Devotions: August 3

Judges 17

This story is about Micah. As a way of background, Judges 17:6 says “In those days there was no king in Israel. Everyone did what was right in his own eyes.” Apparently Micah found himself a wandering Levite whom he convinced to stay with him as his priest (verse 13):

Then Micah said, “Now I know that the Lord will prosper me, because I have a Levite as priest.”

It looks like even way back in the time of the Old Testament judges the “prosperity gospel” was alive and well. It’s all about who you know and what you do that makes God owe you.

Acts 21

I want to focus here on Acts 21:4-6:

And having sought out the disciples, we stayed there for seven days. And through the Spirit they were telling Paul not to go on to Jerusalem. When our days there were ended, we departed and went on our journey, and they all, with wives and children, accompanied us until we were outside the city. And kneeling down on the beach, we prayed and said farewell to one another. Then we went on board the ship, and they returned home.

If it was really the Holy Spirit speaking through the disciples in Tyre, why did Paul ignore them and continue on to Jerusalem? In all the other warnings on Paul’s journey back to Jerusalem from Greece, the warning is that difficulty is coming, not that he should not go. I wonder if that is what is meant in these verses or not.

Mark 16

Almost two thirds of this chapter (Mark 16:9-20) are not found in some of the earliest manuscripts and other’s have some other text inserted between verses 8 and 9.  Without these added verses Mark’s gospel ends without anyone actually seeing the resurrected Christ. Perhaps then a later scribe was motivated by that omission to fill in some detail in the end. Another theory is that the original ending past verse 8 was lost very early on and so a new ending, the one we have today, was grafted in. In any case, the version we have now is from the early second century. For those that are interested, I found Bible Research and Wikipedia articles that were helpful.