The Bible Recap - Day 071 (Deuteronomy 3-4) - Year 4
Episode Date: March 12, 2022SHOW NOTES: - All the info you need to START is on our website! Seriously, go there. - Join our PATREON community for bonus perks! - Get your TBR merch - Show credits FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: -... Deuteronomy 1:37 - The Bible Recap Start Page - Printable Plan SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter TLC: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-GROUP: The Bible Recap is brought to you by D-Group - an international network of discipleship and accountability groups that meet weekly in homes and churches: Find or start one near you today!
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
Today Moses continues revisiting the history of the Israelites to the younger generation,
making sure they remember where they came from.
He's giving cliffs notes of things we've read about at length.
Yesterday, he mostly touched on things this generation hadn't personally experienced,
but today he's touching on more recent history, stuff they've lived through.
Since it's not our first trip through these stories,
try to look for something new about God's character than what you learned the first time we read them.
Moses begins by recounting their victories over King Aug of Bation and King Syhon of the Amorites.
The city's evasion were fortified with high walls, gates, and bars, but God granted them victory.
God is bigger than what keeps us from what he has called us to.
And here we also learn that King Aug was a refeat, a giant, perhaps a demonic origin, and Israel defeated him.
He had a bed that was 13 and a half feet long and
six feet wide, and it was made of iron because apparently that was the only thing strong enough to
hold him up. If this guy was as tall as his bed was long, he would dwarf Shaqialonil. He would
be almost twice his height. That's bonkers. After Israel defeated King's Og and Sihan, they acquired the Transjordan land that God
gave to the 2.5 tribes, Ruben, Gad, and the Half Tribe of Manasseh.
Remember how Moses repeatedly appealed to God to retract punishment for the Israelites
and God did?
Moses also appealed to God to retract the punishment for striking the rock twice when God told
him to speak to it.
But God doesn't. We don't know why, but it probably has something to do with the leaders being held to a higher standard. We've also seen Moses reframing this incident in a way that paints
himself as innocent and passes the blame off on the people. We saw it yesterday in 127, and we see
it again today in 326 and 421 when he says,
the Lord was angry with me because of you and would not listen to me.
So maybe that's why God doesn't relent.
God tells Moses to appoint, encourage, and strengthen Joshua for the task ahead of him,
because Joshua, not Moses, will be the one who takes the people into the promised land.
This has to feel a bit like being the best man for a groom
who's marrying the woman you're in love with.
I can't imagine how hard it was for Moses
to encourage and strengthen Joshua.
Appointing him as a pretty straightforward job,
but encouraging and strengthening him
has some emotion involved in it.
Moses has to die to self yet again,
and it's one of his final roles as a leader.
Then Moses turns from focusing on their past to focusing on their future.
He calls them to obey God's laws, to be set apart in the midst of the wicked nations
so that they see their distinctness and that it points to God.
He tells them to practice remembering what the Lord has done.
Keep your soul diligently is how he puts it. Moses also
points out that their habitation in the land is contingent on worshiping the One True God alone.
He repeatedly warns them not to create idols, repeating it at length and giving lots of different
examples of what forms the idols might take in their lives. Men, women, animals, fish, sun, moon,
stars, then he follows it with
a warning about what will happen if they do fall into idolatry of any kind. They will
die or be scattered out of the land into exile, where they will worship the gods they sought
out, but who will be impotent to help them. But even if this worst case scenario happens,
even if they sin by way of idolatry, even if they're driven into exile.
God still won't cast them off as people.
And in fact, he promises to turn their hearts back to himself.
In 430-31, Moses says,
When you are in tribulation and all these things come upon you in the latter days, you will
return to the Lord your God and obey his voice.
For the Lord your God is a merciful God.
He will not leave you or destroy you
or forget the covenant with your fathers
that he swore to them.
Chapter four verses 32 through 40
are a pep rally like call to remember all God has done
and praise him for it.
I got so happy reading it that I had to stand up.
Today we ended our reading with Moses establishing three cities of refuge in the trans-Jordan areas
that are already set aside for Rubin, Gad, and the Half-Trib of Manasseh, followed by a short introduction
to what we'll be reading tomorrow.
What was your God shot today?
I love seeing how he is patient with our tiny faith, going to be stronger over time as we see his character proven over and over again.
As he's telling the Israelites about the giants and the battles they'll face,
he reminds them that he's already given them victory in other battles and over at least one other giant so far.
He doesn't force them to go from zero to 100 without getting to know him first.
He gives us training leals. Deuteronomy 3.21 says it like this,
your eyes have seen all that the Lord your God has done
to these two kings.
So will the Lord your God do to all the kingdoms
into which you are crossing.
You shall not fear them for it is the Lord your God
who fights for you.
He's patient with us while we learn his character.
And as we learn it, we find out more and more
that trusting him is where the joy is,
because he's where the joy is.
Did you know we have a printable version
of our whole reading plan?
Many of you use our plan on the Bible app,
and a few of you use our daily posts
on Instagram stories to keep up.
But you can have your very own printout, or even just download the PDF if you don't have a printer.
That way, if Instagram ever gets glitchy, you'll still know what chapters to read next.
Just go to thebibelrycap.com, forward slash start, and look for the printable plan in Step 2.
you.