~ Click on this link for today's readings ~
1 Kings 8:1-66 ~ Acts 7:51-8:13
Psalm 129:1-8 ~ Proverbs 17:1
Old Testament - Today we read about the Ark of the Covenant being brought into the Temple!
In verses 10 & 11 we read: "As the priests came out of the inner sanctuary, a cloud filled the Temple of the LORD. The priests could not continue their work because the glorious presence of the LORD filled the Temple." It is thought that the cloud of the presence of God here in the Temple was the same cloud of the presence of God that guided the Israelites by day through the desert as they left Egypt for the Promised Land, as you'll recall from this image below:
Solomon's prayer in today's readings is awesome! Verses 12 & 13 at the start of the prayer are interesting to contrast with a later verse: "Then Solomon prayed, "O LORD, you have said that you would live in thick darkness. But I have built a glorious Temple for you, where you can live forever!" These verses seem quite bold and confident... and maybe even seem to our modern ears that Solomon is trying to put God "in a box." But, then I was very pleased to read Solomon say this in verse 27 - "But will God really live on earth? Why, even the highest heavens cannot contain you. How much less this Temple I have built!" Clearly, Solomon gets it that God is bigger than the Temple and that God does not "need" the Temple for a home. But, as we read about the cloud of God's presence coming into the Temple, it is apparent that God is certainly pleased with the Temple. I think God was pleased that the Israelites were building a Temple to honor God and his name & fame. It was a Temple for God. And though God did not "need" it, I think he appreciated it. I think God appreciated "King" Solomon and the Israelites praying to and honoring God as the true King of Israel. Below is an image of Solomon's prayer and the dedication of the Temple:
New Testament - Today is a sad day of readings as we read about the stoning of Stephen - the first Christian martyr. Verses 59 & 60 are incredible and reminiscent of Jesus on the cross: "And as they stoned him, Stephen prayed, "Lord Jesus, receive my spirit." And he fell to his knees, shouting, "Lord, don't charge them with this sin!" And with that, he died." Below is Rembrandt's "The Stoning of Stephen" from the year 1625:
In verse 58 we are ominously introduced to who we now know as Paul, the author of many of the epistles in the Bible: "The official witnesses took off their coats and laid them at the feet of a young man named Saul." This laying of coats at Saul's feet may be signifying that Saul was the highest official at the stoning of Stephen and may be signifying that Saul gave permission for this stoning of Stephen to occur. Saul is Paul's Hebrew name. Paul is his Greek name. (which is a significant distinction, as Paul's ministry reaches out to the Gentiles, including the Greeks - hence going from the Hebrew name Saul to the Greek name Paul is significant) In a few chapters ahead we will learn about Saul's encounter with Jesus and how his persecution of Christians will soon take a dramatic U-turn... Take a look at the cloaked figure in the image below to the left - this looks to me to be Saul watching over the stoning of Stephen with coats laid at his feet. (and I think Saul is in Rembrant's painting above to the left on the horse) God has an amazing conversion for Saul coming up...
Bible.org's commentary on today's readings in Acts titled "The Stoning of Stephen" is at this link.
Psalms - Psalm 129 is a prayer for the continuing withering of Israel's enemies and verse 4 likely represents a celebration from Babylonian captivity - "But the LORD is good; he has cut the cords used by the ungodly to bind me." How about in our lives today? Has Jesus cut any cords used by the ungodly to bind you? Are there still some cords being used by the ungodly to bind you? Will you let Jesus cut those cords? Will you let Jesus free you from that captivity? Do you believe that Jesus is good and that he wants to cut the cords that bind you? Do you believe that Jesus cares for you?
Proverbs - Proverbs 17 verse 1 is so very wise... "A dry crust eaten in peace is better than a great feast with strife." I don't know about you, but this Proverb hits home. I have eaten very simple meals in peace that have been so beautiful. And I have also eaten at great feasts filled with drama and angst and strife. The world may preach to us that the latter is better - the feast with all it's drama. But, I think the still small quiet voice of God through the Bible indicates the former is better. Which do you think is better? The peaceful crust or the strifeful feast?
Below is an image of a "strifeful feast" to say the least from the artist Rembrandt again. This is from Daniel chapter 5 verses 1 through 6 - "King Belshazzar gave a great banquet for a thousand of his nobles and drank wine with them. While Belshazzar was drinking his wine, he gave orders to bring in the gold and silver goblets that Nebuchadnezzar his father had taken from the temple in Jerusalem, so that the king and his nobles, his wives and his concubines might drink from them. So they brought in the gold goblets that had been taken from the temple of God in Jerusalem, and the king and his nobles, his wives and his concubines drank from them. As they drank the wine, they praised the gods of gold and silver, of bronze, iron, wood and stone. Suddenly the fingers of a human hand appeared and wrote on the plaster of the wall, near the lampstand in the royal palace. The king watched the hand as it wrote. His face turned pale and he was so frightened that his knees knocked together and his legs gave way." (As Paul Harvey would say, check out the rest of this story in Daniel chapter 5 at this link and learn what the writing on the wall means! Mene, Mene, Tekel, Parsin!)
Comments from You & Questions of the Day: What verses or insights stand out to you in today's readings? Please post up by clicking on the "Comments" link below!
God bless,
Mike
Quite a difference between Gamaliel and his student Saul...while the teacher was wise enough to realise that if this "new teaching" was false it would disappear in time and adviced against killing John and Peter,Saul the student decided action was better than waiting for the teachings to die out.
Yet God chose Saul not Gamaliel to take the gospel to the ends of the earth!How His ways are far higher than ours....Saul was merciless in persecuting the church,what he did he did with all he had and continued to do so when he took the gospel to the gentiles.
Like the Jews of those days,many times we want to worship God our way...God is supposed to give us a pain free,victorious life...church is just another social gathering.We don't want to hear the words"suffering"yet I find that those who suffered for Christ truly for God...Compare David to Solomon for example...Even David when took a break from the battlefield fell into sin...Solomon had peace and prosperity all around him,soon we'll see how his worship of God turned out.................
Posted by: Anka | June 10, 2007 at 09:09 PM
I Kings 8:1-66
And the priests brought the ark of the covenant of the Lord to its place in the Holy of Holies of the house, under the wings of the cherubim. For the cherubim spread forth their two wings over the place of the ark, and the cherubim covered the ark and its poles. The poles were so long that the ends of them were seen from the Holy Place before the Holy of Holies, but they were not seen outside; they are there to this day.
(1 Kings 8:6-8 AMP)
It is easy to forget that God allowed Himself to live in a Box for the sake of the people. Visited once a year by the High Priest and only allowing Himself to be “seen” by the other priests who were allowed access into the Holy Place while they did their priestly duty, but all they could see were the ends of the pole that carried the Box. Though the redemptive work of Jesus Christ on the cross, we have the privilege of having the Holy Spirit dwell within us. It is hard to fathom that the Glory of Israel, that Cloud that filled the Temple, the Shekhinah Glory of God, is accessible to us at all times because of Christ’s work on the Cross.
[Shechinah – a Chaldee word meaning resting-place, not found in Scripture, but used by the later Jews to designate the visible symbol of God's presence in the tabernacle, and afterwards in Solomon's temple—From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia]
Let me always be reminded and remember that what Jesus Christ has wrought for us is not cheap nor valueless. What Israel saw outside of them, what she saw in the desert, what she saw when the Temple was dedicated, dwells within me. The Pearl of Great Price is mine. Let me not despise it or treat it cheaply.
Grace and peace,
Ramona
Posted by: Ramona | June 10, 2007 at 09:10 PM
Deity of Christ
This came up last week. Thought I would post this as it reminds us of what the cultural background of Israel was regarding father/son relationships. Even more so when dealing with an "only child" who was male.
Matthew 11:27. "All things have been handed over to Me by my Father: and no one knows the Son, except the Father; nor does anyone know the Father, except the Son, and anyone to whom the Son wills to reveal Him."
In this verse, Jesus claimed to be the Son of God in an "exclusive and absolute sense," having a unique and personal relationship with the Father. It is helpful here to make a momentary digression into the Jewish conception of the father/son relationship, as expressed by Harvey [Harv.JesC, 159-161]. Being a son to a father required the following:
Obedience: The son was expected to be totally obedient to the father in all matters. (See Prov. 4:4.) In identifying Himself as God's Son, Jesus indicated that He was obliged to be in perfect obedience to the divine will. But what human could accomplish this? It would be the claim of one who was either a massive egotist, insane -- or truly divine.
Learning: A son was expected to learn the father's trade, his skills, and his experience. Jesus is therefore saying that he has taken up God's work and learned what He knows directly from God.
Agency: A son was expected to act as the father's agent when called upon, and would be considered to have the father's legal authority in such situations. Jesus was therefore saying that He was appointed as God's direct agent.
This all implies divinity, inasmuch as the OT describes God as one who will not share His glory with another.
http://www.tektonics.org/jesusclaims/miscclaims.html
Posted by: John | June 10, 2007 at 09:11 PM
Stephen's Speech
Old Testament "Type" has been discussed before on this blog. Found a good summary of parallel between Moses and Christ embedded in a John MacArthur sermon (middle section below).
Acts 7:35
"This is the same Moses whom they had rejected with the words, 'Who made you ruler and judge?' He was sent to be their ruler and deliverer by God himself, through the angel who appeared to him in the bush." NIV
"Stephen is absolutely devastating with that point, because one of the arguments the Jews inevitably had was that if Jesus had been their Messiah, they would have known it: "If Jesus had been our Messiah, all of those great Jewish leaders would have known He was our Messiah--we wouldn't have missed it." That's one of the things that Jews argue about even today. With all of the great rabbis and teachers of the past, they conclude that they wouldn't have missed the Messiah. But Stephen says, in effect, "Guess what? You missed Moses, and you missed Joseph, too. Both of them were not even accepted by you until the second time around." (In like manner, when will the Jews accept Jesus? The second time around.)...
...The Jews knew everything about Christ, and if they looked at the facts, they would have seen that Christ parallelled Moses in every way. For example, Moses was a deliverer from among his own people--so was Jesus Christ. Moses came down from a palace, to release men in bondage--Jesus Christ condescended as well. Moses offered himself to Israel, was rejected, and then went and raised up seed among the Gentiles--so did Jesus. (Verse 29 implies the parallel of Jesus being rejected by Israel and turning and raising up seed in the church.) Moses was rejected the first time, but accepted the second time--so it was and will be with Jesus Christ. Moses was a great redeemer--so is Jesus Christ. Moses was a shepherd--so is Jesus Christ. So Moses said, "When you see one like me, listen to Him...He's your Messiah." Though Israel looked, they did not find Him. Consequently, Jesus said that they were "blind leaders of the blind" (Mt. 15:14b). They couldn't see that the history of Moses was the foreshadowing of the life of Christ....
...In reminding the council of these things, Stephen is absolutely indicting the nation of Israel for having rebelled against God all along: They rejected God, they rejected His servants, Joseph and Moses, and they rejected His law."
http://www.biblebb.com/files/MAC/sg1723.htm
Posted by: John | June 10, 2007 at 09:11 PM
John---
The Jews' non-acceptance of Christ as the Savior and King, isn't this simply carrying out God's plan? If they did accept Him then there would be no crucifixion, no death, no resurrection... It's the same question that we ask regarding Adam and Eve's
disobedience to God while they were living gloriously in Paradise.
But of course we know that doesn't absolve the Jews from having been blinded to the TRUTH about Jesus Christ.
Posted by: Rosyln | June 10, 2007 at 09:12 PM
Roslyn,
Excellant question. Satan, Adam and Eve, Pharoah, Judas, rejection of Christ by (most) of Israel, etc. are they not all a part of 'simply carrying out God's plan'?
"Carrying out God's plan" connotes that we are all actors or worse "marionettes" being manipulated through a grand cosmic "play". I don't believe that to be the case.
[The following is not so much an answer, but an explanation. As such it can be tweaked or dismissed if "one" disagrees with the premises.]
There is no way, I can sit here and tell you how a multi-dimensional perfect Being (God) came up with His perfect plan. I do believe He knows all things past, present, and future - and in the end all things work through His purpose to acheive His will.
So before Creation started, God had a plan and knows how it all unfolds. Where God is glorified: Angels and mankind have free will and all of the above examples (in first paragraph) made choices. God did not react to those choices, but they were incorporated into His (pre-existing) plan. Decisions that looked disastorous and seemed to be "plan-busters", in the end when worked (for lack of a better word) through His plan actually end up giving better results than if they had not been made in the first place. This gives God - Glory.
Ex #1: Adam and Eve. If Adam and Eve had not sinned, all indications are that they would have lived and started a race of people that would have lived in a perfect world with "man" as the caretaker. "Mankind" would have been close to and fellowshipped with God.
Instead Adam and Eve sinned - through God's plan of Jesus as redeemer, man has the opportunity to be a "child of God", co-heir to heaven, and live together with Him in a much more glorified state. A result that is much better than simply being eternal caretaker's of a planet. Even a "perfect" planet.
[Note: I know, I know this does not address question of continued attempts by Satan to promote "sin", nor population explosion questions when no one dies, etc. - but heh! I am not God. I just know the end result will be better than if sin never happened, and that glorifies God.]
Ex.#2: "Israel's rejection of Christ". Forgetting prophecy for the moment - if they had not rejected Christ all indications are that Jesus would still have to shed his blood to redeem mankind (Rome could have crucified Jesus on their own without Temple Priests help), but He would have arisen to come back and pass judgment, fulfill covenants with Israel, and usher in the new era for the "chosen people" and the few select Gentiles that had "believed IN Him".
Instead - Israel (the nation) rejected Christ. Through God's plan the offering of Jesus Christ as redeemer went out to the whole world (Gentiles). By the delay in Jesus' return, more people are able to become "saved" that will increase the population (glory) of heaven. In the end, Jew and Gentile will be united in One Body with Christ as it's head (figurative language). All to the greater glory of God. Even more so, because God through His prophets said how it would all unfold. Evidencing His truthfulness and omniscience.
Previously I have posted that without events unfolding as they have - grace, mercy, justice, righteousness, the total eradication of evil would not be in evuidence. Because the above things are in evidence or will be - it glorifies God.
In the first paragraph - Satan has no excuse. He rebelled having full and perfect knowledge of God. Adam and Eve did not have perfect knowledge, but they knew God and were perfect as far as "humans" go. They also had a one shot deal.
I say this, because if you look at the other three examples of Pharoah, Judas, and Nation of Israel: they were all given plenty of chances to choose differently. God showed great patience in His plan.
Yes, God knew how they would ultimately choose/decide their individual situations - but it was not for lack of opportuinities. It was because their heart was not right with God - despite revelations or signs and wonders. Revelations, signs and wonders do nothing if one is not "oriented" or "turned toward" the Lord.
Any hardening of the hearts or blindess to facts, came after several (many) opportunities had passed the respective person(s) "plate". Kind of like, if someone continually rejects Christ their heart becomes so hardened that their is a "point of no going back". The end result being a stregthening of the "position" the person(s) had already taken (or pre-disposed to) on their scenario. Not sure if that makes sense??????
Bottom line is : Excellant question Roslyn, that cannot be definatively answered until we are in Heaven. But it made me think and at least attempt an explanation :)
Posted by: John | June 10, 2007 at 09:12 PM
I Kings 8:1-66
Going through the part of this book (Solomon) at this time has me sad and I am not sure why. The splendor of Solomon’s temple, the First Temple, I can see in my mind’s eye. I can imagine the power and majesty of the prayer Solomon prayed and I can see the throngs of people gathered in Jerusalem both for the dedication of the Temple and the Festival of Succoth, yet I am sad.
Maybe because I know how this will all end and Israel will enter into a civil war and divide into two. I know that both Kingdoms will be captured and taken into exile, yet restoration will come, at least for the Southern Kingdom. I know that full restoration will come at the end of the age, Jesus’ Second Advent. So why do I fell like this?
I think I am sad because I know that I am as part of “Spiritual Israel” setting myself up to repeat the “sins” of the past despite having a written example of what not to do in these daily readings. It is only the mercy of God, the grace of God that keeps me, us, an unfaithful people, in the arms of God.
We can build the most beautiful churches, we can dress up in our Sunday best Go-to-Meeting clothes; yet, it is our hearts that God wants,
Proverbs
23 Above all else, guard your heart,
for it is the wellspring of life.
Acts 7:51-8:13
Interesting, ain’t it, how the New Testament Readings seem to always juxtapose against the Old as if they were one thought. The first line in todays reading is Stephen speaking,
7: 51"You stubborn people! You are heathen at heart and deaf to the truth. Must you forever resist the Holy Spirit? But your ancestors did, and so do you!
Holy Father, prompt me, speak to me, warn me when I stray from your truth. No matter how many sacrifices I offer, if my heart is not set on you I’m just having a barbeque. Help me to keep my eyes on you and you alone. May my heart and ears always have eyes to see and ears to hear your Truth. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Psalm 129: 1-8
I love the imagery of a plow going over someone’s back representing persecution, yet not mortally wounding them. All of us proclaiming Jesus as our Lord and Savior have deep furrows on our backs from the plowman trying to plow us under. O, but for God, our deliverer our redeemer, he not only keeps us alive but also brings us to a place of victory so we can celebrate.
We are blessed by the Lord and to all those experiencing persecution because you call on the name of the Lord, remember a Diamond is brilliant because of tons of unending pressure squeezing radiance into an imperfect and corruptible body in the dark places of the earth. Shine forth folks!
Proverbs 17:1
1 A dry crust eaten in peace is better than a great feast with strife.
I went on vacation for a week with someone who had beautiful, spacious accommodations. Although I was taken aback that they would allow me to accompany them, I accepted because, “I won’t have to spend money on a hotel room.” Boy was that a bad move. I thought about this Proverb a lot while I stayed in luxurious accommodations. The price (free) was not worth the cost.
Posted by: John | June 10, 2007 at 09:13 PM
In light of Saul's permission giving to kill Stephen, no wonder Paul wrote later in 1 Timothy 1:15-16 that "Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners of whom I am the worst." I suspect Paul NEVER got over what he did although he was the champion of grace. He reminds me of John Newton the converted slave trader and composer of Amazing Grace hymn. In later life Newton said, "Of two things I am certain, Christ is a great Saviour and I am a great sinner." I think Newton must have known the story of Paul and the grace of God.
Posted by: luciano Del Monte | June 11, 2007 at 04:22 AM
"What verses or insights stand out to you in today's readings?"
"As the priests came out of the inner sanctuary, a cloud filled the Temple of the LORD. The priests could not continue their work because the glorious presence of the LORD filled the Temple."
I love this verse. It is fascinating to think how it must have been when all Israel saw that cloud entering the Holy Temple. That cloud was a confirmation from God that He was pleased. Even though we do not see clouds today that enter our churches we are the ones that believe without having seen and for this we are blessed. God is a merciful God who manifests himself in our lives each and every day. If it were not for Him we would not have the sky or the air to breath, etc...etc... and there would no life. For He is the maker of life and everything that exists, exists because of Him.
John1:3
"Through him all things were made; without him nothing was made that has been made. In him was life, and that life was the light of men. "
Posted by: Carmen | June 11, 2007 at 11:02 AM