Purpose

Bible Studies for those who love the Word or want to discover more.

Saturday, December 1, 2018

Eternal Hope at Christmas


Read: 2 Samuel 7:4-29
Key Verse:
Your house and your kingdom will endure forever before me; your throne will be established forever.
(NIV)

King David had been resting. It was a well-deserved rest. He had been pursued by a mad king, raised a mighty army, and defeated the Jebusites while claiming Jerusalem as the capital. Not long before he had been a humble shepherd fending off the occasional predator. Now he was king—God’s king of a mighty nation. He wanted to do something for his sovereign Lord. He and Nathan, the faithful and trustworthy prophet, had been sauntering through the palace the night before and they had concurred that David’s idea of building a temple to house the ark of the covenant and envelope the presence of God was a good thing. But that night God revealed another thing he wanted to build—an everlasting kingdom!

The Israelites had known of and coveted kingdoms around them—limited kingdoms whose leaders rose and fell with mighty crashes or were absorbed by greater kingdoms. Now they had their own kingdom, subject to these same humanistic tides. But they had something no other kingdom on earth had. They had the One, True, Living God at the helm! God made it clear through Nathan that he did not need a temple or anything else to prove who He was to Israel’s neighbors, enemies or even to themselves. He simply wanted to be their God and live in loving covenant with them . . . forever.

Forever is a long time. David was stunned and humbled by this revelation. “Who am I? Who are we that You should do such a thing for us?!” But even then, David did no fully comprehend what God had promised. Certainly, he understood all the victories God had provided so far. Certainly, he comprehended that his sons and grandsons and great-grandsons could rule a dynasty like no other around them. But, could he have comprehended the vast and everlasting Kingdom of God extended to all nations?

It is doubtful that he could have ever imagined the might and power that would come through a tiny infant laying in a manger, known by so few at His birth but confirmed by Father God as the King of the Universe whose ever-lasting Kingdom would know no end!  The Incarnate King Jesus was the final and complete fulfillment of that eternal promise to David.

Question: How limited is your understanding of God’s eternal Kingdom?

Prayer: Oh, Jesus, our King! Thank you for coming to fulfill an unbreakable promise of an eternal Kingdom in which all peoples of the world can dwell. 

Amen

Copyright M.R. Hyde 2018

Saturday, November 3, 2018

God Immigration Plan - Revisited

In November 2011 I posted this devotional. I thought it timely to re-post it with a few minor changes.

God's Immigration Plan
What makes a person pull up stakes and leave their home country? When a man is standing on the beach looking into the watery horizon, what makes him think that if he reaches land-out-of-sight that life might be better? Maybe these are just wild and weird dreams. Maybe people get crazy ideas out of desperation or maybe out of hope. Sometimes dreams and visions can be from the Lord. And sometimes wild dreams come from too much pizza right before bed. 

Their names were Alfred Diehl Koch and Conrad Schuessler—German men of strong constitution. They were men who got caught by some strange dream or vision of a better life. They were my great, great grandfathers. And they, along with their wives and children, immigrated to the United States as the century was turning from the late 1800’s to the 1900’s.

Alfred Koch and Conrad Schuessler were part of massive influx of immigrants. “[B]etween 1900 and 1910 . . . almost 1 million immigrants per year entered the country.[i] Records show that “from 1892 to 1924, more than 22 million immigrants, passengers, and crew members came through Ellis Island and the Port of New York.”[ii] My great, great grandfathers stood in line on Ellis Island. They knew very little or no English. They were, I’m sure, terrified and struck with awe as they were churned through the great immigration machine. My great, great grandparents came into the U.S. at the height of the immigration. I long for a full re-telling of the account of their passage. I sit in awe and wonder at what they did and how they survived.
They launched out from New York and worked their way West. They both landed in Texas with their families living no more than fifty miles from each other. I doubt if they ever met. Homesteading in the wild country was very difficult. But they survived, never knowing that their great grandchildren, my mother and father, would one day be married and telling their story with amazement.

We must stop to acknowledge that every Native American Indian lives with the reality that their land was consumed by those whose dreams were ill-informed or insensitive to the basic human rights of native born peoples. Our country, as glorious and wonderful as it is, also has a deeply scarred history of ethnic hatred. Their land and dignity were stripped in the name of prosperity, progress and greed. May God forgive our ancestors for what they did to these significant and wonderful peoples! And may our leaders today do the good work of justice with them.

American is now a nation of immigrants. We are the “melting pot of the world.” Every nationality came here by choice—except for the African Americans. Every family struggled to gain land and crops for themselves—except for the African Americans. I hope we realize that the descendents of every African American person came here under great oppression and violence. And thank God that from time forward there have been God-loving, conscientious people who have worked and still work very hard to make sure that that wrong is righted. Many other people-groups have come from all over the world to find success and a better way of life here. 

Each one of us, except for the Native Americans, must look honestly at our heritage and acknowledge that we are immigrants—foreigners in a foreign land. But acknowledging that is a difficult task—especially when we are trying to live out the American dream we have been born under.

As we look back in history we see that there was a dramatic dip in immigration after its peak in the early 1900’s. Historians remind us that “[t]he older immigrants from Protestant Western Europe felt threatened by the rising tide of immigrants from the more Catholic southern and eastern European countries, and the immigrants from Asia. Organizations were formed urging laws to restrict immigration. . . A literacy test for immigrants was passed and . . . in 1921 imposed a quota system, limiting the number of immigrants from Europe.”34[iii] Further legislative moves continually limited immigration from particular parts of the world and discriminated against new immigrants. Some of theses laws was not repealed until 1965! “Since the great depression of the 1930’s and World War II, immigration has steadily risen again in the U.S. Notwithstanding the numerous and on-going crises and debates over illegal immigration and other related issues. In all of its splendor, the U.S. is not without its dark side.”[iv]
 
Did you know that this is nothing new? It’s not just in America that we have had these struggles. As noted from the historical data, much of the strife erupted over religious issues between Protestant and Catholic. And in the New Testament the very same issue is brought to a head when the Church of Jesus Christ was beginning to spread. It took another dream, another vision to bring things round to right. Read Acts 10. We’ll be looking at this chapter carefully. And I challenge you to read chapters 11 and 15 this week.

Peter was a good Jewish man. He was, as we have come to know, bold and full of enthusiasm. He was given to fits of wildness like cutting off a guard’s ear when Jesus was being arrested. He was given to outlandish statements and deeply wounding behavior, as when he denied our Lord three times before the crucifixion. After the resurrection something wonderful had happened to Peter. Jesus restored him to his place of ministry. And upon being filled with the Holy Spirit at Pentecost, he was launched into an incredibly powerful preaching ministry.

But there was something still amiss with Peter. And the Holy Spirit needed to teach him and stretch him and confront him. Being a good Jewish man he had kept the Jewish laws faithfully all of his life. The Law, by this time, had become second nature to him—it seemed as if the whole world should be playing by those rules. But God is a God of continual revelation and dynamic relationship. There will always be something that we need to learn, something that we need incorporate in our lives as we grow to be more and more like Him. God does not change, nor does his truth change. Rather we are changed when we let him form his likeness in us. And this is what God needed to do with Peter. 

We come to an enormously pivotal point in the early Church in Act 10.

Read Acts 10:1-48

In Leviticus 11 God had given very specific directions for the Jewish people regarding what to eat. These laws seem odd to us, but some scholars think that they were to help the Israelites avoid diseases or to simply demonstrate their obedience to the One, true, living God. 

The Holy Spirit had some new work to do in Peter's life. Can you imagine what it must have been like to have this kind of encounter?
13 Then a voice told him, “Get up, Peter. Kill and eat.”
14 “Surely not, Lord!” Peter replied. “I have never eaten anything impure or unclean.”
15 The voice spoke to him a second time, “Do not call anything impure that God has made clean.” 

It is here that the more complete revelation of God takes over the Christian world. Just a short while earlier Jesus had taught that no food was unclean. (Mark 7:18-19) And Jesus being God, said, “Don’t you see that nothing that enters a man from the outside can make him unclean’? 19 For it doesn’t go into his heart but into his stomach, and then out of his body.” (In saying this, Jesus declared all foods “clean.”). This was God pulling one of his beloved disciples into deeper and broader truth than he had yet experienced.

Read v. 16-23 again.
16 This happened three times, and immediately the sheet was taken back to heaven.
17 While Peter was wondering about the meaning of the vision, the men sent by Cornelius found out where Simon’s house was and stopped at the gate. 18 They called out, asking if Simon who was known as Peter was staying there.
19 While Peter was still thinking about the vision, the Spirit said to him, “Simon, three men are looking for you. 20 So get up and go downstairs. Do not hesitate to go with them, for I have sent them.”
21 Peter went down and said to the men, “I’m the one you’re looking for. Why have you come?”
22 The men replied, “We have come from Cornelius the centurion. He is a righteous and God-fearing man, who is respected by all the Jewish people. A holy angel told him to have you come to his house so that he could hear what you have to say.” 23 Then Peter invited the men into the house to be his guests.

This is a phenomenal breaking of Jewish custom--a breaking only possible by the power of the Holy Spirit! I don’t think we can quite grasp the radical nature of this except by thinking about how striking it was before the civil rights movement for a white man to invite a black man into his Southern home.

Re-read Acts 10:24-48

Peter was launched out into a ministry that embraced every human being. Ladies and gentlemen of all nations, this is the exquisite re-telling of God’s Immigration Policy—that God does not show favoritism, but accepts men [and women, boys and girls] from every nation who fear him and do what is right. It has been God’s policy from the beginning to incorporate anyone from any nation into his great family and house! God’s immigration policy is to let anyone into his great Kingdom without regard to their nation of origin, color of skin, accent or language. And today we fall at God’s feet in thankfulness for including us—the Gentiles of the worldin His great plan. 

I am a great, great granddaughter of German-American immigrants who has been granted a status beyond all that they could have provided—the status of a child of the King! And you are God’s children, every one of you. 

My deep prayer is that all our churches will be communities that accept people from all nations.Will you join me in this prayer and let the Holy Spirit transform us?

M.R. Hyde


[i] www.missouri.edu/~socbrent/immigr.htm 2 www.ellisisland.org
[ii] www.ellisisland.org
[iii] www.missouri.edu/~socbrent/immigr.htm
[iv] Ibid.
Copyright M.R. Hyde 2011

Friday, October 5, 2018

Apples of Gold


Imagine with me a very large and beautiful apple tree. It stands here between you and me. Its bark is gnarled and gray. If we stopped and looked just at the trunk and that bark etched deeply by years of growth, we might not be attracted to it or find it of any worth. However, there is much more to an apple tree than just its trunk and bark.

As we move up the trunk we can see branches spread out. Some of these branches are as old as the trunk, though smaller around. Others are younger and seem more vibrant and supple. On each one of these branches are beautiful variegated leaves. The sun weaves its way through the fibers causing each one to be a radiant garment of green. The breeze blows gently through and taps each leaf asking it if it may have this dance.

Throughout the leaves we can see orbs of a golden color. They cling to the limbs as if their life depended upon it. Hovering together closely in groups of three or four, they draw us to them by their sweet aroma. These apples of gold are the jewels of the mature and thriving tree. They are the fruits of its labor.

Psalm 1:1-3 says: “Blessed is the one who does not walk in step with the wicked or stand in the way that sinners take or sit in the company of mockers, but whose delight is in the law of the Lord and who meditates on his law day and night.  That person is like a tree planted by streams of water, which yields its fruit in season and whose leaf does not wither.  Whatever they do prospers.   

That is a beautiful picture of people who are alive and thriving because of the presence of the Lord in their lives—prosperous, life-giving and fruitful. There are many fruits of the Christian life. There is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, self-control (Galatians 5:22-23). Then there is tenderness, compassion, like-mindedness, being one in spirit and in purpose, selflessness, humility (Philippians 2:1-11).  There is also a love that is superlative in every way to the other kinds of loves we know—it is the love of Christ Jesus borne out into each of us through the abiding presence of the Holy Spirit (1 Corinthians 13).

Questions for Consideration: Which of these apples of gold do you excel in? Which do you need the help of the Holy Spirit to bring you to a deeper level of maturity?

Prayer Prompt: Ask the Lord to help you mature in your weakest areas so that you can produce more beautiful fruit.

M.R. Hyde