The Bible Recap - Day 274 (Luke 1, John 1) - Year 5
Episode Date: October 1, 2023SHOW NOTES: - Head to our Start Page for all you need to begin! - Join the RECAPtains - Check out the TBR Store - Show credits - Want to know how to embrace singleness? Click here!  FROM TODAY’...S PODCAST: - START: New Testament Reading Plan - The Bible Recap - New Testament Prep Episode - 6 Prep Episodes (linked below) - Video: Luke Overview (Part 1) - Video: John Overview (Part 1)  - Video: Matthew Overview Part 1 - The Bible Recap - Day 056 - The Bible Recap - Day 001 - Numbers 6:1-21 - Malachi 4:5-6 - Genesis 1 - Leviticus 14:8 - Mark 1:4 - Article: What is the Nazirite/Nazarite Vow? - Book: Delighting in the Trinity* *This is an affiliate link. A small percentage of your purchase helps support The Bible Recap! - Bible Study: He’s Where the Joy is! - Sermon: Enjoying the Triune God - Sermon: The Trinity and Christian Prayer - The Bible Recap Start Page  PREP EPISODES (in case you haven’t listened yet): Let's Read the Bible in a Year (Chronological Plan)! How I Learned to Love (Reading) the Bible Why Reading the Whole Bible is Important (interview with Lee McDerment) Preparing to Read the Bible Avoiding Common Mistakes: What to Look for When You Read the Bible Reading the Bible in Community  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.Â
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble and I'm your host for the Bible Recap.
If you're new here, welcome!
We've put all the information you need about our reading plan on the start page of our
website, thebibelrecap.com, as well as in the episode we post a called New Testament
prep. So be sure you check that out if you're brand new, and if you haven't already, I also recap.com, as well as in the episode we post called New Testament Prep.
So be sure you check that out if you're brand new, and if you haven't already,
I also want to encourage you to listen to our six prep episodes that will really
help set you up for success as you begin reading through Scripture with us.
We'll link to all those in the show notes of today's episode.
Today we launch into two of the four gospels.
The four gospels, Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, are narrative accounts of the
life of Jesus, and they're primarily eyewitness accounts
with the exception of Luke.
And while maybe Luke did see a lot of these things firsthand,
he treats his role more like an investigative reporter
who goes around interviewing all the other eyewitnesses
in order to tell the story well.
He's kind of like the weather reporter in the rainjack
at who stands in the storm talking to the locals.
Since the Gospels are narrative
and you're likely to grasp the stories,
I'll spend less time recapping the stories themselves
and more time recapping the meaning and underlying implications.
Each of the gospel writers has a unique lens on who Jesus is.
Luke's primary lens is Jesus as man.
And John's primary lens is Jesus as God.
Since Jesus was 100% human and 100% divine,
it's fitting that we're starting out our study
of his time on Earth with those two books today.
Luke's Gospel is written roughly 30 to 55 years
after the resurrection of Jesus.
And it's actually written as a letter to a Greek man
named Theopolis, who probably wasn't super familiar
with Jewish tradition, like many of us.
So Luke will do a great job helping most of us understand
things that would otherwise escape us.
He starts out with the story of a local priest named Zachariah and his wife Elizabeth.
Scripture lets us know that they were righteous, but infertile, reinforcing that those two things
aren't mutually exclusive, despite what the religious culture of the day says.
One day, Zachariah is assigned the rare honor of burning incense in the holy place of
the temple.
Most priests only get this assignment once in their lives. After he clocks in,
he's greeted by the angel Gabriel, who tells him God has said yes to his prayer to be a dad,
and that his son's name will be John. God has some special assignments for John,
which includes strict rules for his life. God is assigning John something called the Nazarite vow.
We first read about this on day 56 in number 6.
We'll link to a short article with more info on this in the show notes in case you want
to find out more.
John will eventually be called John the Baptist, so to avoid any confusion about which John
will referring to, we'll call him JTB from now on.
Gabriel says JTB will be filled with the Spirit of God even when he's in the womb.
If you are with us in the Old Testament, you know this is a big deal.
At this point in history, God, the Spirit, doesn't really dwell in people.
For the most part, he moves around a lot, resting on people to empower them for specific
tasks or callings.
So it seems JTB must have a pretty big calling on his life.
In fact, Gabriel says his life will be kind of like Elijah's, which recalls what we read
yesterday in Malachi 4-5-6, essentially his life will be a flashing arrow pointing toward
the Messiah.
A few months later, the angel Gabriel goes to deliver another message to another unsuspecting
person named Mary.
He tells her she's going to be pregnant soon, and that her son's name will be Jesus and
that he will be a king like his ancestor David, except that his kingdom will be eternal.
And Mary's like, hold up, I'm still a virgin.
So how is this possible?
Gabriel reassures her that it's not a problem
because the baby's father isn't human anyway.
He's divine and he has access to dimensions
we haven't even discovered yet.
Then, as Gabriel is leaving, he says,
PS, your cousin Elizabeth is pregnant too.
She hasn't posted it on Facebook yet, but you need to know.'"
Based on the messenger, Mary probably figures Elizabeth
as the one person she can confide in.
So she goes to visit.
When the women see each other, JTB jumps for joy in the womb,
showing that he's already using his God-given gift of prophecy.
And Elizabeth has a Holy Spirit moment of her own
where she prophesies
about Mary being pregnant with the Lord. The first human to prophesy allowed about Jesus being
the Messiah was an elderly woman. And for Mary, this is probably such a relief to have some other
human confirming what Gabriel said, Mary breaks into song. Next, we move to John's gospel.
It was written around 50 years after Jesus.
John was almost certainly one of the apostles
because he references himself
in several of the personal stories he tells.
He never uses his own name.
Instead, he calls himself the disciple Jesus loved.
Some people think that's arrogant,
some think it's confident humility,
like he doesn't wanna drop his name into the story
and say, it's me, you guys.
But also, he knows his true identity in Christ.
Others point out that at this time,
the church is undergoing lots of persecution
and by not using his own name, he's being wise and discreet.
As we said earlier, John's unique lens on Jesus
is Jesus-as-God.
So you may have noticed a lot of that in today's chapter.
In fact, John starts out
by taking us way back to the beginning of time and putting Jesus right there at the start of it all.
We talked about this on day one in Genesis one where God the Son, Jesus, is there doing the manual
labor of creation. In verse three here, John says, all things were made through him and without him
was not anything made that was made. God the Father commanded it, God the Son made it,
and God the Spirit approved of it and sustained it.
The Trinity, the three unique persons of the One,
to God, has always existed in total unity,
working together toward the same goal.
Jesus, God the Son, wasn't created.
He always existed as God the Son,
then he took on the name Jesus
when he was born on
earth to join humanity for a few decades. If you're new to the idea of the Trinity and you want to
learn more, you can check out a book and two sermons in today's show notes. And we're also linking
to a seven-session Bible study I wrote for Lifeway called He's Where the Joy is,
Getting to Know the Captivating God of the Trinity. So if you really want to dig deeper, that's a great option for you.
John skips forward to the time when JTB and Jesus, who is the light himself, or born.
Even though Jesus made the world, the world doesn't recognize him.
But John gives us hope.
He says that among fallen humanity, there are some that God has adopted into his family,
and he calls them the children of God.
John makes it clear, just like we saw throughout the Old Testament, that this title, Child
of God, isn't given to every human God created, just the ones God adopts into his family.
One day, JTB is in the desert just north of the Dead Sea, baptizing people.
This is similar to the ritual purification bath that the ancient Jews performed,
like in Leviticus 14, except John is doing it in the wilderness rivers with dirty water. It's not
a very clean situation. So what's the point? The Gospel of Mark tells us that baptism was a
physical act that symbolized the spiritual reality of turning to follow God. The Pharisees, who are
the Jewish religious leaders at the time, send some people to interrogate JTB about it and he says,
Remember how our prophets foretold the coming Messiah?
He's here, and it's not me, I'm not trying to start my own religion.
I'm here to point to him the one we've been waiting for.
The next day, Jesus shows up at that river and JTB says,
this is him, this is the guy I was telling you about.
Jesus and JTB are second cousins,
but they lived really far apart from each other.
They may have met before like on holidays maybe,
but JTB first sees Jesus as the Messiah
when the Holy Spirit affirms his divine identity.
This wasn't something everyone saw.
JTB saw it, but he appears to see in the spiritual realm,
things normal human eyes can't see. On day three in this chapter,
JTB and two of his followers run into Jesus
and JTB can't help himself.
He's always pointing to Jesus.
So that's what he does,
and his two disciples head off with Jesus instead.
Andrew is one of those guys,
and he immediately calls his brother Simon.
When Simon shows up,
Jesus pulls a God move.
He renames him.
Simon means to hear, listen, or obey.
But both of the new names Jesus lists,
Seifas and Peter mean stone or pebble,
like a fragment of loose rock.
This is gonna come into play later in Simon Peter's life,
so remember this.
On day four, Jesus decides to take a road trip
back to the Sea of Galilee.
It's about a 30-hour trip uphill by foot.
It would probably take a week in the desert heat.
When he gets there, he recruits a guy named Philip.
Then Philip spreads the word to Nathaniel that they found the Messiah.
Nathaniel, who, by the way, is probably the same person as the Apostle Bartholomew, is
kind of skeptical because Jesus comes from the wrong side of the tracks.
But when Nathaniel slash Bartholomew meets Jesus,
Jesus automatically reveals that he can see things happening
in places where he isn't.
Jesus is already demonstrating his divinity to us here,
his ability to read minds and know hearts
and see things most people can't.
And as he reveals that to other people
throughout his ministry, they're confronted with his identity
and it serves as a line of demarcation in their life. Either they follow him or turn from him. There's no middle ground.
You can't realize a person is divine and remain neutral about them.
In each day's reading, we like to find a God shot. That's a picture of God and his character
that we see show up in what we read that day. It's not necessarily just our main takeaway,
and it's not an application point.
It's the picture we see about who God is.
Today, my God shot was in the songs of Mary and Zachariah
in Luke 1.
It's clear that both of these people know scripture well
because the songs are full of scripture.
Mary was getting a tough assignment,
probably something she did not want initially,
but she joyfully submits herself to God's plan.
Even though she was probably terrified.
She recognized that she was on the receiving end of both God's grace and mercy.
Mary is grateful, even though she got something she didn't necessarily want.
Sakuraiya, on the other hand, had just gotten a yes to a long-prey prayer.
So you'd think that when he breaks into song, he would be singing about the birth of his
child. But he doesn't do that. He skipped straight past that to praising God for the upcoming birth of Jesus.
Sacchariah knows what the point is. It's not the yes to his own desires.
It's the yes to all of humanity's long-awaited redemption. And Mary knows what the point is.
It's far more than her or her desires.
Mary knows what the point is. It's far more than her or her desires.
The birth of Christ is the yes that surpasses all our prayers and the peace that surpasses
all our fears.
He is where the joy is.
Tomorrow we'll be starting the Book of Matthew.
It's 28 chapters long.
We're linking to a short video overview in the show notes that covers the first part of
Matthew.
The video is eight minutes long, so check it out if you have some time to spare.
Hey there, new listener!
Thanks for joining me and so many other Bible readers around the world as we start the
new Testament.
I'm so glad you're here!
And I hope that our time together is going to show you more about who God is, and that
you'll feel encouraged to keep reading with us when we start back with the Old Testament
again on January 1st.
And if you want to make the most of the next three months, be sure to check out the start
page of our website that page has loads of helpful resources for you like a printout plan,
a few prep episodes that will set you up for success with TBR, and just a few more choose your
own adventure options. We can find it all at thebibelrycap.com, forward slash start, or click the link in the show notes.
If you, like me, are working to embrace the gift of singleness,
or if you have a friend who hopes to find a spouse,
I have something that might encourage you.
Not long ago, I sat down with Jen at KSBJ
to talk about how we live in the space
of maintaining contentment in singleness,
while still hoping for a spouse.
Click the link in the show notes to catch our conversation.
contentment in singleness while still hoping for a spouse. Click the link in the
show notes to catch our conversation.