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Week 10 June 3, 2021

What we are reading this week (beginning Thursday, June 3, 2021):


• Exodus 14-20

• Isaiah 64-66 ~ Jeremiah 1-4

• Luke 20-24 ~ John 1-2

• Psalms 64-70


Notes on Exodus

See 16.3: Complaining that they were better off as slaves! We have a propensity as humans to go after things that place us in bondage.


In 17.6, at God’s command, Moses struck the rock and water gushed out. Later, God would tell him to SPEAK to the rock and water would come forth. But Moses disobeyed this, and this cost him his ticket into the Promised Land (even though the water still came forth! We’ll read about this episode later in Numbers 20).


Exodus 17.15: Yahweh Nissi, the Lord is My Banner. The Israelites were chosen out of all of the nations and peoples of the earth to be God’s treasured possession. So sad they for the most part ignored the ramifications of this special designation (19.6).


Notes on Isaiah


An amazing close to an amazing book! Chapter 65 outlines judgment of the wicked, but ends with a marvelous picture of the millennium. This little-talked of part of the coming age is one of my favorite topics. Note, it is not about heaven, for there is still death; death still comes, just much later in life! The close of the final chapter is a chilling picture, The new heavens and new earth are the focus of these last two chapters. The closing statement seems to imply that forever in heaven we will be taken out to gaze upon what has happened to those who have rejected God’s love. And it’s not pretty.


Notes on Jeremiah


Jeremiah was young, single, and had a soft heart. His ministry began thirteen years into the reign of King Josiah. There were seven years left before Josiah’s death followed by the coronation of his sons and grandson, whose wickedness would elicit the final judgment upon Judah. Even though Josiah was a godly king who worked diligently to turn the nation back to God, the wickedness all around him is described in detail in Jeremiah’s book (e.g. 3.6). In 1.5, mention is made of God’s knowledge of the prenatal Jeremiah. Along with David’s account of life in the womb in Psalm 139, these are the go-to verses for the pro-life movement, showing God’s work in lives already in existence before birth. “Almond tree” sounds like “watching”. God loves to use wordplay through the Old Testament (1.12). The idea of remarriage to a former spouse after a second marriage/divorce is forbidden in 3.1. God so desires to bless his people but is often hindered because of their unfaithfulness to him. Marriage is often used as a metaphor for God’s relationship to his people (3.20). In Ephesian 5, we learn that the very purpose of marriage is to illustrate this relationship.

Notes on Luke


Jesus prophecies the destruction of the Temple in 21.6. This would occur forty years later in 70 AD. But he had also prophesied that if you destroy the Temple, he would rebuild it in three days. He was talking about his body, but conspiring to destroying the Temple would be one of the charges that would be leveled against him in his trial. See Matthew 26.61 and John 2.19-22. Chapter 22: Judas, the Last Supper, Gethsemane, arrest, Peter’s betrayal, trial.

In 23.42, the thief on the cross addresses Jesus simply as Jesus. This is the only time in the Bible that Jesus is addressed so simply (and thanks to my Uncle Merle for that insight!) Joseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus totally defiled themselves during Passover in handling Jesus’ body (23.53). Going to Pilate was quite brave to start with. They put themselves on the line to do what they did. Jesus asked for and ate a fish in the presence of the disciples in 24.41-43. This was not because he was necessarily hungry, but to show them that he was actually in a real, living body, not a spirit-form.

Notes on John


John, identified in 1.6 is John the Baptist, as is every reference to that name throughout the book. The author of this gospel never identifies himself by name.


Matthew, Mark and John are called the Synoptic Gospels (because they are synched up!). All three follow the same basic flow of events, yet each with its own unique accounts and perspectives. Some think that all three are based on one narrative referred to as the “Q” document. Some scholars think that Mark may be “Q”. John takes an entirely different approach. His gospel was written many years after the others, and no doubt he felt that there were exceptional things about Jesus that still needed to be written, though there was no way to get to it all (see 21.25). Matthew is written, as we have seen, primarily to the Jews, showing Jesus to be the Messiah. Mark is written for Gentiles. Luke portrays Jesus as the Son of Man, a human who had the essence divinity flowing through him. John portrays Jesus as the Son of God, most clearly demonstrating that Jesus was indeed God. (see 1.1 and 14) Though Matthew and Luke have the more familiar First Christmas accounts, John has one of his own, a single verse: “The true light that gives light to everyone was coming into the world” (1.9). We will find in John a lot of commentary, which we don’t find nearly as much in the first three gospels. The synoptics tend to simply tell the stories. John spends times explaining and even giving context.


“In the beginning was the Word…the Word was God… the Word was made flesh and dwelled among us…” (1.1, 14) This is indisputable confirmation of his deity. Here in the first chapter, we actually find the very first days of Jesus’ ministry, meeting the first of his disciples. The days are specifically numbered for our historical understanding (Following his baptism, verses 29, 35, 43, 2.1 give us an indisputable dateline of the first week).

They asked John if he were the expected Messiah, and he said no. They asked if he were Elijah (see Malachi 4.5-6) and he also said no. They asked if he were the prophet (“no” again). This comes from Deuteronomy 18.18. There is little given in the Old Testament as to who this is. We find later, of course, that this prophet and the Messiah are one and the same.


Notes on Psalms


David is a type of the Messiah, and his good heart poured out to God resulted in many Messianic prophecies that just organically came out of this spirit: “They put gall in my food and gave me vinegar for my thirst” (69.21). Book III begins in chapter 73, and 73-83 are written by Asaph, probably the one designated by David as a musician to make a joyful noise before the Lord. See 1 Chronicles 15.

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