Archive for the Giving Category

Will Man Rob God?

Posted in Giving with tags on September 22, 2009 by Harry

Table Talk. . . it is possible for human creatures to be guilty of theft against God. He (God) answers his question, “Will man rob God?” saying, “Yet you are robbing me.” The Israelite response is: “How have we robbed you?” To which God replies, “In your tithes and contributions” (3:8). God announces that to withhold the full measure of the tithe that He requires from His people is to be guilty of robbing God Himself. Because of this, He pronounces a curse upon the whole nation and commands them afresh to bring to Him all of the tithe.

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Learn to Live With a Little Less

Posted in Giving with tags , on September 4, 2009 by Harry

Table TalkIs It Just a Money Issue? by Burk Parsons

Several years after my father’s death in 1992 I found an old shoebox among my father’s belongings. Among the various items in the shoebox, I came across a stack of letters that my father had written just prior to his death. As I began to read the first letter I quickly realized he had written them to me but that he never had the opportunity to give them to me because his cancer consumed his body more quickly than the oncologist had expected. In one of the letters, my father wrote, “Learn to live with a little less.”
I have never forgotten that admonition, and having often wondered what made my father’s generation different from my own, I have come to the following conclusions: My father’s generation knew what it was to live with a little less. My generation always seems to “need” just a little more. My father’s generation asked this question of God, family, neighbor, and country: “How can I serve you with my time, money, and resources?” My generation asks, “How can you serve me with your time, money, and resources?” My father’s generation was a generation of honorable, principled, and hard-working men and women who felt truly blessed by God to be alive, to have the health to give of themselves to others, and to be fortunate enough to give of their time, money, and resources so that future generations could prosper. My generation is consumed with consumption. It is the generation of entitlement, instant gratification, and expediency. My generation has no understanding of what our fathers and forefathers fought for, what they sacrificed, and how much they gave of their time, money, and resources.
This is not just an issue about money but about how we worship God as stewards of all that He has entrusted to us as we live before His face each and every day. Nevertheless, we must never forget that it is the love of money that is “a root of all kinds of evils” (1 Tim. 6:10). In his book Respectable Sins, Jerry Bridges, one from among my father’s generation, writes, “If money wins out in our lives, it is not God but we who lose. Ultimately, God does not need our money. If we spend it on ourselves, it is we who become spiritual paupers” (p. 169).

  • Burk Parsons is editor of Tabletalk magazine and associate minister at Saint Andrew’s in Sanford, Florida, and is editor of the book John Calvin: A Heart for Devotion, Doctrine, & Doxology.

Paul Washer and Charles Leiter on the Tithe

Posted in Giving on August 21, 2009 by Harry

R.C. Sproul on the Tithe

Posted in Giving with tags on August 8, 2009 by Harry

R.C. SproulWill Man Rob God?Right Now Counts Forever by R.C. Sproul

How is it possible that somebody who has given his life to Christ can withhold their financial gifts from Him? I have heard many excuses or explanations for this. The most common is the assertion that the tithe is part of the Old Testament law that has passed away with the coming of the New Testament. This statement is made routinely in spite of the complete lack of New Testament evidence for it. Nowhere in the New Testament does it teach us that the principle of the tithe has been abrogated (abolished). The New Testament does teach us, however, that the new covenant is superior to the old covenant. It is a covenant that gives more blessings to us than the old covenant did. It is a covenant that with its manifold blessings imposes greater responsibilities than the Old Testament did. If anything, the structure of the new covenant requires a greater commitment to financial stewardship before God than that which was required in the old covenant. That is to say, the starting point of Christian giving is the tithe. The tithe is not an ideal that only a few people reach but rather should be the base minimum from which we progress.

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Coram Deo: Living Before the Face of God

Posted in Giving with tags on August 3, 2009 by Harry

Table TalkIs It Just a Money Issue?  by Burk Parsons

Several years after my father’s death in 1992 I found an old shoebox among my father’s belongings. Among the various items in the shoebox, I came across a stack of letters that my father had written just prior to his death. As I began to read the first letter I quickly realized he had written them to me but that he never had the opportunity to give them to me because his cancer consumed his body more quickly than the oncologist had expected. In one of the letters, my father wrote, “Learn to live with a little less.”

I have never forgotten that admonition, and having often wondered what made my father’s generation different from my own, I have come to the following conclusions: My father’s generation knew what it was to live with a little less. My generation always seems to “need” just a little more. My father’s generation asked this question of God, family, neighbor, and country: “How can I serve you with my time, money, and resources?” My generation asks, “How can you serve me with your time, money, and resources?” My father’s generation was a generation of honorable, principled, and hard-working men and women who felt truly blessed by God to be alive, to have the health to give of themselves to others, and to be fortunate enough to give of their time, money, and resources so that future generations could prosper. My generation is consumed with consumption. It is the generation of entitlement, instant gratification, and expediency. My generation has no understanding of what our fathers and forefathers fought for, what they sacrificed, and how much they gave of their time, money, and resources.

This is not just an issue about money but about how we worship God as stewards of all that He has entrusted to us as we live before His face each and every day. Nevertheless, we must never forget that it is the love of money that is “a root of all kinds of evils” (1 Tim. 6:10). In his book Respectable Sins, Jerry Bridges, one from among my father’s generation, writes, “If money wins out in our lives, it is not God but we who lose. Ultimately, God does not need our money. If we spend it on ourselves, it is we who become spiritual paupers” (p. 169).

  • From August Tabletalk Magazine
  • Burk Parsons is editor of Tabletalk magazine and associate minister at Saint Andrew’s in Sanford, Florida, and is editor of the book John Calvin: A Heart for Devotion, Doctrine, & Doxology.

Temple, Jerusalem, and Israel Overview *****

Posted in Giving, Israel on May 8, 2008 by Harry


Patriarchs to Roman Empire – Overview:

2000 BC

  • Abraham and Sarah have Isaac

Isaac and Rebekah have Jacob (Israel) and Esau (older son)

  • Jacob although younger became the child of the patriarchal promises

Jacob

  • Jacob had twelve sons by his two wives Leah, Rachel and two concubines Bilhah, Zilpah, and thus sired the twelve Tribes of Israel. His sons were Reuben, Simeon, Levi, Judah, Issachar, Zebulun, Dan, Naphtali, Gad, Asher, Joseph, and Benjamin
  • His favorite son, Joseph was betrayed by his brothers, sold into slavery and taken into Egypt

While in Egypt, Joseph was blessed by God and miraculously rose to high political office in the foreign land

  • During a sever drought, the sons of Israel traveled to Egypt in search of food for the family back in Canaan
  • Much to their surprise they were confronted by the very brother they had betrayed, and now their lives were in his hands
  • But Joseph provided food for them and saved their lives
  • Israel and all his children moved from Canaan to Goshen in the northeastern delta of Egypt
  • The Hyksos rule of Egypt may well have been the time when the children of Israel lived in Egypt and multiplied so rapidly
  • But once the Hyksos were expelled, “a new king arose over Egypt, who did not know about Joseph”

For the next several hundred years, the Israelites were enslaved by the Egyptians, and forced to build their cities and drive their economy

1446 or 1275 – Exodus

  • Moses leads the Israelites out of Egypt to the Sinai peninsula where he died

Joshua led the Israelites into Canaan circa 1000 BC

Israel became a loose confederation of 12 tribes and ruled on and ad-hoc basis by “judges”

  • They longed for a leader

Samuel was a prophet and judge who led Israel in the time of transition from judges to kings

  • With God’s blessing Samuel anointed Saul as the first king of Israel
  • But Saul failed to maintain his relationship with god and was eventually rejected as king

After Saul’s failure, God instructed Samuel to anoint a man after God’s own heart, David

  • Under David’s strong leadership, Israel finally defeated the Philistines and forged a degree of peace and security (Israel’s golden age)
  • Though there continued to be much internal strife during his reign, he was able to leave a unified kingdom to his son, Solomon

Solomon expanded Israel’s borders in close to what may be called an empire

  • He brought great wealth and prosperity to Israel
  • Solomon constructed the first temple
  • Solomon, like Saul before him, allowed his hear to turn away from God

Shortly after the death of Solomon, Israel split into two weaker nations, Israel in the north and Judah in the south

  • Assyrians were starting to rise to power, but as Assyria went through a period of internal weakness and 750-700 BC and the Israel and Judah remained prosperous
  • However, social injustice and moral decay began to consume the soul of Israel and Judah
  • Backdrop for prophets: Amos, Hosea, Isaiah, and Micah

Northern Israel fell quickly into religious apostasy and political unrest, In 722 BC the capital of northern Israel, Samaria, fell to the Assyrians

Judah, the southern kingdom by contrast maintained one ruling family (the Davidic dynasty) until 587 BC when Jerusalem, Judah’s capital fell to the Babylonians

The Neo-Assyrian Empire was a period of Mesopotamian history which began in 934 BC and ended in 609 BC.

  • During this period, Assyria assumed a position as a great regional power, vying with Babylonian and other lesser powers for dominance of the region,
  • The Chaldeans of southern Babylon were growing ever more rebellious and difficult to contain for the Assyrians and they soon became independent and replaced the Assyrians
  • The Babylonians destroyed the temple in 587
  • Backdrop of the OT prophets Jeremiah, Habakkuk, and Ezekiel

Persians then ruled until Alexander the Great around 330 BC

Roman empire gained control around 100 BC

Jerusalem:
According to the biblical account, David’s first action as king of Israel was to conquer Jerusalem and declare it the capital of his kingdom.

  • Even though the city was not the perfect choice from many points of view, a geopolitical constraint dictated this choice.
  • Mount Moriah is an important place where Abraham bound Isaac and thus the Temple was to be built there.
  • David is said to have conquered Jerusalem in approximately 1004 BC and made it a center of his government.
  • He brought the Ark of the Covenant to the city.
  • Jerusalem became the political and spiritual nexus of the ancient Hebrews.
  • King David was instructed by God not to build the Temple, leaving the task to his son Solomon.
  • The concentration of religious ritual at the Temple made Jerusalem a place of pilgrimage and an important commercial center.

The city served as the capital of the united kingdom of Israel, but became the capital of the less powerful of the two kingdoms (Judah) after the death of Solomon and the division of the country into two kingdoms.

  • It regained its central status after the conquest and destruction of the northern Kingdom of Israel by the Assyrians in 722 BC.
  • In 586 BC the city was invaded by the Babylonians.
  • At the order of King Nebuchadnezzar II (a ruler of Babylon in the Chaldean Dynasty) the city was torched, the Temple was razed, and the people were taken into exile.
  • Jewish tradition holds this incident to be the first exile of the Jewish nation.

The Temple – Overview:

First temple: 957 BC – destroyed by the Babylonians in 586 BC

Second temple: 515 BC – destroyed by the Roman in 70 AD

  • All of the outer walls still stand, although the Temple itself has long since been destroyed, and for many years it was believed that the western wall of the complex was the only wall standing

Solomon’s Temple, also known as the First Temple, was, according to the Bible, the first temple of the ancient Hebrew religion in Jerusalem.

It functioned as a religious focal point for worship and the sacrifices known as the korbanot in ancient Judaism.

The First Temple was built by King Solomon in seven years during the 10th century BCE in 957 BC

Completed in the 10th century BC, it was destroyed by the Babylonians in 586 BC.

The reconstructed temple in Jerusalem, which stood between 516 BC and 70 AD, was the Second Temple.

The Temple is believed to have been situated upon the hill which forms the site of the present-day Temple Mount, in the center of which area is the Dome of the Rock.

  • Under the Jebusites the site was used as a threshing floor. 2 Sam. 24 describes its consecration during David’s reign.
  • Two other, slightly different sites for the Temple have also been proposed, on this same hill.
  • One places the stone altar at the location of the rock which is now beneath the gilded dome, with the rest of the temple to the west.
  • The Well of Souls was, in this theory, a pit for the remnants of the blood services of the korbanot.
  • The other theory places the Holy of Holies atop this rock.

Two different Jewish temples actually occupied this mountain at different times.

The first was proposed by King David but was not built until his son, Solomon gained the throne.

  • David made great preparation for the temple but, according to the Bible was not allowed to because of the wars he had fought.
  • This temple stood for a number of years until it was destroyed by the invading armies of Nebuchadnezzar when Jerusalem fell and was taken into exile as captives.
  • It was at this time that the Ark of the Covenant, which occupied the Holy of Holies (the inner sanctuary of the temple)was believed to have disappeared from history).

Roughly some 70 years later, under the leadership of Jewish leaders such as Ezra and Nehemiah and with the blessing of the Persian King Cyrus, the temple was again rebuilt and stood until the time of Jesus Christ, during the reign of King Herod.

  • Herod refurbished the temple, built my Ezra/Nehemiah, making it into a grandiose building far excelling its previous glory and splendor.
  • Unfortunately, this notoriety was short-lived, as the building was razed by the Romans, some 70 years later.
  • The so-called “Wailing Wall” in Jerusalem, is actually part of the original retaining wall built around the temple mount as a foundation for the original temple by King Solomon.
  • The Temple Mount in Jerusalem is the site where the First Temple of Solomon and the Second Temple were built.
  • At the center of the structure was the Holy of Holies where only the high priest could enter.
  • The Temple Mount is now the site of the Islamic mosque, the Dome of the Rock (690 AD).
  • The Dome of the Rock is located at the visual center of an ancient man-made platform known as the Temple Mount to the Jews and the Haram al-Sharif (Noble Sanctuary) to the Muslims.
  • The platform, greatly enlarged under the rule of Herod the Great, was the former site of the Second Jewish Temple which was destroyed during the Roman Siege of Jerusalem in 70 AD.
  • In 637 AD, Jerusalem was conquered by the Rashidun Caliphate army during the Islamic invasion of the Byzantine Empire.

When Macedonian ruler Alexander the Great conquered the Persian Empire, Jerusalem and Judea fell under Macedonian control, eventually falling to the Ptolemaic dynasty under Ptolemy

Israel Political History:

As Rome became stronger it installed Herod as a Jewish client king.

  • Herod the Great, as he was known, devoted himself to developing and beautifying the city.
  • He built walls, towers and palaces, and expanded the Temple Mount, buttressing the courtyard with blocks of stone weighing up to 100 tons.
  • Under Herod, the area of the Temple Mount doubled in size.
  • In 6 AD, the city, as well as much of the surrounding area, came under direct Roman rule as the Iudaea Province[41] and Herod’s descendants through Agrippa II remained client kings of Judea until 96 AD.
  • Roman rule over Jerusalem and the region began to be challenged with the first Jewish-Roman war, the Great Jewish Revolt, which resulted in the destruction of the Second Temple in 70 AD.
  • In 130 AD Hadrian Romanized the city, and renamed it Aelia Capitolina.

Jerusalem once again served as the capital of Judea during the three-year rebellion known as the Bar Kochba revolt.

  • Bar Kokhba revolt (132–135 AD) against the Roman Empire was a second major rebellion by the Jews of Iudaea and the last of the Jewish-Roman Wars.
  • Simon bar Kokhba, the commander of the revolt, was acclaimed the Messiah, the king prophesied to restore Israel.
  • The revolt established a Jewish state for over two years, but a massive Roman army finally crushed it.
  • The Romans then barred Jews from Jerusalem.
  • Jewish Christians hailed Jesus as the Messiah and did not support Bar Kokhba.
  • They were barred from Jerusalem along with the rest of the Jews.
  • The war and its aftermath helped differentiate Christianity as a religion distinct from Judaism.
  • According to Cassius Dio, 580,000 Jews were killed, 50 fortified towns and 985 villages razed.
  • The Talmud, however, claims a death toll in the millions.
  • The latter figure is unlikely, because there were simply not that many Jews in the region at that time.
  • Cassius Dio claimed that “Many Romans, moreover, perished in this war.
  • Therefore, Hadrian, in writing to the Senate did not employ the opening phrase commonly affected by the emperors: ‘If you and your children are in health, it is well; I and the army are in health.’” [1]

Hadrian attempted to root out Judaism, which he saw as the cause of continuous rebellions.

  • He prohibited the Torah law, the Hebrew calendar and executed Judaic scholars.
  • The sacred scroll was ceremoniously burned on the Temple Mount. At the former Temple sanctuary, he installed two statues, one of Jupiter, another of himself.
  • In an attempt to erase any memory of Judea, he wiped the name off the map and replaced it with Syria Palaestina, after the Philistines, the ancient enemies of the Jews; previously similar terms had been used to describe only the (smaller) former Philistine homeland to the west of Judea.
  • Since then, the land has been referred to as “Palestine,” which supplanted earlier terms such as “Iudaea” (Judaea) and the antiquated “Canaan.”
  • Similarly, he re-established Jerusalem as the Roman pagan polis of Aelia Capitolina, and Jews were forbidden from entering it.
  • Constantine I allowed Jews to mourn their defeat and humiliation once a year on Tisha B’Av at the Western Wall.
  • Jews remained scattered for close to two millennia; their numbers in the region fluctuated with time.
  • Modern historians have come to view the Bar-Kokhba Revolt as being of decisive historic importance.
  • The massive destruction and loss of life occasioned by the revolt has led some scholars to date the beginning of the Jewish diaspora from this date
  • the presence of Jews outside of the Land of Israel, is a result of the expulsion of the Jewish people out of their land, migrations from there, and religious conversion to Judaism
  • They note that, unlike the aftermath of the First Jewish-Roman War chronicled by Josephus, the majority of the Jewish population of Judea was either killed, exiled, or sold into slavery after the Bar-Kokhba Revolt, and Jewish religious and political authority was suppressed far more brutally
  • The Romans succeeded in recapturing the city in 135 AD and as a punitive measure Hadrian banned the Jews from entering it.
  • As a result the city became entirely pagan (non-Jewish).
  • Hadrian proceeded to rename the entire Iudaea Province to Syria Palaestina after the Biblical Philistines in an attempt to thwart future rebellion and to de-Judaize Judea
  • Enforcement of the ban on Jews entering Aelia Capitolina continued until the 4th century AD.

The terms Byzantine Empire (a historiographical term used since the 19th century) and Eastern Roman Empire are expressions used to describe the Eastern Roman Empire

  • During the 3rd century, three crises threatened the Roman Empire: external invasions, internal civil wars and an economy riddled with weaknesses and problems.
  • Constantine moved the seat of the Empire, and introduced important changes into its civil and religious constitution.
  • In 330, he founded Constantinople as a second Rome on the site of Byzantium
  • Under Constantine, Christianity did not become the exclusive religion of the state, but enjoyed imperial preference, since the Emperor supported it with generous privileges: clerics were exempted from personal services and taxation, Christians were preferred for administrative posts, and bishops were entrusted with judicial responsibilities
  • The Eastern Empire was largely spared the difficulties faced by the West in the third and fourth centuries, due in part to a more firmly established urban culture and greater financial resources, which allowed it to placate invaders with tribute and pay barbarian mercenaries.

Constantine instituted several legislative measures which had an impact on Jews.

  • They were forbidden to own Christian slaves or to circumcise their slaves
  • Conversion of Christians to Judaism was outlawed.
  • Congregations for religious services were restricted, but Jews were allowed to enter Jerusalem on Tisha B’Av, the anniversary of the destruction of the Temple.
  • In the five centuries following the Bar Kokhba revolt, the city remained under Roman then Byzantine rule
  • During the 4th century, the Roman Emperor Constantine I constructed Christian sites in Jerusalem such as the Church of the Holy Sepulchre.
  • Jerusalem reached a peak in size and population at the end of the Second Temple Period: The city covered two square kilometers (0.8 sq mi.) and had a population of 200,000
  • From the days of Constantine until the Arab conquest in 638, Jews were banned from Jerusalem,but were allowed back into the city by Muslim rulers.
  • By the end of the 7th century, an Umayyad caliph Abd al-Malik had commissioned and completed the construction of the Dome of the Rock over the Foundation Stone.
  • In the four hundred years that followed, Jerusalem’s prominence diminished as Arab powers in the region jockeyed for control.

In 1099, Jerusalem was besieged by the First Crusaders, who killed most of its Muslim and Jewish inhabitants, apart from many Christians.

  • The First Crusade was launched in 1095 by Pope Urban II with the dual goals of conquering the sacred city of Jerusalem and the Holy Land and freeing the Eastern Christians from Islamic rule.
  • What started as an appeal by Byzantine Emperor Alexius I Comnenus for western mercenaries to fight the Seljuk Turks in Anatolia quickly turned into a wholescale Western migration and conquest of territory outside of Europe.
  • That would be the first of several conquests to take place over the next four hundred years
  • In 1187, the city was taken from the Crusaders by Saladin.
  • Between 1228 and 1244, it was given by Saladin’s descendant al-Kamil to the Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II.
  • Jerusalem fell again in 1244 to the Khawarizmi Turks, who were later, in 1260, replaced by the Mamelukes.
  • In 1517, Jerusalem and its environs fell to the Ottoman Turks, who would maintain control of the city until the 20th century.
  • This era saw the first expansion outside the Old City walls, as new neighborhoods were established to relieve the overcrowding.
  • The first of these new neighborhoods included the Russian Compound and the Jewish Mishkenot Sha’ananim, both founded in 1860.

In 1917 after the Battle of Jerusalem, the British Army, led by General Edmund Allenby, captured the city.

  • The League of Nations, through its 1922 ratification of the Balfour Declaration, entrusted the United Kingdom to administer the Mandate for Palestine and help establish a Jewish state in the region.
  • The period of the Mandate saw the construction of new garden suburbs in the western and northern parts of the city and the establishment of institutions of higher learning such as the Hebrew University, founded in 1925

As the British Mandate for Palestine was expiring, the 1947 UN Partition Plan (Part III) recommended “the creation of a special international regime in the City of Jerusalem, constituting it as a corpus separatum under the administration of the United Nations.”

  • The international regime was to remain in force for a period of ten years, whereupon a referendum was to be held in which the residents of Jerusalem were to decide the future regime of the city. (Jerusalem had a Jewish majority both in 1948 and in 1958.)
  • However, this plan was not implemented as the Haganah and the Jordanian Arab Legion fought for control of the city.
  • On May 28, the Arab Legion gained control over the Old City; all of its Jewish inhabitants were either taken prisoner or handed over to the Red Cross to be permanently transferred to Israeli-controlled areas.
  • At the end of the 1948 Arab-Israeli War, Jerusalem found itself divided between Israel and Jordan (then known as Transjordan).
  • The ceasefire line established through the Armistice Agreement of 1949 between Israel and Jordan, cut through the center of the city from 1949 until 1967, during which time West Jerusalem was part of Israel and East Jerusalem was part of Jordan.
  • In 1949, Israel designated West Jerusalem as its capital
  • Contrary to the terms of the Armistice Agreement of 1949 between Jordan and Israel, Israelis were denied access to Jewish holy sites, many of which were desecrated, and only allowed extremely limited access to Christian holy sites.

6 day war:

  • Following the 1967 Six-Day War Israel captured East Jerusalem, asserted sovereignty over the entire city, and later in 1980 declared Jerusalem, “complete and united”, to be the capital of Israel.
  • However, East Jerusalem has been seen by the Palestinian Arabs as a possible capital of a proposed Palestinian state.
  • They also refer to Security Council resolution 252, which considers invalid expropriation of land and other actions that tend to change the legal status of Jerusalem.[68] The status of the city and of its holy places remains disputed to this day.
  • In 1967, Egypt, Jordan, and Syria massed troops close to Israeli borders, expelled UN peacekeepers and blocked Israel’s access to the Red Sea.
  • Israel saw these actions as a casus belli for a pre-emptive strike that launched the Six-Day War, during which it captured the West Bank, Gaza Strip, Sinai Peninsula and Golan Heights.
  • The 1949 Green Line became the administrative boundary between Israel and the occupied territories. Jerusalem’s boundaries were enlarged, incorporating East Jerusalem.
  • The Jerusalem Law, passed in 1980, reaffirmed this measure and reignited international controversy over the status of Jerusalem.

In 1992, Yitzhak Rabin became Prime Minister following an election in which his party promoted compromise with Israel’s neighbors.

  • The following year, Shimon Peres and Mahmoud Abbas, on behalf of Israel and the PLO, signed the Oslo Accords, which gave the Palestinian National Authority the right to self-govern parts of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, in return for recognition of Israel’s right to exist and an end to terrorism.
  • In 1994, the Israel-Jordan Treaty of Peace was signed, making Jordan the second Arab country to normalize relations with Israel.
  • Public support for the Accords waned as Israel was struck by a wave of attacks from Palestinians.
  • The November 1995 assassination of Yitzhak Rabin by a far-right-wing Jew, as he left a peace rally, shocked the country.
  • At the end of the 1990s, Israel, under the leadership of Benjamin Netanyahu, withdrew from Hebron (main city of the west bank) and signed the Wye River Memorandum, giving greater control to the Palestinian National Authority.

TFL: "Principles in Giving, Parts A and B" *****

Posted in * Favorites, Bible, Giving on April 13, 2008 by Harry
  • We can make the bible say anything we want it to say, unless we study the bible in submission to its truth within its context
  • The danger in dealing with the bible is the danger in going above the line by saying more than what is said or going below the line and saying less than what is said and the key is to stay on the line
  • Paul is suggesting we will never give generously without discovering afresh God’s ability to supply our needs so that we may give generously again
  • Stott: “By our giving we give expression to our theology, by example: when we contribute to evangelistic enterprises we are expressing our confidence that the gospel is the power of God to salvation and everybody needs to hear it.”

TFL: "Pattern for Giving, Part A" ***

Posted in Giving on March 29, 2008 by Harry
  • Tithing is absent, not mentioned in the New Testament
  • There is a development of thought in scripture and what we have in the bible is often best read from the back going forward – because as things unfold and as they develop you would expect to find what is present in the gospels will then be worked out in the history of the church as recorded in the Acts, and then by the time you get to the letters, whether Peter, John, Paul, or James, these individuals will provide for us the inscripturated truth of essential, abiding, significant elements of biblical theology and of Christian living

TFL: "Jesus the God Man" not archived

Posted in Giving on March 12, 2008 by Harry
  • 312 – Constantine becomes a Christian
  • 325 – Council of Nicea
  • 385 – Council of Constantinople
    • Christ was not a created being
  • 451 – Council of Calcedonea
    • Jesus was both God and man
  • Westminster Confession

TFL: Prelude to Giving, Part B ****

Posted in Giving on March 9, 2008 by Harry
  • Mal 3:10
  • The Macedonians gave beyond their ability
    • They were willing to forego a legitimate desire to supply a legitimate need
    • They would squeeze themselves so others would not feel the pinch
    • If we give within our comfort zones, we do not understand giving
  • The Macedonians gave without being prompted or prodded

Test:

  • Am I giving myself first to the Lord
  • Does Jesus have all of me?
  • Am I giving in response to Gods’s grace?
  • Am I giving beyond my ability?
    • Beyond my comfort zone?
  • Am I giving without external compulsion?
    • ie, without being prodded
  • Am I clamoring for the privilege of serving the saints?

LTW: "The Power of Example" not archived

Posted in Giving on February 9, 2008 by Harry

How to be a good example for others:

1. We can only be a good example for others when we are in partnership with God
2. Only by practicing the love of God in our lives
3. Only by persisting to obey God

Fish – ichthys

Posted in Giving on February 9, 2008 by Harry
  • ichthys (fish) is an acronym for Iesus Christos Theo Huios Soter (Jesus Christ, Son of God, Savior)

Stott: "The Cross of Christ"

Posted in Giving on February 9, 2008 by Harry


Pg 23

  • From Jesus’ youth, indeed from His birth, the cross cast its shadow ahead of him
  • His death was central to the mission
  • Holman Hunt: The Shadow of Death
  • The woman is implied to be Mary, his mother
    • She has caught a glimpse of the shadow on the wall and paused her search within the chest. Is she contemplating the foreshadowing of her son’s crucifixion? Is she remembering what Simeon said to her and Joseph when they presented her baby in the temple?
  • The fine linen in the lower left draws the eye up to Mary’s hand on the chest
    • Are those the gifts of the Magi inside?
    • She knew the prophecy that her son would be king, and she is looking at the gifts for a king, but the juxaposition of the shadow of death and suffering—is she recalling the servant songs in Isaiah?
    • Is she recalling the words of her Magnificant?
  • The Christmas Star, not a Star of David, is above the pillar between the windows, a reminder of his name Emmanuel, “God with us.”
  • See how the window creates a nimbus or halo effect around his head.
  • The pomegranates on the right side, just below the window
    • Pomegranates are often depicted in images of Jesus and Mary.
  • Next to the pomegranate is the scroll with Isaiah’s prophecy.
    • It is also an allusion of Christ as the Word of God.
  • I wonder if the tree in the window is an olive, fig, or pomegranate tree?
  • Are the spindles in the window an allusion to the pillars in the Temple in Jerusalem?
  • In the lower right-hand corner, at the foot of the sawhorse lies a scarlet fillet that is part of Christ’s head-gear.
    • Foreshadowing the crown of thorns?
  • The reeds and cane in the corner on the left.
  • Within the shadow on the wall, the loop around his neck alludes to images of the brazen serpent that Moses held up to heal the Israelites.
  • The curls of wood shavings appear as a snake with its head being crushed under his right foot, victory over sin and death.
  • Shadow cast on the wall?
    • The tool shelf on the wall looks like the cross, and the tools are hammers and nails.
  • Pg 2
  • Crucifixion seems to have been invented by “barbarians” on the edge of the known world and taken over from them by both Greeks and Romans
  • It is probably the most cruel method of execution ever practiced, for it deliberately delayed death until maximum torture had been inflicted

The Sign and Symbol of the Cross

  • Pg 30
  • Roman citizens were exempt from crucifixion except in extreme cases of treason
  • The Jews also regarded crucifixion with horror, but for a different reason
  • They made no distinction between a tree and a cross, and so by hanging and crucifixion
  • Deut 21:23
    • 23 anyone who is hung on a tree is under God’s curse.
    • They could not bring themselves to believe that God’s Messiah would die under his curse, strung up on a tree

The Perspective of Jesus

  • Pg 31
  • Lk 2:41-50
  • Even from a young age Jesus had a sense that He had come to complete a mission, he was sent for a purpose
  • Mk 8:29-30 Messaniac Secret
    • His Messiahship had been kept secret because its nature was misunderstood
    • The popular messianic expectation was of a revolutionary political leader
    • Jn 6:15 – the people tried to make him king by force
    • Now that the apostles had clearly recognized and confessed his identity, however, he could explain the nature of his messiahship and do so openly
    • Peter rebuked him, but Jesus’ reply has been called the first “prediction of the Passion”
    • Mk 8:33
    • 33But when Jesus turned and looked at his disciples, he rebuked Peter. “Get behind me, Satan!” he said. “You do not have in mind the things of God, but the things of men.”
  • Jesus makes two other predictions of his passion in Mark

Manna: "The God Who Sees"

Posted in Dependence, Giving, Will - Our with tags on February 3, 2008 by Harry

1. Looking for the right things in the wrong places
“fallen people” can only provide “faltering” advice

2. Looking for the right things in the wrong ways
Help does not come from God – help is “in” God
There is nothing in us or what we do that can save us
We can’t use God to give us strength whenever we need it
Everything we need is in God but we have to give up our independence
We can never learn or study enough to be unplugged from God
Paul: God’s strength is made perfect in our weakness
But we do not want to be weak, we do not want to give up our independence
A mature Christian lives at the end of the rope – completely dependent on God

3. Looking for the right things in the only right place
Psalm 121:1-8
1 I lift up my eyes to the hills—
where does my help come from?
2 My help comes from the LORD,
the Maker of heaven and earth.
3 He will not let your foot slip—
he who watches over you will not slumber;
4 indeed, he who watches over Israel
will neither slumber nor sleep.
5 The LORD watches over you—
the LORD is your shade at your right hand;
6 the sun will not harm you by day,
nor the moon by night.
7 The LORD will keep you from all harm—
he will watch over your life;
8 the LORD will watch over your coming and going
both now and forevermore.
Look to the hills . . .
help will not come from the hills, we need to go to the hills and there he will take care of us

LTW: "Overcoming Timidity, Part 2" not archived

Posted in Giving, Grace, Law, Salvation on January 30, 2008 by Harry
  • 10 Commandments are not there to save us
  • They are there to drive us to God
  • They are to remind us that we are desperate for the grace of God
  • As long as a person thinks they are good enough or do enough, they will never be saved

TFL: To Marry or not to Marry, Part 2, A” *

Posted in Discipleship, Giving with tags , on January 26, 2008 by Harry
  • v29-31
    • Culture, possessions, happiness, death, relationships
  • v29 – Responsibility of marriage should not reduce the believer’s responsibility to do the Lord’s work
  • Most people state their priorities as: God, Family, Lord’s work, job, leisure
    • But it should be: God, Lord’s work, family, job, leisure
  • New abuse is deification of marriage, family, and denigration of the Lord’s work
    • Not unlike Luke 14:26
    • 6″If anyone comes to me and does not hate his father and mother, his wife and children, his brothers and sisters—yes, even his own life—he cannot be my disciple. 27And anyone who does not carry his cross and follow me cannot be my disciple.
  • You cannot do God’s work in your life and find it detrimental to your family
  • Paul is not saying celibacy is more spiritual, he is saying, in light of the context, it is more sensible
    • This is not grounds for what Catholics have done

TFL: “To Marry or Not to Marry, Part 1, B” *

Posted in Giving with tags , , on January 26, 2008 by Harry
  • We should have an eternal perspective on every aspect of our lives
  • Okay to be involved with things of the world, but do not become engrossed by things of the world
  • Possessions: Okay to have things but do not allow the things to have us
  • Happiness here does not compare to happiness in heaven

Laying on of Hands

Posted in Giving on January 26, 2008 by Harry

Laying On Of Hands (Orthodox study bible pg 520):

  • Has several uses in the NT, such as for healing, prophetic commission, ordination, and reception of the Holy Spirit (chrismation)

Priesthood – Earthly and Eternal (Melchizedek)

Posted in Giving, Law, Old Testament with tags on January 26, 2008 by Harry

The Priesthood – Earthly and Eternal (Orthodox Study Bible – pg 523):

  • Hebrews Chapter 6
  • A major theme of the Book of Hebrews is the contrast between the earthly, or Levitical, priesthood, and the eternal priesthood of Melchizedek, which is fulfilled in Christ
  • The Levitical priesthood, established by Aaron of the tribe of Levi, is limited simply because those who fill it are ordinary human beings
  • The Levitical priests carry out God’s instructions and assist the people in their worship, but they cannot ultimately reconcile people to God
  • The mysterious figure of Melchizedek, on the other hand, represents an entirely different kind of priesthood
    • Melchizedek appears in Genesis (Gen. 14:18-20), long, before the establishment of the Levitical priesthood
    • He is given no genealogy and nothing is said of his death
    • He receives tithes from Abraham, implying he is superior to Abraham in rank and by extension, superior to Abraham’s descendants, the Levites
    • Melchizedek is not only a priest but a king as well
    • In this dual office he is able to reconcile the justice of God (the business of a king) with God’s mercy (the business of a priest)
    • His name means “King of Righteousness,” and his title “King of Salem” (Gen. 14:18) means “King of Peace”
    • He maybe a theophany – a pre-incarnate appearance of Christ
    • at the very least he is a type of Christ, as the author of Hebrews explains in detail
  • There are several specific points of contrast between the Levitical priesthood, and the priesthood of Melchizedek, which is fulfilled in Christ

The Priesthood of Levi:

  • Genealogical requirement:
    • The Levitical priesthood is limited to one tribe
    • It cannot transform mortal and corrupt humanity , because it consists of mere men
  • Ordination:
    • The power given at ordination is incomplete
    • The Levitical priesthood is weak, its sacrifices have to be repeated, and it cannot perfect the worshipers
    • It cannot reconcile people to God, nor give them the inner power to obey
    • The ordination is without direct confirmation from God
  • Term of office:
    • The Levitical priesthood is temporary
    • Since it is composed of mortal men, it requires many members
  • Moral and spiritual requirements:
    • These must be less than perfection, for the Levitical priests are all created beings subject to sin

The Priesthood of Melchizedek:

  • Genealogical requirement:
  • As Melchizedek was without earthly genealogy , so is Christ by virtue of His virgin birth
    He is God incarnate, immortal and sinless, and therefore His priesthood is able to transform humanity
  • Ordination:
    • The power given at ordination is strong and effective
    • The power of Christ’s priesthood is perfect and draws us near to God
    • His sacrifice is offered once for all
    • The Father Himself ordains the Son
  • Term of office:
    • Since Christ is immortal, the priesthood of Melchizedek needs only one, eternal priest
  • Moral and spiritual requirements:
    • The requirement of perfect holiness is met in Christ, the only sinless One
    • He is more than mere man – He is the Son of God

TFL: "To Marry or Not to Marry, Part 1, A" *

Posted in Giving with tags on January 24, 2008 by Harry
  • 1 Cor 7:25
    • 25Now about virgins: I have no command from the Lord, but I give a judgment as one who by the Lord’s mercy is trustworthy. 26Because of the present crisis, I think that it is good for you to remain as you are. 27Are you married? Do not seek a divorce. Are you unmarried? Do not look for a wife. 28But if you do marry, you have not sinned; and if a virgin marries, she has not sinned. But those who marry will face many troubles in this life, and I want to spare you this.
    • 29What I mean, brothers, is that the time is short. From now on those who have wives should live as if they had none; 30those who mourn, as if they did not; those who are happy, as if they were not; those who buy something, as if it were not theirs to keep; 31those who use the things of the world, as if not engrossed in them. For this world in its present form is passing away.

Background info for 1 Cor 7:25

  • There was a sense of impending doom
    • Jerusalem fell 15 years after Paul wrote Corinthians
    • This may be what Paul was referring to when he said “crisis”
    • Paul was writing as if to someone going off to war
  • v29 – time is a factor, they have a short period of time
  • v31 – the world is on the way out
  • What was Paul’s concern in writing 1Cor?
    • Protection, provision , and devotion
  • Protection:
    • Married life is a big responsibility
    • Single life is also a big responsibility with great opportunity to do God’s work
  • Provision
    • He is providing for them for their own good
    • He is their shepherd
  • Devotion
    • He wants them to live in a right way
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