Sunday, May 8, 2022

Deborah, Ruth & Hannah (Judges 4; Ruth; 1 Samuel 1) QUESTIONS

Deborah the Prophetess

READ Judges 4:2-7

Who was Deborah?

 

READ Judges 4:8-9

Why did Barak the warrior tell Deborah that he would only go to war if she was going?

 

READ Judges 4:13-15

Who received the revelation from the Lord regarding the battle plan?

Is priesthood ordination a prerequisite for possessing the gift of prophesy?

 

 

Ruth

Naomi, her husband and two sons leave Bethlehem for Moab to escape a famine.  Her sons marry local Moabite girls, Orpah and Ruth.  In time, her husband and both of her sons die, leaving the three widows to fend for themselves.  Naomi heard that the famine was over in Bethlehem and left for home, 30 miles away. 

If we lived in Bethlehem, we might be curious about Ruths ancestors, and our ears would prick up to the fact that Ruth was a Moabite. Immediately, wed think of the scandalous past of her people, and it would cast her story in a different light. Wed recall that when the weary Israelites were journeying to the Promised Land, the Moabites lured the Israelites into sexual immorality and idol worship (Numbers 25:1). From that time on, the Moabites were associated with sexual immorality.  To us in Israel, it was even more disgusting because it was how they worshipped their “gods.” Because of that sin, God declared that Moabites were barred from being a part of the assembly of Israel in Deuteronomy 23:3. Was their sin ever forgivable, wed wonder?  Then wed think back to the origins of the Moabites in Genesis 19:30-38. After Sodom and Gomorrah were destroyed, we read the not-so-nice story of how Lots daughters got their father drunk so that they could become pregnant by him, since their husbands had refused to leave the city and had both died. One of Lots daughters gave birth to a son named Moab, and he became the father of the Moabite people. So, that is why the Moabites are so immoral? If we believe that people are defined by their genes and ancestry, this might make complete sense to us...

READ Ruth 1:8-9, 14-17

Why did Orpah go back to Moab while Ruth begged Naomi to allow her to go to Bethlehem?

 

READ Ruth 1:18-21

How would you describe Naomi’s faith vs. Ruth’s?

 

To enable the poor to care for themselves, landowners were forbidden from harvesting the corners of their fields or to pick up what fell to the ground.  “Gleaners” would follow behind the hired servants picking up what grain they could - it was hard work but enabled people to survive without begging.

READ Ruth 2:3,7-12

What did Boaz see in Ruth, a Moabite foreigner?

 

READ Ruth 3:11

What is the significance of this statement, given Ruth is a Moabite?

 

Boaz ends up marrying Ruth; their grandson is Jesse and great-grandson is King David.  The scriptures repeatedly stress Ruth’s Moabite origins.  The Law expressly forbad Israelite men from marrying “foreign” women. 

What can we learn from the Story of Ruth?

 

 

Hannah

A man, Elkanah, had two wives, Hannah who was barren, and Peninnah, who had children.  Peninnah taunted Hannah, and while her husband loved Hannah very much, he did not fully understand her desire for a child. 

READ 1 Samuel 1:10-11

What is Hannah’s response to her sorrow?

 

Hannah is blessed to conceive and has a son, who she names Samuel.  When he is weaned (aged 2 or 3), Hannah takes baby Samuel to the Temple to live the Nazarite vow she had made on his behalf. 

READ Judges 13:4-5

What is a Nazarite?

Think of Hannah, Samson’s mother and Elizabeth the mother of John the Baptist; what is the relationship between these three barren women and the Nazarite vow they made on behalf of their sons?

Next week we will continue the story of Hannah and her son Samuel.

 

 

Veil Workers

READ John 2:18-21 and 1 Corinthians 3:16-17

What are the functions of a temple?

How is the body a temple?

 

READ Ether 2:6

What separates us from God?

 

The temple is a place of veil work.  Individuals pass from one place to another, from one level of light to another or from one level of understanding to another, by going through veils or separating boundaries.   

How does this veil-work idea apply to Christ’s body being a temple?

How does veil-work apply to the idea that our mortal bodies are temples?

How does the mantra “holiness to the Lord, the House of the Lord” apply to our bodies as temples?

Who does (or stewards) the work of “raising up” a mortal temple?

Thursday, May 5, 2022

The Reign of the Judges (Judges 2,4,6-7,13-16)

The Judges’ Cycle of Deliverance

 

READ Judges 2:1-3

Why did the Lord leave the inhabitants of Canaan as “thorns” and their gods as “snares” to Israel?

The Lord didn’t - Israel did this when they either refused or were unable, through their lack of faith, to destroy the people of the Canaan.

The people of Canaan as “thorns” is meant to “prick” the people into remembrance of the Lord (when they are afflicted by the local kings).

The gods of Canaan are “snares” only if Israel falls into the trap - there is always an enticement to draw the prey into the snare but if the prey ignores the enticement, they will be safe from the snare.

 

READ Judges 2:10-12

How did a generation whose parents and grandparents “served the Lord all the days of Joshua” and had “seen all the great works of the Lord, that He did for Israel”, know not the Lord?

Perhaps they had not been taught by their righteous parents (doubtful).

Seeing all of the great works of the Lord is not the same as knowing Him for yourself.  Perhaps the parents and grandparents served the Lord because of what they had seen, not what they had personally experienced (they had not come unto Christ to be sealed up to eternal life themselves); and because they had not experienced Jehovah for themselves, the “great things” had ceased with Moses and Joshua, and could no longer be personally observed by their children or effectively taught by them with power to later generations.

But even if they did KNOW Christ for themselves, every one of us stands at the veil individually - we can be taught, served and enticed to come unto Christ – even by those that know Him personally (like Moses or Joseph Smith), but if we refuse the invitation, we will “know not the Lord”; at a minimum, that is what is happening here.

 

READ Judges 3:7-11

What is the cycle of Judges laid out here?

Sin (v7).

Consequences (v8).

Repentance (v9).

Means of deliverance (v9-10).

Deliverance (v10).

Peace (v11).

 

This same pattern is repeated generation after generation, six times - through the following deliverers: Orhniel, Ehud, Deborah, Gideon, Jephthah, and Samson, although this last story is a bit different and we will walk through it in more detail.  Let’s talk about the various “deliverers” in each of these stories.

 

READ Judges 3:9,15; Judges 4:4; Judges 6:15; Judges 11:1-2; Judges 13:3-5

What common theme do you see across these deliverers of Israel?

None of them are the obvious choices to be “Deliverers of Israel” - they are all socially unacceptable to ancient Israel in some way: a younger brother, a left-handed person, a woman, a poor man, the illegitimate son of a prostitute, a miraculous birth and a Nazarite (one who is separated and different from the rest of society).

They all parallel the “Great Deliverer” in some way.

 

The story of Jephthah, the illegitimate son of a harlot, is interesting…

READ Judges 11:5-11

What do you think the Elders of Gilead were planning to do to Jephthah after the battle was won?

Cast him out again.

He is only “their head” for the “fight against the children of Ammon”.

It is only after he tells them his terms: that he be their legitimate leader - that in their desperation, they agree to be led by one of such lowly station and heritage.

How do these various deliverers parallel the Great Deliverer?

“Can any good thing come out of Nazareth?” (John 1:46).

“He hath no form nor comeliness; and when we shall see him there is no beauty that we should desire him” (Mosiah 14:2).

“He is despised and rejected of men; a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief; and we hid as it were our faces from him; he was despised and we esteemed him not” (Mosiah 14:3).

 

We have a natural tendency to read what we think we know of the Lord back into the story, but those who encountered Him in His mortal ministry didn’t see Him for who He really is… READ Luke 4:22-24

READ the Story of Axis the Horse

“There was a Celtic tribe whose horses were known for their strength and speed.  They used to allow their horses to run wild when not being used by the tribe for work or battle.  One horse, born in the wild, grew to be bigger and stronger than all the rest.  He ran at the head of any herd.  He was challenged many times and fought without defeat.  When he raced, he always won.  When he was finally brought into the town, he was scared from battle.  The people named him Axis, in part for his warlike appearance.  He was never truly tamed.  He was hard for any man to ride, and many feared to approach him. Only the most brave attempted it. Only a few were able to ride him. Years after the horse was dead, the princes of the tribe decided to build a monument to Axis.  They commissioned the best sculptor in the land to make a statue of the greatest of horses.  The sculptor looked far and wide for someone who had actually seen Axis alive and he finally found an old man who had seen the horse when he was a small boy.  The old man described Axis as larger than any horse in the herd, with scars like a warhorse, and strength that showed through.  The sculptor began to create the statue in line with this description but when the princes of the tribe saw it, they hated it - “it is too large; it is disproportionate; it is disfigured; it is rearing up and warlike; it is not beautiful and no one will want to look at it.  You must remake it - Axis is known throughout the world and his statue must add to his fame.”  So the sculptor discarded the statue and began again.  This time he found the most beautiful horse he could find as a model.  Although it was a mare, it fit the description the princes wanted.  He created a stallion version of the horse, which all that saw it said was a most amazing work of art!  “It is without blemish!  It is a thing of beauty!  It is perfect!” the princes exclaimed.  The old man had died by the time the new statue was finished but when the horse was unveiled to the public, they marveled, “I thrill at the sight of him!  Look how gentle he must have been!  He must have been named Axis because of his perfect proportions, equal in all dimensions!  He must have been the most attractive horse ever born.  All of the other horses must have followed him in wonder!”  The people of the tribe began to breed their horses in line with the statue.  They became known across the world for their exquisitely beautiful animals.  They won every horse show and the animals were kept carefully in stalls and fed the best hay and oats.  They never ran wild or fought or raced or worked, as they were too valuable and not fit for these purposes, anyway.   And behind an old barn stands a neglected and forgotten statue, whose rearing, scarred form had come to represent everything that was unwanted in a horse.”

Why do we want a hero or Deliverer who is different from real life?

We worship at the altar of telestial appearance and subjective success – and we’ve constructed heroes in stories and movies that fit our socially acceptable narratives; we really do not like it when real life differs from our preconceived notions of how things “should be”.

We have no idea what traits a true Deliverer (hero) will have, anyway.

We do not think about the price a true Deliverer must pay in a mortal world and what that would do to that person over a lifetime (Christ’s price was larger than a 24 hour sacrifice in the Garden and on the cross).

 

 

Gideon’s Signs


READ Judges 6:14-17 and 6:36-40

Who does Gideon lack faith in, such that he is asking the Lord for signs?

Himself - he is doubting his own ability to exercise faith or doubting his own ability as poor (from Manasseh), and the least in his father’s house.

What is Gideon seeking for with the fleece?

Confirmation.

Strengthening.

Assurance beyond what he has already received.

What is the difference between sign-seeking and “fleece-seeking”?

Sign seeking = “I’m not going to do it unless you give me a sign”.

Fleece seeking = “I want to do what you are asking, I intend to do it, I am going to do it, but I need some encouragement and help to increase my faith sufficiently to be able to be an effective tool”.

“Fleece-seeking” comes from the same place of hope mingled with fear that the exchange between the man with the sick son and Christ in Mark 9:22-24 came from.  “IF thou canst believe, all things are possible to him that believeth.”  To which the man replies, “Lord, I believe… help thou mine unbelief!”

 

Gideon was commissioned to defeat the Midianites.  All of them that volunteered to fight were Israelites, and all were seeking to follow the Lord. Yet only a few finished the course.

 

READ Judges 7:2-3

If this story is an analogy for Coming unto Christ, why do two thirds of the “active” Israelites turn back?

They forsake following the Lord because of the cares and temptations of this life.

They “fear” to do good, when tempted to do otherwise.

It is a cautionary tale that while having a desire to come unto Christ is necessary, it is not sufficient.

 

READ Judges 7:4-7

What symbolism exists in the fact that the Lord had Gideon cull his army twice?

All are Israelites or “called” but only a few finish the course – only a few are self-elect enough to be “chosen”.

Three degrees of glory.

What is significant about the way that the 300-person Army of Gideon drank the water?

They remained vigilant as they drank - watching for their enemy - valiant in their purpose of coming unto Christ.

They drank while balanced on their knees, using their (left) hand as a cup to drink the life sustaining water (their right hand balanced on the ground, able to grab their swords if needed).

The image of the cupped hand speaks to begging for and being ready to receive God’s word which will greatly enlarge the souls of those who receive it meekly; it also speaks to being hidden in the hand – suggesting God’s power to protect us when we have faith in Him; it reminds us of how Christ beckons for us – he entreats, implores and invites us to come unto Him – He does not compel with a clenched fist or harsh gesture which belies an authoritarian status.

What does the group that put their faces into the water teach us about the journey back to Christ?

They knelt before their fleshly appetites and momentarily forgot the danger AND purpose of their mission.

They did not remain vigilant; they forgot why they were there.

They turned their eyes from Christ to the true desires of their hearts.

What does the fact that less than one percent of the Israelite men who set out to follow the Lord’s command succeeded in their desire?

The Way is strait and narrow and few there are that find it.

This applies to the “called”, not just the general public; we should be much more humble about our chances.  But having said that, it is wholly up to us – which is good news.

 

 

Samson as a Messianic Figure


READ Judges 13:1-3

What is the significance of this miracle birth?

The pattern: a woman cannot hear a child because of infirmity, age, infertility or lack of marriage; a promise is made by God that a son will be sent; the son is born in miraculous circumstances; the son plays a role which alters the course of the Lord’s people.

The boy is a type of Christ, who also fit the pattern.

Others sons who fit this pattern include John the Baptist, Isaac, Samuel.

 

READ Judges 13:4-5

What is a Nazarite?

One becomes a Nazarite by making a vow to God.

They separate themselves from the world unto the Lord and consecrate the time unto the Lord – they keep His commandments.

What is the Nazarite vow?

Vow includes following God’s commandments, abstaining from wine/drink, not cutting hair, not becoming unclean through touching the dead, not profaning the Sabbath (see Numbers 6).

There is some speculation that Christ Himself had sworn a Nazarite vow; the thought is that the statement in Matthew 2:23 that Christ was called a “Nazarene” should be translated as “called a Nazarite”, as “no good thing” was thought to come out of Nazareth, as it was such a small hamlet of a village at the time that no one would be called a Nazarene; and that Mary cut the strands of his hair when she anointed Him with the spikenard, in preparation for his death.

 

Samson had great strength, which he used to afflict the Philistines, who were the enemies of Israel.  He fell in love with Delilah, a Philistine, who tried to get him to reveal to her the source of his strength.  After several attempts…

 

READ Judges 16:15-20

Why did his hair give Samson “super-strength”?

It didn’t - the Nazarite vow, which Samson had only partly kept, had been honored by the Lord, who gave Samson strength to do His will.

What does hair represent?

The Nazarite vow of consecrating oneself to God.

Health or lack thereof (baldness is a curse in Isaiah, so hair is symbolic of blessings).

A life focused on God as opposed to the mundane things of this world - a healthy spiritual life or lack thereof.

 

READ Judges 16:24-25, 27-28, 30

How does Samson’s death point to Christ’s?

He is taken captive by his enemies.

His enemies proclaim their god is stronger than Samson or his god.

He is called a destroyer of the country (Christ was sentenced for treason).

He is put to death between two pillars (crosses).

He is tied so that his arms are wide open.

He is mocked by his enemies.

He prays that he might be remembered of God (not forsaken).

He prays to God for strength in his hour of death.

The Deliverer of Israel is put to death by his enemies.

The greatest building of his enemies was rent apart when he died (veil of the temple; later the whole Temple building).

 

Sunday, May 1, 2022

The Reign of the Judges (Judges 2,4,6-7,13-16) QUESTIONS

The Judges’ Cycle of Deliverance

 

READ Judges 2:1-3

Why did the Lord leave the inhabitants of Canaan as “thorns” and their gods as “snares” to Israel?

 

READ Judges 2:10-12

How did a generation whose parents and grandparents “served the Lord all the days of Joshua” and had “seen all the great works of the Lord, that He did for Israel”, know not the Lord?

 

READ Judges 3:7-11

What is the cycle of Judges laid out here?

 

This same pattern is repeated generation after generation, six times - through the following deliverers: Orhniel, Ehud, Deborah, Gideon, Jephthah, and Samson, although this last story is a bit different and we will walk through it in more detail.  Let’s talk about the various “deliverers” in each of these stories.

 

READ Judges 3:9,15; Judges 4:4; Judges 6:15; Judges 11:1-2; Judges 13:3-5

What common theme do you see across these deliverers of Israel?

 

The story of Jephthah, the illegitimate son of a harlot, is interesting…

READ Judges 11:5-11

What do you think the Elders of Gilead were planning to do to Jephthah after the battle was won?

How do these various deliverers parallel the Great Deliverer?

 

We have a natural tendency to read what we think we know of the Lord back into the story, but those who encountered Him in His mortal ministry didn’t see Him for who He really is… READ Luke 4:22-24

 

READ the Story of Axis the Horse

“There was a Celtic tribe whose horses were known for their strength and speed.  They used to allow their horses to run wild when not being used by the tribe for work or battle.  One horse, born in the wild, grew to be bigger and stronger than all the rest.  He ran at the head of any herd.  He was challenged many times and fought without defeat.  When he raced, he always won.  When he was finally brought into the town, he was scared from battle.  The people named him Axis, in part for his warlike appearance.  He was never truly tamed.  He was hard for any man to ride, and many feared to approach him. Only the most brave attempted it. Only a few were able to ride him. Years after the horse was dead, the princes of the tribe decided to build a monument to Axis.  They commissioned the best sculptor in the land to make a statue of the greatest of horses.  The sculptor looked far and wide for someone who had actually seen Axis alive and he finally found an old man who had seen the horse when he was a small boy.  The old man described Axis as larger than any horse in the herd, with scars like a warhorse, and strength that showed through.  The sculptor began to create the statue in line with this description but when the princes of the tribe saw it, they hated it - “it is too large; it is disproportionate; it is disfigured; it is rearing up and warlike; it is not beautiful and no one will want to look at it.  You must remake it - Axis is known throughout the world and his statue must add to his fame.”  So the sculptor discarded the statue and began again.  This time he found the most beautiful horse he could find as a model.  Although it was a mare, it fit the description the princes wanted.  He created a stallion version of the horse, which all that saw it said was a most amazing work of art!  “It is without blemish!  It is a thing of beauty!  It is perfect!” the princes exclaimed.  The old man had died by the time the new statue was finished but when the horse was unveiled to the public, they marveled, “I thrill at the sight of him!  Look how gentle he must have been!  He must have been named Axis because of his perfect proportions, equal in all dimensions!  He must have been the most attractive horse ever born.  All of the other horses must have followed him in wonder!”  The people of the tribe began to breed their horses in line with the statue.  They became known across the world for their exquisitely beautiful animals.  They won every horse show and the animals were kept carefully in stalls and fed the best hay and oats.  They never ran wild or fought or raced or worked, as they were too valuable and not fit for these purposes, anyway.   And behind an old barn stands a neglected and forgotten statue, whose rearing, scarred form had come to represent everything that was unwanted in a horse.”

Why do we want a hero or Deliverer who is different from real life?

 

 

Gideon’s Signs


READ Judges 6:14-17 and 6:36-40

Who does Gideon lack faith in, such that he is asking the Lord for signs?

What is Gideon seeking for with the fleece?

What is the difference between sign-seeking and “fleece-seeking”?

 

Gideon was commissioned to defeat the Midianites.  All of them that volunteered to fight were Israelites, and all were seeking to follow the Lord. Yet only a few finished the course.

 

READ Judges 7:2-3

If this story is an analogy for Coming unto Christ, why do two thirds of the “active” Israelites turn back?

 

READ Judges 7:4-7

What symbolism exists in the fact that the Lord had Gideon cull his army twice?

What is significant about the way that the 300-person Army of Gideon drank the water?

What does the group that put their faces into the water teach us about the journey back to Christ?

What does the fact that less than one percent of the Israelite men who set out to follow the Lord’s command succeeded in their desire?

 

 

Samson as a Messianic Figure


READ Judges 13:1-3

What is the significance of this miracle birth?

 

READ Judges 13:4-5

What is a Nazarite?

What is the Nazarite vow?

 

Samson had great strength, which he used to afflict the Philistines, who were the enemies of Israel.  He fell in love with Delilah, a Philistine, who tried to get him to reveal to her the source of his strength.  After several attempts…

 

READ Judges 16:15-20

Why did his hair give Samson “super-strength”?

What does hair represent?

 

READ Judges 16:24-25, 27-28, 30

How does Samson’s death point to Christ’s?

 

Thursday, April 28, 2022

Entering the Promised Land (Joshua 1-6, 23-24)

Joshua the Prophet

READ Joshua 1:1-5

Who selected Joshua to lead Israel after Moses’ translation?

The Lord.

No committee or vote was involved.

 

READ Joshua 1:6-9

What is to be the key to Joshua’s success?

Know the word of the Lord as delivered to Moses in the scriptures.

Why is knowing the word of the Lord key?

If he knows the words or law, he can be obedient to the commandments.

If he is obedient to the commandments, he will be filled with light.

If he is filled with light, he will be able to enter into the rest of the Lord himself and receive his own covenant direct from the Lord’s mouth, as did Moses.

How does one learn the word of the Lord?

Find a true messenger and listen to their words; either an angel from heaven or a person on earth who knows the Lord through face to face interaction.

“Meditate therein” - ponder and pray over the words and concepts in scripture.

“Day and night” - this is not a cursory viewing or even a mammoth one-time project.

 

READ JS-History 1:74

How do the scriptures come alive to us?

When we seek after and receive the Holy Ghost.

And are filled with light.

Which is the mind of God (see LoF 5:2).

And spend time in the scriptures, pondering them and asking questions of them.

 

 

Crossing the Jordan River

READ Joshua 3:5, 10-13

Why is the Lord showing Israel a sign that He is among them?

He’s not - first they have to sanctify themselves, like before Sinai.

Signs follow those that believe - so if they have faith, the Lord will do His miracles.

 

READ Joshua 3:15-17

Why did the Priests have to step into the flooding Jordan River before the Lord parted the water?

It was a trial of faith for the priests, as much as it was for the people.

The Lord asks us to step out of the light and into the darkness - a step of faith - before He will act - otherwise it’s not faith.

 

 

The Walls of Jericho

READ Joshua 2:1-6, 9, 11 and Hebrews 11:31

Why did Rahab betray her people to help Israel?

She received a revelation regarding the fact that the Lord had given the land to Israel.

She exercised faith in that inspiration.

She was following The Lord.

 

READ Joshua 2:12-13, 15, 18

What was the true token Rahab asked of the spies?

The scarlet line or rope that was used to save them.

The word for line (“tiqvah” or teek-vuh) is everywhere else translated as the word “hope” - we exercise faith in the hope or promise we have been given by Christ when He gives us His testimony or word that He will save us.

The scarlet line was the symbol of that hope or promise; it was to be hung in Rahab’s window like the red blood of the Passover lamb which was likewise a symbol to the destroying angel to spare those inside because they had covenanted with the living God and had received a hope or promise of exaltation.

 

READ James 2:14-26

What sacrifice did Rahab make to seal this covenant of faith?

James uses this experience of Rahab’s to illustrate the principle that faith without works is dead.

She would have been dead - either from her people if they ever found out she had committed treason or from the invading Israelites if she had not displayed the “Passover covenant” of the red line in the window.

She did not just say “be ye safe” but put her life and the safety of her family on the line after having received the revelation from the Lord as to who Israel was to Him and what she needed to do to aid His work.

 

READ Joshua 6:1-6

What was the Lord saying to Joshua when He said, “see I have given into thy hand Jericho”, as it was still fully protected?

All things are before His face.

As a result, He is not a linear thinker or communicator.

His ways are truly not our ways.

He could, and did, destroy those solid stone walls with a blast of sound.

 

READ Joshua 6:17-18; Deuteronomy 7:2-5

Why was Israel commanded to destroy every living thing in Jericho but Rahab and her house?

The Canaanites were “accursed”.

Israel would become accursed if they took things that were accursed.

Israel will break their covenants if they marry outside of the Abrahamic Covenant.

Israel had to enter the Promised Land as a whole, sanctified people (that’s why they had to wait 40 years for the unfaithful to die - instead of just leaving them in the desert).

If Israel is personified as a single person, the impure elements within that person had to be purged before entering into the Rest of the Lord (promised land).

If Israel is personified as a single person, why would the Lord tell them to utterly destroy the people of Canaan? (see Exodus 4:22-23 as an example of personification)

We need to stop dabbling in Babylon but “go ye out”.

If we surround ourselves with unholiness, the chances of us being impacted is greater (see Lot in Sodom and Israel in Egypt).

If we become unholy, we will remain separated from the Lord, which is spiritual death.

Also, remember the story of Rahab - the Lord will spare all of those who receive Him (implying that the others in Canaan had chances to come unto Christ but didn’t take them - remember the prophet Balaam, who had never heard of Israel but knew God until he betrayed Him).

 

 

The Conquest of Canaan

READ Joshua 12:1, 7-8 and Judges 1:19-21

What modern event in the last 20 years does this “conquest of Canaan” remind you of?

George W. Bush landing on the aircraft carrier after the “conquest” of Iraq - “mission accomplished”; when in fact, it was really just beginning and was never really accomplished as ISIS later took over and the battle continued.

Why were the children of Israel not able to “accomplish” the “mission” of conquering the promised land?

The people of the land had more advanced technology (iron instead of bronze).

Canaanites were somewhat wealthier albeit in decline (trade, culture).

Israel continued the “strongman model” they began with Moses - see Joshua 1:16-18 - they seem to have a real distaste for interacting with the Lord individually and personally. 

If Canaan represents the Promised Land or the Rest of the Lord which is His presence, Israel cannot get there as a people anyway - they must “enter in” individually.

If these conditions are accurate, how did they get any success at all?

Direct intervention: they displayed some degree of righteousness and faith because by faith the walls of Jericho fell (Hebrews 11:30).

Inspiration which they followed: the Lord taught them how to fight in a way that would raise their probability of success; military intelligence - Rahab and Jericho (Joshua 2); logistics including when to attack so they could eat as they go and don’t have big supply lines (Joshua 3); guerilla tactics to avoid directly engaging the Canaanites chariots; neutralization of city defenses like Jericho (Joshua 2) and Bethel (Judg 1:22-26) through secret gates or physiological tricks; enticement of city defenders to leave their defenses by ruse like in Ai (Joshua 8); surprise attacks like at Gibeon (Joshua 10:9-10); night operations like at Ai and Merom (Joshua 11:7)

 

 

Choose You This Day

READ Joshua 24:15-16, 19-20

Is this a good reason not to seek to truly come unto Christ or serve Him?

No - by rejecting when He extends any blessing or opportunity to you, you are walking away from Him and eventually damning yourself.

What “hurt” will you do to yourself if you choose not to serve the Lord?

You will eventually meet Him and you will not be prepared to stand in His presence.

And ironically, you will hurt yourself in two ways: 1) being blinded by the glory of His light as you encounter Him unprepared, despite the fact that He is just existing – He is not “hurting” you (Mormon 9:3-6) and 2) the disappointment of not taking what Christ offered you freely will be a flame of fire and brimstone within your soul as you torment and condemn yourself for your folly.

 

We have no choice but to offer our whole souls on the altar of the Lord - it is an act of mercy and grace by the Lord to allow us to do so, as we are unworthy, and our whole souls are all that we have to sacrifice that is really ours to give.

 

Sunday, April 24, 2022

Entering the Promised Land (Joshua 1-6, 23-24) QUESTIONS

Joshua the Prophet

READ Joshua 1:1-5

Who selected Joshua to lead Israel after Moses’ translation?

 

READ Joshua 1:6-9

What is to be the key to Joshua’s success?

Why is knowing the word of the Lord key?

How does one learn the word of the Lord?

 

READ JS-History 1:74

How do the scriptures come alive to us?

 

 

Crossing the Jordan River

READ Joshua 3:5, 10-13

Why is the Lord showing Israel a sign that He is among them?

 

READ Joshua 3:15-17

Why did the Priests have to step into the flooding Jordan River before the Lord parted the water?

 

 

The Walls of Jericho

READ Joshua 2:1-6, 9, 11 and Hebrews 11:31

Why did Rahab betray her people to help Israel?

 

READ Joshua 2:12-13, 15, 18

What was the true token Rahab asked of the spies?

 

READ James 2:14-26

What sacrifice did Rahab make to seal this covenant of faith?

 

READ Joshua 6:1-6

What was the Lord saying to Joshua when He said, “see I have given into thy hand Jericho”, as it was still fully protected?

 

READ Joshua 6:17-18; Deuteronomy 7:2-5

Why was Israel commanded to destroy every living thing in Jericho but Rahab and her house?

If Israel is personified as a single person, why would the Lord tell them to utterly destroy the people of Canaan? (see Exodus 4:22-23 as an example of personification)

 

 

The Conquest of Canaan

READ Joshua 12:1, 7-8 and Judges 1:19-21

What modern event in the last 20 years does this “conquest of Canaan” remind you of?

Why were the children of Israel not able to “accomplish” the “mission” of conquering the promised land?

If these conditions are accurate, how did they get any success at all?



Choose You This Day

READ Joshua 24:15-16, 19-20

Is this a good reason not to seek to truly come unto Christ or serve Him?

What “hurt” will you do to yourself if you choose not to serve the Lord?

Thursday, April 21, 2022

The Song of the Lord (Numbers 22-24; Deuteronomy 6,8,11,32)

Balaam the Prophet

READ Numbers 22:8-13

Who was Balaam?

A prophet of God (or a spiritually gifted individual whose “eyes are opened”) who is not one of the Children of Israel (of the covenant) but receives true prophesy from God and communes with God and His angels.

If a spiritually gifted person curses someone that God does not want cursed, by whose power do they do it?

The adversary’s or any other dark entity who is not aligned with the true and living God.

Does God really curse people?

Yes, if they reject what is freely offered to them and turn to other “gods” like the Children of Israel did (see Deuteronomy 28:15).

 

Interestingly, when Israel attacks Midian, they kill Balaam who had taught the Midianites how to successfully defeat Israel by tempting them with the worship of false gods.

READ Numbers 24:13

Why would Balaam go from swearing to follow the Lord to selling his spiritual services for money?

We stand in peril every hour that we are here on earth.

Anyone can fall from grace (D&C 20:32) – it’s a cautionary tale to all who have spiritual gifts.

 

 

The Song of the Lord

READ Deuteronomy 31:19-22

Why does the Lord give Moses a song?

As a testimony against the people that they were taught the truth but would not embrace it but rather turned from it.

Because words put to music can be more easily remembered and have a more powerful emotional response.

 

READ Deuteronomy 32:1-2

What is the dew and small rain to the tender plants?

It is a matter of life and death - if they don’t get the moisture to sustain them, they will die in the heat of the day.

This is particularly true of new vegetation without a mature root system.

But if it is heavy rain or a flood, they will also die.

Who are the tender plants (found in the desert land, v.10)?

The Children of Israel.

How did the Lord sustain life for Israel?

Manna from heaven - physical life.

His words and doctrines - revelation, tabernacle, the Law – spiritual life.

 

READ D&C 130:18-21, D&C 93:36 and D&C 88:13

Why is true doctrine life-giving?

True doctrine is both 1) intelligence and 2) leads to intelligence through via obedience to god’s law.

Intelligence is the glory of god = light.

Light gives life.

“A man is saved no faster than he gets knowledge, for if he does not get knowledge, he will be brought into captivity by some evil power in the other world, as evil spirits will have more knowledge, and consequently more power than many men who are on the earth. Hence it needs revelation to assist us, and give us knowledge of the things of God” (History of the Church 4:588).

 

READ Deuteronomy 33:13

While all of Israel were admonished to receive the life-giving dew, which group was specifically blessed to receive it?

The Tribe of Joseph (Ephraim and Manasseh).

The latter day gentiles of the last days – at least until they reject it (see 3 Nephi 16:6-11).

 

READ Deuteronomy 32:3-4

Who is the “rock”?

The Lord God of Israel.

Why is He called the Rock?

Rock meaning the “stone of Israel” or Temple (Gen 49:24; Gen 28 - Jacob’s Ladder and the stone altar - “God’s house for surely He is in this place”).

Rock as the source of life-giving water (Ex 17:6; 1 Corinthians 10:1, 4).

Rock as the Stone Tablets or Law/Covenant or Word or Truth (3 Nephi 15:9).

Rock as sure foundation (Hel 5:12).

 

READ Deuteronomy 32:5

What does the “father-child” relationship imply?

Child is loved by father.

Child has same traits or genes as father.

Child can grow up to be like father.

How can you tell if a child is related to a certain father?

Child appears similar to their father (Alma 5:14).

Child does the same works as the father (“like father, like son”) John 8:41.

How could Israel become “no longer His children”?

Jehovah is perfect, a god of truth without iniquity.

While the Children of Israel are corrupt, perverse and crooked.

They have broken the covenant of adoption into the family of Christ.

Is there any hope for Israel to be reconciled with Jehovah?

Yes - READ 1 Nephi 21:14-16.

 

READ Deuteronomy 32:6, 10-14

What does “requite” or “repay” the Lord imply?

We owe Him; we are in His debt (Mosiah 4:19).

How does the mother eagle teach her young to fly?

By “stirring up the nest” so that it becomes undesirable to stay there in comfort.

But when they finally jump and fall, because they can’t fly she jets down below them and catches them on her back and flies them back up so they can practice again - it is tough love but what is required for them to learn to fly like she can – a leap of faith.

Unlike in our culture, how did Israel regard the “fat” of anything?

It was the best part and was fit to be sacrificed on the altar to God.

It represented plenty or blessings.

“Fat of kidneys of wheat” means the “best of the best of the wheat” or the “cream of the crop”.

 

READ Deuteronomy 32:15-18

After being offered (and sometimes enjoying) the “cream of the crop” of the Lord’s blessings, what does Israel “waxing fat and kicking” imply?

Gorge themselves on blessings.

Take them for granted - entitlement mentality - no thanksgiving.

Not “fit” or able to do the tasks that good nutrition normally enables.

Why did the Children of Israel view the Lord’s blessings as theirs by right?

They were the “chosen people of the Lord” via Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.

Their ancestors had procured the blessings which they inherited - no need for personal righteousness or a personal covenant for them; they misunderstood the nature of the covenant given to the Fathers – that all who rise up and receive the covenant themselves will be their sons and daughters; instead they thought that all sons and daughters would be given the covenant as a free birthright.

 

READ Deuteronomy 32:19-26

What happens when the Lord “hides His face” from a people?

No revelation.

No physical protection.

No economic blessings.

They are left to themselves; if they are inherently strong, they may last for a while on their own merits (in this world, at least) but it won’t last and when they die, they’re stuck.

Why does the Lord scatter His people?

When you sin against the greater light, you receive the greater condemnation.

Like the branches of the olive tree in Jacob, the Lord tries to save the tree by removing bad wood and grafting wild and tame branches into various trees.

 

READ Deuteronomy 32:36-42

When the Lord has scattered and cursed Israel, what can their gods do?

Nothing.

Their idols (the work of their hands, i.e. economy, military, technology) cannot save them or even help them when the Lord chooses to curse the people.

Why does the Lord curse them?

To show Israel that there is only one “true and living god”.

Their new gods can’t stop the Lord (similar to Egypt).

To get them to repent, if possible.

When they have been sufficiently humbled because they have no power, what will the Lord do?

He will have compassion on them.

They will receive strength again when they return to look to the one true god of strength.

 

READ Deuteronomy 32:43

Why should they rejoice?

Because the Lord will remember the covenants He’s made.

Finally, a generation will come that will turn to the Lord and remember Him, enabling Him to remember them (as He is no respecter of persons).

He will not force or compel them - let them come who will come and partake of the waters of life freely (see Alma 5:34; Alma 42:27). 

Songs are meant to be remembered, so what is the lyrical arc in this song?

The living god speaks the truth that will save you.

The truth is about your Rock or redeemer.

But you have corrupted yourselves and are no longer His children.

He has given you so many blessings.

And you repay His kindnesses with rejection.

So He left you to yourselves.

You will receive what you deserve and be scattered.

Your new gods will be shown to have no power (arm of flesh).

When you have hit bottom, He will have compassion on you.

You will rejoice again, because He will make atonement for you and you will enter into His land (into His rest or presence).

 

 

Moses Is Translated & Taken into Heaven

READ Deuteronomy 34:1-6 and Alma 45:19

What is Moses being shown?

The promised land of Israel.

Why would the Deuteronomists and/or the apostate Christian church want to remove Moses’ translation from the scriptures?

They do not want us believing in or understanding the doctrine of translation.

It sounds a bit too “magical” or “out there” for a sophisticated individual to believe.

What really happened next?

He walked off the mountain, through a pillar of fire, and up Jacob’s Ladder to enter the Rest of the Lord.

 

Sunday, April 17, 2022

The Song of the Lord (Numbers 22-24; Deuteronomy 6,8,11,32) QUESTIONS

Balaam the Prophet

READ Numbers 22:8-13

Who was Balaam?

If a spiritually gifted person curses someone that God does not want cursed, by whose power do they do it?

Does God really curse people?

 

Interestingly, when Israel attacks Midian, they kill Balaam who had taught the Midianites how to successfully defeat Israel by tempting them with the worship of false gods.

READ Numbers 24:13

Why would Balaam go from swearing to follow the Lord to selling his spiritual services for money?

 

 

The Song of the Lord

READ Deuteronomy 31:19-22

Why does the Lord give Moses a song?

 

READ Deuteronomy 32:1-2

What is the dew and small rain to the tender plants?

Who are the tender plants (found in the desert land, v.10)?

How did the Lord sustain life for Israel?

 

READ D&C 130:18-21, D&C 93:36 and D&C 88:13

Why is true doctrine life-giving?

 

READ Deuteronomy 33:13

While all of Israel were admonished to receive the life-giving dew, which group was specifically blessed to receive it?

 

READ Deuteronomy 32:3-4

Who is the “rock”?

Why is He called the Rock?

 

READ Deuteronomy 32:5

What does the “father-child” relationship imply?

How can you tell if a child is related to a certain father?

How could Israel become “no longer His children”?

Is there any hope for Israel to be reconciled with Jehovah?

 

READ Deuteronomy 32:6, 10-14

What does “requite” or “repay” the Lord imply?

How does the mother eagle teach her young to fly?

Unlike in our culture, how did Israel regard the “fat” of anything?

 

READ Deuteronomy 32:15-18

After being offered (and sometimes enjoying) the “cream of the crop” of the Lord’s blessings, what does Israel “waxing fat and kicking” imply?

Why did the Children of Israel view the Lord’s blessings as theirs by right?

 

READ Deuteronomy 32:19-26

What happens when the Lord “hides His face” from a people?

Why does the Lord scatter His people?

 

READ Deuteronomy 32:36-42

When the Lord has scattered and cursed Israel, what can their gods do?

Why does the Lord curse them?

When they have been sufficiently humbled because they have no power, what will the Lord do?

 

READ Deuteronomy 32:43

Why should they rejoice?

Songs are meant to be remembered, so what is the lyrical arc in this song?

 

 

Moses Is Translated & Taken into Heaven

READ Deuteronomy 34:1-6 and Alma 45:19

What is Moses being shown?

Why would the Deuteronomists and/or the apostate Christian church want to remove Moses’ translation from the scriptures?

What really happened next?

 

Hiatus

Due to some recent work and life changes, I'm taking a hiatus from the weekly blog.  I will leave the blog up for anyone who would like ...