Did you see the blood moon last night? I never doubted the forecast. And I believe Jesus is coming back. But the two are not related; there will be no warning. No one knows the day or the hour, not even the angels in heaven nor Jesus himself. Anyone that tells you they know is a liar. Jesus will return, according to his own words, when no one expects. So don’t wait to get ready, but if you are ready then fine, stay that way.
Continue readingRead the Bible: Genesis 15
God repeats promises in chapter 15 that were made in chapters 12 and 13. He reveals details about the next 400 years and beyond and Abram believes, an act of faith that God regards as righteousness.
In Genesis 4, Cain killed his brother Abel. I know that but I got my words a little mixed up tonight. Abel offered the more excellent sacrifice which is why he is mentioned in Hebrews 11.
Read the Bible: Genesis 14
This is the first time we read about Lot getting into trouble and needing to be rescued; it will not be the last. The big thing in this chapter is Melchizedek, king of Salem and priest of God Most High. Little is said about him and there is much we don’t know but he will be presented in the New Testament as a type of Christ.
If you click the play button and listen to the audio you may not notice a difference between this and the other recordings up to this point. If you download the file to a laptop, cell phone – I don’t know what the other options are these days – you might notice this file is an mp3 while the first 13 chapters were saved as m4a files. Mp3 is a slightly larger format so I want to know if anyone has any issues or if the 25 MB size is going to be a problem. I am running a free version of some recording and editing software; I could save as m4a but that’s a feature that would cost something. I used to have a file type converter but that was years ago; I could probably find something like that again but I don’t want to take a bunch of unnecessary steps if nobody cares. I’m the one that is going to run into problems when I run out of storage space for the blog archives. I would like to someday have all 1,189 chapters available for anyone to listen to at any time.
Read the Bible: Genesis 13
Read the Bible: Genesis 12
Read the Bible: Genesis 11
In Genesis 11, we address an apparent contradiction. The Bible does not contradict itself but there are a few apparent contradictions and we will deal with those as we encounter them. Then after a short interruption to describe what happened at the Tower of Babel, we go right back into the genealogy where we left off in chapter 10. I apologize in advance… maybe, if you haven’t played the audio yet… I said begat a couple of times and switched back and forth between begat and fathered. Some of us grew up with chapters full of begats before learning there were modern translations. To be fair, 40 or 50 years ago there were not nearly as many translations in English as there are today.
Happy Monday
That’s not exactly the shot of positivity and inspiration we are looking for is it?
Let’s try again.
Read the Bible: Genesis 10
From time to time as we read through the Bible we will come upon chapters that are almost entirely genealogy. If you thought Genesis 9 had quite a bit then fasten your seat belt. I am not an expert in Hebrew names but many of these will at least be somewhat familiar if you know anything at all about cities, nations and empires in the Old Testament. If you have been with us for a few chapters then hopefully you have developed a routine of some sort. So open your Bible (or app, or web browser, what have you) and let’s read some names I can barely pronounce.
Read the Bible: Genesis 9
At the end of Genesis 8, God said in his heart he would never again destroy all flesh. In chapter 9 he establishes a covenant with Noah and his sons, with all flesh including the animal kingdoms as a matter of fact, that he will never again destroy all flesh and there will never again be such a flood. He places his sign, the rainbow, in the clouds as a reminder.
Satur-deja Vu
Before I joined Facebook, before Twitter existed, there was WordPress. In 17 years I have put up 2,025 posts, logged 2,593 comments and as of Friday evening have 800,558 views. (If you included stats from My Other Blog, which preceded The Master’s Table by a couple of months, that adds another 465,835 views). Blogging is not what it used to be; in 2012 I had over 124,000 just that year alone. Like I say, Facebook and YouTube were relatively new and there was no Twitter, FB Reels, TikTok or Instagram yet. People were so bored they read stuff that I wrote!
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