Jan 13, 2025
GENESIS 30:
In yesterday’s reading , Jacob left home, and God appeared to him
and promised to bless him as he blessed Isaac. Jacob worked for
Laban, married both Leah and Rachel, and he had four sons through
Leah.
JOB 17:
Yesterday was the first chapter of Job's response to Eliphaz. He
complained that his three comforters were not very comforting.
1-2 GNT I have heard words like that before;
the comfort you give is only torment.
3 Are you going to keep on talking forever?
Do you always have to have the last word?
And he said,
6 But nothing I say helps,
and being silent does not calm my pain.
And
9 In anger God tears me limb from limb;
he glares at me with hate.
This last statement shows how easy it is for us humans to misunderstand God’s will or intentions concerning us. God did not hate Job!
MARK 10b:
Yesterday in the first half of chapter 10, Jesus gave God's true
perspective on divorce, blessed some children, and said that is
impossible for the rich to enter the Kingdom of God (in their own
strength). By the way, there is a wrong teaching that is still
often heard. People have heard that the ‘eye of the needle’ was a
little door next to the big gate in Jerusalem, and that a camel
could get through this gate but all the burden would have to be
taken off. This is wrong. No such gate was made in New Testament
days in Jerusalem. Such gates were made in castles in Europe in the
middle ages. No, the meaning of the saying is just what he said: It
is just as impossible for the rich to enter heaven as it is for a
camel to go through the eye of a real sewing needle. The next
statement of Jesus however shows the way the rich may enter
heaven.
Jesus gave a wonderful promise for missionaries at the end of the chapter. I bear witness to every part of that. 2,000 Orya people call me ‘Aya Bak’— which means ‘older brother’. The Lord has blessed me way more than 100 times.
Constable’s notes for v.49:
The two descriptions of Jesus in these verses reveal the faith of
Bartimaeus. The crowds simply described Jesus as “the Nazarene.”
Bartimaeus had obviously heard about Jesus and had concluded that
He was the Messiah. “Son of David” is a messianic title (cf.
11:9-10; 12:35-37; 2 Sam. 7:8-16; Isa. 11:1, 10; Jer. 23:5-6; Ezek.
34:23-24). Even though Bartimaeus lacked physical sight he saw more
clearly who Jesus was then the multitudes who could see. His cry
for mercy from Jesus expressed the attitude of trust, humility, and
dependence that Jesus had been teaching His disciples to
maintain.
NLT Translation notes:
33 “Listen,” he said, “we’re going up to Jerusalem, where
[I,/0] the Son of Manh will be betrayed to the
leading priests and the teachers of religious law. They will
sentence [me/him] to die and hand [me/him] over to
the Romans.i 34 They will mock [me], spit on
[me], flog [me] with a whip, and
kill [me], but after three days
[I/he] will rise again.”
[One very seldom talks of oneself using a third person pronoun in
most of the world's languages.]
45 For even [I, as/0] the Son of Man came not to
be served but to serve others and to give [my/his]
life as a ransom for many.”
52 And Jesus said to him, “Go, [you are healed now because
you fully believed in me//for your faith has healed you].”
Instantly the man could see, and he followed Jesus down the
road.
Unless otherwise indicated, all Scripture quotations are taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation, copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.