The Bible Recap - Day 119 (1 Chronicles 7-10) - Year 3
Episode Date: April 29, 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: -... 2 Samuel 1:6-10 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.
I was excited to finish up the genealogies today, and I'm guessing you were too.
If you think reading them is hard, imagine trying to teach them.
In fact, I only have a couple of things to say about chapter seven and eight.
In chapter seven, we see the genealogy of the tribe of Benjamin,
and then in chapter eight,
we get a second genealogy of Benjamin
that is almost entirely different.
What's going on here?
First, the chapter eight genealogy focuses specifically
on the line of Saul.
Maybe you're wondering why they couldn't have just included
that in the original chapter seven version
instead of having to address it separately.
We won't dive into this fully, but at a point in the story that we haven't reached yet,
it seems that the tribe of Benjamin may have had a little mini-split,
kind of like East and West Manassas did.
And since the author wrote this 500 years after the time we're currently in,
he may have been retroactively noting who went which way in that split. It's not vital information for us to retain, but I wanted to point it out in case
the double genealogy confused anyone. Remember how I told you that these genealogy served to track
who's a part of what tribe or when they return from exile? In Chapter 9, we get a glimpse into that.
It tells us who comes back and in what order and where they go to live. It focuses specifically on Jerusalem, which is the religious capital at this point.
This chapter also shows us just how many people are involved in running things at the temple
after it's built. It's not just making sacrifices, it's mixing incense and counting utensils
and leading worship and guarding gates and baking bread, so much goes into keeping things running
smoothly. And everyone who worked there was considered a leader, regardless of their specific task.
Chapter 10 gives us a quick review of Saul's death.
And in case there was any doubt, this part of Scripture affirms the earlier account
of how Saul killed himself in battle.
That's how it was recorded at the time, and that's how it's remembered 500 years later.
Remember at the Amalachite Sojourner who came today
as a messenger in 2 Samuel 1 and said he killed Saul personally?
This makes it clear that he was just lying to gain favor.
He's not even mentioned in the text here.
What was your God shot today?
And remember, these God shots aren't just something God teaches us,
but something God teaches us about Himself.
So where did you see God or His character show up in what we read today?
For me, it was in the final two verses.
In these verses, Saul was the leader of God's people, and he wasn't seeking God.
In fact, he was seeking counsel from people God had commanded him to kill people who were
enemies of God's kingdom.
And in that way, Saul was a traitor and and idolator and given how God portrays his
relationship with his people as a marriage, Saul would have been considered a spiritual
adulterer. Verse 14 tells us that God put him to death. We've talked about how God is the God
of the womb and the God of the tomb and how he's the giver and taker of life,
and I know that can be a hard concept, but it's what we see in Scripture, so we can't discount
it just because it's uncomfortable for us sometimes. The fact that God claims credit for Saul's death might be a tough
pill to swallow for a variety of reasons. But here's what it showed me about God that's comforting.
God would not stand for a leader who is doing things His only, who is disregarding the good of the
people, who is betraying the God of the universe, and seeking selfish gain. God would not allow that person to continue leading this nation-state that he had put his own name on.
God protects his people, and his protective nature makes me trust him more.
And even though I wasn't part of that nation-state, I know he's protective of me too.
Does harm happen to God's kids? Absolutely.
But he preserves what is most important.
Our souls and our relationship with him.
He's vigilant when it comes to the things of eternal value.
I'm so glad he's made me his forever and that he's the one who keeps me
because he's where the joy is.
Okay Bible readers, it's time for our weekly check-in.
How is your mindset in all of this?
We're almost a third of the way through the Bible.
We'll cross that mark in just a few days.
I hope you're loving this more and more all the time.
I pray for you often and ask how to continue revealing himself to you.
I hope you're learning more about him and finding each trust him more as a result of what
you're learning.
For any places that you need help, ask him for wisdom, ask him for heart change, ask him
to correct the lies you believe about him.
I believe he stands ready to answer those prayers with a yes, because he wants to be known
even more than we want to know him.
I can't wait to dig back into the word with you again tomorrow.
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