JUNE 7
1 Kings 2:1-3:3
1 Kings 2
Vs. 1-4 While I think it’s good for David to
tell Solomon to follow the Lord and His Word (v. 3), I think that in v. 4,
David is too focused on his lineage and keeping the throne in the family. It is
really hard to say how much of God’s plan of redemption was grasped by David
and others. In observing David, it seems that he became a little dysfunctional
regarding his sons, first thinking it would be Amnon, then Absalom, etc. I
would feel better if I saw something about the glory of God and the testimony
of Israel to the nations. When we see Solomon dedicate the temple, many of his
words will have to do with himself.
As disciples,
it is only by God’s grace that we can see God’s plan so clearly. For truly, I say to you, many prophets and righteous people longed to
see what you see, and did not see it, and to hear what you hear, and did not
hear it. (Matthew 13:17)
We are living
on the cutting edge of God’s plan. We have all this Old Testament history to
observe, so we need to observe and learn. Then, we have the record of the lives
of these men and women who played a part in God’s plan without knowing or
grasping the things that we take for granted. For us then, our work as
disciples can’t have anything to do with a name we leave behind in a church or
a group. Our heritage and joy is in the name of Christ and sharing what He has
done. As His servants, we work in the harvest, reaching out and making
disciples for His name, not ours.
Vs. 5-9 I’ve
alluded to David’s final instructions to Solomon. You might have thought, with
his closeness to God and the benefit of the Urim and Thummim, David would have
figured out what to have done with Joab during the time Joab committed these
crimes. Somehow I don’t think this speaks well of David. To me, David allowed
too much injustice and deception in those close to him, probably to build a
kingdom, and possibly because it reminded him too much of his own sins. As
disciples, I would say it is better to be honest at all times and trust God for
the results even if it means confessing our sins or not allowing others to “get
away with murder,” even if they are key players in a church or organization.
This isn’t the full story on David’s final
instructions to Solomon. On a better note, in 1 Chronicles, we’ll see David
pass on instructions, materials and blueprints to Solomon for the building of
the temple.
Vs. 13-25 This is really Solomon cleaning up
after David. David, unlike Ahithophel, didn’t set his house in order when he died.
He allowed this situation with Adonijah to grow out of his neglect.
The issue here was that Adonijah wanted
Abishag so he could marry her and use this as a way to claim the right to the
throne. Legally, according to the law, he couldn’t marry his father’s wife; but
because David had had no sexual relationship with her, it might not have been
considered a full marriage. Whether it was legal or not is not the point.
Solomon saw through the plan and knew who the planners were.
V. 24 It seems to me that there is a whole
lot of me going on in this statement.
V. 25 This is one of David’s mighty men who
became David’s bodyguard. Now he is Solomon’s hatchet man.
Vs. 26-27 Solomon didn’t kill Abiathar
because he was a priest. No one from this lineage would ever serve as priest
again. Note that Jeremiah was from Anathoth, and was a really good guy. It is
interesting to see that this is the fulfillment of God's judgment on Eli back
in 1 Samuel. God is very patient in judgment.
Vs. 28-35 Now it is Joab’s turn. Joab might
have thought that grasping the horns of the altar would save him and that
Solomon wouldn’t have the nerve to do this. Joab should have died long ago. He
had brought poison into David’s court.
V. 33 For me, this seems a little too focused
on himself and the line of David. God should receive glory and the truth of His
Word should be lifted high.
Vs. 36-46 The final loose end was Shimei.
Solomon knew something would happen to make him leave Jerusalem.
In both situations, God was sovereign and
removed two potential threats to Solomon. If Adonijah, Abiathar and Joab hadn’t
tried this idea with Abishag, they might have gone to the grave in peace and
spread more poison. If Shimei had stayed in Jerusalem and let someone else find
his slaves, nothing would have happened. Solomon didn’t have to press the issue
with these men. He needed only to wait on the Lord.
1 Kings 3:1-3
There is all sorts of foreboding here. In
Deuteronomy 17:16-19, among other things, God commands a king to make his own
copy of the law (probably the first 5 books of the Bible) by hand and under the
supervision of the Levites, and then to read from it every day of his life.
Solomon was a busy man and I doubt he ever did that.
Why did Solomon make an alliance with Egypt,
especially through marriage? Israel had been warned that if they allowed their
sons to marry women who worshiped other gods, these women would eventually turn
their hearts. What was he thinking? Why didn’t Solomon depend on a sovereign
God for peace? Why does God seem so silent here? Did Solomon consult the Lord?
Did he ask a priest to roll the Urim and Thummim? I doubt it. I guess there is
a liability for being too smart and too “wise.”
V. 3 You will see this only often among the kings. I think Josiah is the only one who put
an end to worshiping on the high places.
Again, later, Solomon will, himself, sacrifice to foreign gods on these and
other high places. It was forbidden in the law to offer anywhere besides the
tabernacle. A wise king, blessed by God, could have put an end to that kind of
worship and drawn the people to worship as God had intended. God’s silence
doesn’t mean His approval.
As disciples, we see that some of the little
tendencies of these men of God became huge failures later and led them, and
others, into ruin. Organizationally, everyone has an opinion about things, but
where the Word is crystal clear, we need to stay with the Word. No compromise.
Personally, we need to look at ourselves too. Do we allow ourselves the luxury
of committing little sins? We are no better than these men. It is better that
we lay things aside now and focus on the harvest. Once our work is done and
we’re in heaven, we’ll enjoy true vivid joy and enjoyment; and we won’t miss
the “joys of life” we thought we would miss here on earth, if we focused too
steadily on following the Lord into the harvest.
Acts 5
Vs. 1-11 The church was young, only weeks
old. During this crucial beginning period of the church, God did something
here, to protect the church, that, thankfully(?), He doesn’t do today.
Ananias and Sapphira had seen the reaction of
the church leaders to Barnabas’ selfless sale of his property and his giving of
the entire sum to the apostles. They wanted that kind of “fame” for themselves,
to be known among the apostles and in the church. Their sin was not that they
didn’t give all the money, but that they said
they gave all the money. They really sold it for more than they said and kept a
good part of the proceeds for themselves. Their sin was their claim that they
were super-sacrificial, having given it all, in order to gain fame and
importance in the church.
V. 3 This verse is used to show the
personhood and deity of the Spirit. You cannot lie to a “force;” you can only
lie to a person. In v. 4 it says that lying to the Spirit is lying to God. The
Holy Spirit is a Person, the third member of the Trinity.
V. 10 What would you think if your service
for the Lord was burying disobedient Christians? You’d definitely have job
security. Frankly, I hate digging holes, but today we use backhoes.
V. 11 Fear in the church was the intended
result. For now there was fear. That wouldn’t last, and God wouldn’t keep
striking down disobedient Christians. This was a special time.
Vs. 12-16 Notice that the church keeps
growing and that all of the apostles are doing signs and wonders. So I’m guessing the church was now at least a
third of the population of Jerusalem. Many of the people who came to Christ who
were there for Pentecost would eventually return to their homes in the Gentile
world. The gospel was going out.
Vs. 17-26 Isn't it interesting to think that
God let the apostles get arrested so He could break them out? God was doing big
things in a big way. And then God broke them loose from prison, not for them to
escape, but to send them back into harm’s way.
Vs. 27-32 This is supernatural boldness in
the face of these frustrated leaders. Notice that Peter referred to the God of our fathers. This is a great
little message.
Vs. 33-42 Now the leaders wanted to imitate
their "father" by killing the apostles. We haven’t heard this yet,
but Gamaliel’s star pupil was the Pharisee Saul, soon to become the Apostle
Paul. Gamaliel was a Pharisee speaking to Sadducees. He must have been well
respected for them to listen to him.
Vs. 38-39 This shows that Gamaliel was
perceptive enough to see that something strange was going on. I think his
sincerity, even in error, is reflected in his star pupil. Saul of Tarsus was
deadly sincere.
V. 40 I find it cute that, to feel good about
themselves, the leaders had to rough up the apostles.
Vs. 41-42 But the word around town was that
the council wouldn’t do anything to them; therefore, they must be OK. Again,
this is another example of Luke showing Theophilus and all of his readers, that
the Jewish authorities had no real or legal complaint against the disciples or
Christianity. In a sense, the church was declared “not guilty.”
As disciples we don't always want to put
ourselves completely in God's hands, but we have the words of Jesus and stories
like these to tell us it's OK. God will glorify Himself and help us if we trust
Him, even if the way looks tedious or hard. God allowed the apostles to be
arrested in order to break them out, have them preach and confuse the leaders
and get Gamaliel to say what he said. God will do the same with us if we wait
and follow.
Psalm 125
In going to Jerusalem to worship, the
direction is not given as north, south, east, or west. It is simply “up.” As
the worshipers approached the rocky, defensible heights of the city surrounded
by mountains, they thought of the Lord being the one on high, who protects and
surrounds His people.
Vs. 1-2 The people singing this knew that
Zion had experienced its share of affliction. Yet, God still protected the city
as He had promised. Even after the exile, He brought them back to Zion. And in
the future, the Lord will rule from Zion.
V. 3 God would not allow foreign powers to
completely dominate the city or the land, or there would have been a loss of
hope.
Vs. 4-5 Rather than closing with a prayer for
the city, there is a call to the Lord for justice. Those who were righteous
would be the ones who the Lord would use in leading Zion to blessing. The
presence of evildoers brought God's judgment. The judgment of the wicked would
bring the peace Israel and Zion needed.
Proverbs 16:25
This is a very famous verse that I’ve used a
lot in witnessing. The older people get, the more they either think they have
it figured out or they figure it doesn’t matter if you figure it out. Without
Jesus, the end is death.
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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