Friday, September 18, 2020

 "In the beginning, God..."

What beautiful words to start the new year...in the beginning. These words appear at the start of the Old Testament, in the psalms, at the start of the book of John and the book of Hebrews. Beginnings permeate God's Word. He is the God of new beginnings. Praise God, He doesn't look at our past, but He meets us where we are...right now...at this very moment. Every moment for us is a new beginning with Him!

As we contemplate "the beginning", we must know that there was quite a bit of activity with God before "the beginning".  See the book Diving into Deep Things of God by Phil and Patti Moore. Available paperback and kindle on Amazon. 
https://www.amazon.com/dp/1719913390

In the commentary reading for today, this basic question was posed, "What would life be like without the SUN?"  The obvious answer would be, "There would be nothing - no life at all."

Spiritually speaking, "What would life be like without the SON?  Same obvious answer, "There would be nothing - no life at all (no eternal life).

Another question concerning the biblical account of creation - how long is a day?  The length of each day can be explained with this.  However long God took to do the creating, that's how long the day was. The Hebrew word for day is "yom" and has several definitions, such as "a division of time" or a "period of time".  Time itself (as we know it) was not a factor until the end of Day 4 when God created the lights in the heavens, including the sun, moon, and stars to regulate seasons and times.  And they are there to regulate the feast and festival days that He will establish with Moses later on. 

On Day 1 light is created. Yet God did not create the sun until Day 4.  What was the light that God created on Day 1?  Well, consider the following.

Proverbs 8:22
"The LORD brought me forth as the first of his works, before his deeds of old; I was appointed from eternity, from the beginning, before the world began.   

Continue reading in Proverbs to know that wisdom was the first of His works. Wisdom is the knowledge that there is good and there is evil.  Wisdom (Jesus) was the craftsman at God's side doing the creating.   Jesus, the light of the world, represents good and Satan, the prince of darkness, represnts evil.  The light created on Day 1 is neither light waves nor photons.  It is simply the knowledge that there is a difference between good and evil.  One of the definitions for the Hebrew word light is enlightenment.  

John 8:12
When Jesus spoke again to the people, he said, "I am the light of the world. Whoever follows me will never walk in darkness, but will have the light of life."

We are walking in wisdom if we have Jesus, the light of the world, the light of life.

Revelation 21:23
The city does not need the sun or the moon to shine on it, for the glory of God gives it light, and the Lamb is its lamp.

Jesus was the light at the beginning and He will be the light at the end.

On Day 2, God created an expanse between the waters above and the waters below. Here are a couple of other versions that may give us a better understanding of this concept. 

Genesis 1:6-7
God said, "I command a dome to separate the water above it from the water below it." And that's what happened. God made the dome CEV


Genesis 1:6-7
Then God said, "Let there be a canopy between bodies of water, separating bodies of water from bodies of water!"  So God made a canopy that separated the water beneath the canopy from the water above it. And that is what happened:
ISV

The dome and the canopy are the same thing.  There is only water, no land yet. Until the land came up out of the water. 

On Day 3 the dry ground appeared and then God said, "Let the land produce vegetation..."

God prepared the land, (earth) the dry ground, and "seeded" it.  The land was ready to bring forth the vegetation from the dormant seeds when God created the sun on the fourth day. The seeds were not germinated until the fourth day.  More information on this can be found in Genesis 2.  Notice in Gen. 2:8, God planted a garden in Eden.  He planted the full vegetation in the garden.  In the rest of the world the seeds were there ready to come forth.

On Day 4 God created the lights (light waves and photons) in the expanse for several reasons; to give light and to regulate seasons and times and to warm the earth in preparation for the germination of the seeds.

On Day 5 God created animals in the water and in the air.  He made everything according to its "kind". There were no "cross-over" species.  And He told them to increase in number.

On Day 6 He created the animals that lived on land.  There is a distinction made among the land creatures.  He created livestock, creatures that move along the ground, and wild animals.  Some of these are for domestication and can be tamed, others are wild and not tamed. And of course He created man.  The commentator in the Chronological Bible made this statement, "Both Adam and Eve share in the uniqueness of having received a divine inbreathing of  God's Spirit with sets them apart from all other living creatures".

At the end of the first six days of creation, these words are written, "And there was evening and morning...". These words were not written at the end of the seventh day. God had completely finished creating. We are living the seventh day. These words are the reason that the Jewish day begins at sundown. Evening comes first.

On Day 7 Scripture says that God "rested".  Our English definition of that word has little to do with the original Hebrew meaning.  In our way of thinking, God worked for six days and then sat down on His throne amid fluffy clouds, breathed a sigh of relief and maybe took a little snooze.  The Hebrew word for "rest" means " to accomplish, cease, consume, determine, end, finish, be complete, be accomplished, be ended, be at an end, be finished, be spent".  In other words, God was done with creating! And then He stopped. 

The earth was watered by streams, (or fog, dew, condensation) not rain.  God planted full vegetation in the garden. The definition of the word garden is "an enclosed place a fenced in area".  

The definition of marriage is given to us in Genesis 2:24 For this reason a man will leave his father and mother and be united to his wife, and they will become one flesh. 

God made provisions in this admonition for all future generations.  Jesus, Himself, quoted this verse in Matthew 19:3-6.

Can we even begin to imagine how wonderful life was for Adam and Eve?  In the garden, work consisted of just reaching out and picking food from the trees.  There was no real work involved. They were given every green plant for food. No mention is made of eating meat. They were allowed to eat from any tree (including the tree of life) except the tree of the knowledge of good and evil.   As long as they ate of the tree of life, they had the potential to live forever. The Garden of Eden was a perfect place to live, until Satan (inhabiting the serpent) entered the picture.

When Satan tempted Eve to sin, he used doubt as his tool, "Did God really say...". He planted a seed of doubt. Which is exactly what he still does with each of us. He tries to place a bit of doubt in the mind of believers. Eve responded with an additional phrase, something that God did not say.  Eve related to the serpent that God said they were not to even touch the tree.  God only said that they should not eat from the tree and He told this to Adam, not Eve.  God only spoke to Adam. 

There is a very important word in Genesis 3:8. Then the man and his wife heard the sound of the Lord God as he was walking in the garden in the cool of the day..."

The English word "cool" is the Hebrew word "rûach" and is the same word used in Genesis 1:2 for the Spirit of God.  So Adam and Eve were enjoying a spiritual fellowship with God and that had to be refreshing for them as we would think of refreshment in the cool of a late evening summer day.  

One of the consequences of Eve's disobedience was that her pains in childbearing would increase.  Increase from what??? This implies that there were babies born to Adam and Eve before the fall.  Scripture is silent about how long they lived in the garden or how many children were born before they were tempted by Satan.

Once Adam and Eve sinned against God and realized their sin, they tried to cover themselves with fig leaves.  This of course didn't really cover the sin.  So God sacrificed the first animals as a covering for their nakedness and a covering for their sins.  And so with the killing of the animal the death process began. Adam and Eve for the first time witnessed death. This sacrifice is a foreshadowing of the sacrifices to follow, sacrifices that had to be done for the atonement for sin, a covering of the sin temporarily.  Sacrifices had to be done repeatedly in order for sins to be "covered".  It is the first shed blood of the innocent to cover the sin of the guilty.  This foreshadowed Jesus' sacrifice on the cross. Aren't we glad that Jesus became our permanent sacrifice, our atonement for sins forever!

Hebrews 10:22
let us draw near to God with a sincere heart in full assurance of faith, having our hearts sprinkled to cleanse us from a guilty conscience and having our bodies washed with pure water.

Jesus didn't just cover our sins, but He cleansed us from a guilty conscience. Let us draw near to Him as He desires to draw near to us.

What a great way for any beginning!


Thursday, September 17, 2020

 If you have enjoyed reading the daily notes on this blog, we invite you to read our newest book, Parables to Ponder.


Available in paperback and Kindle.


https://www.amazon.com/Parables-Ponder-Phil-Patti-Moore-ebook/dp/B073TNMMMF/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1501284739&sr=1-1&keywords=parables+to+ponder

Friday, July 28, 2017

If you have enjoyed reading the daily notes on this blog, we invite you to read our newest book, Parables to Ponder.

Available in paperback and Kindle.


https://www.amazon.com/Parables-Ponder-Phil-Patti-Moore-ebook/dp/B073TNMMMF/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1501284739&sr=1-1&keywords=parables+to+ponder

Wednesday, March 16, 2016

Finally Joseph's bones rest in Shechem, modern day Nablus. Interesting link to a 2008 article concerning Joseph's tomb.http://www.worldnetdaily.com/index.php?fa=PAGE.view&pageId=56238

According to other historical writings the bones of all Jacob's sons were brought back and buried in Israel, in the area of their inheritances.  Something to ponder...at Jesus' crucifixion.
Matthew 27:50-53
And crying again with a loud voice, Jesus released His spirit. And, behold! The veil of the temple was torn in two from top to bottom. And the earth quaked, and the rocks were sheared, and the tombs were opened, and many bodies of the saints who had fallen asleep arose, and coming out of the tomb after His resurrection they went into the holy city and appeared to many. 

Are the holy ones, raised at Jesus' crucifixion the patriarchs of the past - Abraham, Sarah, Isaac,
Rebekah, Jacob's wives and sons?  

Judges 1:1
After the death of Joshua, the Israelites asked the Lord, "Who will be the first to go up and fight for us against the Canaanites?"
God had already told them earlier that He (God) would do their fighting for them (Joshua 23).  A better question for them to ask would have been, "Who will be the first to go into the land?"

The Lord answered with, "Judah is to go; I have given the land into their hands."  And yet, the men of Judah asked their brothers the Simeonites to go and fight with them. Then Judah and Simeon join forces and fight for Jerusalem, a city in Benjamin's territory. They were unsuccessful in part because they were influenced with pagan culture in the land. Not so sure that Jerusalem was supposed to be burned.  And where was the tribe of Benjamin?  Why wasn't his tribe helping take Jerusalem?

The people were again disobedient in part and suffered the consequence of being unable to drive out some of the inhabitants of the land.

The commentary in the Chronological Bible, "The danger of incomplete conquest is the lingering presence of pagan influence." Not much difference today.  The Israelites were fascinated with the pagan culture around them.  Again, not much difference for us today.  Many people are fascinated with paganism, witchcraft, and the occult (at times even in the Christian church portrayed as innocent events).

Judah and Simeon join forces and attack the Canaanites and Perizzites. A rather unique thing happens with a ruler named Adoni-Bezek.
Judges 1:6
And Adoni-bezek fled. And they ran after him and caught him, and cut off his thumbs and his big toes.
This makes a person rather handicapped. He can no longer run or wield a sword or bow.

Interesting connection with the angel of the Lord in Judges 2:1-5 and the angel of the Lord in Exodus 23:20-22. Seems as if we are seeing a pattern here.

Another pattern emerges as well. The people were told to break down the altars of the pagan gods. They did not and the gods became a snare. The people wept when the Angel of the Lord revealed this to them and they offered sacrifices to the Lord. The question remains. Were they only giving "lip-service"?

Tuesday, March 15, 2016

In Joshua's farewell address, he reminds the people then, and us Believers today, of the following:
1. Love the Lord your God
2. Walk in all His ways
3. Obey His commands
4. Hold fast to Him
5. Serve Him with all your heart and soul

How are we as Believers doing on these five things? Loving the Lord is easy, holding fast to Him is easy, serving Him is another matter, and walking in His ways and obeying His commands... well that's another matter entirely.

Oops, guess we forgot about Deuteronomy 30:1.
"The command that I am giving you today is not too difficult or beyond your reach.

However, in order to walk in His ways and obey His commands, we must know what they are. We know that by studying His word and listening to the Holy Spirit speak.

Joshua also reminds the people...
Joshua 23:6
And be very courageous to keep and to do all that is written in the book of the Law of Moses, so that you do not turn aside from it to the right or to the left;

To keep those five things listed above, we must be courageous. We must be different. There will always be something there on the left or the right for us to turn to. That takes many forms today.

God offers again to push the current inhabitants out of the land if only His people would obey His laws and commandments.  He had already prepared the land for them.  All they had to do was to go in and claim it as their own.  It seems as if God is, in effect saying that even though they have been disobedient in the past, He is offering them a "do-over", a chance to obey Him and start over. But do they take Him up on His offer?  They said they would and even set up a monument of stone as a witness.

The Eastern tribes (those who wanted to settle on the eastern side of the Jordan River - the half-tribe of Manasseh, Reuben, and Gad) built an altar by the Jordan.  This angered all the other tribes because they thought the altar was for sacrificing.  They knew that sacrificing was to be done at the tabernacle by the Levites. In truth, the Eastern tribes wanted the altar there as a reminder, a memorial and not for sacrificing.

What great words from Joshua, “But as for me and my household, we will serve the Lord.”Joshua was the decision maker for his family. He was the spiritual leader of his house. Again, how are we as Believers doing with that one? We must choose every day, even several times a day, whether or not we will serve the Lord. When we are tempted to turn to the right or to the left, we must choose to serve Him. He's given us this promise.
Isaiah 30:21
Whether you turn to the right or to the left, your ears will hear a voice behind you, saying, "This is the way; walk in it."

“He is a holy God; he is a jealous God.”God tells us early on that He views our relationship with Him as a   marriage. He doesn’t want any other “god” taking our attention. We (Phil and Patti) find great comfort in that!

Monday, March 14, 2016

Chapters 18-21 of the book of Joshua are filled with specifications for the land allotments of the tribes.  Remember, this land allotment was significantly smaller than the land promised to Abraham.  The land would have been much larger had Abraham only walked the land promised to him.  That land would have extended from Turkey to the Persian Gulf following the Euphrates River, from the Persian Gulf to the Nile River, up the Mediterranean coast and back to Turkey.  Because of their disobedience, the land promised to them was never claimed and what they did have eventually was taken away from them and the people were taken into captivity.  There are consequences to disobedience then and now.

Only the tribe of Dan is listed as having difficulty taking possession of their territory. The tribe of Dan took property that was not given to them by God. They will pay for this sin later. None of the other tribes seemed to have had any problems.

Six cities are named as Cities of Refuge. This appears to be a foreshadowing of the places of safety that will be provided during the last days and also a foreshadowing of the protection from the wrath of God that only Jesus can provide. Notice that for each of Aaron's descendants is a City of Refuge.

Going back to the tribe of Dan and their difficulty in taking their God-given land, could it be that they did not trust the Lord's provisions for them? We have this promise listed , “Not one of the Lord’s good promises to the house of Israel failed; every one was fulfilled.”

God kept His promises then. He keeps His promises now. Here are a few of our favorite promises. John 14:15-18, John 14:1-3, I Corinthians 12, Isaiah 35:10, I John 5:14-15, John 14:27.

Claiming His promises is all about trust! We trust Him, we obey Him, He keeps His promises.  Pretty simple!

Sunday, March 13, 2016

The commentary in the Chronological Bible for today's reading contains this sentence, "For some unknown reason, the tribes of Judah and Ephraim, and the remaining half-tribe of Manasseh, are given a preferential portion of the land..."  The reason IS known.  Look at pages 92-94 (Genesis 48-49).  Jacob blessed these tribes more than the others.  We can track these blessings all the way back to Abraham and the promises God made to him (Genesis 15:17-21 - page 30).  The blessings continue with Isaac (Genesis 25:29-34 -page 53 and Genesis 27:26-29 - page 56).  And the blessings continue until today and on into our future.  All the blessings will be fulfilled in the Millennium.

Shortly after a general conquest of the land of Canaan, we are told of the land allotment by tribes, all the tribes that is except the tribe of Levi.
Joshua 13:33
But unto the tribe of Levi Moses gave no inheritance; the LORD, the God of Israel, is their inheritance, as He spoke unto them.

The tribe of Levi was given no land allotment. The Lord was their inheritance. Compare that to our lives as believers today.
1Peter 2:9
But you are a chosen generation, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people for possession, so that you might speak of the praises of Him who has called you out of darkness into His marvelous light;

What a delightful inheritance (pun intended) we have with Him! We are His royal priesthood, a holy nation, His possession. And what are we to do for Him? Praise Him. He has called us out of darkness of sin and into a life of light.

Caleb was 40 years old when he went in to explore the land of Canaan. He, along with Joshua were the only two of the original multitude (fighting age and above) who were able to go into the land of promise. Why? Because Joshua and Caleb trusted in God’s promises. When Caleb settled in the land (Hebron) he was 85 years old, strong and vigorous.  He personally inherited the land he actually walked when he went into the land as one of the spies.  It is in Hebron where Abraham, Sarah, Isaac, Rebekah, Leah, and Jacob are buried and a hotly contested site between Muslims and Jews. A Muslim mosque now covers the site.  We must wonder why this is so special to the Muslims since Hagar and Ishmael are not buried there but Sarah and Isaac are - important for Jews but not for Muslims.

In the division of the land Zelophehad of the tribe of Manasseh had no sons and so the daughters petitioned Joshua and the leaders for the right to have an inheritance. This will be extremely significant later. In the culture and customs of that day, the women basically counted for nothing, except for having children. Yet if we read the gospels, Jesus certainly elevated women. He had many women followers. No need for us women to be concerned with Women's Lib!

The tribes of Ephraim and Manasseh are numerous and they petition Joshua for more land.  Joshua makes this prophetic statement.
Joshua 18:17b-18a
"You are numerous and very powerful.  You will have not only one allotment but the forested hill country as well.  Clear it and its farthest limits will be yours..." 
The tribes were given the farthest limits.  This included more than just the land of Israel!  More details when we reach the reading of the book of Jeremiah.