The One Year Bible- March 27th
When I was in high school, I
played on the basketball team. My first year I warmed the bench for the
freshman “A” team. I would have liked to actually play on the “B” team but my
coach was great and wanted me on his team. My sophomore year was a blur and I
think I played a total of three minutes but I loved being part of a team. My
junior year I got cut from the team and I poured my heart out to the coach and
asked to just be able to practice with the team. He said “no” but the varsity
coach put me back on the team, (I think there is a story of redemption there
but that is not where I am going). Needless to say I played a total of zero
minutes that year, but I never missed a practice and I worked my tail off. My
senior year I made the varsity team and was encouraged by a great coach. Gene
Campbell will always have a place of honor in my heart. He not only put me back
on the JV team the previous year, he gave me shot as a senior. His pre-game
speeches were amazing. Our team was picked by the local paper to come in last
in the league; we were small, un-athletic, and inexperienced. That did not stop
Coach Campbell from giving us confidence and inspiring us to be more than we
were told we could be. We finished the year in fourth place out of ten teams.
We missed the playoffs but made everyone stop and notice us. I see Moses as
that type of person for the people of Israel. If the paper did a story on them,
they would be picked last among the people in the area, they were small, un-athletic,
and very inexperienced, but Moses had confidence in them. As he stands at the
boarder of the Promised Land, he recounts the history of the people and gets
them ready and pumped up for the battle ahead. This is how I view the book of
Deuteronomy. Keep this in mind as you read the rest of the book. On to the rest
of the study...
Seth’s Thoughts
The Old Testament
I want to spend some time
this week talking about one of the most important passages in the Hebrew Bible.
“Hear, O Israel: The LORD our God, the LORD is one. Love the LORD your God
with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your strength.”
(Deuteronomy 6:4-5 NIV). Mark Braun in his commentary on the book of
Deuteronomy says the following:
“Israel did not worship a
pantheon of gods; their God was one, undivided. Because of that, God wanted
them to give him undivided loyalty. The Baals of Canaan were manmade pictures
of the various forces of nature, but Israel’s God was one. “Hear, O Israel, the
LORD our God, the LORD is one” is the deepest statement of God’s nature as one
Lord. For centuries the Jews have called this their Shema, from the first
Hebrew word of this phrase. Observant Jews still say the Shema twice each day,
as part of their morning and evening prayers, yet it is not so much a prayer as
a statement of faith.”
This idea of one God is
known as monotheism. It was a distinctive feature of the Hebrew religion. Many
ancient peoples believed in many gods, or pantheism. But the God of Abraham,
Isaac, and Jacob is the God of the whole earth, the only true God. This was an
important insight for the nation of Israel because they were about to enter a
land filled with people who believed in many gods. God reminds the people over
and over again before they enter the land, not to have anything to do with
these other gods. We shall soon see that this is a bit of foreshadowing, as the
gods of the land of Canaan are the cause of many problems and eventually
captivity and exile for the people.
Right after the Shema, Moses
then gives some instructions to the people regarding education. The LORD wanted
to make sure that the following generations would hear the stories and know of
the love and mercy of God and his statutes and teachings for His people. “These
commandments that I give you today are to be upon your hearts. Impress them on
your children. Talk about them when you sit at home and when you walk along the
road, when you lie down and when you get up. Tie them as symbols on your hands
and bind them on your foreheads. Write them on the doorframes of your houses
and on your gates” (Deuteronomy 6: 6-9 NIV).
Mark Braun continues in his
commentary:
“God wanted education in the faith to be a family thing. God
didn’t want his people confining it to Sabbath days, leaving it to the
religious professionals to conduct. Moses’ words in verses 7-9 were probably
meant in a figurative way; parents were to talk about their relationship with
their Savior God and they went about their day-to-day lives. Many later Jews,
however, took these versed literally. Jewish males, thirteen and older, tie
phylacteries on to their foreheads and their left arms—two little black boxes
containing tiny parchment scrolls on which are written four passages of the
Hebrew Scriptures. Observant Jews also fasten mezuzoth to the door frames of
their homes and public buildings—small wooden or metal boxes that hold two
scrolls on which are written this verse and Deuteronomy 11:13-21. The Jewish
teacher Maimonides said that those who look upon the mezuzoth and the
phylacteries as lucky charms are ignorant, yet by obeying Moses’ words
literally, many Jews many have found these outward symbols served as strong
reminders of their faith. Crosses or pictures of Jesus serve a similar purpose
in our homes.”
Jesus makes mention of this
practice in Matthew 23 when he says, “The teachers of the law and the
Pharisees sit in Moses' seat. So you must obey them and
do everything they tell
you...
Everything they do is done for men to
see: They make their phylacteries wide and the tassels on their garments long;
they love the place of honor
at banquets and the most important seats in the synagogues; they love to be
greeted in the marketplaces and to have men call them 'Rabbi.'” Jesus points out that although the Pharisees seem to be doing
the things on the outside right, they are not right on the inside. They need to do what Moses intended. The word must come out through our
actions (tied to our hands) and should be always on our minds (tied to our
foreheads).
The New Testament
We continue our journey in
Luke and there are some amazing passages from this past week’s readings. I like
the quote from Jesus, “It is not the healthy who need a doctor, but the
sick” (Luke 5:31 NIV). We are all definitely sick because of sin. We are
all in need of a doctor and the great physician; Jesus himself is there for us.
You may have wondered about this “Son of Man” reference that Jesus keeps
making reference to. I could write a book about it but the short answer is that
he is most likely making reference to Daniel 7 where a “son of man”
comes in glory from the clouds to rule. This was what Jesus was on earth to do.
I will try to remember to talk about that when we get into Daniel (in
November).
Jesus’ teachings on loving
your enemies should make us all a bit uncomfortable. Do we really have to love
them? Remember that because of sin we are enemies of God. He still loved us so
much that he sent Jesus to die in our place for us. How many of you would die
for your friends let alone your enemies. Just amazing. To a Jew the heart was
the center of the emotions, as well as all reason and intellect. When Jesus
talks about the good things and the evil things that come from our hearts would
really hit home. He is not just talking about emotions here. This is the whole
shootin’ match. What you say flows from what is in your heart. So that begs the
question, what is in your heart? Is it sin or is it love. If it is sin how can
you get rid of it? If it is love, how did it get there? The only way the sin
will be removed is through what Jesus did for us. Because of his death he has
removed that sin and has put in it’s place love. “We love because he first
loved us” (1 John 4:19).
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