Tuesday, December 31, 2019

PT-1 "(The Man" Matthew 3:1)


SPIRITUAL DIARY FOR 12/31/2019 11:39 AM

My Worship Time                                                                                     Focus:  PT-1 “The Man”

Bible Reading & Meditation                                                 Reference:  Matthew 3:1

            Message of the verse:  1 Now in those days John the Baptist *came, preaching in the wilderness of Judea, saying,”

            As we look at “Now in those days” we see that this is a transition between chapter 2 and three.  I believe that it is also about thirty years later after the event so chapter two.  As we look at the different gospel accounts we only see from the gospel of Luke something about the life of Christ when he was around 12 years ago but the rest of the gospels mostly pick up the life of Christ later on in his life, with Matthew only giving a brief background of what went on when Jesus was born and then his move to Egypt and then back to Nazareth. 
           
            John is a very common Jewish name in the New Testament and is the Greek form of the Hebrew Johanan.  I see the word in 28 verses in the Old Testament, and many of them in 1 Chronicles which is a book of genealogies for the most part.  Now when we look at the last part of what John is called, “the Baptist,” this could be translated as “John the Baptizer,” for that is what he did as a part of his going before the Lord Jesus Christ.  I have a friend who has in-laws who live in West Virginia and who say that the Baptist church began with John the Baptist.  Well we know that is not true, but in a sense we could say that the job of John the Baptist and what most Baptist churches is to immerse those converts who have accepted Jesus Christ as their Lord and Savior.

            We know the history of John’s parents as this is spoken of in the first chapter of Luke and so other than saying that they were righteous people who followed the Lord we will not make any further comments.  If you want more info on them read through the first chapter of Luke.

            John would be filled with the Holy Spirit even from birth and I believe that when the pregnant Mary came to meet Elizabeth that could surely be when her unborn baby John was filled with the Holy Spirit.  John’s father stated that he “will be called the prophet of the Most High; for you [John] will go on before the Lord to prepare His ways (Luke 1:67, 76).

            John MacArthur writes “That was John.  His conception was miraculous, he was filled with the Holy Spirit before he was born, he was great in the sight of God, and he was to be the herald of the Messiah, announcing and preparing the people for His coming.  It is therefore not strange that Jesus said, ‘There has not arisen anyone greater than John the Baptist’ (Matt. 11:11).  That great man was a sovereignly designed and chosen herald of for the great King.”

            We will end this SD with MacArthur comments on the word “Came:”  “Came is from paraginomai, which often was used to indicate an official arrival, such as that of the magi (Matt. 2:1), or the public appearance of a leader or teacher (Matt. 3:13).  For thirty years both John and Jesus had lived in relative obscurity.  Now the coining of the herald signified the coming of the King.  The beginning of John’s ministry signaled the beginning for Jesus’ ministry (see Acts 10:37-38).”  “37 you yourselves know the thing which took place throughout all Judea, starting from Galilee, after the baptism which John proclaimed. 38  "You know of Jesus of Nazareth, how God anointed Him with the Holy Spirit and with power, and how He went about doing good and healing all who were oppressed by the devil, for God was with Him.”

            Spiritual meaning for my life today:  I suppose that many of us do not think about John the Baptist a lot; however in the scheme of things he was a very important part of the ministry of Jesus Christ.  Jesus had stated that if the Jewish nation had accepted Him as their Messiah then John the Baptist would have been Elijah, however we know that they were not going to do this and so Elijah, as we studied in the book of Revelation, will be one of the two witnesses, as he is prophesied to come before the Lord who comes at the end of the Tribulation Period seen in the 19th chapter of Revelation.

My Steps of Faith for Today:  As you may know it has been learning humility that has been the major purpose for me this year of 2019, and as we leave this year behind that will still be a focus in my life, however what I want to focus for the year 2020 is having joy in my study of God’s Word.

Today’s quotation from “Love in Action” comes from Habakkuk 3:17-18.

Though the fig tree may not blossom, nor the fruit be on the vines;
though the labor of the olive may fail, and the fields yield
no food; though the flock may be cut off from the
fold, and there be no herd in the stalls—
Yet I will rejoice in the Lord, I will
joy in the God of my salvation.

12/31/2019 12:31 PM

Monday, December 30, 2019

Is America Going the Same way As Babylon (Dan. 5)

Do to the business of this day, as we work on funeral arangaments for my 102 year old father-in-law I want to use a Spiritual Diary from July of 2013.


SPIRITUAL DIARY FOR 7/23/2013 9:30 AM
            Today’s Spiritual Diary will be different than the regular SD that I do each day as I wrote in yesterday’s SD that I want to take some excerpts from the sermon that John MacArthur preached on the fifth chapter of Daniel.  At the end of this message that he did in 1980 he compared some of the sins that were committed in the latter days of the Babylonian Empire with the sins that are being committed at that time in our country, and there are some that we can add to this list in the year 2013. 
Excerpts from “Divine Graffiti: The End of an Empire”
            “First of all verses 1-4.  ‘I see the sin of drunkenness.’  Do you see it there? When he was drunk it all really began to happen.  Cyrus had had it all.  All except Babylon.  And Babylon looked to be unassailable.  And so in a drunken stupor of debauchery, they though themselves impregnable.
            “By the way, you might like to know that in the same place, in the same city of Babylon, in the very same palace, 200 years later, Alexander the Great, undefeated by all the armies of the world, died in his own vomit in a drunken stupor. It wasn’t just Belshazzar.  Alcohol had destroyed many rulers.  It’s destroying some in our own country.
            “Drunkenness:  We have millions of drunks in this country.  Our leaders are drunken, as well as our people.  In the United States, there’s a death from auto accidents due to alcohol every 11 minutes and an injury every 18 seconds.  We are a drunken nation.
            “Secondly, pleasure madness.  They were having a party while the end of the world was a few hours away.  They didn’t understand how serious it was.  Pleasure mad, crazy about entertainment wives, and concubines, and sex, and dancing, and drinking, and feeding themselves.
            “And here we are in the same kind of condition; Sports, and movies, and TV, and shows, and sex, and restaurants, and on, and on.  And we spend billions and billions on these things. 
            “Thirdly, immorality:  The worship of the Canaanite gods involved sexual perversion and sexual stimulation that I would not speak of.  Archaeologists have discovered artifacts in the digs around Babylon that have engraved on them pornographic pictures from this era.  They had their pornography.
            “But I don’t think it could be any worse than what we have in America.
            “Fourthly, this society was destroyed because of its idolatry. They were worshipping all their manmade gods and blatantly rejecting the true God. There were thousands of deities that cluttered their culture.  And we have the same thing.  We have zillions of false Christs, false messiahs, religious phonies, cults and occults, gods of sex, and money, and things and pleasure, and education.  And we have literally crowded God out of our whole country, except for vestiges here and there of those who really know Him.  7/23/2013 11:30 PM
“Fifthly, Blasphemy:  This nation was destroyed because of blasphemy.  It wasn’t enough to reject a blasphemed God, they mocked God.  You can’t believe how fearful a thing that is.  I couldn’t conceive of doing that.  And yet we produce movies like Brian, which is a spoof Jesus Christ that makes him into some kind of a clown and superstar.  Monty Python’s Jesus is a sick joke.  Is a sick joke mocking God.  We mock God with our empty prayers before congressional meetings and football games. (In 2013 we will get into trouble by praying at a football game.)  We mock God with religious charlatans who use His holy name to get rich and fill the needs of their empty egos.
Sixthly, I believe America is characterized like Babylon was of willful rejection.  No nation that I know of in history of the church has had any greater opportunity to hear the gospel than this nation.  Isn’t that true?  It was founded for Christian freedom.  We have heard it but we don’t care about it.  We’re not interested.  It is a willful rejection.  And over in verses 18-22, Daniel said to Belshazzar, ‘You know all the facts about how God revealed Himself to Nebuchadnezzar.  You know the whole story.  And you willingly sin against light.’  ‘To him that knoweth to do good and doeth it not to him it is sin.’  We got churches all over this country on every block and all the way down the streets of this country.  In every little town, there are churches and they are empty, and they are liberal.  And schools are pumping out people denying the Word of God supposed to pastor those churches.  We are turning our backs, willfully rejecting the very thing we know to be true.  No nation ever had greater opportunity than America.  And I’m fast believing that no nation every turned its back on it, either, as severly as we have.  We don’t learn anything from history.  How foolish.
“Seventh, another problem that I see in this particular thing is unrelieved guilt.  This country, this Babylonian society was basically ridden with guilt.  Because sin brings guilt.  And know what?  The king saw the writing on the wall and his countenance was changed.  His thoughts were. ‘And the joints of his lions were loosed,’ and verse 6, ‘And his knees smashed together.’  Why?  Now if you and I were here and all of a sudden we saw some writing on the wall, we might say, hey, the Lord is giving a message.  But that would only be because we know the Lord and we have a secure heart.  But if we were a bunch of ungodly people in the midst of an orgy and supernatural fingers started to write a message, we’d react a little differently.  The reason they reacted the way they did was because their guilt convicted them, you see? 
“We interpret everything that happens to us according to our consciences.  And conscience makes a coward of us all.  The enemy on the inside condemned them like Adam and Eve.
“Our nation is so guilt ridden it’s unbelievable.  We’re literally ridden with guilt.  Never have there been so many psychiatrists, psychologist, counselors, mental illness, alcohol, drugs, misery, sorrow, suicide. It’s all over the place, because we are totally unrelieved in our guilt.
“Eight, America’s characterized by greed and impure motives, and that’s what was part of the destruction of Babylon.  In verse 7, he says, ‘I’ll give you gold, and I’ll give you scarlet, and I’ll make you the third ruler in the kingdom,’ and in verse 17, he says it to Daniel.  Verse 16 ‘I’ll give you all this stuff,’ and Daniel says, ‘I could care less.’
“Number nine: Materialism. Power was equated with your clothes and your gold, the decadence of living for prestige and riches.  I don’t think there’s even been a country in the history of the world to know the wealth of America for such a long period of time spread over so many people.  There are wealthier people in the Arab states, but the mass of people don’t really experience that.  We are wealthy and we are decadent.
“Number ten:  Another thing that struck me about this was their confidence in human security, their confidence in human security.  Did you notice that they were having this feast because they thought their city was impregnable?  What could happen to them?”
MacArthur goes on to speak of how we have a similar mind set in our country because of our military strength, but after 911 we should realize that we are venerable. 
“Another thing that hit me in this passage that is indicative of a dying society is corrupt leadership.  (If you listen to the news today you will hear of things like the IRS scandal, the cover-up in Libya, and other scandals that have actually fallen on deaf ears.”  What were all these princes doing getting just as drunk as the king?  Corrupt leadership, and all the soothsayers, and the Chaldeans, and the magicians had absolutely no help.  They couldn’t give them an answer.  The whole bunch of them were as drunk, and immoral, and as inept, as everybody else.
“Can I throw in another thing?  I read one author this week who said on of the problems with Belshazzar was that he wasn’t as good as his father.  He wasn’t as good as his adoptive father, Nabonidus, and he wasn’t as good as his father or grandfather, Nebuchadnezzar.  I told you in our last study (chapter 4 of Daniel), that I think Nebuchadnezzar became a believer.  Remember that?  But there’s a big gap from Nebuchadnezzar to Belshazzar.  And it illustrated to me the decline of the family.  I see that in America, too.  Where is the Godly seed?  Where is the righteous generation?
“A last one:  And this is the sum of it.  What made Babylon fall? Pride.  Verse 22, ‘You didn’t humble your heart.  You didn’t humble your heart.’  Pride.  Listen to this:  ‘At the feast of Belshazzar and 1,000 of his lords, whild they drank from golden vessels as they book of truth records, in the night, as they reveled in the royar palace hall, they were seized with consternation at the hand  upon the wall.  See the brave captive Daniel as he stood before the throng and rebuked the haughty monarch for his mighty deeds of wrong.  As he read out the writing, it was the doom of one and all, for the kingdom was finished said the hand upon the wall.  Se the faith, and zeal, and courage that would dare to do the right which the spirit gave to Daniel this the secret of his might.  In his home in Judea, a captive in its hall, he still understood the writing of his God upon the wall.’  See our deeds are recorded, there’s a hand that’s writing now.  Sinner, give your heart to Jesus, to His royal mandate vow.  For the day is approaching, it must come to one and all when a sinner’s condemnation will be written on the wall.  The message that I have for you tonight is this:  Sin brings destruction.  We started with Ezekiel 18:10, and we finished with it:  ‘The soul that sinneth, it shall die.’  Be it a man, woman, be it a nation.  Doom is inevitable in the world as it gets worse and worse.  The Bible promises that those who put their faith in Jesus Christ shall escape the wrath to come, shall be delivered from the hour of tribulation.  Shall be saved from judgment and taken to heaven.”
One of the reason for this blog it to get the message of salvation through Jesus Christ out to those who read the posts on it, and I also pray that believers who read this will grow in grace and the knowledge of Jesus Christ our Lord, and the last reason I write what I write is to spark holy revival in the hearts of believer who read this so that they too can tell others of the Good News of the Gospel.
7/23/2013 12:30 PM   



Sunday, December 29, 2019

Intro to "The Greatest Man" (Matthew 3:1-6)


SPIRITUAL DIARY FOR 12/29/2019 10:34 PM

My Worship Time                                                                  Focus:  “Intro to ‘The Greatest Man”

Bible Reading & Meditation                                                 Reference:  Matthew 3:1-6

            Message of the verses:  1 Now in those days John the Baptist came, preaching in the wilderness of Judea, saying, 2 "Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand." 3 For this is the one referred to by Isaiah the prophet, saying, "THE VOICE OF ONE CRYING IN THE WILDERNESS, ’MAKE READY THE WAY OF THE LORD, MAKE HIS PATHS STRAIGHT!’" 4 Now John himself had a garment of camel’s hair, and a leather belt about his waist; and his food was locusts and wild honey. 5 Then Jerusalem was going out to him, and all Judea, and all the district around the Jordan; 6 and they were being baptized by him in the Jordan River, as they confessed their sins.”

            If I were to ask you what makes a man great there would probably be many answers to that question, including riches, power, political greatness, and many other things, however according to the Words of Jesus John the Baptist was the greatest man up to his time, which includes men like Noah, Abraham, Samuel, King David, and all the rest of the kings.  You may be wondering what John the Baptist was the greatest man born up to his time, and as we look at his background, and for that matter the background of Jesus one would never believe that by just looking at their background that they would be called great.

            John the Baptist’s birth is seen in the gospel of Luke and it was a birth that was not ordinary at all, and then probably in his teen years he went out into the wilderness living on locust and wild honey.  He ran around in not so fine clothing, and I suppose in today’s term he would be regarded as a hermit.  This is the greatest man from when we look at men in Genesis all the way through the rest of the Old Testament.

            It was John’s job to go before the Messiah as his twofold duty was to proclaim and prepare.  That is what John’s ministry did for God’s great King, Jesus Christ, and that is why he was the greatest.

            Now I want to quote from John MacArthur as he reminds us that Matthew’s gospel is about the King.  He begins by talking about these first six verses and John the Baptist:  “Reasons for such superlative commendation can be seen in 3:1-6, where Matthew gives a brief picture of the life and work of John the Baptist and also shows that John’s ministry was yet another evidence of Jesus’ kingship.

            “In chapter 1 Jesus’ kingship is shown by His birth—by His descent from the royal line of David and by His miraculous conception.  In chapter 2 His kingship is shown by the circumstances surrounding His birth—by the homage of the magi, the hatred of Herod, and God’s miraculous protection of the young Jesus.  Now we are shown the evidence through the herald who announced the King’s arrival.  The greatest man who had yet lived was primarily so because he was herald of the Messiah, the One who was greater still.  His greatness was related to his calling.”
            MacArthur then gives us the outline we will be following:  “In presenting the herald of Christ, Matthew shows us the man, the message, the motive, the manner, and the ministry.”  That is what we will be looking at as we go through these six verses.

Today’s quotation from “Love in Action” comes from the commentary that David Jeremiah writes about 1 Samuel 30:6, the verse we looked in our last SD.

“In his moment of distress, the heat of discouragement, the young kin turned to the one true God, his God, for encouragement.  There was nowhere else to go.  Life had reduced his options to one.  Sooner or later, life does that to all of us.  Our loving Heavenly Father has provided all the resources we need.  It is true we are commanded to bear one another’s burdens and encourage one another and edify and lift one another up, but there will be times when no one will be there for us but God.  In those crucial moments we, like David, need to encourage ourselves in the Lord our God.”

12/29/2019 11:09 PM

           

Saturday, December 28, 2019

PT-3 "The Return to Nazareth" (Matt. 2:19-23)


SPIRITUAL DIARY FOR 12/28/2019 10:22 AM

My Worship Time                                                              Focus:  PT-3 “The Return to Nazareth”

Bible Reading & Meditation                                     Reference:  Matthew 2:19-23

            Message of the verses:  19 But when Herod was dead, behold, an angel of the Lord appeared in a dream to Joseph in Egypt, saying, 20 "Arise and take the Child and His mother, and go into the land of Israel; for those who sought the Child’s life are dead." 21 And he arose and took the Child and His mother, and came into the land of Israel. 22 But when he heard that Archelaus was reigning over Judea in place of his father Herod, he was afraid to go there. And being warned by God in a dream, he departed for the regions of Galilee, 23 and came and resided in a city called Nazareth, that what was spoken through the prophets might be fulfilled, "He shall be called a Nazarene.’”

            Remember that we spoke of earlier that Matthew’s gospel was first and foremost written to the Jews and so it is possible that the early Jewish readers knew who the prophets were that prophesied that were.  As far as latter readers like us today we can conclude that the Holy Spirit did not want us to know who the prophets were that said He would be called a Nazarene.

            John MacArthur describes Nazareth:  “Nazareth was about fifty-five miles north of Jerusalem, in ‘the regions of Galilee,’ where the Lord had directed Joseph to go.  The town was in an elevated basin, about one and a half miles across, and was inhabited largely by people noted for their crude and violent ways.  The term Nazarene had long been a term of derision, used to describe any person who was rough and rude.  That is why Nathanael, who was from Cana, a few miles to the south, asked Philip, ‘Can any good thing come out of Nazareth?’ (John 1:46).  The question is especially significant coming from Nathanael, who by Jesus’ own word was ‘an Israelite indeed, in whom is no guile!’ (v. 47).  Nathanael was not give to maligning his neighbors, but he was shocked that the one ‘of whom Moses in the Law and also the Prophets wrote’ (v. 45) actually could come from such a disreputable place as Nazareth.”

            Now that we know a little bit about the reputation of the Nazareth we can better understand why after Jesus returned to heaven and the church began why those who belonged to the church through their trust in Jesus as Messiah would talk down on them as seen in Acts 24:5 which took place at the trial that Paul had with Felix as a lawyer Tertullus who was acting as attorney for the high priest Ananias said “"For we have found this man a real pest and a fellow who stirs up dissension among all the Jews throughout the world, and a ringleader of the sect of the Nazarenes.” 

            MacArthur concludes his comments on this section, the last section in chapter two with these words “It was therefore at lowly and despised Nazareth that the royal Son of God, along with the righteous Joseph and Mary, made His home for some thirty years.”

This is a very sad day for my family as my father-in-law passed away early this morning at the age of 102 years old.  He will be missed.

Today’s quotation from “Love in Action” comes from 1 Samuel 30:6.

“But David strengthened himself in the Lord his God.”

12/28/2019 10:59 AM

Friday, December 27, 2019

PT-2 "The Return to Nazareth" (Matt. 2:19-23)


SPIRITUAL DIARY FOR 12/27/2019 12:18 PM

My Worship Time                                                              Focus:  PT-2 “The Return to Nazareth”

Bible Reading & Meditation                                     Reference:  Matthew 2:19-23

            Message of the verses:  19 But when Herod was dead, behold, an angel of the Lord *appeared in a dream to Joseph in Egypt, saying, 20 "Arise and take the
Child and His mother, and go into the land of Israel; for those who sought the Child’s life are dead." 21 And he arose and took the Child and His mother, and came into the land of Israel. 22 But when he heard that Archelaus was reigning over Judea in place of his father Herod, he was afraid to go there. And being warned by God in a dream, he departed for the regions of Galilee, 23 and came and resided in a city called Nazareth, that what was spoken through the prophets might be fulfilled, "He shall be called a Nazarene.’”

            In our last SD we looked at some terrible things that Herod did, and I mentioned that in today’s SD we will look as some terrible things that his son Archelaus did as it seems to me that the apple did not fall far from the tree.  First we will quote from MacArthur’s commentary about what Herod did and then what Archelaus did:  “In one of his numerous acts of brutality shortly before he died, Herod had executed two popular Jewish rabbis, Judas and Matthias, who had stirred up their disciples and other faithful Jews in Jerusalem to tear down the offensive Roman eagle that the king had arrogantly erected over the Temple gate.  The following Passover an insurrection broke out, and Archelaus, reflecting his father’s senseless cruelty, executed three thousand Jews, many of whom were Passover pilgrims who had no part in the revolt. “

            So we have learned that Joseph desired to return to Nazareth because during this time period in Israel Jews were not safe so Joseph took his family to Galilee.  Not only was the best idea to take his family, but it also fulfills another prophecy of the King.  MacArthur adds “Matthew focuses on two features through all of this narrative: (1) divine revelation as indicated by angelic instruction for every move, and (2) the fulfillment of a divine plan revealed in the Old Testament.”

            He goes on to write “The specific statement that the Messiah would ‘be called a Nazarene’ does not appear in the Old Testament.  Some interpreters have tried to connect ‘Nazarene’ with the Hebrew neser (branch) spoken of in Isaiah 11:1, but that idea is without etymological or other support, as is the idea of trying to tie the prophecy to the ‘shoot’ of Isaiah 53:2.  Because Matthew speaks of ‘the prophets,’ plural, it seems that several prophets had made this prediction, through it is not specifically recorded in the Old Testament.”

            This is not the only occasion where someone spoke of events unrecorded in the Old Testament that were nevertheless quoted or referred in the New Testament.  Let us look at Jude 14-15 “14 And about these also Enoch, in the seventh generation from Adam, prophesied, saying, "Behold, the Lord came with many thousands of His holy ones.  15 to execute judgment upon all, and to convict all the ungodly of all their ungodly deeds which they have done in an ungodly way, and of all the harsh things which ungodly sinners have spoken against Him.’”  This is not mentioned in Genesis or any other OT book, but we have to remember that not everything that we see quoted from the OT in the NT was written in the OT.  The Holy Spirit is the divine author of Scripture and that is good enough for me.  In the book of Acts, which Luke wrote through the inspiration of the Holy Spirit we see something that Jesus said “It more blessed to give than to receive,” and yet this is not recorded anywhere else in the NT, not even in the book of Luke.  John states near the end of his gospel record that there were many more things spoken by Jesus that are not recorded.  “And there are also many other things which Jesus did, which if they were written in detail, I suppose that even the world itself would not contain the books that would be written” (John 21:25).

Today’s quotation from “Love in Action” comes from David Jeremiah’s comments from 1 Sam. 22:2.

“Saul considered David his bitter enemy.  He hated him.  He hunted him.  David fled to escape Saul’s jealous wrath.  As the young giant-killer’s life became more and more like the adventures of the Fugitive, he gathered around him a band of rag-tag warriors who were the off scouring of Israel.  Eventually David and his new ‘army’ fled across Israel’s border into Philistia, hoping to find safety among the Philistines.  They thought Saul would never look for them there.”

12/27/2019 1:29 PM



Thursday, December 26, 2019

PT-1 "The Return to Nazareth" (Matt. 2:19-23)


SPIRITUAL DIARY FOR 12/26/2019 10:44 AM

My Worship Time                                                              Focus:  PT-1 “The Return to Nazareth”

Bible Reading & Meditation                                     Reference:  Matthew 2:19-23

            Message of the verses:  19 But when Herod was dead, behold, an angel of the Lord appeared in a dream to Joseph in Egypt, saying, 20 "Arise and take the
Child and His mother, and go into the land of Israel; for those who sought the Child’s life are dead." 21 And he arose and took the Child and His mother, and came into the land of Israel. 22 But when he heard that Archelaus was reigning over Judea in place of his father Herod, he was afraid to go there. And being warned by God in a dream, he departed for the regions of Galilee, 23 and came and resided in a city called Nazareth, that what was spoken through the prophets might be fulfilled, "He shall be called a Nazarene.’”

            We will begin today to look at the fourth and final prophecy found in the 2nd chapter of Matthew in our lesson for today.

            I am going to give you a quote from Antiquities written by Josephus and if you’re reading this in the morning I hope it is after breakfast:  Herod “died of this, ulcerated entrails, putrefied and maggot-filled organs, constant convulsions, foul breath, and neither physicians nor warm baths led to recovery.”  I suppose that this is a rather fitting end to a man who probably did little good in his life, and did much harm in his life as we have seen a small portion of it in our study of Matthew’s second chapter.  His eldest son, Archelaus prepared an elaborate and costly funeral that this son, his successor had for him, and “five days before his death Herod, by permission from Rome, had executed another son, Antipater, because of his plots against his father” writes John MacArthur.

            Let us look at Matthew 2:13 “13  Now when they had departed, behold, an angel of the Lord appeared to Joseph in a dream, saying, "Arise and take the Child and His mother, and flee to Egypt, and remain there until I tell you; for Herod is going to search for the Child to destroy Him.’”  We see from this verse where Joseph had a dream in which an angel told him to take his wife and Jesus to Egypt, and now in verses 19-20 “19 But when Herod was dead, behold, an angel of the Lord appeared in a dream to Joseph in Egypt, saying, 20 "Arise and take the
Child and His mother, and go into the land of Israel; for those who sought the Child’s life are dead."’”  MacArthur writes “The fact that the angel spoke of ‘those who sought the Child’s life’ indicates that Herod was not alone in his plans to destroy ‘the Child’ were themselves now ‘dead.’

            Joseph was instructed to take his family back to Israel, but not any particular part of Israel, so when he found out that Archelaus, Herod’s son Joseph to them back to Nazareth.  Joseph seems to be doing the right thing as we will learn that this actually fulfills prophecy. 

            Yesterday my wife and I listened to Luke chapters one and two as this is the best gospel to hear the Christmas story.  Luke leaves out that Joseph and Mary and Jesus went to Egypt, and it kind of caused me to get mixed up about it and so I prayed about it that God would make it clear in my heart as to what I heard in Luke’s account:  “39 When they had performed everything according to the Law of the Lord, they returned to Galilee, to their own city of Nazareth. 40 The Child continued to grow and become strong, increasing in wisdom; and the grace of God was upon Him” (Luke 2:39-40).   I suppose that the reason that Luke left the part about going to Egypt was due to the audience that he was writing to.  At any rate I believe that the Lord has made this all clear to me.

            There is more violence to be written about both Herod, and also Archelaus, but I believe we have heard enough for one day, so I will leave that until tomorrow.

Our quotation from “Love in Action” is from 1 Samuel 22:2.

Everyone who was in distress, everyone who was in debt,
and everyone who was discontented.

12/26/2019 11:25 AM



Wednesday, December 25, 2019

Merry Christmas


MERRY CHRISTMAS

               I promised yesterday to write a Christmas greeting on my blog on Christmas Day.

            What I have today about Christmas has probably already been said before, well at least some of it, but if that is the case then I will say it again.  Christmas, to me, holds mixed feelings in my mind.  I am not one who likes going all out on buying presents just because it is Christmas, but want to remember what Christmas is suppose to be all about.  Now we know that Jesus Christ was probably not born on the 25th of December, but we do know that He was born, and probably born in the winter months, and I do not know exactly know how the 25th of December came about as the day we celebrate Christmas.  I suppose a little digging on the internet would answer that question, but I probably will not do that.  Like I say the important thing is that Jesus Christ was born into the world and the first prophecy of Him coming into the world goes all the way back to the book of Genesis, and right after Adam and Eve sinned we read “And I will put enmity Between you and the woman, And between your seed and her seed; He shall bruise you on the head, And you shall bruise him on the heel."”  God is speaking of Satan in this passage and also He is saying that there will be war between Satan and the offspring of the woman.  “I’m declaring war between you and the Woman, between your offspring and hers. He’ll wound your head, you’ll wound his heel." (Message)” We see in the NASB that God speaks of the “seed of the woman,” and this is the only time we see this in the Word of God.  The seed comes through the man, but there were three differences in the Scriptures when this did not happen that way.  First God created Adam out of the earth, and then God created woman out of Adam’s rib, and then we read that Mary became pregnant through the Holy Spirit and this is where we get the seed of the woman as involved in the birth of Jesus Christ.

            Now as we read through the Old Testament we see how the Lord narrows down the line in which the Messiah would come from.  In the book of Matthew we see the bloodline of Jesus through Joseph, and in Luke’s gospel we see the bloodline of Jesus through Mary.  Both Joseph and Mary were descendants of David, but Mary came through the line of Nathan while Joseph came through Solomon.  Luke’s line of Jesus goes all the way back to God, while Matthew’s line only goes back to Abraham.  One of the kings of Judah, Jeconiah had a curse against him and so his line could not be in the line of the Messiah to be King.  As I said Mary came through the line of Nathan, Luke 3:31 “the son of Melea, the son of Menna, the son of Mattatha, the son of Nathan, the son of David,.”   Joseph also came from the line of David and even though Jeconiah was in his line this did not permit Jesus from being the Messiah for He was not born of Joseph but of the Holy Spirit and Mary.

            Now as far as the place where Jesus was born and who was there when He was born, it is not like the nativity scenes we see in people’s yards or in their houses.  I read a historic novel a few years ago and the author incorporated into the birth of Jesus a place called Midgal Eder and this place is mentioned in the book of Micah 4:8 where we read “8 "As for you, tower of the flock, Hill of the daughter of Zion, To you it will come-Even the former dominion will come, The kingdom of the daughter of Jerusalem.”  The words “tower of the flock” in the Hebrew is Midgal Eder, and this place was near Bethlehem on the way to Jerusalem and is where the lambs were born who would go to the temple and used for sacrifices.  There was a cave there and many believe that Jesus was born in that cave where these sacrificial lambs were born.  When you think about this it all makes perfect sense.  Now as far as who was there we know that Joseph, Mary, Jesus and later on the shepherds came, but as far as the wise men they did not come and see Jesus until he was near two years old.  They probably came from what was once Babylon and they probably got their information from Daniel who prophesied in his book of the time when the Messiah would die and so they would know when it would be near time for Him to be born and looked for Him following a star.  They first came to see Herod and asked him where the Messiah would be born and then went to find Him, giving gifts to Him and were then told in a dream not to go back to tell Herod.  Herod then had all male boys from the age of two years old and younger killed as was prophesied by Jeremiah. 

            Okay so the story of Jesus’ birth is probably much different than what we use to celebrate it in our world today as I tried to bring out, but the point of all of this is that God was in control of all the things which would bring His Son into the world to fulfill what His plans were for Him to accomplish, and He accomplished all of them, and we can praise the Lord on this Christmas Day that He did accomplish all of them.  Jesus told His mother while in the temple that He came to do His Father’s will and at the end of His life, while hanging on a cross He said “It is finished.”  What was finished was His becoming sin for us so that we could receive His righteousness and have it credited to our account so that when the Father looks at those who have received this free gift of salvation He will see Jesus Christ and not our sinfulness.

            The all time very best gift a person can receive on Christmas Day or any other day is to receive Jesus Christ as Savior and Lord, to confess that they are a sinner in need of a Savior and find out that Jesus paid it all, and receive Him as Savior and Lord.

            Merry Christmas to all!


I, Jacob Howard, wrote Dr. Charlie Dyer, who is the speaker on the Land and the Book Radio, a question about Migdal-Eder, mentioned in Micah 4:8. This was Dr. Dyer’s response.

Jacob,

Thank you for your e-mail, and thanks as well for your kind words! Denny and I both appreciate the privilege God has given us to serve Him in this way. You have encouraged us both!

As far as Midgal Eder is concerned, there is no universal identification of the site. But I do believe it was a real site. The best thing I’ve read on the subject is from Alfred Edersheim’s The Life and Times of Jesus the Messiah. (You can find his complete work online at Google Books.) I’ll include his quotation here, and then I’ll follow it with a few observations. (I’ll also highlight the key point he makes in the quote.)

But as we pass from the sacred gloom of the cave [i.e., he was just talking about the birth of Jesus in a cave] out into the night, its sky all aglow with starry brightness, its loneliness is peopled, and its silence made vocal from heaven. There is nothing now to conceal, but much to reveal, though the manner of it would seem strangely incongruous to Jewish thinking. And yet Jewish tradition may here prove both illustrative and helpful. That the Messiah was to be born in Bethlehem, was a settled conviction. Equally so was the belief, that He was to be revealed from Migdal Eder, “the tower of the flock.” This Migdal Eder was not the watchtower for the ordinary flocks which pastured on the barren sheep ground beyond Bethlehem, but lay close to the town, on the road to Jerusalem. A passage in the Mishnah leads to the conclusion, that the flocks, which pastured there, were destined for Temple-sacrifices, and, accordingly, that the shepherds, who watched over them, were not ordinary shepherds. The latter were under the ban of Rabbinism, on account of their necessary isolation from religious ordinances, and their manner of life, which rendered strict legal observance unlikely, if not absolutely impossible. The same Mishnaic passage also leads us to infer, that these flocks lay out all the year round, since they are spoken of as in the fields thirty days before the Passover—that is, in the month of February, when in Palestine the average rainfall is nearly greatest. Thus, Jewish tradition in some dim manner apprehended the first revelation of the Messiah from that Migdal Eder, where shepherds watched the Temple-flocks all the year round. Of the deep symbolic significance of such a coincidence, it is needless to speak.

—Alfred Edersheim, The Life and Times of Jesus the Messiah, pp. 186-87

If Edersheim is correct (and I believe he is), the location for Migdal Eder would be north of Bethlehem and near the old road from Bethlehem to Jerusalem. (That road is the old “Hebron road” one drives on between Jerusalem and Bethlehem today!) I believe this puts the location  somewhere between the Jewish kibbutz of Ramat Rachel and Bethlehem, probably just to the west of Har Homa. There used to be an actual sheepfold in this area where I would take our groups but, sadly, it has been covered over by the modern road that now goes to Har Homa.

A key point here. Edersheim indicates that Migdal Eder was an actual spot, but he is not saying it was a town or village. Rather, the name means “watchtower of the flock” which seems to identify it as a specific pasture area for sheep. And the sheep that grazed here were those specifically destined for Temple sacrifice. In that sense the shepherds keeping watch over the temple sacrifices were the ones to whom God announced the birth of the ultimate “sacrificial lamb.”

I’m attaching a screen shot from Google Earth that might be of help in identifying the location for Midgal Eder. Note that Ramat Rachel is at the top of the picture and Bethlehem is at the bottom. The road running along the left side of the picture is the old Hebron Road, and Homat Shemu’el/Har Homa is just to the right of center in the picture. Based on Edersheim’s description, I would place Migdal Eder almost in the center of the picture…north of Bethlehem, just to the west of Har Homa, and east of the road from Bethlehem to Jerusalem. Since the word means “tower of the flock” it is likely a high spot in this area where sheep would graze. The hills right around (or right at) Har Homa are probably the best possible location.

I hope this is helpful!

Charlie


Tuesday, December 24, 2019

PT-3 "The Slaughter at Ramah" (Matt. 2:16-18)


SPIRITUAL DIARY FOR 12/24/2019 11:44 AM

My Worship Time                                                      Focus:  PT-3 “The Slaughter at Ramah”

Bible Reading & Meditation                                     Reference:  Matthew 2:16-18

            Message of the verses:  16  Then when Herod saw that he had been tricked by the magi, he became very enraged, and sent and slew all the male children who were in Bethlehem and in all its environs, from two years old and under, according to the time which he had ascertained from the magi. 17 Then that which was spoken through Jeremiah the prophet was fulfilled, saying, 18 "A VOICE WAS HEARD IN RAMAH, WEEPING AND GREAT MOURNING, RACHEL WEEPING FOR HER CHILDREN; AND SHE REFUSED TO BE COMFORTED, BECAUSE THEY WERE NO MORE.’”

            I really don’t think that Herod knew anything about fulfilling prophecy when he had the babies killed in Bethlehem.  I think that because of the evilness of his heart that this was actually the natural thing for him to do.  I seriously doubt that Herod had any conscience left because of the hardness of his heart, similar to Pharaoh as seen in the early part of the book of Exodus.

            John MacArthur talks about the word “fulfilled” which is seen in verse seventeen.  “The term ‘fulfilled’ (from poeroo, ‘to fill up’) marks this out as completing an Old Testament prediction.  This prophecy, like that of Jesus’ return from Egypt , was in the form of a type, which, as we have seen above, is a nonverbal prediction revealed in the New Testament.  In the passage (Jer. 31:15) from which Matthew here quotes, Jeremiah was speaking of the great sorrow that would soon be experienced in Israel when most of her people would be carried captive to Babylon.  ‘Ramah,’ a town about five miles north of Jerusalem, was on the border of the northern (Israel) and southern (Judah) kingdoms.  It was also the place where Jewish captives were assembled for deportation to Babylon (Jer. 40:1).  ‘Rachel,’ the wife of Jacob-Israel, was the mother of Joseph, whose two sons, Ephraim and Manasseh, became progenitors of the two half-tribes that bore their names. Ephraim is often used in the Old Testament as a synonym for the northern kingdom.  ‘Rachel’ was also the mother of Benjamin, whose tribe became part of the southern kingdom.  She had once cried, ‘Give me children, or else I die’ (Gen. 30:1), and now her beloved ‘children,’ her immeasurably multiplied descendants, were being taken captive to a foreign and pagan land.

            “Rachel weeping for her children’ therefore represented the lamentation of all Jewish mothers who wept over Israel’s great tragedy in the days of Jeremiah, and most specifically typified and prefigured the mothers of Bethlehem weeping bitterly over the massacre of their children by Herod in his attempt to kill the Messiah.  So even while Israel’s Messiah was still a babe, Rachel had cause to weep again, even as the Messiah Himself would later weep over Jerusalem because of His people’s rejection of Him and the afflictions they would suffer as a consequence (Luke 19:41-44).”

            Matthew does not mention the next verse after Jeremiah 31:15 “Thus says the LORD, "Restrain your voice from weeping And your eyes from tears; For your work will be rewarded," declares the LORD, "And they will return from the land of the enemy (Jer. 31:16).” 
            I am reading a book written by Warren Wiersbe entitled “WHY US? When Bad Things Happen to God’s People,” and in last night’s reading from it this book I saw the following “He [God] does not always take the pain away, but He uses the pain to give birth to joy.  We are not saved from our travail; we are saved by our travail.”  This comes from the chapter “Pictures of Pain,” and this particular picture comes from “travail and birth.”  One more quote from this section and we will be nearly finished with this SD “Just as there can be no birth without travail, there can be no glory without suffering.”   Jesus went through travail as He suffered on the cross, but after His resurrection there came joy as all who will accept His forgiveness will be saved.  Jeremiah 31:16 speaks of the joy that the children of Israel had when they returned to Jerusalem.

I mentioned that in tomorrow’s SD we will look at a former SD that I wrote about Christmas, actually the birth of Christ.

Today’s quotation from “Love in Action” we will look at what David Jeremiah commented on yesterday’s verses from Exodus 2:15; 3:1-4.

“God often programmed isolation into the lives of people He wanted to use.  He put Moses in the desert for forty years before He freed him to be the leader of the exodus.  I really believe that in our culture today, if we are ever going to learn how to deal with self-encouragement, we are going to have to figure out a way, no matter how hard it is, to walk away from things and buy           some time where we can be alone with God.  There is ministry in solitude, to be alone, to be quiet, so that you can talk to God, and God can talk to you.”

12/24/2019 12:21 PM

Monday, December 23, 2019

PT-2 "The Slaughter at Ramah" (Matt. 2:16-18)


SPIRITUAL DIARY FOR 12/23/2019 9:18 AM

My Worship Time                                                             Focus:  PT-2 “The Slaughter at Ramah”

Bible Reading & Meditation                                     Reference:  Matthew 2:16-18

            Message of the verses:  16  Then when Herod saw that he had been tricked by the magi, he became very enraged, and sent and slew all the male children who were in Bethlehem and in all its environs, from two years old and under, according to the time which he had ascertained from the magi. 17 Then that which was spoken through Jeremiah the prophet was fulfilled, saying, 18 "A VOICE WAS HEARD IN RAMAH, WEEPING AND GREAT MOURNING, RACHEL WEEPING FOR HER CHILDREN; AND SHE REFUSED TO BE COMFORTED, BECAUSE THEY WERE NO MORE.’”

            We begin today with a quote from John MacArthur:  Thumoo (to be enraged) is a strong word, made still stronger by lian (very, or better, exceedingly).  The Greek is in the passive voice, indicating that Herod had lost control of his passion and now was completely controlled by it.  His senses, and what little judgment he may have had, were blinded.  He did not bother to consider that, because the magi did not return to him, they probably had guessed his wicked intent and that, if so, they surely have warned the family.  The family, in turn, would have long fled Bethlehem and probably the country.  In light of Herod’s perverted mind, however, he possibly would have taken the same cruel action—out of the same senseless rage and frustration—even had he known that the primary object of his hatred had escaped.  If he was not able to guarantee killing Jesus by killing the other babies, he would kill them in place of Jesus.”

            Herod’s rage may have been vented through the killing of those little ones and this shows us how terrible a man that he was.  To make things clear Herod did this because he wanted to do it and not because it was prophesied that he would do it.  The same was true of Judas in his betrayal of Jesus.  Another thing that I want to point out as far as the killing of these baby boys is that it is certainly my belief that all of these babies went directly to heaven.  I believe that the Bible teaches that there is an age of accountability and that in some cases when a person is not capable of even understanding the gospel, and could be old, that they too will go to heaven when the pass from this earth.  John MacArthur has written a wonderful book on this subject entitled “Safe in the Arms of God.”

            We are not sure exactly how old Jesus was at this time, but it could have been that He was around six months old, but Herod did not want to take any chances when it came to trying to kill these young boys from two years old and younger.  Someone asked me why was Joseph and Mary, and the baby Jesus still living in Bethlehem and I don’t have an answer with the exception that it was God’s will for them to stay there until the magi came to worship Him, and then give Him those gifts.

            Herod knew that the child that he sought was the Messiah because of what was spoken of by the Scribes, and the irony of all of this was that even though the Scribes knew where to find the verse as to where the Messiah would be born, they didn’t believe the Scriptures they studied.  People today who read the Christmas story too have a hard time in understanding it.  Not much has changed.

            Perhaps Matthew included this early story of Jesus to show of things that will come when He begins His ministry as again, not much will change, but will grow worse, as many other Scribes and Pharisees will have the same hatred of Jesus as Herod had.  John MacArthur writes “The slaughter in Bethlehem was the beginning of the tragedy and bloodshed that would result from Israel’s rejection of her Savior and true King.  Those innocent and precious babies of Bethlehem were the first casualties in the now-intensified warfare between the kingdoms of this world and the kingdom of God’s Christ, God’s Anointed.  Within two generations from that time (in A. D. 70) Jerusalem would see its Temple destroyed and over a million of its people massacred by the troops of Titus.  Yet that destruction will pale in comparison with that of the Antichrist—a ruler immeasurably more wicked and powerful than Herod—when in the Great Tribulation he will shed more of Israel’s blood than will ever have been shed before (Dan. 12:1; Matt. 24:21-22).  All of that bloodshed is over the conflict with the Messiah.”

            We will continue looking at this section in our next SD, Lord willing.  One more note and that is that I have a special SD that I have been putting onto my blogs each Christmas day and on that day that will be the only thing that I will post on both of my blogs.

            Spiritual meaning for my life today:  I understand that this battle that goes on between the forces of this world over the Messiah will continue to go on until He returns, and it is my desire to continue to study and put my studies where many people can read them to understand the truth.

My Steps of Faith for Today:  To continue to remember what the Lord has taught me and continues to teach me about humility.

Today’s quotation from “Love in Action” comes from Exodus 2:15; and 3:1-4.

Moses fled from the face of Pharaoh and dwelt in the land of Midian.
Now Moses was tending the flock of Jethro his father-in-law, the
priest of Midian.  And he led the flock to the back of the
desert, and came to Horeb, the mountain of God…
Then Moses said, “I will now turn aside…”So
when the Lord saw that he turned
aside…God called to him.

12/23/2019 9:57 AM