Devotional: Leviticus 2
Today’s passage: Leviticus 2
Helpful thoughts:
- Chapter 2 describes the Grain Offering.
- The Grain Offerings included fine flour, oil, frankincense and salt.
- These ingredients were special and reminded the people to bring their best before the Lord.
- Unlike the burnt offerings, a portion of the grain offerings were to be set aside for the priests as their food. This was one of God’s ways of providing for the priests, and if Israel would be faithful to bring their offerings, the priests would have everything they needed through their service to the Lord and Israel.
- The memorial portion of the grain offering was called that because when it was offered to the Lord, he committed to remember (Memorial/Remember) their petitions and prayers.
- These offerings were given to accompany the other offerings of animal sacrifice.
Questions to consider:
- Knowing that portions of these offerings were used to feed the priests, how would the faithfulness of Israel and the priests have served as a blessing to all? In what way did God set up a system where faithfulness would be a blessing to all? Adversely, once the people started lacking in faithfulness, what would have been the domino effect that led to greater and greater unfaithfulness? How important is every member of the body to make the whole body healthy?
- Did God need help remembering people’s prayers, as if he needed some burned grains to spark his memory? What were the benefits for Israel of giving these offerings? What was God doing for them in giving these commands?
Devotional: Leviticus 1
Today’s passage: Leviticus 1
Helpful thoughts:
- From the ESV Study Bible:
- “Leviticus should be considered a continuation of Exodus. The second part of Exodus is devoted to building the tabernacle, the purpose of which is to manifest the Lord’s glory among the people. The entire content of Leviticus was given less than a month after the construction of the tabernacle, between the first month of the year and the second month of the year following the Exodus from Egypt.”
- The first several chapters of Leviticus will detail five major offerings, the first of which is the burnt offering.
- The burnt offering was given to accompany prayers from God’s people (Either for needs or for praise).
- The offering (The animal sacrificed) served to atone for the person offering the prayer. The laying of the hand on the animal served as a way of showing the animal’s “standing in the place” of the person.
Questions to consider:
- What did the need of a burnt offering for a person to come before the Lord teach about God’s holiness and justice? Also of his mercy and grace?
- How would this picture have encouraged those who faithfully practiced it at the tabernacle to take their lives and their prayers seriously? What room is there for messing around in these offerings? How might they cause a person to live circumspectly?
- How do we as Christians (Under the New Covenant) approach the “throne of grace” in prayer (Hebrews 4:14-16)? What offering was needed to grant us access? How can this encourage us to continually, faithfully pray?
Devotional: Colossians 4:7-18
Today’s passage: Colossians 4:7-18
Helpful thoughts:
- The Body of Christ is full of relationships! People were coming and going back and forth to the churches and with the Apostle Paul. Some of them were headed toward restoration (Onesimus and Mark – Philemon 1:10-16, Acts 15:39). Others would later prove unfaithful (Demas – 2 Timothy 4:10).
- All of these people mattered and all of them had a role to play in the churches (Verse 17).
- Paul took up the writing utensil to sign this letter at the end, showing he was genuinely the author.
Questions to consider:
- In what way did Epaphras struggle on behalf of the Colossian church (Verse 12)? Why is prayer such an important part of our “struggling” as a church?
- What can this list of people remind us of concerning the church? What is church really all about? Who is the church? What is the purpose of the property, the building, the programs? What are they here to do and be used for?
- Who could you encourage today with a “greeting”? How could you “fulfill the ministry you have received” from God’s Word as an active member of the Body of Christ?
Devotional: Colossians 4:2-6
Today’s passage: Colossians 4:2-6
Helpful thoughts:
- Paul calls on Christians to continually, steadfastly pray:
- With thanksgiving.
- Toward the clear presentation of the gospel to the lost.
- Clarity in communicating the gospel is not an impossible task, it is what “ought” to be done.
- Difficulty in clarity is not found in the content of the gospel, but in the spiritual battle to overcome our own fears to share it.
- “Outsiders” are those who do not believe, those outside the church. Before unbelievers, we are to walk and talk in wisdom, with gracious and seasoned speech. They are the mission field.
Questions to consider:
- What thoughts and beliefs result in a life of steadfast and continual prayer? What does a lack of prayer reveal about a person’s thinking?
- What is the gospel? For whom can you pray as they share it with others? With whom could you be praying and preparing to share it?
- When we are harsh or mocking toward unbelievers who act in unbelieving ways, what are we forgetting (1 Corinthians 6:9-11)? How does remembering where we’ve come from why we are saved and growing help us to stay humble and more likely to share our faith with others?
Devotional: Colossians 3:18-4:1
Today’s passage: Colossians 3:18-4:1
Helpful thoughts:
- The list of characteristics Christians “put on” as we grow in Christ continues in today’s passage.
- The typical practice of the Roman culture was for men to be domineering over their wives and for the wives to simply obey. The Bible teaches submission, but not under a domineering hateful husband. Wives are not slaves. We are all made in the image of God. Husbands, love your wives.
- The Apostle Paul did not commend slavery, but he did give instruction to Christians in how to conduct themselves within that present social system. When Christians operated with dignity and respect within the system, it would have served to upend the system.
- Because this is true, what we read in this passage can be just as applicable to modern day employer-employee relationships.
Questions to consider:
- When we think of relationships and authority, what is it about those things that causes us to grieve, fear, recoil, etc.? What do we know will eventually happen with (or be done by) the people who are in charge? Why do we know that all in authority will eventually do something wrong? What is their nature?
- Why doesn’t this knowledge of the failure of those in authority completely eliminate the need, or the command, or the rightful place of authority and structure in the world? Why do you think God still instructs us to lead and be led in different relationships?
- When we lead or when we are being led, who are we serving? How does thinking about leading and being led through the grid of love and through the grid of service to the Lord change our thinking and tendency to protect self?
Devotional: Colossians 3:12-17
Today’s passage: Colossians 3:12-17
Helpful thoughts:
- In the previous verses, Paul exhorted the reader to “put off the old man.” Now we read about what comes next, putting on the new.
- The list of characteristics given give a well-rounded picture of the growing Christian life.
- We forgive because the Lord has forgiven us. When we think of our offense as created beings before our holy Creator, it gives a proper perspective to the sins of one person against another.
- When the Word of Christ dwells in us richly, it comes out of us in various ways.
- When we sing songs together in our services, we are giving worship to God and ministering to one another! Sing your heart out! Your brothers and sisters in Christ need to hear you sing the Words of Christ.
Questions to consider:
- How does becoming a follower of Christ change our identity and our goals? How should we look at our identity in light of being united together with the body (Verse 15)?
- Which characteristics stuck out the most to you and why? How have you seen yourself and/or others growing in these areas? How would you like to grow? For what can you thank the Lord?
- In what way does verse 17 wrap up anything else the passage may have “missed?” What area of our lives is out of the realm of God’s sovereignty? How can you do everything/anything you do to the glory of God (1 Corinthians 10:31)?
Devotional: Colossians 3:5-11
Today’s passage: Colossians 3:5-11
Helpful thoughts:
- Because of who we are in Christ, and because of the glory we are guaranteed in eternity, it is only right that we change and grow to become more like him. This is progressive sanctification. We put off the “old self” and put on the “new self.”
- The process of putting on the new self begins with “being renewed in knowledge.”
- We do what we do because we want what we want.
- We want what we want because we think what we think.
- Right knowledge comes through hearing and seeing truth (The Word of God).
- No matter what is true of us in this world, for all those who put their faith in Christ, your primary identity is that you are in Christ.
Questions to consider:
- How does remembering we have an “old self” to put off keep us humble when we look at others in the world? Are we better than anyone else? What do the lost need? What can we tell them?
- Of all the people in the world, who are your brothers and sisters? Who is closest to you, regardless of the color of their skin, their background, their economic status, their address, etc.?
- What does it mean to “put to death what is earthly in you”? Did anything in the list of earthly, sinful actions stick out? How can you make progress in putting it to death and putting on the “new self”?
Sermon: 1 Peter 1:10-12
Devotional: Colossians 3:1-4
Today’s passage: Colossians 3:1-4
Helpful thoughts:
- The focus of the false teachers was on the self and in the physical and temporary. Christians keep our eyes up on Christ and eternity!
- Christ is presently at the right hand of God the Father. This is a position of authority and where Christ makes intercession for us (Romans 8:34). No other teacher or leader in the church could ever come close to the authority and access of Jesus. Look to Jesus.
- When Paul writes, “your life is hidden,” he refers to the safety and security we have in Christ. Jesus is our shelter, our protection, our sin is covered by his blood.
- He is our authority, our access to God, and our safety.
Questions to consider:
- Why is it best for us as a church to never tire of making much of Jesus? Why is he the greatest thing we could think about, talk about, preach about, sing about, etc.?
- How does focusing on Jesus and his gospel rightly shape who we are what we are to do as Christians and as the church?
- What is the promise given to us in verse 4? What will be true of us forevermore when Christ returns?
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