The Bible Recap - Day 117 (1 Chronicles 6) - Year 4
Episode Date: April 27, 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: -... Numbers 4 - FAQ 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!
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble, and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
At this point, you may be wondering if Chronicles is only genealogies.
Don't worry, it's not.
We've only got one more day of those coming up, and that day's reading also jumps into
the narrative part of the book.
So this is our last day of straight genealogies, in first chronicles that is.
I want to fulfill a promise I made to you a few days ago.
I promised to tell you the purpose of all these genealogies.
I didn't want to spoil it for those of you who haven't heard this story before, but if
you were paying close attention to today's reading, you picked up on part of the story
that gives it away.
Verse 15 says, Jehosedak went into exile
when the Lord sent Judah and Jerusalem into exile
by the hand of Nebuchadnezzar.
So the spoiler that may come as no surprise
is that Israel doesn't keep the covenant
and God eventually raises up an enemy
to carry them off into exile
back out of the promised land.
But don't worry, God's not casting them off forever.
Remember that He's already told us that this is how things will go, and He says it's all part of
His plan to bring Him to repentance and to restore all things. So they're an exile for a long time,
but then they repent and get to come back to the Promised Land, and that's when these genealogies
come in super handy, because they really need to know who is from which tribe, so they can go back to the right plot of land.
And they need to know who is from the tribe of Judah and specifically the line of David,
because God has appointed that as the line of kings.
And they need to know who the Levites are, according to the clans of the coathides and the
Maraulites and the Gershinites, because they need to set everything back up with the temple
according to the specific job of each clan.
You may have noticed that Gershian is called Gershian here,
but don't worry, it's all the same.
All of these lists are really important in verifying people's identities
so they can reinstate things when they return to the land.
It may seem boring to us, but it was vital to them.
It wasn't just a list, it was their life.
It determined their jobs and where they lived.
In verse 31, we see that David has set up some new positions in the service of the temple.
Back in numbers four, God set up roles for the three clans of the Levites. But here David adds a fourth role, musician.
And you may have noticed that ASAP the Koah Thite was listed among these.
We've been reading some of his Psalms.
This is how that all came together.
After the genealogies and the job assignments, we see the Levites divided into their plans and
we see the cities of refuge announced. What was your God shot today? Myon came in asking myself
what it says about God that this chapter exists at all. The fact that this is here, to help reestablish
people in the land he gave them that they gave up,
and that he brought them back into, it shows me his heart for restoration and redemption.
It shows me he's so patient and generous with them, even when they break his heart.
And it reminded me of something that happened in my own family once.
I'm the Angus of 6, and when I was a kid, my dad's mom made a bunch of stuff animals for us.
They were frogs,
actually. Frogs filled with beans, if I recall correctly. They weren't cute or cuddly,
but they were a labor of love. I'm sure my grandmother spent dozens of hours carefully cutting out and
stitching them all and filling them with beans. By that time in her life, she was old and frail
with failing eyesight, but still she made these frogs
for us. One day our school had a yard sale fundraiser, so of course those unsightly frogs
made their way onto one of the tables. And you know who came to the yard sale? And do you
know that she opened up her purse and bought those frogs back? She'd made them, poured
her heart into it, ugly and flawed as they were, and then she paid
for them to buy them back.
Our God not only does that with the Israelites, but he's done it with each and every one of
his kids.
He made us, and then he paid the ultimate price to buy us back, death on a cross.
This chapter is a testament, is abundant kindness, and is planned for restoration and redemption.
He's where the joy is.
No matter how long you've been doing TBR, chances are you'll start to ask some good questions,
like, what version of the Bible do you use, or which study Bible do you recommend, or
does she go by Tara or Tara Lee?
Good news.
We have an FAQ page for all of that.
So check it out at thebiborecap.com-forod-slash-facu.