Episodes
Monday Dec 12, 2022
The Rest of the Story / Expecting a King
Monday Dec 12, 2022
Monday Dec 12, 2022
Jesus the Christ
Various passages December 11, 2022
- Introduction:
- At the time of Jesus birth, every Jew’s hope was wrapped up in the one they called the Messiah, the one who was coming to be a forever king who would reign forever over a forever kingdom.
- The New Testament translates that Hebrew word into Greek with the word “Christ” Read John 1:40-41
- So simply the Messiah or Christ is synonymous for the King of Israel.
- Read Matthew 2:1-4
- Show them that “King of the Jews” in v2 is equivalent to “Christ” in v4.
- They were waiting and hoping for this Messiah/ Christ/ King because they were under the rule of Rome and they longed for the day when the Christ would come to set them free from Rome and set up God’s kingdom here on earth.
- When we think of the rest of the story of Christmas, we need to understand that Jesus was not just born to die, but he came to present himself as the King over both Israel and the whole world.
- Their expectations and hopes were shaped by what they knew about him from the Old Testament – summarize
- He would be God himself (Isaiah 5:7; 9:6-7; 24:23; Micah 4:7; Zechariah 14:9,16-17) who would dwell in their midst as a victorious warrior (Zephaniah 3:15-17; Zechariah 2:7-10) judging the nations (Psalm 110:5-6; Isaiah 42:1; 63:1-6; Zechariah 14:1-3,12-15;) and saving Israel so that they dwell in safety forever (Jeremiah 23:5-6; Zechariah 14:11). One from the line of Judah (Genesis 49:10) and the line of David (2 Samuel 7:12-19; Psalm 132:11), who would be born in Bethlehem (Micah 5:2) and preceded by a messenger who would prepare the way before him (Isaiah 40:3-5; Malachi 3;1).
- He would enter into Jerusalem on a donkey (Zechariah 9:9) to be their king forever ( 2 Samuel 7:16; Daniel 7:14; Isaiah 9:6-7), over God’s kingdom forever (2 Samuel 7:16; Daniel 2: 44; 7:14 ), ruling over all the world (Psalm 2:4-12; Psalm 110:1-3; Isaiah 2:2-4; Daniel 7:14; Zechariah 9:9-10; 14:9-10) from Jerusalem (Isaiah 2:1-3; 24:23) after he enters through the east gate of the temple to set up his throne there (Ezekiel 43:1-7).
- He would be anointed by the Spirit of God to be the King (Isaiah 11:1-5), a priest (1 Samuel 2:35; psalm 110:4) and a prophet like Moses in whose mouth God himself would put his words (Deuteronomy 18:15:18). A prophet who would preach good news to the broken and imprisoned (Isaiah 61:1-2). He would be the good and faithful shepherd who will care for them (Isaiah 40:11; Ezekiel 34:11-16) and supernaturally heal their infirmities (Isaiah 35:4-6).
- Therefore, this is what would have been in the mind of a Jew at the coming of Christ based on what they knew from the Old Testament.
- At the time of Jesus birth, every Jew’s hope was wrapped up in the one they called the Messiah, the one who was coming to be a forever king who would reign forever over a forever kingdom.
- Now we need to know that …
- Jesus born to be King
- Before he was born Jesus was King– John tells us in John 12:41 that when Isaiah saw that great vision of the glory of God sitting on the throne in Isaiah 6, that is was Jesus whom he saw.
- At his birth, the angels announced that Jesus was a king, the Magi affirmed it and King Herod even tried to kill baby Jesus because he knew he was the King of the Jews!
- The whole book of Matthew was written to prove Jesus was the Messiah, the Christ, the King of Israel they were all waiting for.
- During Jesus’ life he claimed to be the Messiah/ Christ/ King
- In Luke 4 - when Jesus began his ministry, he read in the synagogue a passage of Scripture about the Messiah from Isaiah 61. Then he said this, “Today this Scripture is fulfilled in your hearing.” They understood clearly that Jesus was proclaiming himself to be the Messiah and the people were so angry they threw him out of the city and tried to kill him
- In John 4 – the Samaritan woman said to Jesus “I know that the Messiah is coming and when he comes, he will tell us all things.” Jesus said to her “I, who speak to you, am he.”
- In Matthew 16 when Jesus asked his disciples, “Who do you say that I am?” Peter answered, “You are the Christ, the Son of the living God.” Then Jesus told him that this was a supernatural revelation that the Father opened up to Peter!
- At the triumphal entry
- Matthew said that it was to fulfill the prophecy of Israel’s king coming to them
- The crowds recognized and affirmed him as King as they cried out, “Hosanna to the Son of David” and “Blessed is the King who comes in the name of the Lord.”
- In Matthew 26 - we saw that the high priest asked Jesus directly, “Are you the Christ, the Son of God?”
- Paraphrased for us that is, “Are you the coming king, are you God himself?”
- When Jesus said he was; the high priest accused him of blasphemy and condemned him to death.
- In John 18 Pilate asked Jesus directly, “Are you the King of the Jews?” After a little discussion about this, listen to how the conversation closed.
- Read John 18:37
- So here is the rest of the story of Christmas, Jesus was born to be a king and keeping things in context – that is the truth he came to bear witness of, the truth that he is a king!
- Finally, when the charges were put above the cross for the reason for his death it said – “the King of the Jews”
- The Pharisees wanted it to say, “He said he was” the King of the Jews
- But Pilate insisted it stay as the King of the Jews
- Jesus not only came to present himself as King and we are not only waiting for him to come back to be the king in the millennial kingdom but Jesus always was, is and will be King of all Kings and Lord of all Lords!
- So what does that mean for you and me this Christmas
- Application
- Simply a king is the one who has the right to rule, he has the right to direct, order, command. He has the highest rank and superior status over everyone and everything in his kingdom. He is preeminent and has first place over everyone and everything in his kingdom.
- It is what we sometimes refer to the lordship of Christ. While our response to him, as Savior is to trust him, our response to him, as Lord is to obey him.
- Luke 6:46
- When we think of a king, we think of King Charles! He is really distant from the details of people’s lives and his decisions make an impact but in a very general way.
- So when we think of Jesus as King we often think of him reigning from a distance over the world or for some even in the future when he returns.
- But Jesus is an up-close kind of king, who is reigning right now over with the intimate details of his people’s lives!
- Turn to Colossians 1. Read v16-18
- All things created through and for him!
- First place in everything!
- ESV – preeminent
- Web - before all others in importance, having paramount rank
- MSG – towering far above everything, everyone!
- Amplified explains this as he will stand supreme and be preeminent in everything!
- ESV – preeminent
- That sounds like a king to me, an up-close king over everyone and every detail of their lives!
- Implications for you and me this Christmas is that Jesus was not only born to be King over Israel and the whole world in the future but also born to be our King, our Lord who has first place over everything in our lives right now.
- So does Jesus have first place in everything in your life? Is he ruling and directing your life from the throne of your life, or are you sitting on that throne of your life, ruling and directing your own way?
- Simply a king is the one who has the right to rule, he has the right to direct, order, command. He has the highest rank and superior status over everyone and everything in his kingdom. He is preeminent and has first place over everyone and everything in his kingdom.
- Let me do a quick check up like your primary care pastor!
- Heart
- Affections – is Jesus truly the top love and delight of your heart or is some local sports team, political party, or reaching some achievement or position, or certain pleasures I have become addicted to, or certain things you want to get?
- Motives so as to do everything in life to the glory of God,
- Choices you make consistent with the choices Jesus would make if he were in your shoes – by the way he may not be in your shoes but he is in your heart,
- Head
- Thought life so as to focus upon that which is true and pure,
- Tongue
- Words you speak to others so as to build them up, encourage them and point them to Jesus,
- Assets
- Possessions – am I stewarding everything I have as one who is managing what God really owns or do I treat it as my own, doing whatever I want with it?
- Money – am I honoring God with the first fruits of my money by giving that to him and am I using all my money under his direction for his glory,
- Relationships –
- Am I connecting deeply with other believers to support one another in our walk with Jesus or am I being influenced primarily by those who do not know God so as to forget that bad company corrupts good morals, etc.
- Jesus/Christmas - does Jesus have first place this year in your Christmas plans, your family gatherings, your decorations, your gift giving, your music, your conversations with your kids and friends about Christmas?
- Let me ask you this –
- What is that still small voice of the Spirit speaking to your heart this morning?
- Even more importantly now – what specific thing or things are you going to do in response to what he is speaking to you about?
- Take a moment to consider those two questions
Tuesday Dec 06, 2022
Tuesday Nov 29, 2022
Christmas: The Rest of the Story
Tuesday Nov 29, 2022
Tuesday Nov 29, 2022
The Rest of the Story!
The Mystery of the Covenants and Christmas
November 27, 2022
- Introduction:
- When I was younger there was a radio commentator named Paul Harvey and he would do a daily radio segment called the rest of the story.
- Paul would tell in a very interesting way a little-known historical fact and at the end of the story connect it with a famous person or event
- His final words would be, “Now you know the rest of the story!”
- Well there are some very interesting and important facts that relate to Jesus’ birth that are often overlooked when it comes to Christmas.
- Most often, we hear from Christians this simple little phrase connected with Christmas that “Jesus was born to die!”
- True, Jesus was born to die for our sins,
- But there were other reasons for his birth, reasons that are often overlooked a Christmas and that is the rest of the story we want to talk about this Christmas.
- Most often, we hear from Christians this simple little phrase connected with Christmas that “Jesus was born to die!”
- The series this Christmas I am calling the rest of the story, the rest of the story about Christmas, the rest of the story about why Jesus was born and some of the other key reasons Jesus was born other than just to die for our sins.
- Today’s message closes up the series regarding people of promise and opens up Christmas, the rest of the story at the same time.
- The knowledge you gained about the covenant promises will help you better understand the rest of the story as to why Jesus was born!
- In the Davidic covenant, we learned that God was going to send from the line of David, one who would be king forever, reigning forever over a forever kingdom.
- This expected king was known as the Messiah, which translated into Greek is Christ.
- In Isaiah 9 God tells them that there will be a son born to whom God will give the throne of David and over his kingdom, he will reign from then on and forevermore.
- Read Isaiah 9:6-7
- This is where the stories of the Bible and the covenants and Christmas intersect with Jesus as the main character of all three!
- Right from the very start of the New Testament, they are showing that Jesus is the Messiah by proving through his genealogy that he is the son of David and the son of Abraham – the seed who was promised in both covenants to those two men, the one who would bless all the nations and reign as king forever.
- Read Matthew 1:1-2
- Thus, we see in 1:16 that Jesus birth is connected with him being the Messiah – the one who was promised to Israel to be their savior and king who would set up a forever kingdom!
- So the one question that I have heard the most in this series is “What about the church, what about us believers today, how do we fit in to all of these covenant promises?”
- I am encouraged by this question because that means you have followed us well as we have sought to be faithful to what the Bible teaches rather than forcing our times, lives, our applications and our theology on what the Old Testament clearly has taught.
- We have learned over the past few months that the covenant promises God made were with Abraham, David and Israel, not with the church, nor with humankind, or with us as individuals!
- So what about us – I going to show us today that one of the other reasons for Jesus’ birth was so that you and me, believers today, can participate in God’s covenant program.
- When I was younger there was a radio commentator named Paul Harvey and he would do a daily radio segment called the rest of the story.
- I am going to tell you my answer right up front and then show it to you in the Scripture …
- The church is heirs of and participates in the covenant promises through Jesus Christ!
- Let’s start by defining an heir
- Many in this room have experienced being an heir.
- An heir is someone who inherits something normally from their parents when they die.
- Normally they receive their possessions,
- But in the case of King Charles recently he not only received possessions but also he inherited rights, privileges and a position from Queen Elizabeth when she died
- As believers, we are closer to King Charles as we do not just get possessions yet to come in the future but also rights, privileges, positions and promises in our inheritance!
- So let’s look at this in the Scripture – turn to Ephesians 2:11
- He is speaking to Gentile believers here and recalling their former state to them. As I read I want you to note the five different things that characterized their condition when they were unbelieving Gentiles = non-Jews. Read 11-12.
- In verse 13, we see what has happened to them now that they are in Christ! Read v13.
- They are no longer are strangers to the covenants but now they have been brought near to the covenants by Christ.
- The five things mentioned in v12 that they were far from, four of those they are now near to, but in v14-15 he explained the fifth – being excluded from the commonwealth of Israel. Watch as I read v14-15
- This one new man he is talking about is the church. A new commonwealth if you will, a new community, one body in Christ – the body of Christ made up of Jews and Gentiles.
- It’s a completely new thing that God does, as Gentiles do not become Jews nor do Jews become Gentiles but they are all unified as a completely new community in Christ.
- Chapter 3 expands upon this and shows that they are not only together now as one but they are fully equal in status and privileges.
- Read 3:1-5 – what he is saying here is that during the time of the Old Testament God did not reveal to them this truth about the Gentiles that we just saw in chapter 2.
- Then he gets very specific –
- As I read, recognize that fellow simply means to be of the same group with equal status and rights!
- Read v6
- Simply Gentile and Jews through Jesus now share together equally as
- Heirs – someone who receives the inheritance – the possessions, rights and privileges and promises that are passed to them
- Members – that means Jews and Gentiles have equal status in the body of Christ
- Partaking in the promise of Jesus the Messiah! – they share in the promise that comes from the Messiah himself.
- Turn now to Galatians 3 where we will see essentially the same thing.
- Read v13-14 where we will see the death in verse 13 and the inheritance promises in v14
- Look down now at v16 and note to whom the Abrahamic promises were made . Read
- In v19, we see again that the promise was given to Jesus as well. Read
- Now go down to v28 where we will see once again the same truth that both Jews and Gentiles are all one new entity in Jesus Christ. Read v28.
- Now here is the big one in v29. Read
- Because we belong to Jesus – the seed, we are Abraham’s seed, heirs, recipients of the promise made to Abraham.
- Since I am in Christ, then I am in the seed to whom the promises were made thus as Romans 8:17 says I, as a Gentile, am not only a fellow heir with the Jews but with Christ! Read Romans 8:16-17
- “I will be their God” PowerPoint!
- Conclusion
- So like Paul Harvey, God was revealing a detail about his covenant promises that was little known and understood in the Old Testament times. But now with the coming of Jesus and his birth he came also to include the Gentiles in God’s program as full members along with the Jews.
- What a time to bring Thanksgiving, Christmas and the covenants all together by giving thanks to Jesus for bringing us near and making both Jews and Gentiles a brand new community who are co-heirs of the covenant promises and co-equal members of the body of Christ!
- We have a reason to celebrate Jesus!
- Let’s start by defining an heir
Tuesday Nov 22, 2022
Being Thankful / Thanksgiving 11.20.2022
Tuesday Nov 22, 2022
Tuesday Nov 22, 2022
Being Thankful
Various passages November 20, 2022
- Introduction:
- Psalm 127 says that children are a gift of the Lord; the fruit of the womb is a reward…. how blessed is the man whose quiver is full of them.
- We have a God who not only delights to bless us but who has joyfully bound himself to bless us and even pursues us to bless us!
- It all started with Abraham when God blessed Abraham, told him to be a blessing and then said that through his seed, Jesus the whole world would be blessed! He took that promise and turned it into a covenant just to assure Abraham of how serious God was about blessing.
- We learned just a few weeks ago in the new covenant that God has given some unbelievable life changing at the core of our being types of blessings to his children – things like forgiveness, the removal of the old heart and giving us a new heart and placing his Holy Spirit within us to enable us to live in his ways
- Because of Jesus, we learn in Ephesians 1 that we have already been blessed with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places. Ephesians 1:3
- Let’s go a step further the ultimate blessing is the blesser himself! God and his presence with us and even in us by his Spirit, is the greatest blessing! Sometimes we can get all caught up in the blessings and forget all about the blesser.
- Blessing is simply a benefit that has supernatural fingerprints on it!
- That means it is not just good things that happen or even beneficial things happen. But a blessing is a benefit that has God’s fingerprints on it! It originates from God and he gives it to you as a gift!
- Sometimes those blessings/benefits come in wrapping paper that looks more like trouble or a trial because our God is using everything in our life, the good, bad and ugly to work out his good purpose in our life!
- That means it is not just good things that happen or even beneficial things happen. But a blessing is a benefit that has God’s fingerprints on it! It originates from God and he gives it to you as a gift!
- Going back to Ephesians 1:3 we are called to bless God for all the blessing he has given us in Christ.
- Psalm 103:1-2 tells us the same thing. Turn and read
- To bless God is to speak well of him, to praise him and thank him for these blessings.
- So we are to bless God, praise and thank him for all the benefits and blessings that touch our lives both spiritual and daily practical benefits and blessing!
- We are to do it with all our hearts!
- So we are to bless God with all our hearts for all he has done for us.
- As we prepare for the Thanksgiving week, which really according to the Bible should be thanksgiving life, moment by moment, day by day in both the ups and downs of life
- Psalm 127 says that children are a gift of the Lord; the fruit of the womb is a reward…. how blessed is the man whose quiver is full of them.
- I want to talk to you for a moment about
- Thanking God for his blessing us!
- The word thanks simply means the acknowledgement and expressing appreciation for something you have received from someone else!
- It is the natural response that just flows out of our hearts when someone does something special for us. It’s like – wow! Thanks!
- If giving thanks to God is not a natural response that spontaneously flows from your heart on a regular basis; then
- You are not aware of the working of God in your life and the blessings that ultimately come from him James 1 says, “Every good thing given and every perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of Lights!” James 1:17
- The every good thing and every perfect gift includes both spiritual and daily practical blessing and benefits that come our way that have God’s fingerprints all over them.
- You are not aware of the working of God in your life and the blessings that ultimately come from him James 1 says, “Every good thing given and every perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of Lights!” James 1:17
- So if I am depending moment by moment upon Jesus for everything in my life then I should be constantly and naturally from the depths of my heart be thanking him for literally everything in my life
- Even the difficult things that come my way that God uses to grow me and build more of the life of Christ within me.
- This should be true all the way from forgiveness in Christ, the ability to live the way he calls us to, to every breathe we take every day!
- The word thanks simply means the acknowledgement and expressing appreciation for something you have received from someone else!
- So let’s
- Practice thanks for the blessing God has given us!
- I hope that we can prime the pump today for a weeklong attitude and practice of thanks that would prime the pump for a day-by-day, moment by moment lifelong thanking of God for his blessings upon us!
- Let’s start right now
- I want you to take a few minutes and think of the three biggest benefits/blessing over this last year that you are or should be thankful to god.
- Either spiritual or daily practical, or internal or external are fair game!
- Now I want you to take a few minutes to actually express to God your thanks for these benefits/blessing
- I want you to take a few minutes and think of the three biggest benefits/blessing over this last year that you are or should be thankful to god.
- Close by finding someone sitting close to you and share what one or two of the biggest things you are grateful to God for and how he has spoken to you today.
Tuesday Nov 15, 2022
Tuesday Nov 15, 2022
When Will All of These Covenant Promises Happen
Acts 3, Zechariah 10, Romans 11, Revelation 16-19
November 13, 2022
I. Introduction:
A. We have learned in this series that God has joyfully bound himself
by means of covenants to carry out promises he made to Abraham,
David, and Israel. We also learned that we are heirs of these
covenant promises, because we also are the seed of Abraham
because we belong to Jesus.
B. What are all these covenant promises? Remember when I first
introduced this series I said that all the prophecies have their roots
in the covenants so when we make sense of the covenant promises
it will make sense of the prophecies as well.
1. Like a puzzle it simply takes a picture and cuts it in as many
pieces as they desire- could be 1,000 pieces could be 16
pieces. While the picture is still the same it is much easier to
figure out when we see the whole picture in just 20 pieces.
a. 1,000 piece puzzle
b. 16 piece puzzle
C. So what are these key pieces? The covenant promises that God
joyfully bound himself to do!
1. Abrahamic – God promised Abraham
a. A land forever
b. Innumerable descendants
c. Blessings
d. In his seed all the nations will be blessed
e. God will be their god forever
2. Deuteronic – God promised Israel in spite of their
disobedience and discipline that he would grant them
a. Future repentance of Israel
b. Restoration to the land
c. Regathered from dispersion
d. Nation converted
e. Israel’s enemies will be judged
f. Nation receive full blessings in the land
3. Davidic –God promised David that from his line would be a
a. King forever
b. Kingdom forever
c. Reign forever
4. New covenant – God promised Israel that for his own name
sake he would
a. Spiritual blessing – forgiven, new heart, the Holy
Spirit.
b. Abiding material blessings in the land
B. That is the literal 16 piece puzzle of prophecy which drives the
hundreds of verses on prophecy that describe in detail what these
things will be like.
1. The Bible teaches us that there are two main pieces of prophecy
puzzle.
a. 1 Peter 1:10-11
b. The two main pieces are:
1. Suffering of Christ
2. The glories to follow!
• So my question today is simple “when are these glories that follow
Jesus’ sufferings
II. When will all the covenant promises take place?
A. We learned in the new covenant that certain aspects of the
covenant – the part of being in fellowship with God – forgiven and a
new heart indwelt by the Holy Spirit, we already participate in but many
of the sixteen pieces we just saw are yet to be fulfilled!
B. We also know from the New Testament and Jesus’ words
that when it comes to his kingdom we are in a position of already
not yet.
1. Already means we are enjoying the first fruits of the kingdom
of God right now in a spiritual sense, a spiritual kingdom where
Jesus rules over the hearts of the children of God from the right
hand of the throne of God in heaven
2. But the not yet means our hope is found in the future when the
fullness of a literal earthly kingdom where all the promises of
the covenants will be fulfilled. Then Jesus will rule over the
entire earth from his throne where he will sit on it in
Jerusalem.
a. We, the church, during that time will reign with Jesus
in that kingdom.
b. The way we live our lives today determines just what
role we will have in the reign
C. So some aspects of the covenant promises and the kingdom
of God we are already experiencing much like the first fruits as a
guarantee of the rest to come in the future.
1. According to Ephesians 1, that is why we have been given the
Spirit, a pledge, down payment, a guarantee of our future
redemption and inheritance!
D. Let’s see in the Bible when all these things will happen!
1. We already learned there are two key categories to prophecy –
Jesus’ suffering and the glories to follow. Now look at what we
learn in Acts 3:17-21. Where we see the same two categories
but with a bit more detail! Turn
a. Read
b. Tells us that in Jesus’ first coming he fulfilled the Old
Testament prophecies concerning his sufferings
c. When he returns he will fulfill the Old Testament prophecies
concerning the restoration of all things. restoration = kingdom =
glories
2. At Jesus’ return is when he fully sets up his kingdom.
a. Key verses that shows Christ’s kingdom is in the future
1. Matthew 19:28 = regeneration equals restoration of Acts
3.
2. Matthew 25:31- says at Jesus’ return is the time he will
sit on his glorious throne!
3. Revelation 3:21 – Jesus speaking to the church in
Laodicea said, “In the future you will sit down on my
throne with me just as he is seated now on the Father’s
throne, at his right hand.”
b. He makes a distinction here between the Father’s throne now and
Jesus’ own throne in the future! I love to trace the place of Jesus on the
throne.
1. In Old Testament – Father and Son on throne
2. While Jesus was on earth – the Father
3. After Jesus ascended into heaven – right hand of the
Father
4. During future millennium – Jesus on his throne in
Jerusalem
5. Eternity – Father and Son on the throne
together! Revelation 22:3
3. Romans 9- 11 indicates that God still has a future plan for
Israel. Romans 11:11-15 – stumble = trip, fall = cease;
a. V16-17 – Gentiles grafted in with Israel, not in place of them.
b. V24 Israel will be grafted back in- key word “will”
c. V25-28 - Israel will enter back into God’s covenant program after
the fullness of the Gentiles have come in,
1. Note the words mystery and until
2. We see first that this is the time when Jesus returns – the
deliverer will come
3. It is at the time Israel sins will be forgiven. - We know
that is the new covenant.
4. So the new covenant goes into effect for Israel when
Jesus returns. When the new covenant goes into effect,
as the catalyst covenant, the covenant that activates all
the other covenants so they go into effect at the return of
Jesus.
4. Zechariah 12:1-3 – nations gathered for war against
Jerusalem and Judah
a. Revelation gives us the heavenly view of this war. Revelation
16:13-14,16; 17:12-14; 19:17-21 -
1. Satan and his demons against the Lamb and his chosen
ones
b. Zechariah teaches us the earthly human view of the
war - all the nations against Judah and Jerusalem
c. Zechariah 12:8-11 – Jesus returns to defend Israel, and
Israel repents when they see Jesus and new covenant
begins. Read
d. Zechariah 13:1-2 – forgiveness
e. Zechariah 13:8-9 – 2/3 of Israel is judged and 1/3 is
saved all Israel, 1/3 left at that time saved – read Romans
11:26
f. Zechariah 14:9, 16-17 – the outcomes of this war
F. We see all of these things come together in the future in four major
passages (Jeremiah 32:36-42 & Jeremiah 33:7-9, 14-26; Ezekiel
36:16-36 & Ezekiel 37:21-28)– I want to read just one of
them. Ezekiel 37:21-28
F. While the terms or promises of the new covenant were made in the
Old Testament during the time of Ezekiel, the new covenant was
ratified by Jesus through the shedding of his blood at the cross, but
the complete enactment, fulfillment of the new covenant will take
place at the return of Christ.
1. How does that make sense – work out a deal to buy a house and
you agreed upon the terms last week. But the contract will not
be signed until the end of next week, that is when it is ratified,
but you will not take possession of the house until the start of
next year.
III. Application
A. So what do we do right now while we are waiting for Jesus’
return? Suggest just two
1. Many Christians are trying to turn the 16 piece puzzle into a
1000 piece puzzle by trying to mix current events and Bible
prophecies so we can figure out who is who and when it will
happen? But that in not what God’s word tells us to do!
2. Let me suggest two things: First listen to 1 Peter 1:13
a. Fix your hope completely on the grace and glory yet to come at
Jesus’ second coming.
b. Do you have your hope fixed there or in your political party or
the rebound of the stock market?
3. Secondly, listen to Jesus’ counsel on how to operate while
waiting for his return and not knowing the exact time.
a. Read Matthew 24:42-47
b. More important than figuring out the puzzle is doing the will of
God for our lives!
c. Do you know what God’s will is for your life –
1. It is different than mine because your gifts, passion,
calling are all different than mine
2. If not read this book and talk to someone mature
3. If you do, then do it
Wednesday Nov 09, 2022
God’s Faithful Love / People of Promise
Wednesday Nov 09, 2022
Wednesday Nov 09, 2022
God’s Tenacious Faithful Radical Love
November 6, 2022
- Introduction:
- We have completed going through each of the major covenants that we are going to cover in this series. so today and the next few weeks we just want to close up with a few details that help us better understand the context of these covenants.
- This morning I want us to see it is God’s tenacious, faithful, radical love that is the ultimate driver of these covenants.
- We have placed this series in the context of the big story of the Bible with the covenant promises being the major structure, the backbone, the major thoroughfares to the story
- It is possible that so far in the series you’ve seen these covenants more as a story line or a legal contract of how God would relate to Israel and ultimately us, rather than a love relationship
- While at times covenants were used to legally define the relationship between nations or a superior over an inferior, the covenants we studied were based on a love relationship between God and the people he has chosen to love.
- We have said all along that there are two key words throughout the Scripture that go hand and hand with the covenants, faithfulness and loving-kindness. They help us clearly see the motivation of God’s love behind these covenants.
- Loving-kindness – an intense deep desire and active pursuit to bless your covenant partner. It is both an attitude and an action
- Faithfulness – speaks of the unending nature of a covenant as long as each member of the covenant is alive. It gives confidence that one covenant partner will never leave or forsake the other covenant partner.
- Some other words that reveal God’s heart in the covenants are kindness, mercy, peace, steadfastness, loyalty and friendship.
- What I have to say today I believe can be a major encouragement to those who feel unloved or unlovable because of the neglect they’ve received from key relationships. And for those who have committed major grotesque sins against God and others resulting in feeling as if they’re not worthy of God or maybe even lost their salvation because of it. I think everyone in between those two should be encouraged as well!
- Today’s message gives us another window to see the truth in 2 Timothy 2:13
- When I see the way God deals with Israel in the midst of their unfaithfulness and disobedience by not quitting on them it gives me greater understanding and personal encouragement regarding the way God deals with me when I am unfaithful and disobedient to the Lord and that he will not quit on me.
- We will see the truth of 1 Corinthians 13:7 regarding love in action.
- So today I want to look at some things that helps us see …
- God’s tenacious faithful radical love!
- Is first seen in the very nature of a blood covenant.
- We have said repeatedly in this series that God joyfully bound himself to do these promises:
- If he just bound himself to do them, it can feel legal
- But when you recognize that he joyfully bound himself to do these promises; the aspect of love is at the heart of it
- The fact that God used covenants showed them how serious he was to be tenaciously faithful to them at all cost since:
- A covenant is kept until death and since God will never die, he will be faithful throughout eternity. They are everlasting covenants
- God would be worthy of death if he breaks his covenant promises with Abraham, Israel and David.
- In the Mosaic covenant, God says he will discipline Israel for their rebellion but that he would not break his covenant with them!
- Listen to what God says he will do if they repent! Read Leviticus 26:42-45
- Yes, God is going to spank them with discipline but he is not going to break off the relationship with them just as our parents spanked us but did not end their relationship with us!
- Thus, he remains tenaciously faithful to these promises and his people in spite of their disobedience!
- Turn to Deuteronomy 7. Read v 6-9
- V6 – becoming God’s chosen people was what the Abrahamic and Mosaic covenants were all about.
- Listen now to why God set his love on them and choose them.
- Read 7-9
- God set his love upon them because he loved them period.
- It was God’s unconditional, unprovoked, tenacious, faithful, radical love that moved God to make and keep his covenant promises.
- Turn to Micah 7 which talks about the return of the Lord and the time of new covenant goes into effect with the forgiveness of their sins!
- Read v18-20
- Unchanging love is the Hebrew word for loving-kindness so the translators are saying God’s loving-kindness equals his unchanging love.
- In verse 20 when he talks about God’s unchanging love/loving-kindness towards Abraham that he swore to him, they are basically equating or describing God’s covenants with his unchanging love/ loving-kindness
- In Mary’s magnificat in Luke 1 listen to what she says
- Read Luke 1:54-55
- She views the covenant promises and Jesus’ birth to fulfill them, as God’s mercy to his people.
- Finally, the existence of Israel in the land after nearly 1900 year of being out of it is unheard of regarding any other nation. This helps us see God’s tenacious faithful radical love for his people
- We have said repeatedly in this series that God joyfully bound himself to do these promises:
- Is first seen in the very nature of a blood covenant.
- As we prepare for
- Communion
- Listen to this amazing account of Israel’s history with God and how he loved and responded to them and loves and responds to his children today even though we may be unlovely or unfaithful
- Ezekiel 16 where God married (v8) the abandoned and unloved Judah and poured his amazing, tenacious, faithful, radical love upon them. Read 13-14
- But then they played the harlot on him in the boldest way! V15, 32-34, 46-47, 51 –
- Samaria in was the northern kingdom, Israel’s capital
- God said he would give them into the hands of their lovers who will tear them apart; just as he told them in the Mosaic covenant.
- Read v37-39.
- Yes, he will discipline them for disobedience
- But we also learn in this passage that in spite of their disobedience and discipline God will not break his relationship with them but he will restore and bless both Israel and Judah in light of their repentance, which we learned in both the Deuteronic and new covenants that God brings about. read v55, 61;
- He establishes his covenant with them when they repent and God forgives them.
- That is the new covenant in the future when Jesus returns to fulfill the covenant promises.
- Now I love this word at the start of v60, nevertheless.
- Nevertheless means in spite of this
- So even though their sins were much more and grosser than Israel and Sodom, both who were judged for their sins, and even though Judah was being disciplined for their sins.
- In spite of this listen to what God says he is going to do! Read v60-63
- My hope is that this sermon has become different windows for us to look in and see God’s amazing grace and mercy to Israel
- God’s amazing grace and mercy to you and me!
- God’s amazing, tenacious, faithful, radical love to all his children.
- As we take communion today let God’s love sink into your heart and respond as your heart moves you.
- Reflect
- Take communion
- But then they played the harlot on him in the boldest way! V15, 32-34, 46-47, 51 –
Tuesday Nov 01, 2022
Tuesday Oct 25, 2022
Thursday Oct 20, 2022
Has God Abandoned Israel?/ People of Promise
Thursday Oct 20, 2022
Thursday Oct 20, 2022
Deuteronic – Land Covenant
Deuteronomy 28, 29:1; Deuteronomy 30
October 16, 2022
I. Introduction:
A. We are continuing our series “people of promise” where we are
looking at the covenant promises that God has joyfully bound
himself to do!
1. We have seen that God promised to Abraham –a seed – a family
line of people, descendants who come from him, to give them a
land forever, to bless them in that land and God would be their
God. Along with a descendant of Abraham who would bless all
the nations!
a. This drives the story line of the Old Testament and the entire
Bible.
2. Last week we learned that God set up a covenant with Israel
through Moses, called the Mosaic covenant or the Law, where
he laid out the principle by which he was going to deal with
Israel, the descendants of Abraham.
a. Simply if you obey me, then I will bless you; if you disobey
me, then I will curse/disciple you and if you repent then I
will restore you to blessing.
b. We also learned that the ultimate discipline for their
disobedience and refusal to repent would be to be expelled
from the land and scattered among the nations
3. When we weave these two covenants together, it helps us make
sense of the twists and turns in the Old Testament story.
B. But here is the dilemma
1. As a nation, Israel not only disobeyed God they even rejected
the Messiah himself resulting in 70 AD when they were
expelled from the land again and scattered throughout all the
nations of the world.
2. While some Jews have returned to the land, and some Jews have
even come to Christ as their messiah and savior - as a nation
they still are in disobedience to God and rejecting Jesus as the
Messiah.
3. Is God done with Israel as a nation? Has the church replaced
Israel in God’s program?
C. To answer that we must look at the most overlooked verse in the
entire covenant program of God and the most overlooked covenant
itself.
1. Because people miss this verse they do not even know that this
covenant in Deuteronomy even exists!
D. So we will see here in Deuteronomy that God proactively makes
another covenant with Israel – the Deuteronic covenant, to
guarantee that he will bring about their repentance, regenerate
them, give them a heart to obey him thus restore/regather Israel to
the promised land and bless them there!
• Let’s take a look at this in
II. The Scripture
A. Many people say that the book of Deuteronomy is a restating of the
Mosaic covenant. I am going to tell you today that is not the case
and there is a completely different covenant in this book.
1. It is true that the standards (civil, moral and ceremonial laws)
and the principle of the Mosaic covenant (if you obey me, then I
will bless you and if you disobey me, then I will discipline you
and if you repent then I will restore you to blessing) are restated
in Deuteronomy.
2. But while all of that is restated, he attached another covenant to
it near the end of the book.
B. Turn to Deuteronomy 5
1. The context is that Israel is standing right across the Jordan in
the wilderness of Moab ready to enter into the promise land for
the first time. This is 40 years after the covenant God made
with Israel through Moses at Mount Sinai. Moses is reviewing
their history and the Mosaic law
2. In chapter 5, Moses is reviewing for them how they responded
to the Mosaic covenant when God first gave it to them on Sinai,
which is also called Horeb!
a. Read 5:27-28 – God commends them for affirming that they
will do what God asks them to do.
b. But in v29, he states their core problem with obeying what
God says so they can be blessed. Read
3. It is a heart problem – they do not have the kind of heart that
would fear and obey God!
C. So in chapters
1. 6-26 he reviews the laws from the Mosaic covenant
2. Chapter 27 he charges them to obey these laws and reminds
them cursed is the one who does not.
3. Chapter 28 he reviews with them the basic principle of dealing
with them that God set up through Moses, which we learned
about last week in Leviticus 26.
a. If you obey me, then I will bless you; if you disobey me,
then I will curse/disciple you. If you repent then I will
restore you to blessing
D. Now in chapter 29 we see the verse that is so often overlooked thus
overlooking this very important and foundational covenant.
1. Read v1 – did you catch it? This is another covenant God is
making with them in Moab besides the one he already made
with them at Horeb/ Mount Sinai 40 years earlier.
2. Again, while the standards and principle of the Mosaic covenant
are the same; now another covenant is being made with them.
3. Now look down at verse 10 where he is speaking to the people
who are there on that day. Read v10-13.
a. Note in verse 12 that the Lord is making this covenant with a
new generation of Israel!
4. V 13 so that he may establish with them the covenant promises
he swore to Abraham. Read
a. Note a key distinction here – he made the covenant with
Abraham in the past and he wants to establish it with them.
b. Establish means to confirm, to bring it about, put it into
effect the promises God made with Abraham with his
descendants.
E. So the tension exists – yes God has established obedience as the
principle by which he would bring about these promises to
Israel. But we also saw that Israel does not have the heart to do
them.
F. But just as God made an unconditional covenant with Abraham
where he bound himself to bring about those covenant promises;
now he is going to make an unconditional covenant with Israel!
1. In spite of their disobedience that was so severe that they were
scattered among the nations;
a. He will bring them back to the very land that their fathers –
Abraham, Isaac and Jacob lived on.
b. He will give them a heart that obeys him.
c. He will abundantly bless them in the land.
2. Thus, he will bring about the covenant promises he made with
Abraham regarding his descendants Israel!
G. This is absolutely crucial because God is making this covenant with
Israel.
1. So God does not disqualify or replace Israel from receiving the
promises made with Abraham because of their disobedience or
rejection of the Messiah
2. But rather God is guaranteeing to them that he is going to fulfill
his covenant promises in spite of their persistent and severe
disobedience!
a. Read Ezekiel 36:20-24
• Now we are ready to see the promises God made with Israel in the
III. Deuteronic covenant
A. Turn now to chapter 30
1. As we look at this today, we will see the Promised Land
mentioned numerous times. Just remember this covenant has to
do with the regathering to the land, not the rights to the land,
which was made with Abraham.
2. Also, note that the only condition in this whole section is a time
condition – not if but when – so it is tied to a time element.
3. Finally, we will see that this covenant is going to take place at a
time when the nation of Israel is plucked off the land for
disobedience and scattered among the nations.
B. Detail out the promises:
1. Future repentance of Israel. Deuteronomy 30:1-2 not if but
when!
a. Repentance = recall, return, restore
2. Regathered from captivity and from all over the world
Deuteronomy 30:3-4. Not Assyria nor Babylon but all the
nations of the world.
3. Restoration to the land given to their fathers. Deuteronomy
30:5
4. Israel regenerated by a work of God to get a new heart that will
love and obey the Lord... Deuteronomy 30:6, 8
5. Israel’s enemies will be judged. Deuteronomy. 30:7
6. Israel will prosper abundantly. Deuteronomy 30:5, 9
C. So the big question now is when will the covenanted promises
made to Abraham which will be established with his descendants,
his seed be carried out. Remember not if but when.
1. Chart
2. Turn to Zechariah 12:9
a. Context – he is talking about the time when the entire world
will come against Israel and Jerusalem. We also read about
this in Revelation 16-19.
b. Read v9-14 - note two things:
1. God pouring out his grace precedes and is the cause of
their repentance
2. We see a national repentance here and not just an
individual. At the return of Jesus Israel will repent.
D. So God brings about the necessary repentance in Israel thus then
God will pour out all his covenant promises/blessing upon them at
that time.
E. Romans 11 tells us why this has not happened yet.
1. It is so the fullness of the Gentiles can come into the experience
of his promised blessings then all Israel will be saved.
2. Read Romans 11;25-27
3. Turn and read 2 Peter 3:9
III. Application
F. If you are here today and you do not know Jesus Christ repent
1. Recall what Jesus says about you and about himself
a. That our sin separates us from God and that Jesus’ death and
resurrection deals with our sin problem and gives us life!
2. Turn to him by calling upon him in faith to save you!
G. If you are a believer in Jesus Christ
1. And you have walked away from Jesus and living just like the
rest of the world I would encourage you today to repent as well.
a. Recall what God says in his Word about who you are and
how to live as a child of God
b. Return to him by admitting/confessing you are not living as
you ought
c. Call upon him to give you the grace to live like a believer in
Jesus
2. Maybe today you need God to bring about in your heart the
willingness and ability to give up some area of your life that is
not pleasing to him or even an area that has taken control of you
and you could not give it up with all the trying, programing and
steps in the world.
a. Read Philippians 2:12-13
3. Open your heart to Jesus this morning and invite him to work
into you both the willingness and the ability to live fully for him
Tuesday Oct 11, 2022
The Power of Promise / People of Promise
Tuesday Oct 11, 2022
Tuesday Oct 11, 2022
Mosaic Covenant – The Way God Dealt with Israel
Leviticus 26
October 9, 2022
I. Introduction:
A. Today’s message along with last week’s on the Abrahamic
covenant is enough to give you the core knowledge you need to
understand the basic skeleton of the Old Testament.
1. The four main promises of the covenant God made with
Abraham give shape to the story/stories of the historical section
of the Old Testament and become the foundation for the New
Testament!
a. Review - Four promises are. Land, seed, blessing, and God
would be their God.
2. Today we are going to talk about the Mosaic covenant that God
made with Israel. This covenant establishes the principle upon
which God dealt with Israel, his chosen people, Abraham’s
seed.
a. The Mosaic covenant not only helps us further understand
the history of the Old Testament and why things happened
the way they did, but it also is the foundational structure and
driving message of the prophetic section of the Old
Testament!
B. One more important distinction between these two covenants turn
in your Bibles to Galatians 3:15
1. Read Galatians 3:15-19
2. Simply stated, the law was temporary until Jesus came while the
Abrahamic covenant was an everlasting covenant and nothing
about the law changes or supersedes the Abrahamic covenant.
3. It was put in place alongside the Abrahamic covenant only until
Jesus came!
• Let me give you a couple of …
II. Introductory thoughts on the Mosaic law/ covenant
A. The law is found primarily from Exodus 19 through the end of
Leviticus, and is reviewed in the book of Deuteronomy.
B. These laws covered three primary areas:
1. Civil laws – how to live with one another
2. Moral laws – how to walk with a holy God
3. Ceremonial laws – how to worship a holy God
C. We need to understand right up front that the Mosaic covenant was
not like the Abrahamic covenant where God made unconditional
promises that he would keep independent of Abraham’s
behavior. In the Mosaic covenant God imposed obligations upon
Israel and made conditions that were dependent upon their
behavior.
1. The heart of the principle
a. If you obey me then I will bless you
b. If you disobey me then I will curse you
c. If you repent then I will return you to blessing.
2. Repeat that with me.
• Let’s look closer at this foundational principle! Turn to
III. Leviticus 26.
A. After detailing these civil, moral and ceremonial laws from Exodus
19 to Leviticus 26:2 we come to a great summary that is so key to
understanding the Old Testament.
1. If you obey me, then I will bless you. Read Leviticus 26:3-4.
a. Then he details some of those blessings: land will be fruitful,
peace in the land, eliminate harmful beasts, no war, you will
defeat your enemies, God will dwell among them and he will
be their God.
b. Read v9
2. But if you disobey me, then I will curse you. Read v14-17.
a. Now we need to note God’s grace even in his discipline of
Israel for their disobedience as he starts with lesser
disciplines then increases them as their refusal to repent
continues – good parenting principle. Read v18, 21, 23-24,
27-28.
b. This continues until we get to the ultimate and most harsh
discipline, the expelling of Israel out of their own land,
which God promised to them and scattering them among the
nations. Read 32-33.
c. Now we understand why Israel and Judah were both
deported out of their land and went into captivity in Assyria
and Babylon. A big part of the Old Testament story!
1. God had to be faithful to the covenant that he made with
his people when they disobeyed.
2. This does not make me think of a God as angry and mean
but rather a God that is faithful to “all” of his word, a
God who can be trusted that when he says something he
will do it, whether it is a good thing or a bad thing.
3. Now the third part of this principle shows up in verse 40. If you
repent, then I will return you to blessing.
a. Read v40-46
b. Simply, this principle says when Israel is obeying God then
they will experience the land, the blessing, and God being
their God as promised in the Abrahamic covenant
• So now we understand a lot more of twists involved in the story of
God carrying out his promises with Abraham in the historical books
of the Old Testament. But what about
IV. The prophets
A. Listen to the ministry of the prophets Read 2 Kings 17:13-15, 23
B. The basic structure of all the prophets, both their ministry and their
books in the Old Testament was to
1. Point out their sin of how they were breaking the Mosaic
covenant
2. Call them to repentance
3. Remind them of the promised blessings they would experience
if they repented!
4. If you read the prophets with that in mind, they will be much
easier to understand!
C. The book of Isaiah is a perfect example of this
1. The first 40 chapters Isaiah are pointing out how they have
broken the Mosaic covenant and calling them to repent
2. The last 26 chapters reminds them of the promised blessing they
will receive when they do repent!
D. We see these basic principles worked out in the history of Israel.
1. Cycle in judges (disobeyed - discipline - repentance -
deliverance)
2. Solomon broke the covenant, which resulted in the divided
kingdom. Northern kingdom (Israel) and the southern kingdom
(Judah) 1Kings 11:1-13
3. The northern kingdom (Israel) broke the covenant by setting up
idol worship. 1 Kings 12:25-33
4. The northern kingdom (Israel) falls and is taken into captivity
just as the covenant says. 2 Kings 17, 18:11-12
5. Jeremiah warns Judah of judgement for breaking the covenant
and calls for repentance. Jeremiah 25:3-11
6. The southern kingdom (Judah) falls and is taken into captivity
just as the covenant says. 2 Kings 24:17-25, 12
7. After recognizing God’s timetable, Daniel turns to God in
repentance based on the covenant.
8. Ezra 1 and the return to their land out of captivity is the direct
result of Daniel 9 and the repentance he did in behalf of the
nation.
9. Rebuilding of the walls was based on the repentance and
blessing of the covenant. As acknowledged by Nehemiah in his
prayer. Nehemiah 1:4-11
• As you saw today, the story of God fulfilling his covenant promises
to Abraham is interwoven with the principle by which God
covenanted with Israel in the Mosaic covenant. what I want to close
with are …
V. Applications for us today
A. There are two important truths we must keep in mind today.
1. As we learned in Galatians 3, earlier the Mosaic covenant was
only on the table for Israel until the seed, the Christ, the
Messiah, Jesus came!
2. We also learn in 1Timothy 1:8-9 that the law is still useful today
if we use it lawfully.
a. Read 1 Timothy 1:8-9
b. Paul also said in Romans 3:20 that through the law comes
the knowledge of sin something he reaffirms in detail in
Romans 7.
c. So the good and lawful use of the law is to point out sin to
the unbeliever so they will turn to Jesus to be delivered from
the penalty and power of sin!
B. But my bigger concern today is that many Christians still live as if
we are under the principle of the law – if you obey then God will
bless you and if you disobey then God will curse you.
1. Maybe it is not the Mosaic Law, but they turn the New
Testament commands into laws and apply the principle of
obedience resulting in blessing and disobedience resulting in a
curse.
2. Here is the difference between the two:
a. In the Old Testament God supernaturally intervened with
blessings /good things when they obeyed and supernaturally
intervened with curses/trouble when they disobeyed.
b. In New Testament times obedience brings its own blessings
because you are living in conformity with God‘s wisdom
how to live and disobedience brings its own trouble because
sin has personal and relational poison in its DNA.
1. It’s not a matter of God doing it to you but a matter of
you doing it to yourself by ignoring what is best for you!
3. When it comes to blessings
a. In the Old Testament blessings were conditional upon their
obedience
b. In the New Testament, we have already been blessed with
every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places in Christ.
c. So today we obey for two reasons:
1. Not in order to get blessed but out of love because we are
already blessed
2. We also obey because God’s way is the wisest and best
way to live.
4. When it comes to difficulties or trouble in our lives in the New
Testament there are two reasons for it.
a. To ignore God’s wisdom is to do it to your own hurt! We
drink the poison laced Kool-Aid called sin
b. But sometimes even our trouble and difficulties are designed
by God to bring us ultimately to the place of blessing and
good in our life.
1. Often the blessing has to do with God working in us a
greater and deeper Christ like character or to restrain us
from going a direction we should not go.
c. So when it comes to trouble in our lives we need to discern if
it is sin, thus trouble of our own making or God giving us a
gift of blessing dressed in wrapping paper of trouble!
5. So this is how most of us stumble in this area – we look at our
outward circumstances or even the inward disposition of our
hearts and if they are good, we say it is because God is blessing
us and if they are bad, we say it is because God is not blessing
us.
a. They have more money, nicer and more things, better
circumstances, better health, better looks, better results,
bigger ministry, more opportunities etc., so we interpret that
as God is blessing them more than he is blessing me.
b. As a matter of fact, we wonder if God is blessing us at all –
maybe he is not pleased with me, maybe I am doing
something wrong!
C. We cannot measure God’s goodness and blessing to us by our
circumstances or feeling but by the cross of Christ, all the spiritual
blessings we already have in Christ Jesus, and God’s call and
purposes for my life as different from someone else’s!
1. We need to measure our lives by our gratitude to God for Jesus
and the blessings that come with him and our faith in his good
purposes he is working in our lives!