The Bible Recap - Day 072 (Deuteronomy 5-7) - Year 3
Episode Date: March 13, 2021SHOW 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: - T...he Bible Recap Links Page 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!
Transcript
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
Yesterday Moses transitioned out of telling the new generation of Israelites about their
history and segwayed into telling them about their future.
They'll do a little back and forth like this throughout this conversation.
When we left off, he was giving an introduction to the laws,
and today he continues that conversation, starting with the 10 commandments.
And here's an interesting thing about these two tablets mentioned in 522.
We often see them as having five commandments on each tablet,
but the way treaties were written back then usually involved making two copies of the treaty,
one for each party.
So we can't know for sure unless one of you has access to the arc of the covenant and just
didn't tell me, but all 10 commandments were probably on both tablets. Before Moses goes over
the 10 commandments, he starts out by telling them that God's covenant is not with their fathers.
It's with them. And yes, of course, it was also with their fathers, but Moses is emphasizing here that they
have their own relationship with God.
This is not a thing to be received second hand.
God is also making the covenant with their generation directly.
And even though for many of these people, God didn't technically rescue them out of Egyptian
slavery, still, he did.
Because if he hadn't rescued their parents,
they would have been in slavery as well. Moses reiterates the Ten Commandments to this
new generation and tells them how their parents had received these words with joy and gratitude.
They had a proper all and fear of God in that moment. Even though, as we know, it was
temporary.
In Chapter 6, we encounter the beginning of a prayer that has become the chief
prayer of the Jewish people. It's called the shema. Shema means here, and here is the first word of
the prayer, and it's also what we're being called to do in the text. Religious Jews usually
pray this prayer twice a day, in the morning and in the evening, and they often cover their eyes
with their right hand when they pray to increase their focus during the prayer.
The Shema includes two other paragraphs from elsewhere in Scripture, but it opens here in six, four through six with these words.
Here, O Israel, the Lord our God, the Lord is one. You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your might. First of all, you may recognize part of this as a quote from Jesus in the New Testament.
Jesus was quoting Deuteronomy.
In fact, there are at least three verses in today's reading that Jesus quoted.
Second, while we believe that God is one, most commentaries point out that this statement,
the Lord our God, the Lord is one, is not a reference to God's internal unity,
but to his superiority and exclusivity.
It's like saying, Yahweh is our God.
He's the only God for us.
Third, you may notice that there's no
with all your mind like when Jesus said it.
That's because the ancient Hebrew language
conflates the words for heart and mind.
So it is included in
this text, even if not directly stated. In Aramaic, which Jesus spoke and in English,
the ideas for heart and mind are different, which is why Jesus adds that word to his quote,
even though he's not adding the meaning to his quote.
The Shamakos on to say that God's words should fill our hearts and our mouths and our minds
and our lives.
When we're sitting, walking, lying down or waking, we should be mindful of God.
His words should be on our hands and eyes.
Some religious Jews do this via the factories we've talked about before.
But if you're taking this more figuratively than literally, it could mean that God's
work should be the framework through which you do all your actions and through which you see the world.
And it should be on your homes and on your gates.
And some religious Jews obey this literally by putting scripture on their doorpost in a
small scroll box called a Mizzusa.
But you might also keep the spirit of this law by having reminders of God in your home,
by building your home around God and His Word. We not only want to have reminders of God around us, but we also want to be a
reminder of God to those around us, because we carry His Spirit with us everywhere we go.
When the ESP study Bible is talking about the importance of remembering God, it puts it this way.
To forget is less a memory problem
than a moral one, a parallel to disobedience.
Remembring is vital. Because of the covenant Israel has with God, there are consequences
that they fail to keep it. If they don't keep this covenant, they don't keep the land.
This is a situation unique to Israel. What I mean is, I am not personally guaranteed any land
because of my obedience to God. I can't take these verses out of context and make them my own,
but I can still learn something about God's character from them. What I learn is that Yahweh
wants our allegiance. And this is the primary theme of Deuteronomy. He wants allegiance in action and in thought.
In fact, today and tomorrow we will see three specific thoughts Moses warns them against
thinking.
The one we see today is in 717-18, where he warns them not to be afraid of God's plan
or think of it as impossible.
Each time he warns them against a specific thought, he reminds them that the way to avoid letting that thought take over is to remember who God is, to recall what
he has done for them. Moses also anticipates a day when this new generation has children
of their own who approach them with the eternal question, why? Why do we have to do all these
things? And he prepares them to answer this way.
Because God rescued us out of slavery,
and he cared for us and provided for us in miraculous ways,
and that God who loves us is the one who commanded these things,
and therefore our good always.
I love that part of 624.
That we're called to fear the Lord our God for our good always.
Obedience brings joy and gives life and is the right and good response to God for our good.
Moses reiterates that they must completely drive out and destroy all the people of the land
and not intermary with them. And in 716 he also says they shouldn't even pity these people.
If some or all the people they'll be dealing with do happen to be the crossbreed between
humans and fallen angels, you can see all the more why this would be important.
But even if they aren't, this is still God's way of accomplishing many aspects of his plan.
First, he's punishing the wicked nations for their rebellion,
and he's using Israel as the tool to accomplish that justice.
Second, he's ensuring that the line of the Messiah stays intact, and third, that the hearts
of his people stay intact as well and aren't led astray to lesser gods.
Moses reminds them to destroy all signs of idolatry in the land as well, and he promises
that things will not go well if they don't.
God even tells them that his plan is to drive out the enemy
little by little and that there is purpose
and intention in that.
When they grow impatient, he wants them to remember
that he still has a process in mind.
He's in this for the long haul.
Moses reminds them,
God chose us before he were even a thing. He invented the Israelites.
He didn't choose us because we were a massive, powerful nation and would make him look really awesome if he picked us for his team.
There were literally zero of us, and all zero of us had extra zero to offer him, but he still set his love on us and grew us into the nation we are today. Then Moses says that if God's love is returned with hate, he will repay that person to their
face.
I don't know about you, but that sentence terrifies me.
Fortunately, Moses doesn't hover over it for too long.
He moves on to all the abundant blessing God has in store for the Israelites.
In 714, he says, you shall be blessed above all peoples.
What was your God shot today?
I have a special affection for 6, 10 through 11,
where God references giving them cities they did not build,
houses they did not fill,
sisters they did not dig, vineyards they did not plant.
He's so incredibly generous,
but he also wants them to remember
who gave all this to them. It doesn't want their hearts to turn away to other gods when
they get these blessings from him, when they're no longer living in tents in the desert
with a fire cloud to guide them. If you're a parent, imagine being really excited about
the gift you're giving your kid for Christmas, then having him go lock himself in his room to play with it alone, fixing all his attention on it.
Do you want him to enjoy the thing you generously gave him?
Yes.
But to the exclusion of a healthy relationship with you?
No, of course not.
You're after their joy and you're after their hearts.
And that's how God feels about us as well. He's after our hearts, he wants our joy,
and he's where the joy is.
Can I give you some show notes, pro tips?
Number one, not all pod catcher apps
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2.
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3.
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links for a whole year's worth of show notes in one treasure chest.
you