Dictionary: Trust
Showing 1526 to 1550 of 1901 results

Understanding Series
Robert H. Mounce
... in declaring that the sins of the paralyzed man were forgiven, was blaspheming (v. 3). The only alternative would be that Jesus was a divine being, and that was a conclusion they chose not to accept. As the official exponents of the law it was their duty to be on the lookout for heretical teaching. The punishment for blasphemy was stoning (m. Sanh. 7.4). Jesus perceived their inward reasoning and proposed a test. Since they accepted the premise that sickness was the result of sin, if a person had the power ...

Understanding Series
Robert H. Mounce
... important than religious prescriptions. As Messiah, Jesus has the authority to override Sabbath ordinances when appropriate. 12:9–14 Jesus has just declared that the moral obligation to show kindness takes precedence over the ceremonial responsibility to fulfill ritual duties (vv. 1–8). The incident that follows demonstrates the same ethical priority. Jesus moves on from there and enters a synagogue. Their synagogue refers to the synagogue of the Pharisees (cf. v. 2). It does not reveal a later period ...

Understanding Series
Larry W. Hurtado
... anticipation interprets her gift in the context of what is to come. It is not her foreknowledge of his coming death but her complete attention to him that provided the actual basis for Jesus’ commendation of her. While the Twelve are concerned with the duties of the Feast, such as the required gift to the poor (v. 5), and have demonstrated a preoccupation with their own coming rewards (e.g., 9:28; 10:35–45), the woman concerns herself solely with giving honor to Jesus. It is this undivided devotion ...

Understanding Series
Craig A. Evans
... history of our Antiquities, most excellent Epaphroditus, I have, I think, made sufficiently clear … the extreme antiquity of our Jewish race.… Since, however, I observe that a considerable number of persons … discredit the statements in my history … I consider it my duty to devote a brief treatise to all these points … to instruct all who desire to know the truth concerning the antiquity of our race. As witnesses to my statements I propose to call the writers who, in the estimation of the Greeks ...

Understanding Series
Craig A. Evans
... e., 3 p.m.], the hour of prayer and evening sacrifice). Elsewhere the “angel of the Lord” appears in Luke 2:9; Acts 5:19; 8:26; 12:7, 23. 1:13 your prayer has been heard: We are not told what Zechariah’s prayer was. In his temple duties he naturally would pray for Israel’s redemption, although he and his wife no doubt had often prayed for a son. Thus, both prayers were answered in the conception of John, for he would be their long-awaited son and the forerunner of the Messiah. John means “the Lord ...

Understanding Series
Craig A. Evans
... requiring this of the healed man Jesus is thinking of the regulations of Leviticus 13–14, with part of his statement actually derived from Lev. 13:49. Similar instructions are given to the ten lepers in 17:14. The priest refers to the priest on duty when the leper arrives for examination and the offering of his sacrifice (Fitzmyer, p. 575). as a testimony to them: Because of its association with supernatural occurrences (see Exod. 4:6; Num. 12:10–12) leprosy often was believed to be the result of divine ...

Understanding Series
James R. Edwards
... their history purposefully and patiently increased their knowledge of him. Then, in Paul’s own time, God spoke his last word. The awesome finality that Jesus Christ was the fulfillment of God’s eternal purpose stamped Paul’s consciousness with an indelible sense of duty and obligation. Paul is a servant, called, apostle, and set apart. 1:3–4 Verses 1–2 introduce the gospel, but verses 3–4 explore its meaning. The gospel regards God’s Son, which means that Jesus Christ is the content of it ...

Understanding Series
James R. Edwards
... the one whom it ought to have honored, God gave it over to do what ought not be done. This expression, like several others in the latter half of this chapter, appears to be indebted more to Stoicism than to Hebrew thought. It implies a self-evident duty in accordance with nature, or natural law. 1:29–31 These verses contain a list of twenty-one terms (in Greek) of things which “ought not be done” (v. 28). They are consequences, not causes, of exchanging the truth of God for a lie. As the consequences ...

Understanding Series
James R. Edwards
... observance of Torah, as the rabbis taught, but a guarantee of his righteous standing with God. If circumcision was an acknowledgment of Abraham’s moral rectitude, then it was in fact a reward, a payment, an “obligation” of God (v. 4). But circumcision was not God’s duty to Abraham, it was a sign of his grace to him. One way of grasping Paul’s distinction between faith and works is to compare the use of father in verses 1 and 12. When Paul speaks of “Abraham our forefather” (v. 1) he speaks as ...

Understanding Series
James R. Edwards
... Greece and Rome varied, but roughly a quarter of the work force belonged to slave classes. Regardless of their functions, slaves possessed few civil rights and virtually no legal rights. If a master freed a slave it was considered a merit, not a duty. Slaves could be sold at the master’s whim, and punishment of slaves, including torture or capital punishment, was permissible as long as social formalities were observed. Lack of rights was due to the most odious, if essential, aspect of slavery, that slaves ...

Understanding Series
James R. Edwards
... . It is the only mortgage which can never be burned. In returning to the personal ethics of agapē in verses 8–10 Paul recalls that good citizenship (13:1–7) is neither the sum of nor a substitute for true Christianity. Beneath civic duties and good causes, even beneath personal world-views and life-styles, lies the essential and indispensable characteristic of Christian faith, love for others. 13:8–10 Verse 8 begins with an emphatic double-negative in Greek, which might be rendered, “Owe nothing to ...

1 Corinthians 7:1-40
Understanding Series
Marion L. Soards
... a profit or an advantage. In other words, Paul understands sexual relations to be a basic element in the economy of marriage. Paul’s statement is straightforward, although the NIV translation seems to squirm about with a euphemistic reference to marital duty. While there is nothing bawdy or lewd in Paul’s language, there is nothing oblique. Paul assumes that sexual relations are a standard, natural, even necessary part of marriage; and one should recall that he works from the assumption that marriage ...

Understanding Series
Marion L. Soards
... apparently was not yet an idea in the church. Paul says, however, that he does not wish to do fund raising when he arrives in Corinth; indeed, he desires the giving to be done naturally and willingly, so that generosity is more charismatic than duty-bound. He does, however, sketch a procedure for the gathering of the collection. As Talbert (Reading, p. 105) has noticed, by focusing on the phrases in Paul’s directions, one may identify the principles that lie behind or in the activity of the collection ...

Understanding Series
W. H. Bellinger, Jr.
... of Sacrificial Worship: This central historical narrative continues the account of the Aaronic priests’ ministry, especially their first offering of sacrifice in the tabernacle cult. On the eighth day, after the proper ordination rites, the priests assume their duties. 9:1–7 As is generally characteristic of Leviticus, the text begins with preparation for the upcoming major event. These first verses introduce the details of these first sacrifices. Burnt, grain, fellowship, and sin offerings will be ...

Understanding Series
W. H. Bellinger, Jr.
... are obedient. Leviticus 21 gives further instruction on the responsibilities of priests in such contexts; the Priestly order of things, which is distinct from heretofore accepted practices, is to be maintained. 10:8–11 The incident leads to further comment on priests’ duties and boundaries. The weight of these instructions is seen in the penalty and the notice that this is a lasting ordinance. The task of the priests is to distinguish between the holy and the common, between the unclean and the clean ...

Understanding Series
W.H. Bellinger, Jr.
... , and then the north. The text names the leader of each tribe again. The Levites do not move out as one group. The Gershonites and Merarites go out with Judah and the tribes on the east (v. 17). The tabernacle has been disassembled, and they perform their duties of carrying the curtains and frames as detailed in chapter 3. When the people stop to set up camp, they can set up the tabernacle, and it will be ready for its furniture carried by the Kohathites, who set out with the next group, the camp of Reuben ...

Understanding Series
W.H. Bellinger, Jr.
... incense, in contrast to the rebellions recounted earlier in this chapter. In this case, atonement indicates reconciliation and the averting of danger. Aaron the priest stood between the living and the dead. Numbers 3–4 laid out the places and duties of priests and Levites. Chapter 16 affirms that order for the organization of the community and rejects violations of the order, a theme which continues in the next chapters. Additional Notes 16:1–50 The Priestly tradents have incorporated earlier narrative ...

Understanding Series
Mary J. Evans
... and ambiguity fits with Samuel’s position. 12:1–2 Samuel realized that the appointment of Saul meant a fundamental change in his own position. He had been acting as the primary national leader, carrying out a mixture of priestly and prophetic duties while functioning as a ruling judge. Now, although his priestly and prophetic roles will not cease and he can remain as a spiritual adviser, decisions about national policy are no longer his. The ceremony reaffirming Saul’s position gives him a chance ...

1 Samuel 21:1-9
Understanding Series
Mary J. Evans
... may have been an attempt to protect Ahimelech from accusations of conspiracy. Unleavened bread would remain edible for some time, and the nonexistent troop provides an excuse for David to ask for a good supply. The rule about no sex while on duty served as a way of alleviating any doubts that Ahimelech might have had about letting David use consecrated bread, which was normally restricted to priestly families. At a later stage, Uriah’s adherence to the rule for troops under David’s control brought ...

Understanding Series
Mary J. Evans
... residents’ willingness to hand David over to Saul may result from fear for their own safety and an unwillingness to be embroiled in civil war. However, the emphasis on Saul as king (v. 20) may indicate that they were loyal subjects seeking to do their duty. Saul’s unpopularity was largely a product of his own imagination. Even in this picture of self-interested betrayal in a text that depicts David rather than Saul as the hero, we find a glimpse of an alternative scenario in which Saul accepts David as ...

Understanding Series
Mary J. Evans
... been reflecting on passages such as this one when he developed his teaching about one body with many members (1 Cor. 12). The reader is gradually being introduced to different aspects of David’s role and the way in which he was carrying out kingly duties without having deposed the present king. In instituting the practice of sharing alike for all who take part in military campaigns in any way, David was already acting as king, making judgments and setting up new laws. 30:26–31 It is hard to determine ...

Understanding Series
Mary J. Evans
... at the door had become drowsy while she was sifting wheat and had fallen asleep so Rechab and Baanah slipped in” (GNB). If this is correct then we have evidence of the low-key arrangements at Ish-Bosheth’s court with only one woman doorkeeper on duty. The impression is of a fairly impoverished lifestyle rather than a lavish palace. However, the NIV may be correct in following the MT, where v. 7 appears to reinforce what has been described in v. 6. 4:8–9 The men’s claim that through their action ...

Understanding Series
Mary J. Evans
The Ark Comes to Jerusalem: 6:1–5 The story begins at Baalah of Judah, where the ark had been kept since its recovery from the Philistines twenty years before. To take a party of thirty thousand men for a ceremonial duty sounds excessive, and the accuracy of the text has been seriously questioned. It is possible that the “thousand” refers to a military grouping (cf. additional note on 1 Sam. 4:10). However, Baalah, although Judean territory, was still within the range of Philistine influence. Thus, ...

Understanding Series
Mary J. Evans
... Tou king of Hamath has an Israelite name meaning “Yahweh is exalted.” David probably gave him this name to indicate vassal status. 1 Chron. 18:10 calls him Hadoram (“exalted Hadd”). 8:16–17 We cannot be sure of the exact duties of these officials, although the main structure is clear. Joab had responsibility for the main Israelite army and Benaiah for the foreign mercenary troops, who were usually kept separate. The recorder, a new figure in Israel’s government, maintained the essential national ...

Understanding Series
Mary J. Evans
... bodies, including those of her own sons, from the elements. Her grief moved David and challenged him into taking the action Rizpah would not have had the authority to do—giving the bodies a proper burial. Whether this was done from kindness, from a sense of duty (as in the case of the sparing of Mephibosheth), or from a desire to close the episode and make the existence of the bodies less likely to inspire a Saulide revolt is not made explicit. The episode ends with the statement that God answered prayer ...

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