Monthly Archives: August 2006

Is Leviticus depressing?

I just finished reading Leviticus. I have gotten behind on my reading, and I was in the mood to read today, so I read almost the entire book today (I had read the first few chapters yesterday). I talked with a friend later who made the comment that Leviticus is a depressing book…

I honestly hadn’t found it depressing. I suppose perhaps I should have. The entire book of Leviticus is about laying out the sacrifices necessary to atone for sins, laying out the law on what is considered sinful, what makes one unclean, etc., etc. The book lays out the blessings that will follow if the laws are kept, and the punishments that will follow if they are not.

It is depressing on the one hand, because it makes our imperfection very obvious — there are so many things that we do without even thinking most times that are sinful and displeasing to God. Everywhere we turn is a stumbling block or a temptation. Certain sins required stoning, and there was even a point where some of Aaron’s sons were struck down by God for worshiping in a strange way that was not prescribed.

On the other hand, it isn’t depressing — for every sin done in ignorance there was a restitution laid out. Yes, it was expensive, but there were even alternatives for those who were too poor to afford the normal offering. When God’s people were keeping his commandments the blessings they were to receive were astounding, and it seems that a people that blessed, that able to see miracles up close and personal, should rightly be expected to keep a higher standard.

But knowing we humans will always screw up and fall short, it would certainly be depressing if it had ended there. Thank God for His mercy, and for the Ultimate Sacrifice.

Leave a Comment

Filed under Bible Study

Lost Internet Connection

Okay, I got lost for a few days without my high-speed connection. I’ve only been reading sporadically lately becuase august is insanely busy and I’ve been having a hard time keeping up. I will probably be posting sporadically all month as well. I know I won’t get a chance to post at least until sunday night (after our family reunion).

Leave a Comment

Filed under Personal

Protected: Thoughts on Healing and Answered Prayers

This content is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

Enter your password to view comments.

Filed under Disability, Personal, Prayer Requests

the first Bible college

As I was reading through Exodus (chapters 14 through 26 or so) today, it caught my eye that Moses was on the mountain for 40 days and 40 nights when God gave him the commandments. All too often, we highlight the 10 commandments, then perhaps skip ahead to the scripture shortly after this to talk about the fact that the Israelites got restless and made themselves an idol and Moses broke the tablets…

But most of us never really realize that Moses was up on that mountain for 40 days and 40 nights getting instruction from God. God spent 40 days teaching Moses the rest of His law, showing him blueprints for the tabernacle and the ark and everything else.

This wasn’t the first time that God had spent an extended amount of time teaching Moses, either… Moses didn’t just see the burning bush then run off to tell Pharaoh to let God’s people go. Moses spent quite a long learning from God and preparing before God sent him back to Egypt.

I’m tempted to write a expound on this, but I can’t seem to focus my thoughts on the subject, so I’ll leave it here for now :)

Leave a Comment

Filed under Bible Study

obscure passage

Well I just read exodus, chapters 1 thru 14. I’ve heard this story so many times that not much impressed me this time around (I’m not doing an in-depth study, remember), except for the little aside in Exodus 4:24-26


And it came to pass by the way in the inn, that the LORD met him, and sought to kill him.
Then Zipporah took a sharp stone, and cut off the foreskin of her son, and cast it at his feet, and said, Surely a bloody husband art thou to me.
So he let him go: then she said, A bloody husband thou art, because of the circumcision.

Now, to understand the context… Moses was an Israelite and had been nursed by his own mother, but had been raised as Pharaoh’s nephew, so he most likely didn’t know much of the customs of his people. He had fled Egypt after killing a guard and had taken Zipporah as a wife. This passage comes a while after Moses had the conversation with God (from the burning bush), in which he had to ask what God’s name was, because he didn’t know what the Israelites called their God.

Moses would have been circumcised, because his mother didn’t put him in the bulrushes until he was well past the 8 day mark, but chances are he didn’t know much about it. This passage comes as Moses is taking his family back to Egypt to meet up with Aaron and start the job of getting Pharaoh to let His people go.

I don’t even recall having read this passage before, but the defining mark of an Israelite is the circumcision, and Moses’ son would not have been circumcised, as his father-in-law was a priest of Midian (quick edit, I originally thought Midian was a false god, but it turns out it was a place, and his father in law was actually a priest of God) and Moses probably didn’t know much about circumcision himself (quick edit, I’m assuming the priest fo Midian was not Hebrew, so would not have practiced circumcision).

This passage is rather obscure — it appears that the Lord was threatening to kill Moses until his wife circumcised his son, at which point he backed off and let him go. Perhaps it was necessary for his son to be circumcised before he went to work for the Lord, but a previous verse mentions him having “sons”, and this verse only mentions the one. Also, this passage seems to omit any dialog that happened that would have caused his wife to suddenly circumcise her son, so this whole passage remains a bit of a mystery to me…

Leave a Comment

Filed under Bible Study

yikes!

Talk about a lull… I had company this weekend and then got sick, and then got busy trying to get caught up, and I nearly forgot all about the blog and reading. I will start on Exodus first thing in the morning.

Leave a Comment

Filed under Bible Study