The Bible Recap - Day 075 (Deuteronomy 14-16) - Year 3
Episode Date: March 16, 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: -... Leviticus 21:5 - February Reflections and Corrections - The Bible Recap - Psalm 16:11 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.
Moses is still giving his final speech to the Israelites before he dies and they enter
the Promised Land.
He starts with some peculiar commands about haircuts.
Back in the day, one of the way pagans grieved was by shaving their heads,
and Moses was outlawing this because it was pagan adjacent. This law had already been given to the
priest back in Leviticus 21, but here Moses gives it to all the Israelites who were supposed to look
and live differently than their neighbors. pagans were also known to cut themselves as a part of their ritual morning practices, and Moses forbids that too.
He also covers some dietary laws, much of which we've seen before.
One of the interesting ones here that carries a lot of weight in keeping kosher comes from 1421, the command not to boil a goat in its mother's mill.
Over the years, many rabbis have debated over what all the laws
mean and how to apply them. They often extend the boundaries of what is unacceptable to make sure
they don't get anywhere close to breaking the actual law. They call this building a fence around the
law. One of the things the rabbis deduced about this law was that they should avoid mixing milk and
meat. So today, if you go to Israel, you'll find that those
two things aren't served at the same meal for any place that keeps kosher. You can switch
it up however you like schedule-wise, but typically, dairy is served at breakfast, loads of
cheeses and milks and yogurts, and meat is served at the other meals.
Kosher households won't even use the same plates for meat and dairy. And if you're a wealthy
kosher family, you probably even have two whole, separate kitchens.
This is how far people would go to avoid breaking these laws.
And the heart behind this could be good, but we'll see over time how these fences began
to be treated like they were the law itself, instead of a man-made attempt to protect
the law.
In the laws for the sabbatical year, we see God's heart toward the poor on display again.
Dets are forgiven and servants are released from their contracts.
God promised that if they remain faithful to His command,
there will always be enough to go around.
And those who would be considered poor will be cared for by the surplus of the wealthy.
If they're faithful to Him, you will bless them so much
that the other nations around them will borrow from them
and they won't ever have to borrow.
This keeps the Israelites free from the kind of financial
attachments to pagan nations that might result
in their being enslaved again.
God also sets out some commands about how to feel
and think, not just how to act.
God's concern for things at a heart level
doesn't just start in the New Testament.
He's always been after our hearts, not just our obedience.
In 159-10, he says things like,
take care less, there be an unworthy thought in your heart,
and your heart shall not be grudging when you give to him.
He cares about our motives.
In February's R&C episode,
we talked about how the arrangement for debtors
is different than the Atlantic slave trade,
even though the word slave is what's used in Scripture.
If you miss that conversation,
check it out when you have a chance.
I think it will be really helpful.
We'll link to it in the show notes today.
In the arrangement for the Sabbath year release
of these servants,
God commands that they not only be released, but be blessed and provided for.
By the way, do you remember how Jacob agreed to serve his father-in-law, Laban,
seven years in exchange for his daughter Rachel? That's exactly the kind of agreement
we're talking about here. Arranging to work for someone for seven years to pay off debt.
In Jacob's
case, he was working off the bride price, and he had to do it twice since he accidentally
got himself two wives. He voluntarily stayed with Laban for a few more years after his debt
was paid, then he asked Laban to bless him with some animals when he left. This gives us
a good picture of what these slave relationships rely, even though that particular one was still
far from ideal.
If a slave really liked his boss, he would decide
to stay with him forever and be absorbed into the family,
which was always voluntary.
They would mark this decision by piercing his ear.
Moses also goes over some of the Festal calendars again.
He's reiterating a lot of these laws now,
because remember, they've been celebrating these things in the wilderness
for 40 years, and now the way they're going to do things
will ship since they'll be spread out in the promise land
instead of gathered together as one large group.
These festivals will require them to travel to the central
location where the tabernacle will be established
once they take the land.
In 163, Moses says, all the days of your life, you may remember the day when you came out
of the land of Egypt.
And in 1612, he says, you shall remember that you were a slave in Egypt and you shall
be careful to observe these statutes.
You'd think that would be the kind of thing most people would want to forget, like, the
past is behind you.
Don't look back or you'll never move forward. But that's not God's approach to this." He says, remembering where they
came from and what he has done for them is what will keep them humble and grateful.
The Exodus is for Jews, what the resurrection is for Christians. It's the most important
thing in their history. Moses tells them to always look back at that to remember who they are,
just as we should always be looking back at the resurrection to remind us who we are.
But we also get to look forward to the return of the resurrected Christ.
We live in the time period theologians call the all-ready but not yet, because we live between
the first coming and the final coming of the Messiah. The best way for us to stay humble and worshipful
is to remember these two things as well.
And that's where my God shot came in.
I saw that not only will remembering
keep us humble and worshipful,
but it will keep us joyful too.
In 1614-15, when Moses is talking about the feast of booths,
he says, you shall rejoice in your feast.
And the Lord your God will bless you in all your produce
and in all the work of your hand so that you will be all
together joyful.
He's after our joy.
And he knows where joy is found.
It's one reason he keeps drawing us near to himself.
Not only does he want to be near us,
but he wants us to be joyful. In Psalm 1611, David says it like this, in his presence there is fullness
of joy. And David was right. He's where the joy is. Each week, a team of people from
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