Leviticus 14
Vs. 1-9 This is the initial public cleansing
of the leper to bring him back into the community. The use of the two birds is
interesting and might symbolize death and life. It is also interesting that he
had to live outside of his tent for a week. That would have been very public.
People could have brought over casserole dishes and come and talked with him or
her.
The shaving looks like it was everything,
from the head to the top of the big toe. The person would have had less hair
than a newborn baby.
Vs. 10-32 This is the ceremonial cleansing to
be invited back into the worship of Yahweh. Verse 21 repeats everything for the
situation of a poor person, yet in both descriptions of cleansing for a leper,
at least one lamb had to be offered. This is a very interesting situation in
that it is like the ordination of a priest, but even more elaborate in one
detail, the “commissioning to service” with oil.
V. 14 There is the same applying of blood to
the right ear, right thumb and right big toe, that there was with Aaron and the
priests. These two places are the only places in the Bible. So it makes me
wonder about the connection. What did a priest and a cleansed leper have in
common? The only thing I can come up with is that a leper was "dead"
in a figurative sense, being a walking symbol of sin and separation from God.
The healing and being made clean would symbolize life from the dead. In the
consecration of Aaron, the meaning of the blood seemed to be that all of his
life: thoughts, doing and going were to be devoted to God in ministering the
blood, or leading people to God for forgiveness and cleansing. My sense is that
the leper, now redeemed from death, was to be consecrated to God and was to
live his life under the "direction" of that blood, giving testimony
to lead others to the forgiveness and cleansing of God.
V. 17 But here the leper is anointed with oil
in the same way he was anointed with blood. And then the oil was poured on his
head. In a way, it looks to me like a commissioning service to live a life of
testimony to the congregation. The oil represents the anointing to a task, but
symbolically, oil represents the Holy Spirit. In some sense, it makes me think
of the demonic guy with the legion who, having been set free, wanted to follow
Jesus. In sending him home, Jesus commissioned him to be a living testimony to
the power of God.
As a disciple, it seems to me that we've been
lepers. We've been made alive and forgiven and cleansed by the blood. All our
thoughts and doing and going should be led by that blood. And we've been
anointed by the Spirit, commissioned to the harvest. We live to follow Christ
and give testimony and lead others to the forgiveness and cleansing of God,
making disciples, who make disciples, who make disciples.
In Mark 1:40-45, Jesus told that leper, the
first Israelite leper we ever know of (besides Miriam) to be healed, to go and
present himself to the priest. The priest would have had to publicly pronounce
this man "clean." That would have been a great public testimony by a
priest showing that Jesus had done the work of God. It would have been an
amazing public event. The guy did his own thing, disobeyed, and caused problems
for Jesus.
Sometimes it is best to obey God in the
system, following Christ as He desires.
Vs. 33-57 Now, there is a lot in this section
regarding cleansing and sacrifice and houses. I suppose the purpose is to show
the people that all growing manifestations of rot and decay, spiritually,
physically and culturally, are deadly and unclean. This clearly was an object
lesson. When you read this section, pay attention to the beginning verses. They
tell you that there must have been a purpose.
Vs. 46-47 Notice that whoever is in the house
is ceremonially unclean.
Vs. 48-53 Notice the cleansing ceremony with
the birds symbolizing death and life.
I never understood this stuff about leprous
material or a leprous house until I lived in Texas during all the black mold
stuff in 2001 and we discovered it in our house. We didn't just have black
mold, but yellow and red and green. Some of it was actually very pretty
stuff….cough, cough, cough.
Mark 6:30-56
Vs. 30-44 It's interesting that Jesus tries
to teach the disciples the importance of getting into isolation after a
draining time of ministry. It's also interesting that it doesn't work. Instead
of being able to relax, they are pursued; and Jesus, moved with compassion,
teaches the people. He probably did some healing as well, and the disciples
probably helped organize the people into lines. The result was that this was
not rest and relaxation for the disciples. It is interesting to think that the
disciples got to watch Jesus respond to the Father changing His plans. Jesus
was the perfect, flexible Son of God, living only to respond to what the Father
was doing. I probably would have gotten mad and blown up trees and thrown
mountains into the sea.
V. 35 According to John, this was in March,
just before the Passover, and these crowds were probably on their way to
Jerusalem. The disciples recognized the problem. It was late and would get dark
quickly, and there were lots of people in the middle of nowhere. (There is
actually a small city in Texas called "in the middle of nowhere," Midlothian,
Texas, which now has a Wal-Mart and no longer lives up to its name.)
V. 37 When I think of the disciples here, it
is really the same scenario as the first days of the Exodus. How is God going
to feed all these people in the middle of nowhere? Imagine the disciples coming
off of this spiritual victory. Now, instead of resting, they were serving even
though they were tired; and then, after hours of serving and hearing Jesus
teach they are very, very tired. Then Jesus says, You give them something to eat. What is interesting is that there
is a story in the OT of God doing something like this with Elisha the prophet,
so with both the manna in the wilderness and with the prophet Elisha, there was
a precedent for feeding crowds.
So, what lesson do you think the disciples
learned from this event? We talked about some of this in Matthew.
Vs. 45-52 Elsewhere we learn that Jesus sent
the disciples away as a decoy. The people knew Jesus was still up on the
mountain, and so they waited for Him in order to take Him captive and make Him
king.
The disciples still haven't rested. Jesus
tells them to get into the boat and they just do it, now fighting the wind.
The thing I get from all of this is that
there are times God pushes us, in our following, to exhaustion, to teach us in
that tiredness to exercise our faith. It is easy to follow, and it's easy to
have faith, and it's easy to be joyful when you are well rested. You test the
real depth of learning or training under duress, and sometimes it takes a long
time to get us to that teachable moment.
So how do you explain the last part of this?
They were terrified and astounded….because they did not understand about the
loaves. What didn't they understand there, that led them to be terrified here?
I think it has to be some connection they
missed regarding Jesus and who He was. And in that connection, something they
missed with regard to the manna. God is preparing them to understand who Jesus
is. Immediately after this boat ride, we have John 6:24-71. Jesus' words in
John 6 tie this all together. Peter's words in John 6:68-69 show you that they
finally understood about the loaves. Jesus was the bread that came down from
heaven.
Vs. 53-56 It is amazing to think that many of
these people who are pursuing Him will turn from Jesus when He gets to
Capernaum. I guess the question is, "Do you want Him, or do you want what
He can give you?" It's not the same thing.
Psalm 40:1-10
Again, this is a psalm that my heart latches
onto. These are only the first ten verses, but what great verses. Laura and I
have memorized these, and they are comforting and challenging. They are exactly
what I think a leper was supposed to do after he was cleansed.
This psalm is "after the fact," in
that David had already received the deliverance he cried out for. I like the
crying out and waiting. You have to notice the frequency of these words in The
Psalms and get the idea that this is what God wants us to do. We might be
tempted to say, "But things aren't that bad." Maybe we don’t feel it,
but in reality, things are always worse than they seem, considering that our
planet is on course for a bad day.
Vs. 1-3 Notice that the new song didn't come until after the deliverance. We don't have to
feel guilty about not having the new song, if we are still waiting for the
Lord. He will give it when it is time.
Vs. 4-5 This is a part of that new song.
Vs. 6-8 These verses are quoted regarding
Jesus in Hebrews 10:5. The word "ear" is taken together with
"body" in Hebrews 10 to mean both a body and the understanding of
what to do with that body. It's interesting that we're reading so much about sacrifice and offering in Exodus and
Leviticus, and here it says the opposite. Verses 7 and 8 are the answer, and
this was probably the answer back when Leviticus was penned.
Vs. 9-10 These verses show precisely why God
allows us to get into bad scrapes, so He can deliver us, and so we can give
genuine, heartfelt praise and testimony to God. We’re back to the cleansed
leper again.
Proverbs 10:11-12
You can really see the design of these
verses, the mouth of the righteous
being a fountain of life that issues
from a heart of love that covers sins. The
mouth of the wicked conceals violence, motivated by a heart of hate that stirs up strife.
Do you recognize the second half of v. 12?
You hear it all the time, and it's quoted in James 5:20 and in 1 Peter 4:8.
Maybe the way it is used here helps us understand what it means in the NT.
If you’re reading along and don’t have a One Year Bible,
click on this link http://www.esvbible.org/devotions/every-day-in-the-word/. If that doesn't
work, go to http://www.esvbible.org/devotions/
and click on “Every
Day in the Word.”
I'm writing these comments to and for those who are
following a One Year Bible and interested in growing deeper as a disciple,
following Jesus in the harvest. My hope is to see the growth of a discipleship
culture in the church. Groups of 3-4 disciples, meeting weekly, encouraging
each other to follow Christ and work to reach out and make disciples who make
disciples. The Bible itself is the most universal manual we have and key to our
growth and service in Christ. Nothing keeps us more focused on why we are here
or what we are to be doing. My comments are only meant to provide some
explanation of the events or to show the flow of God's plan of redemption. My
comments are in no way exhaustive, but are designed to keep us focused on
Christ and our role in His harvest. My hope is that the people in these groups
will grow in Christ and be willing, after a year, to find 3 others to meet with
and encourage in their growth as disciples, disciples making disciples in the
harvest.
If you would like a complete description of this model
of being and making disciples you can find it in my book: Simply
Disciples*Making Disciples. http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B011WJIDQA?*Version*=1&*entries*=0
If you would like a more descriptive commentary that is
still readable and concise, I'd recommend the Bible Knowledge Commentary. It's
keyed to the NIV, so the result is the commentators are constantly telling you
what the Greek or Hebrew is. That never hurts.
I am not endorsing any particular One Year Bible; in
fact, I read something you don't, die revidierte Lutherbibel 1984.
Anyone reading along with us is welcome to do so and is
encouraged to take their own notes and make their own observations. If the
comments made do not agree with your particular tradition or understanding,
that's OK. Nothing I've written is meant to criticize any point of view, but
only to express the truth of what God has written to us, as I understand it.
Send comments or feedback to dgkachikis@gmail.com.
If you would like documents containing an entire month
of the Reading Notes, go to https://sites.google.com/site/dlkachikis/reading-notes. You can download
these to use on your computer or to print.
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