. No one who has been born of God commits sin,
because God’s nature abides in him. So the children of God can be
discerned from the children of Satan by their actions. Those who do
not do right and do not love one another are not of God.
John Summary:
Jesus had declared that he and God are one (John 10:30). The Jewish
authorities took up stones to stone him. Jesus said “I have shown
you many good works from the Father; for which of these do you stone
me?” The authorities said they were going to stone him, not for good
works, but for blasphemy, since he, a man, had represented himself
to be God.
Jesus replied by quoting Psalm 82:6, which suggests that we all are
God’s children, but we don’t act like it. How dare they then condemn
the one God consecrated and sent into the world as his anointed
Messiah for claiming to be God’s Son? Jesus’ works attest to the
fact that he is the Son of God. Though they don’t believe Jesus’
words, they should be able to see that Jesus is God because Jesus
does works only God can do. The authorities attempted to arrest
Jesus, but he escaped from them.
Commentary:
In ancient times, people believed that a person’s name contained the
essence of the person’s self. At significant moments in a person’s
life they would receive a new name indicating a new self (as when
God changed Abram and Sarai to Abraham and Sarah; see Genesis 17:5,
15). Jacob had gone to Aram as a fugitive fleeing punishment of his
sins against his twin brother, Essau. Now he was returning having
learned to live in obedience to God and to do what was right in
God’s judgment during his twenty year exile.
That twenty years, from the time he encountered God at Bethel on his
way to Aram, where he made the commitment to serve God (Genesis
28:10-22), until he returned to the same area and wrestled
with the angel north of the Jabbok, was a period of “discipleship”
for Jacob. Jacob was returning in obedience to God’s will, and
seeking reconciliation with Essau. He was a changed person, and God
gave him a new name, Israel, by which God’s People would come to be
called.
All people are children of God in the sense that God is our creator.
Not all of us acknowledge God as our Father. Regardless of whether
we acknowledge God as our father or not, our behavior reveals whose
children we really are.
Jesus frequently referred to himself as the Son of man, which
suggests an emphasis on the incarnation (God coming in human flesh
to live among us). It also clearly is a messianic claim (Daniel
7:13; Revelation 1:13; 14:14), but one which allows the hearer to
decide for himself who Jesus is. The Jewish authorities were not
satisfied with Jesus’ statements about who he was; they wanted him
to tell them plainly if he was the Christ (John 10:24). So Jesus
said “I and the Father are one” (John 10:30), and at this point the
authorities took up stones to kill Jesus for claiming to be God.
Jesus is the only begotten Son of God, the Christ (Messiah), in whom
“the whole fulness of deity dwells bodily”(Colossians 2:9), who
refers to himself as the Son of man, talking to people who God
generously calls his children, and those children hate and want to
kill him. Jesus by his actions proves to be God’s Son, and they by
their actions prove to be children of Satan.
Believers in Jesus were originally called “disciples.” “Disciple”
was the “new name” given to those who trusted and obeyed Jesus. In
Antioch, after the stoning of Stephen (Acts Ch. 7) and the
conversion of Paul on the road to Damascus (Acts Ch. 9) disciples
were for the first time called “Christians” (i.e. “followers of
Christ;” Acts 11:26). Today there are lots of people who claim
the name “Christian” who do not know what Jesus taught, who deny
that discipleship is a requirement, and whose actions prove them not
to be children of God. Whose child are you? What is your true
name? Do you know who Jesus is?
Is Jesus your Lord (Matthew 7:21-23; Luke 6:46)? Are you Jesus'
disciple (John 8:31)? Are you trusting and obeying Jesus (John
14:21)? Have you received the indwelling Holy Spirit since you first
truly believed (Acts 19:2)? Are you making disciples of Jesus Christ
and teaching them to obey all that Jesus commands (Matthew
28:18-20)? Do you know with certainty where you will spend eternity
(1 John 5:11-13; Ephesians 1:13-14)?
Saturday 6 Epiphany - Even (Variable)
To Be used only if
there is a 7 Epiphany Sunday - Otherwise skip to 8 Epiphany.
First posted 02/19/04;
Podcast: Saturday 6 Epiphany - Even
Genesis 32:22-33:17
- Jacob wrestles with the angel;
1 John 3:1-10 - Our response to
God’s love;
John 10:31-42 - Who Jesus is;
Genesis Summary;
Jacob was returning to the Promised Land to face his twin
brother, Essau, who had sworn twenty years earlier to kill
him when Jacob had tricked him out of his blessing. Jacob
sent his family across the Jabbok River (east of the
Jordan River, north of the Dead Sea), and Jacob spent the
night on the northern side of the Jabbok, and he wrestled
with an angel until dawn. Jacob nearly prevailed, because
of his great strength, so the angel touched Jacob’s thigh
and put it out of joint. Even so, Jacob would not let the
divine being go until he had blessed Jacob.
The angel asked Jacob what his name was, and when Jacob
told him, the angel gave him the new name, “Israel,”
(understood here to mean “he who strives with God”) saying
that he had striven with God and Men and had prevailed.
(Jacob means “supplanter.”) Jacob asked the angel what his
name was, but the angel refused to tell him, saying “Why
is it that you ask my name?” (Genesis 32:29) Jacob named
the place Peniel (“the face of God”), saying that there he
had seen God face-to-face and had lived. Jacob left the
place limping because the angel had dislocated his thigh.
Israelites maintained a taboo against eating the
corresponding thigh muscle of animals as a result of this
incident.
1 John Summary:
God loves us and considers us his children, which we are.
The world does not acknowledge that because the world does
not know God. We are God’s children now; but what we will
become is not yet apparent. When he appears we know that
we will be like him; we will see him as he is. Everyone
who hopes in Jesus purifies himself as Jesus is
pure.
Those who commit sin are guilty of lawlessness. Jesus came
to take away sin. No one who abides in Jesus commits sins.
No one who sins has either seen or known Jesus.
Righteousness is in doing what is right in God’s judgment.
Those who sin are of the devil, whose nature is sinful. No
one who has been born of God commits sin, because God’s
nature abides in him. So the children of God can be
discerned from the children of Satan by their actions.
Those who do not do right and do not love one another are
not of God.
John Summary:
Jesus had declared that he and God are one (John 10:30).
The Jewish authorities took up stones to stone him. Jesus
said “I have shown you many good works from the Father;
for which of these do you stone me?” The authorities said
they were going to stone him, not for good works, but for
blasphemy, since he, a man, had represented himself to be
God.
Jesus replied by quoting Psalm 82:6, which suggests that
we all are God’s children, but we don’t act like it. How
dare they then condemn the one God consecrated and sent
into the world as his anointed Messiah for claiming to be
God’s Son? Jesus’ works attest to the fact that he is the
Son of God. Though they don’t believe Jesus’ words, they
should be able to see that Jesus is God because Jesus does
works only God can do. The authorities attempted to arrest
Jesus, but he escaped from them.
Commentary:
In ancient times, people believed that a person’s name
contained the essence of the person’s self. At significant
moments in a person’s life they would receive a new name
indicating a new self (as when God changed Abram and Sarai
to Abraham and Sarah; see Genesis 17:5, 15). Jacob had
gone to Aram as a fugitive fleeing punishment of his sins
against his twin brother, Essau. Now he was returning
having learned to live in obedience to God and to do what
was right in God’s judgment during his twenty year exile.
That twenty years, from the time he encountered God at
Bethel on his way to Aram, where he made the commitment to
serve God (Genesis 28:10-22), until he returned to
the same area and wrestled with the angel north of the
Jabbok, was a period of “discipleship” for Jacob. Jacob
was returning in obedience to God’s will, and seeking
reconciliation with Essau. He was a changed person, and
God gave him a new name, Israel, by which God’s People
would come to be called.
All people are children of God in the sense that God is
our creator. Not all of us acknowledge God as our Father.
Regardless of whether we acknowledge God as our father or
not, our behavior reveals whose children we really are.
Jesus frequently referred to himself as the Son of man,
which suggests an emphasis on the incarnation (God coming
in human flesh to live among us). It also clearly is a
messianic claim (Daniel 7:13; Revelation 1:13; 14:14), but
one which allows the hearer to decide for himself who
Jesus is. The Jewish authorities were not satisfied with
Jesus’ statements about who he was; they wanted him to
tell them plainly if he was the Christ (John 10:24). So
Jesus said “I and the Father are one” (John 10:30), and at
this point the authorities took up stones to kill Jesus
for claiming to be God.
Jesus is the only begotten Son of God, the Christ
(Messiah), in whom “the whole fulness of deity dwells
bodily”(Colossians 2:9), who refers to himself as the Son
of man, talking to people who God generously calls his
children, and those children hate and want to kill him.
Jesus by his actions proves to be God’s Son, and they by
their actions prove to be children of Satan.
Believers in Jesus were originally called “disciples.”
“Disciple” was the “new name” given to those who trusted
and obeyed Jesus. In Antioch, after the stoning of Stephen
(Acts Ch. 7) and the conversion of Paul on the road to
Damascus (Acts Ch. 9) disciples were for the first time
called “Christians” (i.e. “followers of Christ;” Acts
11:26). Today there are lots of people who claim the
name “Christian” who do not know what Jesus taught, who
deny that discipleship is a requirement, and whose actions
prove them not to be children of God. Whose child are
you? What is your true name? Do you know who Jesus
is?
Is Jesus your Lord (Matthew 7:21-23; Luke 6:46)? Are you
Jesus' disciple (John 8:31)? Are you trusting and obeying
Jesus (John 14:21)? Have you received the indwelling Holy
Spirit since you first truly believed (Acts 19:2)? Are you
making disciples of Jesus Christ and teaching them to obey
all that Jesus commands (Matthew 28:18-20)? Do you know
with certainty where you will spend eternity (1 John
5:11-13; Ephesians 1:13-14)?
Saturday, February 15, 2014
Week of 6 Epiphany - Even - 02/16 - 22/14/2014
Posted by shepherdboy at 8:18 AM 0 comments
Labels: bible, christian, christian maturity, discipleship, faith, jesus, maturity, spiritual growth, spirituality, supernatural
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