Nehemiah 9:22-10:39
This is the conclusion of
the feasts we read about yesterday. I find it interesting that God made sure
they dedicated themselves to Him and to following Him, before they dedicated
the walls. I wonder how many congregations dedicate themselves to the Lord like
this, with prayer and confession and tears and renewal, before they dedicate a
new building. What's the sense of filling a new building with believers who
have lost their focus on why they are here?
One thing to keep in mind as
you read this is that this was the beginning of Nehemiah's twelve-year tenure
as governor of Judea. In a couple of chapters we'll be reading how things went
south, but we've seen that between a couple of verses, years can pass. Since
the beginning of Nehemiah, only a few months have gone by. All of the
dedication and organization we are seeing will set the tone for twelve years of
God's grace on these people. They will receive strong godly leadership.
Nehemiah 9:22-38
I have to admit, I have
never enjoyed reading this prayer like I have this time. I hope reading the
story of God's plan and working with Israel has given you an exciting
understanding of how important it is for Him to save us and how privileged we
are to have Him do so. This prayer is full of things that will feed your heart.
Remember to keep highlighting you and
they.
Vs. 22-25 This was God
fulfilling the promise to Abraham to give Israel the land. It was a great
blessing which will now be contrasted with their continued rebellion.
Vs. 26-31 Notice how v. 26
is stated. No national literature paints its people in such a stark and
distasteful light. What we have here is a portrait of mankind painted for all
mankind to see. This catalogue of Israel's rebellion, leading to their exile,
is a description of all mankind. Israel was used by God to show us what all of
us are like. In the future, Israel will fulfill their destiny and be rewarded
for their service to us.
V. 30 Notice that they
understood that the prophets were led by the Holy Spirit.
Vs. 32-37 Still, the steadfast love of the Lord had not left
or failed them. This entire prayer is steeped in truth and confession and
sounds like something all of mankind could declare.
V. 36 They admitted that they were slaves. That's
reality and humility. This humility and truthfulness was missing when Jesus
faced the Jews in John 8:31-33, So Jesus
said to the Jews who had believed him, “If you abide
in my word, you are truly my disciples, 32and you will know the truth,
and the truth will set you free.” 33They answered him, “We are offspring of Abraham and
have never been enslaved to anyone. How is it that you say, ‘You will become
free’?”
V. 38 This is a
transition verse between these two events.
Nehemiah 10
Vs. 1-27 Notice that
Nehemiah was the first signer of the covenant. Although Ezra's name doesn't
appear, his forefather's name is there (v. 2 Seraiah), suggesting that he
signed for the house of his family.
Vs. 28-31 Doesn't this
remind you of Deuteronomy? It was a promise of the people to keep themselves
separated for God, to be His servants on earth. Remember, they could marry
those of other lands who were converts and worshipers of Yahweh. Keeping the
Sabbath was their way of honoring God and showing they were living in the
promise to Abraham. Both of these things showed their understanding of God's
purpose in the world, His purpose in Israel and their faith in the promise to
Abraham.
V. 31 The children of Israel
had never kept the Sabbatical year for the land. The reason this is mentioned
now is that those missed Sabbatical years (490 years divided by 7) were the
basis of their 70-year exile, to give the land its rest. Oddly enough that number,
490 or 7 x 70, also figures into God's fulfillment of Israel's destiny.
Sixty-nine weeks of years have already been accomplished, from the command to
rebuild Jerusalem to the entrance of the Messiah, as Messiah, into Jerusalem.
There is only one more week (7 years) left to be fulfilled.
Vs. 32-39 The tithes were
the only way the priests and Levites could serve. The tithes not only showed
the gratefulness of the people for God's provision, but they revealed their
spiritual devotion and insight. It showed that they understood the need for the
teaching and ministry of the Levites so that they could be forgiven and draw
near to God. Without the Levites, there could be no sacrifices, no Passover, no
Day of Atonement, no feast weeks and no morning and evening sacrifices. This
obedience revealed that the people knew their need and were seeking God.
Without the teaching of the Levites, and everyone doing their part by giving,
there would be no continued generational following of God toward the fulfilling
of the promise of redemption through Abraham and through Israel.
The German translation
emphasizes the things they agreed to do by the paragraph layout. The ESV is not
so gracious. As you read, block out or draw lines to show each thing they were
agreeing to do.
This renewal of the people
and the covenant is one of the greatest in the OT. The only times Israel seemed
this repentant and close to God were at the end of Deuteronomy and in the
revival by Josiah. The things that are said and taught and prayed in this event
are like a summary of mankind's rebellion and God's amazing grace and love in
trying to reach out and save us. I know that this inspires me and I hope it
moves you too, to be renewed in working side by side with our Lord in the
harvest, reaching out and making disciples. For whatever reason, He has saved
us, called us by His name and sent us to tell the news of His love and coming.
1 Corinthians 9:19-10:13
1 Corinthians 9:19-27
I love these verses. They
made so much sense to me as a missionary in Germany, and they've gotten me in
so much trouble here in the States. All of our talk about music or Bible
translations is so silly. If we were in China working underground, we'd never
worry about the KJV or any other version. They don't speak English and we'd be
happy just to have a copy of the Bible. If we were working in the mountains of
Colta, Ecuador, we wouldn't worry about hymns vs. contemporary, because those
songs don't even work there. What works there might numb your mind, but you'd
learn to love it for the sake of Christ and reaching those people. Our tastes
and "necessities" in the church reveal our lack of love for our Lord
and the shallow state of our discipleship. Disciples take their cues from the
harvest field in which they are following Jesus. They adapt themselves to the
people they are strengthening to become disciples in the harvest. How have we
missed this? Disciples are His slaves and become all things to all men to reach
the lost and make disciples.
Vs. 19-23 You could read
this portion out loud with the rest of chapter 9. There is emotion here too.
Notice that Paul is connecting v. 1, “Am
I not free?” with v. 19, “For though
I am free from all…" Freedom means the ability to let go of our rights
for the sake of Christ, and the harvest, and this tragedy on earth. To hang on
to our tastes means we are held by the earth and living by the passions of our
body of death. That is a tragedy too and something that disqualifies us as
disciples.
Vs. 24-27 Reread Romans
7:14-25 to understand why Paul took this so seriously. This is something I'm
still trying to get into my head and heart. The sin within us is not our
friend, but we go on thinking it makes us cool and quirky characters for
Christ. Notice that the issue here was being disqualified to be an example to
others. This will only matter to people who really care about following our
Lord and having an impact in the harvest.
1 Corinthians 10
Chapter 10 is one complete
argument, and in it we will find the conclusion of some discussions going all
the way back to chapter 6. You can see this by the repetition of words that
Paul has used earlier. If you read the entire chapter you'll notice these. This
is a great chapter of the Bible.
V. 1 Remember in Romans how
Paul would say he was talking to those who knew the law, or was talking to the
Gentiles in that congregation. Look at this verse. Clearly, Paul is talking to
Jews without asking for any particular group. If you look at this group in Acts
18, you see that it was a very strongly Jewish church. Paul can assume that
they all know what he is saying because they are all (98%) Jews.
Vs. 1-5 We have read this in
the OT and were amazed that these people did not believe. Actually, we just
read something like this in the confessional prayer in Nehemiah. How could
people see such signs and deliverance and still rebel against God? What is
amazing here is that Paul is applying this same truth to Christians.
Vs. 6-11 Notice how vs. 6
and 11 are parallel, but v. 11 goes beyond v. 6 to a stellar reality we all
need to grasp.
V. 7 Do you know which
chapter in 1 Corinthians Paul is looking back to? It is chapter 8 and you will
see this clearly tomorrow.
V. 8 Here Paul is referring
back to chapters 5 and 6 in 1 Corinthians. In using this OT illustration, Paul
is getting them to think about the immorality that they had been involved in.
If we knew the OT as well as
Paul did, we could use it for illustrations for modern-day situations. In using
the OT for illustrations, you're actually teaching people on several different
levels, making the Bible more alive to them.
What is sobering here is
that even among believers, all of the sins of this chapter can be alive and
well. That is incredible if you think about the greatness of our salvation in
Jesus. Notice too that in this list, two of the sins are overtly wrong, and the
last two are more subtle. Putting the Lord to the test and grumbling are more
dangerous to us and to our work in the harvest than we think. Philippians 2:14 says, Do all things without grumbling or disputing. The all things is referring to all things,
but we think sinning like this makes us quirky and cool. What follows that
verse is our work as disciples in the harvest.
Vs. 12-13 If you understand
these verses correctly, they are an accusation. The Corinthians had already
been overtaken in their pride and sin. Tomorrow will blow your mind. Paul is
appealing to them to escape.
Psalm 34:1-10
I've got a subtitle note
that says this psalm was written after David escaped from Abimelech after
faking he was crazy. Since we've read about that, what stands out to me is that
this event is when David's 10 years of running from Saul began. David was
terrified and losing it emotionally. After escaping from Gath he slowly
regained composure and began trusting the Lord. It was in these years that he
learned of the steadfast love of the Lord.
Vs. 1-3 As a result of God's
deliverance, David made it a priority in his service for God to share his testimony with all
men. David was apparently not only in his right mind, but in reflecting on his
terror, he knew that he should have depended on the Lord.
Vs. 4-7 This is what David
learned every day and every way over years of running and hiding.
Vs. 8-10 Not only was there deliverance, but the Lord
somehow set the table even when they had no homes and no security. This isn't
the only time that seeking the Lord first was said to provide what we need. But
seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness, and all these
things will be added to you.
(Matthew 6:33)
This psalm and David's praise
continue tomorrow.
This psalm has the line, taste and see that the Lord is good, but
the main focus is on God's deliverance. David would see 10 years of little,
constant deliverances and evidences to God's ongoing, daily goodness and
steadfast love. Tasting is a dare. You don't know if the Lord is really good.
Jesus promises a lot of things to those who follow in the harvest, but you have
to follow to "taste" them. In your following will be hardship that
teaches endurance, builds character and faith which leads to abundant hope and
joy and a very special fellowship with Jesus and the Father. Here it says you
have to "taste." When you read Jesus, He says it's more like a
"dive" coming to Him, taking His yoke, lifting up a cross and putting
it over your shoulder and walking to your death. That's a funny way to
experience His promises and unity with Him, but that's what He says. And it all
begins with a taste.
Proverbs 21:13
God leaves the poor before
us to reveal our hearts. We are all debtors to God. It's interesting to me that
Jesus commanded His disciples to give to everyone who begged from them. Of
course there was that one time when Peter and John were out of money, but they
figured something out.
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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