Author Archives: MzEllen

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This is why I lumped 3 chapters together yesterday - today is Thanksgiving Day.

Chapter 12 is really about priests and Levites - but talks about thanksgiving.

There were priests in charge of the songs of thanksgivings (v.8)...

There were more priests to praise and give thanks (v.24)

They gave thanks at the dedication of the wall that they had worked so hard on (v.27)

They had two great choirs to give thanks (v.31)

Those two choirs sang in the house of the Lord (v.40)

And they remembered the days of long ago; the days of David and Asaph, when there were directors of the singers, and there were songs of praise and thanksgiving to God (v.46)

1 Corinthians 15:57
But thanks be to God, who gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ.

2 Corinthians 2:14
But thanks be to God, who in Christ always leads us in triumphal procession, and through us spreads the fragrance of the knowledge of him everywhere.

2 Corinthians 9:15
Thanks be to God for his inexpressible gift!

Psalm 111:1
Praise the LORD!I will give thanks to the LORD with my whole heart,in the company of the upright, in the congregation.

Psalm 107:1
Oh give thanks to the LORD, for he is good,for his steadfast love endures forever!

Psalm 118:28
You are my God, and I will give thanks to you;you are my God; I will extol you.

Psalm 28:7
The LORD is my strength and my shield;in him my heart trusts, and I am helped;my heart exults,and with my song I give thanks to him.

Psalm 92:1
It is good to give thanks to the LORD,to sing praises to your name, O Most High;

This day, I am thankful for God's goodness.

I am thankful for all that which God has brought me through.  All have worked together for my good, whether or not they felt good at the time.

I am thankful for my family (whether we are related by blood or not).  I am thankful that God is working in my children's lives - in ways I can see and in ways I cannot.

I am thankful for my dear friend, for things said and unsaid.

I am thankful for trials and tribulations, for they make me strong.

I am thankful for times of rest.

This day...I am thankful.

Chapters 9,10,11.

These chapters are spent on confessing and reconnecting.

Mourning for time lost; fasting, sackcloth and ashes. Praise for deliverence.

A covenant made and more numbers.

After I returned to God I went through one of those times. What I had missed, where I had strayed. Not only that, but even the consequences of what I had done would stay with me until "til death us do part".

It wasn't until I understood that (while the "away time" is not erased), God deals with us where we are now. If we are constantly looking backward, we will miss what is ahead.

And there was a lot that was ahead.

The Jews confessed the sins of their fathers. We are not guilty of the sins of our fathers and (while there is generational learning by modeling) there is no generational curse. But we do learn from those who model for us and if we can look at the mistakes made by those who went before, perhaps we can avoid some of our own.

Having examined their fathers, the Jews put their name to a commitment/covenant and outlined what their obligations would be.

When we turn to Christ, we enter into the New Covenant - Christ yoke is easy and His burden is light.  And yet, not so light.  We turn away from the Law, to fall under the "law of love".  And that is not always an easy thing.

Do we fail?  We all do, at some point or another.  It does us good to remember that.

I apparantly woke up a day early...it's only Wednesday...


Thirteen Things I hope to accomplish today:

  1. Another cup of coffee
  2. Bake my sugar free pumpkin pie (the regular one is done)
  3. Shop for the rest of my Thanksgiving dinner stuff (green beans, stuffing mix)
  4. Eat the minimun number of Weight Watchers points (no more magic marker days this week)
  5. Laundry
  6. Clean my desk
  7. Homework (photoshop)
  8. Fix my sidebar (remove old links, add new ones)
  9. Shop with my son (he thinks he found the backpack he wants - for backpacking, not school)
  10. Clean out my cupboards
  11. Exercise
  12. Drink all my water
  13. enjoy my day off

Links to other Thursday Thirteens!
1. (leave your link in comments, I’ll add you here!)

Get the Thursday Thirteen code here!The purpose of the meme is to get to know everyone who participates a little bit better every Thursday. Visiting fellow Thirteeners is encouraged! If you participate, leave the link to your Thirteen in others comments. It’s easy, and fun! Be sure to update your Thirteen with links that are left for you, as well! I will link to everyone who participates and leaves a link to their 13 things. Trackbacks, pings, comment links accepted!

"And do not be grieved, for the joy of the LORD is your strength."

So far, I have liked Nehemiah 8 best of all.

The wall around Jerusalem is build and the people are settling in. Nehemiah is governer.

The people "gathered as one man" What did they do?

They sent Ezra for "the Book of the Law of Moses that the LORD had commanded Israel." And he read it. He read from early morning until mid day. When he opened the book the people stood. When he prayed, the people lifted their hands and answered "Amen". When they worshipped, they bowed their heads. When the Word was read, their ears were attentive.

When they heard the Words of the Law, they wept.

The priests were there to help them understand and the Levites taught the people.

They read the Word and found that it was the time of the "Festival of Booths". For the first time since the Jews were exiled, they celebrated this holy time. God's people were again connected with the Law, the temple, with Jerusalem.
The "Second Temple Period" had begun.

Today?

I remember when I returned to God - about 16 years ago. Digging into the Word was again new. I grieved for a while, for the time that I had lost.

During those first months I learned from a wonderful Christian woman (a pastor's wife) that taught me a lot about life, about marriage, about God.

What drew me back? It wasn't good preaching, it wasn't "doing the right things", it wasn't hanging out with the right people.

It was the Word.

To be sure, it was the Word that was written in a very unusual place (we were on vacation). This "monument to women" had Scripture that I was familiar with from childhood and I knew that in order to do my job as a mother, I would have to return to God. NOW.

My son was 4, so that would have been 16 years ago.

I've "adjusted" since then. Studied a lot. I've had some very good leaders and good pastors. But in everything, the Word was central to my education.

😉

Lecture exam on respiratory and digestive systems...

I think that once I got to the point where I could see what I was studying, my lecture tests got a lot better.  I'm not as uptight about this one because I can't get an "A" in the class.  As long as I have to have a "B", I might was well be happy with getting a "B"

If you don't like reading a whole lot of numbers, you can skip reading Nehemiah 7.

The beginning of the chapter it says that the Lord laid it upon Nehemiah's heart to take a census and he obeyed.  Nehemiah found the book of genealogies and found the list of returned Jews that had been exiled under Nebuchadnezzar...

(This is a short post - let's just say that there were a lot of Jews.  And servants and horses and singers and...)

Chapter 8 deserves an entire post by itself  😉

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After seeing Elena's latest post about me...I can't do pie (weight watchers and all that).

I make the offer to Elena to sit down for coffee, with her and her priest (or other counseling staff person). My schedule doesn't make it easy to schedule things so I need at least three weeks notice.

But that's the offer, let her priest read her blog, my blog.

(an edit below)

Elena's reply:

That's sweet Ellen.

I think we should just agree to disagree, realize that we are just not ever going to be a good fit as far as friendly adversaries go, wish each other well and just let it go.

Have a nice Thanksgiving.

Thank you for your gracious response. I wish you the best Thanksgiving as well.

If you desire to pursue reconciliation, my offer to sit down with you and your church authority remains on the table.

More from Elena:

Because it's time consuming and stupid. I don't particularly care to reconcile and I think she should be apologizing to me. You asked.

Out of the abundance of the heart, the mouth speaks.   Since I was again referenced on Elena's blog, I'm again asking to meet with Elena and her priest - on her turf, under the authority she sits under.

If Elena truly believes that reconciliation is stupid and she doesn't care to reconcile (as she writes), I recommend a short passage.

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A few weeks ago, John Kerry stepped in it by saying something to the effect that if you don't go to college and study hard, you'll end up in the military.

Uh...if Charles Rangel, the incoming chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee has his way, college, studying or anything else may not make a difference.

Who is pushing for a reinstatement of the draft?  Hint: it isn't the Republicans.  And it isn't just young men.

The article says that involuntary service would not just include the military:

"young people (would) commit themselves to a couple of years in service to this great republic, whether it's our seaports, our airports, in schools, in hospitals,"

And yet:

Rangel, a veteran of the Korean War who has unsuccessfully sponsored legislation on conscription in the past, said he will propose a measure early next year.

In 2003, he proposed a measure covering people age 18 to 26. This year, he offered a plan to mandate military service for men and women between age 18 and 42; it went nowhere in the Republican-led Congress.

(emphasis mine)

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Nemiah, chapter 6. This is where it gets interesting and has parallels in "this week's news"

By this time, there was no breach left in the wall. The bad guys ("Sanballat and Tobiah and Geshem the Arab and the rest of our enemies") were still around; and they used tactics that are still around today.

1) Distraction.

"Come and let us meet together at Hakkephirim in the plain of Ono."

The bad guys were sounding like they wanted to "make nice" and get together. Nehemiah knew that "sounding like" didn't mean that these guys actually had any intention of meeting with him in order to get along.

Four times they sent this invitation and four times Nehemiah answered, "I am doing a great work and I cannot come down. Why should the work stop while I leave it and come down to you?"

2) The fifth time, they sent an "open letter" (yes, we do see this tactic today).

In the same way Sanballat for the fifth time sent his servant to me with an open letter in his hand. In it was written, "It is reported among the nations, and Geshem also says it, that you and the Jews intend to rebel; that is why you are building the wall. And according to these reports you wish to become their king. And you have also set up prophets to proclaim concerning you in Jerusalem, 'There is a king in Judah.' And now the king will hear of these reports. So now come and let us take counsel together."

Normally, these letter would have been sealed so that the person that the letter were meant for would see them before the recipient. Nehemiah was very specific: Sanballat sent his servant with an open letter. This was meant for "everybody" to see.

3) The world was meant to see these false accusations.

People who make false accusations generally don't care about what the accused actually says, much less care about what is meant. When they are called on their sin of false accusation, many times these false accusers respond with more accusations and/or claim victim status of their own. Nehemiah was clear about what he thought about the false accusations. I love his response (I think I'll remember it):

"No such things as you say have been done, for you are inventing them out of your own mind."

Why did Sanballat use this tactic? Nehemiah tells us, "For they all wanted to frighten us, thinking, "Their hands will drop from the work, and it will not be done."

4) Intimidation is still attempted today.

5) We read in verse 10 that Sanballat also had "hired guns" - false prophets who spoke lies, saying that they were from God, in order to put fear into Nehemiah.

Despite false accusations, despite people writing "open letters", despite lies spoken behind his back, despite "hired guns" ganging up on him - Nehemiah persevered.

The wall was rebuilt in 52 days. Fifty-two!

Keep in mind that Nehemiah didn't have cranes, bulldozers and power tools. I don't know how long Nehemiah's wall was, but Israel is planning a security fence around Jerusalem that would be 32 miles.

That is a big wall for men without gasoline or electricity to build in 52 days.

Does this apply today?

Absolutely!

I can apply it in a couple of different ways.

1) A few of us are familiar with the term "watchblogger". Bloggers that keep an eye on blogs who disagree with them - and then visit that blog for the express purpose of disagreement and/or keep to their own blog and post negatively about the blogs they are watching.

Yes. They are out there.

2) More to the point today is a topic I posted about a few days ago: Mark Driscoll. This is not part of the "blog world", but it has certainly been written about on blogs.

People have doctrinal disagreements. Deal with it - if you have a belief, there is somebody who has a belief that is just as strong as yours - but different.

In Seattle, we have a woman pastor. Earlier on her blog she clearly states that she believes that complementarian theology is oppressive to women, rather than being a Biblical creation order.

She states that she has an agenda and that she will not stop - to make a place for women in leadership in the church.

Like Sanballat, Madrid-Swetman wrote an "open letter" (published it on her blog). And folks are taking it and running with it. There is going to be a demonstration outside of Driscoll's church in early December.

People are planning of folks showing up for a show of "strength in numbers". My guess is that Driscoll won't be intimidated.

Are there more parallels? Accusations? Yes, there are.

Misogyny is one accusation. As one who has been falsely accused of hatred toward another person, seeing a brother in Christ accused of hatred by on who claims to be a Christian is glaring to me.

Make no mistake.

Nehemiah's critics wanted him silenced.

Watchbloggers want posts that disagree with them silenced.

Those who organized the protest want Driscoll silenced.

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We're heading into the season when many single folks do a lot of introspection and lookig/hoping into the future.

Because of my passion for singles, and because of some of my own history, I've spent countless hours studying the Biblical issue of marriage, divorce, and remarriage in the church.

In the notes of the paper that I wrote, I said something to the effect of, even as a widowed person, I still need to know what it is that I believe about divorce and remarriage. If I intend to be single for the rest of my life, it's a non-issue. If I intend to date and possible remarry, I better know the boundries ahead of time. Whocan I date, who to consider, who can I marry?

There are Biblical reasons to divorce that leave a person free to remarry. Beyond that, what is a person to do - are they truly left to a lifetime of being alone? Or is there forgiveness and restoration in Christ?

Two resources that I use a lot are

Marriage, Divorce, & Remarriage By: Jay Adams - This is the book that many pastors, counselors and theologians consider to be the most biblical and the most helpful on the issue of marriage and divorce. The author examines the relevant passages in both the Old and New Testaments so that his readers can consider the many issues and interpretations that arise in trying to establish a consistently biblical position. As a result, you can see more clearly and accept more firmly the truth of Scripture.

Divorce and Remarriage in the Bible: The Social and Literary Context by David Instone-Brewer "Marriage in the ancient Near East was contractual, involving payments, agreed stipulations, and penalties..." [Note: I don't agree with some of Instone-Brewer's theology, but his historical information is very interesting.

Also, here is a shot article from Grace Community Church (John MacArthur)

This is a topic that takes lots of time, but every Bible-believing Christian needs to know and be convinced of what they believe on this topic.