Saturday, March 05, 2016

Types of Christian Prayer

Since I enjoy putting things into groups, I guess it's to be expected that I would also be sorting prayer into categories. (Actually, that's already been done throughout church history). However, above all categories of Christian prayer is that it's relational - and it takes place in a loving relationship between God and us.

And just as there are multiple ways that humans can communicate within a loving relationship - so too are there many ways of prayer that can be seen within our relationship with God.

On to the categorizing:

Kataphatic Prayer.


This is a Greek word meaning ‘with form or images’ and it emphasizes the communication and relationship we can have with God through all of creation – including our own created bodies. We think our prayers to God using our brain, or speak or sing them with our mouths, or even communicate with our bodies through bowing, kneeling or dancing before the Lord. When the Word became flesh, and Jesus walked the hills of Judea with his disciples, the whole of creation was affirmed as the context through which we can grow in our relationship with the creator. In the Western Christian church it is the Kataphatic (sometimes spelt Cataphatic) forms of prayer which are the most common. Even so, there is an aspect to kataphatic prayer involving the use of our imagination that has been devalued by the Western church.

Here are the main types of Kataphatic prayer.


Praising Prayer


When we praise another person we are celebrating something we can see is good about them. We praise athletes who demonstrate exceptional ability in their sport. We praise artists who create great works of beauty. We praise people for their acts of kindness towards others, or their generosity in giving, etc. In each case we see something which is good in a person, and we acknowledge the good that we see. Some people find praise very difficult to do. For various reasons, they have been left with the inclination to see only the negative in others and themselves.

Praise is an essential element in our relationship with others, and God has made us all with the potential for being praiseworthy as well as for praising. This is because we are made in God’s likeness so that something of the goodness of God can be found in each of us. So praising prayer is prayer that focuses directly on the goodness of God. It acknowledges the truth about God. It is a truth that we can be blind to or even take for granted. But praising prayer challenges us not to lose sight of just how extraordinary God’s goodness is. It is not done as a way of encouraging God, or building him up. God does not have that kind of need! Rather, as we praise God, the potential is released for our own transformation into a greater likeness of God, as well as a more deep and loving relationship with him. Psalm 13:6 “I will sing the LORD’s praise, for he has been good to me.”


Confessing Prayer


To confess is to discover and acknowledge the truth.  Sometimes the truth is that we desire things and do things which are wrong. Some may feel that this is not a strong enough statement; that to confess reallymeans to repent, and repenting must be to feel a deep sense of guilt for things done wrong or for the good that we have failed to do. People feel things differently and so the emphasis of repentance needs to be on the acknowledgement of guilt rather than the feeling of guilt.

Sometimes the truth is that we desire things and do things which are fully in alignment of God's will.  And sometimes, the truth comes when we catch sight of God's grace, mercy and goodness in operation in our lives.

In confession, we draw out into the light the parts of our lives for examination - the wrong and the right, the surrendered and the proud. Sometimes, it can be helpful to share our confession with another person who we can trust (James 5:16). 

Repentance-style confession does not come easily as our natural inclination is to hide the times and places where we have missed the mark. Being a disappointment - accidentally or on purpose - feels like personally annihilating a world. But we must not hide from ourselves or try to hide from God.

Thanking Prayer



A young couple purchased an old, run-down, abandoned farm with plans to turn it into a thriving organic enterprise. The fields were grown over with weeds, the farmhouse was falling apart, and the fences were broken down.

The village vicar stopped by to bless the family’s work, saying, “May you and God work together to make this the farm of your dreams!”

A few months later, the preacher stops by again to call on the young farmers. He couldn’t believe his eyes. The farm house was completely rebuilt and in excellent condition, there were plenty of cattle and other livestock happily munching on feed in well-fenced pens, and the fields were full of crops planted in neat rows. “Amazing!” the preacher says. “Look what God and you have accomplished together!”

“Yes, Vicar,” said the farmer’s wife, “and just remember what the farm was like when God was working it alone!”

Being thankful is a state of mind. It takes a starting point that nothing I have is mine as a right, but everything has been given to me as a gift. Living in a society which is so individualistic, and has a strong work ethic, it could be easy to see our achievements or possessions as acquired through our own efforts; that we do not need to thank anyone else for what we have.

This sort of thinking taps into a deep desire within us for independence, to stand on our own two feet and determine the course of our own lives. But that is not the kingdom which God has made for us. Maturity is not about being able to live alone well, but to live well with others, and ultimately to live well with God who has provided all the good things we have. It is a part of ‘living well’ with others that there must be thankfulness, firstly to God and then to those people around us. Psalm 107 is a song of thanksgiving that recalls all the different ways God had acted to look after the people of Israel, and repeats the line, “Let them give thanks to the LORD for his unfailing love and his wonderful deeds for humankind.”

Good parents will teach their child to say ‘thank you’. Left on their own they might well forget to do so. The Bible plays that same parental role with us as it repeats the message of our need to thank God, as it does in Philippians 4:6 “Do not be anxious about anything, but in every situation, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God.”


Asking Prayer

A man was walking along the beach, enjoying an afternoon vacation stroll, when he heard someone screaming. Looking around he saw an obviously distraught woman kneeling next to a little girl. The man quickly determined the child had swallowed something that was blocking her airway and held her up by her heels and gave a few quick thumps to her back. Sure enough, the child started to sputter and cough and spit a coin onto the sand.

“Oh, thank you sir!” cried the grateful mother. You seemed to know exactly what to do. Are you a doctor?”

“No, ma’am,” the man replied. “I’m retired. But I am the chair of the stewardship committee for my church.”


God wants us to ask him for things. Pride can get in the way of this as we try to gain things, or make things happen, through our own efforts. But asking is a really important part of the relationship building process between us and God. This is why Jesus strongly encourages us to ask God for things (John 16:24), and the Lord’s prayer is full of requests (Matthew 6:9-14).

Of course, the most important request we can make is for a relationship with God. Jesus assures us that this request will always be answered with a ‘yes’, “Ask and it will be given to you; seek and you will find; knock and the door will be opened to you. For everyone who asks receives; those who seek find; and to those who knock, the door will be opened” (Matthew 7 : 7-8 see also Luke 11 : 13). Even the robber dying on the cross beside Jesus found this request answered (Luke 23:39-43). But this is not the only thing we can ask God for. God is interested in even the smallest details of our lives, which means that all our desires or needs are important to him and can be asked for. These kinds of requests will not always be answered with a ‘yes’. Our human limits and lack of full understanding of a situation can lead us to ask for things which God knows would not be good for us (see James 4:1-3). But even so, God invites us: Isa 43:25- “I, I am the one who wipes away all your sins. I do this to please myself. I will not remember your sins. 26 But you should remember me. Let’s meet together and decide what is right. And gradually, through the transforming work of the Holy Spirit, we can grow in maturity and insight to the will of God which will affect both the kind of requests we make and how God responds to them (see John 15:7, James 5:16, 1 Peter 3:12).


Meditating Prayer


The word meditation is a problematic word because it means different things to different people. In this description of meditative prayer, I mean the use of our imagination in prayer. Some people will find that using their imagination comes more easily than for others. Some people will also find different surroundings help meditative prayer to happen, whilst others hinder it. In my own experience, sitting still in a quiet room can be very helpful. So here are two ways of doing meditative prayer:

Take a gospel story and use your imagination to place yourself in the story. You might be an onlooker, or even one of the characters in the story. For example, you might imagine yourself as Joseph in the stories about Jesus’ birth, or as one of Jesus’ disciples on the fishing boat when the storm blows up on lake Galilee, or as a person in the crowd when the blind man has his sight restored by Jesus outside Jericho. Allow God to bring the story alive for you and he will show you so much more than you will have seen through a regular bible study. At the end of the session you can imagine yourself talking with Jesus about what you have seen, and how you have responded to the story. This form of meditation is commonly known as Ignatian.

Another way of doing meditative prayer is by going on an imaginative journey with Jesus. On this journey you could walk with Jesus, drive, or even fly to places and people that you are concerned about; talking to him about the many issues that may come to your mind. For example, you might be concerned about a friend who is ill in hospital. You could imagine yourself walking with Jesus into the hospital and visiting your friend together, talking about your friend with him. Another example would be to fly with Jesus to a refugee camp in another part of the world and walk around the camp with Jesus discussing the needs of the people there. As you go on these journeys with Jesus try to be open to him speaking back to you and sharing his own heart with you. Also, let your journey be open-ended and see where the Holy Spirit takes you. This form of meditation can help develop a sense of companionship with Jesus as you travel together, as well as a growing sensitivity to the heart and will of God.

Using our imagination with the guidance of the Holy Spirit also makes our own spirits more receptive of visions and dreams given by God.

Meditation is only mentioned directly in the Old Testament, and mostly in the Psalms. We are told that Isaac would go out into the fields to meditate (Genesis 24:63) but no explanation is given as to what he was doing.

Our ability to imagine is a gift from God, and creative imagination reflects His image - so there is no good reason why it should not be another way through which we can communicate with him. Other references are made in the Psalms about meditating on scripture and this may have been more of an exercise in reflection on the text than a use of the imagination. God does speak to us through scripture as we approach it prayerfully. However, this practice is not meditation as defined here. Instead, it comes more under my first definition of contemplating prayer (see below) as it involves ‘being present’ to the scriptures as we read them.



Contemplating Prayer 1


There are two versions of prayer in the Christian tradition which are commonly called contemplative. This first version is about being ‘present to God in any particular moment’. Others might use the term ‘mindfulness’. Jesuits talk about being a ‘contemplative in action’. It begins with us being present to God in our Bible study and prayer time, and gradually overflows into more and more of our everyday lives. It is a way of becoming fully attentive to God in the world around us (hence this comes under the heading of Kataphatic prayer) which begins in our regular times of prayer as we quieten our thoughts and still our bodies – a practice which is also known as Centering prayer.

 It is a discipline which enables us to see what we otherwise might miss – God’s communication with us through Scripture, through his creation, through the lives of others, etc. It is a way of living our life intentionally and thoughtfully. To put it simply, a contemplative will notice beauty in small things, see something of God in them and praise Him for them. Whereas a non-contemplative will be so full of thoughts and actions that they will pass such objects of beauty without even noticing them, let alone connecting with God through them. “To contemplate means, first of all, to be present to where one is – to be here and now” (Bishop Kallistos of Diokleia). This is prayer because these disciplines of prayerful silence and stillness bring about a greater consciousness of God’s presence and speaking into our lives. It is a form of prayer which is much more about listening than speaking, and it enables us to discern what God is wanting to show us, whilst opening our hearts to the transforming work of the Holy Spirit. An example from the scriptures where this type of prayer happened is in Luke 2:19 which says that “Mary treasured up all these things and pondered them in her heart.” She was attentive to the things she saw and heard. She ‘treasured’ these things as being from God, and allowed God to reveal himself to her through them. This form of contemplative prayer can lead naturally on to the second form which would come under the category of Apophatic prayer.


Apophatic Prayer

This comes from the Greek word meaning ‘without form or images’, and focuses on the fact that God is both separate and different to his creation. Whereas in Kataphatic prayer God, through Jesus, enters creation as a human being and welcomes us into relationship with him as one human being to another, in Apophatic prayer we are trying to connect with the God who is not human; who is outside of creation and therefore beyond our understanding; the God who is mystery; the God who is pure love. So, whereas in Kataphatic prayer we mostly communicate with God through words, in Apophatic prayer we put words to one side and attempt to communicate in silence or with a language beyond human speech with the God of love through love. It is in the Eastern Orthodox Christian church that Apophatic prayer is more common, and is described here as the second form of contemplative prayer.


Contemplating Prayer 2



The second form of contemplative prayer is also known as the ‘prayer of the heart’. It is a prayer of love in which no words are necessary. It would be similar to a parent lovingly watching their child play, or two lovers gazing in silence at each other. Contemplation involves doing exactly this, looking and loving.


Possible places in scripture might be Matthew 9:36, “When he saw the crowds, he had compassion on them”, Mark 10:21, “Jesus looked at him and loved him.” which have both these two elements. Then there were the women who saw and loved Jesus as he died on the cross, “Many women were there, watching from a distance. They had followed Jesus from Galilee to care for his needs” Matthew 27:55.





In the spiritual classic
 The Cloud of Unknowing we read “Love means loving God for himself alone, above all else, and loving others as oneself. In contemplation God is loved in this way: nothing else is sought. There is a naked intent, a single-mindedness of spirit, directed towards God alone.” This form of prayer has as its goal an entering into an experience of God (sometimes called ‘union with God’), and the transformation of our capacity to love God (and therefore other human beings as well) which comes through that experience. John of the Cross describes the experience as being “when an effect of the spirit overflows in the senses.” Blaise Pascal wrote of his experience as “Joy, joy, joy, tears of joy.” It is the heart’s response towards God of those who have truly discovered that they are beloved of God.

Mysterious Prayer

I struggled to think of a name for these types of prayers. I could have called them Charismatic prayer, but all forms of prayer involve the Holy Spirit and could not happen without him. I could have called them Grace prayer, because they are a gift from God, but again, without God’s grace no prayer would be possible. So I ended up calling them Mysterious prayer because they are types of prayer for which there is a strong element of mystery. Probably the biggest mystery is why God chooses to gift these types of prayer to some people and not to others. But the other mysterious characteristic is in the way they seem to form a special momentary connection between creator and created. Difficult to understand. Difficult to explain. Hence mysterious!

Praying in Tongues


It is a prayer of words in that it comes from the mouth, and the words may be of another earthly language as found in Acts 2:1-11. Or it may be of a heavenly language that no one may interpret without the help of the Holy Spirit. Paul writes about both human and angelic tongues (1 Corinthians 13:1) and writes that both tongues and the interpretation of tongues are a gift from God (1 Corinthians 12:4-11). Paul clearly saw the use of praying in tongues as important. He tells the Corinthians “I thank God that I speak in tongues more than all of you.” (1 Corinthians 14 : 18), and it does seem at times that a special grace of God is given when people pray in tongues.


Special Revelation



There is no such thing as a first class, second class, or even third class Christian, we are all one in Christ. Yet a life steeped in prayer and the pursuit of God is transforming, and that transformation opens us up to the possibility of a deeper form of connecting prayer with God.

In Numbers 12:6-8 God tells Miriam and Aaron, “When there are prophets of the LORD among you, I reveal myself to them in visions, I speak to them in dreams. But this is not true of my servant Moses; he is faithful in all my house. With him I speak face to face, clearly and not in riddles; he sees the form of the LORD.” Moses’ faithfulness, but also his humility (see verse 3) meant that God was able to reveal himself to Moses in a way that he did not with others.

There are a range of ways in which God gives special revelation. Some people in the Bible received revelation through dreams that left them feeling troubled. Other forms of special revelation were more dramatic. In Isaiah 6, the prophet has a vision of God which overwhelms him and he exclaims “Woe to me! I cried. I am ruined!” Daniel (a man held in high esteem by God, see Daniel 9:23) was another one who had extraordinary experiences of God, and there were many more. Such experiences are a special gift from God and they did not only occur in the Old Testament. Paul refers to such an experience of prayer in 2 Corinthians 12:1-4. Throughout the centuries since Paul wrote of this experience there have been many others who have had similar encounters with God. As it is written in Joel 2:28 “And afterward, I will pour out my Spirit on all people. Your sons and daughters will prophecy, your old men will dream dreams, your young men will see visions. ”

Saturday, December 19, 2015

Praying in Other Tongues

This is a second pass through the Scripture, looking at passages that deal with spiritual prayer - and are perhaps not as obvious as the first pass we took - looking mostly at the letter to the Corinthians.

John 14:16-17

I will ask the Father, and He will give you another Parakletos *, that He may be with you forever;  that is the Spirit of truth, whom the world cannot receive, because it does not see Him or know Him, but you know Him because He abides with you and will be in you.

* One called alongside to help or console; one who Encourages or Uplifts; one who Refreshes; one who Guides; Comforter; Advocate; Intercessor.  Also The Summoner, The One who makes free.

These titles help define the role of the Holy Spirit in the life of a believer.  He's been given to us to be our Comforter, Counselor, Helper, Intercessor, Advocate, Strengthener, and Standby. But in all of these activities, the Holy Spirit does His work through us, but He won't do the job for us.

An example, from Acts 8:26-39.
An angel tells Phillip to go down to Gaza.  When Phillip obeys, he meets an Ethiopian eunuch who was reading the scroll of Isaiah.  Phillip led the man to salvation - not the angel and not the Holy Spirit.

We are also named workers together with God (2 Cor 6:1)

Praying Together with the Holy Spirit

In Romans 8:26-27
26: In the same way the Spirit also helps [synantilambanomai] our weakness; for we do not know how to pray as we should, but the Spirit Himself intercedes for us with groanings too deep for words; 27 and He who searches the hearts knows what the mind of the Spirit is, because He intercedes for the [j]saints according to the will of God.

synantilambanomai is a word that weaves three roots together:

"To take hold together"
'With"
"Against"

So this one word, usually translated as "helps" really means ... takes hold together with us against ...

Praying in alignment with God's Perfect Will - not our will or another's will.

In Romans 12:2
And do not be conformed to this [c]world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, so that you may [d]prove what the will of God is, that which is good and [e]acceptable and perfect.

This verse indicates a progression, or maturity level on the part of the believer - where our metamorphosis helps us in following the good, then the acceptable, and finally the perfect will of God.

If we pray with our understanding, there is a chance of selfishness coming into our prayers. But if we pray with our spirit, then the Holy Spirit will assist us, and we can pray the perfect will of God.

In 1 Samuel 8:5-7
The Elders in Israel gathered and said to Samuel: Now appoint a king for us to judge us like all the nations.” 6 But the thing was [evil] displeasing in the sight of Samuel when they said, “Give us a king to judge us.” And Samuel prayed to the Lord. 7 The Lord said to Samuel, “Listen to the voice of the people in regard to all that they say to you, for they have not rejected you, but they have rejected Me from being king over them.

Acquiring a king was not God's first, best will for Israel - but it is something He permitted.  For Israel, having a human king limited the extent of the blessing God could have provided to them.

Speaking in Tongues helps us remain cognizant of the Holy Spirit within us

John 14:16-17 (again)

I will ask the Father, and He will give you another Parakletos, that He may be with you forever;  that is the Spirit of truth, whom the world cannot receive, because it does not see Him or know Him, but you know Him because He abides with you and will be in you.

John says the other Parakletos will be us forever, dwelling with us and in us.

In much the same way that swear-aholics can somehow clean up their language in the presence of a policeman or a judge (even when they can't help it around you) - so the practice and interaction of speaking in tongues keeps us aware of presence of the Holy Spirit in us, and helping us.

Howard Carter, the supervisor of The Assemblies of God in Great Britain, said, "We must not forget that speaking with other tongues is not only the initial evidence of the Holy Spirit's infilling,but it is also a continual experience for the rest of one's life to assist in the worship of God."

And, "Speaking in tongues is a flowing stream that should never dry up and that will enrich one's life spiritually."

Tongues (speaking and praying) Stimulates Faith

Jude 20
But you, beloved, build yourselves up on [the foundation of] your most holy faith [continually progress, rise like an edifice higher and higher], pray in the Holy Spirit.

Praying in tongues does not give us faith.

Romans 10:17
So faith comes from hearing [what is told], and what is heard comes by the [preaching of the] message concerning Christ.

2 Peter 3:17-18
Therefore, [let me warn you] beloved, knowing these things beforehand, be on your guard so that you are not carried away by the error of [a]unprincipled men [who distort doctrine] and fall from your own steadfastness [of mind, knowledge, truth, and faith],18 but grow [spiritually mature] in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. To Him be glory (honor, majesty, splendor), both now and to the day of eternity. Amen.

So Peter directs us to grow spiritually, but what are the ways we can grow in grace and knowledge?

John 16:13
But when He, the Spirit of Truth, comes, He will guide you into all the truth [full and complete truth]. For He will not speak on His own initiative, but He will speak whatever He hears[from the Father—the message regarding the Son], and He will disclose to you what is to come [in the future].

1 Corinthians 2
Yet we do speak wisdom among those spiritually mature [believers who have teachable hearts and a greater understanding]; but [it is a higher] wisdom not [the wisdom] of this present age nor of the rulers and leaders of this age, who are passing away; 7 but we speak God’s wisdom in a mystery, the wisdom once hidden [from man, but now revealed to us by God, that wisdom] which God predestined before the ages to our glory [to lift us into the glory of His presence]. 8 None of the rulers of this age recognized and understood thiswisdom; for if they had, they would not have crucified the Lord of glory; 9 but just as it is written [in Scripture],

     “Things which the eye has not seen and the ear has not heard,
     And which have not entered the heart of man,
     All that God has prepared for those who love Him [who hold Him in affectionate reverence,                  who obey Him, and who gratefully recognize the benefits that He has bestowed].”

10 For God has unveiled them and revealed them to us through the [Holy] Spirit; for the Spirit searches all things [diligently], even [sounding and measuring] the [profound] depths of God [the divine counsels and things far beyond human understanding]. 11 For what person knows the thoughts and motives of a man except the man’s spirit within him? So also no one knows the thoughts of God except the Spirit of God. 12 Now we have received, not the spirit of the world, but the [Holy] Spirit who is from God, so that we may know and understand the [wonderful] things freely given to us by God. 13 We also speak of these things, not in words taught or supplied by human wisdom, but in those taught by the Spirit, combining and interpreting spiritual thoughts with spiritual words [for those being guided by the Holy Spirit].

14 But the natural [unbelieving] man does not accept the things [the teachings and revelations] of the Spirit of God, for they are foolishness [absurd and illogical] to him; and he is incapable of understanding them, because they are spiritually discerned and appreciated, [and he is unqualified to judge spiritual matters]. 15 But the spiritual man [the spiritually mature Christian] judges all things [questions, examines and applies what the Holy Spirit reveals], yet is himself judged by no one [the unbeliever cannot judge and understand the believer’s spiritual nature]. 16 For who has known the mind and purposes of the Lord, so as to instruct Him? But we have the mind of Christ [to be guided by His thoughts and purposes].


Saturday, November 14, 2015

Fasting and Prayer - 02

Types of Fasting

1: Normal - abstaining from food  (Luke 4:2)
2: Absolute (or Supernatural) - abstaining from food AND water - normally no more than 3 days.
     - Acts 9:9 (Saul, becoming Paul)
     - Deut 9:9 (Moses)
     - Ezra 10:6 (Israel)
     - Esther 4:16 (Israel)
3: Partial (or Daniel, No Pleasant Bread) - Dan 1:16, Dan 10:3
4: Regular - fast days to commemorate an event, or standard recurring fasts in your life
     - Day of Atonement (Lev 23:27, Ps 35:13, Is 58:5)
     - A fast day (Jer 36:6)
     - Four moeds (Zech 8:19)
     - Twice a week (Luke 18:11-12)
5: Public - Fasts called for special needs or emergencies
     - 2 Chron 20:1-4; Ezra 8:21-23, Jonah 3:5,10)
6: Involuntary - No desire for food, or no food is available
     - Dan 6:18; Matt 15:32; 2 Cor 6:5, 2 Cor 11:27)

Fasting and Prayer - 01

An overview of Fasting:

1: What does the Bible say about fasting?

  • Matt 9:14-15   (John the Baptist's disciples' question to Jesus)
  • Matt 4:4  (read closely -- Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word ...)
  • Esther 4: definition of fasting
  • Leviticus 23:32: definition of fasting
  • Matt 6:16-18 (do not boast)
2: God's Expectations
  • Isaiah 58:5-7 (Not just for our personal deliverance - but also concern for our neighbors)
    • Put the stomach to sleep, and awaken our hearts to love and concern
  • Isaiah 58:9 Then...

3: How often?
  • Jesus said, "When you fast..."
  • Day of Atonement (Leviticus 23:32)
  • Paul fasted often. 2 Cor 11:27, Acts 9:9 - a way of life: 1 Cor 7:5
  • In preparation for known trials (Matt 4)
4: Preparation
  • Jonah 3
5: Not all fasting is for repentance
  • Acts 13:2-3 -- intercession and support for Paul and Barnabas
  • Acts 14:23 - selecting elders for the church
  • Dan 9:3 - deliverance
  • Dan 6:18 - protection (fasting by a Gentile king)
  • Ex 34:27-28 - draw closer to God (by Moses)
  • Ps 35:13 - healing for sick friends
  • Mark 9:28-29 - for casting out demons
  • Luke 2:37 - Anna fasted in service to the temple
6: Discussion:
  • Joel 1:14
  • Joel 2:15-16
  • Isaiah 58:6
  • Deut 32:15
  • 2 Chron 29:31
  • Prov 3:9-10
  • Isaiah 1:19
  • Dan 10:3

Thursday, July 30, 2015

Prayer as a Song

Deuteronomy 32-33

Moses' last words appear this time in the form of a song that summarizes the story of Israel's election, apostasy, punishment, and, in the end, God's gracious vindication.  It contains praise and prophecy.

The Song of Moses functions as a justification of God's ways with Israel.  While some think it is cast in the form of a hymn because of the calls to praise that frame the song, most continue to see, lying behind the poem, a framework known as the prophetic lawsuit, in which God brings charges against Israel.


And Moses came and spoke all the words of this song in the ears of the people, he and Yeshua (Joshua) son of Nun.

Give ear, O heavens, and I [Moses] will speak; and let the earth hear the words of my mouth.


It's called a song, yet Moses says he spoke,  I wonder if he's a Roger Whittaker-style singer?

My message shall drop as the rain, my speech shall distill as the dew, as the light rain upon the tender grass, and as the showers upon the herb.  For I will proclaim the name [and presence] of the Lord. Concede and ascribe greatness to our God.

He is the Rock, His work is perfect, for all His ways are law and justice. A God of faithfulness without breach or deviation, just and right is He.

Remember the days of old; consider the years of many generations. Ask your father and he will show you, your elders, and they will tell you.  When the Most High gave to the nations their inheritance, when He separated the children of men, He set the bounds of the peoples according to the number of the Israelites.

For the Lord’s portion is His people; Jacob (Israel) is the lot of His inheritance.

He made Israel ride on the high places of the earth, and he ate the increase of the field; and He made him suck honey out of the rock and oil out of the flinty rock,  Butter and curds of the herd and milk of the flock, with fat of lambs, and rams of the breed of Bashan, and he-goats, with the finest of the wheat; and you drank wine of the blood of the grape.

But Jeshurun (Israel) grew fat and kicked. You became fat, you grew thick, you were gorged and sleek! Then he forsook God Who made him and forsook and despised the Rock of his salvation.

They provoked Him to jealousy with strange gods, with abominations they provoked Him to anger.  They sacrificed to demons, not to God—to gods whom they knew not, to new gods lately come up, whom your fathers never knew or feared.

Of the Rock Who bore you you were unmindful; you forgot the God Who travailed in your birth.  And the Lord saw it and He spurned and rejected them, out of indignation with His sons and His daughters. And He said, I will hide My face from them, I will see what their end will be; for they are a perverse generation, children in whom is no faithfulness.

They have moved Me to jealousy with what is not God; they have angered Me with their idols. So I will move them to jealousy with those who are not a people; I will anger them with a foolish nation.

For a fire is kindled by My anger, and it burns to the depths of Sheol, devours the earth with its increase, and sets on fire the foundations of the mountains.  And I will heap evils upon them; I will spend My arrows upon them.  They shall be wasted with hunger and devoured with burning heat and poisonous pestilence; and the teeth of beasts will I send against them, with the poison of crawling things of the dust.

From without the sword shall bereave, and in the chambers shall be terror, destroying both young man and virgin, the sucking child with the man of gray hairs.

I said, I would scatter them afar and I would have made the remembrance of them to cease from among men, had I not feared the provocation of the foe, lest their enemies misconstrue it and lest they should say, Our own hand has prevailed; all this was not the work of the Lord.

For they are a nation void of counsel, and there is no understanding in them.  O that they were wise and would see through this [present triumph] to their ultimate fate!

How could one have chased a thousand, and two put ten thousand to flight, except their Rock had sold them, and the Lord had delivered them up?  For their rock is not like our Rock, even our enemies themselves judge this.

For their vine comes from the vine of Sodom and from the fields of Gomorrah; their grapes are grapes of [poisonous] gall, their clusters are bitter.  Their wine is the [furious] venom of serpents, and the pitiless poison of vipers.  Is not this laid up in store with Me, sealed up in My treasuries?

Vengeance is Mine, and recompense, in the time when their foot shall slide; for the day of their disaster is at hand and their doom comes speedily.

For the Lord will revoke sentence for His people and relent for His servants’ sake when He sees that their power is gone and none remains, whether bond or free.

And He will say, Where are their gods, the rock in which they took refuge, who ate the fat of their sacrifices and drank the wine of their drink offering? Let them rise up and help you, let them be your protection!

See now that I, I am He, and there is no god beside Me; I kill and I make alive, I wound and I heal, and there is none who can deliver out of My hand.

For I lift up My hand to heaven and swear, As I live forever,

If I whet My lightning sword and My hand takes hold on judgment, I will wreak vengeance on My foes and recompense those who hate Me.

I will make My arrows drunk with blood, and My sword shall devour flesh, with the blood of the slain and the captives, from the long-haired heads of the foe.

Rejoice [with] His people, O you nations, for He avenges the blood of His servants, and vengeance He inflicts on His foes and clears guilt from the land of His people.




With this song, the case for God's gracious care of Israel and an accusation of Israel's covenantal neglect is brought to the court of "heaven and earth." For exilic readers, the destruction of Jerusalem and their subsequent deportation to Babylon are understandable consequences of Israel's lack of faithful obedience. The argument can be outlined as follows:
A. Introduction, calling on heaven and earth to serve as witnesses
B. History of God's relationship to Israel
1. Accusation: God's faithfulness and Israel's apostasy
2. Recital of God's care for Israel
3. Indictment of Israel's apostasy
C. God's decisions
1. To punish Israel
2. To deliver Israel and punish the enemy
a. God's punishment of Israel might be misunderstood by the enemy as weakness on God's part
b. God relents and punishes the enemy
D. Summons for the heavenly council to praise God
Most important is the dramatic reversal, where God decides the punishment of Israel could be misunderstood as weakness in God or, worse, victory due to the enemy's own might. Therefore, God decides to punish the enemy and deliver Israel as a graphic illustration of divine sovereignty.

Monday, June 29, 2015

Prayer as Thanksgiving

Deuteronomy 26

Moses instructs the people on their prayer as they offer the firstfruits from their fields.  When they give the basket containing their offering to the priest, the priest accepts it and places it before the altar.

And you shall say before the Lord your God, A wandering and lost Aramean ready to perish was my father [Jacob], and he went down into Egypt and sojourned there, few in number, and he became there a nation, great, mighty, and numerous.
And the Egyptians treated us very badly and afflicted us and laid upon us hard bondage.

And when we cried to the Lord, the God of our fathers, the Lord heard our voice and looked on our affliction and our labor and our [cruel] oppression;

And the Lord brought us forth out of Egypt with a mighty hand and with an outstretched arm, and with great (awesome) power and with signs and with wonders;

And He brought us into this place and gave us this land, a land flowing with milk and honey.

And now, behold, I bring the firstfruits of the ground which You, O Lord, have given me. 

[And you shall set it down before the Lord your God and worship before the Lord your God;]

And you and the Levite and the stranger and the sojourner among you shall rejoice in all the good which the Lord your God has given you and your household.

When you have finished paying all the tithe of your produce the third year, which is the year of tithing, and have given it to the Levite, the stranger and the sojourner, the fatherless, and to the widow, that they may eat within your towns and be filled,

Then you shall say before the Lord your God, I have brought the hallowed things (the tithe) out of my house and moreover have given them to the Levite, to the stranger and the sojourner, to the fatherless, and to the widow, according to all Your commandments which You have commanded me; I have not transgressed any of Your commandments, neither have I forgotten them.

I have not eaten of the tithe in my mourning [making the tithe unclean], nor have I handled any of it when I was unclean, nor given any of it to the dead. I have hearkened to the voice of the Lord my God; I have done according to all that You have commanded me.

Look down from Your holy habitation, from heaven, and bless Your people Israel and the land which You have given us as You swore to our fathers, a land flowing with milk and honey.


Thanksgiving prayers, so common in the Old Testament, included gratitude for material things like land and food.  Prayers were offered by the worshipers after the basket of the first-fruits had been placed before the altar.  The benediction of heaven was sought only after the tithes had been reserved for the fatherless and widows.

What is our lesson from this?



The tithe comes first - an offering (back) to the Lord, taken from the gain he has given us.

Then rejoicing, worship, and praise for all the good things the Lord has given us and our household.

This order of event: first the physical giving, the unloading of that encumbrance - give us spirit wings for the communion with God.

And the pattern repeats itself in the spirit realm: prayer lets our spirit commune with the Holy Spirit- allowing our burdens and troubles to be dropped at the feet of the Savior, giving freedom to our spirit to move even closer to God.