Author: Helen Crawford, 21 December 2017
On the train last weekend. I had a two and a half hour train journey and slogged my way through eight days worth of Bible readings including the whole of Esther, Malachi and the first few chapters of Revelation.
I’m reading Ezra at the moment, then I think it’s just Nehemiah left in the Old Testament. Finishing off Revelation and the last few Psalms as well.
This month, Tom played Joseph in
our short Nativity play at a local supermarket
Getting to grips with the level of violence in some of the passages is still a difficulty at times! The book of Esther is a ‘feel good’ read with themes of courage, righteousness and God’s protection. But it’s hard not to wince just a little bit when the heroine Esther gives orders for ten men to be impaled on poles (Esther 9.13).
Malachi 1.2-3. I’ve never quite got this passage before, it seems a bit random. But now reading in the context of the whole of the rest of the Old Testament, it makes a lot more sense. Jacob (Israel) and his descendants are God’s chosen people. This is highly significant. He reminds the Israelites of his ‘faithfulness’ and ‘unfailing love’ – hallmarks of his nature – over many generations, in contrast to Esau, the symbolism of those who are outside his chosen people.
The good news for us is that God has now opened the way for all of us to be part of his chosen people, through Jesus. It isn’t exclusive. As Isaiah 56.7 says, ‘my house will be called a house of prayer for all the peoples’.
I’ve been given a year-long Psalm devotional, so I’d like to do that. Maybe I’ll carry on and do Bible in a year again as well.
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