Bible Verse of the Day
September 26th Through October 1st
Monday September 26
2016
Hebrews
10:30-31
| 30-For we know him who said, "It is mine to avenge;
I will repay," and again, "The Lord will judge his people." |
|
31-It is a dreadful thing to fall into the hands of the
living God.
|
|
First of all, I have a correction to make from the PPT
slides for Sundays message. I had a verse from 1 Samuel 6:7; that should have
been verse 16 instead of verse 6; a typing error when I formatted the Power
Point program. I do apologize for this error and I pray that it did not cause
anyone any inconvenience. Someone pointed it out to me after the service and
I do appreciate that. I have told all of you to always check the word of God
no matter who gives you some scripture, I want all of you to feel comfortable
in coming to me with whatever God has laid on your heart.
Our verse of the day for this past Saturday, the 24th,
was also from the 10th chapter of Hebrews, in which we went over
the general aspects of this chapter, so we will not repeat that this
morning.
There is a lot of misconception abounding surrounding
this verse. The major consensus, among those that do not take God’s Word in
the context it should be viewed, say this verse is talking about judging
others and that is God’s job not ours. We can see how that could be
misconstrued if this verse was a standalone thesis, but in context with the
rest of the chapter, as well as the rest of the book of Hebrews, in
conjunction with the New Testament itself, and its relationship with the Old
Testament, the idea here become very crystal clear.
If we look back to verses 26-30 we will see that, 26-“For if we sin willfully after we
have received the knowledge of the truth, there no longer remains a sacrifice
for sins,” and
verse 29 speaks of “trampling the Son
of God underfoot.”
The legalist or
Judaizers of Paul’s day wanted to hang on to the Law of Moses and make
Christianity a sect of Judaism. This was done because they wanted to be able
to say I did this and I did that, depending on their own work instead of the
Grace of God, through Faith in the Work of Christ Jesus on the Cross. These 1st
century people had received the truth from God through Paul, Peter, James and
John as well as other faithful servants of Christ, however they wanted to
continue their animal sacrificial system of Justification. In verse 26 we see
that if the truth, that the sacrifice of Jesus was the last (It is finished)
sacrifice needed, is rejected, there is no
sacrifice for sins is left (26b).
Given this
information, as well as the other teachings in the New Testament about false
teaching and legalism there can be no question this is where the message of
this verse is centered.
There is still
legalist out there today that want to use this verse, out of context, to say
that if a person continues in sin they will lose their salvation. Let us not
be taken in by Satan’s lies and those that are led by Satan to spread this
misinformation.
|
Tuesday September 27th
2016
Matthew
6:33
33-But seek first
his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as
well.
Seek first his kingdom and his
righteousness: In
Matthew 6 the greatest sermon ever preached continues from chapter 5, The
Sermon on the Mound. It also continues and finds its conclusion in chapter 7.
This great message from Christ Jesus in this chapter touches on, ways in which
we can live in order to please God, how materialism can cause great damage to
our walk with God and how to get past any apprehension or worry over such
matters.
We all have some
manner of priority list that we live our life by. There are some that believe
that God should be on this priority list somewhere, preferably at the top of
the list. The problem with putting God on our priority list is that there will
come a time during an attack of Satan, we will be tempted to relegate God to
another position on our list. We must put God first in our lives and then under
that start to schedule our priority list.
There are not very many times that we will have to choose
between our admiration and reverence to God and our love for our spouses or
being a good worker. We will be loving, kind and considerate to our spouses and
reliable workers because we have put God first in our lives, over and above any
priority list that we might generate.
If we diligently and with all of our hearts seek God’s
kingdom and His Righteousness He will open the door of our hearts and come in
to our lives (Revelation 3:20; Romans 10:13).
And all these things will be given
to you as well: If we
put God over and above our worldly priority list and seek after His plans and
agendas for our lives, He will provide for all of our needs, this is the
promise here. The problem comes when the
division between our needs and wants becomes fuzzy, and we don’t feel like God
is providing enough, and we begin to seek after our own worldly wants that we
see as needs.
Later on in this
chapter, (verse 24), Jesus tells us in no uncertain terms that we cannot serve
or seek after money and still serve God. We all make this choice when we first
repent and accept Jesus into our lives as our Lord and Savior. Our
sanctification, our daily walk with God, will either bolster and highlight that
resolution or repudiate and contradict it.
Wednesday September 28
2016
1
Corinthians 2:14
14-The
person without the Spirit does not accept the things that come from the Spirit
of God but considers them foolishness, and cannot understand them because they
are discerned only through the Spirit.
In
this 2nd chapter of 1 Corinthians Paul continues speaking on the
differences between human wisdom and Godly wisdom. He shows how God reveals His
wisdom to people, that is through the Holy Spirit of God.
It
would be impossible for someone that does not have the indwelling of the Holy
Spirit to accept what God has to offer. The person without the Spirit of God
would only be looking at the temporal instead of the eternal. You cannot see,
feel or touch eternal life in a natural setting, so it would seem foolish for
someone without the spirit, to focus on things that cannot be viewed with
natural vision. Moreover, someone in the natural world would be looking for
“the bottom line” or “what’s in it for me,” where someone who has access to the
supernatural, would understand that all of the gold and silver, fame and
fortune, is but a temporary thing.
This person without the Spirit
of God, reading God’s Holy word would be like someone reading text from a
language they cannot understand. In this case they would need an interpreter to
allow them to comprehend what they were reading. This interpreter, in the case
of God’s Holy Word, is the Holy Spirit, who will respond to anyone that is
truly, with a repentant heart, seeking the truth.
We
must keep in our mind that this chapter is not speaking to how people
understand the Bible in a universal logic, but Paul’s message here is on the
central and essential message of the crucified and resurrected Savior. Paul
argues here, and in much of his writings, that it (The resurrection of Christ Jesus)
would be essentially inconceivable
to the mind without the Spirit.
Thursday September 29
2016
John
3:20-2
| 20-Everyone who does evil hates
the light, and will not come into the light for fear that their deeds will be
exposed. |
|
21-But whoever lives by the truth
comes into the light, so that it may be seen plainly that what they have done
has been done in the sight of God.
|
John 3 is centered around the new birth, as Jesus explained
it to the Pharisees, Nicodemus, who did not understand what Jesus was talking
about. There are still many today that fail to understand what the concept of
the new birth is all about. There is a movement this day among some Christians,
that we should not use the term “Born Again” because of the misunderstanding
surrounding that requirement for entering the Kingdom of heaven, and it offends
some people.
In the 1960’s the State of Virginia passed a law that would
require a certain amount of “Foot Candles” of light in the bars and saloons. The
saloon owners had the light levels in the bars so low that it became a danger
to the people in the bars. This is a prime example of how sin likes the
darkness instead of the light.
The light Jesus is talking about here is symbolic, Him
being the “Light of the World, ” and those that want nothing to do with Him
remaining away from that light and in the darkness of sin. People that
consistently reject Jesus see themselves as people that have moved away from
superstition and have learned to deal with all the world problems on their own.
To say that they would need someone else to support them in their everyday
problems would indicate a weakness, and their pride won’t let them do that. It
boils down to pride or humility, some see humility as a weakness, however,
humility is power harnessed by the Holy Spirit.
Those that fight against Jesus and the Gospel do so because
they love their sin, but don’t see it as sin. They also do not want to accept
the fact that there is a God, and He will judge their sins. When we talk about
the love of sin that will separate one from God for eternity in an awful place
called hell, we thing of the big sins, but the sin of trying to be the Lord of
one’s owns life is enough to send one to hell.
Friday September
30,2016
Philippians
1:9-1
| 9-And this is my prayer: that your
love may abound more and more in knowledge and depth of insight, |
|
10-so that you may be able to
discern what is best and may be pure and blameless for the day of Christ,
|
Our last verse verses of the Day from Philippians 1 was
Thursday August 18th, the 21st verse.
For a Christian to prosper and flourish in their walk with
Christ Jesus, they must get to know him better and get closer to him. We all
have people that we know and if we want to get to know them better and get
closer to them, the only way is to spend time with them and put their needs
before our own. The same goes for Jesus, the only way to get to know Him better
and get closer to Him is spending time with Him; prayer, bible study, worship services,
Christian fellowship, Sunday school, and putting His will before our will
(Matthew 22:36-40).
The love that Paul is referring to here is not a visionless,
selfish love that was centered around, “what’s in it for me.” This was the love that was Christ centered,
an unconditional love, that had knowledge and depth of insight. The closer we get to Christ Jesus
the more our love for Him will grow, and the more our love for Him grows the
more we are going to want to know about Him and get closer to Him.
Paul was well
aware of the hazards and perils of haphazard and insensitive love, he
had reprimanded the Corinthians for their self-glorification love that brought
about absolutely no knowledge and depth of insight (1 Corinthians 5:1-7).
In order for anyone to determine what path is the right
path, what turn to take at the cross-roads, we must have the love of, and for
Christ Jesus in our hearts, the indwelling of the Holy Spirit. Paul wants us to
be
pure and blameless for the day of Christ, blameless is not void of sin, it is walking in the light of
Jesus and reflecting that light to a lost world, from a clear and clean
reflector.
Saturday October 1 2016
Matthew
5:11-12
| 11-"Blessed are you when
people insult you, persecute you and falsely say all kinds of evil against
you because of me. |
|
12-Rejoice and be glad, because
great is your reward in heaven, for in the same way they persecuted the
prophets who were before you.
Verses 11-12 explains and sheds
light on the last of the eight Beatitudes in the Sermon on the Mound
(5:3-5:10). In the sermon on the mound we will find that Jesus talked about
many things that were not relevant to the lives of the ones that were present
at the time. This would indicate that Jesus was speaking to people down
through the ages, as well as the ones present that day.
In verse 10 the persecution is
because of their righteousness itself, and in verse 11 they are persecuted
because of Jesus Himself. This might show that the lives of Christians then
and now should be lived following the example of Jesus. It was not too many
years after this sermon that that persecution began, the study of Acts and
the writings of Paul and other New Testament writers show that with crystal
clarity.
12-Rejoice and be glad, because great is your reward in
heaven, for in the same way they persecuted the prophets who were before you:
James talked about this in his
writing, (James 1:2). This assures us that even though we might go through
trials and tribulations now, the reward that will come later in heaven is
much greater that any suffering we might go through here on this earth.
Moreover, we are in great company, the Prophets that came before, went through
much persecution.
The ones that are persecuted are
done so because of the values found in these beatitudes, as well as the
gospel itself. The Christian values are completely opposite from the
standards and ethics of the world, and people lash out at what they do not
understand. The persecution we go through is not as drastic as what the
prophets of old had to endure, however, if no one is speaking ill of us, we
must ask ourselves one critical question. Are the traits, morals and ideals
of the beatitudes reflective of the way we live?
|

Pastor Ron, In the book of Luke, Ch 24 verse 18 is a person name Cleopas. My wife and I were wondering who this is?
ReplyDelete