Dictionary: Trust
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Teach the Text
C. Hassell Bullock
... ) b. Invitation to learn the “fear of the Lord” and the Lord’s attentive care of the righteous (34:11–20) i. Learning the fear of the Lord (34:11–14) ii. The Lord’s attentive care of the righteous (34:15–18) iii. The Lord’s protection of the righteous (34:19–20) c. Final contrast between evil’s power to slay the wicked and God’s will to deliver the righteous (34:21–22) Historical and Cultural Background The title alludes to an event recorded in 1 Samuel 21:10–15, when David feigned ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... but also an intimate understanding of moral rectitude (2:9; cf. 1:3). Since wisdom now pervades the command center of one’s life and acquiring knowledge has become an enjoyable task, personal discretion assumes the role previously carried out by God (2:8) of protecting the youth from the dangers brought about by wrong choices and missteps (2:11). Divine wisdom will help the youth get on the right path and stay on it. Verses 12–19 then describe the two primary threats to the moral integrity of the youth ...

Understanding Series
W.H. Bellinger, Jr.
... almost magical. Such customs were ancient. Here the procedure is brought under divine and priestly auspices to deal with what is perceived to be an issue in this community, the suspicion of adultery when there is no public evidence. The concern is to protect the community from hidden impurity and strife in relationships. In this section, the wife is clearly subject to the husband and priest. The husband faces no consequences even if his accusations are false, and the wife can be accused “if feelings of ...

Understanding Series
W.H. Bellinger, Jr.
... s perverting justice. Still, the judicial system was dependent on witnesses telling the truth. A ransom is not allowed to commute a death sentence for murder or to commute exile to a city of refuge. The exile to the place of asylum serves as both protection and punishment. Verses 33–34 indicate why murder is such a serious crime and also reveal the primary motivation of the Priestly tradents. Bloodshed pollutes the land. Atonement can be made only with the blood of the one who shed it. Notice that it is ...

Understanding Series
Mary J. Evans
... with David, accepting unquestioningly his innocence, the rightness of his claim to the throne of Israel, and the fact that God is behind him, who fights the LORD’s battles. The details and clarity of her speech indicate that Abigail is not simply protecting the farm staff from being harmed but also expressing her own firmly held opinions. Her final request, that when he is in control he should remember her, parallels Saul’s request in the previous chapter (24:21). David has an opportunity to grant ...

Understanding Series
Gerald H. Wilson
... is of a once mighty tree shattered by lightning (Ps. 105:32–33) or broken down by a strong wind (Ps. 29; Job 19:10). The destruction of trees is often a metaphor for divine judgment (Isa. 10:28; Ezek. 17:24; Dan. 4). Like trees unable to protect themselves from the destructive power of the storm, so Job desires these wicked to be broken down in divine judgment. 24:21 They prey on the barren and childless woman. The passage turns rather abruptly from the expected end of the wicked to their evil deeds. The ...

Understanding Series
Craig C. Broyles
... ’s structure and thematic development, we should note that the requests (Hb. imperfect) that the NIV renders as imperatives should be rendered as wishes: “may you lead me” (v. 2), “may I dwell” (v. 4), “may you increase” (v. 6), and “may your love and faithfulness protect him” (v. 7). Psalm 61 is thus composed of three sections (vv. 1–3, 4–5, 6–8), each containing a request expressed as a wish (vv. 2, 4, 6–7) and a supporting motivation (introduced by for, vv. 3, 5, or then, v. 8 ...

Understanding Series
William Nelson
... to succeed him, although his wife, Roxane, was pregnant at the time. She gave birth to a son following Alexander’s death, but sadly the child did not stand much chance of survival. He was used as a pawn by generals pretending to protect him, until it was no longer necessary or advantageous. Then he was murdered, as were Roxane; Alexander’s mentally handicapped half-brother, Philip Arrhidaeus; and Herakles, who claimed to be Alexander’s illegitimate son. In the intrigues for power after the great ...

Understanding Series
W.H. Bellinger, Jr.
... almost magical. Such customs were ancient. Here the procedure is brought under divine and priestly auspices to deal with what is perceived to be an issue in this community, the suspicion of adultery when there is no public evidence. The concern is to protect the community from hidden impurity and strife in relationships. In this section, the wife is clearly subject to the husband and priest. The husband faces no consequences even if his accusations are false, and the wife can be accused “if feelings of ...

Understanding Series
W.H. Bellinger, Jr.
... almost magical. Such customs were ancient. Here the procedure is brought under divine and priestly auspices to deal with what is perceived to be an issue in this community, the suspicion of adultery when there is no public evidence. The concern is to protect the community from hidden impurity and strife in relationships. In this section, the wife is clearly subject to the husband and priest. The husband faces no consequences even if his accusations are false, and the wife can be accused “if feelings of ...

Numbers 35:6-34
Understanding Series
W.H. Bellinger, Jr.
... s perverting justice. Still, the judicial system was dependent on witnesses telling the truth. A ransom is not allowed to commute a death sentence for murder or to commute exile to a city of refuge. The exile to the place of asylum serves as both protection and punishment. Verses 33–34 indicate why murder is such a serious crime and also reveal the primary motivation of the Priestly tradents. Bloodshed pollutes the land. Atonement can be made only with the blood of the one who shed it. Notice that it is ...

Genesis 3:1-24
Understanding Series
John E. Hartley
... cut off penalty” attached to several cultic laws (Genesis 1–15, p. 74; e.g., Lev. 20:17–18). That penalty deprived a person of access to the tabernacle, God’s presence, and community support. In antiquity, whoever was cut off from the support and protection of the community faced a bleak future and mortal danger. Expulsion from the garden was therefore a type of death penalty, underscored here by the loss of access to the tree of life (3:22). Third, the couple lost access to the abundant supply of ...

Genesis 31:22-55
Understanding Series
John E. Hartley
... . The report of this covenant between Laban and Jacob is difficult to unravel because it is hard to sort out the duplicate details: two witnesses, two place names, two names for God, two meals, and two purposes, that is, a guarantee of Jacob’s protecting the status of Laban’s daughters in his house and a boundary marker. These elements in pairs may be understood either as the conflation of two sources or as a rhetorical style for emphasis. Sarna (Genesis, p. 221) points out that the twofold nature of ...

Understanding Series
James K. Bruckner
... Yahweh controls the creation, using natural phenomena in supernatural ways. Yahweh worked among them and with individuals (e.g., Moses and Aaron) to accomplish these purposes. Yahweh distinguished between those who were under the pharaoh’s protection and those who were under the Lord’s protection. God did not liberate them quickly, but used strategies that worked with the creation and the political structures that were in place. 10:1–2 “Go to Pharaoh, for I have hardened his heart and the hearts ...

Understanding Series
James K. Bruckner
... very beginning Israel needed to remember that it had no monopoly on God’s compassion. God followed through on this threat to “kill you with the sword” when using Assyria and Babylon to attack Israel in the eighth and sixth centuries B.C. Two case laws also specifically protected poor debtors (vv. 25–27; see also Lev. 25:35–38; Deut. 23:19–20; 24:10–13). “If you lend money to one of my people among you who is needy, do not be like a moneylender; charge him no interest.” Again the address is ...

Understanding Series
Christopher J. H. Wright
... first and fifth of the laws both require actions that involve removing pollution from the sight of God and from the land. 21:15–17 The right of the firstborn son. The next two laws balance each other. The first protects a son from an unfair father; the second protects parents from an unruly son. Together they illustrate the balance of rights and responsibilities that exist in a family, and even more so, in wider society. Polygamy was permitted in Israelite society but was probably not very common. It was ...

Deuteronomy 33:1-29
Understanding Series
Christopher J. H. Wright
... while they are defended by the power of such a king (Num. 23:21–23). Finally, in Deuteronomy 33:2–5 it is linked with Yahweh’s role as the giver of Israel’s laws (cf. Isa. 33:22 for the same combination of roles). Defeat of enemies, protection and security, good laws—these are the things expected of kings and these are the things Yahweh as the true king provides for Israel. 33:6–25 The opening stanza has thus set the context in which the blessings on the tribes appropriately follow. The theme of ...

Understanding Series
Iain W. Provan
... read the sequel in verse 37. Having failed to understand from his experience that the LORD is God, Sennacherib finds himself one day in the temple of his god. He had thought that Hezekiah’s God could not protect the Judean; now he finds that it is he who lacks protection, as he is murdered by his sons. The prophecies of Isaiah have been fulfilled. Jerusalem has been saved. “David” has once more overcome “Goliath.” Additional Notes 18:17 The aqueduct of the Upper Pool: This aqueduct, of uncertain ...

2 Kings 19:14-19
Understanding Series
Iain W. Provan
... read the sequel in verse 37. Having failed to understand from his experience that the LORD is God, Sennacherib finds himself one day in the temple of his god. He had thought that Hezekiah’s God could not protect the Judean; now he finds that it is he who lacks protection, as he is murdered by his sons. The prophecies of Isaiah have been fulfilled. Jerusalem has been saved. “David” has once more overcome “Goliath.” Additional Notes 18:17 The aqueduct of the Upper Pool: This aqueduct, of uncertain ...

Understanding Series
Iain W. Provan
... read the sequel in verse 37. Having failed to understand from his experience that the LORD is God, Sennacherib finds himself one day in the temple of his god. He had thought that Hezekiah’s God could not protect the Judean; now he finds that it is he who lacks protection, as he is murdered by his sons. The prophecies of Isaiah have been fulfilled. Jerusalem has been saved. “David” has once more overcome “Goliath.” Additional Notes 18:17 The aqueduct of the Upper Pool: This aqueduct, of uncertain ...

Understanding Series
John Goldingay
... 7 and in 14:28. So chapter 32 begins with a positive statement about the way things will one day be. King and government will exercise just judgment (v. 1, see on 1:15b–20) and thus fulfill their vocation to be protectors to those who need protection (v. 2). There are nice verbal links with what has preceded. The image of a rock recurs (cf. 31:9, NIV “stronghold”). The strength that Judah and Assyria had both needed to look for, the people who are in need of shelter will now find. The fearsomeness ...

John 10:11-18
Sermon
John Jamison
... lost any sheep, he would have to pay for them out of his reward. More importantly, the shepherd who lost sheep would soon be seen as untrustworthy and would quickly find himself without any owners willing to hire him. Protecting the sheep was more than just a financial issue for the shepherd. The shepherd who did not protect his flock was not a shepherd. He might be considered a hired hand, someone who was paid to do something and who may or may not do it very well. But if he truly wanted to be a shepherd ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... a beautiful, orderly, fruitful world for Adam and Eve to enjoy. In Genesis 2:15, we read that God had one rule, one law to protect Adam and Eve in this perfect new world: “The Lord God took the man and put him in the Garden of Eden to work it ... a close, fruitful relationship with God and with each other. They were created to live in freedom, so long as they lived under the protection of God’s one law. But Adam and Eve did not trust God enough to honor that relationship. By disobeying the one law given ...

Sermon
Lori Wagner
... jars. Although the alabaster jar has an exotic story, there is also no particular reason to believe that the woman from the city was of another faith other than Jewish. Was she however succumbing to folk beliefs in wanting to protect the messiah from harm by slathering Jesus in protective perfumed ointment? Is her sin one of idolatry? Or desecration of the faith? Believing in charms? Or was she simply a Jewish woman who had many husbands, or lied with a forked tongue? There’s no way of knowing. Alabaster ...

Luke 6:12-16, Luke 9:1-9, Luke 10:1-24
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... ’s Witness to Jesus’ Choosing of Apostles (6:12-6:16 and 9:1-9:6 and 10:1-10:24) Minor Text The Call of Moses (Exodus 4) Psalm 1: The Chaff of Sin Psalm 35: Chaff Before the Wind Psalm 91: God’s Protection Psalm 140: God’s Protection Psalm 121: God’s Protection The Call of Jeremiah (Jeremiah 1) Isaiah’s Dream (6) Isaiah’s Warning to the False Prophets in Jerusalem (28) Zephaniah’s Warning (2) Matthew’s Witness to Jesus’ Choosing of Apostles (9:35-11:1 and 11:2-12:8) Mark’s Witness to ...

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