The Bible Recap - Day 073 (Deuteronomy 8-10) - Year 5
Episode Date: March 14, 2023SHOW 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 - Win a trip to Israel! FRO...M TODAY’S EPISODE: - Printable Reading 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! DISCLAIMER: The Bible Recap, Tara-Leigh Cobble, and affiliates are not a church, pastor, spiritual authority, or counseling service. Listeners and viewers consume this content on a voluntary basis and assume all responsibility for the resulting consequences and impact.
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble, and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
Today we drop back in on Moses' speech to the new generation of Israelites before they
enter the Promised Land.
This is his final locker room talk.
He's recounting all the ways they've made bad plays in the past, and he's going over the plays they want to execute well in the future. He tells them that the
wilderness was a test to refine them, and it's clear that the Promised Land will be a test
as well. It's not some kind of end game for them, some kind of reward where they can just
kick back and do whatever they want. They personally won't retain the land unless
they respond to God's covenant promise by worshiping Him alone. The promised land is just another part of God's process
to restore wicked humanity in relationship with Himself. And He knows how this next step
will turn out, too. He's not testing them for His sake. He's testing them for their sake.
This generation had yet to encounter anything that was really a result of their own actions.
They had to endure at least a portion of the 38 years of wilderness that their parents
received as punishment, but they weren't complicit in rebellion at Kadesh Varnaya.
So this wasn't a punishment for them, even though they had to endure it just like their
parents did.
I'm sure it felt like punishment at times, but it wasn't in response to anything they
had done.
For them, it was discipline.
It was training and had a respond to hardship and had a trust God.
It's important to make a distinction between punishment and discipline.
And in fact, for those of us who know Christ, all our punishment has been absorbed by Him
on the cross.
If you've been adopted into God's family, you are His forever, and you can rest assured
that He is never punishing you.
He might be disciplining you as any good Father does,
but you will never, ever, ever see His wrath, not ever.
Christ absorbed it all on the cross.
It's not that we don't deserve punishment,
we absolutely do. It's all
we deserve. But Christ took what we deserved and gave us what we could never earn, eternal
love and acceptance into God's family forever. The Israelites needed to be humbled, despite
400 years of slavery. They needed to be tested to see what was in their own hearts to see who they really are.
They also needed to see his provision to see who he really is.
He tested them, and he provided for them.
They always had food and clothes, and even their feet didn't swell.
I've been in that desert, and I can tell you, that is a miracle.
I was there for 24 hours, and my ankles were the size of my knees.
They were there for 40 years.
Moses wants to remind them of all God has done because honestly, given their track record,
he knows what to expect from them.
Yesterday he warned them against one particular kind of wrong thinking, and I mentioned that
would encounter two more today.
Yesterday's first warning was against fear and mistrusting God.
Do you remember what the antidote to fear was? I'll give you a second. He told them to recall
who God is and what he has done for them. We see him reference the same antidote today for two
entirely different kinds of wrong thinking. Today in his second warning against wrong thinking which comes in 8, 17 to 18,
he says, bewareless you say in your heart, my power and the might of my hands have gotten me
this wealth. So while yesterday's warning was against fear, today we see him warning against pride.
Prosperity can numb you to God's activity, even when God is the one who brought that prosperity.
The third kind of wrong-thinking he warns against comes in 9-4, and it says this,
Do not say in your heart after the Lord your God has thrust them out before you.
It is because of my righteousness that the Lord has brought me in to possess this land.
This third warning is also against pride.
The second warning was against pride in their efforts,
and this warning is against pride in their righteousness.
It's interesting that they have to be warned twice
against pride and only once against fear.
In our society that beefs us up and tells us
it's all about us and what we deserve,
we would do well to heed these warnings too.
Pride makes us forget God just as much as fear does.
Both kinds of wrong thinking, fear-based and pride-based have their roots in forgetting
God and fixing our eyes on ourselves and our enemies.
The way to fight these kinds of wrong thinking is to remember who God is and what He has done.
God says it's not because they're righteous that He gives them the land,
but because the other nations are unrighteous. We can't earn God's blessings. They're a gift
freely given to the undeserving. This is humbling, but it also should be comforting.
It should prompt us to stop striving for his approval and favor.
It has already been granted to us in Christ. God blesses us because of His goodness, not ours.
And in fact, right after Moses warns them against thinking it's because of their goodness,
He gives them a very lengthy reminder of exactly how ungood they really are
by going over five stories of their
rebellion in the wilderness. The Golden Calf, the fearful rebellion at Kadesh-Barnaya,
when they said they wouldn't go in to take the land, and three times when they grumbled over food
and water, doubted as planned, and wished they were back in Egypt. God doesn't just want their
obedience. He wants their affection and relationship. Moses reminds them that God's rules aren't
about diminishing their joy and freedom, but about increasing it. God has chosen and set
them apart through no doing of their own, as we've seen time and time again, for their
joy. In 1016, Moses uses a peculiar turn of phrase when describing how this all plays out. He tells them, circumsize your heart.
We know that circumcision serves as a physical sign of the covenant between God and the Israelites,
but this is an indication to have a full transformation and commitment, spiritual, emotional,
and mental.
Because again, like we talked about yesterday, the ancient Hebrew word used here for heart
encompassed all those things.
He goes on to tell them that one way they can demonstrate
the love they've received from God
is by caring for the fatherless, the widow, and the sojourner.
These would be the people among them
who typically don't have any physical land or inheritance.
God commands for all of them to be taken care of
by their unique nation-state community.
And you may recall that this same sort of provision is made for the Levites,
who also have no land inheritance.
We continue to see God's showing how attentive and thoughtful He is toward the have-nots.
What was your God's shot today?
I loved this little moment in 1014-15.
Behold, to the Lord your God-belong heaven
and the heaven of heavens,
the earth with all that is in it,
yet the Lord set his heart in love on your fathers
and chose their offspring after them.
You above all peoples, as you are to this day.
God owns everything, yet he set his heart on me and on you.
And not only is it not because of any good works or righteousness, but it's despite the
fact that I lack those things.
That kind of love is magnetic.
When I stop to remember who I am and who he is, I can't help but be drawn to him.
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 the Bibleibelrecap.com, forward slash start, and look for the printable plan in step two.
One of my favorite things to do is leave teaching tours of Israel,
and it's about to get even better because now I'm partnering with Hope Media Group and its
ministries, including WayNation.com, to give you a chance to join me on one of these trips for free.
To find out more, click the link in today's show notes or text the word trip to 67101.