Reflections on Leviticus 26-27

God will bless obedience and punish disobedience.

  • God’s Presence – God promises to bless the people if they will obey the covenant.  One of his greatest blessings is that he will dwell with them (26:11).  One of God’s greatest blessings to us is that he dwells with us by his Spirit.
  • Punishment – God will punish the people if they forsake the covenant.  God takes disobedience seriously.  Unfaithfulness to God is a serious affair.  In a world that scoffs at sin, let us be careful to obey God faithfully.

Semon Songs: Ephesians 4:15-16

MusicNotes

Now tell the truth with loving speech
To build up the Body
Speak the gospel in love to reach
The world for His glory

One another now serve in love
Enabled by Jesus
That we might be like Christ above
The Head of all of us

In truth and love now let us grow
And into Christ our Lord
Draw near to Him – His love to know
His grace to us out-poured

 (To the tune of “O For A Thousand Tongues To Sing”)

Reflections on Levitiicus 23-25

Our passage today continues to give laws that teach us some very important lessons

  • The Lord’s Name – One of the people blasphemed the name of God.  The penalty was death, and he was stoned.  Here is a reminder of how serious God is about how we treat his name.  While the punishment is part of the Mosaic Covenant, the command comes from the Third Commandment – a universal law.  How do you treat God’s name?  Do you use it as a curse?  Do you treat it poorly?
  • The Poor – Chapter 25 reveals God’s concern for the poor.  How does your heart match the heart of God?  How are you helping those in need?

Leviticus 23-27: Worship

(23) The people were to gather together regularly throughout the year.  What was the purpose of each of the holy gatherings (or feasts) that God appointed?  How might each one point to Jesus?

  • Sabbath (Matthew 11:28-30) –
  • Passover / Unleavened Bread (I Corinthians 5:7) –
  • First Fruits (I Corinthians 15:20-23) –
  • Weeks / Pentecost (Acts 2) –
  • Trumpets (I Thessalonians 4:13-18) –
  • Day of Atonement (Hebrews 9:12, 24-26) –
  • Booths/Tabernacles –

How might the Lord’s Supper fulfill many of the same purposes of worship for us today?

(24) Worship includes not only public celebrations, but how we live our daily lives. What do you learn about our speech (v10-16)?  What would it look like to apply this principle to all of our lives?

(25) What was the purpose of the Sabbath year and the year of Jubilee (v4, 10)?  How does the year of Jubilee point to Jesus (Luke 4:16-21)?

What was the reasoning behind these special years (v2, 23, 42, 55)?  What do these reasons suggest about how we should live (see also Psalm 24:1)?  Be specific.

(27) This chapter deals with voluntary and required gifts.  Why is giving an important part of worship?

Passion Points

Here are some good posts for your weekend reading:

4 Ways to Cling to the Lord – Sam Storms (Crossway)
The temptation to forget God is always present. But there is a way to maintain one’s devotion to the Lord. Joshua’s counsel in Joshua 23:6-11 is especially helpful and can be summarized using four As.

How to Resist Temptation’s Mirage Moment– Jon Bloom (DG)
Temptation is a disorienting, defiling experience when evil is presented to us as good. Destruction comes dressed up to look like happiness.

5 Things You Can Give to God Every Day – Tim Challies
The heart of productivity is glorifying God by serving others. It is carefully and deliberately considering the things God calls us to do, and deploying all that we’ve got for his glory and the good of people made in his image. It is giving back to him what he has entrusted to each one of us.

Don’t Be Embarrassed by Your Ordinary Church – Erik Raymond (For the Church)
Is your church ordinary? Small? Well, my Christian friend, if it is preaching the gospel and endeavoring to help others to know and follow Jesus then it is not insignificant. It is powerfully important and surpassingly glorious.

Hope you have a great Lord’s Day with your ordinary church and your extraordinary God!

The Triumph of Personal Perception

The Bible teaches that God created the world.  As the Creator, God defines what is real.  God alone determines reality.

But of course our culture has rejected God as Creator, and so rejects his claim to define what is real.  And so now we will define reality based on our own personal perceptions.  We will become mini-gods and define reality as we see fit.  Objective created reality doesn’t matter.  All that matters is what I perceive to be real.

And so as a recent video shows us, a short white man can think he is a tall Chinese woman, and we will accept him as such because his personal perception defines his reality regardless of what is really real.  If this same adult claims to be a seven-year-old, we will affirm him in his personal perception of himself, and even allow him to attend first grade. Personal perception determines reality – even if we must throw out mathematics (the man’s height), biology (the man’s gender), and history (the man’s ancestry).

If I think I am a penguin, then I am, and I should be able to swim with the penguins at the zoo.  Because personal perception determines reality.  That is the teaching of our culture.

And so our president’s recent directive, that every public school must allow their students to define their gender regardless of their biological sex, should not surprise us.  That each school must allow boys claiming to be girls to shower in the girls’ locker room should not surprise us.  That so many people are willing to go along with this should not surprise us.  This is merely one symptom of this false way of thinking – that my personal perception defines reality.

I recently attended one of my daughter’s soccer games, and the school hosting the game provided programs with the names and numbers of all the players.  And at the bottom of the program was this little gem: “If you believe it, you can do it.”  In other words, your perception determines reality.  So if I believe I can fly, I can jump off a cliff and fly away.  But will my personal perception really determine my reality?

The fact is that the hard rocks of real reality lie at bottom of the cliff.  Reality often won’t bend to my perception.  And this attempt to redefine reality based on our own perceptions will leave many bloody and hurting at the bottom of the cliff.  And as people grow weary of the carnage and wreckage that their own perceptions of reality will ultimately bring, the church needs to be ready to lovingly point them back to Jesus. We need to be ready to point them to the real Savior who died on a real cross to pay for their real sin of trying to become gods who determine reality for themselves.

God alone defines reality.  Instead of trying to bend reality to our own perceptions, we must bend our perceptions to reality as God has defined it, reality as God has created it, reality as it really is.