Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Thinking through the Bible: Old Testament

We are happy to share with you that our editor, Alyson DaCosta, has now completed theOld Testament lessons for 'Thinking through the Bible'. They come in seven separate pdf files, covering the Foreword/Introduction; Books of Law; Books of History; Books of Poetry; Books of the Major Prophets; Books of the Minor Prophets; and the Inter-Testament Period.
We are very thankful in the Lord for the hard work Alyson put into editing our notes to conform to our specific approach for reading and thinking through the Bible.
You will find in the 2013 editions, that our editor has been careful to keep to our purpose in the approach to this study, as described in our Introduction, and as stated in her set of notes designed for children and those unfamiliar with the Bible, ‘Reading God’s Story’ (if you desire her notes – Genesis through John’s Gospel Account, please let us know):
In this study, it is also important to read through the Bible in order, and not to jump ahead to other books.  It is fun to read Genesis and try to imagine how it was to live in that time.  Try not to think about the people and the things that happened after Genesis when you are reading through that book.  That way, you will get a good understanding of what the people knew of God at that time.  They didn’t know as much as the people later on knew, so you want to try to understand how God was speaking to them at that time, without judging the things they didn’t know that were going to happen in the future.  But, once you get to the second book, called Exodus, it is good to remember the things that happened in Genesis.  It is like a story that just keeps on unfolding.  As you get farther on in the Bible, it is good to look back and try to put the whole big story together.
We are discovering that more and more are using Alyson’s notes for students (‘Reading God’s Story'), and using our notes for teachers (‘Thinking through the Bible’). If you have been using our previous notes, we request that in the future you use our 2013 final edition, since they do better to fulfill the purpose of our approach to reading and thinking through the Bible. We hope to soon (read ‘as time permits’) have the entire New Testament completed sometime this year. Our editor is now working on the NT Introduction, the Gospel Accounts Collectively, and the Gospel Accounts Individually. We are presently editing The Acts, and including the Letters of the New Testament in chronological order in The Acts, which means we are suggesting when to read and think through each of the remaining books (letters) of the NT as you read through The Acts.
If you are interested in receiving any of these notes, please contact us by email at indlovu303@gmail.com

Monday, October 21, 2013

October 21, 2013
There will soon be an update posted about the progress we've made with 'Thinking through the Bible' final notes. A broken leg in June slowed progress just a little! Keep posted...


Saturday, November 24, 2012

Update...

Things are developing slowly in completing our 'Thinking through the Bible' notes for Acts through Revelation... but after thirty-three years in Africa, we've learned that living by the event rather than being pressured by the clock or calendar allows us to be more involved in people's lives in more meaningful ways than being consumed by a project...

We can tell you that  the Old Testament 'Reading God's Story' notes by Alyson DaCosta are complete and are available through us, as well as the New Testament notes through the Gospel Accounts. We have discovered that these notes are not only suitable for ages 6 through 16, but are also beneficial for those with little or no previous exposure to reading the Bible as One Book.

Much of our attention is focused on relating to those we are in mentoring partnerships with in various parts of the world, as they develop their ministries from the Lord after becoming equipped with God's Word. As we have time, we will continue to edit the remaining New Testament notes so that there will be an entire set of notes for those who desire to use them as a guide in reading through the Bible, and think about it as it unfolds book by book. Until then, we pray that you will continue reading the Bible from beginning to end, discovering how God's Story fits into your life.



Sunday, September 2, 2012

Moved on...

Our mentoring partnership approach is:
I do it... you watch
I do it... you help
You do it... I help
You do it... I watch
You do it
We fulfilled this approach in June, 2011 on Bainbridge Island, WA, so we knew it was time to move on in order for those equipped to develop their ministries. We had taken a group through the Old Testament in our approach to 'Thinking through the Bible'. There was a young family capable of leading the chapel through the remaining Old Testament books of Prophecy, and continue with the New Testament. We continued posting blogs of the Sunday morning sessions to complete the Old Testament. We provided notes for the Gospel accounts in the New Testament, but no blogs were posted for those sessions. If anyone desires copies of the New Testament notes through John's Gospel account, contact us.
We are now settled into our new home in southern California, and have been editing the notes for 'Reading God's Story', which is the children's version (designed for those around the ages of 6 to 16) being produced by Alyson DaCosta of Massachusetts. We personally think that her notes are very suitable for almost any age group! She now has her draft version available through the Inter Testament Period, which you may request through us.
What we see developing is that our notes are more suitable for those who are leading a group in 'reading and thinking' through the Bible according to our approach, and Alyson's notes provide guidelines for those reading and thinking together under a leader.
We are now able to continue with our 'Thinking through the Bible' notes in order to complete the New Testament - Acts through Revelation. As they are developed, we will make then available to those requesting them.
Our desire, as time permits, is to eventually develop a website that promotes reading and thinking through the Bible in a way that helps people realize that they need not be restricted in understanding it in order to help them see how their own story fits into God's Story. We continually come across people who have never read through the greatest Story ever written from beginning to end, as you would an ordinary book. Some have read it through, but are left with questions that overwhelm them. They are looking for someone to explain certain parts to them, and in the meantime, they read verses and chapters at random, hoping they are fitting them correctly into the entire Story. Bible teachers are needed, as you know if you've read through God's Story, but we continue to discover that people need to truly 'read and think' for themselves. So our saga continues...
Stay posted and enjoy 'reading and thinking' through God's Story for yourself.

Friday, December 16, 2011

SESSION 41: Haggai, Zechariah, Malachi

HAGGAI
His ministry was during the reign of kings Jotham (11), Ahaz (12), and Hezekiah (13) of Judah.
His relationship with a prophet and post-exilic leaders was:
Zechariah, who served alongside him in the ministry of encouraging the rebuilding of the temple.
Zerubbabel (Sheshbazzar), as the governor of Judah under the Persian ruler, Darius.
Darius, as the fourth ruler of the Persian Empire.
Nehemiah, as cupbearer to the king in the Persian palace.
Esther, a Jew raised up to deliver her people, the Jews.

Haggai takes us back to one of the most turbulent periods in Judah's history: their captivity at the hands of a foreign power, followed by their release and resettlement in Jerusalem. They returned to their homeland, beginning in 538 B.C., after Babylon fell to the conquering Persians.

Haggai gives a collection of brief messages that came from the Lord in 520 B.C. The people had returned from exile and had lived in Jerusalem for some years, but the temple was still in ruins. The messages urge the leaders of the people to rebuild the temple, and the Lord promised prosperity and peace in the future for a renewed and purified people.
  • What is the significance of Haggai’s use of the name Jehovah 35 times in 38 verses?
Sharing:
  • This part of God’s Story takes place after punishment, and is directed to the remnant that returns to Judah from Babylon. Judah had been through sin, punishment, repentance, and a return to their homeland.
  • The significance of using the name ‘Jehovah’ 35 times in 38 verses: The messages directs thoughts to God; it is a message from God; Haggai 1:14 indicates that the people’s strength and desire comes from Him; It is said that there are two kinds of people out there: those who are proud, and those who worry they are proud. We should be a third kind, who focus on God, understanding that it’s all about God’s goodness and greatness and forgiveness.
  • As soon as the people began to obey God, He blessed them. He didn’t wait for years.
  • The central verse is Haggai 2:15-16: consider your ways. We should make God our priority. It takes showing God’s love with our actions, and not just our words. Joshua 24:16-24 records where Israel said they would serve the Lord. They didn’t do too well on their own. They were unable to do it on their own.
  • In Haggai 2:22 to the end, God says “I will” five times. Things are actually done by God. Actions don’t connect us to God, but rather His love for us.
  • The ‘defiled and unclean’ meant things like eating a pig or touching the dead. In a legal sense, that made them unable to be with others.
  • It took 15 years to rebuild the temple. They had distractions.
  • The central message is really one of restoration. They were to turn their hearts to God and He will be there waiting for them.
The contemporaries of Zechariah:
  • Zerubbabel was governor of Judah.
  • Tattenai was the military governor of Judea (Ezra 6:13).
  • Joshua was the high priest in Jerusalem.
  • Xerxes I (485 – 465 B.C.) was king of Persia after his father’s death (Darius the Great), during the time of Zechariah 9-14.
Zechariah took his message further than Haggai did regarding the rebuilding of the temple, by emphasizing the need for complete spiritual renewal through faith and hope in God. The second portion of Zechariah was written in the period between the times of the prophets Haggai (520 B.C.) and Malachi (450 B.C.).
Zechariah delivered two distinct messages: 1) He dealt with the restoration of Jerusalem, the rebuilding of the temple, the purification of God’s people, and the messianic age to come (1-8); 2) messages about the expected Messiah and the final judgment (9-14).
  • What is the significance of Zechariah’s use of Thus says the Lord at least 89 times?
  • What does God prefer more than fasting?
  • What was the purpose of God’s command for one fast?
Sharing:
·         Zechariah 4:10 mentions small beginnings: gold lampstand; olive trees (vs.3-4). Things may seem very small, but can be totally be used by God.

The contemporary of Malachi was Artaxerxes I, as the fifth Persian Ruler.
Malachi’s message is delivered between Nehemiah’s first and second visits to Jerusalem, placing it between 430 and 424 B.C. as God’s final message of the Old Testament. He delivered God’s message of judgment on Israel for their continuing sin and of God’s promise that one day in the future, when the Jews would repent, God’s covenant promises would be fulfilled.
Malachi’s message was delivered after the temple was built in Jerusalem. His main concern is to call priests and people to renew their faithfulness to their covenant with God. There was laxity and corruption in the life and worship of God’s people. Priests and people were cheating God by not giving Him the offerings that were rightly due Him, and by not living according to His teaching. But the Lord would come to judge and purify His people, sending
ahead of Him His messenger to prepare the way and to proclaim His covenant.
·         Consider God’s view of divorce, even though He permits it.
Sharing:
  • God reminds Israel that He loves them. He tells them to look at Esau and remember that He has loved Jacob, their father.
  • Malachi 1:6-2:9: God calls out the priesthood, the privileged. They are giving Him blind and crippled animals for sacrifice. They are supposed to be giving their very best animal to the Lord, to acknowledge that it was Him who gave them all they have. Instead, instead they treat God with contempt.
  • We as humans sometimes need things explained to us. That’s why God allowed the “why” questions after He called them out. They asked, how we treat you with contempt? But God knew the sinfulness of their heart just like He knows ours. They would not give the governor, a mere man, second-rate food. It shows a complete lack of faith or belief. They fear a man much more than they do God. They would never give their second- best to someone in power over them, because they know how unforgiving people are. But they would give their God second-best? Do we give our God our seconds? Our leftovers? That’s a hard thought. We might like to say to ourselves, “Well, I might do that, but that’s not what I mean by it.” What we mean and what is reality do not always meet up. Reality is that we often show contempt for God and an unhealthy respect for man. We often fear man and money much more than we love and trust our God. False spirituality will not endure. It will be exposed and torn down by God. I believe that’s true for all time. God will not allow it to last for a lifetime.
  • Malachi 2:10: Marriage is under attack in Judah. Men are forsaking the wife of their youth for the foreign women that surround them. These women worship another god and have no interest in the God of Israel. In Nehemiah we’re told that they don’t even raise their children to speak the language of Israel. God tells these men that their tears are ignored. While they have broken faith with their partner, their flesh, God will not bless them or answer a single prayer.
  • Malachi 2:15: Has not God made them one? In the flesh and spirit they are His. And why only one wife? Because He was seeking Godly offspring. So guard yourself in the spirit, and do not break faith with the wife of your youth. In loving each other in marriage, we have a guard for our spirit. God is stepping in for the women of Israel who are being cast aside. He shows His view and His love for the relationship of marriage that He created.
  • Malachi 2:17: God exposes the evil of saying, “Everyone’s fine, God doesn’t judge. He loves all His children and they are all good in His sight.”
  • Malachi 3:1-5: God reveals again that He is coming; the Lord that they seek will come to His temple. But it is also a warning. Who will endure it? These people hear this prophesy and think, “I can’t wait.” But God is shaking His head, because He knows that they won’t be ready. You can’t live a selfish life until the last minute, and then decide to give everything. There are exceptions, but not many, and God constantly reminds us to be prepared and ready, because even the possibility of missing the Messiah is terrifying.
  • Malachi 3:6-18: The people have been robbing God. They have been withholding there tithes and offerings because they did not trust that God would take care of them, and they were not giving credit to God for giving them all they had in the first place. God even challenges them to test Him in their offering. He tells them that if they give the glory to Him and trust that He will provide, He will open the floodgates of heaven and pour out so much blessing that they will not have enough room to keep it. God is calling His children to trust Him, and the results will be for their good. So why didn’t they trust Him? Next, God tells them that they have cursed Him. Because they say, “What did we gain by serving the Lord? What good did it bring us?” My question would be, when was Israel really serving the Lord? There were a few times when a few godly men were raised up, so that the people followed God’s ways. But the more consistent attitude of Israel was this: They wanted God to give them His heart when they kept their hearts guarded from everything that might hurt their pride. They wanted God to bless their outward actions when their hearts had no thoughts of loving God. The result of a false spiritual life is an absence of love. After generations of living falsely, they had no trouble killing their own children in the name of other gods. They easily got rid of the wives of their youth for young women who had no interest for God, because they had no interest in God. They had interest in themselves and what they could get.
  • Malachi chapter 3 ends with those who revered the Lord, renewing their covenant with Him and giving Him honor for what He has done. God responds, telling them that He loves them and that they are His children. They will see the difference between the righteous and the wicked.
  • Malachi chapter 4 ends with the day of the Lord. In Amos, who also mentions the day of the Lord, the prophet tells the people that there will be a time when God will remove His voice from the land so that the people will hunger for it and search for the Word of God.
  • Malachi, Haggai and Zechariah are the final books of prophecy. God’s last words for four hundred years are to remind everyone that His day is coming. The wicked will be punished, and the “Sun of righteousness will rise with healing in its wings.”  This is a beautiful description of what God’s purpose is. There is a warning against evil and a reminder to hold on: wait for Me, I am coming and I will teach you how to love again. I will send Elijah and I will save you from the curse. I am coming; healing is coming. Be ready; wait for me. The Old Testament testifies to the coming one and the healing of the curse. The expectation for the Messiah, the coming one, is breaking through all of creation. The righteous wait, and the wicked ones who understand, tremble. There is 400 years of earth’s history that is the calm before the storm. The world has reached the point of giving in to the curse and there is no man that can free it.
  • HE IS COMING!






SESSION 40: Nahum, Habakkuk, Zephaniah

Contemporaries
  • His ministry was during the reign of king Manasseh of Judah (14).
  • His relationship with prophets was 20 years after Isaiah, and a sequel to the book of Jonah, who prophesied over a century earlier.

His message to Nineveh was delivered a century after the city repented because of God’s message through Jonah. The city returned to idolatry, violence, and arrogance during the height of its power. The city fell under the assault of the Babylonians, after a 300-year rule (612 B.C.).

The Book of Nahum is a poem celebrating the fall of Nineveh, the capital city of Israel’s ancient and oppressive enemy, the Assyrians. The fall of Nineveh is seen as the judgment of God upon a cruel and arrogant nation.





  • God presented as jealous and avenging.
Sharing:
  • The name ‘Nahum’ means ‘consolation’.
  • Jonah and Nahum connect because of the time of repentance followed by sin and destruction.
  • The nature of sin is that it is slow, corrosive, and effective.
  • Jonah must love this book.
  • What are prophets for? To share God’s word; to give a message from God; to give a warning in a merciful way. It is not a pride thing. They didn’t make a bunch of rules, but just communicated God.
  • Now we see that God is a God who keeps His word and remains just. The Ninevites of Jonah’s time repented. But that had no bearing on their children and the following generations. The sins of the parents do not condemn, and righteous parents don’t mean righteous children. God has an individual relationship with every person’s heart.
  • The Lord is described by Nahum as jealous and avenging and filled with wrath. Nahum 1:6 says: “Who can withstand His indignation? Who can endure His fierce anger? His wrath is poured out like fire; the rocks are shattered before Him.” This is an almighty God being described: a terrifying, humbling, all-powerful Creator, who is ready to punish the sin of a nation.
  • The very next verse is almost contradictory (v.7): “The Lord is good, a refuge in times of trouble. He cares for those who trust in Him.” No human can capture those identities in the same moment. Our God is a God who can be a refuge while He’s angry, deliverance in His punishment, and mercy in His justice.
  • The references to the water gates (Nahum 2:6) and flooding (Nahum 3:8) is interesting. The city has been excavated and they found gates that held the Tigris River out of the city.
  • Is it a good thing to have a jealous and avenging God? This description seems negative to us. However, God has a right to be jealous – He created us. The reason for this description is that He loves us.
  • No one can get away with sin. Sooner or later it will catch up to us. The only way to stop sin is death and destruction, or like David, have real repentance.
  • Did Judah deserve to be punished by the Assyrians? Did the Assyrians deserve punishment? In chapter 3 we get a reminder of what kind of people the Ninevites were. The city itself is known as the city of blood; full of lies, full of plunder, and never without victims. The last verse of the book clarifies things: “Nothing can heal your wound, your injury is fatal. Everyone who hears the news about you will clap their hands at your fall, for who has not felt your endless cruelty?
  • And yet Israel becomes known for its abuse of the poor, its valley of slaughter where they sacrificed their children to the god Molech. Their daughters were given as temple prostitutes. It’s so easy to think to ourselves: “God seems really extreme here. He seems angry and violent.” His children are murdering each other and committing horrible acts, God will not let a people continue into deeper and deeper sin. He will cut it off, and stop the bleeding. In order to stop generation after generation from becoming prostitutes and murderers, He will stop a nation. God does not view death from our point of view, and He does not condemn every man, woman and child to hell when He punishes on earth. We have a God who cares for us more than we care for ourselves. He fashioned each one of us and knows our names and our most intimate self. He will not watch self-abuse and self-ruin forever. God reaches down and brings punishment that leads to justice and repentance. He stops evil, and ultimately, He stepped down to take His own punishment that everyone deserved.
HABAKKUK
  • His ministry was during the reign of King Jehoiakim (18) of Judah.
  • His relationship with prophets was when Zephaniah’s ministry was concluded, Jeremiah was in the middle of his ministry, and Daniel was deported to Babylon two years after Habakkuk’s warning.
  • Habakkuk belongs to the time when the balance of power was shifting from the Assyrians to the Babylonians. Jerusalem was destroyed (586 B.C.) two years after his ministry ended.
The message of Habakkuk came at a time when the Babylonians were in power. He was deeply disturbed by the violence of these cruel people, and asked the Lord, “So why are you silent while they destroy people who are more righteous than they are?” (1:13, GNT). The Lord’s answer was that He would take action in His own good time, and meanwhile “those who are righteous will live because they are faithful to God” (2:4, GNT). The rest of the message is a prophecy of doom on the unrighteous, with a concluding psalm celebrating the greatness of God and expressing the undying faith of the poet.
  • What should we do when God seems to lack concern because He is silent?
  • When can complaining to God be beneficial?
  • What is involved in waiting on God?
  • What’s a good description of living by faith?
  • How should life be balanced when there is injustice, grief and pain?
Sharing:
  • The book of Habakkuk begins with a man complaining to God. Here is a man who knows he is talking to a real God. He’s not trying to mock God, or call Him out. He’s asking, “Why?” What are you doing in heaven? Sometimes all we can do in the middle of a terrible stretch in our lives, is ask why?
  • Is it a good thing to go to God with complaints, requests, and conversations? In God’s Story so far, it seems so within limits, like Job. God desires open communication. It shows relationship. We are able to ask questions respectfully of God.
  • It appears that this is a conversation that is over time. Habakkuk waits on the Lord, and stands ready for an answer. Habakkuk knew he didn't know everything about God. It’s a good place to be.
  • Habakkuk 1:5 shows a God who cares enough to reply. Sometimes we have to wait and watch and listen. He doesn’t ask that we blindly follow. We should be willing to wait. This is a concept of faith in self/now versus faith in God.
  • After reading Habakkuk 2:6-7, it is easy to say Israelites are bad, but we must remember we are too. It comes down to our promoting ourselves. Our plans become our gods. And God laughs at them. They were punished due to their self love. But not before again having a chance to repent.
  • Habakkuk knows something about our God. He knows that He can be trusted to reveal His will to those who love Him, and wait for Him to answer. God answers in His time, because it is the best time. He makes us wait, to bring us closer to Himself. God answers, and tells Habakkuk that He is raising up the Babylonians to spread across the earth. He acknowledges their cruelty and that they worship themselves. Notice that God only gives a part of the picture. In the prophet’s reply, he seems to understand that God will reveal more to him. He wonders at why God would use such a proud, cruel and godless nation. He shares his heart with God and stands ready to watch and listen for an answer. And we have a God who as all the answers, and has a purpose and reason for everything. He tells His prophet to make it plain, easy to understand, so that it can be told to everyone. God does not want Himself revealed to only a higher society. In fact, many times those in power refuse to hear His voice. God is the God of all men of all walks of life. His word is meant to be easily understood by those who seek after Him and wait for His word.
  • This prophecy is towards the end of Israel and Judah as kingdoms, so it is not a prophecy toward innocent people.
  • God uses evil for good. For each of us. That's the only use God has for evil.
  • God’s last answer lets Habakkuk know that the Babylonians will not be rewarded for their evil. Their evil will eventually destroy them. All evil is self-destructive. Evil is pride of self, and the self was never meant to serve itself. It’s a broken lifestyle and it can only produce evil in the end.
  • The last chapter is Habakkuk’s prayer of praise to God. The fog of fear is lifted and God’s promise of salvation for His people is still good. It’s easy to think that if God isn’t letting us know what’s happening, it must be a bad thing. Habakkuk shows us that God waits to reveal things so that we can learn to wait on Him. It’s in the waiting that we grow in faith and trust and love.
  • The wait was worth it: “Yet I will rejoice in the Lord, I will be joyful in God my Savior” (Habakkuk 3:18).
  • His ministry was during the reign of King Josiah of Judah (16).
  • His relationship with prophets was when Jeremiah was half way through his ministry, and Daniel began his ministry two years after his message.
His message belongs to the dark period in Judah’s history about 100 years after Israel had fallen to the Assyrians. He sensed that the same thing was about to happen to Judah. In 605 B.C. Judah’s first captives were taken to Babylon. Judah fell in 586 B.C.
Zephaniah preached in the decade before King Josiah’s religious reforms of 621 B.C. The book contains the familiar prophetic themes: A day of doom and destruction is threatened, when Judah would be punished for her worship of other gods. The Lord would also punish other nations. Although Jerusalem was doomed, in time the city would be restored, with a humble and righteous people living there.
  • Consider God’s order in delivering judgment.
  • How is the ‘joy of the Lord’ expressed?
  • What is the significance of Zephaniah’s use of God’s name 37 times in three chapter?

      Thursday, December 15, 2011

      SESSION 39: Obadiah, Jonah, Micah

      ·         The date of his ministry is doubtful. If his ministry was around 848-841 B.C., Jehoram [Joram] was the king of Israel (9).

      ·         His ministry was during the reign of kings Jehoram (5) and Ahaziah (6) of Judah.

      ·         His relationship was with the prophets, Elijah, and probably Elisha.

      This short book comes from some undetermined time. Many consider it to be around 848-841 B.C. when Elijah and Elisha ministered. Some think it was after the fall of Jerusalem in 586 B.C., with a message against the Edomites, ancestors to Esau, the brother of Jacob, because they rejoiced over the fall of Jerusalem. Obadiah prophesied that Edom would be punished and defeated, along with other nations that were the enemies of Israel.

      ·         God’s view towards taking vengeance.
       
      Sharing:
      ·         God gave this prophecy to Obadiah long before the punishment was carried out. He is a patient God who waits, and will withhold is judgment for generations so that even a few could be saved.
      ·         He has always been a God of the few, the remnant, and the faithful. But while there have always been believers and followers of God, He does not rest. He seeks the lost and the sinful. He reaches out to even the evil and gives them time to repent. Our God is always calling sinners to repentance.
      ·         Why is it good that God gives out punishment? Because He is just, and it’s tempered with forgiveness when it is asked for. In this case, it is not just one man’s evil, but the people as a whole who got worse. There were sins of omission (not doing what they knew they should do), and not just commission (the evil they actually did).
      ·         Obadiah shows that Israel is not God’s only people.
      ·         ‘Stand and watch’ in verse 11 may refer to the Gulf of Aqaba between Israel and Edom. Edom stood by on the other side and watched Israel’s destruction. Or it may not be a geographical reference, but just a reference to doing nothing while Israel needed help. The prophecy was fulfilled when Edom was wiped out forever is years to come.
      ·         Verse 18 compares with Ezekiel 35:1. If God is against you, there is no hope.
      ·         His ministry was during the reign of Kings Jehoash (12) and Jeroboam II (13) of Israel.
      ·         His ministry was during the reign of King Amaziah of Judah (9).
      ·         His relationship was with the prophet Amos.
      His message to Nineveh was delivered during the rules of two kings of Assyria: (Shalmaneser IV) and Ashur-dan III (760-753), ending his ministry about thirty years before Assyria fell (722 B.C.).
      The Book of Jonah is unlike other prophetic books of the Bible in that it is a narrative, describing the exploits of a prophet who tried to disobey God’s command. God told him to go to Nineveh, the capital of the great empire of Assyria, Israel’s enemy. But Jonah did not want to go there with God’s message, because he was convinced that God would not carry out his threat to destroy the city. After a series of dramatic events, he reluctantly obeyed, and finally sulked when his message of doom did not come true. The book portrays God’s absolute sovereignty over His creation. But above all it portrays God as a God of love and mercy, who would rather forgive and save even the enemies of His people, than punish and destroy them.
      • What is the purpose in using God’s name 41 times in 48 verses?
      • How does God use prayer to deal with our anger toward Him?
      Sharing:
      • God tells Jonah to give a message of warning and repentance to Nineveh. In Sunday school I always heard the story of Jonah being too scared to go. But I don’t find fear in the story. I believe if there is fear, it’s a fear that God would forgive the Ninevites. The Ninevites were Assyrians, not only a danger to Israel, but an awful brutal people. They put the bones of their enemies outside their city gates, and covered the wall with their skins. They were a violent, proud people.
      • Jonah is certain to have heard stories of their evil and could even have known some of their victims. It was a national hate for the Assyrians. They were not God’s chosen people. In fact, they tortured and killed His people.
      • God revealed Himself to the sailors by stopping the storm, once Jonah was thrown overboard. The men on the ship offer a sacrifice to the Lord and make vows to Him. He is always revealing Himself. Once Jonah tells them that the way they are living will bring punishment on themselves from God, the Ninevites repent. It’s as simple as that. They hear the words of God, and respond with repentance. After all the belligerent and stubbornness of the Israelites, it’s refreshing to finally see people that repent. And they’re not God’s chosen nation. They’re the dirty, the unfaithful, the sexually immoral, the drunks, and the liars. That’s who God saves. Israel as a nation refused to think of itself needing God as much as every other nation does. They assumed that because of their parents, they must be right with Him. On the high places and in the dark, they sinned as much and more than the “sinful” people around them. But Nineveh repented. So thousands upon thousands of people were saved into the family of God and everyone was happy… that would have been a good ending. In reality, we are much less forgiving than God. Jonah accused God of being a gracious and compassionate God! It sounds like he’s calling God soft. He even says that it would be better to die than to see the city saved.  But God asks Jonah, “What right do you have to be angry?” Jonah stuck around to see if maybe God would punish the city after all. God made a vine to give shade for Jonah from the scorching sun. Jonah was comfortable and happy, until God took away the vine and the desert sun beat down on Jonah’s head until he became faint. Again, Jonah says it would be better to die than live after God took away the vine. The Lord reminds Jonah that he did no work to grow the vine, and it was God’s to do with as He pleased. If Jonah was so distressed about the vine, was he not distressed about an entire city that had never been told the truth of God? God was concerned for them, and it’s good for us He’s nothing like us. The Ninevites were the people in life that are just plain awful. They are the type of people that sicken us. They fill us with righteous anger for the innocent people they hurt and the innocence they take away. They’re the reason hell was made; they don’t deserve forgiveness. But that’s not the truth in the book of Jonah. Here’s a statement that might sound strange: ‘God gives forgiveness only to the undeserving.’ Undeserving Nineveh was saved, and deserving Israel remained unrepentant. God’s word and our consciences prove that no one deserves salvation. We’ve all proven our inability to be righteous. But the God of Israel and Nineveh and Bainbridge, loves to forgive and the only reason He does it, is because He loves us. It is not for anything good that we can give Him; it is just because it pleases Him to offer Himself to all men.
      • God’s Story about Jonah shows not only a punishing God, but one who accepts repentance. He is the sole prophet to Gentiles only.
      • Why did Jonah run away? He hated the Ninevites as evil people. Are we the same in that we may not want salvation for those we dislike? Jonah knew that God would forgive his enemy, and he didn’t want that to happen. He was prepared to die (be dumped off the ship) before going to the Ninevites. Jonah also ran away because he had allegiance to his own country.
      • The sailors were introduced to Jonah’s God in a very strange way. God used Jonah’s disobedience to reveal Himself to others. They encountered a supernatural God.
      • The Ninevites witnessed a strange looking man that was white from stomach acid. It is ironic that the result of Jonah’s disobedience was used by God to get the attention of the Ninevites. Their repentance wasn’t for gain, since they didn’t know God would withhold judgment.
      • It was easy for Jonah to flee from God: he had the money, and the ship leaving in the opposite direction. His fleeing provides an illustration: fleeing means he went down – down to the port of Joppa, down to the ship’s base, down to the ocean bottom, and down and away from God.
      • Jonah accused God of being merciful and compassionate, slow to get angry, and full of unfailing love (Jonah 4:2). It is easy for us to think others don’t deserve God’s forgiveness. Many think the Old Testament only shows a bloody, angry God. This story shows a God of love that Jonah accused Him of being.
      Jonah knew that God was a God of mercy and forgiveness, so he ran away from delivering God’s message.
      • His ministry was during the reign of kings Pekah (8) Hoshea (9) of Israel.
      • His ministry was during the reign of kings Jotham (11), Ahaz (12), and Hezekiah (13) of Judah.
      • His relationship with prophets was shortly after Amos, with Hosea Israel, and Isaiah in Jerusalem.

      His message to Judah was during the time when the Assyrians launched their drive for supremacy, defeating the northern kingdom of Israel in 722 B.C.
      Micah, a contemporary of Isaiah, was from a country town in Judah, the southern kingdom. He was certain that Judah was about to face the same kind of national catastrophe that Amos had predicted for the northern kingdom, and for the same reason God would punish the hateful injustice of the people. Micah’s message, however, contains more clear and notable signs of hope for the future. His message gives the picture of universal peace under God (4:1-14); the prediction of a great king who would come from the family line of David and bring peace to the nation (5:2-5); and in 6:8 he gives the summary of much that the prophets of Israel had to say: “What he requires of us is this: to do what is just, to show constant love, and to live in humble fellowship with our God.”
      • What does God consider authentic worship to be?
      • What is the significance of Micah’s use of God’s name 52 times in seven chapters?
      Sharing:
      • Every generation was faced with the truth of God and the exposing of their sin. That is a God of constant love. He gives every person of every generation an opportunity to respond to His love, repent and stop doing evil.
      • The people of Micah’s time looked for prophets that would tell them they were a great people, that God would lift them up and bless them. This is a constant theme throughout all of Scripture, and all of human history. Is there any difference today?
      • We easily hear what we want to hear when the Bible is preached. Sometimes we ignore the message, sometimes we are sleeping, and sometimes we apply it to someone else and don’t take it to heart. We are masters of deflection and self-deception. There are even times when we will go out and seek a place that doesn’t challenge us to pursue hard after God so that we can feel like a good person again. We just want to hear that we have everything together. We want a God who loves us and doesn’t want us to change a thing. Micah is saying that everything is not okay. We are called to change, to admit the sin in our lives, and then live differently. A godly walk that doesn’t need to be changed has only existed once. We are called to honesty, and if we’re honest, there is no way we can be done living a repentant life. There is always something to give up, to leave at the roadside and follow our God. If we’re not changing we’re lying to ourselves. We’re either becoming more obedient to our God, or we’re more a slave to sin.
      • Micah displays the results of disobedience, and they are terrible. Living in sin heaps misery on your head. Living after God brings rest and joy. All of the prophets and all of God’s Word scream this at us. There is no middle ground, it’s love God and experience the protection of the God who can lead you to perfect peace, or reject His protection and try it your own way. The prophets are meant to wake people up to the choices that they’re making and the results of those choices. God will not let anyone wander into hell unknowingly. We are all faced with God. In the back of our minds, there is that vague memory of something lost. Something that we are missing that we were meant to have.
      • God is waking His people up, and sadly, when they are shown their sin and confronted with God’s opinion of it, they deny that small voice calling them back, by telling themselves, ”This prophet doesn’t really know what he’s talking about. He can’t know what I’ve done in secret.” But I believe, in their hearts they know. It is a choice. And it’s so easy to deflect and avoid. It seems easier to just wait out those guilty feelings and let them pass.
      • Micah reveals the punishment of sin, and then the unbelievable forgiveness of God. God calls and calls and never tires. He exposes sin to bring repentance, and not a guilty conscience. The guilt remains because we haven’t given up our sin. Guilt is not meant for God’s children. He has never wanted a worried, guilty people. He desires a free and thankful people who understand the great gift of a God that opens our eyes to the sin that wears on our soul. He gives us a way to let go and be free. We are not meant to be guilty. We are meant to accept that we have fallen short, and then to accept His forgiveness and know that true salvation’s rest is with us.
      • What does God require for authentic worship? Micah 6:8 speaks of a heart that expresses itself in life.
      • The fact that Micah mentions God’s name 52 times shows that the people wanted to identify with God, but not serve Him.
      • The people’s reaction to their sin being exposed was to tell Micah not to tell them about it, but go away. He was to shut up and leave. They denied that they were under conviction. It seemed easier for them to evade the issue most of the time. Why is sin exposed? A change was needed, to the extent that a second chance was given. The sin of Israel and Judah was an example to other nations of the folly of living in sin. Exposure of sin is not intended to make us wallow in guilt, but so that we can enjoy life. It is to our benefit to go the right way, and in order to do this, we cannot brush off sin, but respond to the conviction we have when we do sin.