Dec 3, 2022
JOEL 1:
I
feel the need to comment about chapter 9 of Esther and how the Jews
“got rid” of their enemies. Remember that those Jews were not
Christians. (I know how silly that sounds, but it is actually a
common supposition among naive Christians.) The revelation of God’s
will did not come all at once, and the Jews did not have the
pleasure of knowing what Jesus said in the Sermon on the Mount or
other pertinent NT passages. They most certainly did NOT ‘get rid’
of their enemies, except in the short run. All the relatives of the
enemies slain raised up succeeding generations of people who hated
the Jews even more fiercely than the first enemies did. We
Christians must read Esther 9 remembering how the Jews had been
slaughtered and then taken away from their land by force put into
slavery in Babylonia. It is just amazing to me how the cycle of
‘getting rid of enemies’ has continued, right up to Hitler (the
modern Haman), and right up to the conflicts in the middle east
today. The cycle will stop and real peace will only happen when the
True King returns.
Joel is the second book of the minor prophets in the Old Testament. We read the first one— Hosea, about two months ago. From now until the end of the year, we will start every day with a reading in the minor prophets. Joel’s name means “Yahweh is God.” It is quite possible that Joel is one of the earliest of the prophets. He is called the ‘prophet of Pentecost’, since Peter quoted from Joel in his speech in Acts 2. The occasion of Joel’s message was a devastating plague of locusts which foreshadows the ‘Day of the Lord’— a time not for comfort for God’s people, but for punishment because of their sins.
ISAIAH 44a:
According to the NLT, in Is. 43:14 God
said,
43:14 NLT “For your sakes I will send an army
against Babylon,
forcing
the Babylonians to flee in those ships they are so proud
of.”
This is a very difficult verse to translate, and GNT’s translation can also be defended:
43:14 GNT Israel's holy God, the Lord who saves
you, says,
“To save you,
I will send an army against Babylon;
I will break down the city
gates,
and the shouts of
her people will turn into crying.
God said that the people of Israel had become tired of God and tired of bringing sacrifices. God will do something new:
43:25 NLT “I—yes, I alone—will blot out your
sins for my own sake
and
will never think of them again.
These frequently quoted words are from the beginning of the chapter:
43:1b NLT “Do not be afraid, for I have
ransomed you.
I
have called you by name; you are mine.
2
When you go through deep waters,
I
will be with you.
When
you go through rivers of difficulty,
you
will not drown.
When
you walk through the fire of oppression,
you
will not be burned up;
the
flames will not consume you.
2TIMOTHY 2:
What was the spiritual gift that Timothy
received when Paul placed his hands on him? Paul wanted Timothy to
fan that gift into flame. (2Tim. 1:6) Is there a clue to what the
gift was in the next verse?—
2Tim. 1:7 NLT “For God has not given us a spirit of fear and timidity, but of power, love, and self-discipline.”
Paul says,
2Tim. 1:12 “I know the one in whom I trust, and I am sure that he is able to guard what I have entrusted to him until the day of his return.”
What has Paul entrusted to the Lord? Is it a clue when Paul says,
2Tim. 1:14 “Through the power of the Holy Spirit who lives within us, carefully guard the precious truth that has been entrusted to you.”
GNT Translation
notes:
2Tim. 2:21 Those
who make themselves clean from all [the evil taught by false
teachers//those evil things], will be used for special purposes,
because they are dedicated and useful to their Master, ready to be
used for every good deed.
22
[Run away to escape from//Avoid] the passions of youth[.//, and]
Strive for righteousness, [full belief//faith], love, and peace,
together with those who with a pure heart call out to the Lord for
help.
26 And then they will come to their senses and
escape from the trap of the Devil, who [0//had] caught them and
made them obey his will.