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NOVEMBER 9
So, you ask, what is the purpose
of all we've read in Isaiah and Jeremiah, and are now wading through in
Ezekiel? In as much as the Lord revealed Himself to Israel and is using them as
a visual lesson to mankind, why do you think we have all of this text? The
weight of this lesson, I think, is that without a new spiritual rebirth in
Jesus Christ, mankind is completely without hope. No amount of God's revealing
Himself to humans will overcome the sin within us that rebels against Him. If
kindness and help and signs and wonders could have saved people and brought
them to God, these people would have been a testimony to the world. But they
rejected God and they and their culture became hopelessly perverse. I'm sure
they were nice religious people, but they were anti-God and anti-truth. So now
we see judgment coming upon them.
Our world stands under this same
judgment every day. The harvest is now and the gospel of Christ is the only
hope for mankind. Unless there is forgiveness and a spiritual rebirth in Christ,
there is no acceptance before God and there is no change. Our job in the
harvest following our Lord is not to transform society, but to reach one person
at a time with the message of our Savior. The fields are white for harvest. We
need to go and make disciples, who make disciples, who make disciples, while
there is still time for us to work.
Ezekiel 20
In God preparing the people to return to the land, there is a lot of
immediate and extensive surgery going on here. The climactic act that will
humble these people will be the fall of Jerusalem, still a few years off.
V. 1 This is now two years since Ezekiel began to prophesy. Again the
elders are sitting before him. Ezekiel has been incredibly active and has
become a phenomenon in the community of the exiles.
Vs. 2-31 Having gone through Psalm 105 and 106, this is going to sound
very familiar to you. God recounts their history to them. Go slowly through
this section and look for how often God mentions holding back His judgment.
In this section look for repetitions of words. Some of these words are wilderness, Sabbath, for the sake of my name.
There is a lot in this section. For example, moreover is repeated four times. The first one is good, and the
next three are bad. The last one signifies God giving them up to their sin.
Notice that God is dealing with them regarding their idolatry. Notice that v.
31 refers back to the elders coming to inquire of Ezekiel.
Is there idolatry in our culture? More so than we realize. Are
believers neutralized by idolatry? And as
for what fell among the thorns, they are those who hear, but as they go on
their way they are choked by the cares and riches and pleasures of life, and
their fruit does not mature (Luke 8:14). To me, this sounds like us -
hearing the Word, enjoying church, living a clean life, sleeping in the light
and bearing no fruit that comes to maturity. It looks like fruit, and that
makes us feel good, but it is stilted by our true desires for our own safety,
needs, comfort and urgings to have more.
Vs. 2-4 The reason God wouldn't be inquired of by them was that these
men, and all the exiles, hadn't fully given up their allegiance to idols. We'll
see that this was also true of the people who came out of Egypt.
Vs. 5-8 This is kind of mind numbing to think of, that the people in
the Exodus brought idols with them. We remember from the story that they were
very quick to make a golden calf once Moses was out of sight.
V. 9 This will be repeated. God didn't want His name reproached,
because it has always been His desire to save mankind. Israel was then, and
still is, the nation through which He planned to reach the nations. An
interesting verse to put together with this is Isaiah 55:13, Instead of
the thorn shall come up the cypress; instead of the brier shall come up the
myrtle; and it shall make a name for the LORD, an everlasting sign that shall
not be cut off. God makes His name known through His people, and that
includes us.
Vs. 10-17 This is the generation of people
who rebelled at Kadesh-barnea.
V. 12 The Sabbath was to have been a blessing to them, but only through
faith. The Sabbath will be mentioned several times. In order to enjoy the
Sabbath you had to trust God and not be consumed by needs and desires. You had
to have faith, and He had to be your only desire. Then, obedience was easy and
didn't seem like duty.
V. 15 This sounds like what we've read in Hebrews about the people not
entering into God's rest in the land. Only faith in Him could give them rest as
it was promised.
Vs. 18-24 This is probably not the generation that went into the land
with Joshua, but their children who we read about in Judges. The judgment in
the wilderness cleansed the generation that entered the land. The generation
after Joshua and Caleb flowed straight into sin. God gave them over to their
enemies because they didn't obey.
Vs. 25-26 This is similar to Romans 1:24, 26 and 28. God gave them
over to their desires. He allowed sin to have its way with them and become
statutes to them. The flip side of this is that if we will fight against sin,
God will help us to defeat it.
Vs. 27-29 When we read Judges it was amazing to see how quickly and
completely the majority of the people became idolatrous and ignorant of God’s
Word. This generation of Israel in Ezekiel's day was like their idol-following
“fathers.” You realize what they were really following was the sin and desires
of their own hearts.
Vs. 30-31 It appears that these people had blood on their hands. We'll
see this in chapters 22-24. Righteous people had died in Jerusalem when they
had stood in the way of "progress." And the people had been for, or
were OK with, the idolatry they had left in Jerusalem; that is, Baal worship
that resulted in children, who were then sacrificed to Molech. These people had
innocent blood on them. With hearts still like this, God found nothing sincere
in their request to hear His Word.
V. 32 This is a very strong verse. God was and is determined to save
Israel. For the sake of His promise to Abraham, God will save and bless Israel
whether they like it or not. For I tell
you that Christ became a servant to the circumcised to show God's truthfulness,
in order to confirm the promises given to the patriarchs (Rom. 15:8).
Vs. 33-38 Notice the wildernesses here. As God chastened and cleansed
Israel in the wilderness of the land of
Egypt, He will now do the same to them in the wilderness of the peoples.
V. 39 Another very strong verse. Thankfully there were many who heeded
this challenge. Have you been underlining the mentions of God’s name? It is
interesting to wonder why the people wanted to be called by God’s name at all
if they would not obey or follow Him. Why not just move to Moab and be free?
Vs. 40-44 This is the promise of physical and spiritual millennial
blessing, but notice v. 43. There is acknowledgement of sin and repentance by
Israel. Everyone who enters into God’s blessing will enter it humbly, knowing
they were saved by grace.
History is important to God as a way for people to trust Him and
understand His plan and His love. Just as our faith is to be built upon what
God has done in the past in the Bible, it is also to be built on our
personal/family history with the Lord. God didn't just expect these people to
know this history; He expected them to know and trust Him because of this
history. For us as disciples in the harvest, faith is never easy; but being in
the Word daily helps us see again whom it is we follow and how wise and loving
He is. Those things that He has done and is doing for us are more than events
in our lives. He expects us to remember them and be strengthened in our faith
by them as we wait on Him.
Vs. 45-49 I think this should have belonged to the next chapter.
Actually, v. 45 is the first verse of the next chapter in the Hebrew Bible. God
directed Ezekiel to begin pronouncing judgment on the land of Israel. The image
is that of a fire sweeping over the entire land.
V. 49 Ezekiel informed God that the people were ridiculing him, saying
this man was a maker of parables.
They didn't get what God was saying through the prophet, so they were
disregarding what Ezekiel said. In chapter 21 God will become very clear.
Again, for us in the harvest, these things are written to remind us
that there is a fire coming. God will judge and our Master will return. Our
work is now. People need to hear the message, and at the same time, we need to
live in the daily expectation that our Lord could come. Blessed is that servant whom his master will find
so doing when he comes (Luke 12:43).
Hebrews 9:11-28
Vs. 11-14 How could they go back to the law, or how could anyone
dismiss Jesus since He entered the presence of God with Himself and His life
and His blood as a sacrifice for our sins? The dead works are those acts of the law that cannot make us right
before God. Our acceptance is wholly in Jesus, not in anything we can do.
V. 14 Purify our conscience.
Paul makes a big deal about conscience. In the sense of being acceptable to
God, a person could have a bad conscience with regard to wondering if they had
done enough. But in Christ, “it is finished.” There was never anything for us
to do, but accept the gift. We can have a guilty conscience because of
unconfessed sin, but never because of wondering if we're good enough or have
done enough. This is the same thought as in Romans 8:31-34.
V. 15 Jesus sealed this covenant with His own blood. Again, this
covenant doesn't have two parties, just one, Jesus Himself. This means that we
enter in by faith in His work, not
by doing works of our own.
Vs. 16-17 The covenant by Jesus is likened to a will. Jesus set the
terms of it, and at His death the benefits come to those to whom He willed
them. The beneficiaries of the will don't have to work; they only have to accept.
Vs. 18-23 The old covenant, even though inferior, temporary and looking
ahead, still had to be ratified in blood. Verse 22 is pretty important. Blood
showed that our sin brought us under the judgment of death.
Vs. 24-28 So the Lord died once for all. One question on v. 28 has to
do with those who are waiting for Him eagerly. Jesus bore the sin of many, but
could it be that the circle of those who wait expectantly for Him is smaller.
If you look at Hebrews 3:14 and think of the rewards offered for those who
endure and hold fast, you get the idea that waiting expectantly for the Lord is
one of those things that gives endurance and opens the door to a closer
relationship with Him here on earth.
Psalm 107
This is a good psalm to look for recurring words. Finding the word some will help put structure into what
the author is saying. It is hard to know when this was written or if any
particular OT history is being referred to. For example, vs. 23-32 talk about a
sea voyage. We don’t know of anyone but Jonah who was at sea, and I’m not sure
this section reflects what happened in that story. It is enough to say that
these are all experiences that stretched people the psalmist knew. It could be
that these stories were from those who had been taken into exile and they were
describing their return to Israel.
Vs. 1-3 This sets the tone for this psalm. Thanking and giving public
praise to God will be repeated. God’s steadfast
love will be mentioned often in connection with people being redeemed and saved from trouble.
Vs. 4-9 Notice how this section begins with the word some. This describes the danger they
faced. Notice v. 8 and then in v. 9, the for
shows what God should be praised for. This is the basic pattern of all these
sections.
Vs. 10-16 These people were in prison.
Vs. 17-22 These people got themselves in trouble by their own
foolishness. Notice that here, in their case, God sent His Word to heal their
foolishness. This only works if people are broken and crying out in humility.
Vs. 23-32 These people were on the seas.
Vs. 33-38 This is how God cared for everyone, not only in their danger,
but in helping them establish themselves.
Vs. 39-42 God exalts the humble, but puts down the proud.
V. 43 says it all.
Proverbs 27:11
Apparently one of the ways to reproach a father was through the conduct
of his son. That made me immediately think of our conduct and our Father's
name. In 1 Timothy Paul mentions different groups of people living without
reproach or defaming the name of God. Let all who are under a yoke as bondservants regard their own
masters as worthy of all honor,
so that the name of God and the teaching may not be
reviled (1 Tim. 6:1).
To me, it is interesting how this fits with the reading in Ezekiel. We
should all be wise sons and daughters, hallowing (honoring) our Father's name.
Please Read
the Following Disclaimer
I'm writing the Reading Notes to and
for those who are following a One Year Bible and are 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, that is, 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 and important discipleship manual we have and it is the 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, or whom we are to be following. 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, as disciples, 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, making disciples in the harvest.
If you would like a more descriptive
commentary that is still readable and concise, I'd recommend the Bible Knowledge Commentary (BKC).
I read the BKC in doing background for the Reading Notes and refer to it quite
often. I also make reference to maps or charts in the BKC, though I will only
note where those resources can be found. Often you can do a search for these
and find them in Google books. Buying both volumes of the Bible Knowledge
Commentary would be a good idea.
I am not endorsing any particular
One Year Bible translation; in fact, I read something you probably don't, Die
Revidierte Lutherbibel, 1984. Unless noted, all Scripture quotes are from the
ESV Bible.
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. Often there is a breadth of opinion on certain events, both
historical and prophetic. Many of my views come from my church background,
theological training and my personal study.
I'm
doing this with discipleship in mind, meaning, I'm writing out thoughts that
will keep discipleship and our growth as disciples applied to what we are
reading. Remember, the real focus of the Reading Notes is to be a
supplement, a disciple’s commentary, giving motivation and insight so that we
will keep following our Lord in the harvest, reaching the lost and making
disciples, who make disciples. Being in
the Word every day, sitting at Jesus’ feet, learning directly from Him, is the
essential essence of being and making disciples.
May the Lord bless you as you follow Him in the
harvest, reaching the lost and making disciples, who make disciples. Dan
If you would like documents
containing an entire month of the Reading Notes, go to https://sites.google.com/site/dlkachikis/reading-notes.
If you would like a full
presentation of discipleship read Simply
Disciples*Making Disciples.
Or if you are struggling with
insomnia and would like a long boring dissertation on disciple making, these
can both be found on https://sites.google.com/site/dlkachikis/reading-notes.
Reading Notes ©, Dan Kachikis
2011, 2012, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2018
The One Year Bible © by
Tyndale House Publishers, Inc., Wheaton Illinois 60189
The Holy Bible, English
Standard Version® (ESV®) Copyright © 2001 by Crossway, a publishing ministry of
Good News Publishers.
All charts/graphics/outlines
from the Bible Knowledge Commentary are used with the permission of David C.
Cook.
© 1983, 2001 John F Walvoord and Roy B Zuck.
The Bible Knowledge Commentary is published by David C Cook.
All rights reserved. Publisher permission
required to reproduce.
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