Dictionary: Trust
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Ezekiel 43:13-27, Ezekiel 44:1-31, Ezekiel 45:1-12, Ezekiel 45:13--46:24
Understanding Series
Steven Tuell
... system of 60 shekels to the mina. That we find this same system in chs. 40–48 makes a strong case for dating this document as well, in its final form, to the reign of Darius in the Persian period. In such a setting, the prince would be obligated to enforce the Persian standards. 45:18 In the first month. The “seventh month” in Lev. 16:29 may be the same as the “first month” in Ezek. 45:18, assuming either that the editors were numbering from the fall, when the Jewish New Year is celebrated, or ...

Matthew 8:18-22, Matthew 8:23-27, Matthew 8:28-34, Matthew 9:1-8
Teach the Text
Jeannine K. Brown
... home, his followers must reckon on following him wherever he would lead. Allegiance to Jesus displaces home and even family commitments, something that we see in 8:21–22, where family obligation is shown to be secondary to following Jesus. To first-century ears, this would sound quite countercultural, given the significance of family loyalty and obligation in the ancient world. Jesus in Matthew will speak to this question at a number of points (e.g., 10:37–39; 12:46–50; 19:29). Following Jesus means ...

Teach the Text
Jeannine K. Brown
... death. This intensification of the conflict between Jesus and Jewish leaders will eventually lead to Jesus’ death (see 16:21; 26:1–4; 27:20). Teaching the Text 1. God’s mercy is the lens through which we ought to understand our covenant obligations. In teaching on the topic of Jesus and the Sabbath, it is common enough to portray Jesus as one who breaks Sabbath rules for greater purposes (to see this tendency, search the internet for “Jesus Sabbath breaker”). The resulting portrayal fits well with ...

Mark 11:20-25 (26)
Teach the Text
Grant R. Osborne
... Matt. 6:5]) is connected to a forgiving heart. This is reminiscent of Matthew 6:14–15, where Jesus elaborates on the forgiveness portion of the Lord’s Prayer (6:12), the only portion to receive such treatment. The message of Matthew 6 and here is that we are obligated to treat others the way God has treated us, and the way we treat others is the way God will treat us. There is also a community dimension to this.6The prayer power of the corporate family is dependent on unity in the Spirit. As in James 5 ...

Teach the Text
Grant R. Osborne
... the act of “anointing for burial” signifies the honor due him for that salvific act. The woman’s loving act portrays the praise and worship that all should give for what he has done for us. 2. Scripture emphasizes the importance of caring for the poor. The obligation to help the poor is one of the dominant themes in the Bible. Poverty is the result of sin, of the insatiable desire of people to take what belongs to others. God wanted it to be abolished, and every seven years debts were to be cancelled ...

Luke 22:66--23:25
Teach the Text
R.T. France
... Jesus’s fate. Pilate’s power was given by a world system opposed to the Christ, and that same system demanded that Pilate use it against Jesus, no matter what his conscience told him. Pilate’s great power actually came with great helplessness and obligation. The cry for crucifixion reveals the full depth of humanity’s depravity and upside-down values—apart from God’s grace, we would all have joined in shouting it. Literature: Aesop’s Fables. One of Aesop’s fables is the story of the scorpion ...

Teach the Text
C. Marvin Pate
... that the believer owes is to love God and others. Paul’s command in 13:8–10 cannot be understood to prohibit, in our time, the (prudent) use of credit cards, mortgage, and so forth. Rather, it makes the point that loving others is an ongoing obligation for believers. Second, the Christian is under love, not law. But, as the Sermon on the Mount shows, loving others is more demanding and radical than the Torah itself. Only the power of the Holy Spirit can accomplish such behavior. Third, the power to love ...

Teach the Text
C. Marvin Pate
... three helpful theological principles that emerge from these verses. First, Paul was a realist; he knew that we have to deal with people where they are (in the case of 14:1–15:13, Jewish scruples about ritual purity). Second, Christians who do not feel obligated by the scruples of their weaker brothers and sisters should nevertheless be willing to limit their liberty for the sake of fellow believers and for Christ’s sake. Third, Paul’s bottom line in adiaphora is the unity of the church.7 Teaching the ...

Teach the Text
Joe M. Sprinkle
... comments at Lev. 2). Accommodation is also made for poor lepers (Lev. 14:21–22, 30–32). In the case of a poor mother, a pigeon or dove can substitute for the more expensive lamb for her burnt offering (Lev. 12:7–8). She still is obligated to offer a sacrifice, even if she is poor, but God mercifully lets her offer something more affordable. Use of this law is evidenced by a New Testament character: Mary the mother of Jesus. Mary undergoes the required purification ritual after the birth of Jesus (Luke ...

Teach the Text
Joe M. Sprinkle
... 24 divides into two sections: Israel’s requirement to supply oil and bread to the tabernacle in its daily worship (vv. 1–9) and the execution of a blasphemer (vv. 10–23). Verses 1–9 move from the obligations for Israelites to worship on holy days (Lev. 23) to obligations to maintain worship on a daily basis. The connection of the second section to the context is less clear. The case of the blasphemer fits into the Pentateuch’s pattern of intertwining laws and narratives. It is reminiscent ...

Teach the Text
Joe M. Sprinkle
... , and many Christians choose to wear crosses. Wearing the tassel was a reminder of the need to obey God’s commandments. Wearing a cross—in principle though not always in practice—serves to remind the wearer that he or she belongs to the Crucified One and is obligated to take up the cross and follow him (Luke 14:27). No Scripture commands anyone to wear such a symbol. However, to the degree that wearing a cross serves as a reminder of the need to follow Christ, it can be useful, just as the tassels ...

Teach the Text
Daniel J. Estes
... for a loan that he cannot presently repay (cf. Gen. 38:17–18; Exod. 21:2–6; Deut. 24:10–15). His words reflect the custom that a piece of property could be given by a debtor to a creditor as a pledge until the debtor could pay off his obligation (cf. Job 24:9). Job here calls upon God to trust him until his innocence can be proved. Interpretive Insights 17:2  Surely mockers surround me. In chapter 17, Job shifts his focus from the useless words of the friends (16:3) to the hurtful attitude they have ...

Teach the Text
Daniel J. Estes
... . Job then must either answer the questions that Yahweh poses to him, and by that means show that he has sufficient understanding to call Yahweh to account, or else he must admit that he cannot answer the divine questions. If that is the case, then Job will be obligated to concede to the superior wisdom of Yahweh, instead of finding fault with him. 40:4–5  I am unworthy—how can I reply to you? I put my hand over my mouth. Interpreters have taken Job’s reply to Yahweh in 40:4–5 in two contrasting ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... prohibition (9:4). Interestingly even animals are now held accountable for crimes (9:5–6). God now proceeds to establish his covenant with Noah (9:8–11) and with the animals. The covenant is unilateral. That is, it is one that lays all obligations on God and no obligations on man. It is a covenant in which the Almighty binds himself to a certain course of action—never again to destroy the earth by a deluge. To cement that covenant God establishes a sign both with Noah and with unborn generations. He ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... of Ephron the Hittite (23:9). Instead Ephron insists that Abraham purchase the entire field, cave and all (23:11). According to the Hittite law code one who bought a field from another had to assume feudal obligations for the field. By requesting only a part, Abraham is trying to avoid these obligations. Abraham pays four hundred shekels of silver for the field. This seems a high price, given the fact that many generations later Jeremiah will pay seventeen shekels of silver for a field at Anathoth (Jer. 32 ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... or “debt.” If the debt is for sin (rather than physical impurity; see below), reconciliation is completed by subsequent divine forgiveness. Thus, a priest who officiates a purification offering thereby makes atonement (kipper) on behalf of the offerer, meaning that the obligation regarding the sin is removed from the offerer, in order that the individual may be forgiven by God (see commentary on 4:1–5:13). This use of the Hebrew verb for the idea of “expiate” or “remove” is related to the ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... Israelites (e.g., Exod. 29:40–41; Lev. 23:13, 18; Num. 6:17). However, Numbers 15 systematically specifies amounts of grain and drink offerings corresponding to sacrificial victims of different sizes. This law regarding sacrifices reminds the Israelites of their basic obligation to serve the Lord. But the fact that Israel continues to enjoy the privilege of worshiping him is due to divine grace. The introduction to the law—“When you come into the land . . .” (15:2 NRSV)—is striking in light of the ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... 16; only cursory reference in Num. 29:11). Sacrifices were an integral part of the biblical Israelite festivals (cf. Exod. 23:15; Deut. 16:16). Because the sacrificial system is no longer functioning, it is impossible for anyone to fulfill an obligation to God by performing rituals on these sacred occasions (cf. Col. 2:16–17—typological “shadows” on festivals, new moons, and sabbaths [not including basic Sabbath rest], chiastically referring to the sections of Numbers 28–29 in reverse). However ...

Deut 23:15–25:19
One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... dies. The widow is not to marry outside the family, because the brother-in-law, apparently even if already married, is to marry her and see that an heir is raised up for his deceased brother (25:5). If the brother-in-law objects and refuses to fulfill his obligation, his renunciation must be accompanied by a symbolic act. The widow of the man’s brother must remove his sandal and spit in his face, saying, “This is what is done to the man who will not build up his brother’s family line” (25:9; cf. Gen ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... and the redeemer to sit and discuss the matter in the company of ten elders, the number required for legal and marriage benedictions (4:1–2). Once Boaz fully airs the matter with the nameless kinsman-redeemer, the latter determines he cannot fulfill his obligations for personal reasons (4:3–6). The curious omission of the redeemer’s personal name represents the author’s way of giving a high profile to the act of redemption, the necessary event to secure restoration for both women. In fact, the terms ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... life. The life of the believer is a life of self-sacrifice for God (12:1–2), made possible as a result of the ministry of the gifts of grace (12:3–8) and as a result of the reality of love (12:9–21). Christians continue to have obligations to civic authorities (13:1–7). They fulfill the law through love (13:8–10). They are motivated to be obedient to the Lord Jesus Christ by the imminent arrival of God’s new world (13:11–14). Paul exhorts the believers in Rome not to quarrel about matters ...

Galatians 5:1-15
One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... physical act of circumcision, or even the lack of it, guarantees nothing as to the type of life one will lead. Rather, contrary to following legal requirements, proper faith will express a person’s relationship to God through loving action, motivated more by gratitude than obligation. Paul will pick up on this theme again in the next section of the letter (5:13–26). An evident shift in tone takes place in verse 7 and continues throughout the rest of the letter as if to signal Paul’s satisfaction that ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... have supposed, attempts to gain righteousness by means of works of the law or cultic performances but simply sins in general, all evil thoughts and actions from which the conscience must be cleansed (Heb. 9:14; cf. Rom. 6:21). Though the believer is obliged to pursue maturity, God’s grace and action are necessary (6:1 reads, literally, “let us be carried to perfection”). The NIV omits the “for” with which verse 4 begins and which indicates that in the case of apostates, God is unwilling and not ...

One Volume
Gary M. Burge
... and chaos has set in. The theme of leadership also stands out in Judges, as to be expected in a book named after its leaders. In keeping with the thrust of the Deuteronomic History, we will see that good leaders influenced Israel to fulfill covenant obligations and bad leaders influenced them to go astray from God’s covenant, God’s way of life and liberty. It is no wonder that without good leadership, Israel found itself in bondage from which it could not extricate itself apart from God’s miraculous ...

Sermon
Robert Leslie Holmes
... of meeting, and then came out and blessed the people; and the glory of the Lord appeared to all the people. (Leviticus 9:22-23) We call this prayer in John 17 "the great high priestly prayer" in part because we see all three of these priestly obligations revealed in Jesus' prayer here. The Inward Emphasis of His Prayer Jesus looked up to heaven and said, "Father, the hour has come; glorify your Son so that the Son may glorify you, since you have given him authority over all people, to give eternal life to ...

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