Tuesday, June 29, 2021

Deuteronomy

Deuteronomy is a call to obedience and covenant renewal to a new generation of Israelites. Moses, at the age of 120, had passed the mantle of leadership over to Joshua and with little time left before his death, he gathered the people and gave a final discourse of the Law. Hence, the book is also known as 'the second giving (repetition) of the Law'.

There are three parts to Moses' message: he first reminded the people what God had done for them in the past (1-4); next, he emphasized what God expected of them as His chosen people (5-26); and lastly, he assured the people what God would do for them in the future (27-34). So while Leviticus is mainly written to the priests, Deuteronomy is addressed directly to the people as a whole.

Structured in the form of a treatise, Moses challenged the new generation to make the right choice to obtain God's blessing and life, and not repeat the mistakes of the old generation that resulted in God's cursing and death. God has and will remain faithful to His part of the covenant, but it is up to the people to fulfill their part of the deal; and Moses spared no effort in his discourse to repeatedly plead with them to 'hear', 'do', 'keep' and 'observe' God's Law out of love for Him.

30:19-20
I call heaven and earth as witnesses today against you, that I have set before you life and death, blessing and cursing: therefore choose life, that both you and your descendants may live: that you may love the LORD your God, and that you may obey His voice, and that you may cling to Him: for He is your life.

Jesus Christ often quoted from this book, including the verses He used against Satan during His temptation. And no wonder —while Genesis to Numbers portray God's ways, Deuteronomy reveals His love.


OUTLINE OF DEUTERONOMY

1. Past: What God Has Done (1:1-4:43)
a. Journeys (1:1-2:23)
Horeb | Kadesh-Barnea | Moab
b. Conquests (2:24-3:20)
Sihon | Og | Leadership Transition
c. Warnings (4:1-43)
2. Present: What God Expects (4:44-26:19)
a. Prologue to God's Law (4:44-49)
b. Exposition on the Decalogue (5:1-11:32)
Reiteration of the Law | Response of the People
Reminders:   Teach the Law | Trust God
Turn away from Idolatry | Love God
c. Exposition on Sundry Laws (12:1-26:19)
Ceremonial Laws
Sanctuary | Idolatry | Food | Tithes | Debts
Slaves | Firstborn | Feasts
Civil Laws
Judges | Kings | Priests and Prophets
City of Refuge Witnesses | Warfare
Social Laws
Justice | Family | Community
Harmony | Obligations
3. Future: What God Will Do (27:1-34:12)
a. Ratification of the Covenant (27:1-28:68)
Altar | Admonition | Proclamation
Blessings and Curses
b. Entering into the Covenant (29:1-30:20)
Parties involved
Warnings of Dispersion and Restoration
Reiteration to Obey
c. Transition of Leadership (31:1-34:12)
Moses Blessed the Tribes | Viewed the Land
Death of Moses | Joshua succeeded Moses
Eulogy 
 

Monday, June 21, 2021

Numbers

It took God only one night to bring Israel out of Egypt, but forty years to get Egypt out of Israel. Numbers recorded the tragic consequences of the unbelief and stiff-necked rebellion of an old generation (1-12) as they faded into oblivion during the thirty-eight years of wandering in the desert (13-20), only to be replaced by a new generation (21-36) that was eager to trust God and ready to depend on Him to lead them into the promised land.

In this painful account, we see how God disciplined His erring people, yet remained faithful to His covenant promises despite their stubborn and self-willed ways. In the same way, God deals with our old man, the Adamic nature, by putting it to death because flesh and blood can never inherit His kingdom (1 Corinthians 15:50). The old nature with its sin and rebellion must die in order that the new nature can live to its fullest in total obedience to the will of God.

Murmurings, complaints, ingratitude, lust, insolence, defiance, rebellion—these are the trademarks of the old generation and that of our old nature. Burning, epidemic, leprosy, pestilence, judgment and death—these are the consequences that befell the old generation and all who refuse to let God deal with their old self with its sinful nature.

The failures of the first generation were a grim reminder and also a stern warning to the next generation not to follow the footsteps of their parents, but to implicitly trust God before they could enter to possess the land. There are no shortcuts to obtaining God's blessings—obedience does come with a price, but the price of disobedience is even higher.

1 Corinthians 10:11
Now all these things happened to them as examples, and they were written for our admonition, especially for those living in the last days.


OUTLINE OF NUMBERS

1. The Old Generation (1:1-12:16)
a. The First Census (1:1-4:49)
Numbering the People
Arrangement of Tribes around the Tabernacle
Numbering the Priests
Assignment of Levites to duties of the Tabernacle
b. Sanctification of the People (5:1-10:10)
Separation | Nazarite Vow | Worship
Divine Guidance
c. Fumbles and Failures (10:11-12:16)
People Complained | Moses Complained
God's Provision for Moses and the People
Moses's Authority Challenged | Miriam Punished
2. The Transition (13:1-20:29)
a. The Kadesh-Barnea Incidence (13:1-14:45)
12 Spies | Evil Report | Disobedience
Defiance | Judgment | Defeat
b. The Korah-Israel Incidences (15:1-19:22)
Offerings Reviewed | Korah Rebelled
Israel Rebelled | Priesthood Reaffirmed
c. Incidences en-route to Moab (20:1-29)
Miriam's Death | Moses and Aaron Disciplined
Edom Denied Passage | Aaron's Death
3. The New Generation (21:1-36:13)
a. Victories and Failures (21:1-25:18)
Canaanites | Serpents | Ammonites | Bashan
Moabites | Balak and Balaam
b. The Second Census (26:1-27:23)
Land Allotment | Joshua Appointed
c. Regulations of Offerings and Vows (28:1-30:16)
Daily | Weekly | Monthly | Yearly
d. Conquest and Division (31:1-36:13)
Midianites Destroyed | Land East of Jordan
Journeys Recounted | Land West of Jordan
 

Tuesday, June 15, 2021

Leviticus

At the end of the Exodus narratives, we saw how God's glory filled the Tabernacle at its completion and dedication, and how Moses was unable to enter as a result of God's holy presence. Leviticus shows how sinners can approach a holy God through the ministration of the priesthood and sacrifices, detailing the way to obtain forgiveness through purification, and how to walk in continual fellowship with Him. With all the necessary provisions in place, Moses was thus able to enter into the Tent of Assembly and commune with God (Numbers 1:1).

Five types of ritual sacrifices are mentioned in the beginning to facilitate fellowship with God via the burnt, meal and peace offerings, and to restore the fellowship by means of the sin and trespass offerings when offence arises. Only when the people and the priests are sanctified can they keep the yearly feasts of the LORD—seven in total: the Passover, Unleavened Bread, Firstfruits, Pentecost, Trumpets, the Day of Atonement, and Tabernacles. These feasts foreshadowed God's divine plan in the history of mankind, of which the first four Spring feasts were fulfilled in the crucifixion, death, burial and resurrection of Jesus Christ and the coming of the Holy Spirit.

Leviticus is really about the sanctification of God's redeemed people in a living relationship with Him. Both ritual and moral purity are emphasized, the former being a reminder to Israel that God's holiness affects every area of life, while the latter deals with the practical outworking of a sanctified people in terms of social responsibilities, such as charity, integrity and justice. The imageries and instructions contained in this book paint a sharp contrast between the impurity of man that leads to death and the purity of God that leads to life.

As a chosen people, we are called to a life of holiness and purity:

20:7-8 Sanctify yourselves therefore and be ye holy: for I am the LORD your God…who sanctifies you.


OUTLINE OF LEVITICUS

1. Worshipping God (1:1-10:20)
a. Five Types of Offering (1:1-6:7)
Burnt | Meal | Peace | Sin | Trespass
b. Ministration Laws (6:8-7:38)
Details | Summary
c. Regulations for Priests (8:1-10:20)
Consecration of the Priesthood
Cleansing | Attiring | Anointing | Consecrating
Functioning of the Priesthood
Priests | People | God
Failures of the Priesthood
Nadab and Abihu | Eleazar and Ithamar
2. Walking with God (11:1-27:34)
a. Personal Purity (11:1-15:33)
Food | Childbirth | Leprosy | Bodily Discharge
b. Focus: Day of Atonement (16:1-17:16)
Regulations for the High Priest
Sacrificial Goat | Scapegoat
Atonement for Priests | Tabernacle | People
Observation of the Day
Sanctity of the Blood
c. Corporate Purity (18:1-22:33)
People—Prohibitions | Practices | Penalties
Priests—Practices | Prohibitions | Purposes
d. Feasts of the LORD (23:1-44)
Passover | Unleavened Bread | Firstfruits
Pentecost | Trumpets | Day of Atonement
Tabernacles
e. Sundry Laws (24:1-27:34)
Sabbath Year | Jubilee
Obedience | Disobedience
Consecration of Persons | Animals | Properties
Exclusions from Consecration
Firstborn Animals | Devoted Items | Tithes


Wednesday, June 9, 2021

Exodus

The Exodus story picks up where the Genesis account left off—following the death of Joseph and the rise of a new Pharaoh who oppressed the Hebrew people which, after four hundred years, had multiplied into a nation that rivaled or outnumbered the Egyptians.

The first half of the book covers the birth of Moses, his calling and commission by God to be His spokesman to Pharaoh and deliverer of His people, the signs and wonders he performed through the ten plagues that decimated Egypt, and the crossing of the Red Sea that wiped out its entire army. The remaining half deals with the legislative aspects of a nation in transition as God laid down His requirements for His redeemed people through the ten commandments, the blueprint for worship via the building of the tabernacle, the institution of the priesthood and the sacrificial system.

Exodus is foundational to an understanding of the redemptive history of the nation of Israel as God's covenant people, and the Mosaic law with its intricate ceremonies and customs formed an important framework to a right relationship between a holy God and a chosen people. Prominent events like the Passover, the crossing of the Red Sea, the ratification of the covenant at Mount Sinai, God's provision of Manna and life-giving water in the desert, the legislation of worship, civil rights and duties, etc. are rich in spiritual meanings and found fulfillments in the Person of Jesus Christ.

Make no mistake about it: Exodus teaches that obedience to God is the hallmark of a redeemed people:

19:5-6
Now therefore, if you will indeed obey My voice and keep My covenant, then you shall be a peculiar treasure to Me above all people… a kingdom of priests and a holy nation.


OUTLINE OF EXODUS
1. From Slavery to Salvation (1:1-15:21)
a. The Need for Deliverance (1:1-22)
Israel Multiplies | Israel Moans
b. The Shaping of the Deliverer (2:1-4:31)
Birth of Moses | Rise and Fall of Moses
Call and Commission of Moses
c. The Acts of Deliverance (5:1-15:21)
Confrontations with Pharaoh | Ten Plagues
The Passover | The Exodus | The Pursuit
The Red Sea Crossing
2. From Salvation to Sinai (15:22-18:27)
a. Physical Provisions (15:22-17:7)
Bitter-Sweet | Manna | Water from Rock
b. Physical Protection (17:8-16)
War with Amalek | Jehovah-Nissi
c. Physical Delegation (18:1-27)
Jethro's Visit | Jethro's Council
3. From Sinai to Sanctification (19:1-40:38)
a. Establishing the Covenant (19:1-31:18)
Preparing the People to receive the Law
The Ten Commandments
Laws on Social Conducts and Regulations
Instructions for the Tabernacle
Institution of the Priesthood
Implementation of the Covenant
b. Responding to the Covenant (32:1-40:38)
The Golden Calf Incident
Moses' Intercession
The People Repented | Covenant is Renewed
Gifts Presented
The Tabernacle and Priestly Attires
Built | Inspected | Dedicated
Filled with God's Glory