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  • How to Become Christians who are Contagious

    SCRIPTURES: LUKE 2:8-20

    Luke 2:8-20 NIV
    And there were shepherds living out in the fields nearby, keeping watch over their flocks at night. [9] An angel of the Lord appeared to them, and the glory of the Lord shone around them, and they were terrified. [10] But the angel said to them, “Do not be afraid. I bring you good news that will cause great joy for all the people. [11] Today in the town of David a Savior has been born to you; he is the Messiah, the Lord. [12] This will be a sign to you: You will find a baby wrapped in cloths and lying in a manger.” [13] Suddenly a great company of the heavenly host appeared with the angel, praising God and saying, [14] “Glory to God in the highest heaven, and on earth peace to those on whom his favor rests.” [15] When the angels had left them and gone into heaven, the shepherds said to one another, “Let’s go to Bethlehem and see this thing that has happened, which the Lord has told us about.” [16] So they hurried off and found Mary and Joseph, and the baby, who was lying in the manger. [17] When they had seen him, they spread the word concerning what had been told them about this child, [18] and all who heard it were amazed at what the shepherds said to them. [19] But Mary treasured up all these things and pondered them in her heart. [20] The shepherds returned, glorifying and praising God for all the things they had heard and seen, which were just as they had been told.

    Designed in Canva by Yury Gaudard

    The author of the book A Disciples Heart, James a. Harnish, poses a difficult question to the reader. He inquires: If the Christian faith were to be compared to a case of the flu, would anyone be at risk of contracting the illness because of you? How contagious do you think you are?

    I have to admit that this is a question that gets right to the heart of the matter. How contagious are we as Christians? How much of a heart-warming desire do we have to communicate the good news of the Gospel and the love of God with others?

    John Wesley believed that one of the most telling signs that a person was on the path to becoming a better Christian was when they had a deep desire to share the love of God with others.

    The shepherds were protecting their sheep when they saw an angel who was announcing that the Messiah was coming. It was an angel who told the shepherds where Jesus was. They ran to see him right away. As soon as the shepherds saw that it was all true, they went out and told everyone about it.

    There isn’t a lot we know about the shepherds, but we do know that they were social outcasts in their time. It was because of their social status that they were the least likely people to get into any big news or be credible witnesses to it, so they didn’t even bother trying to be more credible to people.

    What happened to them and the reason for which they were distributing the news to everyone is entwined in this story. They saw the Savior as a baby, they saw the angels, and they knew it was all true. They also understood that God had chosen them to see and share it with the rest of the world.

    What occurs to us today is that we know the gospels are true, we know that Jesus is our Savior and we love him, and we know that we have been chosen by God to spread the good news of God’s salvation through Jesus Christ with others. The reality is that if the truth we are trying to spread isn’t alive in our everyday lives, it often prevents us from becoming contagious Christians.

    What I’m getting at is that we don’t spend nearly enough time with Jesus. We don’t get to know him on a daily and in-depth basis. We aren’t filled with His Spirit, as we should be. It is as a result of this that we go about our lives, carrying out our responsibilities without much excitement. The apathy we experience in our life often reflects the distance there is from having a vibrant and thrilling connection with our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. At the end of the day, we will not share anything that we do not vividly enjoy.

    We are fortunate in that we have a Savior who is pursuing us. Wesley identified three types of grace: prevenient grace, which is God’s active presence in people’s lives before they are aware of it; justifying grace, which is God’s forgiveness of all sins; and sanctifying grace, which allows people to grow in their ability to live in the way of Jesus.

    Having this sanctifying grace lets us see that God is always trying to get closer to us in a one-on-one relationship with the Holy Spirit so that He can change our minds and change us from being self-centered to loving others, from being greedy to giving, from being isolated and racist to fighting for social justice, and so on. It’s an invitation from the cross for us to draw near to the cross every day and experience how Jesus’ resurrection can change our lives. We are enabled then to see our shortcomings turned into a living testimony of grace that we can share with others.

    We are being converted from apathetic and indifferent people into contagious Christians. It’s all because of His Grace. It’s all because of His love. All of this is made possible by the genuine and living connection we have with the Living God! May Christian contagiousness rise among us!

    Reflection questions:

    • Think about how you’ve grown in Christ. In your spiritual journey, what would you say is a good thing to share with others?
    •  When people look at your life, they should be able to see and feel how Christ’s love is shown. What do you think people could learn from you?
    • In your life, who has been labeled as an outcast and why? How would you go about sharing with them of the wonderful news of the gospel?

    Prayer: God, open my ears and eyes today to the fact that there could be people in my neighborhood waiting to hear from you. Prod me to be a shepherd who spreads your love to people who are easy to love and people who aren’t. This week, help me to be bold and gentle so that I can spread the good news. Amen.

  • Verse of the day

    Isaiah 58:6-8 TPT
    “This is the kind of fast that I desire: Remove the heavy chains of oppression! Stop exploiting your workers! Set free the crushed and mistreated! Break off every yoke of bondage! [7] Share your food with the hungry! Provide for the homeless and bring them into your home! Clothe the naked! Don’t turn your back on your own flesh and blood! [8] Then my favor will bathe you in sunlight until you are like the dawn bursting through a dark night. And then suddenly your healing will manifest. You will see your righteousness march out before you, and the glory of Yahweh will protect you from all harm!

  • There is a lot to learn about Jesus, dead pigs, and the Legion of demons

    Matthew 8:28-34 NASBS
    When He came to the other side into the country of the Gadarenes, two men who were demon-possessed met Him as they were coming out of the tombs. They were so extremely violent that no one could pass by that way. [29] And they cried out, saying, “What business do we have with each other, Son of God? Have You come here to torment us before the time?” [30] Now there was a herd of many swine feeding at a distance from them. [31] The demons began to entreat Him, saying, “If You are going to cast us out, send us into the herd of swine.” [32] And He said to them, “Go!” And they came out and went into the swine, and the whole herd rushed down the steep bank into the sea and perished in the waters. [33] The herdsmen ran away, and went to the city and reported everything, including what had happened to the demoniacs. [34] And behold, the whole city came out to meet Jesus; and when they saw Him, they implored Him to leave their region.

    One of the most important aspects of the story is the men who were living amid the graves that had been carved into the rocks, which were most likely above-ground crypts for the deceased. These facilities provided a safe haven for those who were homeless on the streets.

    There is a discrepancy between Matthew’s reference to two guys and Mark and Luke’s reference to only one man.

    Some believe that Matthew regularly prefers to add to Mark’s account, while another quite good view is that there were two guys, but that one stood out in particular during the clash between the two groups of people.

    Mark and Luke tell us about the fact the demon possessed man called himself Legion because they were many demons. (Mark 5:1–20; Luke 8:26–39).

    The topic of demons preoccupied the minds of the ancients for thousands of years. They believed that demonic powers were responsible for the majority of illnesses, including mental sickness, epilepsy, and the majority of physical illnesses.

    In ancient Egypt, they thought that the body was divided into thirty-six parts, and that any one or all of these parts may be possessed by demons at any time. There were Jewish beliefs that demons were the fallen angels that seduced mortal women (see Genesis 6:1–8).

    Whatever the source, the Gospel writers are adamant about the historical accuracy of these episodes as well as the fact that Jesus Himself spoke of the personality and presence of demons in his teachings.

    The key here is that the demons were aware of Jesus’ identity. Their statement symbolizes knowledge of the world beyond, of the person of Jesus Christ as the Son of God, and of their own impending judgment. According to James’s writing, “The devils also believe, and tremble” (2:19, KJV).

    Jesus did not show any fear of the demons at all. Because He had power over them, he ordered that they be freed from the men they were bound to. If we think the devil is powerful, we should know that he is not a second god in the world, and his power is not even close to that of God. The demons are also not to be feared when we know Christ because they are just extensions of the power or influence of the devil. In any way, they are small and can be defeated in the name of Christ!

    Mark provides us with a fuller version of the narrative, which helps us to better comprehend what is going on. A difficult aspect of this journey is the episode involving the death of an entire herd of 2,000 pigs.

    Perhaps the demons knew what would happen and thought this was a good way to fight back against Jesus. The herd of swine may have killed themselves because they had asked Jesus not to judge or punish them before. Jesus had come to deliverer and save the man behind the demons and he did so.

    Perhaps Jesus saw this as a way to confront the people in the area, a way to show that human life and well-being were more important than the swine trade. Or maybe it was to show the possessed men that they were free, that the demons had gone into the swine and went with them to their death, freeing them from the hellish powers that had bound them.

    Everybody in the city came out to see what was going on. It says in Mark that when they came to Jesus, the demon possessed man was “clothed and in his right mind,” which is very interesting (5:15).

    This was a chance for them to see true values, to value people above things, and to celebrate with those who were freed and healed.

    There had been a big loss in their business, and the herd of swine had been killed and because of that they couldn’t see the move of God in their midst.

    This is a picture that shows how you can choose between the values of the kingdom and the materialism of the world. People didn’t care that two men were made whole if their economy was now in trouble.

    This is human selfishness in its most clear form. But this isn’t a new thing. People don’t seem to care about the needs of the this World as much as they do about protecting their own economic advantages.

    It’s also true of the church, where we talk a lot about “protecting our security” but don’t care about the well-being of our brothers in need.

    The sad fact of today’s church is that men are still debating whether they should follow Jesus by valuing people above their things or whether they should safeguard their pigs and live comfortably!

    And you?  What are you choosing?

  • What Does It Mean to Be Born Again?

    John 3:1-9 NASBS
    Now there was a man of the Pharisees, named Nicodemus, a ruler of the Jews; [2] this man came to Jesus by night and said to Him, “Rabbi, we know that You have come from God as a teacher; for no one can do these signs that You do unless God is with him.” [3] Jesus answered and said to him, “Truly, truly, I say to you, unless one is born again he cannot see the kingdom of God.” [4] Nicodemus said to Him, “How can a man be born when he is old? He cannot enter a second time into his mother’s womb and be born, can he?” [5] Jesus answered, “Truly, truly, I say to you, unless one is born of water and the Spirit he cannot enter into the kingdom of God. [6] That which is born of the flesh is flesh, and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit. [7] Do not be amazed that I said to you, ‘You must be born again.’ [8] The wind blows where it wishes and you hear the sound of it, but do not know where it comes from and where it is going; so is everyone who is born of the Spirit.” [9] Nicodemus said to Him, “How can these things be?”

    Nicodemus pays a visit to Jesus –

    Nicodemus was a Pharisee and a ruler of the Jews, and he was considered one of the most important Pharisees of his day. The phrase used to describe him conveys the assurance that he was a very well-known and highly influential figure in the community.

    During the Passover holiday, Jesus thrashed all of the selling booths, yelling that His Father’s home was to be called a house of prayer, but that the religious leaders were changing it into a business. Nicodemus had come to meet Jesus shortly before this.

    At the time, Jesus was publicly referring to himself as the Son of God and the Messiah of Israel. When his authority was called into question, he said that he would demolish the temple and rebuild it in three days, citing who had given him the authority to do such things and what evidence he could produce to confirm his authority in the process.

    Several people teased him and made fun of him.

    But people were observing him. John 2:23 NASBS say that:
    Now when He was in Jerusalem at the Passover, during the feast, many believed in His name, observing His signs which He was doing.

    Nicodemus went to see Jesus as a result of these signs.

    According to him, no one could perform these miracles unless God was present to assist them. To his Pharisee colleagues, who believed that Jesus was under the power of the prince of devils, Nicodemus looked to think the polar opposite of what they did. His signs and wonders have left a trail of evidence in their wake. It appears that Nicodemus believes in Jesus because he recognizes the signs and sees God’s hand at work in his life.

    In order to avoid being severely reprimanded and possibly deserted, Nicodemus comes to Jesus in the middle of the night to see him. It’s also possible that Nicodemus would have more time to converse quietly with Jesus if they met at night.

    With a humble heart, he addresses Jesus as Rabbi, which was a title of high distinction among the Pharisees and meant “a teacher sent by God,” according to the New Testament. Rabbi, you have been sent by God, and God is with you, and I wholeheartedly acknowledge this! In other words, that was what Nicodemus was saying.

    When John Wesley speaks of God’s grace, it is noteworthy that he distinguishes between three types of grace: prevenient grace, which is God’s active presence in people’s lives before they even realize God is at work in their lives; justifying grace, which allows all sins to be forgiven; and sanctifying grace, which allows people to grow in their ability to live as Jesus did in his life.

    We can observe prevenient grace at work in Nicodemus’s life at this particular point. He has no choice but to flee to the Messiah, despite the fact that it is the middle of the night. While he is in close proximity to the Messiah, his heart is afire with desire for what he has sought his entire life, but has only experienced fully when he was close to the Messiah.

    He was well-versed in the ways of the Lord. Perhaps more than anybody else in the room, yet his heart seemed to be struggling against nothingness. Augustin once said: You have made us for yourself, O Lord, and our hearts are restless until they rest in you.

    I believe that this man’s desperation began to manifest itself when he witnessed the miracles that he had only heard about and been educated about. When he heard Jesus’ words, his appetite was piqued even more.

    The combination of Jesus’ being filled with the Holy Spirit and the fact that prevenient grace had reached Nicodemus caused him to take a completely different attitude than the other Pharisees. He didn’t hesitate to acknowledge the Saviour’s power or to express his desire to learn more about him.

    But there was more to it than that. Jesus is unambiguous in his approach. He tells Nicodemus that if he isn’t born again, he will not enter the kingdom of God. Nicodemus was perplexed as to how.

    What’s to be born again? What’s to be born of water and Spirit?

    It literally means “born from above” when you hear the term “born again.” Nicodemus was in desperate need. He required a change of heart—a spiritual transformation—in order to move on.

    A new birth, also known as being born again, is an act of God through which eternal life is bestowed to the individual who believes in it.

    Here are some passages that add to the meaning and understanding of what it means to be born again:

    2 Corinthians 5:17 NASBS
    Therefore if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creature; the old things passed away; behold, new things have come.

    Titus 3:5 NASBS
    He saved us, not on the basis of deeds which we have done in righteousness, but according to His mercy, by the washing of regeneration and renewing by the Holy Spirit,

    1 Peter 1:3 NASBS
    Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who according to His great mercy has caused us to be born again to a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead,

    1 John 2:29 NASBS
    If you know that He is righteous, you know that everyone also who practices righteousness is born of Him.

    1 John 3:9 NASBS
    No one who is born of God practices sin, because His seed abides in him; and he cannot sin, because he is born of God.

    1 John 4:7 NASBS
    Beloved, let us love one another, for love is from God; and everyone who loves is born of God and knows God.

    1 John 5:1-4 NASBS
    Whoever believes that Jesus is the Christ is born of God, and whoever loves the Father loves the child born of Him. [2] By this we know that we love the children of God, when we love God and observe His commandments. [3] For this is the love of God, that we keep His commandments; and His commandments are not burdensome. [4] For whatever is born of God overcomes the world; and this is the victory that has overcome the world-our faith.

    John 1:12-13 NASBS
    But as many as received Him, to them He gave the right to become children of God, even to those who believe in His name, [13] who were born, not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man, but of God.

    To be born again, according to these verses, means to be a new person who has left the old ways of life behind and is now experiencing new life in Christ. To be born again means to be saved by God ’s Grace, and God is the source of our salvation.

    It is when our desire is to be like him, to love like him, and to walk like him that we are born again. This change occurs as a result of our hearts being transformed. The truth is that we have been given a new heart.

    We are born again when we place our faith in Him and acknowledge that Jesus is God, that he died on the cross for our sins, and that he rose again to life after death. We were dead in our sins and iniquities, but we have been raised to life through Christ.

    Moreover, Nicodemus may have been taken aback by the connotation of this statement. Nicodemus possessed an excessive amount of knowledge, was an excessively talented individual, and possessed an excessive amount of possessions.

    Was he going to strip himself from all his self-sufficiency and independence, or rather dependence on his own methods. Would he start over?

    For Nicodemus, being a follower of Jesus meant that he would have to abandon all he held dear. His eminence in the eyes of others, his prestige, and his position.

    He would also have to give up on the way he related to God and learn it all again. Jesus taught that the kingdom of God belonged to the poor in Spirit. To those who saw themselves as lacking truth and in desperate need for a savior.

    The recognition that we are sinners, that we are unworthy, and that we require Jesus Christ’s saving grace are all prerequisites for being born again. Humility is required in order to accomplish this.

    God-honoring humility depletes our life of self-sufficiency and independence. It is an understatement to suggest that we are in desperate need of Him and lack the necessary resources within. It is never excessive to shout, Jesus, have mercy on me. It is necessary to acknowledge our inadequacy before Him. This humility results in spiritual development; it bestows upon us the keys to the kingdom of God.

    We should have the same attitude than Jesus Christ,

    Philippians 2:5-10 TPT
    And consider the example that Jesus, the Anointed One, has set before us. Let his mindset become your motivation. [6] He existed in the form of God, yet he gave no thought to seizing equality with God as his supreme prize. [7] Instead he emptied himself of his outward glory by reducing himself to the form of a lowly servant. He became human! [8] He humbled himself and became vulnerable, choosing to be revealed as a man and was obedient. He was a perfect example, even in his death-a criminal’s death by crucifixion! [9] Because of that obedience, God exalted him and multiplied his greatness! He has now been given the greatest of all names! [10] The authority of the name of Jesus causes every knee to bow in reverence! Everything and everyone will one day submit to this name-in the heavenly realm, in the earthly realm, and in the demonic realm.

    Humility is dependence + obedience.

    In order to be born again, Nicodemus had to give up on his human prestige and glory. Empty himself,  become low, become a servant, become vulnerable in obedience.

    He was only beginning to grasp the concept that true authority comes from genuine humility at the time. That power comes from being of service to others. It is only in this way that we can understand what it means to rely on and believe in God to see salvation come true.

    Nicodemus had taken the first step on the path that would lead him to Jesus, a path that would be followed by Paul years later. As he described the journey to salvation, Paul mentioned how he considered everything he had as worthless in order to obtain Jesus, to experience the power of His resurrection and suffering, and ultimately, all for the sake of knowing Jesus.

    Paul wrote in Ephesians 2:8-9 NASBS
    For by grace you have been saved through faith; and that not of yourselves, it is the gift of God; [9] not as a result of works, so that no one may boast.

    Salvation is a gift from God, to which we must answer by laying down our lives in order to follow Him.

    Is it possible that Nicodemus followed Jesus? That isn’t really clear.
    But as a result of this discourse, we understand that we must be born again, and that in order to do so, we must place our lives in the hands of our creator, embracing Jesus’ sacrifice for our sins, repenting, and committing our lives to Jesus unreservedly.

    Romans 10:9-11 NASBS
    that if you confess with your mouth Jesus as Lord, and believe in your heart that God raised Him from the dead, you will be saved; [10] for with the heart a person believes, resulting in righteousness, and with the mouth he confesses, resulting in salvation. [11] For the Scripture says, “Whoever BELIEVES IN HIM WILL NOT BE DISAPPOINTED.”

    Do you believe?  Have you bring born again? He is calling you to come close to Him. If today you hear Him calling don’t resist it.

    Give yourself to Jesus and He will take care of the rest!

  • 7 Benefits of Fasting

    Matthew 9:14-17 NASBS
    Then the disciples of John came to Him, asking, “Why do we and the Pharisees fast, but Your disciples do not fast?” [15] And Jesus said to them, “The attendants of the bridegroom cannot mourn as long as the bridegroom is with them, can they? But the days will come when the bridegroom is taken away from them, and then they will fast. [16] But no one puts a patch of unshrunk cloth on an old garment; for the patch pulls away from the garment, and a worse tear results. [17] Nor do people put new wine into old wineskins; otherwise the wineskins burst, and the wine pours out and the wineskins are ruined; but they put new wine into fresh wineskins, and both are preserved.”

    This is a fairly well-known chapter from the Bible, and it has been explained in a variety of ways by many people throughout history. Here’s my best try at explaining.

    Jesus uses a parable to illustrate fasting as well as the reason why his disciples aren’t fasting, despite the fact that everyone else appears to be.

    Starting with the most important reason for people to fast, Jesus goes on to explain why they should do so. Fasting is a period of abstinence from some activities in order to concentrate on God’s kingdom. Food, beverages, television, and other items fall under this category. Our goal when fasting is to become more intimate with Jesus, and it is Jesus himself who teaches us this when he says:

    Matthew 9:15 NASBS
    “The attendants j of the bridegroom cannot mourn as long as the bridegroom is with them, can they?

    According to Jesus, fasting is not primarily intended to fulfill religious obligations, is not intended to try to gain God’s favour in vain, and most surely is not intended to be noticed by anybody other than God Himself. 

    In Matthew 6:16-18 NASBS
    “Whenever you fast, do not put on a gloomy face as the hypocrites do, for they neglect their appearance so that they will be noticed by men when they are fasting. Truly I say to you, they have their reward in full. [17] But you, when you fast, anoint your head and wash your face [18] so that your fasting will not be noticed by men, but by your Father who is in secret; and your Father who sees what is done in secret will reward you.

    Fasting is a private business between you and God, who sees you in your place of intimacy and blesses you with His Presence. Let us seek to be found in the secret place of intimacy with The Father, rather than falling into the trap of desiring human glory.

    Because of His Presence, our wineskins are transformed, allowing us to accept the fresh wine. However, in this particular instance, wine refers to the delight that comes from new revelations of God’s character.

    Prayer and fasting enable us to enter into the secret area of intimacy with God, and as a result, we are transformed so that we may experience God’s perfect will.

    In His Presence we have:

    His presence that fills me with joy.
    “In Your presence is fullness of joy; at Your right hand are pleasures forevermore.” (Psalm 16:11)

    Those who live in God’s presence are protected. The fact that we remain in His presence places us under the safety of His shadow.
    “He who dwells in the secret place of the Most High shall abide under the shadow of the Almighty’’ (Psalm 91:1).

    In His presence, we find comfort and tranquility.
    “My presence will go with you, and I will give you rest” (Exodus 33:14).

    When we spend time with God, He takes us by hand, leads us to green pastures, and guides us in the path ahead of us.
    “Nevertheless I am continually with You; You hold me by my right hand. You will guide me with Your counsel, and afterward receive me to glory” (Psalm 73:23-24).

    Every mountain, every hurdle, and every hindrance that stands in our way, as well as every evil plan for our lives, are melted away by the fire and strength of God’s presence.
    ” The mountains melt like wax at the presence of the Lord” (Psalm 97:5).
    “Take counsel together, but it will come to nothing; speak the word, but it will not stand, for God is with us” (Isaiah 8:10).

    When we enter into God’s presence, our anxieties and insecurities, as well as our sufferings and sorrows, are lifted and removed from our lives.
    “Come to me, all you who labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest” (Matthew 11:28).

    In His presence, we are transformed, refined, and polished again. His presence removes the chaff from our character and helps us to become better people.
    “But we all, with unveiled face, beholding as in a mirror the glory of the Lord, are being transformed into the same image from glory to glory, just as by the Spirit of the Lord” (2 Corinthians 3:18).

    So let us fast with a heart that yearns for His reign and the Presence of His majesty. It is in doing so that we will be able to share in the Lord’s joy, become more aware of His protective hand over our life, as well feel greater serenity and direction from the Lord.

    As our faith grows as a result of spending time in the secret realm of intimacy, we shall watch the mountains move in His Presence. Abba takes us by the hand, refining our character as he transforms us into the image of Christ in the secret place, where our Father sees and rewards us.

    We leave our worries at His feet and watch as He takes us by the hand, refining our character and transforming us into His image.

    He pours out new wine, a deeper understanding of who He is, and a higher level of His Spirit as our wineskins are transformed in His Presence.

    Thank you, thank you, thank you, Daddy
    Blessings

  • Scandalous Love

    Matthew 9:9-13 NASBS
    As Jesus went on from there, He saw a man called Matthew, sitting in the tax collector’s booth; and He said to him, “Follow Me!” And he got up and followed Him. [10] Then it happened that as Jesus was reclining at the table in the house, behold, many tax collectors and sinners came and were dining with Jesus and His disciples. [11] When the Pharisees saw this, they said to His disciples, “Why is your Teacher eating with the tax collectors and sinners?” [12] But when Jesus heard this, He said, “It is not those who are healthy who need a physician, but those who are sick. [13] But go and learn what this means: ‘I DESIRE COMPASSION, AND NOT SACRIFICE,’ for I did not come to call the righteous, but sinners.

    Jesus is seated among sinners, which is considered a sign of disloyalty to God in Jewish tradition. In Jesus’ day, no self-proclaimed man of God would ever consider spending time with someone who was leading a sinful lifestyle.

    To sit with this people would imply to religious people that you would no longer be able to worship God because you would have become dirty. Just by having fellowship with sinners.

    In the time of Jesus, a tax collector would have been considered more than just an impure person. A tax collector was a Jew who chose to work for the Roman empire in order to collect money from his fellow countrymen. He was paid in silver. According to the rest of the Jewish population, a tax collector was someone who was becoming wealthy at the expense of the disgrace and impoverishment of their homeland.

    But Jesus doesn’t appear to be particularly concerned with the politics of his day. He went straight to the people who were betraying the country, chose one of them to be his disciple, and sat down with them for dinner to discuss their actions. He was even praying with them at the time!

    Jesus doesn’t appear to be troubled by the religious garb or the fact that he doesn’t appear to be following their rules. Jesus astonished the religious leaders as well as the rest of the populace with a single act of pity or compassion (we will return to the profound meaning of the word later).

    Tax collectors were not well received or appreciated by the public. They were traitors, to say the least. However, despite the fact that he was living during a period of very judgmental people,  Jesus was able to take advantage of every opportunity he had to demonstrate scandalous mercy and unheard of acts of love.

    His love went on to dismantle every barrier that stood between humans and the Almighty. The word “compassion” conjures up images of a love that is so genuine and profound that it is not hindered by politics, religious codes of conduct, or even the apathetic behavior that we are all familiar with. He was frequently moved by compassion.

    This compassion is expressed in the Hebrew language as an inward anguish for others that manifests itself in the form of an act of love and assistance. This sympathy can be expressed by tears, groans, or other unidentified sounds, as well as through a strong and determined GO AND DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT!

    When the Pharisees confronted him about why he was eating with such sinners, he responded by revealing his heart and, at the same time, rebuking the religious leaders who had become entrapped in their religious bubble and had failed to understand God’s heart for the people of the world.

    Matthew 9:13 (NASB) is what Jesus said.
    For now, though, go and learn what this means: “I WANT COMPASSION, NOT SACRIFICE,’ for I did not come to call the righteous, but sinners.”

    Here, the term “compassion” or “mercy” refers to a feeling of benevolence or good will toward the unfortunate and afflicted, combined with a wish to assist them. (Thayer’s Bible Dictionary, Dictionary Thayer of the Bible.)

    Isn’t it straightforward? We take something so easy for granted… Helping those in need was something Jesus did with a scandalous amount of compassion, unwavering action, and the sheer desire to assist them.

    That’s where his heart is.

    The rebuke came in the shape of the phrase “I do not desire sacrifice, but rather mercy. ” I don’t want self-righteous people who don’t show mercy and grace to those around them. I do not support religious rituals that ignore individuals who are in desperate need of assistance. To represent me, I want compassionate people who will journey to the ends of the Earth in search of those in need and sit with them and listen to them, as well as love them.

    Remove the locks from your doors and venture out into the streets. Talk to sinners and offer them assistance. This is the result of God’s handiwork.

    Politics and religious codes of behaviour are not barriers to love. Love that goes beyond your own comfort or sense of self-righteousness. Love takes precedence over your disinterest. Get out there and help those who are in need.

    Blessings

  • What Is The Role of Women in the Church, Society and Home in Biblical Times?

    Text taken from the Preacher’s Commentary of the Bible.

    1 Timothy 2:1–3:13

    Let all things be done decently and in order” (1 Cor. 14:40). So Paul ended his instructions to the Corinthians, where worship services had become sources of confusion and conflict rather than renewal and unity. One of my friends is fond of saying, “People sure have a way of lousing things up!” And the church is not exempt. From the beginning, dealing with conflict and tension has been a part of being involved in a church. Even something seemingly as simple as worshiping God together can become a battleground.

    We only make matters worse if we project our wish-dreams for our ideal human society onto the church. I began my Christian journey in the fellowship of folks who idealized New Testament Christianity. The “New Testament Church” was our way of referring to a church that was pure in its motives, programs, and relationships. As time passed, I discovered that the quest for this pure church was like hunting for grunion in the High Sierras. I abandoned my search for the perfect church when I accepted the fact that the New Testament church itself was far from perfect. Even that first church of the twelve, in the presence of Jesus Himself, couldn’t get it all together.

    The fact that Paul had to appeal for things to be done decently and in order obviously meant that things were being done indecently and out of order. We might expect that in a wild place like the seaport town of Corinth. But in Ephesus? If there was one church in which Paul invested more of himself than any other, it was in Ephesus. He had lived and taught there for two years (Acts 19:10). He had sent his most trusted associate, Timothy, to be their pastor. And yet there were problems in their life and worship—problems relating to prayer, to the behavior of some women in the church, and to the standards and conduct of bishops and deacons. It is because Paul dealt with those practical matters of congregational life that this letter is rightly called a Epistle.”

    2:1-8

    Can Prayer Change the World?

    Since Paul had digressed from the main thought of his charge to Timothy in 1:19 and 20, he uses a “therefore” to tie what follows to his continuing concern for the quality of Timothy’s pastoral leadership in Ephesus.

    It’s best to begin by observing that the central theological thrust of the paragraph is not so much on prayer as on the universality of the gospel. The phrase “first of all” is to be read in the sense of “as of primary importance.” In other words, of all the pastoral advice that is to follow, this is the most important. And what is important is not just to pray in corporate worship, but to pray for “all men.” The emphasis is unmistakable—“all men” (v. 1), “all men” (v. 4), “for all” (v. 6).

    The close connection that Paul makes between the universality of the gospel and prayer in public worship is far-reaching in its implications. The all-too-typical pastoral prayer in corporate worship can hardly be said to be of first importance. And it certainly can’t be regarded as a vital force in changing the world. Paul is reaching for something much deeper than mere liturgy. He is calling us to radical change in life and worship.

    The kind of prayer to which Paul is calling us can indeed change the world. But it’s going to have to be something radically different from just saying eloquent prayers in public worship.

    Paul’s logic is at its best. If we are really to pray for all people, we must believe that God loves them all without distinction and that Christ’s sacrifice on the cross was indeed on behalf of all. It’s difficult for us to appreciate the struggle that those early Jewish followers of Jesus had with this. Imagine being raised in the tradition in which the world was divided into two camps, Jew and Gentile, the children of light and the children of darkness, and then, through faith in Christ, learning that God loves all people and that the old distinctions are invalid. It took a lot of doing to work out this new reality in which Jew and Gentile, slave and free, male and female, educated and uneducated are called to live together in a fellowship that seeks and accepts all people alike.

    As a matter of fact, we haven’t worked it out yet. The churches in America, for the most part, merely reflect the social, ethnic, and cultural distinctions of the world around us. It’s obvious that the world has shaped the church more than the church has impacted the world. This is not to accuse the churches of creating or of consciously perpetuating ethnic, cultural, and economic segregation. That’s just the way things are.

    As I’ve come to know the pastors and people of hundreds of churches in East Africa, I have come to appreciate the complexities of their struggles with the divisive forces of ancient tribalism. Even in the Church of Uganda, where the Holy Spirit has been mightily at work through the Revival, a renewal movement which began in 1936, tribal divisions continue to be a source of tension. Baganda, Munyoro, Muganda, Bahororo, Karamajong all have great difficulty overcoming centuries of ill feelings and strained relationships. The great witness of the Church of Uganda is in those places where the power of Christ to create unity and love across tribal divisions is clearly demonstrated.

    Now, I’ve never met anyone who professed a belief that God only desired the salvation of the rich, the educated, the whites, or the males. I’ve never heard anyone preach that Christ gave Himself as a ransom only for a particular group or tribe of people. Not even in South Africa. In a recent visit there, I was privileged to have lunch with a member of Parliament who was a staunch advocate of the official state doctrine of apartheid, the enforced separation of the races. An elder in his church, and a student of church history, he held strongly that salvation is for all, black and white alike, and we had no theological disagreement at that point. I think we’ve all pretty well covered that ground and agree that salvation in Christ is offered to all men and women without distinction.

    But how long can we go on saying one thing and doing another? Whether it’s in South Africa, Sri Lanka, South Korea, or Southern California, the church rarely looks any different from the community center or country club nearby. Can we really pray and give thanks for all people if we’re not actively seeking to enter into active relationships with them? Can we really proclaim that God desires all people to be saved as long as they stay in their own places as determined by race, sex, or money? Can we offer the gospel of Christ’s redemption to all without offering ourselves? Absolutely not!

    It is evident that churches have allowed the world around them to control their agendas. The “homogeneous unit” principle of church growth is a fact. Churches that slant their appeal to their own kind are the churches that most often grow in numbers. Churches in America that reflect the culture of affluence and success are more likely to be successful. Churches like the one I serve would not tolerate any thought of a gospel exclusively for well-educated, successful whites. But if someone from another planet were to visit us on a Sunday morning, they would have to get the impression that we are rather exclusive.

    So what can we do? First, we can admit to the reality of our own indifference. We can stop ignoring the problem. As long as we defend our segregated churches on the grounds that there are no ethnics in our neighborhood or no poor people in our community, we simply perpetuate our own unwritten code of apartheid. There can be no forgiveness, healing, or change without the admission that we have a problem. We call this confession.

    The step that follows confession is repentance, and that means a conscious change of direction. There is built-in resistance to change in all human behavior patterns. If you don’t believe it, try to correct the slice in your golf swing. I am troubled that the church I serve doesn’t really want to change in this area. It seems that we really don’t want to be an all-inclusive church. If we did, our people probably wouldn’t have moved to our suburban community in the first place. We prefer to be with our own kind. We are uncomfortable around folks who don’t think, talk, and look like us. We really have to decide whether we want to change. So far, I don’t see any dramatic changes in the offing. But certainly no change will ever occur until we begin with genuine confession and repentance. And I don’t see how we can go on affirming the universality of the gospel without trying to demonstrate it in actual relationships. To accept things the way they are is to continue to allow the world around us to write our agenda.

    And how do we apply the universality of the gospel to the incredibly complex problems of nationalism, militarism, and warfare? To return to Paul’s logic: if we are really to pray for all people, we must believe that God loves them all without distinction, and that Christ’s sacrifice on the cross was indeed on behalf of all.

    Can we sincerely pray for the salvation of people at the same time that we are arming to kill them? The basic problem that I feel in addressing this question is the confusion that exists in our categories. It’s as though we were trying to play basketball by the rules of football. The technology of warfare has moved rapidly in a short time. Our thinking has not caught up with the realities.

    The ultimate example of this is talking about winning or surviving a nuclear war. The press recently carried reports of an evacuation plan for Southern California in the event of a nuclear attack. In the first place, anyone who drives the freeways at rush hour will attest to the impossibility of such a mass evacuation of more than five million people on what would most likely be less than thirty minutes’ notice! One of our officials even said that one could survive by digging a hole and covering it with a wooden door and a lot of dirt! Our thinking has not caught up with technology. The old categories of shields to ward off spears, steel helmets to deflect bullets, and thick walls to resist cannonballs are no longer applicable.

    It seems to me that’s where our theories of deterrence break down. The fact is that technology has advanced beyond the point of capable defenses. This is true with the new breed of conventional weapons as well as with nuclear weapons. Official estimates are that a conventional war, involving Russia and the United States, if fought in western Europe would produce 500,000 military casualties in the first sixty days. To the United States, this would mean more casualties than we suffered in World War II and Vietnam combined. Remember, this is in just two months, without the use of nuclear weapons. And I haven’t even mentioned the diabolical potentials for chemical and biological warfare. If you confront these realities openly and honestly, you may need more than a glass of warm milk to go to sleep tonight.

    The maintenance of military strength with some equivalence among the nations is a fact of life in a sinful world. But the nuclear arms race, in which each superpower had the capability of destroying the other thirty times over, was a stark symptom of technology out of control and far beyond our thinking. And perhaps the greatest danger to the world still could come from a small country with nuclear capability and a dictator accountable to no responsible political process.

    There can be no question in my mind that we as Christians must address these questions of nationalism, militarism, and warfare, not only because of their urgency and complexity, but also because of our beliefs as set forth in this passage. We are to pray for all people, especially political authorities “that we may lead a quiet and peaceable life in all godliness and reverence.” And the reason that this is of first importance is that God desires the salvation of all people, and Christ gave Himself as a ransom for all people.

    It is this universality of God’s love and Christ’s death for all people that calls us to a new way of thinking and a newer way of living. Where will the initiative arise for a new ideology if not from the gospel? And where will the message of God’s love for all people without distinction be heard, if not from the church? The old competitive nationalisms, with their seeds of the destruction of humankind, must be challenged by Christians in every country. The insane pursuit of military expansion and adventurism must be exposed by the prophetic voice of the churches in every land. The disobedience to the Word of God entailed in the squandering of our resources on weapons of war while millions of the people whom God loves are starving places us clearly under God’s inescapable judgment.

    To be silent or complacent in an hour such as this is to part company with Isaiah, Jeremiah, Amos, and all of the prophets, and also with Jesus. To allow any nationalism to control the agenda of the church is too tragic a failure to even contemplate. I see no way to talk about the universality of the gospel, as Paul does here, without speaking out against the thought of sending millions of people into an eternity without Christ at the push of a button or the spray of a nozzle.

    Can prayer change the world? I believe that it can. But not just by saying eloquent prayers in public. Paul closes our paragraph with the key in verse 8. He calls the men to “pray everywhere, lifting up holy hands, without wrath and doubting.” Most commentaries break the paragraphs between verses 7 and 8. I feel strongly that verse 8 is the conclusion of the previous paragraph.

    The picture of lifting holy hands not only harks back to the ancient Jewish traditions; it is also a picture of coming before God with clean hands and a pure heart. How can we lift holy hands to God if we are not actively seeking to relate to all men and women, whom He loves without distinction? How can we lift holy hands to God if we are not speaking and working for the reduction and elimination of the forces and weapons poised to destroy the very people God loves and for whom Christ died? To raise holy hands, without wrath and doubting, is clearly of first importance in our worship agenda. Such is the prayer and the worship that could change the world.

    When I reflect upon the prophets of the Old Testament, I often raise the question, why did God choose a particular nation, as He did Israel, to be His chosen people? They preferred to think of their election as a privilege, but the prophets saw it as a responsibility. The divine call and love, while indeed a privilege, must always be regarded as an awesome responsibility.

    And why does God work through a particular people such as Israel then, and the new Israel, the church, now? I believe He does this in order to show to everyone else, through those chosen people, what His design for life, His love for all people, really is.

    When Israel allowed the world around it to write its agenda, it failed to show the world God’s agenda. When we allow the world around us to control our agenda to fit its prejudices, its nationalisms, and its militarisms, we have failed to show our world that God desires all to be saved and that Christ gave Himself a ransom for all.

    Saying prayers in public worship becomes an object of God’s scorn where those prayers are not expressions of the universality of the gospel in word and deed. How shocked were the people and priests when Amos presented God as saying:

    “I hate, I despise your feasts,

    and I take no delight in your solemn assemblies.

    Even though you offer me your burnt
    offerings and cereal offerings,

    I will not accept them,

    and the peace offerings of your fatted beasts

    I will not look upon.

    Take away from Me the noise of your songs;

    to the melody of your harps I will not listen.

    But let justice run down like waters,

    and righteousness like an everflowing stream.”

    —Amos 5:21–24 (RSV)

    Prayer can change the world, but it’s going to have to be a way of praying different from merely saying prayers.

    Troubling Questions About Women in the Church

    I’ve been around long enough to remember reading this passage without batting an eyebrow. More than any other time in Christian history, this passage, along with others like 1 Corinthians 11:2–16; 14:34–35; and 1 Peter 3:1–6 cannot be read without causing many temperatures to rise.

    2:9-15 Before we examine the text itself, it’s important to establish some ground rules on how we will read it. Let me suggest three:

    We must read the passage in the light of all other Scripture. It is not the purpose of this commentary to present a thorough technical study, but the serious student may begin with Genesis 1:26–28, 2:18–25, 3:1–24 and work through numerous passages, all pertaining to our understanding of male and female. Simplistic generalizations barring women from public ministry have no place, for instance, when Priscilla is called by Paul “a fellow worker in Christ Jesus” (Rom. 16:3), and when Euodia and Syntyche are referred to as “these women who labored with me in the gospel, with Clement also, and the rest of my fellow workers” (Phil. 4:3). The whole of Scripture must be considered in the interpretation of any given passage.
    We must distinguish between passages that describe events or practices at the time, and those that clearly teach principles designed for universal and timeless application. This ground rule is extremely important, for example, in the Gospels and in the Book of Acts. It’s one thing to read that Jesus turned water into wine, but that is no indication that we are called to do the same in the continuing life of the church. Similarly, just because certain things happened as described in the Book of Acts, does not necessarily mean that they are to be regular patterns in the church. It may not be easy to decide whether a given passage was intended primarily as narrative or teaching or both. But the question must be considered.
    We must read the passage within its cultural, social, and historical setting. It shouldn’t startle anyone to be told that the Bible was written by real people, struggling with real problems, in real places and times. To read it with first century eyeglasses and hear it through twenty-first century headsets is not always easy. But that is our task and privilege.

    With these ground rules established, let’s play ball. As stated before, I choose to relate verse 8 to the previous paragraph, but verse 9 clearly contains a continuity of thought. Remember, the original text did not have sentence or paragraph divisions. I see the “in like manner” saying in effect that as the men are to lead in public prayer, not just by the words that are spoken, but with “holy hands” by the quality of their lives, so the women are to show their faith both by their outward dress and by their good works. The paragraph deals with three themes: clothing and Christian witness (9–10), leadership in the church (11–12), and the Fall revisited (13–15).

    Clothing and Christian witness (vv. 9–10). In Paul’s mind, which was steeped in the Scriptures, any description of a virtuous woman had to reflect Proverbs 31:10–31. No passage in the Bible, or perhaps in all ancient literature, exalts a woman with higher praise. The woman of that passage is no shrinking violet, blending into the wallpaper. Of her it was said, “strength and honor are her clothing;… Charm is deceitful and beauty is vain, but a woman who fears the Lord, she shall be praised” (Prov. 31:25, 30).

    The issue before us is that of values: what makes a person valuable, and what should a person hold valuable? Paul addresses the issue specifically for women. This could well indicate that Paul was confronting a problem that had arisen on the local scene. Perhaps some of the women in the church in Ephesus had begun to use their new freedom in Christ wrongly. This reality of their new freedom must not be overlooked.

    Here is where an understanding of the social and cultural background of the New Testament period is essential. Christians in Ephesus were from both Jewish and Greek backgrounds. In the Jewish tradition, a woman was regarded more as a piece of property than as a person. She was without rights or power. In spite of the honor given to her in such a passage as Proverbs 31, in actual practice outside of the home, she was not regarded as a person. There was a Jewish prayer in which the man thanked God that he was not a Gentile, a slave, or a woman. One could have lovely daughters, but a marriage without a male heir was considered a disaster.

    Women were also held to be nonpersons on the Greek side of the ledger. The life of the Greek woman was confined mostly to the home. And even at home, she was her husband’s property. She lived in her own quarters and did not appear in public alone. She was rarely involved in community meetings or activities. Though there were some women in business, such as Lydia in Philippi (Acts 16:14), they were the exceptions and not the rule.

    I first experienced this view of women in a visit to Afghanistan in 1970. For the most part, the streets and bazaars were filled with men. I never saw a woman alone in public, and most of the women wore traditional long tentlike dresses and veils. In a dinner in an Afghan home, only the men gathered around the table and we were served by the young men of the household, though I assumed the mother and daughters were in the kitchen preparing the meal. As we left the home, the wife was brought to the door to greet us—and she was veiled. To be sure, those traditions are changing throughout the world, largely due to Western influence, but they can still be found in many countries, especially in Muslim culture.

    One group of women in the New Testament period who did appear outside of the home were the sacred prostitutes. In Corinth, the Temple of Aphrodite boasted a thousand of them, and their activities were not confined to the temple. It may have been difficult to walk the streets of Corinth without being confronted by some of them. In Ephesus, the temple of Diana had hundreds of sacred prostitutes. Prostitution was regarded as a form of worship to some of the gods.

    What we must realize is that when a woman became a Christian, she was, for the very first time in her life, regarded fully as a human being. The way in which Paul singled out women and preached to them (Acts 16:13) was a radical departure from Jewish and Greek culture. Treating a slave girl as a human being landed Paul in prison (Acts 16:16–24). From the very beginning, women were sought and accepted in the fellowship. When Mark underscored the fact that there were a number of women who traveled with Jesus, he was pointing to something very different and significant about the ministry of Jesus. And, of course, Paul summed up this radical difference that the gospel made: “There is neither male nor female; for you are all one in Christ Jesus” (Gal. 3:28). Does this obliterate all distinctions between male and female and make the Christian community unisex? Of course not! But it does make a clean break with all cultural mores based upon some assumed inherent superiority of male over female.

    What does all of this have to do with clothing and Christian witness? A great deal. As women received their liberation in Christ from the old Hebrew and Greek suppressions, we have to believe that some of them went beyond the boundaries of common sense in expressing their new-found freedom and power. And one of the ways they announced their new-found status could well have been in the way they dressed and fixed their hair. That’s still a way that women work off some of their frustrations. Going out to buy a new outfit and stopping at the hairdresser on the way home is sometimes good therapy. But if a woman, or a man for that matter, starts measuring personal worth by the clothing worn and the outward appearance, it becomes a case of misplaced values.

    The old cliché “Clothes make the man” applies to women as well. But, all it can really mean within the bounds of healthy values is that clothing is often the first statement we make about who we are to those who do not know us. If I wear my painting clothes to the first day of a new class that I teach at the seminary, I will be thought of quite differently than if I wear a jacket and tie. When I arrive to begin a conference with pastors in Uganda, I don’t wear shorts and a T-shirt. As people get to know me, what I wear might not make a great deal of difference in their opinion of me. But I cannot separate my clothing from what I want to say about myself.

    Because clothing says something about the person wearing it, it is related to Christian witness. If the newly liberated women in the church at Ephesus were coming to the meetings in all kinds of finery and lavish accessories, they were making a statement as to what this new Christian community believes about values. Extravagance and ostentation are always to be avoided, partly as our witness to our belief that our money should be used, not for selfish consumption, but for the kingdom of God.

    And let’s be willing to struggle with all of the ambiguities that this matter presents. Customs and fashions vary from time to time and place to place. On a tour group in Israel, one of our women was a good representative of accepted clothing styles in Southern California. Her sundresses and halter tops would raise no questions at one of our weekday Bible study groups. But in Israel? She was not allowed to enter the shrines and holy places. I overheard a comment from a local, “She looks like a prostitute!” No one would say that of her at home. But in another culture, her clothing made a different statement.

    It may well have been that the Christian women in Ephesus were looking more like prostitutes than like newly redeemed children of God. Could it be that in many of our churches on Sunday mornings we look more like commercials for the American image of success than like people concerned with the hungry and naked of the world?

    Paul’s admonition to the women at Ephesus needs to be heard by us all. Our culture drives us to place all too much value on outward appearance. We need to be reminded that God looks upon the heart. We are each of infinite value, not on the basis of what we wear or own, but on the basis of God’s love for us. We should thus hold valuable, not the things on which price tags are so readily placed, but those things which are eternal. To adorn ourselves with good works is the best fashion advice ever given.

    Leadership in the church (vv. 11–12). It’s my guess that these two verses will continue to be a source of disagreement among Christians for a long time to come. Our convictions and traditions in the matter of women in leadership in the church are often deeply imbedded and strongly felt. I have some Christian friends who will have nothing to do with a church that ordains women to leadership positions. I have other Christian friends who would have nothing to do with a church that doesn’t. I find myself praying that we’ll find a way to love one another across this battleline and stop fighting each other for the sake of our common mission to the world.

    However, I have to express my conviction that if we read this passage and its companion in 1 Corinthians 14:34–35 in the light of our three ground rules, we will be able to come to some reasonable conclusions.

    As is true in all of his letters, Paul is addressing specific people and specific situations. Rarely do we have access to the actual problems. But is it not safe to assume that some of these newly liberated women in Christ had become overly aggressive in the meetings of the congregation? The Jewish woman had never been allowed to read the Scriptures in the synagogue or to teach in a school. In the temple at Jerusalem, she could only go as far as the outer court. (To this day, she is confined to a smaller section of the Western Wall in Jerusalem.) The Greek woman had rarely had an opportunity to be heard by anyone outside of her home.

    It would be difficult for me to believe that some of the women in this new and exhilarating climate of the gospel wouldn’t get carried away. It doesn’t take much imagination to visualize a scene in which a few women seized power and were dominating the leadership and worship of the church in Corinth and in Ephesus. There’s no indication that such problems existed in places such as Thessalonica, Philippi, or Rome. In fact, as we have already seen, Paul referred to women in Rome and Philippi as “fellow workers.”

    What the interpreter must decide, then, is the scope of application. Were these only local situations that needed the drastic remedy that Paul prescribed, or was Paul setting forth a universal rule to be applied in all churches, in all places? I prefer the former. This preference seems to be supported by Paul’s use of the first person singular in verse 12. Paul is clearly referring to his personal practice. It seems to me that this practice is to be limited rather than universal in the church.

    And, by the way, the admonition to the women to learn in silence isn’t bad pedagogical advice for men either. How else does most learning take place? I get the feeling that Paul was addressing some women who had lost the art of listening. Coming out of the deprivations that had long been imposed upon them, they had a lot to learn, a lot of catching up to do. They needed to do a lot of listening, and thus the appeal to “learn in silence with all submission” may not have sounded to them the way it sounds to us. I prefer to hear it as good pedagogical advice in that particular setting, a corrective to some local abuses which could occur anywhere, anytime.

    Before we leave this subject, I need to express a conviction and a hope. My conviction is that we have no basis for relegating women to subservient roles in the church on the basis of the whole of Scripture. Functional roles are not clearly established by the New Testament. The long history of the emergence of different structures and officers in the churches certainly attests to the fact that no single pattern is set forth in the Scriptures. To take the Bible seriously must mean that we begin with the creation of male and female, both in the image of God. It must also mean that we honor the gifts of the Holy Spirit given to all believers. To restrict the recognition of such gifts on the basis of sexuality is hardly consistent with Paul’s classic statement: “There is neither male nor female; for you are one in Christ Jesus” (Gal. 3:28).

    My hope is that we will grow in our ability to love and respect one another in our differences. I want to grow in my willingness to accept those who insist on a universal application of what I consider to be a local and historical matter. At the same time, I pray that those who differ will recognize that we take the Scripture no less seriously in departing from the traditional views of all-male leadership in the church. To make this matter a test of orthodoxy can only be detrimental to the body of Christ.

    The Fall revisited (vv. 13–15). The third, and by far the most complex, issue raised in this paragraph is Paul’s view of woman in relationship to the Fall. Even as I say “Paul’s view,” I recognize the fairness of pointing out that the statements in verses 13 and 14 were probably representative of the prevailing view of the rabbis at that time. The same idea is expressed in 1 Corinthians 11:8–9, in which the fact that man was created first, and that woman was created from the man, is said to establish man’s priority and superiority over the woman. The rabbis also added that though woman was second in creation, she was the first to sin.

    It need not be surprising that Paul reflected the view of the Fall which prevailed in his time. To make this a case for the inherent inferiority of women is neither necessary nor good. This is not the only passage by Paul which presents us with difficulty. His allegorical treatment of Sarah and Hagar, with Hagar corresponding to Mount Sinai and the earthly Jerusalem in contrast to the heavenly Jerusalem (Sarah) (Gal. 4:21–31), is not as clear as we might wish. Likewise, his argument in Romans 11 and the statement that “all Israel will be saved” (11:26) is a source of continuing difficulty, and interpreters have been unable to agree upon a universally acceptable solution.

    Rather than make a case for a rigid view of the inferiority and subservience of women, why not place this passage in the category of those remarkably few statements of Paul which best be admitted to be beyond our grasp? There’s no question in my mind that it reflects a debatable view. To argue that the sequence of the creation narrative teaches the superiority of the man certainly goes beyond anything said in Genesis.

    Two classic statements in Matthew Henry’s eighteenth century commentary are worth recalling: “Eve’s being made after Adam, and out of him, puts an honor upon that sex, as the glory of man (1 Cor. 11:7). If man is the head, she is the crown… . The man was dust refined, but the woman was dust double-refined, one remove further from the earth.” The second has been more widely quoted: “… not made out of his head to rule over him, nor out of his feet to be trampled upon by him, but out of his side to be equal with him, under his arm to be protected, and near his heart to be beloved.”

    While the traditional view didn’t leave much hope for the woman, we can be grateful to Paul for daring to go beyond that view in verse 15. Unfortunately, scholars still can’t agree on what he meant. The exhortation to women to continue in “faith, love, and holiness, with self-control” applies to men as well and expresses the norm for Christian living. What is perhaps the most difficult phrase in the pastorals, however, is “she will be saved in childbearing” (v. 15). A number of interpretations have been suggested.

    Some of them have to do with the meaning of the word for “saved” used here. To make childbirth a means or requirement for being saved is clearly inconsistent with Paul’s view of salvation “by grace through faith in Jesus Christ” (Eph. 2:8–9). But the Greek word for “saved” is not used in the New Testament exclusively in the sense of spiritual salvation. It is also used to mean “health or wholeness.” It is used in the gospels in connection with Jesus’ healings. But even if it is taken in that sense here, we still have the implication that women can find true wholeness only through bearing children. Many single women would testify otherwise.

    A more ancient interpretation emphasizes the presence of the definite article in the Greek text before “childbearing.” Here, the reading is “the childbearing,” meaning the birth of Jesus by Mary. If Paul wanted to say that the salvation of women would come by the birth of Jesus, this was an awkward and obscure way of saying it.

    Others tie the statement to Genesis 3:15, in which, after the Fall, it is said that the seed of the woman would crush the serpent’s head. This, again, is a variation of the messianic theme above.

    Yet another approach is to regard motherhood in general as a very wholesome and health-giving experience, reinforcing the traditional view of the Hebrew and Greek cultures that woman’s basic value was in giving birth to children and raising them.

    I’m convinced that the meaning of these verses will never be resolved and that we do well to accept our limitations in interpreting them.

    As Paul has begun these practical instructions for the life and worship of the church, it is certainly clear that he did not intend to deliver a comprehensive manual of polity and worship. He is only addressing some specific needs in that particular situation, out of which comes helpful guidance for the churches in all times.

    He will now turn to questions about officers and leaders in the church.

  • Sonship Explained in the Bible

    Written by D. A. Carson

    When the Bible uses “son” metaphorically to refer to someone other than a biological son, the range of its usage is rather large. The high point is Jesus the Son of God; Christians too, both men and women, are called sons (NIV “children”) of God. The paths toward the full range of the biblical usage of “son” are rich and diverse.

    Sonship in the Ancient World

    In addition to the many instances in the Bible where sonship is entirely natural and biological (e.g., Gen 22:2; Ruth 4:13,17; 1 Sam 16:18; Ezek 18:14; Matt 10:37; Luke 15:11), sonship is often metaphoric. The root of these metaphoric uses lies in the way sons achieved their identity. In the Western world today, only about 5 percent of sons end up doing the same work their fathers did; in the ancient world, the overwhelming majority of sons took up the same vocation as that of their fathers. The sons of farmers became farmers, the sons of fishermen became fishermen—and in both cases the sons learned their trade from their fathers, not at a college or in an apprenticeship with someone outside the family. These realities established their identity. That is why Jesus can be identified as “the carpenter’s son” (Matt 13:55) and, presumably after the death of his (apparent) father Joseph, as himself “the carpenter” (Mark 6:3).

    These social realities generate many of the sonship metaphors in the Bible. Jesus says that the peacemakers “will be called children [sons] of God” (Matt 5:9): he presupposes that God is the supreme peacemaker, and insofar as human beings make peace, they are acting like God; so that on that axis, at least, they can be called sons of God. Similarly, those who love their enemies are “children [sons] of God” (Luke 6:35). Biologically, of course, Abraham is the ancestor of all Israelites, but because faith characterized so much of his life, he is, more important, “the father of all who believe” (Rom 4:11), and believers are “the children [sons] of Abraham” (Gal 3:7). Biologically, the Judeans of Jesus’ day are Abraham’s descendants, but Jesus is prepared to challenge their claim to Abraham as their father on the grounds that they are not acting like Abraham (John 8:39–41). Their actions—their lies about who Jesus is and their efforts to kill him—demonstrate that their real “father” is the devil himself (John 8:44). In this metaphoric usage, paternity—who one’s father is—is established not by genes but by conduct.

    The Range of “Sons”

    Understandably, in the original languages there are many metaphoric uses of the expression “sons of [something]” that are translated into simpler expressions in English because English does not use “sons of [something]” in the same way. Translators rightly render “son of a murderer” as “murderer” (2 Kgs 6:32). The “son of a bow” is rendered “arrows” (Job 41:28). A “son of might” is a “fighter” (2 Sam 17:10); the “sons of wise men” are “wise counselors” (Isa 19:11). These and many more examples show us the patterns of thought that make some uses of “son(s) of God” easier to understand.

    Son(s) of God

    The uses of this expression are diverse. The Bible designates Adam as “the son of God” (Luke 3:37): human beings were made in the image of God (Gen 1:27), designed to reflect God in all ways appropriate to their status. As soon as someone in the line of David becomes king, he is declared to be God’s “son” (2 Sam 7:14; Ps 2:7; cf. Ps 89:19–29). Even when a Davidic king reigns unjustly, he does not thereby cease being God’s “son” (e.g., Ezek 21:10), for the category of “sonship” discloses how he ought to be like God.

    Collectively, God calls the people of Israel his “son” (Exod 4:22–23), whether they are properly reflecting him or not. The Bible uses the plural expression “sons of God” to refer to angels (see NIV text notes on Job 1:6; 2:1; 38:7; see also Pss 29:1; 89:6, though the NIV renders the expression as “heavenly beings”), including the fallen angel called Satan (Job 1:6; 2:1). The collective “children [sons] of God” frequently refers to God’s covenant people, whether under the terms of the old covenant (e.g., Deut 14:1; Isa 43:6; Jer 3:19) or the new (e.g., Rom 8:14; Phil 2:15; 1 John 3:1). This Father-child relationship is in view not only when the Bible calls believers children, but also when believers refer to God as Father (e.g., Mal 2:10) or, in the NT, address him as Father (e.g., Matt 6:9).

    One other facet of the Bible’s usage of “children [son(s)] of God” as applied to believers must be underscored. The final vision of the Bible ratchets up the intensity or perfection of many expressions introduced much earlier in the Bible—and it does the same for sonship. For example, “God’s dwelling place is now among the people . . . They will be his people, and God himself will be with them and be their God” (Rev 21:3). When similar words are said to the Israelites in the wake of the giving of the law at Sinai, God’s dwelling place is tied to the tabernacle (Exod 25:8) and later the temple (1 Kgs 8:13), and God will be with them, manifesting himself to them as they traverse the wilderness (Exod 29:44–45; Num 1:51).

    When similar words are connected with the promise of a new covenant (Jer 31:31–34), the focus is no longer on the tabernacle and priestly system but on the inward transformation characteristic of the new covenant. In Rev 21, in the context of a new heaven and a new earth, within the walls of the new Jerusalem, God’s presence with his people entails perfection: no more sin, no more of sin’s miserable entailments, and no need of tabernacle or temple because the entire city is the Most Holy Place (Rev 21:22; see “Temple”). In exactly the same way, this vision in Rev 21 ratchets up the significance of “son”: “he who is victorious will inherit all this, and I will be his God and he will be my son” (Rev 21:7, author’s paraphrase)—and in this context the son, the believer, is utterly sinless (contrast the sins of those who are not sons, v. 8), perfectly reflecting the heavenly Father so far as God’s image-bearers can.

    Jesus the Son of God

    The Bible applies the title “Son of God” to Jesus in several distinctive ways—and this is where the trajectories of biblical themes running throughout the Bible come together.

    The True Israel

    Just as Israel is depicted as God’s son—a frequently failing son—so Jesus recapitulates key episodes in Israel’s life to disclose himself as the Son who does not fail. “Out of Egypt I called my son” (Hos 11:1) pictures the exodus, but Jesus too is “called” out of Egypt (Matt 2:15). Israel was tested and tempted during 40 years in the wilderness and frequently failed; Jesus is tested and tempted during 40 days and nights in the wilderness—the devil casts doubts on whether Jesus really is “the Son of God”—but this Son proves utterly loyal (Matt 4:1–11).

    The True Davidic King

    As is true with other kings in David’s line, when Solomon ascends to the throne, God declares, “I will be his father, and he will be my son” (2 Sam 7:14; cf. Ps 2:7). That same passage, however, promises to David (ca. 1000 BC) an unending dynasty (2 Sam 7:16). God progressively discloses how this will be fulfilled. Less than three centuries later, the prophet Isaiah foresees a king “on David’s throne” whose “government and peace” will never end and who will be called “Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace” (Isa 9:6–7). Other passages closely identify this coming Davidic king, sometimes designated “Messiah” (see “The Kingdom of God: Jesus as the Davidic King”), with God the supreme Shepherd (e.g., Ezek 34:1–24). Jesus the Son of God insists that he has received from his Father the command to be the ideal good shepherd (John 10:1–18).

    Mark’s Gospel begins by announcing “Jesus the Messiah [almost certainly referring to the Davidic king], the Son of God” (Mark 1:1), and this is confirmed almost immediately at the baptism of Jesus, “You are my Son, whom I love” (Mark 1:11). When Mark’s Gospel draws to a close and the centurion who witnesses Jesus’ death exclaims, “Surely this man was the Son of God!” (Mark 15:39), whatever pagan notions the centurion presupposes by the expression, Mark’s readers recognize that Jesus is, at very least, the promised Davidic king, the Messiah. Jesus supremely enters into this kingly role by his resurrection from the dead (Rom 1:3–4). When Heb 1:5 ties Jesus to the promise of 2 Sam 7:14, it is not confusing Jesus with Solomon but connecting him through this verse with the trajectory of Davidic kings that finds its promise and culmination in him. This makes him superior to the angels, for only he reigns perfectly in the name of his heavenly Father.

    The Unique Son, One With the Father

    NT writers find diverse ways to distinguish Jesus’ sonship from ours. For example, in Paul’s writings, believers become sons/children of God by adoption; the same thing is never said of Jesus. But it is John who repeatedly insists that Jesus is the “one and only Son” (e.g., John 1:18; 3:16) and then explains more fully what he means. While human beings may be “sons/children of God” because along one axis or another we act like God (making peace, loving our enemies, reigning in David’s line), only Jesus is the perfect Son of God because “whatever the Father does the Son also does” (John 5:19, emphasis added). For example, as the Word of God, Jesus the Son has created everything (John 1:3); like the Father, the Son raises the dead and “gives life to whom he is pleased to give it” (John 5:21). Small wonder that God is determined that all should honor the Son “just as they honor the Father” (John 5:23), which can certainly not be said of other “sons/children of God.” Jesus the Son is not only the one through whom God “made the universe” (Heb 1:2), but he is “the radiance of God’s glory and the exact representation of his being, sustaining all things by his powerful word” (Heb 1:3).

    Intertwinings

    The different ways in which the Bible applies “Son of God” to Jesus do not always follow independent trajectories through the Bible. Frequently they intertwine. For example, while Matt 1–4 emphasizes that Jesus as the Son of God is the new Israel, in the midst of this passage are the words “This is my Son, whom I love” (3:17), almost certainly picking up the Davidic/kingly use of sonship that was also implicit in the initial genealogy (ch. 1). Again, while Heb 1:5–13 focuses on the Davidic/kingly theme of sonship, the preceding verses display Jesus as the unique Son who is one with his Father (Heb 1:1–4). These and other numerous instances of intertwined uses of “Son of God” applied to Jesus demonstrate that the diverse uses, rather than entirely separate uses, “cross-pollinate” one another to generate a theologically rich notion of Jesus the Son of God.

  • Reading (How?) The Bible for Transformation

    Brian H. Cosby

    The Apostle Paul encouraged the Roman believers, “Do not be conformed to this age, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind” (Rm 12:2).

    Most of us could probably think of a few ways to avoid being “conformed to this age,” but what about transformation? How are we transformed by the renewing of our minds? How do we appropriate the truth of Scripture into our thinking and affections?

    Centuries ago, brave men and women sought to reclaim the centrality of the Bible in the worship and life of the community of faith—a period called the Protestant Reformation. These Reformers championed sola Scriptura: the belief that the Bible alone bears authority in all things pertaining to life and godliness.

    As the Reformation spread across Europe during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, a new generation of Bible-loving, Christ-exalting, and joy-pursuing Christians carried the Reformation torch throughout the English-speaking world.

    These “Puritans,” as they became known, inherited the Reformation theology of their predecessors—Martin Luther, John Calvin, and Ulrich Zwingli (among others)—and clothed it with practical application. They set out to purify the church from its unbiblical vestiges of man-centered theology and worship. But their zeal for sola Scriptura soon engendered persecution, and many of them faced torture, imprisonment, and even death.

    That we today enjoy the preaching of God’s Word in English, an emphasis on daily devotions, and the privilege of families reading the Bible together can be directly traced to the labors and sacrifices of the Puritans. In short, the Puritans sought spiritual transformation through the Word of God by the power of his Spirit. In the spirit of the Reformation and of the Puritans, below are six ways to appropriate the truth of Scripture for spiritual transformation.

    THE SPIRIT OF GOD IN TRANSFORMATION
    God uses his Word both to save and to sanctify his people. “Faith comes from what is heard, and what is heard comes through the message about Christ” (Rm 10:17). That message—the good news of Jesus—is the “power of God for salvation to everyone who believes” (Rm 1:16). We plant and water; God gives the growth (1Co 3:7).

    Thomas Watson (ca 1620-1686), the later English Puritan, wrote, “We may read many truths in the Bible, but we cannot know them savingly, till God by his Spirit shines upon our soul.” Similarly, the Puritan John Flavel (ca 1630-1691) explained, “We preach and pray, and you hear; but there is no motion Christ-ward until the Spirit of God blows upon them.” We must remember that any transformation that takes place in our lives comes by the sheer sovereign grace of God. Scripture is a means by which God alone saves and sanctifies his people. Therefore, he alone receives all the glory and praise!

    READING THE BIBLE FOR TRANSFORMATION
    Increasingly, Christians in the West have become biblically illiterate. Most do not know the books of the Bible, the Ten Commandments, or even the events of Jesus’s life. We cannot articulate the great “drama” of redemption—from both Old and New Testaments—or what basic biblical words mean, like justification, adoption, or sanctification. Much of this biblical illiteracy stems from a simple lack of reading Scripture.

    When you read the Bible, read with the expectation that God is at work. The same Holy Spirit who inspired the Scriptures long ago is the same Holy Spirit who illumines and applies the Scriptures as you read. So read expectantly, asking God to show you wonderful things from his Word (Ps 119:18).

    Thomas Watson gave this helpful exhortation: “Leave not off reading the Bible till you find your hearts warmed. … Let it not only inform you, but inflame you.”

    Make Bible reading a priority. If you need to, gather friends for accountability and follow a Bible-reading plan, like the one developed by Robert Murray M’Cheyne (1813-1843). Remove any obstacles that might hinder your time in the Scriptures. If you don’t, the cares of the world will choke out the cures of the Word (Mk 4:18-19). Oftentimes, Bible reading ignites a greater love for reading. So tolle lege (Lat.)—take up and read!

    MEMORIZING SCRIPTURE FOR TRANSFORMATION
    Memorizing anything takes considerable effort. Memory works in ways analogous to a muscle—the more we exercise it, the more we are able to retain. Usually.

    For some reason, children stop memorizing Bible verses around middle school age, never to pick it up again. Adults today, by and large, do not make the effort to memorize Scripture, which can oftentimes be seen in the devastating effects of a shallow and joyless faith.

    The Puritan John Bunyan (1628-1688), in his classic work, The Pilgrim’s Progress, describes the main character, Christian, battling the evil dragon, Apollyon. The description is worth noting:

    “While Apollyon lifted himself up to deliver his last blow and to make a full end of this good man, Christian nimbly stretched out his hand for his sword and grabbed it, saying, ‘Rejoice not against me, O my enemy: when I fall, I shall rise back up.’ With that, Christian gave Apollyon a deadly thrust, which made the fiend fall back as one who had received a mortal wound.”

    Notice that Christian grabs his “sword” and then speaks God’s Word, using it as both a defensive and an offensive weapon.

    The Apostle Paul teaches that Christians should “put on the full armor of God” (Eph 6:11)—belt, breastplate, sandals, shield, and a helmet. However, he gives one final and essential piece of armor: “the sword of the Spirit—which is the word of God” (v. 17). The word for “word” here, in Greek, is the more unusual rhema, which is the spoken word. In order for Christian to pick up his sword and speak God’s Word in battle, he had to first know the Word in his heart.

    The Psalmist writes, “I have treasured your word in my heart so that I may not sin against you” (Ps 119:11). Assaulted by Satan in the wilderness, Jesus rebuked his adversary by quoting the Scriptures that he knew by heart. Oh how we need to write God’s Word on the tablet of our hearts today!

    Here are a few suggestions if your brain “muscle” needs some stretching. First, don’t bite off more than you can chew. Before you set out to memorize the entire New Testament, start with a few verses or, if you are more seasoned, a whole chapter.

    Second, ask others in your church or family to join you and to keep you accountable. This will help provide regular reminders, especially if you have a busy schedule. Third, incorporate as many ways to memorize as possible—through music, writing it out on paper, repetition, or other creative ideas. Through it all, may God’s Word revive your soul and transform your mind and heart.

    MEDITATING ON SCRIPTURE FOR TRANSFORMATION
    Meditating on God’s Word ushers us into the green pastures of God’s transformative grace. The Puritan Edmund Calamy (1600-1666) defined biblical meditation as “dwelling upon the mercies we receive and chewing upon the promises.”

    Thomas Hooker (1586-1647) described meditation as a “serious intention of the mind whereby we come to search out the truth, and settle it effectually upon the heart.” When we ponder, think about, wrestle with, and chew on the text (so to speak), we are transformed by the renewing of our minds.

    Thomas Hooker (1586-1647) was born in England and emigrated to Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1633. Hooker led a group from what is now Cambridge, MA to settle in Hartford, CT.

    When we talk about “meditation,” we are not talking about the Eastern religious practice of crossing your legs, saying “Om,” and emptying your mind. Far from it. Biblical meditation seeks to fill the mind with the truth, meaning, and application of the biblical text. In so doing, the Spirit of God aligns our minds with the mind of Christ so that we might be transformed into his likeness.

    Psalm 1 speaks of a man whose “delight is in the Lord’s instruction, and he meditates on it day and night” (v. 2). How often should we meditate on God’s Word? At all times. It should fill our minds in both morning and evening. Moreover, we are admonished to teach the Scriptures to our children “when you sit in your house and when you walk along the road, when you lie down and when you get up” (Dt 6:7). Teaching and articulating the truth of the Word takes a certain measure of knowing the word. And knowing the Word takes a certain measure of meditating on the Word.

    But Psalm 1 also shows us the effects of meditation: the fruit of transformation. “He is like a tree planted beside flowing streams that bears its fruit in its season and whose leaf does not wither” (v. 3). Meditating on God’s Word bears the fruit of a healthy and fruit-filled faith, which brings delight and godly perspective to your life and to the lives of those around you.

    PRAYING SCRIPTURE FOR TRANSFORMATION
    In our day, we have witnessed an increasing assault on prayer. America has largely abandoned the idea of prayer, and we have seen it removed from the public square. People today do not cry out to God unless they experience trials or difficulties—treating God more like a divine bellhop than the sovereign Supplier of good. But the real battle is not against flesh and blood (Eph 6:12); Satan will employ his devices to turn the privilege of prayer into an empty ritual.

    John Bunyan counseled, “Prayer is a shield to the soul, a sacrifice to God, and a scourge for Satan.” Matthew Henry (1662-1714), the great Bible commentator, confined his prayers—almost entirely—to the language of Scripture. He advised, “The sacred dialect [should] be most used.” Praying the Word of God to God not only provides God-honoring language, but also transforms our souls in the process. By praying Scripture, we appropriate its truth in our thoughts and affections, which renews our minds, and draws us heavenward.

    Those who experience the severity of suffering—who don’t seem to have the words to offer in prayer—can turn to Holy Writ and let God’s Word become theirs. Or, if you are seeking words to lift your affections, you can take a familiar text, say Psalm 23, and begin:

    “Lord, if you are my Shepherd, how can I be in want? If you are my Shepherd, you will feed me, lead me, and take care of me. Thank you, God, that I can call you my Shepherd.” Filling our prayers with God’s Word transforms our hearts by reflecting back to him the holiness and beauty of his revealed truth.

    THE COMMUNITY OF FAITH IN TRANSFORMATION
    Have you ever noticed all of the “one another” passages, especially throughout the New Testament? We are called to “love one another” (Jn 13:34), bear with one another and forgive one another (Col 3:13), “instruct one another” (Rm 15:14), and so on. While Christianity is certainly personal, it’s not private. The faith wrought in you by the Holy Spirit is meant to be a faith expressed within the living and active community of faith—the local church.

    In this grace-filled community, believers are transformed through the faithful preaching of the Word, Bible study, small groups, counseling, and the many other contexts of Scripture-saturated edification. As we shouldn’t neglect meeting together in worship (Heb 10:25), so also we shouldn’t isolate ourselves from the communion of saints. As the Puritan Joseph Hall (1574-1656) once noted, “There is no place for any loose stone in God’s edifice.”

    You need your brothers and sisters and their gifts, which God gives for the building up of the body of Christ (Eph 4:12). “Iron sharpens iron, and one person sharpens another” (Pr 27:17). From accountability to encouragement, God has seen fit to equip you with the tools for gospel transformation within the community of faith.

    Whether you are a new believer or a seasoned saint, the Scriptures provide deep wells of transformative truth. Jesus prayed for his disciples, “Sanctify them by the truth; your word is truth” (Jn 17:17). We today enjoy a rich heritage of biblical fidelity, stemming from the Protestant Reformation and the Puritans. Indeed, that great cloud of witnesses—those who have gone before—now beckon us onward in our race of faith. As you read, memorize, meditate, and pray the Scriptures within the community of faith, may God plant you by streams of grace so that you may bear fruit in season, for his glory and your joy.

    SOURCES
    Bunyan, John, The Pilgrim’s Progress: From This World to That Which is to Come, ed. C. J. Lovik (Wheaton: Crossway Books, 2009).

    Calamy, Edmund, The Art of Divine Meditation (London: Printed for Tho. Parkhurst and J. Collier, 1680).

    Henry, Matthew, A Method for Prayer (Berwick: W. Gracie, 1819).

    Hooker, Thomas, The Application of Redemption: Books 9-10 (Ames, Iowa: International Outreach, 2008).

    Thomas, I. D. E., A Puritan Gold Treasury (Edinburgh: The Banner of Truth Trust, 1977).

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  • The Differences Between the Gospels Explained

    DIFFERENCES IN THE GOSPELS

    Written by: Robert H. Stein

    Serious readers of the Gospels notice various differences between them. One difference involves geographical arrangement.

    In the Synoptic Gospels (Matthew, Mark, and Luke), Jesus visits Jerusalem only once during his entire ministry. For instance, all of the events in Mark 1:1-11:10 take place either in Galilee (1:1-8:21) or on the way to Jerusalem (8:22-11:10). Only from 11:11 forward is Jesus recorded as entering Jerusalem.

    The Gospel of John takes a different approach. John records Jesus visiting Jerusalem several times throughout his ministry (2:13-4:45; 5:1-47; 7:1-10:40; and 12:12-20:31), including an early temple cleansing (John 2:13-22).

    The Synoptics say nothing about an early temple cleansing, and John in turn says nothing about the later cleansing that the Synoptics recount (Mt 21:12-13; Mk 11:15-18; Lk 19:45-48).

    It seems the authors chose different ways of using geography as a tool for arranging their accounts of Jesus’s life. Mark, whose Gospel likely predated and influenced Matthew and Luke, chose not to discuss any of Jesus’s doings in Jerusalem until the climactic events beginning in 11:11.

    This literary approach builds a steady tension that finally explodes with Jesus’s crucifixion in the sacred city. John, writing years after the Synoptics, took a different approach, sprinkling Jerusalem throughout his account.

    Another literary consideration that helps account for differences among the Gospels is how the authors chose to group Jesus’s teachings. Matthew is organized around alternating blocks of Stories of Jesus and Teachings of Jesus.

    Here is the arrangement: chapters 1-4 (S); 5-7 (T); 8-9 (S); 10 (T); 11-12 (S); 13 (T); 14-17 (S); 18 (T); 19-22 (S); 23-25 (T); 26-28 (S). Luke, on the other hand, places the teachings of Jesus in two large sections: 6:20-8:3; and 9:51-18:14.

    Different approaches such as this explain why the Gospel authors often place sayings of Jesus in different contexts, as for instance when Matthew records the Lord’s Prayer early in Jesus’s ministry (6:9-13) while Luke places it later (11:1-4).

    The Gospel writers arranged much of their material on topical and logical grounds rather than chronological. The earliest reference to any Gospel was made by Papias, a church father who in the first decade of the second century stated that Mark wrote accurately but not in chronological order the traditions he learned from Peter. Thus early readers noticed the differences between the Gospels, understood some of the basic causes of the differences, and did not regard them as problematic.

    Another reason for differences involves the literary style of individual evangelists. In Matthew 8:5-13 and Luke 7:1-10 we have two accounts of Jesus healing a centurion’s servant. In Luke the conversation takes place between Jesus and Jewish elders who speak on behalf of the centurion. In Matthew the conversation is directly between Jesus and the centurion.

    There is no conflict in these accounts when we realize that Matthew has abbreviated the story (103 words compared to 186 words in Luke). Matthew omitted material unessential to the story, and the elders (serving as go-betweens) are the least important element in the story.

    Thus, just as modern-day journalists report on meetings between heads of state without mentioning the go-betweens, Matthew makes no mention of the elders.

    Furthermore, the evangelists understood themselves to be inspired interpreters, not mere stenographers of Jesus’s acts and teachings. They felt free to clarify and add explanatory comments to the traditions they were recording.

    For example, whereas Matthew in 7:11 records Jesus as saying God the Father gives “good things” to those who ask, Luke has Jesus saying God gives “the Holy Spirit.” In this case, Luke has done some interpretive extension: of all the good things God gives, the Holy Spirit is the best of them.

    Other examples of inspired editorial work include:

    THE BAPTISM OF JESUS
    •In Matthew 3:17 the voice from heaven states, “This is my beloved Son.”

    •In Mark 1:11 and Luke 3:22 the voice states, “You are my beloved Son.”

    Explanation: In Mark and Luke, God’s voice addresses Jesus. Matthew shifts the audience to the bystanders in order to make clear to his readers that God would have them know that Jesus is his Son. The overall meaning is unchanged.

    THE BEATITUDES
    •In Matthew 5:3 the first beatitude reads, “Blessed are the poor in spirit . . .”

    •Luke 6:20 has, “Blessed are you who are poor . . .”

    Explanation: Matthew gives a “thought for thought” rather than “word for word” translation of the original. He adds “in spirit” to help his readers understand that in this context “poor” refers to spiritual humility. A similar usage of “poor” occurs in Psalm 86:1, where King David (who was financially wealthy) speaks of being “poor and needy.”

    HOUR OF THE CRUCIFIXION
    •In Mark 15:25 Jesus is crucified at “nine in the morning” (the third hour).

    •In John 19:14 Jesus is crucified at “about noon” (the sixth hour).

    PETER’S DENIAL OF CHRIST
    •Mark tells his readers of Peter’s denial in Mk 14:53-54 and 14:66-72. Wedged between this two-part account is the story of Jesus’s trial.

    •Luke completes the entire account of Peter’s denial before telling of Jesus’s trial.

    Explanation: Rather than a chronological discrepancy, these are two different ways of telling two separate stories. Mark follows one of his favored stylistic techniques and “sandwiches” Jesus’s trial between the two halves of the story of Peter’s denial. Luke chooses to treat them separately.

    We have avoided terms such as “discrepancy” and “contradiction” when discussing differences among the Gospels. When we seek to understand what the Evangelists are doing as interpreters of Jesus’s life, we often find that their different approaches help clarify and draw out implications from Jesus’s acts and teachings.

    This often entails sharing the stories of Jesus’s life in a topical or logical order, not chronological. In this light, alleged “discrepancies” and “contradictions” are seen as mere “differences.”

  • A Father’s Legacy

    These are the twelve tribes of Israel, and these are the blessings with which Jacob blessed his twelve sons. Each received a blessing that was appropriate to him.Genesis 49:28.


    The act of blessing in the Old Testament was much more significant than just an inheritance of gifts or money. A spoken blessing was a legacy that a father left to a son. When Jacob called his sons around him, the scene was much different from when he had stolen his brother Esau’s blessing on their father Isaac’s deathbed.

    At that time Jacob was known as “the deceiver.” His sad example continued into the next generation, when his sons sold their brother Joseph into slavery. As Jacob lay on his deathbed, however, he could no longer be identified as a dishonest man. He had learned from his early mistakes and was now known as a man of honor. Though he bestowed spoken blessings on his sons, the example of his changed life was a living legacy that would have an impact on the generations that came after him.

    We, too, will leave a legacy to those who will follow us. We have the opportunity to influence the outcome of our own destiny as we follow Christ, but we also have the chance to shape the lives of those who will follow in our footsteps. What kind of legacy are you leaving for the next generation?

    FATHER, when I make wrong decisions, help me to be honest and transparent before you. Please help me to follow you faithfully so that I can be a blessing to those you’ve placed in my trust and to those around me who will be watching my example. As you have blessed me, your child, so I yearn to bless others.

    The power to reproduce godly offspring remains primarily with the parent who loves the Lord, knows and obeys his word, and is committed to the depth of his heart to produce godly offspring.
    Bruce Wilkinson

    The One Year Bible Readings for today are Genesis 48:1–49:33; Matthew 15:29–16:12; Psalm 20:1-9 and Proverbs 4:20-27.

    This study was taken from Praying Through the Bible Devotional Bible

  • A Special Meeting Place

    Whenever Moses went out to the Tent of Meeting, all the people would get up and stand in their tent entrances. They would all watch Moses until he disappeared inside. As he went into the tent, the pillar of cloud would come down and hover at the entrance while the Lord spoke with Moses.

    Exodus 33:8-9


    The people lingered outside their tents, watching, waiting for the moment when the tent closed around Moses. It was evident that wondrous events were taking place within the confines of the tabernacle. The Israelites worshiped from a distance as their leader sat in the presence and glory of God and spoke to him as a man speaks with a friend.

    There are times when we may feel as if a vast distance separates us from God. There are moments, even days, when it seems as if we are standing outside our own tent, watching as others embrace spiritual intimacy with God. Yet the good news is that we don’t need to find a special place to share our hearts or use special words to communicate our thoughts, needs, even our fears to God.

    Our sacred tent of meeting is as close as a whisper because Christ lives in us. He invites you to come freely to him and to sit in his presence, talk with him as you would with a friend, and continue that dialogue as you work, live, and walk through your day.

    OH, LORD, it is when I am in your presence that you reveal your love for me. In those quiet moments I can express my thoughts, fears, and longings to walk with you through joyous times and even the times when I feel I am in the wilderness. I am so thankful that you are as close as my heartbeat. Thank you for the privilege of daily being able to meet with you!

    Prayer is not artful monologue Of voice uplifted from the sod; It is love’s tender dialogue Between the soul and God.
    John Richard Moreland (1880–1947)
    The One Year Bible Readings for today are Exodus 32:1–33:23; Matthew 26:69–27:14; Psalm 33:1-11 and Proverbs 8:33-36.

  • How Awesome Is Our God!

    July 10 – Daily Devotional
    Awesome God

    O Lord, our Lord, the majesty of your name fills the earth! Your glory is higher than the heavens. You have taught children and nursing infants to give you praise. They silence your enemies who were seeking revenge.

    When I look at the night sky and see the work of your fingers—the moon and the stars you have set in place—what are mortals that you should think of us, mere humans that you should care for us? For you made us only a little lower than God, and you crowned us with glory and honor.Psalm 8:1-5


    God and only God can be described with such powerful images as those recorded in this psalm. The majesty and brilliance of our God fills the earth. The glory of God is higher than the heavens. Even children and infants give him praise. He set the sky, the moon and the stars, and all the galaxies in place. He is truly an awesome God!

    When we consider these images and descriptions, it stretches our minds to realize that God, the almighty Creator, actually considers us. Who are we? “Mortals” and “mere humans,” the psalmist says. And not only does God consider us, but he has placed us only a little lower than himself. And he has crowned us with glory and honor and put us in charge of caring for the earth.

    There is no doubt that these acts of our heavenly Father should produce words of praise from our lips— praise to him and for him. “O Lord, our Lord, the majesty of your name fills the earth!”

    LORD, we praise you for who you are. Your glory is higher than the heavens. Your majesty fills the earth. We worship and adore you. Help us to walk as your children, giving honor and glory to you and never losing sight of your power or your love. You are our Lord.

    On earth join all ye creatures to extol him first, him last, him midst, and without end.
    John Milton (1608–1674)

    The One Year Bible Readings for today are 1 Chronicles 9:1–10:14; Acts 27:21-44; Psalm 8:1-9 and Proverbs 18:23-24.

    This devotional was taken from praying through the Bible Devotional Bible

  • Why did Jesus Teach in Parables?

    He Taught in Parables

    Designed by Liora Gaudard

    He taught them many things in parables (Mark 4:2).

    Jesus didn’t use parables as a way to teach a lesson; each parable was the lesson. A comparison of story telling and story teaching reveals a significant difference between the way truth is learned by the Western mind and the way it is grasped in the Middle Eastern mind. In the West, stories illustrate and provide examples of the stated truth. In the Middle East, a story presents the lesson-in-life from which one or more conclusions may be drawn, much like life itself.

    What, then, is a parable? The term is used throughout the Bible to indicate a variety of narrative approaches that expect the hearer to understand by careful reflection. These include metaphors, similes, and even brief case studies. Parables require attention. The stories may appear at first glance to be simplistic, but they carry deep meaning. Parables don’t hide truth; they present truth in a subtle and elegant way to those willing to think.

    By using parables, Jesus fit right in with the long history of teachers and prophets in Israel. The people who heard him didn’t remark that he had invented a new form of teaching. They were accustomed to storytelling teachers. But Jesus’s stories had an added quality. “They were astonished at his teaching because he was teaching them as one who had authority, and not like the scribes” (Mk 1:22). For those willing to listen, Jesus’s stories had a convicting, life-changing quality that communicated to those who heard them. The same is true today. He still teaches us many truths through parables.

    Getting Personal

    Like the prophet Nathan’s approach with King David centuries before (2Sm 12), Jesus got inside his audience’s defenses with stories that made their point before listeners realized they were being singled out.

    • Which of Jesus’s parables have had that effect on you? Why?

    • In what way(s) has your life changed because of this specific teaching of Jesus?

    Talking to God

    Lord, open my heart and mind to respond to what you have to teach me as I think about this amazing story of restoration that Jesus told when he talked about the prodigal son. Please help me see my place in the parable. Amen.

  • What does the Bible say about the Bible?

    It is God inspired:

    2 Timothy 3:16 NASB
    All Scripture is inspired by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, for training in righteousness;

    It is Holy Spirit inspired:

    Acts 1:16 NASB
    “Brethren, the Scripture had to be fulfilled, which the Holy Spirit foretold by the mouth of David concerning Judas, who became a guide to those who arrested Jesus.

    Hebrews 3:7-8 NASB
    Therefore, just as the Holy Spirit says, “Today IF YOU HEAR HIS VOICE, [8] Do NOT HARDEN YOUR HEARTS AS WHEN THEY PROVOKED ME, AS IN THE DAY OF TRIAL IN THE WILDERNESS,

    2 Peter 1:21 NASB
    for no prophecy was ever made by an act of human will, but men moved by the Holy Spirit spoke from God.

    Jesus sanctioned scripture by appealing to it:

    Matthew 4:4 NASB
    But He answered and said, “It is written, ‘Man SHALL NOT LIVE ON BREAD ALONE, BUT ON EVERY WORD THAT PROCEEDS OUT OF THE MOUTH OF GOD.’”

    Mark 12:10 NASB
    Have you not even read this Scripture: ‘The STONE WHICH THE BUILDERS REJECTED, THIS BECAME THE CHIEF CORNER stone;

    John 7:42 NASB
    Has not the Scripture said that the Christ comes from the descendants of David, and from Bethlehem, the village where David was?”

    Jesus taught scriptures:

    Luke 24:27 NASB
    Then beginning with Moses and with all the prophets, He explained to them the things concerning Himself in all the Scriptures.

    Scriptures are called:

    The book of Law:                           Galatians 3:10 NASB
    For as many as are of the works of the Law are under a curse; for it is written, “Cursed IS EVERYONE WHO DOES NOT ABIDE BY ALL THINGS WRITTEN IN THE BOOK OF THE LAW, TO PERFORM THEM.”

    Book of Truth:

    Daniel 10:21 NASB
    However, I will tell you what is inscribed in the writing of truth. Yet there is no one who stands firmly with me against these forces except Michael your prince.

    Holy Scriptures:

    Romans 1:2 NASB
    which He promised beforehand through His prophets in the holy Scriptures,

    Law of the Lord:

    Psalm 1:2 NASB
    But his delight is in the law of the LORD, And in His law he meditates day and night.

    Instruction of the Lord:

    Isaiah 30:9 NASB
    For this is a rebellious people, false sons, Sons who refuse to listen To the instruction of the LORD;

    Message of Christ

    Colossians 3:16 NASB
    Let the word of Christ richly dwell within you, with all wisdom teaching and admonishing one another with psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing with thankfulness in your hearts to God.

    Scroll of the Lord

    Isaiah 34:16 NASB
    Seek from the book of the LORD, and read: Not one of these will be missing; None will lack its mate. For His mouth has commanded, And His Spirit has gathered them.

    Book of Prophecy

    Revelation 22:19 NASB
    and if anyone takes away from the words of the book of this prophecy, God will take away his part from the tree of life and from the holy city, which are written in this book.

    Sword of The Spirit

    Ephesians 6:17 NASB
    And take the HELMET OF SALVATION, and the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God.

    The very Word of God

    1 Peter 4:11 NASB
    Whoever speaks, is to do so as one who is speaking the utterances of God; whoever serves is to do so as one who is serving by the strength which God supplies; so that in all things God may be glorified through Jesus Christ, to whom belongs the glory and dominion forever and ever. Amen.

    The Word that saves

    James 1:21 NASB
    Therefore, putting aside all filthiness and all that remains of wickedness, in humility receive the word implanted, which is able to save your souls.

    Living Words

    Hebrews 4:12 NASB
    For the word of God is living and active and sharper than any two-edged sword, and piercing as far as the division of soul and spirit, of both joints and marrow, and able to judge the thoughts and intentions of the heart.

    Word of Truth

    James 1:18 NASB
    In the exercise of His will He brought us forth by the word of truth, so that we would be a kind of first fruits among His creatures.

    Contain the promises of God

    Romans 1:2 NASB
    which He promised beforehand through His prophets in the holy Scriptures,

    Contain the Law, Statutes and Judgements of the Lord

    Exodus 24:3-4 NASB
    Then Moses came and recounted to the people all the words of the LORD and all the ordinances; and all the people answered with one voice and said, “All the words which the LORD has spoken we will do!” [4] Moses wrote down all the words of the LORD. Then he arose early in the morning, and built an altar at the foot of the mountain with twelve pillars for the twelve tribes of Israel.

    Record divine prophecies

    2 Peter 1:19 NASB
    So we have the prophetic word made more sure, to which you do well to pay attention as to a lamp shining in a dark place, until the day dawns and the morning star arises in your hearts.

    Testify of Christ

    John 5:39 NASB
    You search the Scriptures because you think that in them you have eternal life; it is these that testify about Me;

    Are full and sufficient

    Luke 16:29-31 NASB
    But Abraham said, ‘They have Moses and the Prophets; let them hear them.’ [30] But he said, ‘No, father Abraham, but if someone goes to them from the dead, they will repent!’ [31] But he said to him, ‘If they do not listen to Moses and the Prophets, they will not be persuaded even if someone rises from the dead.’”

    Are an unerring guide:

    Proverbs 6:23 NASB
    For the commandment is a lamp and the teaching is light; And reproofs for discipline are the way of life

    Gives the wisdom that leads to Salvation

    It is profitable both for doctrine and practice

    2 Timothy 3:15 -17NASB
    and that from childhood you have known the sacred writings which are able to give you the wisdom that leads to salvation through faith which is in Christ Jesus.
    All Scripture is inspired by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, for training in righteousness; [17] so that the man of God may be adequate, equipped for every good work.

    Is described as active and alive

    Hebrews 4:12 NASB
    For the word of God is living and active and sharper than any two-edged sword, and piercing as far as the division of soul and spirit, of both joints and marrow, and able to judge the thoughts and intentions of the heart.

    It is described as flawless

    Psalm 12:6 NASB
    The words of the LORD are pure words; As silver tried in a furnace on the earth, refined seven times.

    More precious than gold

    Psalm 19:10 NASB
    They are more desirable than gold, yes, than much fine gold; Sweeter also than honey and the drippings of the honeycomb.

    Perfect

    Psalm 19:7 NASB
    The law of the LORD is perfect, restoring the soul; The testimony of the LORD is sure, making wise the simple.

    The Truth

    John 17:17 NASB
    Sanctify them in the truth; Your word is truth.

    Written for our instruction

    Romans 15:4 NASB
    For whatever was written in earlier times was written for our instruction, so that through perseverance and the encouragement of the Scriptures we might have hope.

    Intended for the use of all people

    Romans 16:26 NASB
    but now is manifested, and by the Scriptures of the prophets, according to the commandment of the eternal God, has been made known to all the nations, leading to obedience of faith;

    Nothing to be from, or added to.

    Deuteronomy 4:2 NASB
    You shall not add to the word which I am commanding you, nor take away from it, that you may keep the commandments of the LORD your God which I command you.         Deuteronomy 12:32 NASB
    “Whatever I command you, you shall be careful to do; you shall not add to nor take away from it.

    One portion of, to be compared with another.

    1 Corinthians 2:13 NASB
    which things we also speak, not in words taught by human wisdom, but in those taught by the Spirit, combining spiritual thoughts with spiritual words.

    Designed for Regenerating

    James 1:18 NASB
    In the exercise of His will He brought us forth by the word of truth, so that we would be a kind of first fruits among His creatures.

    1 Peter 1:23 NASB
    for you have been born again not of seed which is perishable but imperishable, that is, through the living and enduring word of God.

    Reviving us

    Psalm 119:50 NASB
    This is my comfort in my affliction, That Your word has revived me.

    Psalm 119:93 NASB
    I will never forget Your precepts, For by them You have revived me.

    Illuminating

    Psalm 119:130 NASB
    The unfolding of Your words gives light; It gives understanding to the simple.

    Converting the soul

    Psalm 19:7 NASB
    The law of the LORD is perfect, restoring the soul; The testimony of the LORD is sure, making wise the simple.

    Sanctifying

    John 17:17 NASB
    Sanctify them in the truth; Your word is truth.

    Producing faith

    John 20:31 NASB
    but these have been written so that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God; and that believing you may have life in His name.

    Producing hope

    Romans 15:4 NASB
    For whatever was written in earlier times was written for our instruction, so that through perseverance and the encouragement of the Scriptures we might have hope.

    Producing Obedience

    Deuteronomy 17:19-20 NASB
    It shall be with him and he shall read it all the days of his life, that he may learn to fear the LORD his God, by carefully observing all the words of this law and these statutes, [20] that his heart may not be lifted up above his countrymen and that he may not turn aside from the commandment, to the right or the left, so that he and his sons may continue long in his kingdom in the midst of Israel.

    Cleansig the heart

    John 15:3 NASB
    You are already clean because of the word which I have spoken to you.

    Purifying our lives

    Psalm 119:9 NASB
    How can a young man keep his way pure? By keeping it according to Your word.

    Keeps us from destructive paths

    Psalm 17:4 NASB
    As for the deeds of men, by the word of Your lips I have kept from the paths of the violent.

    Where we live from

    Deuteronomy 8:3 NASB
    He humbled you and let you be hungry, and fed you with manna which you did not know, nor did your fathers know, that He might make you understand that man does not live by bread alone, but man lives by everything that proceeds out of the mouth of the LORD.

    Promotes growth

    1 Peter 2:2 NASB
    like newborn babies, long for the pure milk of the word, so that by it you may grow in respect to salvation,

    Build up in Faith

    Acts 20:32 NASB
    And now I commend you to God and to the word of His grace, which is able to build you up and to give you the inheritance among all those who are sanctified.

    Admonishing

    1 Corinthians 10:11 NASB
    Now these things happened to them as an example, and they were written for our instruction, upon whom the ends of the ages have come.

    Comforting

    Psalm 119:82 NASB
    My eyes fail with longing for Your word, While I say, “When will You comfort me?”

    Rejoice in the heart

    Psalm 119:111 NASB
    I have inherited Your testimonies forever, For they are the joy of my heart.

    Psalm 19:8 NASB
    The precepts of the LORD are right, rejoicing the heart; The commandment of the LORD is pure, enlightening the eyes.

    Work effectively in those who believe

    1 Thessalonians 2:13 NASB
    For this reason we also constantly thank God that when you received the word of God which you heard from us, you accepted it not as the word of men, but for what it really is, the word of God, which also performs its work in you who believe.

    The letter, without the Spirit, kills.

    2 Corinthians 3:6 NASB
    who also made us adequate as servants of a new covenant, not of the letter but of the Spirit; for the letter kills, but the Spirit gives life.

    John 6:63 NASB
    It is the Spirit who gives life; the flesh profits nothing; the words that I have spoken to you are spirit and are life.

    Ignorance of the Scriptures become a source of error

    Matthew 22:29 NASB
    But Jesus answered and said to them, “You are mistaken, not understanding the Scriptures nor the power of God.

    Christ enables us to understand

    Luke 24:45 NASB
    Then He opened their minds to understand the Scriptures,

    The Holy Spirit enables us to understand

    John 16:13 NASB
    But when He, the Spirit of truth, comes, He will guide you into all the truth; for He will not speak on His own initiative, but whatever He hears, He will speak; and He will disclose to you what is to come.

    No prophecy from Scriptures is of private interpretation

    2 Peter 1:20 NASB
    But know this first of all, that no prophecy of Scripture is a matter of one’s own interpretation,

    Everything should be checked and tried by in Scripture

    Acts 17:11 NASB
    Now these were more noble-minded than those in Thessalonica, for they received the word with great eagerness, examining the Scriptures daily to see whether these things were so.

    Scripture should be the standard of teaching

    1 Peter 4:11 NASB
    Whoever speaks, is to do so as one who is speaking the utterances of God; whoever serves is to do so as one who is serving by the strength which God supplies; so that in all things God may be glorified through Jesus Christ, to whom belongs the glory and dominion forever and ever. Amen.

    Scripture should be believed

    John 2:22 NASB
    So when He was raised from the dead, His disciples remembered that He said this; and they believed the Scripture and the word which Jesus had spoken.

    Scripture should be appealed to

    1 Peter 1:16 NASB
    because it is written, “You SHALL BE HOLY, FOR I AM HOLY.”

    Scripture should be read

    Isaiah 34:16 NASB
    Seek from the book of the LORD, and read: Not one of these will be missing; None will lack its mate. For His mouth has commanded, And His Spirit has gathered them.

    Scripture should be read in public to all

    Jeremiah 36:6 NASB
    So you go and read from the scroll which you have written at my dictation the words of the LORD to the people in the LORD’S house on a fast day. And also you shall read them to all the people of Judah who come from their cities.

    Scripture should be known

    2 Timothy 3:15 NASB
    and that from childhood you have known the sacred writings which are able to give you the wisdom that leads to salvation through faith which is in Christ Jesus.

    Scripture should not be received as word of men, but of God

    1 Thessalonians 2:13 NASB
    For this reason we also constantly thank God that when you received the word of God which you heard from us, you accepted it not as the word of men, but for what it really is, the word of God, which also performs its work in you who believe.

    Scripture should be received with humility

    James 1:21 NASB
    Therefore, putting aside all filthiness and all that remains of wickedness, in humility receive the word implanted, which is able to save your souls.

    Scripture should be searched

    John 5:39 NASB
    You search the Scriptures because you think that in them you have eternal life; it is these that testify about Me;

    Scripture should be searched daily

    Acts 17:11 NASB
    Now these were more noble-minded than those in Thessalonica, for they received the word with great eagerness, examining the Scriptures daily to see whether these things were so.

    Scripture should be laid up in the heart

    Deuteronomy 6:6 NASB
    These words, which I am commanding you today, shall be on your heart.

    Scripture should be taught to children

    Deuteronomy 6:7 NASB
    You shall teach them diligently to your sons and shall talk of them when you sit in your house and when you walk by the way and when you lie down and when you rise up.

    Talked of continuously

    Deuteronomy 6:7 NASB
    You shall teach them diligently to your sons and shall talk of them when you sit in your house and when you walk by the way and when you lie down and when you rise up.

    Not handled in a deceitful way

    2 Corinthians 4:2 NASB
    but we have renounced the things hidden because of shame, not walking in craftiness or adulterating the word of God, but by the manifestation of truth commending ourselves to every man’s conscience in the sight of God.

    Not only heard but obeyed

    Matthew 7:24 NASB
    “Therefore everyone who hears these words of Mine and acts on them, may be compared to a wise man who built his house on the rock.

    Used to answer spiritual enemies

    Ephesians 6:11,17 NASB
    Put on the full armor of God, so that you will be able to stand firm against the schemes of the devil. [17] And take the HELMET OF SALVATION, and the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God.

    All should desire to hear

    Nehemiah 8:1 NASB
    And all the people gathered as one man at the square which was in front of the Water Gate, and they asked Ezra the scribe to bring the book of the law of Moses which the LORD had given to Israel.

    Merely hearers of, delude themselves

    James 1:22 NASB
    But prove yourselves doers of the word, and not merely hearers who delude themselves.

    Advantage of possessing

    Romans 3:2 NASB
    Great in every respect. First of all, that they were entrusted with the oracles of God.

    Blessedness of hearing and obeying it

    Luke 11:28 NASB
    But He said, “On the contrary, blessed are those who hear the word of God and observe it.”

    Let it dwell in you richly

    Colossians 3:16 NASB
    Let the word of Christ richly dwell within you, with all wisdom teaching and admonishing one another with psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing with thankfulness in your hearts to God.

    Consequences for those who tamper with it

    Revelation 22:19 NASB
    and if anyone takes away from the words of the book of this prophecy, God will take away his part from the tree of life and from the holy city, which are written in this book.

    This exercise was taken from NASB MacArthur Study Bible

  • What Jesus Wants You to Ask Him

    Jesus asked the two blind men a specific question: “What do you want me to do for you?” And they responded in a specific manner: “We want our sight.” When Jesus asks you a question, he wants you to respond in a specific way too.

    But Jesus doesn’t want to be the only one asking questions. There are also some things he wants you to ask him! Read through these statements and then check out the Scriptures listed in the next column. They’ll back up these questions and give you more information.

    #1: He wants you to ask his help in revolving your life around him. He doesn’t simply want to reside in your heart. He wants total residence in your entire life. He wants to guide and direct each one of your steps.

    #2: He wants you to ask for a hunger and thirst for the things of God. It’s not enough to simply know him; he wants to develop a hunger within you to know him better. He also wants you to grow in your desire to be with his people.

    #3: He wants you to ask him to help you keep up with the basics in developing a growing relationship with him. Without continuing in a consistent prayer life and in daily Bible reading, your relationship with Christ will slowly fade.

    #4: He wants you to ask him to deepen your trust in his Word. He wants you to know—beyond doubt—that he never breaks his promises.Know It!You can wholeheartedly trust the creator of the universe. He’s never broken his word, and he never will. One of his greatest desires is to strengthen your faith and help you draw ever closer to him.

    Read It!

    Psalms 42:1; 
    As the deer pants for streams of water, so my soul pants for you, my God.

    Psalm 51:12 NIV
    Restore to me the joy of your salvation and grant me a willing spirit, to sustain me.

    Proverbs 3:6 NIV
    in all your ways submit to him, and he will make your paths straight.

    Isaiah 43:2 NIV
    When you pass through the waters, I will be with you; and when you pass through the rivers, they will not sweep over you. When you walk through the fire, you will not be burned; the flames will not set you ablaze.

    Matthew 3:16 NIV
    As soon as Jesus was baptized, he went up out of the water. At that moment heaven was opened, and he saw the Spirit of God descending like a dove and alighting on him.

    Philippians 2:13 NIV
    for it is God who works in you to will and to act in order to fulfill his good purpose.

    Hebrews 13:5 NIV
    Keep your lives free from the love of money and be content with what you have, because God has said, “Never will I leave you; never will I forsake you.”

    Pray It!Ask God to help you ask the right questions and wait for his answers.

    This devitional was taken from Devos for Teens

  • Adopted

    Can you imagine prospective parents saying, “We’d like to adopt Johnny, but first we want to know a few things. Does he have a house to live in? Does he have money for tuition? Does he have a ride to school every morning and clothes to wear every day? Can he prepare his own meals and mend his own clothes?”

    Romans 8:12-17 NKJV
    Therefore, brethren, we are debtors-not to the flesh, to live according to the flesh. [13] For if you live according to the flesh you will die; but if by the Spirit you put to death the deeds of the body, you will live. [14] For as many as are led by the Spirit of God, these are sons of God. [15] For you did not receive the spirit of bondage again to fear, but you received the Spirit of adoption by whom we cry out, “Abba, Father.” [16] The Spirit Himself bears witness with our spirit that we are children of God, [17] and if children, then heirs-heirs of God and joint heirs with Christ, if indeed we suffer with Him, that we may also be glorified together.

    No agency would stand for such talk. Its representative would lift her hand and say, “Wait a minute. You don’t understand. You don’t adopt Johnny because of what he has; you adopt him because of what he needs. He needs a home.”

    The same is true with God. He doesn’t adopt us because of what we have. He doesn’t give us His name because of our wit or wallet or good attitude. . . . adoption is something we receive, not something we earn.

    We are welcome in God’s house because we have been adopted by the owner. God has adopted you. God sought you, found you, signed the papers and took you home.

    It would be enough if God just cleansed your name, but He does more. He gives you His name. It would be enough if God just set you free, but He does more. He takes you home. . . God adopted you simply because He wanted to. You were in His good will and pleasure. Knowing full well the trouble you would be and the price He would pay, He signed His name next to yours and changed your name to His and took you home. Your Abba adopted you and became your Father.

    Study Guide

    Read Romans 8:12–17.

    • How does salvation compare with adoption?

    • List some advantages of being God’s child rather than just His creation.

    • How has God been like a good father to you?

    • How would your life be different if you didn’t belong to God?

    • In what ways have you tried to work for your “sonship” rather than just accepting your adoption into God’s family?

    • Why do people expect punishment rather than grace when they think about returning to God?

    • What is our inheritance as God’s children?

    • In what ways do we share our inheritance with Jesus Christ?

    • As children of God, how do we share in Christ’s sufferings?

  • Where is God?

    It’s called Bethesda. It could be called Central Park, Metropolitan Hospital, or even Joe’s Bar and Grill. It could be the homeless huddled beneath a downtown overpass. It could be Calvary Baptist. It could be any collection of hurting people.

    An underwater spring caused the pool to bubble occasionally. The people believed the bubbles were caused by the dipping of angels’ wings. They also believed that the first person to touch the water after the angel did would be healed. Did healing occur? I don’t know. But I do know crowds of invalids came to give it a try.

    Picture a battleground strewn with wounded bodies, and you see Bethesda. Imagine a nursing home overcrowded and understaffed, and you see the pool. Call to mind the orphans in Bangladesh or the abandoned in New Delhi, and you will see what people saw when they passed Bethesda. As they passed, what did they hear? An endless wave of groans. What did they witness? A field of faceless need. What did they do? Most walked past, ignoring the people.

    But not Jesus. He is in Jerusalem for a feast. . . .

    He is alone. He is not there to teach the disciples or to draw a crowd. The people need Him—so He’s there.

    Can you picture it? Jesus walking among the suffering.

    What is He thinking? When an infected hand touches His ankle, what does He do? When a blind child stumbles in Jesus’ path, does He reach down to catch the child? When a wrinkled hand extends for alms, how does Jesus respond?

    Whether the watering hole is Bethesda or Bill’s Bar . . . how does God feel when people hurt?

    It’s worth the telling of the story if all we do is watch Him walk. Its worth it just to know He even came. He didn’t have to, you know. Surely there are more sanitary crowds in Jerusalem. Surely there are more enjoyable activities. After all, this is the Passover feast. It’s an exciting time in the holy city. People have come from miles around to meet God in the temple.

    Little do they know that God is with the sick.

    Little do they know that God is walking slowly, stepping carefully between the beggars and the blind.

    Little do they know that the strong young carpenter who surveys the ragged landscape of pain is God.

    Study Guide

    Read John 2:1–15.

    • Think of a time when a friend showed special concern for you during a difficult time in your life. How did that person’s support help you?

    • What do you think motivated Jesus to go to Bethesda during a celebration?

    • What do Jesus’ actions in this story teach us about His character?

    • What are some of the challenges of ministering to people with a serious illness?
    What are the rewards?

    • How can we demonstrate God’s love to people who are suffering?

    • Why is it important for believers to minister to hurting people?

    • Think of someone you know who is hurting. How can you reach out to that person?

    • How can the church become more sensitive to the suffering around it?

    Text taken from Lucado Life Lessons Study Bible

    Image design: Yury Gaudard

  • Our Bird Cage by Charles Spurgeon

    A little London girl, who had gone into the country, once said, “Look, mamma, at that poor little bird. It has not got any cage!” That would not have struck me as being any loss to the bird—and if you and I were without our cage, and the box of seed, and glass of water, it would not be much of a loss if we were cast adrift into the glorious liberty of a life of humble dependence upon God!

    Charles Spurgeon

    Matthew 6:33 CSB
    But seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness, and all these things will be provided for you.

  • Are Natural Disasters Acts of God?

    The Bible says in Mark 13:8 that:
    Nation will rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom. There will be earthquakes in various places, and famines. These are the beginning of birth pains.

    When a volcano erupts, a hurricane devastates a city or lightning ignites a vast forest fire, it is natural for us to ponder God’s relationship to the events. How should we regard such tragic occurrences? Are they really “acts of God,” as insurance companies still label them?

    Jesus asked his disciples a similar question. In Luke 13:4, Jesus asked, “Those eighteen who died when the tower in Siloam fell on them—do you think they were more guilty than all the others living in Jerusalem?” Jesus was apparently referring to a well-known disaster of his time that had killed 18 people. His point was simple: events and tragedies beyond our control are part of life. There is not necessarily a direct cause and effect between the people who suffer and the tragedies themselves.

    Advertising: know more about the Bible, subscribe to the YouTube Channel Bread of Life

    The Bible offers two reasons for natural disasters. First, the world itself is beautiful but broken. All of creation suffers as a consequence of the entry of sin, death and decay into the world;

    Romans 5:12 NIV say:
    Therefore, just as sin entered the world through one man, and death through sin, and in this way death came to all people, because all sinned—

    Romans 8:19-22 NIV also say:
    For the creation waits in eager expectation for the children of God to be revealed. For the creation was subjected to frustration, not by its own choice, but by the will of the one who subjected it, in hope that the creation itself will be liberated from its bondage to decay and brought into the freedom and glory of the children of God. We know that the whole creation has been groaning as in the pains of childbirth right up to the present time.

    Second, all of human history takes place within the context of the cosmic battle between the forces of God and the forces of Satan. Job did not know that the Lord was using his life as an example of faithfulness when Satan afflicted him with sores and sadness.

    Thankfully, Jesus left his disciples (and us) with this encouragement: “In this world you will have trouble. But take heart! I have overcome the world” (Jn 16:33).

    This post was brought to you by Yury Gaudard and published first in the NIV Essentials Study Bible.

  • What is Evolution

    Written by Baylard Taylor and featured in the CBS Apologetics Study Bible for Students.

    Designed by Yury Gaudard

    Evolution is the theory pioneered by Charles Darwin that says that over vast amounts of time, natural selection (in which the strong survive and produce successful offspring) and genetic modification (the imperfect transmission of genes from generation to generation) gradually helped organisms adapt to their physical environments, resulting in the diversity of biological species we see today.

    In the mainstream scientific community, evolution refers to both microevolution (changes within species or among closely-related species) and macroevolution (evolution of new species arising from less-complex life forms). Over the past 150 years, evolution has become the master theory dominating the biological sciences.

    Many see Darwin’s theory as incompatible with the Bible’s teachings, with the existence of God, and with the notion that humans are the crown of creation and made in God’s image (Gn 1:26). Darwin himself, a former theology student who initially aimed to enter ministry, and whose wife was an evangelical Christian, apparently lost his faith because he could find no room in his theory for God as Designer.

    Christians have responded to the theory of evolution in four major ways. Adherents to each view start by affirming God as Maker of heaven and earth (Gn 1:1), but they vigorously disagree about what methods and timeframes God used in creating the world. The differences hinge on how to interpret Scripture, how to interpret science, and how the two come together.

    The first three views accept microevolution, which they reconcile with the idea that God created the living organisms “according to their kinds” (Gn 1:11-12,21,24-25), but reject macroevolution. They say the idea of one kind (like a bird) morphing into another (like a reptile) contradicts Scripture and sound science.

    Young Earth Creationists describe themselves as taking the Bible literally. They say creation took six, twenty-four-hour days and that earth is, at most, only a few thousand years old.

    Old Earth Creationists teach that God miraculously created the various forms of life instantaneously and completed, but that a reasonable interpretation of Genesis 1 can accommodate a universe that began with a Big Bang happening billions of years ago.

    Intelligent Design says the complexity and diversity in biological systems could not have arisen by chance and that the scientific evidence points to an Intelligent Designer/Creator. The theory’s proponents include people from non-Christian religions as well as agnostics. Most reject macroevolution, though a minority adopts the idea that all living things descended from one common ancestor. They reject unguided natural selection as the mechanism.

    Theistic Evolution says God designed and created the world in such a way that evolution was destined to happen as God’s plan unfolded. Theistic evolutionists say Darwinism poses no real threat to the biblical message since God is still seen as Creator, though in a way that differs from traditional views. Not surprisingly, the three anti-evolutionist positions claim that Theistic Evolution is incompatible with a proper reading of the Bible and that it does not make sense to fuse God’s design (which is intentional) with chance (which is unintentional).

    It is important to emphasize how each view confronts naturalism and holds that God is the Maker of all. Ultimately, the merits of each view depend on how faithfully they’ve handled the testimonies of Scripture and nature.

  • Are Good Works Necessary for Eternal Life?

    Matthew 25:35-36 NIV
    For I was hungry and you gave me something to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and you invited me in, I needed clothes and you clothed me, I was sick and you looked after me, I was in prison and you came to visit me.’

    Jesus did not teach that good deeds form the basis of our salvation. The Bible shows clearly that eternal life results from what God does, not what we do.

    Titus 3:4-7 NIV
    But when the kindness and love of God our Savior appeared, [5] he saved us, not because of righteous things we had done, but because of his mercy. He saved us through the washing of rebirth and renewal by the Holy Spirit, [6] whom he poured out on us generously through Jesus Christ our Savior, [7] so that, having been justified by his grace, we might become heirs having the hope of eternal life.

    We are saved by God’s grace, not by our works. Still, God intends that those who receive his grace do good works.

    Ephesians 2:8-10 NIV
    For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith—and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God— not by works, so that no one can boast. For we are God’s handiwork, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do.

    True faith is more than just claiming to have faith. Genuine love for God will be expressed through service to others

    1 John 3:16-18 NIV
    This is how we know what love is: Jesus Christ laid down his life for us. And we ought to lay down our lives for our brothers and sisters. If anyone has material possessions and sees a brother or sister in need but has no pity on them, how can the love of God be in that person? Dear children, let us not love with words or speech but with actions and in truth. Not to earn salvation but because a heart that truly loves God will be filled with compassion for others. Jesus wants his followers to set the pace by helping those who are hurting. Good works that come from people grateful for God’s grace are at the heart of true religion.

    James 1:27 NIV
    Religion that God our Father accepts as pure and faultless is this: to look after orphans and widows in their distress and to keep oneself from being polluted by the world.

    Original text taken and adpted from NIV Essentials Bible Study.

  • Personality profile: Gideon

    Judges 6:11–8:35

    Gideon

    Most of us want to know God’s plan for our lives, and we focus on how we can discover it. One common misunderstanding is the idea that God’s guidance has nothing to do with what we’re doing now. But if we’re always looking toward whatever grand assignment God might have in store for us in the future, we can run the risk of overlooking or even ruining whatever we’re working on right now. The Bible demonstrates that God’s guidance can come in the midst of—and in response to—one’s present situation. A good example of this kind of guidance is seen in Gideon’s life.

    Gideon had a limited vision, but he was committed to it. His challenge was to obtain food for his family even though hostile invaders were making the growing, gathering, and preparation of the food almost impossible. Gideon was resourceful. He put a winepress to double duty by turning it into a sunken threshing floor. It lacked ventilation to blow the chaff away, but at least it was hidden from the Midianites. Gideon was working in his threshing floor when God sent him a messenger with a challenge.

    Gideon was surprised by what God told him to do. He did not want to jump into a task for which he was ill prepared. The angel had to overcome three objections before Gideon was convinced: (1) Gideon’s feelings of responsibility for his family’s welfare, (2) his doubts about the call itself, and (3) his feelings of inadequacy for the job. Once Gideon was convinced, however, he obeyed with zest, resourcefulness, and speed. He dedicated those personality traits to God, with whom he was now personally acquainted.

    Gideon had his weak moments and failures, but he was still God’s servant. If you can easily relate to Gideon’s weakness, can you also see yourself being willing to serve? Remember Gideon as a man who obeyed God by giving his attention to the task at hand. Then give your full attention to believing that God will have prepared you for tomorrow when it comes.

    Strengths and accomplishments:

    A military strategist who was an expert at surprise

    Led Israel to defeat the Midianites

    Though slow to be convinced, acted on his convictions

    Weaknesses and mistakes:

    Feared that his own limitations would prevent God from working through him

    Collected Midianite gold and made a symbol that became an idolatrous object of worship

    Through a concubine, fathered a son who would bring great grief and tragedy to both Gideon’s family and the nation of Israel

    Failed to establish the nation in God’s ways (after he died, they all went back to idol worship)

    Notable facts:

    Was Israel’s fifth judge

    Was offered, but rejected, a hereditary kingship by the leaders of Israel

    Is a member of the “Hall of Faith” in Hebrews 11

    Lessons from his life:

    God calls in the middle of our present obedience; as we are faithful, he gives us more responsibility.

    God expands and uses the abilities he has already given us.

    God uses us in spite of our limitations and failures.

    Even those who make great spiritual progress can easily fall into sin if they don’t consistently follow God.

    Vital statistics:

    Where: Ophrah, valley of Jezreel, spring of Harod

    Occupations: Farmer, warrior, judge

    Relatives: Father: Joash. Son: Abimelech.

    Contemporaries: Zebah, Zalmunna

    Key verses:

    “‘But Lord,’ Gideon replied, ‘how can I rescue Israel? My clan is the weakest in the whole tribe of Manasseh, and I am the least in my entire family!’ The LORD said to him, ‘I will be with you. And you will destroy the Midianites as if you were fighting against one man.’” (Judges 6:15-16)

    Gideon’s story is told in Judges 6–8. He is also mentioned in Hebrews 11:32.

  • Twisted Scripture

    Click on the image to see better!

  • Are dreams messages from God?

    Genesis 28:12-15 NIV
    He had a dream in which he saw a stairway resting on the earth, with its top reaching to heaven, and the angels of God were ascending and descending on it. [13] There above it stood the Lord, and he said: “I am the Lord, the God of your father Abraham and the God of Isaac. I will give you and your descendants the land on which you are lying. [14] Your descendants will be like the dust of the earth, and you will spread out to the west and to the east, to the north and to the south. All peoples on earth will be blessed through you and your offspring. [15] I am with you and will watch over you wherever you go, and I will bring you back to this land. I will not leave you until I have done what I have promised you. ”

    They can be, though they are not always. In this case, God repeated the promises he had made to Jacob’s father and grandfather. The dream corresponded to the already revealed will of God. Likewise, if God chooses to reveal his will to us in a dream, it will correspond to the teaching of Scripture.

    Dreams should not take precedence over sound and well-thought-out decisions. Scripture and respected members of the church should be consulted. We shouldn’t expect God to tell us in a dream whom to marry or what career track to choose. That isn’t God’s normal pattern of revealing his will.

    This dream was given to assure Jacob that God was present with him and that God intended to bless him, keeping the promise made to his ancestors. It also marked the beginning of Jacob’s lifelong relationship with God.

  • Are Christians supposed to tithe?

    The short answer is no, Christians aren’t required to tithe.

    The Law of Moses mandated the tithe to support the Levites in their priestly service and those in need among the foreigners, orphans and widows (see Dt 14:28–29). Since Christ’s sacrifice of himself removed the need for a Levitical priesthood, the principal purpose for the Old Testament tithe is gone. But the New Testament says quite a lot about giving. Believers are to give in the following manner:

    Generously. Jesus told his followers to give to everyone who asks (see Lk 6:30), to give to those who can’t repay (see Lk 14:13–14) and to freely give what we have freely received (see Mt 10:8). Paul established the principle that what we reap is a reflection of what we sow (see 2Co 9:6).

    Humbly. There is danger in thinking that if we follow a specific rule, we have done everything that God requires. Jesus chastised the Pharisees for giving a tenth of their spices while neglecting more important matters of the law—justice, mercy and faithfulness (see Mt 23:23). To suppose that God demands 10 percent—and nothing more—can foster an attitude that says, “This bit is for God, and the rest is mine.”

    With the proper attitude. Using a strictly legal principle of giving prompts wrangling over questions like: Is it 10 percent of gross income or net income? of take-home pay only? before or after insurance and retirement deductions? Instead, we are to give what we decide in our hearts to give, “not reluctantly or under compulsion, for God loves a cheerful giver” (2Co 9:7). Therefore some better questions might be: How can I better manage my affairs so that I can give more? Where can I give that will best serve God’s purposes? Now that I’ve given what money I can, what else can I give?

  • LBGTQ’s – GENDER AND SEXUALITY FOR CHRISTIAN YOUTH

    “Can’t they just absorb it by osmosis?” Well, yes and no. Teens have their radar up for information about sexuality more than anything. They swim in a culture permeated by sexual objects, messaging, and content. Their friends talk about it, movies show them what it looks like, music tells them the feelings of experiences, and everything outside them and inside them swirles in a tempest of sexual identity.
    Meanwhile… what are their parents doing? Telling them what NOT to do it, drawing lines, restricting, OR just saying and doing nothing about sexuality. Neither approach tends to work well. That’s why we’re here – to learn how to have a lifelong conversation about sexuality and gender instead of “The Talk.” If you are interested in learning how to help GEN Z, click in the link bellow!!!

    https://mailchi.mp/2ed7a6db1f61/lbgtqs-gender-and-sexuality-in-gen-z

    I know that the information is thorough but yet, so necessary for Christians, being them parents, Youth, pastors or even social workers.

    Enjoy!

  • Carta de Bolsonaro ao Brasil após 5 meses de governo!

    Bastaram 5 meses de um governo atípico, “sem jeito” com o congresso e de comunicação amadora para nos mostrar que o Brasil nunca foi, e talvez nunca será, governado de acordo com o interesse dos eleitores. Sejam eles de esquerda ou de direita.

    Desde a tal compra de votos para a reeleição, os conchavos para a privatização, o mensalão, o petrolão e o tal “presidencialismo de coalizão”, o Brasil é governado exclusivamente para atender aos interesses de corporações com acesso privilegiado ao orçamento público.

    Não só políticos, mas servidores-sindicalistas, sindicalistas de toga e grupos empresariais bem posicionados nas teias de poder. Os verdadeiros donos do orçamento. As lagostas do STF e os espumantes com quatro prêmios internacionais são só a face gourmet do nosso absolutismo orçamentário.

    Todos nós sabíamos disso, mas queríamos acreditar que era só um efeito de determinado governo corrupto ou cooptado. Na próxima eleição, tudo poderia mudar. Infelizmente não era isso, não era pontual. Bolsonaro provou que o Brasil, fora desses conchavos, é ingovernável.

    Descobrimos que não existe nenhum compromisso de campanha que pode ser cumprido sem que as corporações deem suas bênçãos. Sempre a contragosto.

    Nem uma simples redução do número de ministérios pode ser feita. Corremos o risco de uma MP caducar e o Brasil ser OBRIGADO a ter 29 ministérios e voltar para a estrutura do Temer.

    Isso é do interesse de quem? Qual é o propósito de o congresso ter que aprovar a estrutura do executivo, que é exclusivamente do interesse operacional deste último, além de ser promessa de campanha?

    Querem, na verdade, é manter nichos de controle sobre o orçamento para indicar os ministros que vão permitir sangrar estes recursos para objetivos não republicanos. Historinha com mais de 500 anos por aqui.

    Que poder, de fato, tem o presidente do Brasil? Até o momento, como todas as suas ações foram ou serão questionadas no congresso e na justiça, apostaria que o presidente não serve para NADA, exceto para organizar o governo no interesse das corporações. Fora isso, não governa.

    Se não negocia com o congresso, é amador e não sabe fazer política. Se negocia, sucumbiu à velha política. O que resta, se 100% dos caminhos estão errados na visão dos “ana(lfabe)listas políticos”?

    A continuar tudo como está, as corporações vão comandar o governo Bolsonaro na marra e aprovar o mínimo para que o Brasil não quebre, apenas para continuarem mantendo seus privilégios.

    O moribundo-Brasil será mantido vivo por aparelhos para que os privilegiados continuem mamando. É fato inegável. Está assim há 519 anos, morto, mas procriando. Foi assim, provavelmente continuará assim.

    Antes de Bolsonaro vivíamos em um cativeiro, sequestrados pelas corporações, mas tínhamos a falsa impressão de que nossos representantes eleitos tinham efetivo poder de apresentar suas agendas.

    Era falso, FHC foi reeleito prometendo segurar o dólar e soltou-o 2 meses depois, Lula foi eleito criticando a política de FHC e nomeou um presidente do Bank Boston, fez reforma da previdência e aumentou os juros, Dilma foi eleita criticando o neoliberalismo e indicou Joaquim Levy. Tudo para manter o cadáver procriando por múltiplos de 4 anos.

    Agora, como a agenda de Bolsonaro não é do interesse de praticamente NENHUMA corporação (pelo jeito nem dos militares), o sequestro fica mais evidente e o cárcere começa a se mostrar sufocante.

    Na hipótese mais provável, o governo será desidratado até morrer de inanição, com vitória para as corporações. Que sempre venceram. Daremos adeus Moro, Mansueto e Guedes. Estão atrapalhando as corporações, não terão lugar por muito tempo.

    Na pior hipótese ficamos ingovernáveis e os agentes econômicos, internos e externos, desistem do Brasil. Teremos um orçamento destruído, aumentando o desemprego, a inflação e com calotes generalizados. Perfeitamente plausível. Claramente possível.

    A hipótese nuclear é uma ruptura institucional irreversível, com desfecho imprevisível. É o Brasil sendo zerado, sem direito para ninguém e sem dinheiro para nada. Não se sabe como será reconstruído. Não é impossível, basta olhar para a Argentina e para a Venezuela. A economia destes países não é funcional. Podemos chegar lá, está longe de ser impossível.

    Agradeçamos a Bolsonaro, pois em menos de 5 meses provou de forma inequívoca que o Brasil só é governável se atender o interesse das corporações. Nunca será governável para atender ao interesse dos eleitores. Quaisquer eleitores. Tenho certeza que esquerdistas não votaram em Dilma para Joaquim Levy ser indicado ministro. Foi o que aconteceu, pois precisavam manter o cadáver Brasil procriando. Sem controle do orçamento, as corporações morrem.

    O Brasil está disfuncional. Como nunca antes. Bolsonaro não é culpado pela disfuncionalidade, pois não destruiu nada, aliás, até agora não fez nada de fato, não aprovou nada, só tentou e fracassou. Ele é só um óculos com grau certo, para vermos que o rei sempre esteve nu, e é horroroso.

    Infelizmente o diagnóstico racional é claro: “Sell”.

    Autor desconhecido

  • ARE WE BOUND TO BE SAVED OR LOST? JOHN 17:11-12 AND THE CASE OF THE SON OF PERDITION

    Matthew Henry Commentary of the Bible

    11 And now I am no more in the world, but these are in the world, and I come to thee. Holy Father, keep through thine own name those whom thou hast given me, that they may be one, as we are. 12 While I was with them in the world, I kept them in thy name: those that thou gavest me I have kept, and none of them is lost, but the son of perdition; that the scripture might be fulfilled. 13 And now come I to thee; and these things I speak in the world, that they might have my joy fulfilled in themselves. 14 I have given them thy word; and the world hath hated them, because they are not of the world, even as I am not of the world. 15 I pray not that thou shouldest take them out of the world, but that thou shouldest keep them from the evil. 16 They are not of the world, even as I am not of the world.

    After the general pleas with which Christ recommended his disciples to his Father’s care follow the particular petitions he puts up for them; and, 1. They all relate to spiritual blessings in heavenly things. He does not pray that they might be rich and great in the world, that they might raise estates and get preferments, but that they might be kept from sin, and furnished for their duty, and brought safely to heaven. Note, The prosperity of the soul is the best prosperity; for what relates to this Christ came to purchase and bestow, and so teaches us to seek, in the first place, both for others and for ourselves. 2. They are such blessings as were suited to their present state and case, and their various exigencies and occasions. Note, Christ’s intercession is always pertinent. Our advocate with the Father is acquainted with all the particulars of our wants and burdens, our dangers and difficulties, and knows how to accommodate his intercession to each, as to Peter’s peril, which he himself was not aware of (Luke xxii. 32), I have prayed for thee. 3. He is large and full in the petitions, orders them before his Father, and fills his mouth with arguments, to teach us fervency and importunity in prayer, to be large in prayer, and dwell upon our errands at the throne of grace, wrestling as Jacob, I will not let thee go, except thou bless me.

    Now the first thing Christ prays for, for his disciples, is their preservation, in these verses, in order to which he commits them all to his Father’s custody. Keeping supposes danger, and their danger arose from the world, the world wherein they were, the evil of this he begs they might be kept from. Now observe,

    I. The request itself: Keep them from the world. There were two ways of their being delivered from the world:–

    1. By taking them out of it; and he does not pray that they might be so delivered: I pray not that thou shouldest take them out of the world; that is,

    (1.) “I pray not that they may be speedily removed by death.” If the world will be vexatious to them, the readiest way to secure them would be to hasten them out of it to a better world, that will give them better treatment. Send chariots and horses of fire for them, to fetch them to heaven; Job, Elijah, Jonah, Moses, when that occurred which fretted them, prayed that they might be taken out of the world; but Christ would not pray so for his disciples, for two reasons:– [1.] Because he came to conquer, not to countenance, those intemperate heats and passions which make men impatient of life, and importunate for death. It is his will that we should take up our cross, and not outrun it. [2.] Because he had work for them to do in the world; the world, though sick of them (Acts xxii. 22), and therefore not worthy of them (Heb. xi. 38), yet could ill spare them. In pity therefore to this dark world, Christ would not have these lights removed out of it, but continued in it, especially for the sake of those in the world that were to believe in him through their word. Let not them be taken out of the world when their Master is; they must each in his own order die a martyr, but not till they have finished their testimony. Note, First,The taking of good people out of the world is a thing by no means to be desired, but rather dreaded and laid to heart, Isa. lvii. 1. Secondly, Though Christ loves his disciples, he does not presently send for them to heaven, as soon as they are effectually called, but leaves them for some time in this world, that they may do good and glorify God upon earth, and be ripened for heaven. Many good people are spared to live, because they can ill be spared to die.

    (2.) “I pray not that they may be totally freed and exempted from the troubles of this world, and taken out of the toil and terror of it into some place of ease and safety, there to live undisturbed; this is not the preservation I desire for them.” Non ut omni molestia liberati otium et delicias colant, sed ut inter media pericula salvi tamen maneant Dei auxilio–Not that, being freed from all trouble, they may bask in luxurious ease, but that by the help of God they may be preserved in a scene of danger; so Calvin. Not that they may be kept from all conflict with the world, but that they may not be overcome by it; not that, as Jeremiah wished, they might leave their people, and go from them (Jer. ix. 2), but that, like Ezekiel, their faces may be strong against the faces of wicked men,Ezek. iii. 8. It is more the honour of a Christian soldier by faith to overcome the world than by a monastical vow to retreat from it; and more for the honour of Christ to serve him in a city than to serve him in a cell.

    2. Another way is by keeping them from the corruption that is in the world; and he prays they may be thus kept, John 17:11 John 17:15. Here are three branches of this petition:–

    (1.) Holy Father, keep those whom thou hast given me.

    [1.] Christ was now leaving them; but let them not think that their defence was departed from them; no, he does here, in their hearing, commit them to the custody of his Father and their Father. Note, It is the unspeakable comfort of all believers that Christ himself has committed them to the care of God. Those cannot but be safe whom the almighty God keeps, and he cannot but keep those whom the Son of his love commits to him, in the virtue of which we may by faith commit the keeping of our souls to God, 2 Timothy 1:12 1 Peter 4:19. First, He here puts them under the divine protection, that they may not be run down by the malice of their enemies; that they and all their concerns may be the particular care of the divine Providence: “Keep their lives, till they have done their work; keep their comforts, and let them not be broken in upon by the hardships they meet with; keep up their interest in the world, and let it not sink.” To this prayer is owing the wonderful preservation of the gospel ministry and gospel church in the world unto this day; if God had not graciously kept both, and kept up both, they had been extinguished and lost long ago. Secondly, He puts them under the divine tuition, that they may not themselves run away from their duty, nor be led aside by the treachery of their own hearts: “Keep them in their integrity, keep them disciples, keep them close to their duty.” We need God’s power not only to put us into a state of grace, but to keep us in it. See, John 10:28-29 1 Peter 1:15.

    [2.] The titles he gives to him he prays to, and them he prays for, enforce the petition. First, He speaks to God as a holy Father. In committing ourselves and others to the divine care, we may take encouragement, 1. From the attribute of his holiness, for this is engaged for the preservation of his holy ones; he hath sworn by his holiness, Ps. lxxxix. 35. If he be a holy God and hate sin, he will make those holy that are his, and keep them from sin, which they also hate and dread as the greatest evil. 2. From this relation of a Father, wherein he stands to us through Christ. If he be a Father, he will take care of his own children, will teach them and keep them; who else should? Secondly, He speaks of them as those whom the Father had given him. What we receive as our Father’s gifts, we may comfortably remit to our Father’s care. “Father, keep the graces and comforts thou hast given me; the children thou hast given me; the ministry I have received.

    (2.) Keep them through thine own name. That is, [1.] Keep them for thy name’s sake; so some. “Thy name and honour are concerned in their preservation as well as mine, for both will suffer by it if they either revolt or sink.” The Old Testament saints often pleaded, for thy name’s sake; and those may with comfort plead it that are indeed more concerned for the honour of God’s name than for any interest of their own. [2.] Keep them in thy name; so others; the original is so, en to onomati. “Keep them in the knowledge and fear of thy name; keep them in the profession and service of thy name, whatever it cost them. Keep them in the interest of thy name, and let them ever be faithful to this; keep them in thy truths, in thine ordinances, in the way of thy commandments.” [3.] Keep them by or through thy name; so others. “Keep them by thine own power, in thine own hand; keep them thyself, undertake for them, let them be thine own immediate care. Keep them by those means of preservation which thou hast thyself appointed, and by which thou hast made thyself known. Keep them by thy word and ordinances; let thy name be their strong tower, thy tabernacle their pavilion.”

    (3.) Keep them from the evil, or out of the evil. He had taught them to pray daily, Deliver us from evil, and this would encourage them to pray. [1.] “Keep them from the evil one, the devil and all his instruments; that wicked one and all his children. Keep them from Satan as a tempter, that either he may not have leave to sift them, or that their faith may not fail. Keep them from him as a destroyer, that he may not drive them to despair.” [2.] “Keep them from the evil thing, that is sin; from every thing that looks like it, or leads to it. Keep them, that they do no evil,” 2 Cor. xiii. 7. Sin is that evil which, above any other, we should dread and deprecate. [3.] “Keep them from the evil of the world, and of their tribulation in it, so that it may have no sting in it, no malignity;” not that they might be kept from affliction, but kept through it, that the property of their afflictions might be so altered as that there might be no evil in them, nothing to them any harm.

    II. The reasons with which he enforces these requests for their preservation, which are five:–

    1. He pleads that hitherto he had kept them (v. 12): “While I was with them in the world, I have kept them in thy name, in the true faith of the gospel and the service of God; those that thou gavest me for my constant attendants I have kept, they are all safe, and none of them missing, none of them revolted nor ruined, but the son of perdition; he is lost, that the scripture might be fulfilled.” Observe,

    (1.) Christ’s faithful discharge of his undertaking concerning his disciples: While he was with them, he kept them,and his care concerning them was not in vain. He kept them in God’s name, preserved them from falling into any dangerous errors or sins, from striking in with the Pharisees, who would have compassed sea and land to make proselytes of them; he kept them from deserting him, and returning to the little all they had left for him; he had them still under his eye and care when he sent them to peach; went not his heart with them? Many that followed him awhile took offence at something or other, and went off; but he kept the twelve that they should not go away. He kept them from falling into the hands of persecuting enemies that sought their lives; kept them when he surrendered himself, ch.xviii. 9. While he was with them he kept them in a visible manner by instructions till sounding in their ears, miracles still done before their eyes; when he was gone from them, they must be kept in a more spiritual manner. Sensible comforts and supports are sometimes given and sometimes withheld; but, when they are withdrawn, yet they are not left comfortless. What Christ here says of his immediate followers is true of all the saints while they are here in this world; Christ keeps them in God’s name. It is implied, [1.] That they are weak, and cannot keep themselves; their own hands are not sufficient for them. [2.] That they are, in God’s account, valuable and worth the keeping; precious in his sight and honourable; his treasure, his jewels. [3.] That their salvation is designed, for to this it is that they are kept, 1 Pet. i. 5. As the wicked are reserved for the day of evil, so the righteous are preserved for the day of bliss. [4.] That they are the charge of the Lord Jesus; for as his charge he keeps them, and exposed himself like the good shepherd for the preservation of the sheep.

    (2.) The comfortable account he gives of his undertaking: None of them is lost. Note, Jesus Christ will certainly keep all that were given to him, so that none of them shall be totally and finally lost; they may think themselves lost, and may be nearly lost (in imminent peril); but it is the Father’s will that he should lose none, and none he will lose (ch. vi. 39); so it will appear when they come all together, and none of them shall be wanting.

    (3.) A brand put upon Judas, as none of those whom he had undertaken to keep. He was among those that were given to Christ, but not of them. He speaks of Judas as already lost, for he had abandoned the society of his Master and his fellow-disciples, and abandoned himself to the devil’s guidance, and in a little time would go to his own place; he is as good as lost. But the apostasy and ruin of Judas were no reproach at all to his Master, or his family; for, [1.] He was the son of perdition, and therefore not one of those that were given to Christ to be kept. He deserved perdition, and God left him to throw himself headlong into it. He was the son of the destroyer, as Cain, who was of that wicked one. That great enemy whom the Lord will consume is called a son of perdition, because he is a man of sin, 2 Thess. ii. 3. It is an awful consideration that one of the apostles proved a son of perdition. No man’s place or name in the church, no man’s privileges or opportunities of getting grace, no man’s profession or external performances, will secure him from ruin, if his heart be not right with God; nor are any more likely to prove sons of perdition at last, after a plausible course of profession, than those that like Judas love the bag; but Christ’s distinguishing Judas from those that were given him (for ei me is adversative, not exceptive) intimates that the truth and true religion ought not to suffer for the treachery of those that are false to it, 1 John ii. 19. [2.] The scripture was fulfilled; the sin of Judas was foreseen of God’s counsel and foretold in his word, and the event would certainly follow after the prediction as a consequent, though it cannot be said necessarily to follow from it as an effect. See Psalms 41:9Psalms 69:25 Psalms 109:8. We should be amazed at the treachery of apostates, were we not told of it before.

    2. He pleads that he was now under a necessity of leaving them, and could no longer watch over them in the way that he had hitherto done (v. 11): “Keep them now, that I may not lose the labour I bestowed upon them while I was with them. Keep them, that they may be onewith us as we are with each other.” We shall have occasion to speak of this, v.21. But see here,

    (1.) With what pleasure he speaks of his own departure. He expresses himself concerning it with an air of triumph and exultation, with reference both to the world he left and the world he removed to. [1.] “Now I am no more in the world. Now farewell to this provoking troublesome world. I have had enough of it, and now the welcome hour is at hand when I shall be no more in it. Now that I have finished the work I had to do in it, I have done with it; nothing remains now but to hasten out of it as fast as I can.” Note, It should be a pleasure to those that have their home in the other world to think of being no more in this world; for when we have done what we have to do in this world, and are made meet for that, what is there here that should court our stay? When we receive a sentence of death within ourselves, with what a holy triumph should we say, “Now I am no more in this world, this dark deceitful world, this poor empty world, this tempting defiling world; no more vexed with its thorns and briars, no more endangered by its nets and snares; now I shall wander no more in this howling wilderness, be tossed no more on this stormy sea; now I am no more in this world, but can cheerfully quit it, and give it a final farewell.” [2.] Now I come to thee. To get clear of the world is but the one half of the comfort of a dying Christ, of a dying Christian; the far better half is to think of going to the Father, to sit down in the immediate, uninterrupted, and everlasting enjoyment of him. Note, Those who love God cannot but be pleased to think of coming to him, though it be through the valley of the shadow of death. When we go, to be absent from the body, it is to be present with the Lord, like children fetched home from school to their father’s house. “Now come I to thee whom I have chosen and served, and whom my soul thirsteth after; to thee the fountain of light and life, the crown and centre of bliss and joy; now my longings shall be satisfied, my hopes accomplished, my happiness completed, for now come I to thee.

    (2.) With what a tender concern he speaks of those whom he left behind: “But these are in the world. I have found what an evil world it is, what will become of these dear little ones that must stay in it? Holy Father, keep them;they will want my presence, let them have thine. They have now more need than ever to be kept, for I am sending them out further into the world than they have yet ventured; they must launch forth into the deep, and have business to do in these great waters, and will be lost if thou do not keep them.” Observe here, [1.] That, when our Lord Jesus was going to the Father, he carried with him a tender concern for his own that are in the world; and continued to compassionate them. He bears their names upon his breast-plate, nay, upon his heart, and has graven them with the nails of his cross upon the palms of his hands; and when he is out of their sight they are not out of his, much less out of his mind. We should have such a pity for those that are launching out into the world when we are got almost through it, and for those that are left behind in it when we are leaving it. [2.] That, when Christ would express the utmost need his disciples had of divine preservation, he only says, They are in the world; this bespeaks danger enough to those who are bound for heaven, whom a flattering world would divert and seduce, and a malignant world would hate and persecute.

    3. He pleads what a satisfaction it would be to them to know themselves safe, and what a satisfaction it would be to him to see them easy: I speak this, that they may have my joy fulfilled in themselves, v. 13. Observe,

    (1.) Christ earnestly desired the fulness of the joy of his disciples, for it is his will that they should rejoice evermore. He was leaving them in tears and troubles, and yet took effectual care to fulfil their joy. When they thought their joy in him was brought to an end, then was it advanced nearer to perfection than ever it had been, and they were fuller of it. We are here taught, [1.] To found our joy in Christ: “It is my joy, joy of my giving, or rather joy that I am the matter of.” Christ is a Christian’s joy, his chief joy. Joy in the world is withering with it; joy in Christ is everlasting, like him. [2.] To build up our joy with diligence; for it is the duty as well as privilege of all true believers; no part of the Christian life is pressed upon us more earnestly, Philippians 3:1Philippians 4:4. [3.] To aim at the perfection of this joy, that we may have it fulfilled in us, for this Christ would have.

    (2.) In order hereunto, he did thus solemnly commit them to his Father’s care and keeping and took them for witnesses that he did so: These things I speak in the world, while I am yet with them in the world. His intercession in heaven for their preservation would have been as effectual in itself; but saying this in the world would be a greater satisfaction and encouragement to them, and would enable them to rejoice in tribulation. Note, [1.] Christ has not only treasured up comforts for his people, in providing for their future welfare, but has given out comforts to them, and said that which will be for their present satisfaction. He here condescended in the presence of his disciples to publish his last will and testament, and (which many a testator is shy of) lets them know what legacies he had left them, and how well they were secured, that they might have strong consolation. [2.] Christ’s intercession for us is enough to fulfil or joy in him; nothing more effectual to silence all our fears and mistrusts, and to furnish us with strong consolation, than this, that he always appears in the presence of God for us; therefore the apostle puts a yea rather upon this, Rom. viii. 34. And see Heb. vii. 25.

    4. He pleads the ill usage they were likely to meet with in the world, for his sake (v. 14): “I have given them thy wordto be published to the world, and they have received it, have believed it themselves, and accepted the trust of transmitting it to the world; and therefore the world hath hated them, as also because they are not of the world,any more than I.” Here we have,

    (1.) The world’s enmity to Christ’s followers. While Christ was with them, though as yet they had given but little opposition to the world, yet it hates them, much more would it do so when by their more extensive preaching of the gospel they would turn the world upside down. “Father, stand their friend,” says Christ, “for they are likely to have many enemies; let them have thy love, for the world’s hatred is entailed upon them. In the midst of those fiery darts, let them be compassed with thy favour as with a shield.” It is God’s honour to take part with the weaker side, and to help the helpless. Lord, be merciful to them, for men would swallow them up.

    (2.) The reasons of this enmity, which strengthen the plea. [1.] It is implied that one reason is because they had received the word of God as it was sent them by the hand of Christ, when the greatest part of the world rejected it, and set themselves against those who were the preachers and professors of it. Note, Those that receive Christ’s good will and good word must expect the world’s ill will and ill word. Gospel ministers have been in a particular manner hated by the world, because they call men out of the world, and separate them from it, and teach them not to conform to it, and so condemn the world. “Father, keep them for it is for thy sake that they are exposed; they are sufferers for thee.” Thus the psalmist pleads, For thy sake I have borne reproach, Ps. lxix. 7. Note, Those that keep the word of Christ’s patience are entitled to special protection in the hour of temptation, Rev. iii. 10. That cause which makes a martyr may well make a joyful sufferer. [2.] Another reason is more express; the world hates them, because they are not of the world. Those to whom the word of Christ comes in power are not of the world, for it has this effect upon all that receive it in the love of it that it weans them from the wealth of the world, and turns them against the wickedness of the world, and therefore the world bears them a grudge.

    5. He pleads their conformity to himself in a holy non-conformity to the world (v. 16): “Father, keep them, for they are of my spirit and mind, they are not of the world, even as I am not of the world.” Those may in faith commit themselves to God’s custody, (1.) Who are as Christ was in this world, and tread in his steps. God will love those that are like Christ. (2.) Who do not engage themselves in the world’s interest, nor devote themselves to its service. Observe, [1.] That Jesus Christ was not of this world; he never had been of it, and least of all now that he was upon the point of leaving it. This intimates, First, His state; he was none of the world’s favourites nor darlings, none of its princes nor grandees; worldly possessions he had none, not even where to lay his head; nor worldly power, he was no judge nor divider. Secondly, His Spirit; he was perfectly dead to the world, the prince of this world had nothing in him, the things of this world were nothing to him; not honour, for he made himself of no reputation; not riches, for for our sakes he became poor; not pleasures, for he acquainted himself with grief. See ch. viii. 23. [2.] That therefore true Christians are not of this world. The Spirit of Christ in them is opposite to the spirit of the world. First, It is their lot to be despised by the world; they are not in favour with the world any more than their Master before them was. Secondly, It is their privilege to be delivered from the world; as Abraham out of the land of his nativity. Thirdly, It is their duty and character to be dead to the world. Their most pleasing converse is, and should be, with another world, and their prevailing concern about the business of that world, not of this. Christ’s disciples were weak, and had many infirmities; yet this he could say for them, They were not of the world, not of the earth, and therefore he recommends them to the care of Heaven.

  • A LETTER FOR PREACHERS ONLY!

    I thought of you when I read this quote from “The Complete Works of E. M. Bounds: Power Through Prayer, Prayer and Praying Men, The Essentials of Prayer, The Necessity of Prayer, The Possibilities … Purpose in Prayer, The Weapon of Prayer” by E. M. Bounds –

    “Our Sufficiency Is of God But above all he excelled in prayer. The inwardness and weight of his spirit, the reverence and solemnity of his address and behavior, and the fewness and fullness of his words have often struck even strangers with admiration as they used to reach others with consolation. The most awful, living, reverend frame I ever felt or beheld, I must say, was his prayer. And truly it was a testimony. He knew and lived nearer to the Lord than other men, for they that know him most will see most reason to approach him with reverence and fear.—William Penn of George Fox

    The sweetest graces by a slight perversion may bear the bitterest fruit. The sun gives life, but sunstrokes are death. Preaching is to give life; it may kill. The preacher holds the keys; he may lock as well as unlock. Preaching is God’s great institution for the planting and maturing of spiritual life.

    When properly executed, its benefits are untold; when wrongly executed, no evil can exceed its damaging results. It is an easy matter to destroy the flock if the shepherd be unwary or the pasture be destroyed, easy to capture the citadel if the watchmen be asleep or the food and water be poisoned. Invested with such gracious prerogatives, exposed to so great evils, involving so many grave responsibilities, it would be a parody on the shrewdness of the devil and a libel on his character and reputation if he did not bring his master influences to adulterate the preacher and the preaching.

    In face of all this, the exclamatory interrogatory of Paul, “Who is sufficient for these things?” is never out of order. Paul says: “Our sufficiency is of God, who also hath made us able ministers of the new testament; not of the letter, but of the spirit: for the letter killeth, but the spirit giveth life.”

    The true ministry is God-touched, God-enabled, and God-made. The Spirit of God is on the preacher in anointing power, the fruit of the Spirit is in his heart, the Spirit of God has vitalized the man and the word; his preaching gives life, gives life as the spring gives life; gives life as the resurrection gives life; gives ardent life as the summer gives ardent life; gives fruitful life as the autumn gives fruitful life. The life-giving preacher is a man of God, whose heart is ever athirst for God, whose soul is ever following hard after God, whose eye is single to God, and in whom by the power of God’s Spirit the flesh and the world have been crucified and his ministry is like the generous flood of a life-giving river.

    The preaching that kills is non-spiritual preaching. The ability of the preaching is not from God. Lower sources than God have given to it energy and stimulant. The Spirit is not evident in the preacher nor his preaching. Many kinds of forces may be projected and stimulated by preaching that kills, but they are not spiritual forces. They may resemble spiritual forces, but are only the shadow, the counterfeit; life they may seem to have, but the life is magnetized.

    The preaching that kills is the letter; shapely and orderly it may be, but it is the letter still, the dry, husky letter, the empty, bald shell. The letter may have the germ of life in it, but it has no breath of spring to evoke it; winter seeds they are, as hard as the winter’s soil, as icy as the winter’s air, no thawing nor germinating by them. This letter-preaching has the truth.

    But even divine truth has no life-giving energy alone; it must be energized by the Spirit, with all God’s forces at its back. Truth unquickened by God’s Spirit deadens as much as, or more than, error. It may be the truth without admixture; but without the Spirit its shade and touch are deadly, its truth error, its light darkness.

    The letter-preaching is unctionless, neither mellowed nor oiled by the Spirit. There may be tears, but tears cannot run God’s machinery; tears may be but summer’s breath on a snow-covered iceberg, nothing but surface slush. Feelings and earnestness there may be, but it is the emotion of the actor and the earnestness of the attorney.

    The preacher may feel from the kindling of his own sparks, be eloquent over his own exegesis, earnest in delivering the product of his own brain; the professor may usurp the place and imitate the fire of the apostle; brains and nerves may serve the place and feign the work of God’s Spirit, and by these forces the letter may glow and sparkle like an illumined text, but the glow and sparkle will be as barren of life as the field sown with pearls.

    The death-dealing element lies back of the words, back of the sermon, back of the occasion, back of the manner, back of the action. The great hindrance is in the preacher himself. He has not in himself the mighty life-creating forces. There may be no discount on his orthodoxy, honesty, cleanness, or earnestness; but somehow the man, the inner man, in its secret places has never broken down and surrendered to God, his inner life is not a great highway for the transmission of God’s message, God’s power. Somehow self and not God rules in the holy of holiest.

    Somewhere, all unconscious to himself, some spiritual nonconductor has touched his inner being, and the divine current has been arrested. His inner being has never felt its thorough spiritual bankruptcy, its utter powerlessness; he has never learned to cry out with an ineffable cry of self-despair and self-helplessness till God’s power and God’s fire comes in and fills, purifies, empowers. Self-esteem, self-ability in some pernicious shape has defamed and violated the temple which should be held sacred for God. Life-giving preaching costs the preacher much—death to self, crucifixion to the world, the travail of his own soul. Crucified preaching only can give life. Crucified preaching can come only from a crucified man.”

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  • EXPERIENCING GOD’S PRESENCE – 4 SERMON SERIES

    Enjoying The Manifest Presence of God

    Hindrances to God’s Presence

    The Holy of Holies of God’s Presence

    The Daily Practice of God’s Presence

  • The Fraternity of the Pharisees

    The “Fraternity” of Pharisees

    To realise the state of religious society at the time of our Lord, the fact that the Pharisees were a regular “order,” and that there were many such “fraternities,” in great measure the outcome of the original Pharisees, must always be kept in view. For the New Testament simply transports us among contemporary scenes and actors, taking the then existent state of things, so to speak, for granted. But the fact referred to explains many seemingly strange circumstances, and casts fresh light upon all. Thus, if, to choose an illustration, we should wonder how so early as the morning after the long discussion in the Sanhedrim, which must have occupied a considerable part of the day, “more than forty men” should have been found “banded together” under an anathema, neither to eat nor to drink “till they had killed Paul” (Act 23:12 , Act 23:21(refs2) ); and, still more, how such “a conspiracy,” or rather “conjuration,” which, in the nature of it, would be kept a profound secret, should have become known to “Paul’s sister’s son” (Act 23:16 ), the circumstances of the case furnish a sufficient explanation. The Pharisees were avowedly a “Chabura”–that is, a fraternity or “guild”–and they, or some of their kindred fraternities, would furnish the ready material for such a “band,” to whom this additional “vow” would be nothing new nor strange, and, murderous though it sounded, only seem a farther carrying out of the principles of their “order.” Again, since the wife and all the children of a “chaber,” or member, were ipso facto members of the “Chabura,” and Paul’s father had been a “Pharisee” (Act 23:6), Paul’s sister also would by virtue of her birth belong to the fraternity, even irrespective of the probability that, in accordance with the principles of the party, she would have married into a Pharisaical family. Nor need we wonder that the rage of the whole “order” against Paul should have gone to an extreme, for which ordinary Jewish zeal would scarcely account. The day before, the excitement of discussion in the Sanhedrim had engrossed their attention, and in a measure diverted it from Paul. The apologetic remark then made (Act 23:9 ), “If a spirit or an angel hath spoken to him, let us not fight against God,” coming immediately after the notice (Act 23:8 ) that the Sadducees said, there was “neither angel nor spirit,” may indicate, that the Pharisees were quite as anxious for dogmatic victory over their opponents as to throw the shield of the “fraternity” over one of its professed members. But with the night other and cooler thoughts came. It might be well enough to defend one of their order against the Sadducees, but it was intolerable to have such a member in the fraternity. A grosser outrage on every principle and vow–nay, on the very reason of being of the whole “Chabura”–could scarcely be conceived than the conduct of St. Paul and the views which he avowed. Even regarding him as a simple Israelite, the multitude which thronged the Temple had, on the day before, been only restrained by the heathens from executing the summary vengeance of “death by the rebel’s beating.” How much truer was it as the deliberate conviction of the party, and not merely the cry of an excited populace, “Away with such a fellow from the earth; for it is not fit that he should live!” But while we thus understand the conduct of the Pharisees, we need be under no apprehension as to the consequences to those “more than forty men” of their rash vow. The Jerusalem Talmud (Avod. Sar. 40 a) here furnishes the following curious illustration, which almost reads like a commentary: “If a man makes a vow to abstain from food, Woe to him if he eateth, and, Woe to him if he does not eat! If he eateth, he sinneth against his vow; if he does not eat, he sins against his life. What then must he do? Let him go before ‘the sages,’ and they will absolve him from his vow.” In connection with the whole of this matter it is, to say the least, a very curious coincidence that, at the very time when the party so acted against St. Paul, or immediately afterwards, three new enactments should have been passed by Simeon, the son of Gamaliel (Paul’s teacher), which would exactly meet the case of St. Paul. The first of these ordained, that in future the children of a “Chaber” should not be necessarily such, but themselves require special and individual reception into the “order”; the second, that the previous conduct of the candidate should be considered before admitting him into the fraternity; while the third enjoined, that any member who had left the “order,” or become a publican, should never afterwards be received back again.

    Three words of modern significance, with which of late we have all become too familiar, will probably better help us to understand the whole state of matters than more elaborate explanations. They are connected with that ecclesiastical system which in so many respects seems the counterpart of Rabbinism. Ultramontanism is a direction of religious thought; the Ultramontanes are a party; and the Jesuits not only its fullest embodiment, but an “order,” which, originating in a revival of the spirit of the Papacy, gave rise to the Ultramontanes as a party, and, in the wider diffusion of their principles, to Ultramontanism as a tendency. Now, all this applies equally to the Pharisees and to Pharisaism. To make the analogy complete, the order of the Jesuits also consists of four degrees * –curiously enough, the exact number of those in the fraternity of “the Pharisees!”

    * When speaking of the four degrees in the order of Jesuits, we refer to those which are professed. We are, of course, aware of the existence of the so-called “professi trium votorum” of whom nothing definite is really known by the outside world, and whom we may regard as “the secret Jesuits,” and of that of lay and clerical “coadjutors,” whose services and vows are merely temporary.

    Like that of the Jesuits, the order of the Pharisees originated in a period of great religious reaction. They themselves delighted in tracing their history up to the time of Ezra, and there may have been substantial, though not literal truth in their claim. For we read in Ezr 6:21 , Ezr 9:1 , Ezr 10:11 and Neh 9:2 (refs4) of the “Nivdalim,” or those who had “separated” themselves “from the filthiness of the heathen”; while in Neh 10:29 we find, that they entered into a “solemn league and covenant,” with definite vows and obligations. Now, it is quite true that the Aramaean word “Perishuth” also means “separation,” and that the “Perushim,” or Pharisees, of the Mishnah are, so far as the meaning of the term is concerned, “the separated,” or the “Nivdalim” of their period. But although they could thus, not only linguistically but historically, trace their origin to those who had “separated” themselves at the time of Ezra and Nehemiah, they were not their successors in spirit; and the difference between the designations “Nivdalim” and “Perushim” marks also the widest possible internal difference, albeit it may have been gradually brought about in the course of historical development. All this will become immediately more plain.

    At the time of Ezra, as already noted, there was a great religious revival among those who had returned to the land of their fathers. The profession which had of old only characterised individuals in Israel (Psa 30:4 , Psa 31:23 , Psa 37:28 (refs3) ) was now taken up by the covenanted people as a whole: they became the “Chasidim” or “pious” (rendered in the Authorised Version, “saints”). As “Chasidim,” they resolved to be “Nivdalim,” or “separated from all filthiness of heathenism” around. The one represented, so to speak, the positive; the other, the negative element in their religion. It is deeply interesting to notice, how the former Pharisee (or “separated one”), Paul, had this in view in tracing the Christian life as that of the true “chasid,” and therefore “Nivdal”–in opposition to the Pharisees of externalism–in such passages as 2Co 6:14-18 and 2Co 7:1 (refs2) , closing with this admonition to “cleanse ourselves from all filthiness * of the flesh and spirit, perfecting holiness in the fear of God.” And so St. Paul’s former life and thinking seem ever to have served him as the type of the spiritual realities of his new state. **

    * The Greek word for “filthiness” occurs in this passage only, but the verb from which it is derived seems to have a ceremonial allusion attaching to it in the three passages in which it is used: 1Co 8:7 ; Rev 3:4 , Rev 14:4 (refs3) .

    ** If St. Paul was originally a Pharisee, the accounts given by the earliest tradition (Euseb. H. E. ii. 23), compared with that of Josephus (Ant. xx,197-203), would almost lead us to infer that St. James was a “Chasid.” All the more significant would then be the part he took in removing the yoke of the law from the Gentile converts (Act 15:13-21).

    Two points in Jewish history here claim our special attention, without attempting to unravel the whole somewhat tangled web of events. The first is the period immediately after Alexander the Great. It was one of the objects of the empire which he founded to Grecianise the world; and that object was fully prosecuted by his successors. Accordingly, we find a circle of Grecian cities creeping up along the coast, from Anthedon and Gaza in the south, northwards to Tyre and Seleucia, and eastwards to Damascus, Gadara, Pella, and Philadelphia, wholly belting the land of Israel. Thence the movement advanced into the interior, taking foothold in Galilee and Samaria, and gathering a party with increasing influence and spreading numbers among the people. Now it was under these circumstances, that the “Chasidim” as a party stood out to stem the torrent, which threatened to overwhelm alike the religion and the nationality of Israel. The actual contest soon came, and with it the second grand period in the history of Judaism. Alexander the Great had died in July 323 BC. About a century and a half later, the “Chasidim” had gathered around the Maccabees for Israel’s God and for Israel. But the zeal of the Maccabees soon gave place to worldly ambition and projects. When these leaders united in their person the high-priestly with the royal dignity, the party of the “Chasidim” not only deserted them, but went into open opposition. They called on them to resign the high-priesthood, and were ready to suffer martyrdom, as many of them did, for their outspoken convictions. Thenceforth the “Chasidim” of the early type disappear as a class. They had, as a party, already given place to the Pharisees–the modern “Nivdalim”; and when we meet them again they are only a higher order or branch of the Pharisees–“the pious” of old having, so to speak, become pietists.” Tradition (Men. 40) expressly distinguished “the early Chasidim” (harishonim) from “the later” (acheronim). No doubt, those are some of their principles, although tinged with later colouring, which are handed down as the characteristics of the “chasid” in such sayings of the Mishnah as: “What is mine is thine, and what is thine remains thine as well” (P. Ab. V. 10); “Hard to make angry, but easy to reconcile” (11); “Giving alms, and inducing others to do likewise” (13); “Going to the house of learning, and at the same time doing good works” (14).

    The earliest mention of the Pharisees occurs at the time of the Maccabees. As a “fraternity” we meet them first under the rule of John Hyrcanus, the fourth of the Maccabees from Mattathias (135-105 BC); although Josephus speaks of them already two reigns earlier, at the time of Jonathan (Ant. xiii,171-173). He may have done so by anticipation, or applying later terms to earlier circumstances, since there can be little doubt that the Essenes, whom he names at the same time, had not then any corporate existence. Without questioning that, to use a modern term, “the direction” existed at the time of Jonathan, * we can put our finger on a definite event with which the origin of “the fraternity” of the Pharisees is connected. From Jewish writings we learn, that at the time of Hyrcanus a commission was appointed to inquire throughout the land, how the Divine law of religious contributions was observed by the people. **

    * In proof of this, it may be stated that before the formal institution of the “order,” R. Jose, the son of Joezer, declared all foreign glass vessels, and indeed the whole soil of heathen lands, “unclean,” thus “separating” Israel from all possible intercourse with Gentiles.

    ** It may be to the decrees then enacted by Hyrcanus that Josephus refers (Ant. xiii,293-298), when he speaks of their “abolition” after Hyrcanus broke with the Pharisaical party.

    The result showed that, while the “therumah,” or priestly “heave-offerings,” was regularly given, neither the first or Levitical tithe, nor yet the so-called “second” or “poor’s tithe,” was paid, as the law enjoined. But such transgression involved mortal sin, since it implied the personal use of what really belonged to the Lord. Then it was that the following arrangements were made. All that the “country people” (‘am ha-aretz) sold was to be considered “demai”–a word derived from the Greek for “people,” and so betraying the time of its introduction, but really implying that it was “doubtful” whether or not it had been tithed. In such cases the buyer had to regard the “therumah,” and the “poor’s tithe” as still due on what he had purchased. On the other hand, the Pharisees formed a “Chabura,” or fraternity, of which each member–“Chaber,” or “companion”–bound himself to pay these tithes before use or sale. Each “Chaber” was regarded as “neeman,” or “credited”–his produce being freely bought and sold by the rest of the “Chaberim.” Of course, the burden of additional expense which this involved to each non-“chaber” was very great, since he had to pay “therumah” and tithe on all that he purchased or used, while the Pharisee who bought from another Pharisee was free. One cannot help suspecting that this, in connection with kindred enactments, which bore very hard upon the mass of the people, while they left “the Pharisee” untouched, may underlie the charge of our Lord (Mat 23:4 ): “They bind heavy burdens and grievous to be borne, and lay them on men’s shoulders; but they themselves will not move them with one of their fingers.”

    But the rigorous discharge of tithes was only one part of the obligations of a “Chaber.” The other part consisted in an equally rigorous submission to all the laws of Levitical purity as then understood. Indeed, the varied questions as to what was, or what made “clean,” divided the one “order” of Pharisees into members of various degrees. Four such degrees, according to increasing strictness in “making clean,” are mentioned. It would take too long to explain this fourfold gradation in its details. Suffice it, that, generally speaking, a member of the first degree was called a “Chaber,” or “Ben hacheneseth,” “son of the union”–an ordinary Pharisee; while the other three degrees were ranked together under the generic name of “Teharoth” (purifications). These latter were probably the “Chasidim” of the later period. The “Chaber,” or ordinary Pharisee, only bound himself to tithing and avoidance of all Levitical uncleanness. The higher degrees, on the other hand, took increasingly strict vows. Any one might enter “the order” if he took, before three members, the solemn vow of observing the obligations of the fraternity. A novitiate of a year (which was afterwards shortened) was, however, necessary. The wife or widow of a “Chaber,” and his children, were regarded as members of the fraternity. Those who entered the family of a “Pharisee” had also to seek admission into the “order.” The general obligations of a “Chaber” towards those that were “without” the fraternity were as follows. He was neither to buy from, nor to sell to him anything, either in a dry or fluid state; he was neither to eat at his table (as he might thus partake of what had not been tithed), nor to admit him to his table, unless he had put on the garments of “Chaber” (as his own old ones might else have carried defilement); nor to go into any burying-place; nor to give “therumah” or tithes to any priest who was not a member of the fraternity; nor to do anything in presence of an “am ha-aretz,” or non-“Chaber,” which brought up points connected with the laws of purification, etc. To these, other ordinances, partly of an ascetic character, were added at a later period. But what is specially remarkable is that not only was a novitiate required for the higher grades, similar to that on first entering the order; but that, just as the garment of a non-“chaber” defiled a “Chaber” of the first degree, that of the latter equally defiled him of the second degree, and so on. *

    * It is impossible here to reproduce the Talmudical passages in evidence. But the two obligations of “making clean” and of “tithing,” together with the arrangement of the Pharisees into various grades, are even referred to in the Mishnah (Chag. ii. 5,6 and , and Dema2Ti 2:3 ).

    To sum up then: the fraternity of the Pharisees were bound by these two vows–that of tithing and that in regard to purifications. As the most varied questions would here arise in practice, which certainly were not answered in the law of Moses, the “traditions,” which were supposed to explain and supplement the Divine law, became necessary. In point of fact, the Rabbis speak of them in that sense, and describe them as “a hedge” around Israel and its law. That these traditions should have been traced up to oral communications made to Moses on Mount Sinai, and also deduced by ingenious methods from the letter of Scripture, was only a further necessity of the case. The result was a system of pure externalism, which often contravened the spirit of those very ordinances, the letter of which was slavishly worshipped. To what arrant hypocrisy it often gave rise, appears from Rabbinical writings almost as much as from the New Testament. We can understand how those “blind guides” would often be as great a trouble to their own party as to others. “The plague of Pharisaism” was not an uncommon expression; and this religious sore is ranked with “a silly pietist, a cunning sinner, and a woman Pharisee,” as constituting “the troubles of life” (Sot. 2Ti 4:0 ). “Shall we stop to explain the opinions of Pharisees?” asks a Rabbi, in supreme contempt for “the order” as such. “It is as a tradition among the Pharisees,” we read (Ab. de R. Nathan,5), “to torment themselves in this world, and yet they will not get anything in the next.” It was suggested by the Sadducees, that “the Pharisees would by-and-by subject the globe of the sun itself to their purifications.” On the other hand, almost Epicurean sentences are quoted among their utterances, such as, “Make haste, eat and drink, for the world in which we are is like a wedding feast”; “If thou possessest anything, make good cheer of it; for there is no pleasure underneath the sod, and death gives no respite…Men are like the flowers of the field; some flourish, while others fade away.”

    “Like the flowers of the field!” What far other teaching of another Rabbi, Whom these rejected with scorn, do the words recall! And when from their words we turn to the kingdom which He came to found, we can quite understand the essential antagonism of nature between the two. Assuredly, it has been a bold stretch of assertion to connect in any way the origin or characteristics of Christianity with the Rabbis. Yet, when we bring the picture of Pharisaism, as drawn in Rabbinical writings, side by side with the sketch of it given by our Lord, we are struck not only with the life-likeness, but with the selection of the distinctive features of Pharisaism presented in His reproofs. Indeed, we might almost index the history of Pharisaism by passages from the New Testament. The “tithing of mint and anise,” to the neglect of the weightier matters of the law, and “the cleansing” of the outside–these twofold obligations of the Pharisees, “hedged around,” as they were, by a traditionalism which made void the spirit of the law, and which manifested itself in gross hypocrisy and religious boasting–are they not what we have just traced in the history of “the order?”

    Name: Eder.-Sketches

    Abbreviation: Eder.-Sketches

    Title: Sketches of Jewish Social Life

    Author: Edersheim, Alfred

    Version: 1

    Version date: 29 April 2009

    Description: Sketches of Jewish Social Life

    Comments:

    Sketches of Jewish Social Life

    Chapter 14

  • The Full History of Babylon

    Babylonia

    bab-i-lo’-ni-a

    1. Mounds

    2. Explorations

    3. Names

    4. Semites

    5. Sumerians

    6. Home of the Semites

    7. Immigration

    8. Language

    9. Script

    10. Architecture

    11. Art

    12. Literature

    13. Libraries

    14. Personal Names

    15. History of Kingdoms

    16. Kish

    17. Lagash

    18. Adab

    19. Nippur

    20. Erech

    21. Larsa

    22. Shuruppak

    23. Kisurra

    24. Umma

    25. Accad

    26. Opis

    27. Basime

    28. Drehem

    29. Urumma

    30. First Dynasty of Babylon

    31. Sealand Dynasty

    32. Cassite Dynasty

    33. Cassite Rule

    34. Isin Dynasty

    35. Nebuchadrezzar I

    36. Sealand Dynasty

    37. Bit-Bazi Dynasty

    38. Other Rulers

    39. Babylonian Dynasty

    40. Neo-Babylonian Rulers

    41. Persian Rulers of Babylon

    LITERATURE

    Babylonia is a plain which is made up of the alluvial deposits of the mountainous regions in the North, where the Tigris and Euphrates have their source. The land is bounded on the North by Assyria and Mesopotamia; on the East by Elam, separated by the mountains of Elam; on the South by the sea marshes, and the country Kaldu (Chaldaea); and on the West by the Syrian desert. Some of the cities of the lower country were seaport towns in the early period, but now are far inland. This land- making process continues even at the present time at the rate of about 70 ft. a year.

    This plain, in the days when Babylonia flourished, sustained a dense population. It was covered with a network of canals, skillfully planned and regulated, which brought prosperity to the land, because of the wonderful fertility of the soil. The neglect of these canals and doubtless, also, the change of climate, have resulted in altered conditions in the country. It has become a cheerless waste. During some months of the year, when the inundations take place, large portions of the land are partially covered with swamps and marshes. At other times it looks like a desolate plain.

    1. Mounds:

    Throughout the land there are seen, at the present time, ruin-hills or mounds of accumulation of debris, which mark the site of ancient cities. Some of these cities were destroyed in a very early era, and were never rebuilt. Others were occupied for millenniums, and their history extends far into the Christian era. The antiquities generally found in the upper stratum of the mounds which were occupied up to so late a period, show that they were generally inhabited by the Jews, who lived there after the Babylonians had disappeared.

    2. Explorations:

    The excavations conducted at various sites have resulted in the discovery, besides antiquities of almost every character, of hundreds of thousands of inscriptions on clay and stone, but principally on the former material. At Tello more than 60,000 tablets were found, belonging largely to the administrative archives of the temple of the third millennium BC. At Nippur about 50,000 inscriptions were found, many of these also belonging to temple archives. But about 20,000 tablets and fragments found in that city came from the library of the school of the priests, which had been written in the third millennium BC. At Sippar, fully 30,000 tablets were found, many being of the same general character, also representing a library. At Delehem and Djokha, temple archives of the same period as those found at Tello have come to light in great numbers, through the illicit diggings of Arabs. Babylon, Borsippa, Kish, Erech and many other cities have yielded to the explorer and the Arab diggers inscribed documents of every period of Babylonian history, and embracing almost every kind of literature, so that the museums and libraries of America and Europe have stored up unread inscriptions numbering hundreds of thousands. Many also are in the possession of private individuals. After the work of excavating Babylonia has been completed and the inscriptions deciphered, many of the pro-Christian centuries in Babylonian history will be better known than some of those of our Christian era. The ancient history of the Babylonians will be reconstructed by the help of these original sources. Lengthy family genealogies will be known, as indeed in some instances is now the case, as well as the Babylonian contemporaries of Ezekiel, Abraham and all the other Biblical characters.

    3. Names:

    The Greek name of Babylonia which is in use at the present time is derived from the name of the city of Babylon, the capital and chief city of the land from the time of the First Dynasty of Babylon, about 2000 BC (see BABYLON). The name of the land in the very earliest period which is represented by antiquities, and even inscribed objects, is not known. But in a comparatively early age the northern part is called Uri, and the southern part, Engi or En-gira. The second part of the latter name is perhaps the same as in Su-gir, which is thought to be the origin of the Old Testament Shinar. Su-gir and Su- mer are names of the same country. And inasmuch as Mer and Gir were names of the same west Semitic deity, who played an important role in the early history of Babylonia, it is not improbable that the element Su is also to be identified with the ancient name of Mesopotamia. Su is also in Su-bartu, the name of the country to the North. This name is also written Su-Gir.

    Subsequent to 2000 BC the ideograms read in Sumerian, Uri and Engi, were pronounced in SemBab, Accad and Sumer. The former received its name from the capital of the kingdom Accad, one of the cities mentioned in Ge 10:10. The title, “king of Accad and Sumer” was used by rulers as late as the 1st millennium BC. The name by which the land is known in the second millennium BC is Kar-Duniash, the exact derivation of which is in doubt. Kar means “garden, land” in Semitic and Sumerian; and Duniash being preceded by the determinative for deity, has been regarded as a name of a Cassite god. A more recently advanced explanation is that Duniash is equivalent to Bel-malati, which means “lord of lands.” The meaning of the name, as stated, must be regarded as undetermined.

    In the time of the late Assyrian empire a nation in the extreme southern part of the land, called by the Greeks Chaldea, which is derived from the name Kaldu, came into existence. In the Assyrian historical inscriptions the land is usually called Bit-Yakin. This people seems to have issued from Aramaic Under Biblical. Merodach-baladan they ruled Babylonia for a time. The Neo-Bab Dynasty, founded by Nabopolassar, is supposed to be Chaldean in origin, in consequence of which the whole land in the Greek period was called Chaldea.

    4. Semites:

    Two distinct races are found occupying the land when we obtain the first glimpses of its history. The northern part is occupied by the Semites, who are closely allied to the Amorites, Arameans and Arabs; and the southern part by a non-Sem people called Sumerians. Their cultures had been originally distinct, but when they first become known to us there has taken place such an amalgamation that it is only by the knowledge of other Semitic cultures that it is possible to make even a partial differentiation of what was Sem-Bab and what was Sumerian. The Semites, it would almost seem, entered the land after the Sumerians had established themselves, but this can only be re garded as a conjecture.

    5. Sumerians:

    Although the earliest Sumerian settlement belongs to a remote period, few traces of the pre-historic Sumerian have been found. The archaeological remains indicate that this non-Sem race is not indigenous to the land, and that when they came into the country they had already attained to a fair degree of culture. But there is no evidence, as yet, in what part of the ancient world the elements of their culture were evolved, although various attempts have been made by scholars to locate their original home.

    6. Home of the Semites:

    The home of the Semites has been placed in different parts of the ancient world. A number of scholars look to Arabia and others to Africa for their original habitation, although their theories generally are not based upon much archaeological evidence. Unquestionably, the previous, if not the original home of the Semitic Babylonians, is to be found in the land of the Amorites, that is in Syria. In the earliest known period of Babylonian history, which apparently belongs to the age not very far removed from the time when the Semites entered Babylonia, Amurru was an important factor in the affairs of the nations, and it was a land which the world conquerors of Babylonia, both Sumerian and Semitic, endeavored to subjugate. This points to the fact that the culture of Amurru was then already old. Egyptian inscriptions fully substantiate this. We look to the land of the Arnorites as the home of the Semitic Babylonians, because of the important part played by the chief god of that land Amurru or Uru, in the Babylonian religion and nomenclature. In fact nearly all of the original names of the Semitic Babylonian sun-deities are derived from the names and epithets of the great Sun-god of the Amorites and Arameans (see Amurru, 108 ff). These and many other considerations point to Amurru, or the land of the Amorites, as the previous home of the Semites who migrated into Babylonia and who eventually became masters of the land.

    7. Immigration:

    The original settlements in Babylonia, as stated above, belong to a prehistoric time, but throughout the history of the land fresh Semitic migrations have been recognized. In the Isin and First Dynasty of Babylonia, Amorites or Canaanites seem to flood the country. In the second millennium a foreign people known as Cassites ruled Babylonia for nearly six centuries. The nomenclature of the period shows that many Hittites and Mittanaeans as well as Cassites lived in Babylonia. In the first millennium the thousands of names that appear in the contract literature indicate a veritable Babel of races: Egyptians, Elamites, Persians, Medes, Tabalites, Hittites, Cassites, Ammorites, Edomites, notably Hebrews, are among the peoples that occupied the land. The deportation of the Israelites by the Assyrian kings and of the Jews by the Babylonian kings, find confirmation besides the historical inscriptions in the names of Hebrews living in Babylonia in the corresponding periods.

    8. Language:

    The languages of Babylonia are Semitic and Sumerian. The latter is an agglutinative tongue like the Turkish, and belongs to that great unclassifiable group of languages, called for the sake of convenience, Turanian. It has not been shown, as yet, to be allied to any other known language. The Semitic language known as the Babylonian, with which the Assyrian is practically identical, is of the common Semitic stock. After the Semites entered the land, their language was greatly influenced by the Sumerian tongue. The Semites being originally dependent upon the Sumerian scribes, with whom the script had originated, considered in connection with the fact that the highly developed culture of the Sumerians greatly influenced that of the Semites, brought about the peculiar amalgamation known as Babylonian. The language is, however, distinctively Semitic, but it has a very large percentage of Sumerian loan-words. Not knowing the cognate tongues of the Sumerian, and having a poor understanding of the pronunciation of that language, it is impossible to ascertain, on the other hand, how much the Sumerian language was influenced by the Semites.

    In the late period another Semitic tongue was used extensively in the land. It was not because of the position occupied by the Arameans in the political history of western Asia, that their language became the lingua franca of the first millennium BC. It must have been on account of the widespread migrations of the people. In the time of Sennacherib it seems to have been used as the diplomatic language in Assyria as well as among the Hebrews, as the episode in 2Ki 18:26 would show. Then we recall the story of Belshazzar, and the edicts of the late period referred to in the Old Testament, which were in Aramaic (Ezr 4:7, etc.). In Assyria and Babylonia, many contract tablets have been found with Aramaic reference notes written upon them, showing that this was the language of those who held the documents. The Hebrews after the exile used Aramaic. This would seem to point to Babylonia as the place where they learned the language. The Babylonian language and the cuneiform script continued to be used until the 3rd or 2nd century BC, and perhaps even later, but it seems that the Aramaic had generally supplanted it, except as the literary and legal language. In short the tongue of the common people or the spoken language in all probability in the late period was Aramaic.

    9. Script:

    The cuneiform writing upon clay was used both by the Sumerians and the Semites. Whether this script had its origin in the land, or in the earlier home of the Sumerians, remains a question. It is now known that the Elamites had their own system of writing as early as that of the earliest found in Babylonia; and perhaps it will be found that other ancient peoples, who are at the present unknown to us, also used the cuneiform script. A writing similar to the Babylonian was in use at an early time in Cappadocia. The Hittites and other peoples of that region also employed it. The origin of the use of clay as a writing material, therefore, is shrouded in mystery, but as stated above, the system used by the Semites in Babylonian ylonia was developed from the Sumerian.

    The script is not alphabetic, but ideographic and phonetic, in that respect similar to the Chinese. There are over 500 characters, each one of which has from one to many values. The combination of two or more characters also has many values. The compilation of the values of the different signs used in various periods by both the Sumerians and Assyrians numbers at the present about 25,000, and the number will probably reach 30,000.

    10. Architecture:

    The architecture of Babylonia is influenced by the fact that the building material, in this alluvial plain, had to be of brick, which was largely sun-dried, although in certain prosperous eras there is much evidence of kiln-dried bricks having been used. The baked brick used in the earliest period was the smallest ever employed, being about the size of the ordinary brick used at the present time. The size of the bricks in the era prior to the third millennium varied from this to about 6 x 10 x 3 inches at Nippur, Sargon and his son Naram-Sin used a brick, the largest found, about 20 inches square, and about 4 inches in thickness. Following the operations of these kings at Nippur is the work of Ur-Engur, who used a brick about 14 inches square and nearly 4 inches in thickness. This size had been used at Tello prior to Sargon’s time, and was thereafter generally employed. It re mained the standard size of brick throughout the succeeding centuries of Babylonian history. Adobes, of which the greater portion of the buildings were constructed, were usually double the thickness of kiln-dried bricks. The pillar made of bricks, as well as the pilaster constructed of the same material, seems to have come into use at a very early age, as is shown by the excavations at Tello.

    A large number of Babylonian builders had the brick makers employ brick stamps which gave their names and frequently their titles, besides the name of the temple for which the bricks were intended. These enable the excavator to determine who the builders or restorers were of the buildings uncovered. Naturally, in a building like the temple of Enlil at Nippur, inscribed bricks of many builders covering a period of over 2,000 years were found. These by the help of building inscriptions, which have been found, enable scholars to rewrite considerable of the history of certain Babylonian temples. The walls of the city were also built of clay bricks, principally adobes. The walls usually were of very great thickness.

    Clay was also employed extensively in the manufacture of images, weights, drains, playthings, such as animals, baby rattles, etc., and of inscriptions of every kind. Pottery, with the exception of the blue glaze employed in the late period, was usually plain, although some traces of painted pottery have been found. Although every particle of stone found in Babylonia was carried into the country, either by man or by inundations, still in certain periods it was used freely for statues, steles, votive objects, and in all periods for door sockets, weights and seal cylinders. Building operations in stone are scarcely known in Babylonia until perhaps the time of the greatest of all ancient builders, Nebuchadrezzar II, who laid a pavement in the causeway of Babylon, Aa-ibur-sabu, with blocks of stone from a mountain quarry.

    See BABYLON.

    11. Art:

    The sculpture of the Sumerians, although in most instances the hardest of materials was used, is one of the great achievements of their civilization. Enough examples have been found to trace the development of their art from comparatively rude reliefs of the archaic period to the finished sculpture of Gudea’s time, third millennium BC, when it reached a high degree of excellence. The work of the sculpture of this age shows spirit and originality in many respects unique. In the earliest period the Babylonians attempted the round, giving frequently the main figures in full face. The perfection of detail, in their efforts to render true to life, makes their modeling very superior in the history of article The Sumerian seems to have been able to overcome difficulties of technique which later sculptors systematically avoided.

    Practically every Babylonian had his own personal seal. He used it as the signature is used at the present time or rather as the little stamp upon which is engraved the name of the individual at the present time, in the Orient, to make an impression upon the letter which was written for him by a public scribe. Thousands of these ancient seals have been found. They were cut out of all kinds of stone and metal. The style in the early period was usually cylindrical, with a hole passing lengthwise through them. In the late period the signet was commonly used. Many of these gems were exquisitely cut by lapidists of rare ability. Some of the very best work of this art belongs to the third millennium BC. The boldness in outline, and the action displayed are often remarkable. The most delicate saws, drills and other tools must have been employed by the early lapidist. Some of his early work is scarcely surpassed in the present age.

    The gold and silver smiths of the early age have left us some beautiful examples of their art and skill. A notable one is the silver vase of Entemena of Lagash, mounted on a bronze pedestal, which stands on four feet. There is a votive inscription engraved about its neck. The bowl is divided into two compartments. On the upper are engraved seven heifers, and on the lower four eagles with extended wings, in some respects related to the totem or the coat of arms of Lagash. While attention to detail is too pronounced, yet the whole is well rendered and indicates remarkable skill, no less striking than the well-known work of their Egyptian contemporaries. Bronze was also used extensively for works of art and utensils. Some remarkable specimens of this craft have been found at Tello.

    In studying the magnificent remains of their art, one is thoroughly impressed with the skill displayed, and with the fact that there must have been a long period of development prior to the age to which these works belong, before such creations could have been possible. Although much of the craftsman’s work is crude, there is considerable in the sculpture and engraving that is well worthy of study. And in studying these remains one is also impressed with the fact that they were produced in an alluvial plain.

    12. Literature:

    The literature in a narrow sense is almost entirely confined to the epics, which are of a religious character, and the psalms, hymns, incantations, omens, etc. These are the chief remains of their culture.

    See BABYLONIA AND ASSYRIA, RELIGION OF.

    In a general sense almost every kind of literature is found among the hundreds of thousands of clay tablets unearthed in Babylonia. The inscribed votive objects are of all kinds and descriptions. The stone vase taken in booty was dedicated to the deity of the conqueror. The beautiful piece of lapis lazuli, agate, cornelian, etc., obtained, was inscribed and devoted in the same way. Slabs, tablets and cones of all shapes and sizes, were inscribed with the king’s name and titles, giving the different cities over which he ruled and referring especially to the work that he had accomplished for his deity. From the decipherment of these votive objects much valuable data are gathered for the reconstruction of the ancient history of the land.

    The same is true of what are known as building inscriptions, in which accounts of the operations of the kings in restoring and enlarging temples, shrines, walls and other city works are given. Canal digging and dredging, and such works by which the people benefited, are frequently mentioned in these inscriptions.

    Epistolary literature, for example, the royal letters of Hammurabi, the diplomatic correspondence found in Egypt (see TELL EL-AMARNA) or the royal letters from the Library of Ashurbanipal (see ASHURBANIPAL), as well as the private correspondence of the people, furnishes valuable historical and philological data.

    The thousands of tablets found in the school libraries of Sippar and Nippur, as well as of the library of Ashurbanipal, among which are all kinds of inscriptions used in the schools of the priests and scribes, have furnished a great deal of material for the Assyrian dictionary, and have thrown much light upon the grammar of the language. The legal literature is of the greatest importance for an understanding of the social conditions of the people. It is also valuable for comparative purposes in studying the codes of other peoples.

    See CODE OF HAMMURABI.

    The commercial or legal transactions, dated in all periods, from the earliest times until the latest, also throw important light upon the social conditions of the people. Many thousands of these documents have been found, by the help of which the very life that pulsated in the streets of Babylonian cities is restored.

    The administrative documents from the temple archives also have their value, in that they furnish important data as regards the maintenance of the temples and other institutions; and incidentally much light on the nationality and religion of the people, whose names appear in great numbers upon them. The records are receipts of taxes or rents from districts close by the temples, and of commercial transactions conducted with this revenue. A large portion of these archives consists of the salary payments of storehouse officials and priests. There seems to have been a host of tradesmen and functionaries in connection with the temple. Besides the priest, elder, seer, seeress, sorcerer, sorceress, singer, etc., there were the farmer, weaver, miller, carpenter, smith, butcher, baker, porter, overseer, scribe, measurer, watchman, etc. These documents give us an insight into Babylonian system of bookkeeping, and show how carefully the administrative affairs of the temple were conducted. In fact the temple was provided for and maintained along lines quite similar to many of our modern institutions.

    13. Libraries:

    The discovery of the Library of Ashurbanipal at Nineveh speaks volumes for the culture of Assyria, but that culture was largely borrowed from the Babylonians. Much that this library contained had been secured from Babylonian libraries by the scribes employed by Ashurbanipal. In every important center there doubtless existed schools and libraries in connection with the temples. At Nippur, in 1890, Dr. J. P. Peters found such a library, but unfortunately, although he termed it such, his Assyriologists did not recognize that one of the greatest discoveries of antiquity had been made. It remained for Dr. J. H. Haynes, a decade later, to discover another portion of this library, which he regarded as such, because of the large number of tablets which he uncovered. Pere Scheil, prior to Dr. Haynes’ discovery, had the good fortune while at Sippar to discover a part of the school and library of that important center. Since Professor Scheil’s excavations, Arabs have unearthed many inscriptions of this library, which have found their way to museums and into the hands of private individuals.

    The plan of the Nippur Library, unearthed by Dr. Haynes, has been published by Mr. C. Fisher, the architect of the Nippur expedition (see Clay, Light on the Old Testament from Babel, 183). Professor Scheil, in publishing his results, has also given a plan of the school he discovered, and a full description of its arrangements, as well as the pedagogical methods that had been employed in that institution of learning. This has also been attempted by others, but in a less scientific manner. One of the striking features of these libraries is the use of the large reference cylinders, quadrangular, pentagonal and hexagonal in shape. There was a hole cut lengthwise through them for the purpose of mounting them like revolving stands. These libraries, doubtless, contained all the works the Babylonians possessed on law, science, literature and religion. There are lexical lists, paradigm tablets, lists of names, of places, countries, temples, rivers, officers, stones, gods, etc. Sufficient tablets have been deciphered to determine their general character. Also hundreds of exercise tablets have been found, showing the progress made by pupils in writing, in mathematics, in grammar, and in other branches of learning. Some tablets appear to have been written after dictation. Doubtless, the excavators found the waste heaps of the school, where these tablets had been thrown for the purpose of working them over again as raw material, for new exercises. The school libraries must have been large. Considering for instance that the ideographic and phonetic values of the cuneiform signs in use numbered perhaps 30,000, even the syllabaries which were required to contain these different values must have been many in number, and especially as tablets, unlike books made of paper, have only two sides to them. And when we take into consideration all the different kinds of literature which have been found, we must realize that these libraries were immense, and numbered many thousands of tablets.

    14. Personal Names:

    In modern times the meaning of names given children is rarely considered; in fact, in many instances the name has suffered so much through changes that it is difficult to ascertain its original meaning. Then also, at present, in order to avoid confusion the child is given two or more names. It was not so with the ancient Babylonian. Originally the giving of a name was connected with some special circumstance, and though this was not always the case throughout the history of Babylonia, the correct form of the name was always preserved.

    The name may have been an expression of their religious faith. It may have told of the joy experienced at the birth of an heir. It may even betray the suffering that was involved at the birth of the child, or the life that the parents had lived. In short, the names afford us an intimate glimpse into the everyday life of the people.

    The average Babylonian name is theophorous, and indicates one of the deities worshipped by the family, and often the city. For example, it is suggestive that persons with names compounded with Enlil and Ninib hailed from Nippur. Knowing the deities of the surrounding people we have also important evidence in determining the origin of peoples in Babylonia having foreign names. For example, if a name is composed of the Hittite deity Teshup, or the Amorite deity Amurru, or the Aramean god Dagan, or the Egyptian god Esi (Isis), foreign influence is naturally looked for from the countries represented. Quite frequently the names of foreign deities are compounded with Babylonian elements, often resulting from mixed marriages.

    Theophorous names are composed of two, three, four and even five elements. Those having two or three elements predominate. Two-element names have a diety plus a verbal form or a subst.; or vice versa: for example, Nabu-na’id (Nabonidus), “Nebo is exalted,” or Shulman-asharedu (Shaimaneser), “Shalman is foremost.” Many different combinations are found in three-element names which are composed of the name of the deity, a subst., a verbal form, a pronominal suffix, or some other form of speech, in any of the three positions. Explanations of a few of the familiar Biblical. names follow: Sin-akhe-erba (Sennacherib), “Sin has increased the brothers”; Marduk-apal-iddin (Mero-dach-baladan), “Marduk has given a son”; Ashurakh- iddin (Esarhaddon), “Ashur has given a brother”; Ashur-bani-apal, “Ashur is creating a son”; Nabu-kudurri-usur (Nebuchadrezzar), “O Nebo, protect the boundary”; Amel-Marduk (Evil Merodach), “Man of Marrink”; Bel-shar-usur (Belshazzar), “O Bel, protect the king.” Some Babylonian names mentioned in the Bible are really of foreign origin, for example, Amraphel and Sargon. Amraphel originally is west Semitic and is written Hammurabi (pronounced Chammu-rabi, the first letter being the Semitic cheth). Sargon was perhaps originally Aramean, and is composed of the elements shar and the god Gan. When written in cuneiform it was written Shargani, and later Sharrukin, being translated “the true king.” Many names in use were not theophorous; for example, such personal names as Ululd, “the month Ulul”; names of animals, as Kalba, “dog,” gentilic names, as Akkadai, “the Akkadian,” names of crafts, as Pacharu, “potter,” etc.

    The literature abounds in hypochoristica. One element of a name was used for the sake of shortness, to which usually a hypochoristica suffix was added, like Marduka (Mordecai). That is, the ending a or ai was added to one of the elements of a longer name.

    15. History of Kingdoms:

    The written history of Babylonia at the present begins from about 4200 BC. But instead of finding things crude and aboriginal in this, the earliest period, the remains discovered show that the people had attained to a high level of culture. Back of that which is known there must lie a long period of development. This is attested in many ways; for instance, the earliest writing found is so far removed from the original hieroglyphs that it is only possible to ascertain what the original pictures were by knowing the values which the signs possessed. The same conclusion is ascertained by a study of the art and literature. Naturally, as mentioned above, it is not impossible that this development took place in a previous home of the inhabitants.

    The history of early Babylonia is at present a conflict of the kings and patesis (priest-kings) of the different city- kingdoms, for supremacy over each other, as well as over the surrounding peoples. The principal states that figure in the early history are: Kish, Lagash, Nippur, Akkad, Umma, Erech, Ur and Opis. At the present time more is known of Lagash, because the excavations conducted at that site were more extensive than at others. This makes much of our knowledge of the history of the land center about that city. And yet it should be stated that the hegemony of Lagash lasted for a long period, and the kingdom will ultimately occupy a prominent position when the final history of the land is written. Nippur, where considerable work was also done, was not the seat of rulers, but the sacred city of the god Enlil, to whom the kings of other cities generally did obeisance. Following is a list of known rulers of the different city-kingdoms.

    16. Kish:

    El-Ohemir, identified as the ancient city of Kish, not far from Babylon, is one of the oldest Semitic centers of the land. No systematic excavations have been conducted at this site, but besides the inscriptions which the Arabs have unearthed, several of the rulers are known to us through votive inscriptions discovered at Nippur and elsewhere. The rulers of Kish are: Utug p. (patesi), circa 4200 BC; Mesilim k. (king), circa 4000 BC; Lugal-tarsi k.; Enbi-Ishtar k.; Manishtusu k., circa 2650 BC; Urnmush k., circa 2600; Manana k.; Sumu-ditana k. and Tanium k.

    17. Lagash:

    The excavations by the French under De Sarsez and Cross at Tello, the ancient city Lagash, have yielded more inscriptions of ancient Babylonian rulers than those at any other site. Lagash was destroyed about 2000 BC, and only partially rebuilt in the post-Bab period. The known rulers are: Lugal-shag-Engur patesi, circa 4000 BC, contemporary with Mesilim k. of Kish; @@Badu k.; @@En-khegal k.; Ur-Nina k.; Akurgal p.; Eannatum p. and k.; Enannatum I p.; Entemena I; Enannatum IIp.; Enetarzi p.; Enlitarzi p.; Lugal-anda p.; Uru-kagina k., contemporary with Lugal-zaggisi, k. of Uruk; Engilsa p., contemporary with Manishtusu k. of Kish; Lugul-ushumgal p., contemporary with Sargon of Accad; Ur-Babbar p., contemporary with Naram-Sin of Accad; Ur-E p.; Lugal-bur p.; Basha-Kama p.; Ur-Mama p.; Ug-me p.; Ur-Bau p.; Gudea p.; Nammakhini p.; Ur- gar p.; Ka-azag p.; Galu-Bau p.; Galu-Gula p.; Ur-Ninsun p.: Ur-Ningirsu p.; contemporary with Ur-Engur k. of Ur-abba p.; @@Galu-ka zal p.; @@Galuandul p.; @@Ut-Lama I p.; @@Alla, @@Ur-Lama II p.; contemporary with Dungi k. of Ur; Arad-Nannar p. Unfortunately, with the exception of about onethird of these rulers, the exact order is yet to be ascertained. (Note: Asterisk denotes unidentified forms.)

    18. Adab:

    The mounds of Bismaya which have been identified as Adab were partially excavated by Dr. Edgar J. Banks, for the University of Chicago. Its remains indicate that it is one of the oldest cities discovered. A ruler named Esar, circa 4200 BC, is known from a number of inscriptions, as well as a magnificent statue of the king, discovered by Dr. Banks.

    19. Nippur:

    The large group of mounds covering an area, the circumference of which is three miles, called in ancient times Nippur, but now Noufar, was excavated as mentioned above by Dr. Peters and Dr. Haynes for the University of Pennsylvania. While a great number of Babylonian kings and patesis are represented by inscriptions discovered at Nippur, practically all had their seats of government at other places, it being the sacred city.

    20. Erech:

    The mounds at the present called Warka, but representing ancient Erech (Ge 10:10), covering an area whose circumference is 6 miles, have been tentatively examined by Loftus and other explorers. Many inscriptions have also been unearthed by the Arabs at this site. The rulers of this city known to us are: Ilu-(m)a-ilu, Lugal-zaggisi k., contemporary with Uru-kagina of Lagash; Lugal-kigubnidudu k.; Lugal-kisalsi k.; Sin-gashid k., about 2200 BC, and Sin-gamil k.

    21. Larsa:

    Senkereh known in the Old Testament as Ellasar (Ge 14:1), and in the inscriptions as Larsa, has been explored by Loftus and others. The known rulers of the city are: Gungunu k., contemporary of Ur-Ninib k. of Isin; Sumu-ilu; Nur-Adad; Sin- iddinam; Eri-Aku (the Biblical “Arioch”) circa 2000 BC, son of Kudur-Mabug k. of Elam, and Rim-Sin (or Rim-Aku), his brother.

    22. Shuruppak:

    The present Fara, which in ancient times was called Shuruppak, was partially excavated by the Germans under Koldewey, Andraea, and Noeldeke. It is also a very ancient city. It yielded little to the spade of the excavator. It is close by Abu- Hatab, and known as the place where the scenes of the Babylonian Deluge story occurred. Two rulers known from the inscriptions found there are Dada and ladda, belonging to a comparatively early period.

    23. Kisurra:

    The site now known as Abu-Hatab is the ancient Kisurra. It was partially excavated by the Germans. It flourished as a city in the third millennium BC. The two rulers of this city that are known are Idinilu p., and Itur-Shamash p. (?).

    24. Umma:

    The site now called Jokha lying to the Northwest of Lagash is an ancient Sumerian city known as Umma. The site has been explored by Dr. Peters and others, but more recently surveyed by Andraea and Noeldeke. It proved to be a city destroyed in the early period. Arabs have lately found thousands of documents belonging to the ancient archives of the city. Some of the rulers known are: Ush p., Enakalli and Urlumma p., contemporaries of Enannatum I of Lagash; Ill p., appointed by Entemena p., of Lagash; Kur-Shesh p., time of Manishtusu; @@Galu-Babbar p.; Ur-nesu p., contemporary of Dungi k., of Ur.

    25. Accad:

    The city mentioned in Ge 10:10 as Accad, one of Nimrod’s cities, has not been explored, but is well known by the inscriptions of Sargon and his son Naram-Sin as well as omen-texts of later eras. Sargon was a usurper. He was born in concealment, and sent adrift in an ark of bulrushes like Moses. He was rescued and brought up by Akki, a farmer. He assumed the title “king of the city” (Shar-ali), or “king of Uri” (Shat Uri). Later he conquered the entire country, and became the “king of Accad and Sumer.” In his latter years he extended his conquests to Elam, Amurru and Subartu, and earned for himself the title “king of the Four Quarters,” which his son Naram-Sin inherited. The latter followed up the successes of his father and marched into Magan, in the Sinaitic peninsula. Naram-Sin, as well as his father, was a great builder. Evidences of their operations are seen in many cities. Naram-Sin was succeeded by Bingani, who apparently lost the title “king of the Four Quarters,” being only called “king of the City, or Uri.”

    26. Opis:

    The exact site of the city of Opis is still in doubt, but the city is represented by the ruler Zuzu k., who was defeated by Eannatum p., of Lagash.

    27. Basime:

    The city Basime also remains unidentified, but is represented by Ibalum p., a contemporary of Manishtusu k., of Kish, and son of Ilsurabi, apparently another patesi of that city.

    28. Drehem:

    A site not far from Nippur, called Dolehem or Drehem, which was explored by Dr. Peters, has recently yielded thousands of tablets from the Temple archives dated in the reigns of kings in the Ur Dynasty.

    29. Urumma:

    The extensive group of mounds lying on the west side of the Euphrates, called Mugayyar, and generally known as Ur of the Chaldees, is the ancient Urumma. It was explored by Taylor and others, and proved to have been an important capital from the middle of the third millennium BC. The dynasty which had made the city its capital is known through inscriptions discovered there and at Tello, Nippur, Drehem and Djokha. Thousands of inscriptions dated in what is commonly called the Ur Dynasty have been published. The dynasty was founded by Ur-Engur, who is conspicuous for his building operations at Nippur and other cities. A dynastic tablet of a much later period, the provenience of which is in doubt, gives the rulers of this dynasty founded about 2400 BC, and the number of years that they reigned.

    URUMMA DYNASTY

    Ur-Engur, 18 years

    Dungi (son), 58 years

    Bur-Sin (son), 9 years

    Gimil-Sin (son), 7 years

    Ibi-Sin (son), 25 years

    Five kings, 117 years

    The same tablet gives also the following list of the rulers of Isin. Ishbi-Urra, the founder, lived about 2283 BC.

    ISIS DYNASTY

    Ishbi-Urra, 32 years

    Gimil-ilishu (son), 10 years

    Idin-Dagan (son), 21 years

    Ishme-Dagan (son), 20 years

    Libit-Ishtar (son), 11 years

    Ur-Ninib, 28 years

    Bur-Sin II (son), 28 years

    Iter-iqisha (son), 5 years

    Urra-imitti (brother), 7 years

    Sin-iqisha, 6 months

    Enlil-bani, 24 years

    Zambia, 3 years

    ———-, 5 years

    Ea————-, 4 years

    Sin-magir, 11 years

    Damiq-ilishu (son), 23 years

    Sixteen kings, 225 years and 6 months

    30. First Dynasty of Babylon:

    About the time the Nisin Dynasty came to a close, and while the Larsa Dynasty was ruling, the First Dynasty of Babylon was established. Following is a list of 11 rulers of this dynasty who ruled 300 years:

    I. FIRST DYNASTY OF BABYLON

    Sumu-abum, 14 years

    Sumu-la-el, 36 years

    Sabium (son), 14 years

    Abil-Sin (son), 18 years

    Sin-muballit (son), 20 years

    Hammu-rabi (son), 43 years

    Samsu-iluna (son), 38 years

    Abi-eshuh (son), 28 years

    Ammi-Ditana (son), 37 years

    Ammi-Zaduga (son), 21 years

    Samsu-Ditana (son), 32 years

    The First Dynasty of Babylon came into prominence in the reign of Sin-muballit who captured Nisin. Eri-Aku of the Larsa Dynasty shortly afterward took the city. When Hammurabi came to the throne he was subject to Eri-Aku (Bib. Arioch) of Larsa, the son of the Elamitc king, Kudur-Mabug. The latter informs us that he was suzerain of Amurru (Palestine and Syria), which makes intelligible the statement in Gen 14, that the kings of Canaan were subject to the king of Elam, whose name was Chedorlaomer (Kudur-Lagam ar). In his 31st year, Hammurabi, who is the Amraphel of Ge 14:1, succeeded in throwing off the Elamite yoke, and not only established his independence but also became the complete master of Babylonia by driving out the Elamites.

    31. Sealand Dynasty:

    In the region of the Persian Gulf, south of Babylonia, ruled a dynasty partly contemporaneously with the First Dynasty, extending over the reigns of about five of the last kings, and over several of the Cassite Dynasty, known as the Sealand Dynasty. The historian records for the latter the following list of 11 kings who ruled 368 years:

    II. SEALAND DYNASTY

    Ilima-ilu, 60 years

    Itti-ili-nibi, 55 years

    Damqi-ilishu, 36 years

    Ishkibal, 15 years

    Shushshi (brother), 27 years

    Gulkishar, 55 years

    Pesh-gal-daramash (son), 50 years

    Adara-kalama (son), 28 years

    Ekur-ul-anna, 26 years

    Melamma-kurkura, 7 years

    Ea-gamil, 9 years

    32. Cassite Dynasty:

    The First Dynasty of Babylon came to an end through an invasion of the Hittites. They plundered Babylon and perhaps ruled that city for a number of years. A new dynasty was then established about 1750 BC by a foreign people known as Cassites. There were 36 kings in this dynasty ruling 576 years and 9 months. Unfortunately the tablet containing the list is fragmentary.

    III. CASSITE DYNASTY

    Gandash, 16 years

    Agum I (s), 22 years

    Kashtiliash I, usurper, 22 years; born of Ulamburiash and son of Burna-buriash

    Du(?) shi (s), 8 years

    Abirattash (b ?)

    Tazzigurmash (s)

    Agum II (s)

    ——–;———-Long gap

    @@Kara-indash I, contemporary with Ashur-rimnisheshu, k. of Assyria

    @@Kadashman-Enlil I (s ?)

    @@Kuri-Galzu I

    Burna-buriash II, contemporary of Buzur-Ashur, k. of Assyria

    @@Kara-Indash II, son-in-law of Ashur-uballit, k. of Assyria

    @@Nazi-Bugash (usurper)

    Kuri-Galzu II (s. of Burna-buriash), 23 years; contemporary of Ashur-uballit, and Enlilnirari, kings of Assyria

    Nazi-Maruttash (s), 26 years; contemporary of Adad-nirari I, p. of Assyria.

    Kadashman-Turgu (s), 17 years

    Kadashman-Enlil II, 7 years

    Kudur-Enlil (s), 9 years

    Shagarakti-Shuriash (s), 13 years

    Kashtiliash II (s), 8 years

    Enlil-nadin-shum, 1 1/2 years

    Kadashman-Kharbe II, 1 1/2 years

    Adad-shum-iddin, 6 years

    Adad-shum-usur, 30 years

    Meli-Shipak (s?), 15 years

    Marduk-apil-iddin (s), 13 years

    Zamama-shum-iddin, 1 year

    Bel-mu–, 3 years

    33. Cassite Rule:

    The region from which these Cassites came has not yet been determined, although it seems to be the district Northeast of Assyria. Gandash, the first king, seems to have enjoyed the all-embracing title, “King of the Four Quarters of the World.” Little is known of the other rulers until Agum II, who claims the rule of the Cassites, Accad, Babel, Padan, Alman and Guti. In his inscriptions he records the conquest of Khani in Asia Minor, and the fact that he brought back to Babylon the statues of Marduk and Zarpanit, which had been carried off by the Hittites. The Cassite rule, while extending over many centuries, was not very prosperous. At Nippur the excavations showed active operations on the part of a few kings in restoring the temple and doing ob eisance to Enlil. The rulers seemed to have conformed to the religion of the land, for few foreign elements have been recognized as having been introduced into it during this era. The many Cassite names found in the inscriptions would indicate an influx from a Cassite quarter of no small proportion. And yet it should be noted that, in the same era, Hittite and Mittanean influence, as is shown by the nomenclature, is as great as the Cassite. It was during this period that Assyria rose to power and influence, and was soon to become the master of the Mesopotamian region.

    34. Isin Dynasty:

    IV. ISIN OR PASHE DYNASTY

    11 Kings; began to rule about 1172 BC

    Marduk, 17 years

    Wanting, 6 years

    Nebuchadrezzar I, contemporary of Ashur-resh-ishi, k. of Assyria

    Enlil-nadin-apal

    Marduk-nadin-akhi, contemporary of Tiglath-pileser I, k. of Assyria

    Marduk-shapik-zer-mati, contemporary of Ashur-bel-kala, k. of Assyria

    Adad-apal-iddin, 22 years

    Marduk-akh-erba, 1 1/2

    Marduk-zer, 12 years

    Nabu-shum-libur, 8(?) years

    35. Nebuchadrezzar I:

    The most famous king of this dynasty, in fact of this era, was Nebuchadrezzar I, who re-established firmly the rule of Babylon. He carried on a successful expedition into Elam as well as into Amurru where he fought against the Hittite. He also conquered the Lulubites. But in contest for supremacy with Assyria Ashur-reshishi triumphed, and he was forced to retreat ingloriously to Babylon. His successors failed to withstand the Assyrians, especially under Tiglath-pileser I, and were allowed to rule only by sufferance. The Babylonians had lost their prestige; the Assyrians had become the dominant people of the land. Few rulers of the dynasty which followed are known except by name. The dynasties with one exception were of short duration.

    36. Sealand Dynasty:

    V. SEALAND DYNASTY

    3 Kings

    Simrnash-Shipak, 18 years; about 1042 BC

    Ea-mukin-shum, 6 months

    Kashshu-nadin-akhi, 3 years

    37. Bit-Bazi Dynasty:

    VI. BIT-BAZI DYNASTY

    3 Kings

    Eulmash-shakin-shum, 17 years; about 1020 BC

    Ninib-kudur-usur, 3 years

    Shilaniln-Shuqamuna, 3 months

    38. Other Rulers:

    VII. An Elamitic King, whose name is not known

    VIII. 13(?) kings who ruled 36 years

    IX. A dynasty of 5(?) kings

    39. Babylonian Dynasty:

    X. BABYLONIAN DYNASTY

    Following is a partial list of the 22 kings who ruled until the destruction of Babylon by Sennacherib, when the Assyrian kings assumed direct control. Ashurbanipal, however, introduced a new policy and viceroys were appointed.

    Shamash-mudammiq

    Nabu-shar-ishkun I

    Nabu-apal-iddin

    Marduk-nadin-shum

    Marduk-balatsu-iqbi

    Bau-akh-iddin

    Nabu-shum-ishkun II

    Nabonassar

    Nabu-nadin-zer; 747-734 BC

    Nabu-shum-ishkun III; 733-732 BC

    Nabu-mukin-zer; 731-729 BC

    Pul (Tiglath-pilcser III); 729-727 BC

    Ulula (Shalmancsar v); 727-722 BC

    Merodach-baladan I; 722-710 BC.

    Sargon; 710-705 BC

    Sennacherib; 704-702 BC

    Marduk-zakir-shum (1 month)

    Merodach-baladan II (9 months)

    Bel-ibni; 702-700 BC

    Ashur-nadin-shum; 700-694 BC

    Nergal-ushezib; 694-693 BC

    Mushczib-Marduk; 692-689 BC

    Sennacherib; 689-681 BC

    Esarhaddon; 681-668 BC

    Ashurbanipal; 668-626 BC

    Shamash-shum-ukin; 668-648 BC

    Kandalanu; 648-626 BC

    Ashur-etil-ilani-ukin; 626-

    Nabopolassar; 626-

    During the time of Sennacherib, Merodach-baladan the Chaldean became a great obstacle to Assyria’s maintaining its supremacy over Babylonia. Three times he gained possession of Babylon, and twice had himself proclaimed king. For thirty years he plotted against Assyria. What is learned from the inscriptions concerning him furnishes an interesting commentary on the sending of the embassy, in 704 BC, to Hezekiah (2Ki 20:12; Isa 39:1 (refs2)) in order to induce him to revolt against Assyria, which he knew would help his own cause. Finally Sennacherib, in 690, after he had experienced much trouble by the repeated uprisings of the Babylonians, and the aspirations of Merodach-baladan, endeavored to obliterate Babylon from the map. His son and successor Esarhaddon, however, tried to make Babylon again happy and prosperous. One of his first acts was to send back to Babylon the statue of Bel-Merodach. He rebuilt the city, and also restored other Babylonian temples, for instance, that of Enlil at Nippur. The Babylonians solemnly declared him king. Ashurbanipal, his son and successor, followed his policy. The evidence of his operations at Nippur is everywhere seen in the shape of stamped, kiln-dried bricks.

    Before Esarhaddon died, he had planned that Babylonia should become independent and be ruled by his son, Shamash-shum-ukin, while Assyria he handed down to Ashurbanipal. But when the latter came to the throne, Assyria permitted the former only to be appointed viceroy of Babylon. It seems also that even some portions of Babylonia were ruled directly by Ashurbanipal.

    After fifteen years Shamash-shum-ukin rebelled and attempted to establish his independence, but Sennacherib besieged Babylon and took it, when Shamash-shum-ukin destroyed himself. Kadalanu was then appointed viceroy, and ruled over part of the country. Nabopolassar was the last viceroy appointed by Assyria. At last the time had arrived for the Babylonians to come again unto their own. Nabopolassar who perhaps was a Chaldean by origin, made an alliance with the Urnman Manda. This he strengthened by the marriage of his son Nebuchadrezzar to the daughter of Astyages, the king. Nineveh finally fell before the Umman Manda hordes, and was razed to the ground. This people took possession of Northern Assyria. The Armenian vassal states, and Southern Assyria, as well as the title to Palestine, Syria and Egypt, fell to Babylonia.

    40. Neo-Babylonian Rulers:

    RULERS OF NEO-BABYLONIAN EMPIRE

    Nabopolassar; 625-604 BC

    Nebuchadrezzar II (s); 604-568 BC

    Evil-Merodach (s); 561-560 BC

    Neriglissar (brother-in-law); 559-556 BC

    Labosoarchad (s); 556 BC

    Nabonidus; 555-539 BC

    Cyrus conquered Babylonia in 539 BC

    Nabopolassar having established himself king of Babylon became the founder of the neo-Babylonian empire. He was succeeded by his son, Nebuchadrezzar II, who like Hammurabi and Sargon is among the greatest known characters in Babylonian history. He is the Biblical Nebuchadrezzar who carried the Jews into captivity. There are a number of lengthy records of Nebuchadrezzar concerning the buildings he erected, as well as of other public acts, but unfortunately only a fragment of a historical inscription referring to him has been found. The building inscriptions portray him as the great builder he is represented to be in the Old Testament (see BABYLON). He transformed Babylon into the mistress of the civilized world.

    Evil-Merodach, his son and successor, is also mentioned in the Old Testament. Two short reigns followed when the ruling dynasty was overthrown and Nabonidus was placed upon the throne. The king, who delighted in exploring and restoring ancient temples, placed his son at the head of the army. Nabonidus desiring to centralize the religion of Babylonia, brought to Babylon many of the images of deities from other cities. This greatly displeased the people, and excited a strong feeling against him. The priesthood was alienated, and the military party was displeased with him, for in his antiquarian pursuits he left the defense of the empire to others. So when Cyrus, king of Anshan and ruler of Persia, entered the country, he had little difficulty in defeating the Babylonians in a battle at Opis. Sippar immediately surrendered to the invader, and the gates of Babylon were thrown open to his army under Gobryas, his general. Nabonidus was imprisoned. Three months later Cyrus entered Babylon; Belshazzar, who doubtless had set up his throne after his father had been deposed, was slain a week later on the night of the eleventh of Marchesvan. This scene may have occurred in the palace built by Nebuchadrezzar. This event, told by the chronicler, is a remarkable verification of the interesting story related of Belshazzar in Dnl. The title used by the kings who follow the Babylonian Dynasty is “King of Babylon and King of Countries.”

    41. Persian Rulers of Babylonia:

    PERSIAN RULERS OF BABYLONIA

    Cyrus; 538-529 BC

    Cambyses; 529-522 BC

    Barzia

    Nebuchadrezzar III

    Darius I; 521-485 BC

    Xerxes; 485-464 BC

    Artaxerxes I; 464-424 BC

    Xerxes II; 424-423 BC

    Darius II; 423-404 BC

    Artaxerxes II; 405-358 BC

    Artaxerxes III (Ochos); 358-338 BC

    Arses; 338-335 BC

    Darius III; 335-331 BC

    Alexander the Great conquered Babylonia 331 BC.

    Several of the Persian rulers figured prominently in the Old Testament narratives. Cyrus in a cylinder inscription, which is preserved in a fragmentary form, endeavors to justify himself in the eyes of the people. He claims that the god Marduk raised him up to take the place of Nabonidus, and to defend the religion of the people. He tries to show how considerate he was by returning to their respective cities the gods that had been removed from their shrines; and especially by liberating foreign peoples held in bondage. While he does not mention what exiles were allowed to return to their native homes, the Old Testament informs us that the Jews were among those delivered. And the returning of the images to their respective places is also an interesting commentary on Ezr 1:7, in which we are told that the Jews were allowed to take with them their sacred vessels. The spirit manifested in the proclamation for the rebuilding of the temple (Ezr 1:1; Ezr 1:4(refs2)) seems also to have been in accordance with his policy on ascending the Babylonian throne. A year before his death he associated with himself Cambyses his son, another character mentioned in the Old Testament. He gave him the title “King of Babylon,” but retained for himself “King of Countries.” A usurper Smerdis, the Magian, called Barzia in the inscriptions, assumed the throne of Babylonia, but Darius Hystaspes, who was an Aryan and Zoroastrian in religion, finally killed Smerdis and made himself king of Babylon. But before he was acknowledged king he had to reconquer the Babylonians. By so doing the ancient tradition that Bel of Babylon conferred the legitimate right to rule that part of the world ceased to be acknowledged. Under Nidinta-Bel, who assumed the name Nebuchadrezzar III, the Babylonians regained their independence, but it was of short duration, lasting less than a year.

    LITERATURE.

    History: Rogers, History of Babylonian and Assyrian, 1002; Winckler, History of Babylonian and Assyrian, 1907; King, Sumer and Accad, 1910. Religion: Jastrow, Religion of Babylonian and Assyrian, 1898; Rogers, Religion of Babylonian and Assyrian, Especially in Its Relation to Israel, 1908; Sayce, The Religions of Ancient Egypt and Babylonian, 1903. Literature: Assyrian and Babylonian Literature, in “The World’s Great Books”; edited by R. F. Harper. Relation to the Old Testament: Price, The Monuments and the Old Testament, 1007; Pinches, The Old Testament in the Light of the Records of Assyrian and Babylonian, 1902; Clay, Light on the Old Testament from Babel, 1908; Clay, Amurru, the Home of the Northern Semites, 1909.

    See also “Literature” in ASSYRIA.

    A. T. Clay

    Babylonia

    bab-i-lo’-ni-a

    1. Mounds

    2. Explorations

    3. Names

    4. Semites

    5. Sumerians

    6. Home of the Semites

    7. Immigration

    8. Language

    9. Script

    10. Architecture

    11. Art

    12. Literature

    13. Libraries

    14. Personal Names

    15. History of Kingdoms

    16. Kish

    17. Lagash

    18. Adab

    19. Nippur

    20. Erech

    21. Larsa

    22. Shuruppak

    23. Kisurra

    24. Umma

    25. Accad

    26. Opis

    27. Basime

    28. Drehem

    29. Urumma

    30. First Dynasty of Babylon

    31. Sealand Dynasty

    32. Cassite Dynasty

    33. Cassite Rule

    34. Isin Dynasty

    35. Nebuchadrezzar I

    36. Sealand Dynasty

    37. Bit-Bazi Dynasty

    38. Other Rulers

    39. Babylonian Dynasty

    40. Neo-Babylonian Rulers

    41. Persian Rulers of Babylon

    LITERATURE

    Babylonia is a plain which is made up of the alluvial deposits of the mountainous regions in the North, where the Tigris and Euphrates have their source. The land is bounded on the North by Assyria and Mesopotamia; on the East by Elam, separated by the mountains of Elam; on the South by the sea marshes, and the country Kaldu (Chaldaea); and on the West by the Syrian desert. Some of the cities of the lower country were seaport towns in the early period, but now are far inland. This land- making process continues even at the present time at the rate of about 70 ft. a year.

    This plain, in the days when Babylonia flourished, sustained a dense population. It was covered with a network of canals, skillfully planned and regulated, which brought prosperity to the land, because of the wonderful fertility of the soil. The neglect of these canals and doubtless, also, the change of climate, have resulted in altered conditions in the country. It has become a cheerless waste. During some months of the year, when the inundations take place, large portions of the land are partially covered with swamps and marshes. At other times it looks like a desolate plain.

    1. Mounds:

    Throughout the land there are seen, at the present time, ruin-hills or mounds of accumulation of debris, which mark the site of ancient cities. Some of these cities were destroyed in a very early era, and were never rebuilt. Others were occupied for millenniums, and their history extends far into the Christian era. The antiquities generally found in the upper stratum of the mounds which were occupied up to so late a period, show that they were generally inhabited by the Jews, who lived there after the Babylonians had disappeared.

    2. Explorations:

    The excavations conducted at various sites have resulted in the discovery, besides antiquities of almost every character, of hundreds of thousands of inscriptions on clay and stone, but principally on the former material. At Tello more than 60,000 tablets were found, belonging largely to the administrative archives of the temple of the third millennium BC. At Nippur about 50,000 inscriptions were found, many of these also belonging to temple archives. But about 20,000 tablets and fragments found in that city came from the library of the school of the priests, which had been written in the third millennium BC. At Sippar, fully 30,000 tablets were found, many being of the same general character, also representing a library. At Delehem and Djokha, temple archives of the same period as those found at Tello have come to light in great numbers, through the illicit diggings of Arabs. Babylon, Borsippa, Kish, Erech and many other cities have yielded to the explorer and the Arab diggers inscribed documents of every period of Babylonian history, and embracing almost every kind of literature, so that the museums and libraries of America and Europe have stored up unread inscriptions numbering hundreds of thousands. Many also are in the possession of private individuals. After the work of excavating Babylonia has been completed and the inscriptions deciphered, many of the pro-Christian centuries in Babylonian history will be better known than some of those of our Christian era. The ancient history of the Babylonians will be reconstructed by the help of these original sources. Lengthy family genealogies will be known, as indeed in some instances is now the case, as well as the Babylonian contemporaries of Ezekiel, Abraham and all the other Biblical characters.

    3. Names:

    The Greek name of Babylonia which is in use at the present time is derived from the name of the city of Babylon, the capital and chief city of the land from the time of the First Dynasty of Babylon, about 2000 BC (see BABYLON). The name of the land in the very earliest period which is represented by antiquities, and even inscribed objects, is not known. But in a comparatively early age the northern part is called Uri, and the southern part, Engi or En-gira. The second part of the latter name is perhaps the same as in Su-gir, which is thought to be the origin of the Old Testament Shinar. Su-gir and Su- mer are names of the same country. And inasmuch as Mer and Gir were names of the same west Semitic deity, who played an important role in the early history of Babylonia, it is not improbable that the element Su is also to be identified with the ancient name of Mesopotamia. Su is also in Su-bartu, the name of the country to the North. This name is also written Su-Gir.

    Subsequent to 2000 BC the ideograms read in Sumerian, Uri and Engi, were pronounced in SemBab, Accad and Sumer. The former received its name from the capital of the kingdom Accad, one of the cities mentioned in Ge 10:10. The title, “king of Accad and Sumer” was used by rulers as late as the 1st millennium BC. The name by which the land is known in the second millennium BC is Kar-Duniash, the exact derivation of which is in doubt. Kar means “garden, land” in Semitic and Sumerian; and Duniash being preceded by the determinative for deity, has been regarded as a name of a Cassite god. A more recently advanced explanation is that Duniash is equivalent to Bel-malati, which means “lord of lands.” The meaning of the name, as stated, must be regarded as undetermined.

    In the time of the late Assyrian empire a nation in the extreme southern part of the land, called by the Greeks Chaldea, which is derived from the name Kaldu, came into existence. In the Assyrian historical inscriptions the land is usually called Bit-Yakin. This people seems to have issued from Aramaic Under Biblical. Merodach-baladan they ruled Babylonia for a time. The Neo-Bab Dynasty, founded by Nabopolassar, is supposed to be Chaldean in origin, in consequence of which the whole land in the Greek period was called Chaldea.

    4. Semites:

    Two distinct races are found occupying the land when we obtain the first glimpses of its history. The northern part is occupied by the Semites, who are closely allied to the Amorites, Arameans and Arabs; and the southern part by a non-Sem people called Sumerians. Their cultures had been originally distinct, but when they first become known to us there has taken place such an amalgamation that it is only by the knowledge of other Semitic cultures that it is possible to make even a partial differentiation of what was Sem-Bab and what was Sumerian. The Semites, it would almost seem, entered the land after the Sumerians had established themselves, but this can only be re garded as a conjecture.

    5. Sumerians:

    Although the earliest Sumerian settlement belongs to a remote period, few traces of the pre-historic Sumerian have been found. The archaeological remains indicate that this non-Sem race is not indigenous to the land, and that when they came into the country they had already attained to a fair degree of culture. But there is no evidence, as yet, in what part of the ancient world the elements of their culture were evolved, although various attempts have been made by scholars to locate their original home.

    6. Home of the Semites:

    The home of the Semites has been placed in different parts of the ancient world. A number of scholars look to Arabia and others to Africa for their original habitation, although their theories generally are not based upon much archaeological evidence. Unquestionably, the previous, if not the original home of the Semitic Babylonians, is to be found in the land of the Amorites, that is in Syria. In the earliest known period of Babylonian history, which apparently belongs to the age not very far removed from the time when the Semites entered Babylonia, Amurru was an important factor in the affairs of the nations, and it was a land which the world conquerors of Babylonia, both Sumerian and Semitic, endeavored to subjugate. This points to the fact that the culture of Amurru was then already old. Egyptian inscriptions fully substantiate this. We look to the land of the Arnorites as the home of the Semitic Babylonians, because of the important part played by the chief god of that land Amurru or Uru, in the Babylonian religion and nomenclature. In fact nearly all of the original names of the Semitic Babylonian sun-deities are derived from the names and epithets of the great Sun-god of the Amorites and Arameans (see Amurru, 108 ff). These and many other considerations point to Amurru, or the land of the Amorites, as the previous home of the Semites who migrated into Babylonia and who eventually became masters of the land.

    7. Immigration:

    The original settlements in Babylonia, as stated above, belong to a prehistoric time, but throughout the history of the land fresh Semitic migrations have been recognized. In the Isin and First Dynasty of Babylonia, Amorites or Canaanites seem to flood the country. In the second millennium a foreign people known as Cassites ruled Babylonia for nearly six centuries. The nomenclature of the period shows that many Hittites and Mittanaeans as well as Cassites lived in Babylonia. In the first millennium the thousands of names that appear in the contract literature indicate a veritable Babel of races: Egyptians, Elamites, Persians, Medes, Tabalites, Hittites, Cassites, Ammorites, Edomites, notably Hebrews, are among the peoples that occupied the land. The deportation of the Israelites by the Assyrian kings and of the Jews by the Babylonian kings, find confirmation besides the historical inscriptions in the names of Hebrews living in Babylonia in the corresponding periods.

    8. Language:

    The languages of Babylonia are Semitic and Sumerian. The latter is an agglutinative tongue like the Turkish, and belongs to that great unclassifiable group of languages, called for the sake of convenience, Turanian. It has not been shown, as yet, to be allied to any other known language. The Semitic language known as the Babylonian, with which the Assyrian is practically identical, is of the common Semitic stock. After the Semites entered the land, their language was greatly influenced by the Sumerian tongue. The Semites being originally dependent upon the Sumerian scribes, with whom the script had originated, considered in connection with the fact that the highly developed culture of the Sumerians greatly influenced that of the Semites, brought about the peculiar amalgamation known as Babylonian. The language is, however, distinctively Semitic, but it has a very large percentage of Sumerian loan-words. Not knowing the cognate tongues of the Sumerian, and having a poor understanding of the pronunciation of that language, it is impossible to ascertain, on the other hand, how much the Sumerian language was influenced by the Semites.

    In the late period another Semitic tongue was used extensively in the land. It was not because of the position occupied by the Arameans in the political history of western Asia, that their language became the lingua franca of the first millennium BC. It must have been on account of the widespread migrations of the people. In the time of Sennacherib it seems to have been used as the diplomatic language in Assyria as well as among the Hebrews, as the episode in 2Ki 18:26 would show. Then we recall the story of Belshazzar, and the edicts of the late period referred to in the Old Testament, which were in Aramaic (Ezr 4:7, etc.). In Assyria and Babylonia, many contract tablets have been found with Aramaic reference notes written upon them, showing that this was the language of those who held the documents. The Hebrews after the exile used Aramaic. This would seem to point to Babylonia as the place where they learned the language. The Babylonian language and the cuneiform script continued to be used until the 3rd or 2nd century BC, and perhaps even later, but it seems that the Aramaic had generally supplanted it, except as the literary and legal language. In short the tongue of the common people or the spoken language in all probability in the late period was Aramaic.

    9. Script:

    The cuneiform writing upon clay was used both by the Sumerians and the Semites. Whether this script had its origin in the land, or in the earlier home of the Sumerians, remains a question. It is now known that the Elamites had their own system of writing as early as that of the earliest found in Babylonia; and perhaps it will be found that other ancient peoples, who are at the present unknown to us, also used the cuneiform script. A writing similar to the Babylonian was in use at an early time in Cappadocia. The Hittites and other peoples of that region also employed it. The origin of the use of clay as a writing material, therefore, is shrouded in mystery, but as stated above, the system used by the Semites in Babylonian ylonia was developed from the Sumerian.

    The script is not alphabetic, but ideographic and phonetic, in that respect similar to the Chinese. There are over 500 characters, each one of which has from one to many values. The combination of two or more characters also has many values. The compilation of the values of the different signs used in various periods by both the Sumerians and Assyrians numbers at the present about 25,000, and the number will probably reach 30,000.

    10. Architecture:

    The architecture of Babylonia is influenced by the fact that the building material, in this alluvial plain, had to be of brick, which was largely sun-dried, although in certain prosperous eras there is much evidence of kiln-dried bricks having been used. The baked brick used in the earliest period was the smallest ever employed, being about the size of the ordinary brick used at the present time. The size of the bricks in the era prior to the third millennium varied from this to about 6 x 10 x 3 inches at Nippur, Sargon and his son Naram-Sin used a brick, the largest found, about 20 inches square, and about 4 inches in thickness. Following the operations of these kings at Nippur is the work of Ur-Engur, who used a brick about 14 inches square and nearly 4 inches in thickness. This size had been used at Tello prior to Sargon’s time, and was thereafter generally employed. It re mained the standard size of brick throughout the succeeding centuries of Babylonian history. Adobes, of which the greater portion of the buildings were constructed, were usually double the thickness of kiln-dried bricks. The pillar made of bricks, as well as the pilaster constructed of the same material, seems to have come into use at a very early age, as is shown by the excavations at Tello.

    A large number of Babylonian builders had the brick makers employ brick stamps which gave their names and frequently their titles, besides the name of the temple for which the bricks were intended. These enable the excavator to determine who the builders or restorers were of the buildings uncovered. Naturally, in a building like the temple of Enlil at Nippur, inscribed bricks of many builders covering a period of over 2,000 years were found. These by the help of building inscriptions, which have been found, enable scholars to rewrite considerable of the history of certain Babylonian temples. The walls of the city were also built of clay bricks, principally adobes. The walls usually were of very great thickness.

    Clay was also employed extensively in the manufacture of images, weights, drains, playthings, such as animals, baby rattles, etc., and of inscriptions of every kind. Pottery, with the exception of the blue glaze employed in the late period, was usually plain, although some traces of painted pottery have been found. Although every particle of stone found in Babylonia was carried into the country, either by man or by inundations, still in certain periods it was used freely for statues, steles, votive objects, and in all periods for door sockets, weights and seal cylinders. Building operations in stone are scarcely known in Babylonia until perhaps the time of the greatest of all ancient builders, Nebuchadrezzar II, who laid a pavement in the causeway of Babylon, Aa-ibur-sabu, with blocks of stone from a mountain quarry.

    See BABYLON.

    11. Art:

    The sculpture of the Sumerians, although in most instances the hardest of materials was used, is one of the great achievements of their civilization. Enough examples have been found to trace the development of their art from comparatively rude reliefs of the archaic period to the finished sculpture of Gudea’s time, third millennium BC, when it reached a high degree of excellence. The work of the sculpture of this age shows spirit and originality in many respects unique. In the earliest period the Babylonians attempted the round, giving frequently the main figures in full face. The perfection of detail, in their efforts to render true to life, makes their modeling very superior in the history of article The Sumerian seems to have been able to overcome difficulties of technique which later sculptors systematically avoided.

    Practically every Babylonian had his own personal seal. He used it as the signature is used at the present time or rather as the little stamp upon which is engraved the name of the individual at the present time, in the Orient, to make an impression upon the letter which was written for him by a public scribe. Thousands of these ancient seals have been found. They were cut out of all kinds of stone and metal. The style in the early period was usually cylindrical, with a hole passing lengthwise through them. In the late period the signet was commonly used. Many of these gems were exquisitely cut by lapidists of rare ability. Some of the very best work of this art belongs to the third millennium BC. The boldness in outline, and the action displayed are often remarkable. The most delicate saws, drills and other tools must have been employed by the early lapidist. Some of his early work is scarcely surpassed in the present age.

    The gold and silver smiths of the early age have left us some beautiful examples of their art and skill. A notable one is the silver vase of Entemena of Lagash, mounted on a bronze pedestal, which stands on four feet. There is a votive inscription engraved about its neck. The bowl is divided into two compartments. On the upper are engraved seven heifers, and on the lower four eagles with extended wings, in some respects related to the totem or the coat of arms of Lagash. While attention to detail is too pronounced, yet the whole is well rendered and indicates remarkable skill, no less striking than the well-known work of their Egyptian contemporaries. Bronze was also used extensively for works of art and utensils. Some remarkable specimens of this craft have been found at Tello.

    In studying the magnificent remains of their art, one is thoroughly impressed with the skill displayed, and with the fact that there must have been a long period of development prior to the age to which these works belong, before such creations could have been possible. Although much of the craftsman’s work is crude, there is considerable in the sculpture and engraving that is well worthy of study. And in studying these remains one is also impressed with the fact that they were produced in an alluvial plain.

    12. Literature:

    The literature in a narrow sense is almost entirely confined to the epics, which are of a religious character, and the psalms, hymns, incantations, omens, etc. These are the chief remains of their culture.

    See BABYLONIA AND ASSYRIA, RELIGION OF.

    In a general sense almost every kind of literature is found among the hundreds of thousands of clay tablets unearthed in Babylonia. The inscribed votive objects are of all kinds and descriptions. The stone vase taken in booty was dedicated to the deity of the conqueror. The beautiful piece of lapis lazuli, agate, cornelian, etc., obtained, was inscribed and devoted in the same way. Slabs, tablets and cones of all shapes and sizes, were inscribed with the king’s name and titles, giving the different cities over which he ruled and referring especially to the work that he had accomplished for his deity. From the decipherment of these votive objects much valuable data are gathered for the reconstruction of the ancient history of the land.

    The same is true of what are known as building inscriptions, in which accounts of the operations of the kings in restoring and enlarging temples, shrines, walls and other city works are given. Canal digging and dredging, and such works by which the people benefited, are frequently mentioned in these inscriptions.

    Epistolary literature, for example, the royal letters of Hammurabi, the diplomatic correspondence found in Egypt (see TELL EL-AMARNA) or the royal letters from the Library of Ashurbanipal (see ASHURBANIPAL), as well as the private correspondence of the people, furnishes valuable historical and philological data.

    The thousands of tablets found in the school libraries of Sippar and Nippur, as well as of the library of Ashurbanipal, among which are all kinds of inscriptions used in the schools of the priests and scribes, have furnished a great deal of material for the Assyrian dictionary, and have thrown much light upon the grammar of the language. The legal literature is of the greatest importance for an understanding of the social conditions of the people. It is also valuable for comparative purposes in studying the codes of other peoples.

    See CODE OF HAMMURABI.

    The commercial or legal transactions, dated in all periods, from the earliest times until the latest, also throw important light upon the social conditions of the people. Many thousands of these documents have been found, by the help of which the very life that pulsated in the streets of Babylonian cities is restored.

    The administrative documents from the temple archives also have their value, in that they furnish important data as regards the maintenance of the temples and other institutions; and incidentally much light on the nationality and religion of the people, whose names appear in great numbers upon them. The records are receipts of taxes or rents from districts close by the temples, and of commercial transactions conducted with this revenue. A large portion of these archives consists of the salary payments of storehouse officials and priests. There seems to have been a host of tradesmen and functionaries in connection with the temple. Besides the priest, elder, seer, seeress, sorcerer, sorceress, singer, etc., there were the farmer, weaver, miller, carpenter, smith, butcher, baker, porter, overseer, scribe, measurer, watchman, etc. These documents give us an insight into Babylonian system of bookkeeping, and show how carefully the administrative affairs of the temple were conducted. In fact the temple was provided for and maintained along lines quite similar to many of our modern institutions.

    13. Libraries:

    The discovery of the Library of Ashurbanipal at Nineveh speaks volumes for the culture of Assyria, but that culture was largely borrowed from the Babylonians. Much that this library contained had been secured from Babylonian libraries by the scribes employed by Ashurbanipal. In every important center there doubtless existed schools and libraries in connection with the temples. At Nippur, in 1890, Dr. J. P. Peters found such a library, but unfortunately, although he termed it such, his Assyriologists did not recognize that one of the greatest discoveries of antiquity had been made. It remained for Dr. J. H. Haynes, a decade later, to discover another portion of this library, which he regarded as such, because of the large number of tablets which he uncovered. Pere Scheil, prior to Dr. Haynes’ discovery, had the good fortune while at Sippar to discover a part of the school and library of that important center. Since Professor Scheil’s excavations, Arabs have unearthed many inscriptions of this library, which have found their way to museums and into the hands of private individuals.

    The plan of the Nippur Library, unearthed by Dr. Haynes, has been published by Mr. C. Fisher, the architect of the Nippur expedition (see Clay, Light on the Old Testament from Babel, 183). Professor Scheil, in publishing his results, has also given a plan of the school he discovered, and a full description of its arrangements, as well as the pedagogical methods that had been employed in that institution of learning. This has also been attempted by others, but in a less scientific manner. One of the striking features of these libraries is the use of the large reference cylinders, quadrangular, pentagonal and hexagonal in shape. There was a hole cut lengthwise through them for the purpose of mounting them like revolving stands. These libraries, doubtless, contained all the works the Babylonians possessed on law, science, literature and religion. There are lexical lists, paradigm tablets, lists of names, of places, countries, temples, rivers, officers, stones, gods, etc. Sufficient tablets have been deciphered to determine their general character. Also hundreds of exercise tablets have been found, showing the progress made by pupils in writing, in mathematics, in grammar, and in other branches of learning. Some tablets appear to have been written after dictation. Doubtless, the excavators found the waste heaps of the school, where these tablets had been thrown for the purpose of working them over again as raw material, for new exercises. The school libraries must have been large. Considering for instance that the ideographic and phonetic values of the cuneiform signs in use numbered perhaps 30,000, even the syllabaries which were required to contain these different values must have been many in number, and especially as tablets, unlike books made of paper, have only two sides to them. And when we take into consideration all the different kinds of literature which have been found, we must realize that these libraries were immense, and numbered many thousands of tablets.

    14. Personal Names:

    In modern times the meaning of names given children is rarely considered; in fact, in many instances the name has suffered so much through changes that it is difficult to ascertain its original meaning. Then also, at present, in order to avoid confusion the child is given two or more names. It was not so with the ancient Babylonian. Originally the giving of a name was connected with some special circumstance, and though this was not always the case throughout the history of Babylonia, the correct form of the name was always preserved.

    The name may have been an expression of their religious faith. It may have told of the joy experienced at the birth of an heir. It may even betray the suffering that was involved at the birth of the child, or the life that the parents had lived. In short, the names afford us an intimate glimpse into the everyday life of the people.

    The average Babylonian name is theophorous, and indicates one of the deities worshipped by the family, and often the city. For example, it is suggestive that persons with names compounded with Enlil and Ninib hailed from Nippur. Knowing the deities of the surrounding people we have also important evidence in determining the origin of peoples in Babylonia having foreign names. For example, if a name is composed of the Hittite deity Teshup, or the Amorite deity Amurru, or the Aramean god Dagan, or the Egyptian god Esi (Isis), foreign influence is naturally looked for from the countries represented. Quite frequently the names of foreign deities are compounded with Babylonian elements, often resulting from mixed marriages.

    Theophorous names are composed of two, three, four and even five elements. Those having two or three elements predominate. Two-element names have a diety plus a verbal form or a subst.; or vice versa: for example, Nabu-na’id (Nabonidus), “Nebo is exalted,” or Shulman-asharedu (Shaimaneser), “Shalman is foremost.” Many different combinations are found in three-element names which are composed of the name of the deity, a subst., a verbal form, a pronominal suffix, or some other form of speech, in any of the three positions. Explanations of a few of the familiar Biblical. names follow: Sin-akhe-erba (Sennacherib), “Sin has increased the brothers”; Marduk-apal-iddin (Mero-dach-baladan), “Marduk has given a son”; Ashurakh- iddin (Esarhaddon), “Ashur has given a brother”; Ashur-bani-apal, “Ashur is creating a son”; Nabu-kudurri-usur (Nebuchadrezzar), “O Nebo, protect the boundary”; Amel-Marduk (Evil Merodach), “Man of Marrink”; Bel-shar-usur (Belshazzar), “O Bel, protect the king.” Some Babylonian names mentioned in the Bible are really of foreign origin, for example, Amraphel and Sargon. Amraphel originally is west Semitic and is written Hammurabi (pronounced Chammu-rabi, the first letter being the Semitic cheth). Sargon was perhaps originally Aramean, and is composed of the elements shar and the god Gan. When written in cuneiform it was written Shargani, and later Sharrukin, being translated “the true king.” Many names in use were not theophorous; for example, such personal names as Ululd, “the month Ulul”; names of animals, as Kalba, “dog,” gentilic names, as Akkadai, “the Akkadian,” names of crafts, as Pacharu, “potter,” etc.

    The literature abounds in hypochoristica. One element of a name was used for the sake of shortness, to which usually a hypochoristica suffix was added, like Marduka (Mordecai). That is, the ending a or ai was added to one of the elements of a longer name.

    15. History of Kingdoms:

    The written history of Babylonia at the present begins from about 4200 BC. But instead of finding things crude and aboriginal in this, the earliest period, the remains discovered show that the people had attained to a high level of culture. Back of that which is known there must lie a long period of development. This is attested in many ways; for instance, the earliest writing found is so far removed from the original hieroglyphs that it is only possible to ascertain what the original pictures were by knowing the values which the signs possessed. The same conclusion is ascertained by a study of the art and literature. Naturally, as mentioned above, it is not impossible that this development took place in a previous home of the inhabitants.

    The history of early Babylonia is at present a conflict of the kings and patesis (priest-kings) of the different city- kingdoms, for supremacy over each other, as well as over the surrounding peoples. The principal states that figure in the early history are: Kish, Lagash, Nippur, Akkad, Umma, Erech, Ur and Opis. At the present time more is known of Lagash, because the excavations conducted at that site were more extensive than at others. This makes much of our knowledge of the history of the land center about that city. And yet it should be stated that the hegemony of Lagash lasted for a long period, and the kingdom will ultimately occupy a prominent position when the final history of the land is written. Nippur, where considerable work was also done, was not the seat of rulers, but the sacred city of the god Enlil, to whom the kings of other cities generally did obeisance. Following is a list of known rulers of the different city-kingdoms.

    16. Kish:

    El-Ohemir, identified as the ancient city of Kish, not far from Babylon, is one of the oldest Semitic centers of the land. No systematic excavations have been conducted at this site, but besides the inscriptions which the Arabs have unearthed, several of the rulers are known to us through votive inscriptions discovered at Nippur and elsewhere. The rulers of Kish are: Utug p. (patesi), circa 4200 BC; Mesilim k. (king), circa 4000 BC; Lugal-tarsi k.; Enbi-Ishtar k.; Manishtusu k., circa 2650 BC; Urnmush k., circa 2600; Manana k.; Sumu-ditana k. and Tanium k.

    17. Lagash:

    The excavations by the French under De Sarsez and Cross at Tello, the ancient city Lagash, have yielded more inscriptions of ancient Babylonian rulers than those at any other site. Lagash was destroyed about 2000 BC, and only partially rebuilt in the post-Bab period. The known rulers are: Lugal-shag-Engur patesi, circa 4000 BC, contemporary with Mesilim k. of Kish; @@Badu k.; @@En-khegal k.; Ur-Nina k.; Akurgal p.; Eannatum p. and k.; Enannatum I p.; Entemena I; Enannatum IIp.; Enetarzi p.; Enlitarzi p.; Lugal-anda p.; Uru-kagina k., contemporary with Lugal-zaggisi, k. of Uruk; Engilsa p., contemporary with Manishtusu k. of Kish; Lugul-ushumgal p., contemporary with Sargon of Accad; Ur-Babbar p., contemporary with Naram-Sin of Accad; Ur-E p.; Lugal-bur p.; Basha-Kama p.; Ur-Mama p.; Ug-me p.; Ur-Bau p.; Gudea p.; Nammakhini p.; Ur- gar p.; Ka-azag p.; Galu-Bau p.; Galu-Gula p.; Ur-Ninsun p.: Ur-Ningirsu p.; contemporary with Ur-Engur k. of Ur-abba p.; @@Galu-ka zal p.; @@Galuandul p.; @@Ut-Lama I p.; @@Alla, @@Ur-Lama II p.; contemporary with Dungi k. of Ur; Arad-Nannar p. Unfortunately, with the exception of about onethird of these rulers, the exact order is yet to be ascertained. (Note: Asterisk denotes unidentified forms.)

    18. Adab:

    The mounds of Bismaya which have been identified as Adab were partially excavated by Dr. Edgar J. Banks, for the University of Chicago. Its remains indicate that it is one of the oldest cities discovered. A ruler named Esar, circa 4200 BC, is known from a number of inscriptions, as well as a magnificent statue of the king, discovered by Dr. Banks.

    19. Nippur:

    The large group of mounds covering an area, the circumference of which is three miles, called in ancient times Nippur, but now Noufar, was excavated as mentioned above by Dr. Peters and Dr. Haynes for the University of Pennsylvania. While a great number of Babylonian kings and patesis are represented by inscriptions discovered at Nippur, practically all had their seats of government at other places, it being the sacred city.

    20. Erech:

    The mounds at the present called Warka, but representing ancient Erech (Ge 10:10), covering an area whose circumference is 6 miles, have been tentatively examined by Loftus and other explorers. Many inscriptions have also been unearthed by the Arabs at this site. The rulers of this city known to us are: Ilu-(m)a-ilu, Lugal-zaggisi k., contemporary with Uru-kagina of Lagash; Lugal-kigubnidudu k.; Lugal-kisalsi k.; Sin-gashid k., about 2200 BC, and Sin-gamil k.

    21. Larsa:

    Senkereh known in the Old Testament as Ellasar (Ge 14:1), and in the inscriptions as Larsa, has been explored by Loftus and others. The known rulers of the city are: Gungunu k., contemporary of Ur-Ninib k. of Isin; Sumu-ilu; Nur-Adad; Sin- iddinam; Eri-Aku (the Biblical “Arioch”) circa 2000 BC, son of Kudur-Mabug k. of Elam, and Rim-Sin (or Rim-Aku), his brother.

    22. Shuruppak:

    The present Fara, which in ancient times was called Shuruppak, was partially excavated by the Germans under Koldewey, Andraea, and Noeldeke. It is also a very ancient city. It yielded little to the spade of the excavator. It is close by Abu- Hatab, and known as the place where the scenes of the Babylonian Deluge story occurred. Two rulers known from the inscriptions found there are Dada and ladda, belonging to a comparatively early period.

    23. Kisurra:

    The site now known as Abu-Hatab is the ancient Kisurra. It was partially excavated by the Germans. It flourished as a city in the third millennium BC. The two rulers of this city that are known are Idinilu p., and Itur-Shamash p. (?).

    24. Umma:

    The site now called Jokha lying to the Northwest of Lagash is an ancient Sumerian city known as Umma. The site has been explored by Dr. Peters and others, but more recently surveyed by Andraea and Noeldeke. It proved to be a city destroyed in the early period. Arabs have lately found thousands of documents belonging to the ancient archives of the city. Some of the rulers known are: Ush p., Enakalli and Urlumma p., contemporaries of Enannatum I of Lagash; Ill p., appointed by Entemena p., of Lagash; Kur-Shesh p., time of Manishtusu; @@Galu-Babbar p.; Ur-nesu p., contemporary of Dungi k., of Ur.

    25. Accad:

    The city mentioned in Ge 10:10 as Accad, one of Nimrod’s cities, has not been explored, but is well known by the inscriptions of Sargon and his son Naram-Sin as well as omen-texts of later eras. Sargon was a usurper. He was born in concealment, and sent adrift in an ark of bulrushes like Moses. He was rescued and brought up by Akki, a farmer. He assumed the title “king of the city” (Shar-ali), or “king of Uri” (Shat Uri). Later he conquered the entire country, and became the “king of Accad and Sumer.” In his latter years he extended his conquests to Elam, Amurru and Subartu, and earned for himself the title “king of the Four Quarters,” which his son Naram-Sin inherited. The latter followed up the successes of his father and marched into Magan, in the Sinaitic peninsula. Naram-Sin, as well as his father, was a great builder. Evidences of their operations are seen in many cities. Naram-Sin was succeeded by Bingani, who apparently lost the title “king of the Four Quarters,” being only called “king of the City, or Uri.”

    26. Opis:

    The exact site of the city of Opis is still in doubt, but the city is represented by the ruler Zuzu k., who was defeated by Eannatum p., of Lagash.

    27. Basime:

    The city Basime also remains unidentified, but is represented by Ibalum p., a contemporary of Manishtusu k., of Kish, and son of Ilsurabi, apparently another patesi of that city.

    28. Drehem:

    A site not far from Nippur, called Dolehem or Drehem, which was explored by Dr. Peters, has recently yielded thousands of tablets from the Temple archives dated in the reigns of kings in the Ur Dynasty.

    29. Urumma:

    The extensive group of mounds lying on the west side of the Euphrates, called Mugayyar, and generally known as Ur of the Chaldees, is the ancient Urumma. It was explored by Taylor and others, and proved to have been an important capital from the middle of the third millennium BC. The dynasty which had made the city its capital is known through inscriptions discovered there and at Tello, Nippur, Drehem and Djokha. Thousands of inscriptions dated in what is commonly called the Ur Dynasty have been published. The dynasty was founded by Ur-Engur, who is conspicuous for his building operations at Nippur and other cities. A dynastic tablet of a much later period, the provenience of which is in doubt, gives the rulers of this dynasty founded about 2400 BC, and the number of years that they reigned.

    URUMMA DYNASTY

    Ur-Engur, 18 years

    Dungi (son), 58 years

    Bur-Sin (son), 9 years

    Gimil-Sin (son), 7 years

    Ibi-Sin (son), 25 years

    Five kings, 117 years

    The same tablet gives also the following list of the rulers of Isin. Ishbi-Urra, the founder, lived about 2283 BC.

    ISIS DYNASTY

    Ishbi-Urra, 32 years

    Gimil-ilishu (son), 10 years

    Idin-Dagan (son), 21 years

    Ishme-Dagan (son), 20 years

    Libit-Ishtar (son), 11 years

    Ur-Ninib, 28 years

    Bur-Sin II (son), 28 years

    Iter-iqisha (son), 5 years

    Urra-imitti (brother), 7 years

    Sin-iqisha, 6 months

    Enlil-bani, 24 years

    Zambia, 3 years

    ———-, 5 years

    Ea————-, 4 years

    Sin-magir, 11 years

    Damiq-ilishu (son), 23 years

    Sixteen kings, 225 years and 6 months

    30. First Dynasty of Babylon:

    About the time the Nisin Dynasty came to a close, and while the Larsa Dynasty was ruling, the First Dynasty of Babylon was established. Following is a list of 11 rulers of this dynasty who ruled 300 years:

    I. FIRST DYNASTY OF BABYLON

    Sumu-abum, 14 years

    Sumu-la-el, 36 years

    Sabium (son), 14 years

    Abil-Sin (son), 18 years

    Sin-muballit (son), 20 years

    Hammu-rabi (son), 43 years

    Samsu-iluna (son), 38 years

    Abi-eshuh (son), 28 years

    Ammi-Ditana (son), 37 years

    Ammi-Zaduga (son), 21 years

    Samsu-Ditana (son), 32 years

    The First Dynasty of Babylon came into prominence in the reign of Sin-muballit who captured Nisin. Eri-Aku of the Larsa Dynasty shortly afterward took the city. When Hammurabi came to the throne he was subject to Eri-Aku (Bib. Arioch) of Larsa, the son of the Elamitc king, Kudur-Mabug. The latter informs us that he was suzerain of Amurru (Palestine and Syria), which makes intelligible the statement in Gen 14, that the kings of Canaan were subject to the king of Elam, whose name was Chedorlaomer (Kudur-Lagam ar). In his 31st year, Hammurabi, who is the Amraphel of Ge 14:1, succeeded in throwing off the Elamite yoke, and not only established his independence but also became the complete master of Babylonia by driving out the Elamites.

    31. Sealand Dynasty:

    In the region of the Persian Gulf, south of Babylonia, ruled a dynasty partly contemporaneously with the First Dynasty, extending over the reigns of about five of the last kings, and over several of the Cassite Dynasty, known as the Sealand Dynasty. The historian records for the latter the following list of 11 kings who ruled 368 years:

    II. SEALAND DYNASTY

    Ilima-ilu, 60 years

    Itti-ili-nibi, 55 years

    Damqi-ilishu, 36 years

    Ishkibal, 15 years

    Shushshi (brother), 27 years

    Gulkishar, 55 years

    Pesh-gal-daramash (son), 50 years

    Adara-kalama (son), 28 years

    Ekur-ul-anna, 26 years

    Melamma-kurkura, 7 years

    Ea-gamil, 9 years

    32. Cassite Dynasty:

    The First Dynasty of Babylon came to an end through an invasion of the Hittites. They plundered Babylon and perhaps ruled that city for a number of years. A new dynasty was then established about 1750 BC by a foreign people known as Cassites. There were 36 kings in this dynasty ruling 576 years and 9 months. Unfortunately the tablet containing the list is fragmentary.

    III. CASSITE DYNASTY

    Gandash, 16 years

    Agum I (s), 22 years

    Kashtiliash I, usurper, 22 years; born of Ulamburiash and son of Burna-buriash

    Du(?) shi (s), 8 years

    Abirattash (b ?)

    Tazzigurmash (s)

    Agum II (s)

    ——–;———-Long gap

    @@Kara-indash I, contemporary with Ashur-rimnisheshu, k. of Assyria

    @@Kadashman-Enlil I (s ?)

    @@Kuri-Galzu I

    Burna-buriash II, contemporary of Buzur-Ashur, k. of Assyria

    @@Kara-Indash II, son-in-law of Ashur-uballit, k. of Assyria

    @@Nazi-Bugash (usurper)

    Kuri-Galzu II (s. of Burna-buriash), 23 years; contemporary of Ashur-uballit, and Enlilnirari, kings of Assyria

    Nazi-Maruttash (s), 26 years; contemporary of Adad-nirari I, p. of Assyria.

    Kadashman-Turgu (s), 17 years

    Kadashman-Enlil II, 7 years

    Kudur-Enlil (s), 9 years

    Shagarakti-Shuriash (s), 13 years

    Kashtiliash II (s), 8 years

    Enlil-nadin-shum, 1 1/2 years

    Kadashman-Kharbe II, 1 1/2 years

    Adad-shum-iddin, 6 years

    Adad-shum-usur, 30 years

    Meli-Shipak (s?), 15 years

    Marduk-apil-iddin (s), 13 years

    Zamama-shum-iddin, 1 year

    Bel-mu–, 3 years

    33. Cassite Rule:

    The region from which these Cassites came has not yet been determined, although it seems to be the district Northeast of Assyria. Gandash, the first king, seems to have enjoyed the all-embracing title, “King of the Four Quarters of the World.” Little is known of the other rulers until Agum II, who claims the rule of the Cassites, Accad, Babel, Padan, Alman and Guti. In his inscriptions he records the conquest of Khani in Asia Minor, and the fact that he brought back to Babylon the statues of Marduk and Zarpanit, which had been carried off by the Hittites. The Cassite rule, while extending over many centuries, was not very prosperous. At Nippur the excavations showed active operations on the part of a few kings in restoring the temple and doing ob eisance to Enlil. The rulers seemed to have conformed to the religion of the land, for few foreign elements have been recognized as having been introduced into it during this era. The many Cassite names found in the inscriptions would indicate an influx from a Cassite quarter of no small proportion. And yet it should be noted that, in the same era, Hittite and Mittanean influence, as is shown by the nomenclature, is as great as the Cassite. It was during this period that Assyria rose to power and influence, and was soon to become the master of the Mesopotamian region.

    34. Isin Dynasty:

    IV. ISIN OR PASHE DYNASTY

    11 Kings; began to rule about 1172 BC

    Marduk, 17 years

    Wanting, 6 years

    Nebuchadrezzar I, contemporary of Ashur-resh-ishi, k. of Assyria

    Enlil-nadin-apal

    Marduk-nadin-akhi, contemporary of Tiglath-pileser I, k. of Assyria

    Marduk-shapik-zer-mati, contemporary of Ashur-bel-kala, k. of Assyria

    Adad-apal-iddin, 22 years

    Marduk-akh-erba, 1 1/2

    Marduk-zer, 12 years

    Nabu-shum-libur, 8(?) years

    35. Nebuchadrezzar I:

    The most famous king of this dynasty, in fact of this era, was Nebuchadrezzar I, who re-established firmly the rule of Babylon. He carried on a successful expedition into Elam as well as into Amurru where he fought against the Hittite. He also conquered the Lulubites. But in contest for supremacy with Assyria Ashur-reshishi triumphed, and he was forced to retreat ingloriously to Babylon. His successors failed to withstand the Assyrians, especially under Tiglath-pileser I, and were allowed to rule only by sufferance. The Babylonians had lost their prestige; the Assyrians had become the dominant people of the land. Few rulers of the dynasty which followed are known except by name. The dynasties with one exception were of short duration.

    36. Sealand Dynasty:

    V. SEALAND DYNASTY

    3 Kings

    Simrnash-Shipak, 18 years; about 1042 BC

    Ea-mukin-shum, 6 months

    Kashshu-nadin-akhi, 3 years

    37. Bit-Bazi Dynasty:

    VI. BIT-BAZI DYNASTY

    3 Kings

    Eulmash-shakin-shum, 17 years; about 1020 BC

    Ninib-kudur-usur, 3 years

    Shilaniln-Shuqamuna, 3 months

    38. Other Rulers:

    VII. An Elamitic King, whose name is not known

    VIII. 13(?) kings who ruled 36 years

    IX. A dynasty of 5(?) kings

    39. Babylonian Dynasty:

    X. BABYLONIAN DYNASTY

    Following is a partial list of the 22 kings who ruled until the destruction of Babylon by Sennacherib, when the Assyrian kings assumed direct control. Ashurbanipal, however, introduced a new policy and viceroys were appointed.

    Shamash-mudammiq

    Nabu-shar-ishkun I

    Nabu-apal-iddin

    Marduk-nadin-shum

    Marduk-balatsu-iqbi

    Bau-akh-iddin

    Nabu-shum-ishkun II

    Nabonassar

    Nabu-nadin-zer; 747-734 BC

    Nabu-shum-ishkun III; 733-732 BC

    Nabu-mukin-zer; 731-729 BC

    Pul (Tiglath-pilcser III); 729-727 BC

    Ulula (Shalmancsar v); 727-722 BC

    Merodach-baladan I; 722-710 BC.

    Sargon; 710-705 BC

    Sennacherib; 704-702 BC

    Marduk-zakir-shum (1 month)

    Merodach-baladan II (9 months)

    Bel-ibni; 702-700 BC

    Ashur-nadin-shum; 700-694 BC

    Nergal-ushezib; 694-693 BC

    Mushczib-Marduk; 692-689 BC

    Sennacherib; 689-681 BC

    Esarhaddon; 681-668 BC

    Ashurbanipal; 668-626 BC

    Shamash-shum-ukin; 668-648 BC

    Kandalanu; 648-626 BC

    Ashur-etil-ilani-ukin; 626-

    Nabopolassar; 626-

    During the time of Sennacherib, Merodach-baladan the Chaldean became a great obstacle to Assyria’s maintaining its supremacy over Babylonia. Three times he gained possession of Babylon, and twice had himself proclaimed king. For thirty years he plotted against Assyria. What is learned from the inscriptions concerning him furnishes an interesting commentary on the sending of the embassy, in 704 BC, to Hezekiah (2Ki 20:12; Isa 39:1 (refs2)) in order to induce him to revolt against Assyria, which he knew would help his own cause. Finally Sennacherib, in 690, after he had experienced much trouble by the repeated uprisings of the Babylonians, and the aspirations of Merodach-baladan, endeavored to obliterate Babylon from the map. His son and successor Esarhaddon, however, tried to make Babylon again happy and prosperous. One of his first acts was to send back to Babylon the statue of Bel-Merodach. He rebuilt the city, and also restored other Babylonian temples, for instance, that of Enlil at Nippur. The Babylonians solemnly declared him king. Ashurbanipal, his son and successor, followed his policy. The evidence of his operations at Nippur is everywhere seen in the shape of stamped, kiln-dried bricks.

    Before Esarhaddon died, he had planned that Babylonia should become independent and be ruled by his son, Shamash-shum-ukin, while Assyria he handed down to Ashurbanipal. But when the latter came to the throne, Assyria permitted the former only to be appointed viceroy of Babylon. It seems also that even some portions of Babylonia were ruled directly by Ashurbanipal.

    After fifteen years Shamash-shum-ukin rebelled and attempted to establish his independence, but Sennacherib besieged Babylon and took it, when Shamash-shum-ukin destroyed himself. Kadalanu was then appointed viceroy, and ruled over part of the country. Nabopolassar was the last viceroy appointed by Assyria. At last the time had arrived for the Babylonians to come again unto their own. Nabopolassar who perhaps was a Chaldean by origin, made an alliance with the Urnman Manda. This he strengthened by the marriage of his son Nebuchadrezzar to the daughter of Astyages, the king. Nineveh finally fell before the Umman Manda hordes, and was razed to the ground. This people took possession of Northern Assyria. The Armenian vassal states, and Southern Assyria, as well as the title to Palestine, Syria and Egypt, fell to Babylonia.

    40. Neo-Babylonian Rulers:

    RULERS OF NEO-BABYLONIAN EMPIRE

    Nabopolassar; 625-604 BC

    Nebuchadrezzar II (s); 604-568 BC

    Evil-Merodach (s); 561-560 BC

    Neriglissar (brother-in-law); 559-556 BC

    Labosoarchad (s); 556 BC

    Nabonidus; 555-539 BC

    Cyrus conquered Babylonia in 539 BC

    Nabopolassar having established himself king of Babylon became the founder of the neo-Babylonian empire. He was succeeded by his son, Nebuchadrezzar II, who like Hammurabi and Sargon is among the greatest known characters in Babylonian history. He is the Biblical Nebuchadrezzar who carried the Jews into captivity. There are a number of lengthy records of Nebuchadrezzar concerning the buildings he erected, as well as of other public acts, but unfortunately only a fragment of a historical inscription referring to him has been found. The building inscriptions portray him as the great builder he is represented to be in the Old Testament (see BABYLON). He transformed Babylon into the mistress of the civilized world.

    Evil-Merodach, his son and successor, is also mentioned in the Old Testament. Two short reigns followed when the ruling dynasty was overthrown and Nabonidus was placed upon the throne. The king, who delighted in exploring and restoring ancient temples, placed his son at the head of the army. Nabonidus desiring to centralize the religion of Babylonia, brought to Babylon many of the images of deities from other cities. This greatly displeased the people, and excited a strong feeling against him. The priesthood was alienated, and the military party was displeased with him, for in his antiquarian pursuits he left the defense of the empire to others. So when Cyrus, king of Anshan and ruler of Persia, entered the country, he had little difficulty in defeating the Babylonians in a battle at Opis. Sippar immediately surrendered to the invader, and the gates of Babylon were thrown open to his army under Gobryas, his general. Nabonidus was imprisoned. Three months later Cyrus entered Babylon; Belshazzar, who doubtless had set up his throne after his father had been deposed, was slain a week later on the night of the eleventh of Marchesvan. This scene may have occurred in the palace built by Nebuchadrezzar. This event, told by the chronicler, is a remarkable verification of the interesting story related of Belshazzar in Dnl. The title used by the kings who follow the Babylonian Dynasty is “King of Babylon and King of Countries.”

    41. Persian Rulers of Babylonia:

    PERSIAN RULERS OF BABYLONIA

    Cyrus; 538-529 BC

    Cambyses; 529-522 BC

    Barzia

    Nebuchadrezzar III

    Darius I; 521-485 BC

    Xerxes; 485-464 BC

    Artaxerxes I; 464-424 BC

    Xerxes II; 424-423 BC

    Darius II; 423-404 BC

    Artaxerxes II; 405-358 BC

    Artaxerxes III (Ochos); 358-338 BC

    Arses; 338-335 BC

    Darius III; 335-331 BC

    Alexander the Great conquered Babylonia 331 BC.

    Several of the Persian rulers figured prominently in the Old Testament narratives. Cyrus in a cylinder inscription, which is preserved in a fragmentary form, endeavors to justify himself in the eyes of the people. He claims that the god Marduk raised him up to take the place of Nabonidus, and to defend the religion of the people. He tries to show how considerate he was by returning to their respective cities the gods that had been removed from their shrines; and especially by liberating foreign peoples held in bondage. While he does not mention what exiles were allowed to return to their native homes, the Old Testament informs us that the Jews were among those delivered. And the returning of the images to their respective places is also an interesting commentary on Ezr 1:7, in which we are told that the Jews were allowed to take with them their sacred vessels. The spirit manifested in the proclamation for the rebuilding of the temple (Ezr 1:1; Ezr 1:4(refs2)) seems also to have been in accordance with his policy on ascending the Babylonian throne. A year before his death he associated with himself Cambyses his son, another character mentioned in the Old Testament. He gave him the title “King of Babylon,” but retained for himself “King of Countries.” A usurper Smerdis, the Magian, called Barzia in the inscriptions, assumed the throne of Babylonia, but Darius Hystaspes, who was an Aryan and Zoroastrian in religion, finally killed Smerdis and made himself king of Babylon. But before he was acknowledged king he had to reconquer the Babylonians. By so doing the ancient tradition that Bel of Babylon conferred the legitimate right to rule that part of the world ceased to be acknowledged. Under Nidinta-Bel, who assumed the name Nebuchadrezzar III, the Babylonians regained their independence, but it was of short duration, lasting less than a year.

    LITERATURE.

    History: Rogers, History of Babylonian and Assyrian, 1002; Winckler, History of Babylonian and Assyrian, 1907; King, Sumer and Accad, 1910. Religion: Jastrow, Religion of Babylonian and Assyrian, 1898; Rogers, Religion of Babylonian and Assyrian, Especially in Its Relation to Israel, 1908; Sayce, The Religions of Ancient Egypt and Babylonian, 1903. Literature: Assyrian and Babylonian Literature, in “The World’s Great Books”; edited by R. F. Harper. Relation to the Old Testament: Price, The Monuments and the Old Testament, 1007; Pinches, The Old Testament in the Light of the Records of Assyrian and Babylonian, 1902; Clay, Light on the Old Testament from Babel, 1908; Clay, Amurru, the Home of the Northern Semites, 1909.

    Sources

    A. T. Clay

  • The Full History of Babel Tower

    Babel, Tower of

    This expression does not occur in the Old Testament, but is used popularly for the tower mighdol built by the inhabitants of the world who, traveling in the East, built a city on the Plain of Shinar, with a tower “whose top may reach unto heaven”– an expression which is regarded as meaning “a very high tower.”

    1. General Form of Babylonian Temple-Towers:

    There was a great difference, however, between a Canaanite mighdol or watchtower, and the great Tower at Babylon. The watchtower was simply a high structure, probably without any special shape or form, which depended upon the will of the architect and the nature of the ground upon which it was erected. The Tower of Babel or Babylon, however, was a structure peculiar to Babylonia and Assyria. According to all accounts, and judging from the ruins of the various erections extant in those countries, Babylonian towers were always rectangular, built in stages, and provided with an inclined ascent continued along each side to the top. As religious ceremonies were performed thereon, they were generally surmounted by a chapel in which sacred objects or images were kept.

    2. Their Babylonian Name:

    These erections had, with the Babylonians, a special name: ziqquratu, meaning, apparently, “peak,” or the highest point of a mountain, this word being applied to the mountain-height upon which Ut-napishtim, the Babylonian Noah, offered sacrifices on coming forth from the ark (or ship) when the waters of the great Flood had sufficiently subsided. It has also been thought that they were used as observatories when the Babylonians studied the starry heavens. This is probable, but as these structures were of no great height, it is possible that, in the clear atmosphere of the Babylonian plains, there was no real necessity to go above the surface of the earth when making their observations.

    3. Whereabouts of the Tower of Babel:

    There has been much difference of opinion as to the geographical position of the Tower of Babel. Most writers upon the subject, following the tradition handed down by the Jews and Arabs, have identified it with the great Temple of Nebo in the city of Borsippa, now called the Birs-Nimroud (explained as a corruption of Birj Nimroud, “Tower of Nimrod”). This building, however, notwithstanding its importance, was to all appearance never regarded by the Babylonians as the Tower of Babel, for the very good reason that it was not situated in Babylon, but in Borsippa, which, though called, in later times, “the second Babylon,” was naturally not the original city of that name. The erection regarded by the Babylonians as the great Tower of their ancient city was E-temen-ana-ki, “the Temple of the foundation of heaven and earth,” called by Nabopolassar and Nebuchadrezzar ziqqurat Babili, “the Tower of Babylon”–the world-renowned temple dedicated to Merodach and his consort Zer- panitum, Babylon’s chief deities.

    4. Its Position at Babylon:

    This structure was situated in the southern portion of the city, not far from the right bank of the Euphrates, and according to Weissbach, is now represented by a depression within which is the original rectangular core of unbaked brick. From its shape, the Arabs have made this site Sahan, “the dish.” These remains of the great temple-tower of Babylon, within the memory of men not so very old, towered, even in its ruined state, high above the surrounding plain. The burnt bricks of the ancient Babylonians, however, who “had brick for stone, and slime (bitumen) for mortar” (Ge 11:3), are still good and have a commercial value, so they were all cleared out, with whatever precious material in the way of antiquities they may have contained, to repair, it is said, the banks of the Hindiyeh Canal. Certain records in the shape of conical “cylinders,” however, came into the market, and were acquired by the museums of Europe and America. As these refer to the restoration of the building by Nabopolassar, and the part taken by his sons Nebuchadrezzar and Nabu-sum-lisir in the ceremonies attending the rebuilding, it is very probable that they formed part of the spoils acquired.

    5. A Babylonian Description of the Tower:

    E-temen-ana-ki, to give the Babylonian (Sumerian) name, consisted of six stages built upon a platform, and provided with a sanctuary at the top. A tablet seemingly giving a detailed description of this building was for a time in the hands of the late George Smith in the year 1876. Unfortunately he had not time to give a translation of the document, or to publish the text, but his detailed account of it (Athenaeum, February 12, 1876) is exceedingly interesting. First there was the outer court called the “grand court,” measuring, according to G. Smith’s estimate, 1,156 ft. by 900 ft., and a smaller one, called “the court of Ishtar and Zagaga,” 1,056 ft. by 450 ft. Round the court were six gates admitting to the temples:

    (1) the grand gate;

    (2) the gate of the rising sun (east);

    (3) the great gate;

    (4) the gate of the colossi;

    (5) the gate of the canal; and

    (6) the gate of the tower-view.

    6. The Platform:

    After this came a space or platform apparently walled–a ki-gallu square in form, and measuring 3 ku each way. Its size is doubtful, as the value of the ku is unknown. The sides of this enclosure faced the cardinal points. In its walls were four gates, one on each side, and named from the points toward which they looked. Within this enclosure stood a large building measuring 10 gar (Smith: 200 ft.) each way. Unfortunately, the name of this erection was damaged, so that its nature and use are uncertain.

    7. The Chapels and Shrines:

    Round the base of the Tower were small temples or chapels dedicated to the various gods of the Babylonians. On the East were 16 shrines, the principal of them being dedicated to Nebo and Tasmetu, his spouse; on thee North were two temples dedicated to Ea. (Ae) and Nusku respectively; on the South was a single temple to the two great gods, Anu and Bel (Enlil?). It was on the West, however, that the principal buildings lay–a double house with a court between the wings 35 cubits (Smith: 58 ft.) wide. These two wings were not alike in dimensions, the erection on one side being 100 cubits by 20 (166 ft. by 34 ft.) and on the other 100 cubits by 65 (166 ft. by 108 ft.). In these western chambers stood the couch of the god, and the golden throne mentioned by Herodotus, with other objects of great value. The couch was stated to have measured 9 cubits by 4 (15 ft. by 6 feet 8 inches).

    8. The Tower in Its First Stage:

    In the center of these groups of buildings stood the great Tower in stages, called by the Babylonians “the Tower of Babel” (ziqqurat Babili). The stages decreased from the lowest upward, but each was square in plan. The first or foundation-stage was 15 gar each way by 5 1/2 gar high (300 ft. by 110 ft. high), and seems to have been decorated with the usual double recesses which are a characteristic of Assyr-Bab architecture.

    9. The Remaining Stages:

    The second stage was 13 gar square and 3 gar high (260 ft. by 60 ft.). A term was applied to it which G. Smith did not understand, but he notes that it probably had sloping sides. The stages from the 3rd to the 5th were all of equal height, namely, 1 gar (20 ft.), and were respectively 10 gar (200 ft.), 8 1/3 gar (170 ft.) and 7 gar (140 ft.) square. The dimensions of the 6th stage were omitted, but may be restored in accordance with the others, namely, 5 1/2 gar square (110 ft.) by 1 gar (20 ft.) high.

    10. The Chapel at the Top:

    On this was raised what Smith calls the 7th stage, namely, the upper temple or sanctuary of the god Bel-Merodach, 4 gar long, 3 1/2 gar broad and 2 1/2 gar high (80 ft., 60 ft., and 50 ft., respectively). He does not mention the statue of the god, but it may be supposed that it was set up in this topmost erection. The total height of the tower above its foundation was therefore 15 gar (300 ft.), the same as the breadth of its base. It cannot be said that it was by any means a beautiful erection, but there was probably some symbolism in its measurements, and in appearance it probably resembled (except the decoration) the temple tower of Calah as restored in the frontispiece to Layard’s Monuments of Nineveh, 1st series, in which a step-pyramid with a similarly highbasement stage is shown.

    11. Herodotus’ Description:

    With this detailed description, which is quite what would be expected in a Babylonian account of such a celebrated temple, the description in Herodotus (i.181 ff) agrees. He states that it was a temple square in form, two furlongs (1,213 ft.) each way, in the midst of which was built a solid tower a furlong square (nearly 607 ft.). This, however, must have been the platform, which, with the six stages and the chapel on the top, would make up the total of eight stages of which Herodotus speaks. The ascent by which the top was reached he describes as running “outside round about all the towers”–wording which suggests, though not necessarily, that it was spiral–i.e. one had to walk round the structure 7 times to reach the top. Representations on Babylonian boundary-stones suggest that this view would be correct, though a symmetrical arrangement of inclined paths might have been constructed which would have greatly improved the design. At the middle of the ascent, Herodotus says, there was a stopping-place with seats to rest upon, which rather favors this idea. At the top of the last tower there was a large cell, and in the cell a large couch was laid, well covered; and by it a golden table. There was no image there, nor did any human being spend the night there, except only a woman of the natives of the place chosen by the god, “as say the Chaldeans who are the priests of this god.” These men told Herodotus that the god often came to the cell, and rested upon the couch, “but,” he adds, “I do not believe them.” After mentioning parallels to this at Egyptian Thebes and Patam in Lycia, he goes on to speak of another cell below (that referred to in G. Smith’s tablet) wherein was a great image of Zeus (Bel-Merodach) sitting, with a footstool and a large table, all of gold, and weighing no less than 800 talents. Outside of this cell was an altar to the god, made of gold; and also another altar, whereon full-grown animals were sacrificed, the golden altar being for sucklings only. The Chaldeans also told him that there was, in the precincts of the building, a statue 12 cubits high, and of solid gold. Darius Hystaspis desired to take possession of this valuable object, but did not venture. His son Xerxes, however, was not so considerate of the feelings of the people and the priesthood, for he also killed the priest when he forbade him to meddle with it.

    12. The Builders of the Tower:

    The Bible record does not state who the people were who journeyed in the East and built the city and the Tower. The indefinite “they” might be taken to mean whatever people were there at the time the record was written, and probably presupposes that the reader would certainly know. As the Tower of Babel bears, in the native inscriptions, a Sumero-Akkadian name, it may be supposed that the builders referred to belonged to that race.

    13. Traditions Concerning Its Destruction:

    It is noteworthy that nothing is said in Ge concerning the stoppage of the erection, though they ceased to build the city. Bochart records a Jewish tradition which makes the tower to have been split through to its foundation by fire which fell from heaven–suggested probably by the condition of the tower at “the second Babylon,” i.e. the Birs Nimroud. Another tradition, recorded by Eusebius (Prep. Evang., ix; Chronicon, 13; Syncel. Chron., 44) makes it to have been blown down by the winds; “but when it approached the heavens, the winds assisted the gods, and overturned the work upon its contrivers: and the gods introduced a diversity of tongues among men, who, until that time, had all spoken the same language.”

    14. The Meaning of “Babel”:

    The place where they built the Tower was called Babylon, on account of the confusion of languages. Here we have again the statement as in Ge that the meaning of Babel is “confusion.” This, as is well known, is based upon the purely Hebrew etymological law, which makes balal, “to confuse,” or “mingle,” assume a reduplicate form; but as far as the cuneiform inscriptions, which are now very numerous, give us information, Babel, from baldlu, “to mingle” (the root in question), was an impossibility. But on the Babylonian side, that the rendering of the name as Bab-ili (-ilani), “gate of god” (“of the gods”) was a folk-etymology, is undoubted, notwithstanding that the Sumero-Akkadian form Ka-dingira, with the same meaning, is far from rare. It is noteworthy, however, that one of the forms used by Nebuchadrezzar is Babilam, with the mimmation or “emming,” which is a characteristic of the Babylonian language; moreover, a place-name Babalam also occurs, which may be a still earlier, and perhaps the original, form. Notwithstanding that one would like to see in Babalam, “the place of bringing together,” and in Babilam, “the bringer together,” the termination -am would seem to be an insurmountable difficulty.

    15. The Ultimate Destruction of the Tower:

    That the building of the city would have been stopped when the confusion of tongues took place is natural–the departure of the greater part of the inhabitants made this inevitable. When the population increased again, the building of the city was continued, with the result that Babylon ultimately became the greatest city of then known world. The Tower, notwithstanding what had been said as to its destruction, remained, and when, as happened from time to time, its condition became ruinous, some energetic Babylonian king would restore it. Alexander and Philip of Macedon began clearing away the rubbish to rebuild the great temple of Bclus (Bel-Merodach) connected with it and there is hardly any doubt that the Tower would have been restored likewise, but the untimely death of the former, and the deficient mental caliber of the latter for the ruling of a great empire, put an end to the work. The Tower therefore remained unrepaired–“The tower was exceedingly tall. The third part of it sank down into the ground, a second third was burned down, and the remaining third was standing until the time of the destruction of Babylon” (Rabbi Yehanan, Sanhedhrin, 109, 1).

    16. No Idea of Reaching Heaven:

    Concerning the reputed intention of the builders of the Tower, to carry it as high as the heavens, that, notwithstanding the Talmud and other writings, may be dismissed at once. The intention was to build a very high tower, and that is all that is implied by the words employed. That the Babylonians would have liked their tower to reach heaven may be conceded, and the idea may be taken as symbolical of Babylon’s pride, the more especially as they regarded it as “the house of the foundation of heaven and earth.” Though at present brought lower than the other temple-towers of Babylonia, its renown remains as one of the great glories of that renowned capital. Dedicated as it was to the gods whom they worshipped, and chiefly to the glory of Merodach, the representative of Babylonian monotheism, the Babylonians’ descendants, the native Christians, have no reason to remember this erection of their forefathers with shame, but rather with pride. The rallyingpoint of nations, Babylon, while it existed, was always a great commercial center, and many are the languages which have resounded in the Tower’s vicinity. The confusion of tongues led to the Jewish fiction that the air of Babylon and Borsippa caused forgetfulness, and was therefore injurious to students of the Law, causing them to forget it as the builders of the Tower had of old forgotten their speech (Rashi, Sanhedhrin, 109, 1). This, however, did not prevent the rabbis of Babylon from being more celebrated than those of the Holy Land, and even of Jerusalem itself.

    See also ASTRONOMY

    Source: ISBE Dictionary of the Bible

  • The Secret Place

    The secret place. Extract from Barnes Commentary of the Bible.

    Matthew 6:6

    Enter into thy closet – Every Jewish house had a place for secret devotion. The roofs of their houses were flat places, well adapted for walking, conversation, and meditation. See the notes at Mat 9:2. Professor Hackett (“Illustrations of Scripture,” p. 82) says: “On the roof of the house in which I lodged at Damascus were chambers and rooms along the side and at the corners of the open space or terrace, which constitutes often a sort of upper story. I observed the same thing in connection with other houses.” Over the porch, or entrance of the house, there was frequently a small room of the size of the porch, raised a story above the rest of the house, expressly appropriated for the place of retirement. Here, in secrecy and solitude, the pious Jew might offer his prayers, unseen by any but the Searcher of hearts. To this place, or to some similar place, our Saviour directed his disciples to repair when they wished to hold communion with God. This is the place commonly mentioned in the New Testament as the “upper room,” or the place for secret prayer.

    The meaning of the Saviour is, that there should be some place where we may be in secret – where we may be alone with God. There should be some “place” to which we may resort where no ear will hear us but “His” ear, and no eye can see us but His eye. Unless there is such a place, secret prayer will not be long or strictly maintained. It is often said that we have no such place, and can secure none. We are away from home; we are traveling; we are among strangers; we are in stages and steamboats, and how can we find such places of retirement? I answer, the desire to pray, and the love of prayer, will create such places in abundance. The Saviour had all the difficulties which we can have, but yet he lived in the practice of secret prayer. To be alone, he rose up “a great while before day,” and went into a solitary place and prayed, Mar 1:35. With him a grove, a mountain, a garden, furnished such a place, and, though a traveler, and among strangers, and without a house, he lived in the habit of secret prayer. What excuse can they have for not praying who have a home, and who spend the precious hours of the morning in sleep, and who will practice no self-denial that they may be alone with God? O Christian! thy Saviour would have broken in upon these hours, and would have trod his solitary way to the mountain or the grove that he might pray. He did do it. He did it to pray for thee, too indolent and too unconcerned about thy own salvation and that of the world to practice the least self-denial in order to commune with God! How can religion live thus? How can such a soul be saved?

    The Saviour does not specify the times when we should pray in secret. He does not say how often it should be done. The reasons may have been:

    (1)That he designed that his religion should be “voluntary,” and there is not a better “test” of true piety than a disposition to engage often in secret prayer. He intended to leave it to his people to show attachment to him by coming to God often, and as often as they chose.

    (2)An attempt to specify the times when this should be done would tend to make religion formal and heartless. Mohammed undertook to regulate this, and the consequence is a cold and formal prostration at the appointed hours of prayer all over the land where his religion has spread.

    (3)The periods are so numerous, and the seasons for secret prayer vary so much, that it would nor be easy to fix rules when this should be done.

    Yet without giving rules, where the Saviour has given none, we may suggest the following as times when secret prayer is proper:

    1. In the morning. Nothing can be more appropriate when we have been preserved through the night, and when we are about to enter upon the duties and dangers of another day, than to render to our great Preserver thanks, and to commit ourselves to His fatherly care.

    2. In the evening. When the day has closed, what would be more natural than to offer thanksgiving for the mercies of the day, and to implore forgiveness for what we have said or done amiss? And when about to lie down again to sleep, not knowing but it may be our last sleep and that we may awake in eternity, what more proper than to commend ourselves to the care of Him “who never slumbers nor sleeps?”

    3. We should pray in times of embarrassment and perplexity. Such times occur in every man’s life, and it is then a privilege and a duty to go to God and seek his direction. In the most difficult and embarrassed time of the American Revolution, Washington was seen to retire to a grove in the vicinity of the camp at Valley Forge. Curiosity led a man to observe him, and the father of his country was seen on his knees supplicating the God of hosts in prayer. Who can tell how much the liberty of this nation is owing to the answer to the secret prayer of Washington?

    4. We should pray when we are beset with strong temptations. So the Saviour prayed in the garden of Gethsemane (compare Heb 5:7-8), and so we should pray when we are tempted.

    5. We should pray when the Spirit prompts us to pray; when we feel lust like praying; when nothing can satisfy the soul but prayer. Such times occur in the life of every Christian, (and they are “spring-times” of piety – favorable gales to waft us on to heaven. Prayer to the Christian, at such times, is just as congenial as conversation with a friend when the bosom is filled with love; as the society of father, mother, sister, child is, when the heart glows with attachment; as the strains of sweet music are to the ear best attuned to the love of harmony; as the most exquisite poetry is to the heart enamored with the muses; and as the most delicious banquet is to the hungry.

    Prayer, then, is the element of being – the breath the vital air; and, then, the Christian must and should pray. He is the most eminent Christian who is most favored with such strong emotions urging him to prayer. The heart is then full; the soul is tender; the sun of glory shines with unusual splendor; no cloud intervenes; the Christian rises above the world, and pants for glory. then we may go to be alone with God. We may enter the closet, and breathe forth our warm desires into his ever-open ear, and He who sees in secret will reward us openly.

    In secret – Who is unseen.

    Who seeth in secret – Who sees what the human eye cannot see; who sees the real designs and desires of the heart. Prayer should always be offered, remembering that God is acquainted with our real desires; and that it is those real desires, and not the words of prayer, that he will answer.

  • Five Things Jesus Says to the Gay Community:

    There is a lot of noise on the news and in public forums about gay marriage and traditional values. Everyone has an opinion on what’s right and what’s wrong.
    But what would Jesus say? How would Jesus address a gay man or a lesbian?

    Looking through scripture, Jesus makes His thoughts fairly clear.
    Five Things Jesus Says to the Gay Community:
    1. I love you.
    Amidst the protest signs, yelling crowds and political referendums, the simple message of Jesus’ love for you is often drowned out. Never doubt that Jesus loves you more than you could ever know.
    Jesus doesn’t just love a future version of you; He loves you exactly as you are right now. Jesus’ love for you has no prerequisites or requirements.
    Even if you hate Him, Jesus loves you and wants what is best for you.
    Love is at the core of everything Jesus taught. Unfortunately, His message of love has been conveniently left out by many who would rather make a point than make a difference (John 3:16; 1 John 4:8-10; Romans 5:8; Psalm 86:15).

    2. I understand rejection.
    Jesus knows how it feels to be a social outcast.
    You would think the religious leaders would have been His best friends, but they hated Him. They sought to kill Him and publicly shame Him any chance they had.
    Eventually, the religious elite joined forces with local politicians and murdered Jesus in front of a cheering crowd.
    Rejection hurts.
    Jesus’ own family thought He was out of His mind; you probably understand how that feels. In Jesus’ greatest moment of need, His closest friends deserted Him.
    You may feel rejected by society and the church right now, and that daily pressure takes a toll. Jesus understands.
    His heart always breaks for the rejected and the outcast. Jesus wants to gather you in His arms and let you know that He loves you. You have a home with Jesus, you belong to Him and you are His child.
    Don’t reject Him because He has not rejected you (Isaiah 53:3; Mark 3:20-21; Matthew 26:55-56; Matthew 27; Ezekiel 18:21-23).

    3. I also was tempted.
    Jesus was tempted in every way that we are tempted. He does not shame you or reject you because of your temptations and feelings.
    He faced the same thing when He walked the earth. He never married, and faced daily pressure and temptation in every way imaginable.

    Some like to pretend they are perfect and never face any struggles, but they’re lying. Jesus really was perfect and still faced temptation. He battled the desire to run away from His Father’s plan.
    He understands what you are going through.
    If you read about His life, you will see it was no cake walk, but if you will walk with Him and obey Him, you will find a greater reward than you could ever imagine (Hebrews 4:15-16; Hebrews 2:17-18; Hebrews 12:2-3, 7-11).


    4. I want more for you.
    God created marriage and sex for your enjoyment. Sex was created for one man and one woman within the covenant of marriage, and it has been that way from the beginning. Anything else is sin.
    Sin is not a fun word or a comfortable topic, but Jesus will not stop bringing it to our attention because we will miss out on life with Him if sin is left unaddressed. You may think Jesus is trying to take the one thing you enjoy or spoil your fun, but that is not the case. The reason He clearly defined marriage and sex in the Bible is because He wants what is best for you.

    Ignore the political arguments, the protestors and the yelling. Jesus wants you to trust Him.
    Trust that He has good things in store for you. Trust that He wants what is best for you. Before you decide that what you feel is right, decide if you trust Him (Matthew 19:4-6; Ephesians 3:17-21; 1 Timothy 2:4).

    5. I will be here for you.
    You may disagree with Jesus’ thoughts on sex and marriage, but He will not turn away from you.
    You may enjoy the life you live right now, even if it disagrees with the guidelines He laid out in scripture. Jesus understands your hesitation to make changes. He does not give up on us.

    For a long time now, people have disagreed with Him, yelled at Him and run from Him, and He patiently waits. Jesus is patient with us because He wants you to know Him.
    Jesus wants you to live the life He has planned for you. When you are worn out from doing things your way, He will be here. Turn to Him and ask for help, and He will be there before you can blink.
    There is no permanent joy outside of Jesus.
    Jesus wants what is best for you, and He wants you to experience a full life.
    Jesus is not concerned with winning an argument or forcing you to do something you don’t want to do. Jesus wants you to know that your relationship with Him is better than anything else out there.

    Until you reach that point, He will be here patiently drawing you to Himself (Romans 2:4; 2 Peter 3:9; 1 Peter 5:7; Hosea 14).  

    Article copied from here

  • 3 TIPOS DE FEEDBACK GRANDES LÍDERES SEMPRE DÃO

    3 Tipos de Feedback que os Grandes Líderes Dão

    Por Brian Dodd –

    Um dos elementos mais essenciais do investimento de delegar é o feedback. Ao delegar, feedback efetivo é uma necessidade absoluta para garantir que o delegado e o líder saibam onde estão.


    Crítica construtiva

    O que distingue a crítica construtiva da crítica regular é que seu objetivo principal é ajudar, não castigar.
    Em vez de simplesmente dizer a alguém que seu trabalho é inadequado, diga-lhes especificamente o que precisa melhorar e como lidar com isso. Apontar para coisas que um delegado poderia fazer melhor ajuda a direcionar seu trabalho e melhorar a eficiência. Quando feito direito, a crítica construtiva fará o trabalho do seu delegado mais fácil.
    À medida que seu delegado se familiarizar mais com seu trabalho (e suas expectativas), a necessidade de críticas diminuirá. Mas até então, não se esqueça do elemento “construtivo” da crítica construtiva. Certifique-se de permanecer paciente, útil e respeitoso. Muitas vezes, a forma como você diz algo pode ser mais importante do que o que você diz.
    Feedback positivo
    Mesmo quando construtivo, a crítica por si só não é suficiente. Muitos líderes pensam que a crítica construtiva e o feedback são a mesma coisa. Embora crítica construtiva é um tipo essencial de feedback, é apenas um dos muitos necessários para a liderança forte.
    Quando a crítica é o único tipo de feedback que um líder emprega, os delegados são susceptíveis de se sentir inadequados e desvalorizados. Assim, quando seu delegado faz algo bem feito, certifique-se de dizer-lhes. Os líderes que prontamente louvam e mostram seu apreço são aqueles que promovem os delegados mais dedicados e produtivos.
    Mesmo depois de um delegado ter dominado uma tarefa e consistentemente entregar um trabalho impecável, feedback continua a ser uma parte crítica do processo de delegação. Sem afirmações ocasionais, até mesmo delegados bem estabelecidos podem começar a se sentir dado como certo.
    Se você mostrar aos seus delegados que você valoriza o seu trabalho, eles serão mais propensos a valorizar a sua liderança. As relações profissionais mais eficazes são sempre baseadas no respeito mútuo e no apreço.
    Feedback bidirecional
    Outro erro que muitos líderes fazem é tratar o feedback como uma rua unidirecional. Os melhores líderes convidam seus delegados a fornecer feedback, e não apenas recebê-lo. Se os delegados hesitam em fazê-lo sem ser solicitado, faça-lhes perguntas diretamente:
    “Estou sendo claro o suficiente ao dar atribuições?”
    “Suas necessidades profissionais estão sendo atendidas?”
    “Existe algo que eu possa fazer para melhorar nossa relação de trabalho?”
    Mesmo que um delegado não tenha nada além de boas coisas para dizer, o convite para compartilhar é significativo em si mesmo. Isso mostra que você valoriza o relacionamento e vê seu delegado como um colaborador … não é um objeto.
    O feedback é a ferramenta mais eficaz que um líder tem para orientar e motivar sua equipe. E para obter o máximo do ato de delegar, é imperativo usá-lo efetivamente – onde a crítica sempre procura ajudar, e o elogio nunca se torna escasso.
    Fonte: http://churchleaders.com/pastors/pastor-articles/304128-3-types-feedback-great-leaders-give-brian-dodd.html

  • O RETRATO DE UM PROFETA POR LEONARD HAVENHILL

    O profeta em seus dias é plenamente aceito por Deus e totalmente rejeitado pelos homens.     

    Anos atrás, o Dr. Gregory Mantle estava certo quando disse: “Ninguém pode ser plenamente aceito até ser totalmente rejeitado”. O profeta do Senhor está ciente dessas duas experiências. Eles são sua “marca”.      

    O grupo que é desafiado pelo profeta, porque eles são presunçosos e confortavelmente isolados de um mundo em perigo na sua teologia quente, mas não testada, não votarão no profeta parã o “Homem do ano” quando o mesmo se refere a eles como a sinagoga de Satanás!   

    O profeta vem mostrar o que está perturbado. Seu trabalho é chamar à linha aqueles que estão fora de linha! Ele é impopular porque se opõe ao popular na moralidade e na espiritualidade. Em um dia de políticos sem rosto e pregadores sem voz, não há uma necessidade nacional mais urgente do que nós clamarmos a Deus por um profeta! A função do profeta, como Austin-Sparks disse uma vez, “quase sempre foi a de recuperação”.      

    O profeta é o detetive de Deus em busca de um tesouro perdido. O grau de sua eficácia é determinado por sua medida de impopularidade. Se vender não é conhecido para ele.      

    Ele não tem etiquetas de preço.      

    Ele é totalmente “de outro mundo”.      

    Ele é inquestionavelmente controverso e imperdoávelmente hostil.      

    Ele marcha em outra bateria!      

    Ele respira o ar rarefeito de inspiração (divina = revelação).      

    Ele é um “vidente” que vem para liderar o cego.      

    Ele vive nas alturas com Deus e quando entra no vale ele diz: “assim diz o Senhor.”      

    Ele compartilha parte da presciência de Deus e, portanto, está ciente de       Julgamento iminente.      

    Ele vive em “esplêndido isolamento”.      

    Ele é direto e sincero, mas não reivindica o direito de primogenitura.      

    Sua mensagem é “arrepender-se, reconciliar-se com Deus ou então …!”      

    Suas profecias são evitadas.     

    Sua verdade traz tormento, mas sua voz nunca é nula.      

    Ele é o vilão de hoje e o herói de amanhã.      

    Ele é excomungado enquanto vivo e exaltado quando morto!      

    Ele é desonrado com epítetos ao respirar e honrado com Epitáfios quando morto.      

    Ele é um mestre na escola para nos levar a Cristo, mas poucos “passam” em sua classe.      

    Ele não é amigável enquanto vive mas se torna famoso quando morre.      

    Ele come diariamente o pão da aflição enquanto ministra, mas alimenta o Pão da Vida para aqueles que escutam.      

    Ele caminha perante os homens por dias, enquanto andou diante de Deus por anos.      

    Ele é um flagelo para a nação antes de ser flagelado pela nação.      

    Ele anuncia, pronuncia e denuncia!      

    Ele tem um coração como um vulcão e suas palavras são como fogo.      

    Ele fala com os homens sobre Deus.      

    Ele carrega a lâmpada da verdade entre os hereges enquanto ele é satirizado pelos homens.      

    Ele enfrenta Deus antes de enfrentar os homens, mas ele não tem pretensões.      

    Ele se esconde com Deus no lugar secreto, mas não tem nada a esconder.      

    Ele é naturalmente sensível, mas sobrenaturalmente espiritual.      

    Ele tem paixão, propósito e combatividade.      

    Ele é ordenado por Deus, mas desprezado pelos homens.      

    Nossa necessidade nacional a esta hora não é que o dinheiro recupere sua força, ou a política, ou que encontremos a resposta para o problema da ecologia. Precisamos de um profeta enviado por Deus!      

    Estou bombardeado com conversas ou cartas sobre a próxima escassez em nossa vida nacional: pão, combustível, energia.  

    Eles sentem que os “sete anos de abundância” acabaram para nós. Os “sete anos de fome” estão à frente. Mas a maior fome de todas nesta nação neste momento é de Amós 8:11: Eis que vêm os dias, diz o Senhor Deus, em que enviarei fome sobre a terra; não fome de pão, nem sede de água, mas de ouvir as palavras do Senhor.      

    Milhões foram gastos em evangelismo nos últimos vinte e cinco anos. Centenas de mensagens do evangelho varrem o ar sobre a nação todos os dias. Cruzadas foram realizadas; As reuniões de cura fizeram uma contribuição vital. Os apêlos ao altar já não sacodem a nação. 

    Nós temos muitos organizadores. Os pregadores hábeis abundam. Milhões de organizações cristãs com muito dinheiro estão estabelecidas na nação. 

    MAS onde, oh onde, está o profeta? Onde estão os homens incandescentes frescos do lugar santo? Onde está o Moisés a pleitear em jejum diante da santidade do Senhor por nossa moralidade mofada, nossa perfídia política e espiritualidade azeda e doente?      

    OS HOMENS DE DEUS ESTÃO ESCONDIDOS ATÉ O DIA DE SUA MOSTRA. Eles virão. O profeta é violado durante seu ministério, mas é justificado pela história.      

    Há um vácuo terrível no cristianismo evangélico hoje. A pessoa desaparecida em nossas fileiras é o profeta. O homem com uma terrível sinceridade. O homem totalmente do outro mundo. O homem rejeitado por outros homens, mesmo outros homens bons, porque o consideram demasiado austero, demasiado severamente cometido, demasiado negativo e uninsociável.      

    Seja ele tão simples como João Batista. Deixe-o por uma temporada ser uma voz que chora no deserto da teologia moderna e Estagnada “igreja.”      

    Que ele seja tão altruísta quanto Paulo, o apóstolo.      

    Deixe-o, também, dizer e viver, “Esta única coisa que eu faço.”      

    Que ele rejeite os favores eclesiásticos.      

    Deixe ele se humilhar, não buscar os próprios interesses, não se projeter, não se justificar, não se auto glorificar, não se auto promover.      

    Que ele não diga nada que atraia os homens para si mesmo, mas apenas o que moverá Homens para Deus.      

    Que ele venha diariamente da sala do trono de um Deus santo, o lugar onde ele recebe a ordem do dia.      

    Deixe-o, sob Deus, inutilizar os ouvidos dos milhões que são surdos. Deixe-o chorar com uma voz que este século não ouviu porque ele viu uma visão que nenhum homem neste século viu. 

    Deus nos envie estes Moisés para nos guiar do Deserto do materialismo grosseiro, onde as cascavéis da luxúria nos mordem e onde homens totalmente cegos espiritualmente nos conduzem a um Armagedom sempre próximo.

    Deus tenha piedade! Envie-nos PROFETAS!

    Fonte: http://www.ravenhill.org/prophet.htm

    Tradução: Yury Gaudard

  • 3 perguntas um falso crente não responderá

    Tim Keller oferece um grupo de “perguntas projetadas para acordar cristãos dormindo”. Suas perguntas focam três marcas de um relacionamento crescente com Deus.

    Estas perguntas tornariam o material de um pequeno grupo bom ou poderiam também ser usadas quando mentoring alguém one-on-one.
    Evidência da presença de Deus em sua vida
    Quão real Deus tem sido esta semana para o seu coração?
    Quão clara e viva é a sua garantia e certeza do perdão de Deus e do seu amor paternal. Até que ponto isso é real para você agora?

    Você está tendo alguma estação particular de doce prazer na presença de Deus? Você realmente sente Sua presença em sua vida? Você realmente sente o amor Dele?

    Evidência da Escritura mudando você
    A palavra se Deus tem sido viva e eficaz em sua vida?

    Você está achando certas promessas bíblicas extremamente preciosas e encorajadoras? Quais?

    Você está encontrando Deus chamando você ou desafiando você a algo através da palavra, de que maneiras?

    Evidência de uma crescente apreciação pela misericórdia de Deus
    Você está encontrando a graça de Deus mais gloriosa e se movendo agora do que você tem no passado?
    Você está consciente de um crescente sentimento do mal do seu coração, e em resposta, uma crescente dependência e apreensão da preciosidade da misericórdia de Deus?

  • Novidades 

    Dê uma olhada no link!!! Novidades sobre nós! 

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Yury Gaudard

A believer's heart is the altar for intimacy with Jesus.

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