Dictionary: Hope
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Understanding Series
John Goldingay
... where the chapter began. While paralleling 51:17, the opening exhortation (v. 1) also reworks it. The command is now “Get up and shine out with light” not “Wake up and get up.” The Preacher has a different way of portraying what Yahweh intends, to which a different response is appropriate. The difference arises from a difference in circumstances. In Babylon in the 540s B.C. people were still under the domination of the power that had humiliated them, and they still had no alternative to living as ...

Ezekiel 15:1-8, Ezekiel 16:1-63, Ezekiel 17:1-24
Understanding Series
Steven Tuell
... . 3:10; Rev. 3:3; 16:15), and Jesus in his parables describes God as an unjust judge (Luke 18:1–8) and a cruel master (Matt. 25:14–30//Luke 19:11–27). These of course are not literal descriptions either, but metaphors intended to underline some aspect of truth. In the same way Ezekiel seeks, through deliberately shocking and offensive imagery, to confront his audience with truths they do not want to face. The point of Ezekiel’s disturbing parable is Jerusalem’s radical corruption and faithlessness ...

Ezekiel 25:1-7, Ezekiel 25:8-11, Ezekiel 25:12-14, Ezekiel 25:15-17
Understanding Series
Steven Tuell
... , it is doubtful that the prophets meant for foreigners to read these words, or that any foreign king ever saw them. For though the prophets directed these oracles against other nations, their intended audience was the people of Israel—just as, in our own day, politicians often intend their pronouncements about international affairs for domestic consumption. So, when Amos pronounces the judgment of the Lord upon the nations surrounding Israel (Amos 1:3–2:5), those pronouncements concerning Israel’s ...

Ezekiel 26:1-21, Ezekiel 27:1-36, Ezekiel 28:1-19, Ezekiel 28:20-26
Understanding Series
Steven Tuell
... editing of the book, this date probably is as well. The eleventh year of Ezekiel’s exile was the year that Jerusalem fell and the editors intend for us to read the Tyre material in light of that tragedy. As in the first oracle in this section of the book against Ammon, ... ., however, the word is plural: Katzenstein translates, “throned above your harbors” (History of Tyre, p. 154). Ezekiel probably intended the plural here, as a reference to Tyre’s two harbors: the natural harbor on the north side of ...

Ezekiel 34:1-31, Ezekiel 35:1-15, Ezekiel 36:1-38, Ezekiel 37:1-14, Ezekiel 37:15-28
Understanding Series
Steven Tuell
... Num. 25:12). God’s new covenant with Israel will be eternal and unbreakable, unlike the first (see the discussion of 16:59–63). The imagery of the restoration in verses 25–31 is likewise priestly, drawn from the promises in the Holiness Code regarding the life God intends for Israel in the land (Lev. 26:3–13; Odell, Ezekiel, p. 429). So, God will banish wild beasts from the land, so that one may lie down anywhere, even in the desert or in the forests, and be safe (vv. 25, 28; compare Lev. 26:6, and ...

Teach the Text
Jeannine K. Brown
... responds to the Canaanite woman’s “Lord, help me!” with a picture of the Jews as the children eating at a table and Gentiles as the dogs waiting to catch a dropped morsel. He makes the point that it would not be right to throw the bread intended for the children to the dogs. It is difficult to attribute these words to Jesus if we view him as one who agrees to every request for healing that comes to him. It seems significant that both occasions in Matthew where Jesus initially demurs to heal involve a ...

Mark 1:40-45, Mark 1:35-39, Mark 1:29-34
Teach the Text
Grant R. Osborne
... about Jesus because of his miracles and authoritative teaching. But sadly, many refused to follow him. In his book Mere Christianity, C. S. Lewis argues that given the claims that Jesus made about himself, he was either a liar (“the Devil himself”; his claims were intended to deceive and lead astray), a lunatic (his claims were false, but he believed them), or Lord (“this man was, and is, the Son of God”).6If the claims of Jesus and the Bible are true, then he is Lord and demands our full commitment ...

Mark 2:23-3:6, Mark 2:18-22
Teach the Text
Grant R. Osborne
... If this is true, even more may an oral tradition be set aside for the Messiah himself, the Son of God. 2:27  The Sabbath was made for man. God’s rest, the Sabbath, was meant to benefit and strengthen God’s people. The ordaining of the Sabbath was never intended for the purpose of people keeping Sabbath regulations and precepts. It was a gift from God and so was to serve humankind, not to become the master over humankind. For us, it is meant to be a day of rest and worship, not a source of rules. 2:28 ...

Teach the Text
Grant R. Osborne
... respond to his claims.5The “Son of David” (10:47–48) is truly the Royal Messiah. 2. Jesus is the humble Messiah. Although Mark does not cite Zechariah 9:9 (cf. Matt. 21:5; John 12:15), he does show in Jesus’s extensive preparations that he intended the people to see the gentle, humble Messiah who enters the holy city on a donkey (the symbol of peace), not a warhorse. Jesus has come to bring peace through suffering, to give himself as a “ransom” (10:45b) and to have his “blood . . . poured out ...

Teach the Text
Grant R. Osborne
... Text 1. Fruitfulness is a divine mandate. This is the theme in Jesus’s parable in John 15:1–8. If the branches of the vine wither and stop bearing fruit, they will be “picked up, thrown in the fire and burned” by God (15:6). This is intended as a warning for all of us. As Paul says, salvation comes only by “grace through faith,” not works (Eph. 2:8–9). But as James adds, true salvation must always produce works (= fruit) (James 2:14–26). So Jesus deliberately chooses a fig tree out of season ...

Luke 13:10-17, Luke 13:1-9
Teach the Text
R.T. France
... 1–16. Interpretive Insights 13:1  Galileans whose blood Pilate had mixed with their sacrifices. Presumably, this is a vivid way of describing an act of violence targeted at a group of Galilean worshipers offering sacrifices in the temple. The report may have been intended as a warning to Jesus and his disciples as a group of Galileans bound for Jerusalem: it could be a dangerous place to be identified as a Galilean. 13:2  worse sinners than all other Galileans. The principle is more general, as may be ...

Luke 16:16-18, Luke 16:1-15
Teach the Text
R.T. France
... in 14:23. This is an obscure saying, but one that in some way underlines the climactic period of history inaugurated by John’s mission. 16:17  It is easier for heaven and earth to disappear. This is another independent saying (cf. Matt. 5:18), which is perhaps intended here to balance the sense of a new beginning in 16:16. The law and the prophets are being fulfilled in the kingdom of God, but that does not mean that they are dispensable. Matthew 5:17–20 and especially the examples that follow in 5:21 ...

Teach the Text
R.T. France
... of the two Synoptic versions of this parable on its own terms. But in your teaching it may be helpful to read both side by side, and to identify the differences, so as to highlight more clearly what is distinctive to Luke’s version. What does he intend us to conclude from the fact that all slaves receive the same amount but their results differ? Or from the different levels of reward given to the two successful slaves? The way the slaves are treated also raises the issue of fairness and inequality. Are we ...

Luke 20:9-19, Luke 20:1-8
Teach the Text
R.T. France
... at Jesus’s baptism (3:22) ensures that Luke’s reader cannot miss the reference to God sending his son Jesus as his last appeal to rebellious Israel. In this context, where the son is about to be killed, there is also a poignant echo of Abraham’s intended sacrifice of Isaac (Gen. 22:2). 20:14  the inheritance will be ours. It is most unlikely that in reality the murder of the owner’s son would allow the tenants to take possession as long as the owner himself was still alive (as indeed the sequel in ...

Luke 20:27-40, Luke 20:20-26
Teach the Text
R.T. France
... portrait were available for daily commerce. By getting his questioners to produce a denarius, Jesus exposed their supposed patriotism as phony: they themselves were using the emperor’s coinage, so they had no grounds for refusing to pay his tax. Whose image? The word may be intended to suggest an analogy with the “image of God” in Genesis 1:27: as the coin belongs to Caesar, so we belong to God. 20:25  give back to Caesar what is Caesar’s, and to God what is God’s. This answer cleverly avoids a ...

Luke 22:7-38, Luke 22:1-6
Teach the Text
R.T. France
... in this setting, and his explanatory words over the bread and wine, uttered at a Passover meal, will draw on the Passover symbolism of redemption. All this, we learn from these verses, was not a matter of happy coincidence, but of Jesus’s deliberate planning. He intended his saving death to be seen as the focus of a new exodus (cf. 9:31: “departure,” exodos), and so the inauguration of a new basis for the people of God. Israel is to be reborn. Teaching the Text These verses are preliminary to the ...

Luke 22:66--23:25
Teach the Text
R.T. France
... the difference? Who made up these two different crowds? See above on 19:37. Try to disentangle the various vested interests of different groups in their response to Jesus. 2. Discuss what this scene (in the light of all that has led up to it) may be intended to convey concerning who is now the true Israel, and what this may mean for the future of Israel in relation to the coming kingdom of God. Luke does not include the chilling “self-incrimination” of the Jerusalem crowd (Matt. 27:24–25), but how far ...

Teach the Text
C. Marvin Pate
... on the meaning of nomos (“law” or “principle”) in 3:27–31 (v. 27 [2x], v. 28, v. 31 [2x]). Some think that “law” in verses 27, 28, 31 refers to the law of Moses.3Others think that two different nuances of law are intended: “law of Moses” (v. 27 [the first instance], v. 28, v. 31 [both times]) and “principle” (v. 27 [the second occurrence]).4I suggest instead that nomos, both times in 3:27, means “principle,” but two different principles: the principle of obeying the works of the ...

Teach the Text
C. Marvin Pate
... and consequently rejected the only way to God’s righteousness: faith in Jesus Christ. This is why the majority of Jews are rejecting Christ, while many Gentiles are accepting him. Paul’s long-range explanation of the problem of Israel’s unbelief is that God intends that the Gentiles’ acceptance of Israel’s Messiah will make the Jews jealous and convert them at the end of history (see chap. 11). Second, such a mass conversion of the Gentiles to Christ is the obedience of faith (recall 1:5), the end ...

Teach the Text
C. Marvin Pate
... faith to exercise them.2Other than the opening participle in 12:6, “having” (echontes), there is no verb in 12:6–8, which is reflected in the NRSV translation, whereas the NIV supplies the likely intended verbs (“prophesy,” “serve,” “teach,” etc.). Seven gifts are listed, with no intended symbolism accompanying that number here. Whoever has the gift of prophesy (proph?teia) should use it according to the faith given by God (12:6b). Prophecy was treasured in the early church (1 Cor. 12 ...

Teach the Text
Preben Vang
... out to your listeners that before the player can do so, he or she must also determine what the game even is and who defines its rules. So often, we are taking the cards God deals us in his providence and using them to play a game he never intended. We need to saturate our minds with the Bible and stay connected with his community, the church, in order to understand the cards God deals us and how to play them in a way that pleases and glorifies him. The gospel must totally transform our understanding of life ...

1 Corinthians 13:1-13
Teach the Text
Preben Vang
... see him face-to-face (13:12; cf. Rev. 22:4); love is the very essence and expression of God’s presence and therefore will never end.[13] When the perfect comes, in other words, the imperfections sin brings to love will vanish, and the purity of the relationship God intended from the beginning will be fully restored (John 17:23; Col. 3:14–15; 1 John 4:17–19; Rev. 21:3–4; cf. Isa. 65:19–25). At that time gifts will cease to have purpose and will be abolished, along with all God’s adversaries (1:28 ...

Teach the Text
Preben Vang
... vibrant, undying life. Death is the enemy of God’s purposes for us and must be killed by Jesus’s resurrection. Bible: Revelation 20:13–15. Revelation clearly shows (in agreement with 1 Cor. 15:54–57) that death is our enemy and that Jesus intends to defeat it forever. Death is not a natural part of life—it destroys what God gave and must be eradicated. This is why the bodily resurrection is so essential—death is not simply a passage from one state (embodied spirit) to another (disembodied spirit ...

Teach the Text
J. Scott Duvall
... sitting on a couch!” When we lose focus on the central message of Scripture about the end times (to endure in faithfulness to Jesus), we drift off course. Soon, things that are really not priorities can dominate our field of vision. At best, the truth intended to bring us hope and comfort becomes obscured and lost. At worst, we drift into vain speculations and take our eyes off our true mission. God promises blessing for those who know and live out his Word. Bible: Psalm 1 can provide illustrations of the ...

Numbers 22:21-41
Teach the Text
Joe M. Sprinkle
... NASB, NRSV). The participle holek is plausibly rendered dynamically, “was going.” It was not the fact that Balaam goes—Yahweh has already permitted that—but rather what happens along the journey that arouses God’s anger. That is, God reads Balaam’s mind, perceiving that Balaam intends to curse Israel despite God’s statement that Israel is instead to be blessed (see Num. 22:12). I propose a different solution that sees flashback in the story. Balaam is condemned for going in verse 22 because he ...

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