The Bible Recap - January Reflections and Corrections Episode
Episode Date: January 31, 2023SHOW NOTES: - All the info you need to START is on our website! - Join our PATREON/RECAPtains family for bonus perks! - Get your TBR merch - Show credits - Win a trip to Israel! - Listen To Way F...M FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: - 2 Corinthians 5:17 - Genesis 1 - Genesis 37 Scriptures regarding GOD’S FAMILY: - Romans 8:14-17 - Romans 8:23 - Galatians 4:5 - Romans 9:4 - Isaiah 56:5 - Matthew 12:46-50 - John 8:44 - 1 John 3:1 Resources: - What Does It Mean That Christians are Adopted by God? - Are We All God's Children? 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.
If you've ever wanted to go to Israel and you want to go with me, or free, stick around
after today's episode for more info on how you can win a trip.
Welcome to January's bonus episode.
We're going to try to do an episode like this at the end of
each month, offering some reflections and corrections, some R's and some C's. Let's start with the R's,
looking back at Genesis, Job, and the first few chapters of Exodus we've covered so far.
The Bible is one unified story. It's the story of a family and it all starts in Genesis.
God the Father is literally known best to us by being a Father.
He defined love by sending a son to die on a cross
and he makes his paternal design apparent
by choosing a family through which he would bring change to the world.
Genesis and Job and Exodus demonstrate this sovereignty
and the goodness of the Lord.
This is the way he writes our stories to.
Second Corinthians 517 tells us he speaks
a new identity over us, just like he did with Abraham and Sarah and Jacob Israel.
These books have set up so many amazing things for us, a biblical view of life and marriage,
God's good design for work, what humility looks like, the underappreciated beauty of just
sitting in the struggle with someone instead of trying to play God and solve it for them
Plus a laundry list of how to ruin your family dynamic if you're interested in that
Some of you may have never tried to read through the Bible before or maybe you've tried and failed
But you've made it so far, I'm so proud of you, you are doing something eternal
Which means it's definitely worth 15 to 20 minutes of your morning
But that also means the enemy of your soul is going to wage war against it.
So keep at it.
Don't let the enemy or the flesh
deter you from the mission we're on together.
Pray for an increased desire
to keep reading the Bible with us.
Pray against distraction and ask God for help.
As we keep reading,
I bet God's intricacies and specificity will surprise you.
I know it surprised me and caused me to wonder
a lot over the last 10 years.
The story he's written about himself, about his family, about his faithfulness, it's
just the beginning.
I can't wait for us to see it unfolding even more.
Now let's tackle a few of the things I wish I'd done differently.
These Cs.
I'm so grateful for your grace when I make errors or when I'm confusing in my delivery.
It's hard to know all the ways things will be heard or interpreted until it reaches a
mass audience.
But when it's just me and my dining room, recording these episodes at 3 in the morning, I'm bound
to miss a few things or misspeak here and there.
I make every effort to avoid that, but it's bound to happen, and I always hate it when
it does.
So we've created this section of this month's bonus podcast to address a few of January's
do-overs. So we've created this section of this month's bonus podcast to address a few of January's due overs.
As of today's date, which is January 30th,
these are the applicable corrections.
Any mistakes I make tomorrow or new reflections
I happen to have between now and then
will appear in February's bonus
Reflections and Corrections episode.
In episode 28, when we were talking about walking
in the emotional freedom God has invited us into
and trusting that he's paid the penalty for our sins, I said this.
If we trust that God has at work in all things, it not only helps us forgive those who are
repentant for sinning against us, but it also lays the framework to forgive ourselves
as well.
The phrase, forgive ourselves, can be misleading to some people.
And while I can't always avoid triggers,
I should have unpacked this a little more than I did.
I was hoping the context would make it clear,
but honestly, I should have taken more time
with it regardless of length.
First, let me say that the father's forgiveness
of the sins of his children is final and complete.
We can add nothing to Christ's finished work on the cross,
period.
And thank God, because we wouldn't be able to add to it
if we had to.
As God's children, all our sins have been paid for by Christ's death on the cross, period. And thank God because we wouldn't be able to add to if we had to. As God's children, all our sins have been paid
for by Christ's death on the cross.
So if you're walking in guilt and shame,
it may be more of a matter of receiving
the forgiveness he's purchased for you.
His forgiveness is ultimate forgiveness
and it applies to the deepest spiritual level.
Many people wrestle with this and they say things like,
I know God has forgiven me, but I can't forgive myself.
They live in regret and shame as though they have a higher standard for holiness than God does.
Receiving and believing His forgiveness is really what I was angling toward with this, but it came off wrong.
Receiving that spiritual forgiveness also has personal implications.
I can personally forgive anyone who's sinned against me, but that doesn't
mean I'm absolving their sins before the Father. Only Jesus' death can do that, not my words.
So it would stand to reason that if I'm sending it myself, as I often do, I lie to myself, mislead
myself, make sinful choices that harm myself and others, then because I've been granted God's
forgiveness on a spiritual and personal level, I can also extend that forgiveness to myself on a personal level.
It doesn't have an eternal impact, but it has an emotional impact by way of setting
me free from the sin and shame that the enemy wants to use against me.
If a holy God has made a way to redeem our relationship and redeem my mistakes, then
what do I have to hold against myself?
My standards are not higher than his.
I hope that helps explain things for anyone who was confused by my words or about my theology,
and hopefully I didn't just dig a more confusing pit for us all.
Finally, I want to speak a bit about adoption,
which is something I've referenced in four or five different episodes.
I had someone ask me why I referred to us as God's adopted children,
instead of just God's children.
But before I get on the topic of spiritual adoption, why I refer to us as God's adopted children instead of just God's children.
But before I get on the topic of spiritual adoption, I want to address earthly adoption, which
the Bible also addresses to some degree in regard to some of its most beloved people, like
Moses and Esther.
Adoption is a step to redeem a really broken situation.
If you've been adopted, and especially if you've had a difficult experience, the language
of adoption may be challenging for you.
There's a similar challenge for people who've had broken sinful earthly fathers because
they struggle to accept the relationship terminology of having God as their Father.
Since God loves perfectly, he's the only one who can redeem these images for us where
they're broken or distorted.
Without sin or brokenness of some sort, adoption
is never necessary. It's a consequence and result of the fall. But God has made a way to restore
it and redeem what has been broken by sin. Now, I want to address the spiritual aspect of adoption
and what my intentions are in communicating things with the language God's adopted children.
I don't always say it that way, but in the times that I have, there have been two important motives in play. First, there's a common misconception that all humans are God's children.
That's not what we see in Scripture. It sounds nice, but I can't back it up biblically. All humans are
God's creation. We're all image-bearers of God, and we all have inherent value because of that.
We should treat all people with dignity and respect as fellow image-bearers.
However, Scripture indicates that God's only children are children by adoption.
Being a child of God is a privilege, not a right. For those who are His children,
He initiated a process of redemption. He bought you with Christ's blood, and He filled you with His
Spirit as a marker of this full and final transfer into His family. Romans 8, 14-16 says it like this,
All who are led by the Spirit of God are sons of God, not everyone is led by the Spirit of God.
It goes on to say,
You have received the Spirit of adoption as sons by whom we cry Abba Father.
Not everyone calls him Father.
And then it says,
The Spirit Himself bears witness with our spirit
that we are children of God.
Not everyone has that.
We'll link to some additional scripture references
in the show notes if you want more information on this.
You may wonder what this means for those
who are not adopted by God.
In John 844, Jesus is talking to a group of people
who are not believers, and he says,
you are of your father, the devil.
There are two families here, and the only way to be a part of God's family is to be adopted
through faith in Christ.
The good news for those who are outside God's family is that God is in the adoption business,
and this adoption is far more permanent than any kind of DNA.
We're inextricably linked to him through his spirit that dwells in us and seals us.
So by calling us God's adopted children,
I'm not only aiming to point out some theological distinctions,
but I'm also aiming to show us how scripture
has a high view of adoption
and to point out that we must esteem it rightly.
I hope that helps clarify things
for any of you who've been confused by my words
or were shit offended by them.
Okay, that's all for our January R&C bonus episode. I'm excited to hopefully have lots of
ours and no seas in February. Pray for me as I do this. I desperately need and want your prayers
in this process. I need wisdom, I need stamina, I need to stay healthy. I've already seen the
enemy's attacks on those things because he hates what we're doing here. So please pray that God equips me with all I need to continue doing what we're doing together here.
I love being able to study his words so fully and share it with you all.
Truly, truly, he's where the joy is.
One of my favorite things to do is lead 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
for text-thoroughed trip to 67101.
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