Tag: exodus

  • Are we children of Ephraim? – Psalm 78

    Are we children of Ephraim? – Psalm 78

    A child of blessing

    Ephraim was the second child of Zaphnath-Paaneah and Asenath. His father’s high position second only to Pharaoh gave Ephraim every advantage as he was brought up with all the riches of the palace.

    You may recognize him as brother of Manasseh and both brothers known as sons of Joseph, son of Israel (Jacob).

    He was much like the church we know in the US now. These sons and their families grew up with practically everything a man could desire. But one change in leadership would relegate them to lesser roles before they lost faith in the wilderness.

    Even though they had followed the Lord when Moses returned to save Israel from slavery, during forty years in the wilderness each year of yearning for former days turned their hearts from the Lord.

    Think about their roles as followers of God in the way Asaph contemplates years later. Think also closer to home, considering your own push-back from faithfulness from the Lord who would save you.

    Psalm 78

     God’s Kindness to Rebellious Israel
     A Contemplation of Asaph.

    9 The children of Ephraim, being armed and carrying bows,
    Turned back in the day of battle.
    10 They did not keep the covenant of God;
    They refused to walk in His law,
    11 And forgot His works
    And His wonders that He had shown them.

    How like US

    Forget for a moment your own heritage.

    Perhaps your forefathers came to a land of promise or a home of the free. They may have bought passage to new hope in a land of milk and honey, a hopeful homeland of riches.

    Or perhaps they fled in huddled masses from persecution, slavery and imminent death. Oh, the hope of our poor and tired aliens embarking on a pilgrimage of promise.

    Who will you trust if not the Lord?

    Of Ephraim’s blessing

    Note centrality of Ephraim & Manasseh, Joseph’s sons to the promised land and a divided people of the LORD

    12 Marvelous things He did in the sight of their fathers,
    In the land of Egypt, in the field of Zoan.

    Do you, even in your days of difficulty, remember what the Lord has done for you and your fathers in days past, how the Lord has saved you?

    13 He divided the sea and caused them to pass through;
    And He made the waters stand up like a heap.
    14 In the daytime also He led them with the cloud,
    And all the night with a light of fire.
    15 He split the rocks in the wilderness,
    And gave them drink in abundance like the depths.
    16 He also brought streams out of the rock,
    And caused waters to run down like rivers.

    Here is Asaph’s embrace of the Lord’s blessing many years prior to his own life in the Kingdom of David.

    How like the blessings thousands of years later of the ‘new world,’ a new land to conquer and colonize. Ephraim was one blessed by the Lord, but the promise of the Lord was long forgotten.

    Sin and Rebellion

    Egypt or England will call it rebellion, or course. But your journey of hope from oppression must remain in the hand of the Lord.

    We know in your heart that our forefathers were not without sin. The cause of our exodus from a former existence was not so righteous as our national celebrations would have us believe.

    Though Asaph laments of his founding fathers, we could well apply their rebellion to our own hearts.

    But they sinned even more against Him
    By rebelling against the Most High in the wilderness.

    Psalm 78:17 NKJV

    18 And they tested God in their heart
    By asking for the food of their fancy.
    19 Yes, they spoke against God:
    They said, “Can God prepare a table in the wilderness?
    20 Behold, He struck the rock,
    So that the waters gushed out,
    And the streams overflowed.
    Can He give bread also?
    Can He provide meat for His people?”

    The PERSON of GOD

    If God IS a Person, then how does He feel about your sin?

    How does God the Father react to the sin of His child?

    Roger Harned – talkofJesus.com on Psalm 78

    21 Therefore the Lord heard this and was furious;

    So a fire was kindled against Jacob,
    And anger also came up against Israel,
    22 Because they did not believe in God,
    And did not trust in His salvation.

    I’ll own it – I’m a rebel like Ephraim. Lord forgive me.

    And remember this, along with His many blessings to our forefathers, your own faithful or rebellious children, and what the Lord does for you.

    23 Yet He had commanded the clouds above,
    And opened the doors of heaven,
    24 Had rained down manna on them to eat,
    And given them of the bread of heaven.
    25 Men ate angels’ food;
    He sent them food to the full.

    Do you remember the miracles of the Lord’s blessings?

    Here we are so blessed more than most, yet craving the past and coveting the riches of others. Are we not like Joseph’s sons – Ephraim, the most blessed, whose rebellion failed to trust in the Lord?

    The Father’s wrath

    29 So they ate and were well filled,
    For He gave them their own desire.
    30 They were not deprived of their craving;

    But while their food was still in their mouths,
    31 The wrath of God came against them,
    And slew the stoutest of them,
    And struck down the choice men of Israel.

    How like the children of Ephraim we are!

    We plea to the Lord our God, ‘Father, give us this one thing we must have.’ Then, we think, because our Father has blessed us we will tell him of our next desire for blessing.

    32 In spite of this they still sinned,
    And did not believe in His wondrous works.

    33 Therefore their days He consumed in futility,
    And their years in fear.

    34 When He slew them, then they sought Him;
    And they returned and sought earnestly for God.

    Have you taught your children?

    SPOILED CHILDREN
    A meditation of J.C. Ryle 4 min. 23 sec.
    John Charles Ryle was born of well-to-do parents at Macclesfield England, 10 May 1816, appointed first Bishop of Liverpool. "His successor in Liverpool described him as ‘the man of granite with the heart of a child.’ - source

    Have you told your children of blessing that God our Father, the Lord, must be their Lord or they will suffer His wrath?

    Do you fear death and judgment (or even judgment, then death)?

    In fear have you promised God one thing, then in your comfort forgotten your Father?

    Psalm 78: (cont.)

    35 Then they remembered that God was their rock,
    And the Most High God their Redeemer.

    36 Nevertheless they flattered Him with their mouth,
    And they lied to Him with their tongue;
    37 For their heart was not steadfast with Him,
    Nor were they faithful in His covenant.

    A Father’s love

    Exodus 34:6 Then the LORD passed in front of Moses and called out:
    “The LORD, the LORD God,
    is compassionate and gracious,
    slow to anger,
    abounding in loving devotion and faithfulness,
    7 maintaining loving devotion to a thousand generations,
    forgiving iniquity, transgression, and sin.

    Yet He will by no means excuse the guilty;
    He will visit the iniquity of the fathers
    on their children and grandchildren
    to the third and fourth generations.”

    Do you, forgetful unfaithful claimant of the Lord, remember your repentance?

    Have you returned to the way of your sin, though your fathers repented and told you the faithfulness of the Lord?

    The Father’s compassion

    וְ֭לִבָּם לֹא־נָכֹ֣ון עִמֹּ֑ו וְלֹ֥א נֶ֝אֶמְנ֗וּ בִּבְרִיתֹֽו׃

    Psalm 78:37 WLC

    But he, being full of compassion, forgave their iniquity, and destroyed them not: yea, many a time turned he his anger away, and did not stir up all his wrath.

    For he remembered that they were but flesh; a wind that passeth away, and cometh not again.

    Psalm 78: (continued)

    52 But he brought his people out like a flock;
    he led them like sheep through the wilderness.
    53 He guided them safely, so they were unafraid;
    but the sea engulfed their enemies.
    54 And so he brought them to the border of his holy land,
    to the hill country his right hand had taken.
    55 He drove out nations before them
    and allotted their lands to them as an inheritance;
    he settled the tribes of Israel in their homes.

    Testing the Lord

    56 But they put God to the test
    and rebelled against the Most High;
    they did not keep his statutes.
    57 Like their ancestors they were disloyal and faithless,
    as unreliable as a faulty bow.
    58 They angered him with their high places;
    they aroused his jealousy with their idols.

    Does any sin of ours deserve the wrath of God our Father more than our worship of idol after lifeless idol, while we fail to remember our Father and Shepherd?

    Consequence of the Sin of Ephraim

    When God heard this, he was wroth, and greatly abhorred Israel:

    So that he forsook the tabernacle of Shiloh, the tent which he placed among men..

    Psalm 78:59-60 KJV

    The Very Presence of God left the Tabernacle of worship for Israel, because of their rebellion.

    Psalm 78: (CSB)

    67 He also rejected the tent of Joseph,
    And did not choose the tribe of Ephraim,
    68 But chose the tribe of Judah,
    Mount Zion which He loved.
    69 And He built His sanctuary like the heights,
    Like the earth which He has founded forever.

    God then chose Judah

    70 He also chose David His servant
    And took him from the sheepfolds…

    … He brought him
    To shepherd Jacob His people,
    And Israel His inheritance.
    72 So he shepherded them according to the integrity of his heart,
    And guided them with his skillful hands.

    • Are we children of Ephraim?
    • Children of Moses or of David?

    WHO HAS THE LORD CHOSEN?

    Abraham, Isaac and Jacob: yes Israel was chosen and blessed.

    Joseph, who came to be known in Egypt as Zaphnath-Paaneah, was blessed over his eleven brothers who finally bowed down to him.

    Then the LORD through a final blessing by Joseph’s father Israel blessed his sons, Manasseh the eldest, but giving the greater blessing to Ephraim.

    Yet through disobedience of the sons of Ephraim Israel’s blessing fell upon Judah.

    God’s Guidance of His People in Spite of Their Unfaithfulness – Psalm 78

    And after this all of Israel and its ten tribes were given over to their enemies Judah remained.

    But in time by their own wickedness, refusal to hear the Lord’s Prophets and turning against the Lord their God, the LORD also gave Judah over to its enemies.

    A Lament over the Destruction of Jerusalem, and Prayer for Help – Psalm 79

    Another Psalm of Asaph – a short reading of 13 verses

    Then the Lord brought back a remnant to Judah. They again discovered the Law of Moses in the Temple the Lord had abandoned.

    Yet again after a short time they again turned against the Lord their God. And for a time no word of the Lord was heard in all Israel. Again as Israel, Judah failed to listen to the Lord’s Prophets.

    “Your own eyes will see this, and you yourselves will say, ‘The LORD is great, even beyond the borders of Israel.’

    “A son honors his father, and a servant his master. But if I am a father, where is my honor? And if I am a master, where is your fear of me? says the LORD of Armies to you priests, who despise my name.”

    Malachi 1:5-6a CSB

    1:6 בֵּן יְכַבֵּד אָב וְעֶבֶד אֲדֹנָיו וְאִם־אָב אָנִי אַיֵּה כְבֹודִי וְאִם־אֲדֹונִים אָנִי אַיֵּה מֹורָאִי אָמַר יְהוָה צְבָאֹות לָכֶם הַכֹּֽהֲנִים בֹּוזֵי שְׁמִי וַאֲמַרְתֶּם בַּמֶּה בָזִינוּ אֶת־שְׁמֶֽךָ׃

    Masoretic text of Malachi 1:6

    The Son before Abraham

    The Good News of the Son – John 3:

    “For God loved the world in this way:

    He gave his one and only Son, so that everyone who believes in him will not perish but have eternal life. For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through him.

    The one who believes in the Son has eternal life, but the one who rejects the Son will not see life; instead, the wrath of God remains on him.

    Do you, sons and daughters of blessing, sons and daughters of great blessings through the Lord our God, believe in the Son of the Father, the Messiah Jesus, the Son of Man and only Son of God in whom you have eternal life rather than God’s wrath, as we well deserve?

    What must you do?

  • Before Abraham was, I AM

    Before Abraham was, I AM

    “I am the God of your father—the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob.” And Moses hid his face, for he was afraid to look upon God.

    Exodus 3:6 KJV

    13 And Moses said unto God, Behold, when I come unto the children of Israel, and shall say unto them, The God of your fathers hath sent me unto you; and they shall say to me, What is his name? what shall I say unto them?

    14 And God said unto Moses, I AM THAT I AM: and he said, Thus shalt thou say unto the children of Israel, I AM hath sent me unto you.

    Who sent Jesus to us?

    Moses relates one of the most remarkable encounters with the LORD which results in his leading God’s chosen from slavery to the promised land. Exodus records for us not only the genealogy of Israel, Isaac and Abraham, here we learn the Lord’s own Name:

    הָיָה הָיָה

    I AM that I AM – that is: the LORD IS the Existing One!

    As we learned previously in Who May Judge Sin?, Jesus answers questions of the religious leaders of the Temple. They asked Him to judge a woman accused of adultery, but relented from stoning her when Jesus showed her mercy and challenged their motives.

    They question Jesus legitimacy as the Messiah of God. Do you?

    Essentially they want to prove that Jesus is not sent from God, even though this Son of Man has given many signs of His power and Authority from God.

    These rabbis will go to any length and make any false argument against the legitimacy and authority of Jesus.

    So what does the Messiah Jesus claim?

    Jesus spoke to them again: “I am the light of the world.

    John 8:12a CSB

    What does this mean? It depends if you have ears to hear.

    Who sent Jesus to the world twenty-one centuries ago is a matter of faith – also our question of who to believe.

    So Jesus now speaks to two groups of Jews:

    1. Followers of Jesus – those called by faith, which includes some Jews who believe their Messiah; and also
    2. Those who judge Jesus, refusing to believe the very Word of God! These include some but not all of the Pharisees from the Court of the Jews.

    Let’s dissect Jesus’ words as heard by each group, both then and now.

    John 8:

    1. Followers of Jesus

    Anyone who follows me will never walk in the darkness but will have the light of life.”

    The promise of Jesus – John 8:12b CSB

    14 … “My testimony is true, because I know where I came from and where I’m going.

    I judge no one. 16 And if I do judge, my judgment is true, because it is not I alone who judge, but I and the Father who sent me.

    29 The one who sent me is with me. He has not left me alone, because I always do what pleases him.”

    30 As he was saying these things, many believed in him.

    31 Then Jesus said to the Jews who had believed him, “If you continue in my word, you really are my disciples. 32 You will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.”

    36 So if the Son sets you free, you really will be free.

    42 Jesus said to them, “If God were your Father, you would love me, because I came from God and I am here. For I didn’t come on my own, but he sent me.

    49 “I do not have a demon,” Jesus answered. “On the contrary, I honor my Father … 50 I do not seek my own glory; there is one who seeks it and judges. 51 Truly I tell you, if anyone keeps my word, he will never see death.”

    Then the teachers of the Jews will follow with a question, the answer which divides the faithful from the deceitful.

    But first let’s go back to the beginning of this testimony of the Gospel to stand beside Jerusalem’s religious elite who question the Messiah of God, determined to kill Him and preserve their own temporal glory among men.

    2. Court of the Pharisees

    Hear this same Messiah of Israel through ears refusing to listen to truth. These Pharisees feed the crowds of Jews they teach with their own dismissive words and questions of resentful doubt.

    13 So the Pharisees said to him, “You are testifying about yourself. Your testimony is not valid.”

    Jesus replied, “… But you don’t know where I come from or where I’m going. 15 You judge by human standards.

    17 Even in your law it is written that the testimony of two witnesses is true. 18 I am the one who testifies about myself, and the Father who sent me testifies about me.”

    19 Then they asked him, “Where is your Father?”

    “You know neither me nor my Father,” Jesus answered.

    21 Then he said to them again, “I’m going away; you will look for me, and you will die in your sin. Where I’m going, you cannot come.”

    22 So the Jews said again, “He won’t kill himself, will he, since he says, ‘Where I’m going, you cannot come’?”

    23 “You are from below,” he told them, “I am from above. You are of this world; I am not of this world. 24 Therefore I told you that you will die in your sins. For if you do not believe that I am he, you will die in your sins.”

    Who are you?

    25 “Who are you?” they questioned.

    28 So Jesus said to them, “When you lift up the Son of Man, then you will know that I am he, and that I do nothing on my own. But just as the Father taught me, I say these things.

    33 “We are descendants of Abraham,” they answered him, “and we have never been enslaved to anyone. How can you say, ‘You will become free’?”

    34 Jesus responded, “Truly I tell you, everyone who commits sin is a slave of sin. 35 A slave does not remain in the household forever, but a son does remain forever.

    Jesus, speaking to the Jews to whom He was sent, warns in the same manner He told many parables. The Father, His Father in heaven sent the Son to redeem them of their sins. He will become the Sacrifice God provides, just like the substitute for Isaac the Lord sent to Abraham.

    A sinful man must sacrifice to the Lord because of man’s sin.

    The Son remains in the Father’s house because He will inherit all that the Father owns. But a slave, even a chosen slave freed from Pharaoh, only lives freely if his sin does not shackle him to death once more.

    Abraham believed God; but unbelief binds one to die as sacrifice only for yourself, a sentence of death for your own sin.

    Descendents of Abraham

    37 I know you are descendants of Abraham, but you are trying to kill me because my word has no place among you.

    … so then, you do what you have heard from your father.”

    39 “Our father is Abraham,” they replied.

    “If you were Abraham’s children,” Jesus told them, “you would do what Abraham did. 40 But now you are trying to kill me, a man who has told you the truth that I heard from God. Abraham did not do this.

    41 You’re doing what your father does.”

    “We weren’t born of sexual immorality,” they said. “We have one Father—God.”

    Your father, the Devil

    43 Why don’t you understand what I say? Because you cannot listen to my word.

    44 You are of your father the devil, and you want to carry out your father’s desires. He was a murderer from the beginning and does not stand in the truth, because there is no truth in him. When he tells a lie, he speaks from his own nature, because he is a liar and the father of lies. 45 Yet because I tell the truth, you do not believe me.

    47 The one who is from God listens to God’s words. This is why you don’t listen, because you are not from God.”

    48 The Jews responded to him, “Aren’t we right in saying that you’re a Samaritan and have a demon?”

    Demons and Samaritans

    Do not dismiss quickly their accusation of demons. Many will accuse Jesus of having a demon or evil spirit, even though the Messiah has done no evil.

    And later, confirming the signs of the Messiah some Jews ask, “Can a demon open the eyes of the blind? ”

    The Pharisees knowing from scripture that the Messiah will come from Bethlehem only know the Son of Man as ‘Jesus of Nazareth,’ and we know their contempt as Judeans for Samaritans (and Galileans as well).

    49 “I do not have a demon,” Jesus answered.

    51 Truly I tell you, if anyone keeps my word, he will never see death.”

    [How can that be, anyone must wonder. Never see death?]

    52 Then the Jews said, “Now we know you have a demon. Abraham died and so did the prophets. You say, ‘If anyone keeps my word, he will never taste death.’

    A Convicting Question

    53 Are you greater than our father Abraham who died? And the prophets died. Who do you claim to be?”

    Who could be greater than David, King of Israel a thousand years before Jesus?

    In the new traditions of the Pharisees of a rebuilt temple certainly Moses, who was given the Law and brought them out of Egypt, would be revered most.

    Some prophets like Elijah might be seen as great because of great signs they performed, along with Jacob and Abraham as first fathers of the promise of the Lord to the Hebrew people.

    So the question of the Pharisees to Jesus comparing Him to Abraham and the prophets is meant to convict.

    Who do you claim to be?

    Note that they do not ask, “who are you,” but “who do you claim to be.” Jesus’ unequivocal answer will claim His very deity!

    Jesus’ Glorious Answer

    Even before Mosheh (Moses)

    Returning to Scripture as these rabbis would well know as background:

    וַיִּשְׁכֹּ֤ן כְּבֹוד־יְהוָה֙ עַל־הַ֣ר סִינַ֔י וַיְכַסֵּ֥הוּ הֶעָנָ֖ן שֵׁ֣שֶׁת יָמִ֑ים וַיִּקְרָ֧א אֶל־מֹשֶׁ֛ה בַּיֹּ֥ום הַשְּׁבִיעִ֖י מִתֹּ֥וךְ הֶעָנָֽן׃

    The glory of the LORD rested on Mount Sinai, and the cloud covered it for six days; and on the seventh day He called to Moses from the midst of the cloud.

    Exodus 24:16 WLC; NASB

    The context of the hearers, fellow Jews like Jesus, connects their question to Jesus’ answer. (You must know scripture (Old Testament) as they knew scripture. The Torah of Moses includes the Lord’s promise to Abraham’s descendants.

    And to the eyes of the sons of Israel the appearance of the glory of the LORD was like a consuming fire on the mountain top. Moses entered the midst of the cloud as he went up to the mountain; and Moses was on the mountain forty days and forty nights.

    Exodus 24:17-18 NASB

    Their Hebrew forefathers witnessed the glory of the LORD more than once.

    John 8:

    Now, returning to the Gospel, Jesus gives witness to a glory which preceded Moses who received the Law directly from the LORD.

    54 “If I glorify myself,” Jesus answered, “my glory is nothing. My Father—about whom you say, ‘He is our God’—he is the one who glorifies me. 55 You do not know him, but I know him…”

    And now the Son of Man, who must say only truth, does so even though the depth of Jesus’ words do not immediately sink in.

    “… If I were to say I don’t know him, I would be a liar like you. But I do know him, and I keep his word…”

    Jesus the Son knows the Father unlike ANY son of man, even the Prophets, any of the fathers of Israel or Moses.

    “… Your father Abraham rejoiced to see my day; he saw it and was glad.”

    The Messiah Jesus to Rabbis of JudahJohn 8:56 CSB

    Think of the context of Jesus’ witness of Abraham in the timeline of centuries before the Son of God – the Word – coming to a manger in Bethlehem of Judea.

    57 The Jews replied, “You aren’t fifty years old yet, and you’ve seen Abraham?”

    Jesus said to them, “Truly I tell you, before Abraham was, I am.”

    Witness of the Messiah – John 8:58 CSB

    before Abraham was, I am

    59 Then they took up stones to throw at Him; but Jesus hid Himself and went out of the temple, going[b] through the midst of them, and so passed by.

    Other places in the Gospel add explanation to this.

    Why did religious officials determined to kill this man claiming to be God not successfully seize the Lord Jesus and stone Him to death?

    For his time had not come.

    • So then they tried to seize Jesus, but no one laid a hand on him, because his time had not yet come. – John 7:20 NET
    • (Jesus spoke these words near the offering box while he was teaching in the temple courts. No one seized him because his time had not yet come.) – John 8:20a small detail of the Gospel we have just read

    When, then, would the time for Sacrifice of the Messiah for sin occur?

    Do you see the significance of the substitution of the acceptable sacrifice to the Father?

    For the LORD provided a sacrifice in the place of Isaac for Abraham, an early sign of what must take place to fulfill God’s plan of redemption of sinful man.

    No man can come to me, except the Father which hath sent me draw him: and I will raise him up at the last day.

    I am the living bread which came down from heaven: if any man eat of this bread, he shall live for ever: and the bread that I will give is my flesh, which I will give for the life of the world.

    John 6:44,51 KJV
    NEXT: More Signs  

  • Who May Judge SIN?

    Who May Judge SIN?

    Continuing in the Gospel of John

    ‘Who made you judge and jury,’ some ask the Christian who applies the Law? “Don’t judge sin,” some even preach deceptively. Many a sinner will quote Jesus to you: “Judge not, that you be not judged. Matthew 7:1

    We have been following the Good News of the Messiah Jesus told by John, only surviving disciple after all others had died for their witness of Truth, rather than recant the only Way to heaven, Christ Jesus. His Good News is explanation and not necessarily chronological.

    Previously in John 7 at the Jewish Festival of Booths Jesus shouted out an invitation to the crowds:

    “He who believes in Me, as the Scripture has said, out of his heart will flow rivers of living water.”

    Now we move on to a discussion the following day about authority in the Law. Religious authorities who love to judge sin confront the Messiah with one of their favorites, adultery.

    John 8:

    2 At dawn he went to the temple again, and all the people were coming to him. He sat down and began to teach them.

    Let’s not miss that Jesus had been teaching on the Holy Spirit of God the previous day.

    He said this about the Spirit. Those who believed in Jesus were going to receive the Spirit, for the Spirit had not yet been given because Jesus had not yet been glorified.

    John 7:39 CSB

    Jesus said this about the Holy Spirit as witness to Himself as the Messiah of the Living God!

    Wouldn’t you want to know more about this Man claiming the very power of the One Lord and God? So the crowds came, along with those who claimed earthly authority over the Law of Moses.

    How do YOU judge sin?

    3 Then the scribes and the Pharisees brought a woman caught in adultery, making her stand in the center. 4 “Teacher,” they said to him, “this woman was caught in the act of committing adultery.

    Now, dear christian in this twenty-first century crowd, you think very little of the seriousness of her first century indiscretion with a man to whom she was not married. In fact, in all likelihood many of you commited a different and similar sin when you first loved the significant other of your own life. We are oh so ready to condemn any man who claims the authority of God over our own less severe way to judge sin.

    5 In the law Moses commanded us to stone such women. So what do you say?”

    So does Jesus believe in capital punishment?

    How dare she sleep with another man! After all, she is married.

    6 They asked this to trap him, in order that they might have evidence to accuse him.

    You know the old (not so funny, really) question of the lawyer: “When did you stop beating your wife?” No right answer to the prosecuting question as stated. There’s more to her story than the evidence presented.

    By the way, have you already answered without having had additional evidence presented – facts which perhaps only God may know?

    Is accusation not guilty until proven innocent in these last days?

    So here we look to the Messiah confronted an accusation of adultery in a court having already judged sin of the accused woman.

    Jesus as Judge

    The crowds look on. Religious officials have stated the Law clearly and ask for sentence confirming their judgment of this accused violator. Surly the Messiah who claims that every jot and tiddle of the Law must be fulfilled will not show mercy to this woman who sinned.

    Yet Jesus does not speak a sentence to judge sin clearly accused of this woman.

    7 When they persisted in questioning him, he stood up and said to them,

    “The one without sin among you should be the first to throw a stone at her.”

    8 Then he stooped down again and continued writing on the ground.

    How does the Messiah of God judge sin?

    Jesus has already witnessed the standard by which the Lord will judge sin.

    “I can do nothing on my own. I judge only as I hear, and my judgment is just, because I do not seek my own will, but the will of him who sent me.

    John 5:30

    “Stop judging according to outward appearances; rather judge according to righteous judgment.”

    John 7:24

    One reason the Pharisees confront Jesus rather than having arrested Him at that time is continuation from a previous confrontation.

    John 7:50 Nicodemus—the one who came to him previously and who was one of them [the Pharisees] —said to them,

    51 “Our law doesn’t judge a man before it hears from him and knows what he’s doing, does it?”

    Neither does the Lord Jesus judge this woman accused of adultery without full evidence of what she has done. In His judgment Jesus shows mercy.

    God is Light and Life – Sin is Darkness & Death

    Do you, man or woman of flesh, judge sin?

    Jesus stood to render His decision as Judge:

    “He that is without sin among you, let him first cast a stone at her.

    John 8:7b KJV

    8 Then he stooped down again and continued writing on the ground. 9 When they heard this, they left one by one, starting with the older men. Only he was left, with the woman in the center.

    Justice?

    Was the full justice of the Law served here? Certainly not.

    Did Jesus grant mercy to the woman who sinned against her husband and the Law of the land? Yes, mercy and grace where penalty could have been demanded.

    Would He judge sin at a later time? (Perhaps you had not thought of His temporary grace calling this sinner to repentance.)

    Will Jesus judge sin – adultery, dishonesty, failure to show mercy to the poor or unjustly accused, victims of hateful vengeance?

    • “Put boundaries for the people all around the mountain and say: Be careful that you don’t go up on the mountain or touch its base. Anyone who touches the mountain must be put to death. – Exodus 19:12
    • “Whoever strikes a person so that he dies must be put to death. – Exodus 21:12
    • “If a person schemes and willfully acts against his neighbor to murder him, you must take him from my altar to be put to death. – Exodus 21:14
    • “Whoever strikes his father or his mother must be put to death. – Exodus 21:15
    • “Whoever kidnaps a person must be put to death, whether he sells him or the person is found in his possession. – Exodus 21:16
    • “Whoever curses his father or his mother must be put to death. – Exodus 21:17
    • “Whoever has sexual intercourse with an animal must be put to death. Exodus 22:19

    “Observe the Sabbath, for it is holy to you. Whoever profanes it must be put to death. If anyone does work on it, that person must be cut off from his people. Work may be done for six days, but on the seventh day there must be a Sabbath of complete rest, holy to the LORD. Anyone who does work on the Sabbath day must be put to death.

    Exodus 31:14-15

    His Merciful Sentence

    “He who is without sin among you, let him be the first to throw a stone at her.” –

    Jesus’ question to accusers who would judge sin – John 8:7 NASB

    “I am the light of the world.

    You judge by human standards. I judge no one. And if I do judge, my judgment is true, because it is not I alone who judge, but I and the Father who sent me.

    Jesus’ standard to judge sin – John 8:15-16 CSB

    Is Jesus the Messiah?

    If Jesus was, IS, and will always be the Lord God, the Messiah, then He IS Light itself. Jesus is the very image of Light of the Father God our Creator, sustainer and Judge.

    12 Jesus spoke to them again: “I am the light of the world. Anyone who follows me will never walk in the darkness but will have the light of life.”

    13 So the Pharisees said to him, “You are testifying about yourself. Your testimony is not valid.”

    14 “Even if I testify about myself,” Jesus replied, “My testimony is true, because I know where I came from and where I’m going. But you don’t know where I come from or where I’m going. 15 You judge by human standards…

    Is this not true of every man or woman who must judge another man or woman?

    Therefore what is our standard of temporal justice, prior to the judgment of our souls?

    Leviticus 19: Laws of Holiness – Separation to the LORD

    לֹא־תַעֲשׂ֥וּ עָ֨וֶל֙ בַּמִּשְׁפָּ֔ט לֹא־תִשָּׂ֣א פְנֵי־דָ֔ל וְלֹ֥א תֶהְדַּ֖ר פְּנֵ֣י גָדֹ֑ול בְּצֶ֖דֶק תִּשְׁפֹּ֥ט עֲמִיתֶֽךָ׃

    John does not present every proof of witness that Jesus is the Messiah of Israel, but closes his Gospel written after many proofs of the resurrection of Jesus with this:

    But these are written so that you may believe that Jesus is the Messiah, the Son of God, and that by believing you may have life in his name.

    John 20:31 CSB

    Light of Life from beyond the grave

    12 Jesus spoke to them again: “I am the light of the world. Anyone who follows me will never walk in the darkness but will have the light of life.”

    … “You know neither me nor my Father,” Jesus answered. “If you knew me, you would also know my Father.”

    20 He spoke these words by the treasury, while teaching in the temple. But no one seized him, because his hour had not yet come.

    … and you will die in your sin. Where I’m going, you cannot come.”

    … You are of this world; I am not of this world. 24 Therefore I told you that you will die in your sins. For if you do not believe that I am he, you will die in your sins.”

    25 “Who are you?” they questioned.

    “Exactly what I’ve been telling you from the very beginning,” Jesus told them.

    Do you believe the Light or hide in the darkness of death?

    26 “I have many things to say and to judge about you, but the one who sent me is true, and what I have heard from him—these things I tell the world.”

    To be continued...