The Bible Recap - March Reflections and Corrections - Year 5
Episode Date: March 31, 2023SHOW 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 - Win a trip to Israel! - Win... a TLC Book Bundle from Hope Media Group! 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.
You may have already entered to win our free trip to Israel, but we've added some exciting
new prizes to the contest, so stick around for the end of the episode to find out how
you could win.
Welcome to our March R&C episode.
We're aiming to do an episode like this at the end of each month,
offering some reflections and some corrections.
Let's start with the reflections and look back at all we've covered so far.
We just finished the Book of Joshua our seventh book.
So let's get the 30,000th view on where we are in the chronological timeline
of the Bible's overall meta-narrative.
The Bible is one unified story.
Way back in Genesis, God set out to build a relationship with one particular family, but
things went terribly wrong when they fractured the relationship through sin.
But their sin didn't surprise God.
He already had a plan in place to restore this relationship even before it was broken,
and he continues working out that plan immediately, undeterred, and unhindered by their rebellion.
He sets apart a man named Abraham to be the patriarch of this family,
and he gives this family a name, the Israelites.
There are a bunch of busted people who lie, cheat, and steal.
God blesses them despite their sin, but sin still has its consequences.
One of the long storylines of consequences of the 400 years they spend enslaved in Egypt.
God sent a man named Moses to demonstrate his power over the Egyptian ruler who's enslaving them,
and eventually he reluctantly agrees to let the Israelites slaves go. They flee to the desert,
led by God and his servant Moses. Little by little, God gives these people the basic rules of how
to have a stable society.
All they've ever known is slavery under a cruel dictator.
They've never seen good leadership demonstrated.
There are a bunch of uncivilized, ungrateful people who have only just met God and Moses,
and they're not keen on obeying either of them.
But in the midst of their sin and stubbornness and foolishness,
God knows that what their hearts need is Him.
So He sets up camp among them in the desert.
He's already told them how to have a civil society, so now He begins telling them more
about how to interact with Him.
That involves establishing a team of people to help mediate this relationship, to make
sure everything goes as He commands it.
He sets up a system of sacrifices and offerings, and puts together a calendar of feasts to celebrate
his provision for them. More than anything, he wants them to remember who he is to them, the God
who rescued them out of slavery. He's trying to point them back to the truth that people who recognize
him as God can rely on his pattern of faithfulness, even when they are unfaithful, but they keep
forgetting. And every time they forget,
they either get fearful and disobey, or they get prideful and disobey. Their disobedience lands
them a 40-year sentence in the desert wilderness. And on top of that, they will not get to move
into the land God keeps talking to them about. But the good news is that their kids get to go in.
After all the first generation dies off,
God raises up a new leader, Joshua,
to lead them into that promised land.
Joshua learns to listen to God and do what he says.
And as a result, they begin to take the land
God promised from their enemies, the Canaanites,
who currently live there.
This generation of Israelites is living in the fulfillment,
at least partially, of the things God promised to Abraham,
the first Israelite, way back in Genesis 12. They are numerous, they are a nation in relationship with
God, and they're living in the land he promised to give them, even if they're still among their enemies
at this point. Now that they're in the Promised Land, Joshua appoints plots of lands for all the
tribes and remind them that they're supposed to eradicate their enemies who live there.
God cares about the intimate details of our lives, even those that might seem beneath his
concern.
Just as Joshua is about to die, he makes one final push for them to be thorough with this,
and he reminds them that they should never worship the Canaanite Gods.
They should only worship Yahweh.
The people agree to this and promise to follow
Yahweh alone. Tomorrow we enter the Book of Judges. It's a bloody book, but it brings us an
important reminder of what happens when people don't follow Yahweh and follow their hearts instead.
Okay, that's all for the reflections part of this episode, and we don't have any corrections to
after this month, however, I do want to add something that I found interesting and thought you might appreciate.
Every year, we hear from lots of you who are grieved or confused or even frustrated by the fact
that Moses didn't get to enter the Promised Land. When I recapped it, I mentioned that he was
going somewhere far better, to be with God. But for a lot of you, that wasn't much of a consolation,
so I wanted to share something with you that a few of the people in our Patreon family posted in our Facebook discussion
group.
Honestly it's something I never thought about, and I knew you'd love it as much as I
did.
At least three people in our Patreon discussion group pointed out that while Moses didn't
get to enter the Promised Land with a bunch of entitled, bitter Israelites, he actually
did get to go there.
And his experience was far superior to what any of them experienced when they crossed over.
So if you stick with us for the rest of the reading plan,
you'll get to see it.
We eventually hit a part in Matthew 17
where Jesus is standing on a mountain
with Peter, James, and John in a scene known
as the Transfiguration of Jesus.
And all of a sudden, Moses and Elijah
are transported there as well.
What a moment.
And according to Luke 9.31, the conversation they were having
on top of that mountain was about Jesus upcoming death
and resurrection.
The whole experience is so great that Peter offers
to set up tents so they can all just keep hanging out there.
If I were Moses, I might have been thinking,
thanks a lot, buddy, but I've already
spent my fair share of nights in a tent.
All that aside, if you struggled with the fact
that Moses didn't get to enter the Promised Land,
I just wanna set all of her hearts at ease
and let you know that he did,
and in an even better way than if he'd gone in
with the 12 tribes, he was there with the transfigured Jesus,
talking about the moment when Jesus would conquer sin and death.
It's hard to beat that, my friends.
Okay, that's all for this month's R&C episode.
From day one until now, I hope you're seeing more and more that he's where the joy is.
I'm so excited about how many of you entered to win the free trip to Israel with Israel
Lux and Hope Media Group, and because of that, we want to offer even more chances for you
to win a few other things, especially for those of you who might not be able to go to Israel with us.
So we're going to be giving away some bonus things.
You could win a copy of my new Israel book, which comes out in April.
It's a luxury coffee table book with 256 pages of gorgeous pictures of Israel and 30 devotionals,
or you could win some other TBR book bundles, and a few other secrets we're keeping tucked
up our sleeves.
To enter, text the word book to 67101.
That's book 67101.
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