The One Year Bible- November 16th
With thankful hearts, family events coming up, the anticipation of Advent and eyes cast upon Christmas it may be hard to find time this holiday season to read your Bible every day. It seems that every year there is more to do and less time for our own interests. Make sure you have a plan before your time runs short and you find yourself so busy with holiday preparations that other things don’t get done. Make sure that you carve out (pun intended) some time each and every day to spend time in God’s word. On to the study…
Seth’s Thoughts
The Old Testament
The book of Ezekiel is winding down. This week we got to probably one of the
most famous parts of his prophecy, that is the Valley of the Dry Bones. From
Kieth Kuschel’s commentary on Ezekiel:
The faith of the child of God is constantly threatened by two opposing
dangers: overconfidence and despair. It was to the second of these dangers that
God’s message in Ezekiel 37 is addressed. In the previous chapter God had
assured his people that the exiles now in Babylon were not forever gone, but
that “they would soon come home” (38:8). God’s people were so depressed by
their situation, however, that they found it difficult to believe God’s
promise. They said: “Our hope is gone; we are cut off” (37:11). To reassure his
people God granted Ezekiel a remarkable vision: the vision of the valley of the
dry bones. God’s question of Ezekiel—“can these bones
live?”—normally would have been answered in the negative. Ezekiel’s reply was
interesting. He said, “Only the Person who made all those bones could make them
alive.” Only the God who made man from the dust of the earth could make
something living out of that valley full of bones which represented the whole
community of exiles. The Lord promised to do for these bones just
what he had done for the dust formed into a body in Eden: “The LORD God formed
the man from the dust of the ground and breathed into his nostrils the breath
of life, and man became a living being” (Genesis 2:7). At the
Lord’s command, Ezekiel prophesied to lifeless bones and a miracle happened.
There was a rattling noise as bone came together to bone. To Ezekiel the valley
seemed no longer to be full of disconnected bones but of skeletons. God’s
miracle continued, “Tendons and flesh appeared on them.” Now the valley
resembled a battlefield littered with corpses. But God’s miracle was still not
over. At God’s command Ezekiel continued to prophesy, and breath entered that
army of corpses, and they came to life and stood up. Through a vision Ezekiel
saw how God would re-create his people now apparently hopelessly lost in
Babylon. Ezekiel carried out his orders and the Lord kept his
promise. This ought to be a description of our lives: We carried out the Lord’s
orders and the Lord carried out his promises. Knowledge that we are doing the
Lord’s will in our lives is what takes away the boredom and drudgery. We are
not just working for a paycheck. We are serving God and supporting our families
as God expects. We are not just studying. We are using our minds to the maximum
capacity because the Lord has called us to be good managers of our intellect.
We are not just taking care or the kids. We are shaping the souls of God’s own
children by letting them learn of Jesus from the way we talk and act. And the
Lord keeps his promise, just as he did when Ezekiel preached to those dry bones
as he was instructed to. After Jerusalem had fallen and the rest of
the nation had joined them in exile, the Jews in Babylon had given up hope. “As
a people and a nation we are just as good as dead.” they said. To which the
Lord replied, “I can change that. I can raise you from the dead! I can return
you to your land. Nothing is impossible for me.” This vision of the
dry bones might have been the basis for the New Testament picture of the
spiritual status of all people. St. Paul, for example, wrote, “You were dead in
your transgressions and sins” (Ephesians 2:1). By nature everyone is
spiritually dead, unable to do anything pleasing to God. But in his might and
mercy the Lord has made us “alive with Christ” (Ephesians 2:4). This makes it
possible for us who were “foreigners and aliens,” exiled from God because of
sin, to become “fellow citizens with God’s people” (Ephesians 2:111-13, 19).
The New Testament
James is one of those books that has a checkered past in the history of the
Church. It was one of the books that underwent a tough fight before it found
its place in the New Testament. Many of the objections to the book revolve
around the issue of good works. From a quick reading, it does seem like the
book preached a faith and works salvation. This problem cannot
just be swept away easily. Martin Luther called James an “epistle of straw”,
meaning that it had not much substance or worth according to him. This
viewpoint has not been held tightly even in the Lutheran church, although many
of the teachings of the book are very difficult to translate. The one big way
to help bring about understanding, at least for me, is to think of the works
portions as a natural result of faith. When we look at good works as the
logical outcome of living a life of faith then it is only natural to think that
if there are no works there must not be true faith. I don’t know if this helps
you or not but it works for me. Another way to help is by reading the book of
James through Ephesians 2:8-10, “For it is by Grace you have been
saved, through faith—and this not from yourselves, it is the gift of God—not by
works, so that no one can boast. For we are God’s workmanship, created in
Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do.”
From The Life Application Bible intro to the book of James:
Genuine faith will inevitable produce good works. This is the central theme
of James’s letter, around which he supplies practical advice on living the
Christian life.James begins his letter by outlining some general
characteristics of the Christian life (1:1-27). Next he exhorts Christians to
act justly in society (2:1-13). He follows this practical advice with a theological
discourse between faith and action (2:14-26). Then James shows the importance
of controlling one’s speech (3:1-12). In 3:13-18, James distinguishes two kinds
of wisdom, earthly and heavenly. Then he encourages his readers to turn from
evil desires and obey God (4:1-12). James reproves those who trust in their own
plans and possessions (4:13-5:6). Finally, he exhorts his readers to be patient
with each other (5:7-11), to be straightforward in their promises (5:12), to
pray for each other (5:13-18), and to help each other remain faithful to God
(5:19,20).
This letter could be considered a how-to book on Christian living.
Confrontation, challenge, and a call to commitment awaits you in its pages.
Read James and become a doer of the Word (1:22-25).
Bits and Pieces
The Old Testament
We will finish up Ezekiel this week and start on the book of Daniel. Here are
the vital stats for Daniel:
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