Isaiah 22: Warnings to Jerusalem and its leaders. The warnings stem from how the leaders behaved during wartime. They apparently stopped focusing on God and spent more time focusing on their defenses. At least this is according to the notes in the CEB study bible (p. 1124 OT).
Isaiah 19-21; Matthew 15-16
Isaiah 19: Threats concerning Egypt. So God strikes down Egypt because of what the people there are doing. We then see at the end of this chapter that the people turn (back?) to God and worship him again. As in, if you hold to a literal interpretation of the Bible, then you believe that the Egyptians followed God out of fear.
Again, strange way to view things. Doesnāt make any sense to me. It seems limiting.
Isaiah 16-18; Matthew 13-14
NOTE: From this point forward I will see a one sentence description of the overall message for that particular chapter. This is from the NRSV Access Bible. I like it.
Isaiah 16: More lamentations concerning Moab. This is pretty much a continuation of Isaiah 15. Itās still more about the destruction of Moab at the hands of God.
Isaiah 13-15; Psalms 99-101
Isaiah 13: Even though I am struggling with Isaiah a little bit, I really do need to get into the history of this book. I need to figure out what scholars have learned about the historical setting of this book.
This chapter is about the overthrow of Babylon. We learn in the beginning that God intends to unleash his fury on Babylon. God will put together a huge army to take out Babylon. There is a lot of description here about the horrible things that will help to these people. Itās kind of intense. For example, this is pretty intense: āTheir infants will be crushed before their eyes; their houses plundered, their women rapedā (CEB, v. 16, p. 1114 OT). DAMN!
Continue reading “Isaiah 13-15; Psalms 99-101”Isaiah 10-12; Matthew 11-12
Isaiah 10: The overall message in this chapter is that Assyria will not escape Godās judgment. As I read this chapter and this book overall I canāt help but think of the book by Rob Bell, What is the Bible. He argues, convincingly, that the Bible is pretty much a metaphor and guide, not to be taken literally. I need to reread what he says about the amount of violence of the Bible. Because these chapters are all about God wanting to destroy entire groups of people. Yikes.
Continue reading “Isaiah 10-12; Matthew 11-12”Visit to the Bible Collection at the Stuttgart Library
10/15/18
Today I met with Dr. Christian Herrmann, the head of the Historical Collections department at the WĆ¼rttembergische Landesbibliothek (State Library of WĆ¼rttemberg). I reached out to him a little over a week ago to see if I could set up a visit to look at the Bible Collection, which he also oversees. I was expecting a simple visit where he would set me up in a room with a few editions and let me just look over them. I was in for a surprise. He took me downstairs to the full collection and spent almost 2 hours with me showing me several different versions of the Bible.
Continue reading “Visit to the Bible Collection at the Stuttgart Library”
9/19 Reading (Isaiah 7-9; Matthew 9-10)
Isaiah 7: Here we see the beginning of a story of Ahaz, King in Jerusalem, who is fearful of attacks from Israel and Aram. God tells Isaiah that he will protect him and to trust in him. Ahaz says that he will not test the Lord. Now I took this as a good thing, but according to the notes, Isaiah viewed this as Ahaz not trusting God.
9/17 Reading (Isaiah 4-6; Matthew 7-8)
Isaiah 4: This is the last chapter of the first part of this book. After all of the promise of death and destruction, we see a single paragraph that paints a lovely picture of what Jerusalem will look like after God is done. It sounds like a utopia.
9/8 Reading (Isaiah 1-3; Psalms 97-98)
Introduction to Isaiah: This is the first of the prophetic books. Introduction in CEB makes this book sound pretty interesting. I want to get into the text, but I need to definitely reread this later. In fact, I think that once Iām done and start to explore writing a book, I will come back to all of the introductions to each individual book, the introductions to different sections in the Bible, and the additional essays from each Bible. And Iāll read this source (here).
9/7 Reading (Song of Songs 7-8; Matthew 5-6)
Song of Songs 7: WOW! Now this chapter is where things get interesting. A friend of mine made a comment several months ago that there was references to all sorts of sexual acts in this book, including oral sex. And yep, here it is. The man first describes the womanās body in a similar fashion to how he did in earlier chapters. Of course this focuses on her entire body.
Continue reading “9/7 Reading (Song of Songs 7-8; Matthew 5-6)”