Week
of 25 Pentecost and Following - Odd
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Podcast Download:
Week of 25 Pentecost - Odd
Sunday
25 Pentecost - Odd (Variable)
First posted
11/22/03;
Podcast:
Sunday 25 Pentecost - Odd
Ezra 1:1-11 - Cyrus' decree;
Nehemiah 5:1-19 - Usury;
Acts 20:7-12 - Eutychus revived;
Luke 12:22-31 - Anxiety;
Ezra Summary:
Cyrus, King of Persia (present-day Iran) conquered the Babylonian
(Chaldean; present-day Iraq) empire and began to reign in Babylon in
538 B. C.. The Lord "stirred up the heart of Cyrus" (Ezra 1:1), so
that Cyrus made a proclamation in writing throughout his kingdom
that the Lord God of heaven had given Cyrus all the kingdoms of
earth, and had commanded Cyrus to build God a house in Jerusalem in
Judah. Cyrus told all the Jews in exile to go to Jerusalem to build
a temple for the Lord God of Israel, and he told those of his
subjects who were in contact with the Jews in exile to assist them
by providing gold and silver, provisions, animals for
transportation, and freewill offerings for the house of the Lord in
Jerusalem. Cyrus' command fulfilled the prophecy of Jeremiah that
the Lord would bring his people back to the Promised Land after
seventy years of exile in Babylon (Jeremiah 29:10).
The heads of all the families of the tribes of Judah and Benjamin
(the two tribes of the southern Kingdom of Judah) and all the
priests and Levites, and all the people of Judah who were in exile
in Babylon, who were stirred by the Lord to return and rebuild the
temple prepared to go. The Gentiles (non-Jews) around them in
Babylon gave them vessels of silver and gold, provisions,
transportation animals and other gifts. Cyrus also returned all the
sacred vessels of silver and gold which had been carried off from
the temple by Nebuchadrezzar (Nebuchadnezzar) the king of Babylon
who had conquered Judah. Mithredath, Cyrus' treasurer counted and
turned over the sacred vessels to Shesh-bazzar (a Babylonian name of
a Jewish court officer). There were a total of five thousand four
hundred and sixty-nine gold and silver vessels which were brought by
Shesh-bazzar from Babylonia to Jerusalem.
Nehemiah Summary:
Some of the Jews were hoarding grain; some were forced to mortgage
their houses and fields to obtain food, and to pay the tax the
Persian king levied. As a result their sons and daughters were
becoming slaves of wealthy Jews, and the poor Jews could not prevent
it because they had lost control of their fields.
Nehemiah was angry when he heard this and he brought charges against
the Jewish nobles and officials. (It wasn't legal for Jews to charge
interest to other Jews; Deuteronomy 23:20). Nehemiah rebuked these
profiteers, pointing out that Nehemiah was working with others as
far as possible to redeem Jews from the slavery of exile in Babylon,
but these profiteers were enslaving their brothers in their own
land. Nehemiah told them they should be living in fear (honor and
respect) of God's power, in order to be recognized as righteous
among the Gentiles and enemies of Israel.
Nehemiah ordered the profiteers to restore the lands and money they
had taken from their fellow Jews, and the creditors promised to do
so. Nehemiah called the priests and made a formal oath to God that
they would do as they had said. Nehemiah shook out the lap of his
robe as if removing crumbs, and prayed that the Lord would do
likewise to any who failed to keep that promise. The assembled
people said "Amen" (so be it) and praised the Lord! The people kept
their promise.
From the time that Nehemiah had been appointed governor by the
Persian king, Nehemiah had not used his right to a food allowance (a
tax to be paid him by the people). Previous governors had required
large contributions of food, wine and money for that purpose. Even
the servants of former governors lorded themselves over the people.
Nehemiah hadn't done the same, because he respected, trusted and
obeyed the Lord, and concentrated on the work of rebuilding the
walls.
Nehemiah had acquired no land, and had fed a hundred and fifty
Jewish officials and men. One day's food required an ox and six
sheep in addition to numerous birds and quantities of wine. But
Nehemiah had not demanded the food allowance, because he didn't want
to further burden the people, and he trusted that the Lord would
reward him.
Acts Summary:
Paul was returning from Greece on his third missionary journey, and
came to Troas (in northwest Asia Minor; in present-day Turkey),
where he stayed for a week. On the Sabbath, he was celebrating the
Lord's Supper in a home church, and he talked with the brethren
until midnight. He was planning to leave in the morning.
They were in a well-lit upper room. A young man named Eutychus was
sitting in an open window, and fell soundly asleep as Paul talked
on. He fell from the window on the third story, and "was taken up
dead" (Acts 20:9) but Paul went down and took him in his arms, and
told the others not to worry, because the boy was alive. They
returned to the upper room and ate. Paul continued talking until
sunrise, and then departed. The congregation was glad that the lad
was alive.
Luke Summary:
Jesus taught his disciples not to worry about their lives, food,
bodies or clothing. Life is more than these material things. God
provides for the birds without their labor or the accumulation of
necessities, and we are of much greater value than birds, in God's
judgment. Worry cannot make us an inch taller, or extend our life
for an extra day, so we should not worry over things that are
further from our control.
Lilies don't labor for their clothing or appearance, but God has
provided for them beyond the fine clothes of the rich. If God is
able to provide for things which are so transient, he will certainly
provide for us. All the people of the world worry about food and
clothing and other material things, but those who seek first the
kingdom of God will have all these other things as well.
Commentary:
The Lord was working to redeem his people from slavery and exile in
Babylon, which they had brought on themselves by their disobedience
of God's Word and idolatry. He promised that he would bring them
back after seventy years (Jeremiah 25:11-14; 29:10-14), renewed and
restored, and he kept his promise.
The Lord is abundantly able to do what he promised. He caused Cyrus
to conquer Chaldea, and supernaturally motivated him to allow the
Jews to return, paid them to rebuild the temple, and returned the
treasures of the temple which had been plundered by Nebuchadrezzar
(Nebuchadnezzar).
While the Lord was restoring Judah to its former freedom and
blessings, some of the rich and powerful Jews were enslaving their
brothers and sisters through usurious interest and mortgage rates
and ruthless business practices. They were robbing their brethren in
their attempt to obtain economic security for themselves. But when
confronted by their spiritual leaders, they listened and repented
because they had the proper fear and reverence for God's Word.
In contrast, Nehemiah is the example of a godly leader who was
working in harmony with God's will to accomplish God's work of
building up and strengthening God's people and the "City of God" on
earth. He could have taxed his people to provide lavishly for his
own personal benefit, but he chose to serve the people for their
welfare.
Paul is an example of a godly Christian leader, who loves God and
God's people and cares for their wellbeing. God was working through
Paul to revive and restore Eutychus.
Those who make their own economic security their priority will never
have security, because security is not found in material things. No
matter how much we have, security always requires "just a little bit
more." The more we have, the more we fear it being taken from us. In
contrast, those who trust and act upon the Lord's promise to provide
the material necessities for those who make seeking his kingdom
their priority will have those things and the assurance of eternal
life.
The only real security we can have in this life is through obedient
trust in Jesus Christ. Only Jesus gives the gift of the Holy Spirit,
only to his disciples who trust and obey him (John 1:32-34; John
14:15-17). The Holy Spirit is the seal and guarantee that one is in
Christ and has eternal life (2 Corinthians 1:22; Ephesians 1:13-14;
Romans 8:9b, 11, 15-16). It is possible for one to know with
certainty whether one has received the indwelling Holy Spirit. If we
are "born-again" (John 3:3, 5-8) by the indwelling Holy Spirit we
will have the assurance that nothing including physical death can
take our eternal security from us.
In many ways America is the "New Promised Land," the "New City of
God" and the "New People of God." Are our government and business
leaders godly people who care for the wellbeing of God's people, or
do they treat us like "sheep to be sheared," trying to accumulate
their own economic and political security without any concern for
God's will or the wellbeing of the people?
Do the people who benefit most from our economy pay their fair share
of the cost of government? Are our young men and women slaves of war
in foreign lands to satisfy the desires of the rich and powerful and
protect their accumulated wealth and privilege? Are our global
business practices enslaving people in foreign lands, while denying
any obligation to our own people? Are our religious leaders willing
to confront and hold accountable the sinful practices of rich and
powerful people? Are we willing to accept correction from God's
word?
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)?
*The Oxford Annotated Bible, Revised
Standard Version, Ed. by Herbert G. May and Bruce M. Metzger, Ezra
1:1-4n, p. 573, New York, Oxford University Press, 1962.
Podcast Download:
Week of 27 Pentecost - Odd
Monday 27 Pentecost -
Monday - Odd (Variable)
To be used after
the last Variable Sunday of Pentecost until Christ the King;
First Posted 11/17/08;
Podcast:
Monday 27 Pentecost - Monday - Odd
(Variable)
Ezra 7:27-28; 8:21-36 - Exiles
return with Ezra;
Revelation 20:7-15 - The Final Conflict;
Matthew 17:1-13 - Transfiguration;
Ezra Paraphrase:
Ezra was a descendant of Aaron (Ezra 7:5). He
was a scribe, well educated in the Law of Moses. The Lord had
given Ezra great favor with the Persian king, Artaxerxes II,* who
granted Ezra everything he asked, and generously provided gold and
silver, money and authorization for whatever else was needed for
the temple in Jerusalem to be provided by the Persian provincial
government.
Ezra praised the Lord who had influenced the king to be so generous,
and had revealed God’s love for Ezra before the Persian royal court.
Ezra was encouraged that God was helping him, and he gathered
leading Jews among the exiles in Babylon
to go to Jerusalem
with him.
The returning exiles gathered at the River
Ahava (unknown; probable tributary of the Euphrates),
where Ezra declared a period of fasting, seeking God’s guidance
for their journey. The group consisted of women and children in
addition to men, and they were transporting a large amount of
gold, silver and money, as well as food, unarmed and without
military escort. They prayed about this and the Lord heard their
prayer.
Ezra designated twelve priests and ten of their relatives to be
responsible for an astonishing amount of the monetary offerings
and sacred vessels of Gold, silver, and bronze. He weighed out the
valuables among them, to guard and deliver to the temple staff.
The group left the river and set out for Jerusalem, and the Lord
protected them from attack and ambush. When they arrived in Jerusalem
they rested for three days. On the fourth day they delivered the
sacred vessels and offerings to Meremoth and Eleazar, who were
priests on duty in the temple, and several Levites. Everything was
weighed out and recorded in the temple storehouse.
The returning exiles offered burnt offerings to the Lord. Twelve
bulls for all Israel,
many rams and lambs, and twelve male goats, as a sin offering,
were sacrificed. Ezra also delivered the Persian king’s letter of
authorization to the provincial officials, and they provided the
support that the king had authorized for the people and the
temple.
Revelation Paraphrase:
Christ will reign
for a thousand years with those who had been martyred during the
Great Tribulation. During that reign, Satan will be bound in the
bottomless pit. At the end of the millennium, Satan will be
loosed from his prison to deceive the nations, Gog and Magog
(symbolic of the worldly kingdoms, ruled by Satan, and opposed
to God) who will gather for the Battle of Armageddon. They will
besiege the Holy City (Jerusalem; the Church) and
the camp of the Saints. But fire will fall from heaven and and
consume them, and Satan will be cast into the lake of fire and
brimstone, where the beast and the false prophet have been cast,
where they will be tormented forever.
John, the
revelator, saw a great white throne of the Final Judgment, so
vast that it blocked out earth and sky. All the dead, great and
small stood before the throne, and the heavenly records of their
deeds were opened, and also the book of life, the record of
those who belong to Christ. The dead came forth from the sea and
from Death and Hades. All the dead were judged according to
their deeds. Then Death and Hades and all the dead whose names
were not recorded in the “Lamb’s (Jesus’) Book of Life
(Revelation 13:8) were thrown into the lake of fire, which
is the second (eternal) death.
Matthew Paraphrase:
Jesus took Peter,
James and John up a high mountain by themselves, and Jesus was
transfigured in their presence; his face became radiant like the
sun and his garments glowed. The three disciples saw Moses and
Elijah talking with Jesus. Peter spoke to Jesus suggesting that
Peter build three booths, one each for Jesus, Moses and Elijah,
if Jesus approved.
Before Peter finished speaking, a bright
cloud overshadowed them and they heard a voice saying, “This is my
beloved Son, with whom I am well pleased; listen to him” (Matthew
17:5). The disciples fell on their faces in awe when they heard
this voice, but Jesus came and touched them and told them to get
up and not be afraid.
When they opened their eyes,
Moses and Elijah were no longer visible. As they came down from
the mountain Jesus told them to “tell no one the vision until
after the Son of man is raised from the dead” (Matthew 17:9).
The disciples asked Jesus why the
scribes say that Elijah must come (before the Messiah). Jesus said
that according to scripture Elijah does come to turn Israel
back to God before the Messiah appears, and that Elijah had come
but the religious authorities had not recognized him, and had done
as they pleased. Jesus said that the Son of man (Jesus) would also
suffer (similarly) at their hands. The disciples understood that
Jesus was referring to John the Baptizer.
Commentary:
Ezra is a
foreshadowing, an illustration of the promised Messiah (Christ),
who led God’s people out of exile in Babylon and into the
Promised Land. Ezra was committed to trust and obey God’s Word
and to teach others to know, trust and obey God’s Word also. God
glorified Ezra in the presence of the Persian royal court and
caused Ezra to have great favor with the Persians.
Who would have thought that the Persians
would not only allow the Jewish exiles to return to their land,
but would also return the sacred vessels plundered by
Nebuchadrezzar from the temple when Judah had been
conquered. Even more amazing, the Persian king gave a great
offering of gold and silver for the rebuilding of Jerusalem and the temple, and authorized
the cooperation, assistance and financial support of the
rebuilding of the temple by the Persian
Province of which Judah
was part.
Ezra had declared
his faith in God to keep the exiles from danger of robbery on
their journey as they returned to Judah. Ezra and
the people prayed for the Lord’s protection, and then set out in
faith that the Lord would protect them.
The sacred vessels
were entrusted to priests, so that they would not be defiled,
and the priests faithfully protected them and returned them to
the temple. All the offerings designated for God’s house were
accounted for and placed into the temple storehouse.
The returned exiles
worshiped the Lord with feasting and sacrifices, in thankfulness
that they had been restored from exile, had made it safely to
the Promised Land, and had the provincial Persian government’s
support to rebuild the temple.
John, the
revelator, was probably the last remaining original apostles and
eyewitnesses to the entire ministry of Jesus Christ. The Lord
allowed him to have a series of visions of the end of the age,
the return of Christ, and the Final Judgment, to be recorded for
the encouragement and strengthening of the Church (John 1:1-4).
John was given a glimpse of Christ’s Second Coming in great
power and glory, as he had been allowed a glimpse of Christ’s
glory on the mountain
of Transfiguration
before Jesus’ crucifixion.
Jesus took John,
with Peter and James, Jesus’ closest disciples, to the
mountaintop, where Jesus was transfigured before them. Jesus’
appearance was changed and his face and his clothes became
radiant like the sun. The three disciples saw Jesus talking with
Moses and Elijah. Moses was the patriarch who most foreshadowed
Jesus Christ, and Elijah was the greatest of the Old Testament
prophets, who was caught up into heaven without experiencing
physical death.
The three disciples
not only saw Jesus transfigured, but heard God’s voice attest
that Jesus was God’s Son, who was entirely obedient to God, and
that the disciples were to trust and obey Jesus. The three were
terrified, as the people of Israel
had been when God came down to Moses on Mt. Sinai (Horeb) and gave Moses the
Ten Commandments (Exodus20:18-20).
Moses was the
mediator between God and the people, and the people were not
allowed to come up on the mountain (Exodus 19:12-15, because
under the Old Covenant of Law they could not be completely
cleansed of sin since they needed to continuously offer
sacrifices. Under the New Covenant of Grace (unmerited favor)
through faith (obedient trust) in Jesus Christ, his disciples,
in the presence of Jesus, were allowed to go to the top of the
mountain into the presence of God.
Christian disciples
today, who have trusted and obeyed Jesus, and have come into
personal fellowship with Jesus through the gift of the
indwelling Holy Spirit, are allowed the mountain-top experience
of the presence of God, and God’s affirmation of Jesus as God’s
Son. Jesus opens the minds of his disciples to understand the
Scripture (Luke 24:45). Those who have been with Jesus on the
mountain-top have the spiritual experience to understand the
scriptures, like the prophecy of the return of Elijah before the
coming of the Messiah, in a way that worldly people cannot.
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)?
*The Oxford Annotated Bible, Revised Standard
Version, Ed. by Herbert G. May and Bruce M. Metzger, Introduction
to Ezra, p. 573, New York, Oxford University Press, 1962.
Tuesday
27 Pentecost - Odd (Variable)
To be used after the last Variable Sunday of
Pentecost until Christ the King;
First Posted 11/18/08;
Podcast:
Tuesday 27 Pentecost -
Odd (Variable)
Ezra 9:1-15 - Public
confession;
Revelation 21:1-8 - New Creation;
Matthew 17:14-21 - Epileptic child healed;
Ezra Paraphrase:
In the first month (May-June 516 B.C.*) the returned exiles
celebrated the feast of Passover and the feast of unleavened bread
(a seven-day festival following the Passover feast on the evening of
the fourteenth day). The celebration included “every one who had
joined them and separated himself from the pollutions of the peoples
of the land, to worship the Lord, the God of Israel” (Ezra 6:21b).
They celebrated with great joy for the Lord’s blessings, and because
the Lord had caused the Persian government (then ruling Assyria, and
the land of Israel) to aid Judah in rebuilding the temple.
After Ezra’s group of exiles delivered the sacred vessels and
offerings to the temple, the (Jewish) officials told Ezra that the
people, including priests and Levites, had intermarried with
pagans during the exile and the officials and leaders were the
guiltiest. Ezra was appalled by the news and tore his garments and
pulled out his hair in ritual mourning, for the faithlessness of
the returned exiles, with others who feared God, until the evening
sacrifice.
Then Ezra made ritual public confession for the people,
acknowledging their sin and guilt. He acknowledged that that
Judah’s sins had brought the exile upon them. Now God had shown
favor to them and left a remnant secure in their inheritance.
Although still under Persian government, the Lord had showed his
steadfast love for Israel, had revived his people, and had not
forsaken them. The Lord was assisting the remnant in rebuilding
the temple and walls of Jerusalem.
But God’s people had forsaken God’s commandments. The prophets had
warned Israel when they entered the Promised Land, that the pagan
people of the land practiced all sorts of pollutions and
abominations (idolatry; human sacrifice; cult prostitution, etc).
The Lord had warned them not to intermarry, “and never seek their
[pagans] peace or prosperity” (Ezra 9:12b; don’t make treaties
with them; don’t adopt their practices) so that Israel could
thrive in the land and their descendants could inherit the land.
Ezra prayed, saying that after Judah had experienced the Lord’s
punishment for disobedience of his Word, God had shown mercy by
leaving a remnant (the returning exiles), although God’s punishment
was less than they deserved. But now would Israel, after all that,
continue to disobey God’s commandments not to intermarry with
pagans? Wouldn’t Israel deserve to be completely consumed by God’s
anger, without remnant or escape? But God is completely good and
merciful, and had left a remnant and allowed Israel to escape full
punishment. Ezra acknowledged Israel’s guilt and repentance to God.
Revelation Paraphrase:
John, the revelator, saw a new heaven and a new
earth because the first, temporal creation had passed away. The
New Jerusalem, the holy city came down from heaven like a bride on
her wedding day, dressed for her husband. A voice from heaven
declared that God would dwell with mankind, and they would be his
people. God will wipe away all tears; there will be no more death,
mourning, crying or pain, because these former things have ceased
to exist.
The Lord God, the beginning and end of all
things, makes all things new. God told John to write these things
down, because they are true and trustworthy (because they are the
Word of God). God declared that his eternal purpose had been
accomplished. To those who are spiritually thirsty, the Lord
freely gives the priceless water of eternal life. Those who
conquer (by faithful endurance in Jesus Christ) will receive this
heritage (eternal life with the Lord in his heavenly kingdom); God
will be his God, and they will be God’s sons (and daughters). But
all the wicked, cowards, faithless, polluted (with sin), murders,
fornicators, sorcerers, idolaters, and liars will be in the lake
of burning sulphur, which is the second (eternal) death.
Matthew Paraphrase:
When Jesus returned from his mountaintop
transfiguration with Peter, James and John (Matthew 17:1-13), to
the disciples that had stayed behind, he found a crowd gathered
around the rest of the disciples. A man whose son was an epileptic
knelt before Jesus and asked Jesus to heal the son. The man had
brought him to Jesus’ disciples and they had been unable to heal
him. Jesus healed the boy instantly. The disciples asked Jesus
privately why they had been unable to heal the epileptic. Jesus
answered that it was because of their “little” faith. Jesus said
that if one has faith the size of a mustard seed (a tiny seed)
nothing would be impossible for them.
Commentary:
The people who returned to the Promised Land
from exile in Babylon were the remnant of Judah, which was the
remnant of Israel. Judah’s disobedience of God’s Word had brought
the Babylonian exile upon them, because God had lifted his favor
and protection from Judah and had allowed them to be conquered by
their enemy.
God’s Word had warned them from the time they
first entered the Promised Land that they were not to intermarry
or have any dealings with the pagan natives of the land or adopt
their customs (Leviticus 18-24-30; Deuteronomy 7:3-5). .
The Church is the New Israel. In that sense we
are to be a holy people dwelling in the midst of a pagan culture,
living in obedience to God’s Word, and not adopting the customs of
the pagans around us. We have all sinned (disobeyed God’s Word)
and fallen short of God’s righteousness (Romans 3:23; 1 John
1:8-10), and the penalty for sin is eternal death (Romans 6:23).
In Jesus Christ, God has been merciful to us and will not punish
us fully for our sin (see God’s Plan of Salvation, sidebar, top
right, home). We’ve had a reprieve, but will we go right back to
making the same sinful ways which brought God’s condemnation?
The people of God are the Church, the bride of
Christ, clothed in the pure robe of Jesus Christ’s righteousness,
seeking to please Jesus. This temporal creation will pass away,
replaced by God’s eternal kingdom, the eternal Promised Land. In
the new creation, there won’t be any sin or evil, because no one
who does such things will be allowed in; the wicked will spend
eternity in Hell, the eternal exile in “Babylon” from which there
is no return.
The Church is to be the group of disciples of
Jesus Christ, carrying on the ministry of spiritual healing,
forgiveness and restoration to a lost and dying world. In one
sense, Jesus has ascended to the “hill of the Lord,” and we are to
carry on until he returns.
In too many instances the nominal “Church”
seems very ineffective in carrying on Christ’s mission, and the
reason is that the “Church” has been making “members” instead of
making disciples. Church “members” have “little” faith. The
disciples who had been unable to heal the epileptic boy had not
yet received the gift of the indwelling Holy Spirit (they first
received the Holy Spirit on Pentecost; Acts 2:1-17). In too many
instances the “Church” has been influenced by and has adopted the
attitudes, behavior and beliefs of the pagan culture around us,
instead of influencing and healing the secular society.
Faith is not like wishing on a star; it isn’t
getting whatever we believe if we believe “hard” enough. It’s not
like having an opinion, like whether it will rain tomorrow. “Yes”
is the “mustard seed” of faith which grows to spiritual maturity
as we trust and obey Jesus (John 14:15-17). If we say “yes” to
Jesus and begin to do as he says, we will be “born-again” (John
3:3-5-8) by the gift of his indwelling Holy Spirit and his power
and guidance will reach the world through 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 27
Pentecost - Odd (Variable)
To
be used after the last Variable Sunday of Pentecost until Christ
the King;
First Posted 11/19/08;
Podcast: Wednesday 27 Pentecost -
Odd (Variable)
Ezra 10:1-17 - The covenant to
divorce foreign wives;
Revelation 21:9-21 - Measuring
the city;
Matthew 17:22-27 - The temple
tax;
Ezra Summary:
Ezra, the scribe, a teacher of the Law of Moses, was upset to
discover that many people of the remnant of Israel had married
foreign wives, both the exiles in Babylon and the ones who had
avoided exile but mingled with pagan colonists who settled in Israel
during the exile. He proclaimed the Law to the returned exiles and
they realized and acknowledged that they had disobeyed God’s command
(see Deuteronomy 7:3). Ezra led the people to publicly confess their
sin and repent.
Shecaniah told Ezra that Israel had broken faith with the Lord by
violating the commandment not to take foreign wives, but he said
that it was not too late to be forgiven. He suggested that Ezra
mediate a covenant with God on their behalf to divorce foreign wives
and children. Ezra made the religious leaders and the people take an
oath to divorce wives and families of foreign marriages.
Ezra spent the night in the temple fasting and mourning Israel’s
unfaithfulness, and then he called all the returned exiles to
assemble in the open square in front of the temple, or be expelled
from the congregation of Israel and forfeit their inheritance in
Israel. Three days later they were all assembled as instructed,
despite heavy rain.
Ezra addressed them saying that they had sinned, and called them to
repent and separate themselves from the pagans of the land and from
foreign wives. The entire assembly answered that what Ezra said was
true and they would do as he said. But because of the heavy rain,
the people asked to fulfill the covenant in each city with local
officials, rather than a national assembly, praying that God’s wrath
could be averted. There were only four individuals who opposed the
plan. The former exiles returned to their cities. Ezra appointed the
heads of each family to act as judges, and in two months all the
foreign marriages had been dissolved.
Revelation Summary:
John saw a vision of the holy city, the New Jerusalem, coming down
out of heaven from God. It had the glory of God, described in terms
of precious jewels. All its attributes and measurements are in
multiples of twelve, for the twelve tribes of Israel and the twelve
Apostles. The city is described as a cube, symbolizing perfection.
The wall of the city is built of twelve kinds of precious stones. It
has twelve gates, each made of pearl, and the streets are paved with
gold.
Matthew Summary:
Jesus told his disciples for the second time (compare Matthew 16:21;
20:17-19) that “the Son of man” (Jesus) would be delivered into the
authority of men, be killed, and rise again on the third day. His
disciples were distressed by this statement. At Capernaum the
collectors of the temple tax (Jewish males were required to pay a
half-shekel annual tax to support the Temple) asked Peter whether
Jesus conformed to the obligation. Peter said, “Yes.”
When Peter came home, Jesus spoke before Peter had a chance. Jesus
asked Peter if earthly kings collected a tax from their own sons or
not. Peter knew they did not, and Jesus said that the sons of Kings
were free of taxation. Jesus was not obligated to pay the tax, but
in order to avoid giving offence, he told Peter to go to the sea (of
Galilee) and cast a hook. When Peter caught the first fish and
opened its mouth, he would find a shekel, which he was to give for
the temple tax for Jesus and for himself.
Commentary:
The remnant of Israel had been scattered by the Exile; most went
into exile in Babylon, but those who remained in Israel had no
spiritual leadership during the “seventy years” of the Exile, and
had not learned or observed the Law of Moses. Ezra was a descendant
of Aaron, the high priest and brother of Moses. He was a scribe
(teacher of the Law; i.e., the Jewish Scriptures; our Old Testament)
and during the Exile he preserved the Law of Moses. Ezra led the
last of four major returns from exile.
On their return Ezra gathered all the people of the remnant of
Israel, the returning exiles and those who had avoided the exile,
and read them the book of the Law which he had preserved .(Nehemiah
8:1-8). When the people heard the Scriptures, they realized and
confessed that they had violated them by taking foreign (heathen)
wives. They had learned the truth of God’s Word and the consequences
of disobedience during the Exile, and they feared (had proper awe
and respect for the power and authority of) God; they were anxious
to make amends, receive forgiveness and avoid God’s wrath.
Shechaniah (a relatively obscure person, whose name means “one who
is intimate with the Lord; a man of faith who knew God’s character)
suggested that it was not too late to covenant with God to annul the
marriages of foreign wives and receive God’s forgiveness. The People
asked Ezra to mediate a covenant renouncing foreign wives and to
intercede for them to God on their behalf.
Ezra spent the night in the temple, fasting and praying and then
summoned all the people to a national assemble in the temple
courtyard or be expelled from the congregation. The people all
assembled in the open on the appointed day despite heavy rain. Ezra
called them to repent and separate from their foreign wives, and the
congregation vowed to do so, but asked that the enforcement of the
covenant be carried out by local officials in each city.
Seventy years of exile in Babylon was virtually a life sentence for
adults at the time of the deportation. A disobedient people went
into exile, and a repentant, purified and renewed people returned.
John’s vision is of the Church, the Holy City, the New Jerusalem on
earth, coming down from out of heaven from God through Jesus Christ
by his Holy Spirit; God’s people purified and renewed by obedient
trust in Jesus Christ, who is the mediator of the New Covenant of
Grace (unmerited favor) through faith (obedient trust) in Jesus
Christ.
We are all, in one sense, exiles in the “Babylon” of this world. We
need faithful “Ezras” who have preserved and proclaim the Scriptural
Apostolic Gospel to people who don’t know, haven’t understood, or
have forgotten God’s Word. Ezra is the faithful high priest who
foreshadows and illustrates the Christ. Jesus is our ultimate High
Priest who mediates our forgiveness and salvation, and through his
Holy Spirit opens our minds to hear and understand God’s Word and
fulfill our covenant to obey God’s Word.
Jesus foretold three times, to his disciples, his crucifixion, and
resurrection, and his prophecy was fulfilled. Jesus was dead and
entombed three days [Friday, from three p.m.,* to before sunset
(Luke 23:54), when the Jewish day began, all day Saturday, and until
early Sunday Morning, the third day, when his disciples discovered
the empty tomb]. Jesus fulfilled the role, foreshadowed by Ezra, as
mediator of the Covenant which secures our eternal forgiveness and
salvation, to those who confess their sin, repent, and trust and
obey Jesus.
Peter had been challenged by the Jewish authorities at Capernaum,
who collected the temple tax. Peter went to Jesus, but Jesus already
knew what Peter wanted and needed (Matthew 17:25b). Jesus told Peter
(formerly a fisherman) to fish with a hook, and the first fish he
caught would have a shekel in its mouth. Peter had to have
recognized how improbable that was, but he did as Jesus had said,
and found that Jesus words were exactly fulfilled. The temple tax
was a half-shekel, and God’s providence had provided the tax for
Jesus and for Peter.
Jesus had told Peter that earthly kings did not tax their sons,
implying that Jesus was the Son of God, the eternal King of the
Universe. Peter trusted and obeyed Jesus, and the consequent miracle
proved to Peter that Jesus’ claim was true. If we will trust and
obey Jesus in faith, we will come to know from personal experience
that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God (compare John 6:68-69).
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)?
*the ninth hour; The Oxford Annotated
Bible, Revised Standard Version, Ed. by Herbert G. May and Bruce M.
Metzger, Matthew 27:45 n, p. 1211, New York, Oxford University
Press, 1962.
Thursday
27 Pentecost - Odd (Variable)
To be used after the last Variable Sunday of Pentecost until
Christ the King;
First Posted 11/20/08;
Podcast: Thursday 27 Pentecost
- Odd (Variable)
Nehemiah 9:1-15 (16-25) - The great confession;
Revelation 21:22-22:5 -
The presence and glory of God;
Matthew 18:1-9 -
Warnings of Hell;
After the fall of Babylon
to Persia,
Nehemiah had led one of the groups of exiles returning to Israel from Babylon. Ezra had assembled
the returned exiles to hear the reading of the Law of Moses. The
exiles realized how far they had strayed from the Word of God. It
was the time of the Feast of Booths*.
The Israelites separated themselves from foreigners (Gentiles) and
fasted and mourned in sackcloth and ashes. They read from the Law of
Moses and worshiped God for a quarter of the day. They made public
confession of their sins and their fathers’ sins for a forth of a
day. The Levites called the people to bless and praise the Lord,
their eternal God.
Ezra led the confession, acknowledging that the
Lord is God alone, and the Creator and sustainer of the Universe
and everything in it. Ezra recalled how God had called Abram to
leave his homeland (Babylon)
and gave him the new name, Abraham. God had found Abraham faithful
and obedient, and had made a covenant with Abraham to give the land of Canaan
to Abraham’s descendants, and God has fulfilled his promise,
demonstrating God’s righteousness.
When Israel
came under bondage and affliction in Egypt,
God saw, and heard their cry. God performed great signs and
wonders against Pharaoh, because he and his people were insolent
against God’s people. God earned a great reputation for his power
and faithfulness.
God parted the Red Sea, so that
the Israelites could pass through without getting their feet wet,
and then cast their pursuing Egyptians into the watery depths, as a
stone into deep waters. God led the Israelites by a pillar of cloud
in the day and by a pillar of fire by night, to guide them in the
right way, day or night.
God came down upon Mount
Sinai to speak with them from heaven and give them
God’s commandments through Moses. God taught them God’s holy day
of rest. God gave them “manna” (“bread from heaven”) to satisfy
their hunger, and water from the rock to satisfy their thirst. God
told them to enter and possess the Promised Land, which God had
vowed to give them.
But over and over the people of Israel
rebelled and disobeyed God’s commands, and forgot God’s many
mighty acts among them. They appointed leaders to take them back
into Egypt,
and they made an idol of gold and worshiped it.
Yet God is always ready to forgive, gracious, merciful, loving and
slow to anger and did not forsake them. God’s Spirit in the pillars
of fire and cloud continued to lead and instruct them. God did not
withhold his manna, and gave them water (from the rock). God
sustained them for forty years in the wilderness; their clothes and
shoes did not wear out.
God gave them power to conquer the lands of
King Og and King Sihon (east of the Jordan
River). God fulfilled his promise to make Abraham’s
descendants as vast as the sands of the sea, and fulfilled his
promise to give them the Promised Land. They inherited a land with
houses already built and vineyards and oliveyards already planted,
and wells already dug. They had food in abundance and were
satisfied and took delight in God’s great goodness.
John had a vision of the Holy City,
the New Jerusalem. There is no temple in the city because the
presence of God and the Lamb (Jesus) fill the city. There is no
sun or moon because the glory of God is its sun and the glory of
the Lamb is its moon. The nations will walk in their light, and
the kings of earth will bring their glory into it. There will be
no night there, and the gates of the city will never be shut. The
glory and honor of the nations will be brought in, but nothing
unclean shall enter it.
No one who practices abominations or falsehood will enter; only
those recorded in the Lamb’s book of life. The river of life flows
from the throne of God and the Lamb through the middle of the street
of the city, and each side of the river grows the tree of life, with
twelve kinds of fruit, one for each month.
The leaves of the tree of life are for healing the nations. The
servants of God and the Lamb will worship him. They shall see his
face, and his name will be on their foreheads. There will be no more
night, nor lamp nor sun, because the Lord God will be their light
and they will reign for eternity.
The disciples asked Jesus who would be
considered greatest in heaven. Jesus used a young child to
illustrate the standard of greatness in the kingdom of heaven.
Jesus said that unless we turn, and become like children we will
never enter the kingdom of heaven. One who is considered great
must be humble like a child.
Jesus said that anyone who shows kindness to such a one (a disciple)
in Jesus' name, has done so to Jesus himself; but one who causes
such to sin (disobey God’s Word), will receive punishment worse than
death. The world will be punished for temptations to sin.
Temptations are part of life, but we will be individually
accountable for causing or yielding to temptations. The consequences
of yielding to temptation are worse than any drastic measures we
need to take to avoid sinning.
During the Babylonian Exile, the people of Judah, the remnant of Israel, both those in exile and
those who avoided exile and remained in Israel,
were cut off from religious teaching and observance for seventy
years.
Ezra was a scribe (teacher of the Law), a descendant of
Aaron, the brother of Moses and high priest. Ezra had led one of
the groups of returning exiles, and Nehemiah had led another.
When the exiles returned to the Promised Land, Ezra assembled the
people of Israel
and read the Law of Moses (the Jewish Scriptures; our Old Testament
of the Bible; God’s Word). The people heard God’s Word, and realized
how far from obedience they were, and Ezra led public confession and
repentance as the mediator between God and God’s people.
The history of God’s dealings with his people,
Israel,
is deliberately intended to be a series of parables and metaphors
for the meaning and purpose of life. In a sense we are all in the
“Babylon”
of this earthly life. God calls us, as he called Abraham (Abram),
to come out of “Babylon”
and be led by the Lord into the Promised Land of God’s eternal
kingdom in Heaven.
Ezra prefigures and illustrates the promised Messiah (Christ; God’s
anointed Savior and eternal King). Jesus is also the “Moses” who
leads his people through the wilderness of this present world and
into the Promised Land. The Holy Spirit is the “pillar of fire”
which gives us light to guide us in the spiritual darkness of this
world.
In another sense, we are in bondage to sin and
death in “Egypt.”
The Lord delivers us from spiritual bondage and death through
Jesus’ sacrificial death on the Cross; Jesus is the ultimate
fulfillment of the sacrificial Lamb of Passover, whose flesh
sustained the Israelites as they were led out of Egypt.
We are “baptized” into Jesus in the water of Baptism, as the
Israelites passed through the Red Sea
without getting their feet wet, while the pagans (the Egyptians)
sank like stones in deep water, and perished in the watery depths
for lack of God’s salvation in Jesus Christ.
God has given us his Word, in the Bible, and in
Jesus Christ, the “living Word;” the fulfillment, embodiment, and
example of God’s Word in human flesh (John 1:1-5, 14). Jesus is
the manna, the bread from heaven, and the water from the rock (1
Corinthians 10:2-6) which God gives us to sustain us through the
wilderness of this lifetime, and into the Promised Land and
eternal life.
The Israelites experienced all these great
saving acts of God, and saw God’s power and faithfulness to do
what he said, but they kept turning away from obedient trust in
God’s Word. They kept wanting to return to “Egypt.” When they
finally entered the Promised Land they forgot the lessons of trust
and obedience of the Lord which they had learned in the
wilderness. They repeatedly ignored and disobeyed God’s Word and
worshiped idols (anything one loves and serves as much as or
greater than God; modern examples are wealth, power, success,
pleasure, home, or family), so God lifted his providence and
protection from them and allowed them to be carried into exile in
Babylon, from which God had originally called Abraham.
Babylon is a metaphor for the sinful worldly
kingdom presently ruled by Satan (behind the nominal worldly
leaders), and also a metaphor for the ultimate eternal
condemnation to Hell for those who don’t trust and obey God’s
Word, revealed, received, and understood through Jesus Christ, by
his indwelling Holy Spirit.
Jesus is the only “Ezra” who can bring
us out of the “Babylon” of Satan’s kingdom and into the Promised
Land and eternal life (Acts 4:12; John 14:6; see God’s Plan of
Salvation, sidebar, top right, home). But note that the exile was
seventy years, a life sentence for adults at the time of their
exile. Ezra (and others) did lead people back from Babylon,
but they were not the same people; they were a revived, renewed
people, who had learned during the exile to trust and obey the
Lord.
John received a number of visions from Jesus
Christ, to be written down and transmitted to the Church. This
vision is of the eternal, Holy
City, New Jerusalem,
coming down to us from God, described figuratively.
Jesus is the
fulfillment of the “ladder” of Jacob’s dream (Genesis 28:12), by
which spiritual blessings come down to us from heaven, and how we
can ascend into God’s kingdom and presence (John 1:50-51).
God’s eternal kingdom is pure and holy, and his
people will be purified from all sin and evil. Only those who have
trusted and obeyed Jesus and been filled with the gift
(‘anointing;” “baptism”) of his Holy Spirit will be able to enter
the kingdom. The Holy Spirit is the seal and guarantee that one is
in Christ and has eternal life (2 Corinthians 1:22; Ephesians
1:13-14; Romans 8:9b, 11, 15-16).
Only Jesus “baptizes” with the indwelling Holy Spirit (John
1:31-34), only his disciples who trust and obey Jesus (John
14:15-17). Those are the ones whose names are in the “Lamb’s Book of
Life.” Jesus is the only source of the water of (eternal) life (John
7:37-39), through the gift of his Holy Spirit.
Jesus’ disciples had not yet received the Holy
Spirit. They were still thinking in worldly terms. They were
competing among themselves as to which one would be greater by
deed and outward appearance. Jesus taught them a different
standard than the worldly standard of greatness.
Instead of building ourselves up in the eyes of
our brethren or the world, we must become humble and obedient,
like small children, trusting and obeying their father. We must be
servants of others for Jesus’ sake. But we have a responsibility
not to do anything that would cause others to sin, and to resist
temptation to sin ourselves.
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)?
*Feast of Booths,
or Tabernacles. In September-October; an eight day Harvest
Festival, commemorating Israel’s wilderness
wanderings. The people erected and lived in outdoor shelters made
of palm leaves and leafy branches.
Friday 27
Pentecost - Odd (Variable)
To be used after the last Variable Sunday of Pentecost until
Christ the King;
First Posted 11/21/08;
Podcast: Friday 27 Pentecost
- Odd (Variable)
Nehemiah 9:26-38 - Israel’s
confession and covenant;
Revelation 22:6-13 - Epilog;
Matthew 18:10-20 - The
lost sheep; church discipline;
Nehemiah Paraphrase:
Israel (repeatedly) disobeyed and rebelled
against God’s Word, committed great irreverence to God, and
killed the prophets who tried to warn them to return to
obedience to God. God (repeatedly) gave them into the hands of
their enemies so that they suffered. Then in their suffering
they called out to God for deliverance and God would give them
saviors to save them from their enemies.
But after the
Israelites had rest from their enemies they would again return
to disobedience of God, so that God would again have to abandon
them again to the power of their enemies until they again turned
to God for deliverance. God warned them (repeatedly, through his
prophets), but they refused to listen to and obey God’s Word,
“by observance (obedience) of which a man [a person] shall live”
(Nehemiah 9:29c, RSV).
For many years God
endured disobedience by God’s people, and he “warned them by thy
Spirit through thy prophets” (Nehemiah 9:30), but they refused
to listen, so God allowed them to fall into the power of their
enemies. But God was merciful to them and did not completely
destroy them or abandon them, because God is gracious (giving
unmerited favor) and merciful (showing undeserved forbearance).
Acknowledging that
God is great, mighty, and terrifying, who is faithful in keeping
his promises, and steadfast in his love, the prophet intercedes
for Israel,
asking God to deem their punishment sufficient. The prophet
acknowledges God’s punishment as just; God has been faithful to
Israel, and Israel
has been wicked, not heeding God’s Word and God’s warnings
through his prophets.
They did not appreciate the great
blessings God had given them in their own land, did not serve God
in their own kingdom (Israel), and did
not turn from their wicked ways. The prophet acknowledged that Israel had become slaves in their
own land, and their riches go to foreign kings (Persia), who have power over the
Israelites as well as their livestock, causing Israel
great distress.
The Prophet
mediated a covenant with God on behalf of Israel
to keep God’s Word.
Revelation Paraphrase:
One of the seven
angels with the bowls of the seven last plagues showed John (the
Apostle) the new Jerusalem, the river of life and the tree of
life in the new Creation (Revelation 21:9; 22:1-2). Then the
angel declared that the revelation to John was trustworthy and
true. The Lord, the God of the spirits has sent his angel to
reveal to God’s servants “what must soon take place” (Revelation
22:6).
The Lord declares, “Watch and see; I am
coming soon” (Revelation 22:7a). Those who keep the words of
this book of prophecy (Revelation; also God’s Word; the Bible)
will be blessed. John declared that he had seen these things of
the revelation. When John saw and heard them, John fell down to
worship the angel who revealed them to him, but the angel warned
John not to do that; the angel is a fellow servant of the Lord,
with all the prophets and those who trust and obey God’s Word; we
must worship (only) God.
The angel told John
that this book was intended for all to read and should not be
sealed (or hidden). The wicked will be allowed to continue in
wickedness and evil according to their choice; let the righteous
and holy continue in holiness and righteousness.
The Lord promises
that he is coming soon, bringing repayment for each, according
to his deeds. The Lord is the “alpha and omega” (the beginning
and end of the Greek alphabet), the “A to Z;” the first and the
last; the beginning and the end of all things. Jesus is the root
and offspring of David.
Matthew
Paraphrase:
We should respect
and care for all people, because the Lord cares for each
individual and doesn’t want anyone to perish. In the parable of
the lost sheep, Jesus used an everyday image of his time to
illustrate God’s concern for each individual. The Lord doesn’t
abandon the straying to their fate, but actively seeks them to
bring them back to safety. The Lord rejoices more when the lost
and straying are restored than over those who never went astray.
Jesus also gave his disciples
instructions concerning discipline among his followers. If someone
sins against us we should tell him his sin privately and give him
the opportunity to repent. If a believer who has sinned against us
doesn’t repent, we should confront him in the presence of
witnesses. If he still doesn’t repent, he should be brought before
the Church. If he doesn’t heed the pronouncement of the Church, he
is to be excluded from fellowship. Jesus gave his Church the
responsibility for judgment and discipline within the Church.
Commentary:
God has intended
from the very beginning of this Creation, to establish an
eternal kingdom of his people who would willingly trust and obey
God. God designed this Creation to allow us free choice of
whether to obey God or not, but he designed it to be temporal;
he has set a time-limit on his tolerance of disobedience. God
knew that we would all have to learn by trial and error to trust
and obey God.
God’s Word declares
that all have sinned and fall short of God’s standards (Romans
3:23; 1 John 1:8-10), and that the penalty for sin (disobedience
of God’s Word) is (eternal) death (Romans 6:23). Jesus Christ is
God’s only provision for our forgiveness, salvation from eternal
death, and restoration to fellowship with God (Acts 4:12; John
14:6; see God’s Plan of Salvation; sidebar, top right, home).
Jesus is not an afterthought, after God found out we would rebel
and disobey him; God knew from the beginning that we would rebel
and disobey, and he designed Jesus into the very structure of
Creation (John 1:1-5, 14).
The history of
God’s dealings with Israel is
deliberately intended to be a series of parables (experiences of
everyday life used to illustrate spiritual truth) and metaphors
for the meaning and purpose of life. God’s eternal kingdom
started with one person, Abraham, who was willing to trust and
obey God.
From Abraham came the nation of Israel,
the people of God, in fulfillment of God’s promise to Abraham.
From the nation and people of Israel came God’s
Messiah (Christ; both words mean “anointed”, in Hebrew and
Greek, respectively), God’s anointed Savior and eternal King.
Through faith (obedient trust) in Jesus, the Church is the New
Israel on earth, and Christian disciples are the New People of
God, and the spiritual descendants of Abraham.
In a sense we are
all God’s people, because God is our Creator, and Israel
is typical of us all. We have all rebelled against, and
disobeyed, God’s Word. We all either refuse to acknowledge God
or try to manipulate God to do our will, instead of seeking to
know and do God’s will. We all want to be “like” God (Genesis
3:5) and be our own “god.” If we believe in God, we ask for his
help when we have trouble, but when things are going well, we
turn from obedience of God’s Word, and worship and serve idols,
like wealth, power, success, career, pleasure, home, and family.
In another sense, America
in particular, and other “Christian” nations as well, are the
New Promised Land and the New People of God. The histories of
the nominal “Church,” and America,
have followed the pattern of Israel. When
things are going well, we tend to fall away from obedience to
God’s Word and turn to “idolatry,” but when tribulation happens,
we repent and return to obedience and trust in the Lord.
The meaning of this
lifetime is to seek and find God (Acts 17:26-27), our Creator,
come to personal fellowship with him, and find eternal life,
which is only possible through faith (obedient trust) in Jesus
Christ, by the gift (“anointing;” “baptism”) of the indwelling
Holy Spirit. Only Jesus gives the gift of his indwelling Holy
Spirit (John 1:31-34), only to his disciples who trust and obey
Jesus (John 14:15-17). The Holy Spirit is the seal and guarantee
that one is in Christ and has eternal life (2 Corinthians 1:22;
Ephesians 1:13-14; Romans 8:9b, 11, 15-16). It is possible for
one to know with certainty for oenself, if one is truly
"born-"again," filled with the indwelling Holy Spirit (Acts
19:2).
Are we learning
from the testimony of Scripture and from our own cultural
experience, or are we repeating the mistakes of the past? The
Bible was given to us as a warning not to repeat past errors,
but have we heeded (heard and obeyed) the Scriptures?
The Apostle John
was given the series of visions recorded in Revelation as a
warning and encouragement to the Church. Jesus has promised to
return on the Day of Judgment, when everyone who has ever lived
will be accountable to the Lord for what they have done in this
lifetime. Those who have rejected Jesus and have disobeyed God’s
Word revealed in Jesus Christ, will receive eternal condemnation
in Hell with all evil, but those who have trusted and obeyed
Jesus and have been reborn through the gift of his Holy Spirit
will receive eternal life in the paradise of Heaven in the
presence of God and his Son, Jesus Christ (Matthew 25:31-46).
Jesus Christ is the beginning and the end of this present,
temporal Creation.
God cares for each
of the people of his creation. God sent Jesus to save us from
eternal death, because God loves each one of us and doesn’t want
anyone to perish eternally (John 3:16-17). God has not abandoned
any one of us; he uses trouble and hardship to help us realize
our need and dependence upon him, so that we may be saved to
live eternally.
I personally
testify that I had strayed into rebellion and disobedience, and
that he used my difficult circumstances to teach me to trust and
obey him. He came personally to me when I was lost, and healed
and restored me to salvation, fellowship, and eternal life in
the fellowship of the indwelling Hoy Spirit.
The Church is the kingdom of God
on earth in this temporal lifetime. The Lord has given authority
and responsibility to the Church to discipline its members.
God’s eternal kingdom will be holy and sinless by the blood
sacrifice of Jesus Christ; and the Church has the responsibility
to maintain that standard in this present world, but in many
instances the nominal “Church” has failed. The Church has
concentrated on building Church buildings and making “members,”
instead of making disciples who trust and obey Jesus, and
building up the eternal kingdom
of God.
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 27 Pentecost - Odd (Variable)
To be used after the last Variable
Sunday of Pentecost until Christ the King;
First Posted 11/22/08;
Podcast:
Saturday
27 Pentecost - Odd (Variable)
Nehemiah 7:73b-8:3, 5-18 -
Reading the Law;
Revelation 22:14-21 - Invitation and warning;
Matthew 18:21-35 - Forgiveness;
Nehemiah Summary:
In the seventh
month (September-October), all the people of Israel came from throughout Judah and gathered to the
square in front of the Water Gate (which was probably in the
southeastern wall of Jerusalem).
They asked Ezra, the scribe (a teacher of the Law of Moses, who
had preserved a book of the Law in exile, and had led a group of
Exiles from Babylon
back to the Promised Land), to read the book of Law in the
hearing of the assembly. Every Israelite old enough to
understand listened to the reading of the Law. Ezra read from a
wooden pulpit constructed for the purpose. The Levites (Nehemiah
8:9b) stood by and helped with teaching.
Ezra opened the
book in the sight of the people, and all the people stood up.
Ezra praised the Lord and the people responded “Amen, Amen,
lifting their hands” (Nehemiah 8:6) in praise and then knelt and
bowed in worship. The leaders read from the book of Law and
explained it so the people could understand the meaning.
When the people
heard the Law, they wept (in repentance for not having lived
according to it). Nehemiah the governor, Ezra the priest and
scribe, and the Levites reassured the people. They declared that
day holy, and that the people should rejoice and feast rather
than mourn. So the people returned to their homes to celebrate,
because they had understood the Word of God.
The next day, the
heads of the households of all the people and all the priests
and Levites came to Ezra to study God’s Word. They discovered
that Moses had commanded the people to dwell in “booths”
(temporary shelters made of palm leaves and leafy branches)
during the feast in the seventh month (the Feast of booths). So
the people made booths, on their rooftops (of those who lived in
Jerusalem), and in the squares
and courtyards of the City of Jerusalem
and the Temple (for the pilgrims
from the rest of Israel).
Israel had not kept
the Feast of Booths since at least before the Exile (Jeshua, or
Joshua, the son of Nun, seems improbable; another Jeshua may be
meant, possibly Jeshua who helped Zerrubabel rebuild the temple*).
There was great rejoicing for the seven-day period of the feast,
during which they heard the book of Law read. Then on the eighth
day, they had a solemn assembly, in accordance with the ordinance
for the festival in the Scripture.
Revelation Summary:
Those who cleansed
their robes in the blood of the “Lamb” (Jesus, the sacrificial
“Lamb” of Passover; Revelation 7:14) by faith (obedient trust)
in Jesus will be blessed and have the right to eternal life, and
will be allowed to enter the eternal City of God. All
spiritually impure (“mongrels;” such as Jews regarded the
Samaritans of Jesus' Day; not pure racially or religiously),
sorcerers, fornicators, murderers, idolaters, and untruthful
people will be left outside the gate of God’s kingdom.
Jesus himself sent
this revelation to the churches by his Spirit (“angel;” angel
can be understood as Spirit; compare Acts 12:15b) through John
(Revelation 1:1). Jesus is the root and offspring of David (the
great king of Israel; the son of Jesse; I Samuel 16:11-13; Isaiah
11:1, 10; Matthew 1:1; thus God’s “anointed” eternal king, Savior,
and Messiah, the Christ).
“The Spirit (of God; the Holy Spirit; the
Spirit of Christ; Romans 8:9) and the Bride (the Church) say
‘Come,’ [an invitation to those who are spiritually thirsty to
come to Jesus, the source of living water; John 4:14; John
7:37-39; Revelation 22:17b] and let him who hears say, ‘Come’”
[i.e., “Maranatha;” Aramean for “Our Lord, Come!” An invitation to
the Holy Spirit to come into one’s heart and life and give
spiritual “rebirth” (John 3:3, 5-8), and also a prayer for the
Second Coming of Jesus Christ to return and establish his eternal
kingdom) Revelation 22:17a].
Those who hear the prophecy of this book
(Revelation; also the entire Bible), are warned not add anything
to God’s Word or take away from God’s Word. God will add the
curses of this book to those who add to God’s Word, and will take
away the share in the tree of (eternal) life from those who take
away from God’s Word.
Jesus, who testifies to the truth of these
words, warns that he will certainly come soon, and the saints
(“born-again” believers of Jesus Christ) say Amen, Maranatha!
“Come, Lord Jesus!”
The grace (unmerited favor) of the Lord Jesus
will be with all the saints. Amen!
Matthew Summary:
Jesus had just told his disciples how to deal
with grievances among themselves (Matthew 18:15-20). Peter wanted
to know if one should forgive an individual as many as seven
times. Jesus replied that one should forgive a person every time,
as many times as necessary; true forgiveness doesn’t keep score.
To illustrate forgiveness, Jesus told a parable
about a king settling accounts with his servants. When the king
began the accounting, a servant was brought before him who owed
perhaps ten million dollars. The servant could not pay, so the
king ordered the man, his wife, children and all his possessions
to be sold to satisfy the debt. The man pleaded with the king to
have patience, promising to repay the debt. The king had pity on
the servant and released him and forgave the entire debt.
As the servant left the accounting, he passed a
fellow servant who owed him twenty dollars. The forgiven debtor
grabbed his fellow servant by the neck and demanded immediate
repayment. The fellow servant asked for patience and promised to
repay, but the forgiven debtor had his fellow servant put in
prison until he should repay the debt. The other servants of the
king were distressed by the forgiven debtor’s harsh treatment of
his fellow servant, and complained to the king.
The king summoned the servant he had forgiven
and told him that since the king had forgiven him all his large
debt, that he should have shown mercy to his fellow servant
concerning his much smaller debt. The king reversed his decision
to forgive the debt, and threw the wicked servant into jail until
he could repay his debt. Jesus warned that God will do likewise to
those who do not truly forgive others.
Commentary:
The Lord had punished Judah, the remnant of Israel,
for disobedience and idolatry, by lifting his providence and
protection from them and allowing them to be deported to exile for
seventy years. God’s punishment is intended to bring us to
repentance so that we can be forgiven and saved from eternal
destruction.
During the exile, the people of Israel
were unable to hear and study God’s Word, or observe the feasts
and festivals as God’s Word commanded. When they returned to the
Promised Land Ezra read and explained God’s Word to them so that
they could understand it.
It was the time for the Feast of Booths
(tabernacles). When the people heard God’s Word and realized how
far they had gone from obedience, they wept and mourned, but their
spiritual leaders reassured them. The fact that they had heard and
understood God’s Word and were committed to live according to it
was cause for celebration.
God’s Word is intended to bless those who are
willing to hear it and live according to it. God’s Word is
intended to bring us to repentance for sin (disobedience of God’s
Word) and idolatry (love of anyone or thing as much as or more
than God). We need to be convicted of our sins in order for us to
receive God’s forgiveness, which is only available through Jesus
Christ.
Those who trust and obey Jesus are cleansed by
Jesus’ blood, and have God’s blessings now, and the right to
eternal life in the eternal City of God in Heaven. But those who
reject Jesus and refuse to obey Jesus’ commands, who refuse to be
corrected by God’s Word, who refuse to repent of sin, will be
eternally locked out of God’s eternal kingdom, and eternally
separated from God’s presence and providence.
We are all sinners (Romans 3:23; 1 John
1:8-10), and the punishment for sin is eternal death (Romans
6:23). God wants us to hear and understand his Word and repent, so
that he can forgive us and give us true, eternal life in his
presence, now and eternally. Jesus is God’s only provision for our
forgiveness and salvation (Acts 4:12; John 14:6; see God’s Plan of
Salvation, sidebar, top right, home).
The Holy Spirit, the Spirit of God, the Spirit
of Christ, and the Church, the Bride of Christ, extend to each one
of us the invitation to come, to receive forgiveness, salvation
from eternal condemnation and death, and to receive eternal life.
Those who hear the invitation are urged to respond by saying
“come,” inviting Jesus to come into our hearts by the gift of his
indwelling Holy Spirit, which only Jesus Gives (John 1:31-34),
only to his disciples who trust and obey Jesus (John 14:15-17).
The Holy Spirit is the seal and guarantee that one is in Christ
and has eternal life (2 Corinthians 1:22; Ephesians 1:13-14;
Romans 8:9b, 11, 15-16).
Jesus has promised to come again, to judge the
physically and spiritually living and the dead (John 5:28-29;
Matthew 25:31-46). That will certainly occur within the
lifetimes of each one of us, because we will each be accountable
to the Lord on the Day of Judgment, for what we have done in this
lifetime, whether we are still living physically at the time of
Christ’s return or not.
No one can be certain that any of us will live until tomorrow. Those
who are “born-again” (John 3:3, 5-8) by the gift of the indwelling
Holy Spirit will say “Maranatha! Come, Lord Jesus!” We are praying
and working for Christ’s return to establish his eternal kingdom.
The Word of God, the Bible, fulfilled,
embodied, and exemplified in Jesus Christ (John 1:1-5, 14) is the
standard by which everyone will be judged. We are warned not to
add to or take anything away from God’s Word.
Jesus’ mission was to proclaim
and demonstrate the truth of God’s Word and God’s unlimited desire
to forgive and save us from sin and eternal death. Jesus taught
and exemplified obedient trust in God’s Word.
Jesus died on the cross as the only sacrifice acceptable to God for
the forgiveness of our sins, and he demonstrated the truth of
resurrection and of existence beyond physical death. If we have
accepted and experienced the free gift of eternal forgiveness and
salvation, the Lord expects us to forgive others and offer Jesus’
forgiveness to them.
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)?
*The Oxford Annotated Bible, Revised
Standard Version, Ed. by Herbert G. May and Bruce M. Metzger,
Nehemiah 8:17 note, pg 595, New York, Oxford University Press, 1962.