MIME-Version: 1.0
Date:         Tue, 16 Apr 1996 08:48:00 +-200
Reply-To: Christian explanation of the Scriptures to Israel
              
Sender: Christian explanation of the Scriptures to Israel
              
From: Teus Benschop 
Subject:      ChrExp, The Scriptures opened, 79
To: Multiple recipients of list CHR-EXP 

Contents
----------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Leviticus 12     - Purification after child bearing
2. Ezekiel 3:17-21  - Israel's watchman
3. Matthew 5:3      - The poor in spirit


1.  Leviticus 12 - Purification after child bearing
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Weekly reading:    Leviticus 12 - 13
                   Leviticus 14 - 15


Leviticus 12.

1 And the LORD spake unto Moses, saying,
2 Speak unto the children of Israel, saying, If a woman have conceived
seed,  and  born  a man child: then she shall be unclean  seven  days;
according to the days of the separation for her infirmity shall she be
unclean.
3  And  in  the  eighth  day  the  flesh  of  his  foreskin  shall  be
circumcised.
4  And she shall then continue in the blood of her purifying three and
thirty  days;  she shall touch no hallowed thing, nor  come  into  the
sanctuary, until the days of her purifying be fulfilled.
5  But  if she bear a maid child, then she shall be unclean two weeks,
as  in  her  separation: and she shall continue in the  blood  of  her
purifying threescore and six days.
6  And when the days of her purifying are fulfilled, for a son, or for
a  daughter,  she  shall bring a lamb of the first year  for  a  burnt
offering,  and  a young pigeon, or a turtledove, for a  sin  offering,
unto the door of the tabernacle of the congregation, unto the priest:
7  Who shall offer it before the LORD, and make an atonement for  her;
and she shall be cleansed from the issue of her blood. This is the law
for her that hath born a male or a female.
8  And  if  she be not able to bring a lamb, then she shall bring  two
turtles, or two young pigeons; the one for the burnt offering, and the
other  for a sin offering: and the priest shall make an atonement  for
her, and she shall be clean.


In  our text we have the laws for the purification of a woman who  has
brought forth a son or a daughter. When she has given birth to a  son,
then  she  shall  be unclean for seven days. But  in  the  case  of  a
daughter,  she  was  twice as long unclean, namely fourteen  days.  In
these days she was separated from society. Nobody might tough her lest
he  or  she  would also be unclean. She should be separated  from  the
people  during the seven or the fourteen days. On the eighth  day  the
boy  was  circumcised, but even after that the women remained unclean.
During  three  and  thirty  days after the circumcision  she  remained
unclean. And in the case of a daughter twice as long.

In  the  verses  six to eight we read that the law commands  that  she
should  offer a lamb of the first year. Not an offering to  thank  the
LORD that He has given her offspring, and that a new human has come on
the  world. The offering she was obliged to bring was not to thank the
Lord. But she should bring a burnt offering. And also an offering  for
sin.  The priest shall then make atonement for her, and then she shall
be clean.

We  might ask: "What is wrong in bringing forth children? Why  is  the
woman unclean so long? Why is she not obliged to bring an offering  to
thank  the LORD, but an offering to atone for her sins? Why  must  she
bring  a  burnt offering and an offering for sin? What  has  she  done
wrong? Hasn't the LORD said: "Be fruitful, and multiply, and replenish
the  earth"?  Genesis 1:28. What is wrong in bringing forth  children,
and in obeying His command to be fruitful?" The answer to this all  is
very  easy.  It  might be that she has fulfilled  the  command  to  be
fruitful, but yet at the same moment she has brought a new sinner into
the  world.  And  *that* God has not commanded. God  commanded  to  be
fruitful, not to bring new sinners into the world. This is the  reason
of  her  uncleanness. This is the reason why the  priest  should  make
atonement  for her, that she might again be clean. The new born  child
inherits the sinful nature of all posterity after Adam. The woman  has
brought  forth  one with a sinful nature, a new sinner.  Surely,  this
makes  her unclean. Why didn't she bring forth good children? Why  has
she  given  life  to sinners? We, people, can bring  sinner  into  the
world,  but  it is God only Who can cleanse that sinner. Only  through
regeneration the new born child can be acceptable in God's sight.  The
first generation is a natural generation. Through our first generation
we  come  into  being.  Yet,  this is not enough.  We  need  a  second
generation,  a so called re-generation. The first, natural  generation
needed a burnt offering and an offering for sin, and a priest to  make
the   woman   clean.  But  the  second,  spiritual   generation,   the
regeneration needs nothing of that sort. The second generation makes a
sinner really clean. Only through a new heart we can be acceptable  in
God's  sight.  Only then we become righteous. "Except a  man  be  born
again, he cannot see the kingdom of God." Joh 3:3. "Marvel not that  I
said  unto  thee,  Ye must be born again." Joh 3:7. Marvel  not  about
this.  You  may think that the natural birth is enough,  and  that  we
ourselves  should  make us acceptable in God's  sight.  But  then  you
forget  that you, when you came into this world, made your  mother  so
unclean that she was separated for a long time from other people, lest
they  also should become unclean because of you. You came as a  sinner
in  this world, and you will be damned as a sinner, unless you be born
again, the second birth. Only a new birth, through the Spirit of  God,
can make you clean.

Are  you  born of a woman? Yes, of course you are. So you are born  of
flesh.  Flesh,  what  will bring it forth? Will flesh  bring  forth  a
spiritual  man? No, but flesh will bring forth flesh. "That  which  is
born  of  the flesh is flesh; and that which is born of the Spirit  is
spirit."  Joh 3:6. Flesh, born of flesh, has nothing to do  with  God,
because  He  is a Spirit. God is not flesh, but He is Spirit.  And  He
must be worshipped in spirit. How can a man, who is flesh, worship God
duly, unless he is born again and is become spiritual? Can such a man,
who defiled his environment at birth, ever please the holy and perfect
God?  No, he cannot, because what is born of flesh is flesh. Only when
he  is  born  of the Spirit, he becomes spiritual, and can please  the
spiritual God. Regeneration, that is what you need. The second birth -
without that you must eternally die. Only when you are born again  you
will see the Kingdom of God. Only spiritual people, pleasing God, will
come  there  - not carnal men. That what is born naturally is  carnal,
but  what is born of God is spiritual and holy, like God is holy.  "Be
holy",  said God, "because I am holy". But how can carnal men ever  be
holy, unless they are born from the Holy Spirit?

The  first  birth of a person defiled his whole environment, including
his  mother.  But the second birth, the regeneration, has  a  cleaning
effect  on  us. Through regeneration God will make us holy,  and  this
holiness will be seen and heard in our behaviour and speech.

Let's earnestly pray for this second birth, that cleanses us from  our
first,  defiling one. A second birth is not something that happens  to
you  automatically. It is a special gift of God.  He  grants  that  to
some,  namely to such as He pleases. Let's therefore pray Him that  He
also gives us this invaluable great gift. When God regenerates us,  He
gives  us  also  the  faith in Jesus Christ, His  Son.  These  two  go
together, regeneration and faith. Also righteousness is given us then.

We  have seen above the law for the purification of the woman that has
given birth to a son or a daughter. The birth defiled her, and she was
unclean  for a rather long time. This behaviour of the unclean  woman,
her  separation,  her  burnt  offering,  her  offering  for  sin,  the
atonement of the priest - these all show us that there has happened  a
terrible unclean thing: a child has been born. This all shows  us  the
original  sin.  The child, even before it has done something  good  or
evil,  already defiled his mother. Its birth was so unclean that  many
things  should  be  done to purify all again.  The  original  sin  has
defiled this child, in its very birth. The intervention of the priest,
and  offerings were necessary to purify all. Likewise have we need  of
the  intervention of our High Priest, Jesus Christ the Son of God. And
in like manner have we need of several offerings for sin. The only and
perfect offering of Jesus Christ is what we need to make us clean from
our own sins and from our original sin. Regeneration, that is what  we
need.  When  we  are  born again, then Christ's offering  for  sin  is
applied to us, and we are clean again.

LORD,  purify us, because we are defiled from our very birth.  Through
faith  in  Christ Jesus, we will become holy, and there will  be  made
atonement for us. LORD, purify us.

Though the birth of a child defiles the whole environment, yet on  the
other  hand there is lawful joy. "A woman when she is in travail  hath
sorrow,  because her hour is come: but as soon as she is delivered  of
the child, she remembereth no more the anguish, for joy that a man  is
born  into the world." Joh 16:21. So, when a child is born, let us  be
filled  with  a  mixture of two feelings: On the  one  hand  we  mourn
because  a new sinner is born, but on the other hand we thank God  and
are  filled  with delight that a new man is born into the  world.  But
much  greater  is our joy when a man is born again, and is  reconciled
with God.





2.  Ezekiel 3:17-21 - Israel's watchman
----------------------------------------------------------------------

17  Son  of man, I have made thee a watchman unto the house of Israel:
therefore hear the word at my mouth, and give them warning from me.
    The  prophet is made watchman for Israel, to warn them for  coming
    evils.
18  When I say unto the wicked, Thou shalt surely die; and thou givest
him  not warning, nor speakest to warn the wicked from his wicked way,
to  save his life; the same wicked man shall die in his iniquity;  but
his blood will I require at thine hand.
    When  a  prophet does not warn the wicked, and they die, then  the
    wicked one dies in his sins, but also the prophet is guilty.
19  Yet  if thou warn the wicked, and he turn not from his wickedness,
nor  from his wicked way, he shall die in his iniquity; but thou  hast
delivered thy soul.
    If  the  wicked man dies because of his sins, but he is warned  by
    the prophet, then the prophet is blameless.
20  Again, When a righteous man doth turn from his righteousness,  and
commit iniquity, and I lay a stumblingblock before him, he shall  die:
because thou hast not given him warning, he shall die in his sin,  and
his  righteousness which he hath done shall not be remembered; but his
blood will I require at thine hand.
    When  a righteous man begins to sin, but the prophet hasn't warned
    him, then when that man dies, the prophet is guilty.
21 Nevertheless if thou warn the righteous man, that the righteous sin
not,  and he doth not sin, he shall surely live, because he is warned;
also thou hast delivered thy soul.
    When  the man is warned by the prophet, and he sins not, then  the
    prophet has delivered his soul.


We  have here an account of the important task of being prophet  of  a
nation.  A  prophet is like God's mouth. When a prophet  speaks  to  a
nation,  they  hear  not a man's words, but God's.  This  applies,  of
course,  to a called prophet, not to a false one. Like the task  of  a
prophet was heavy and demanding, also the task of the present minister
is  difficult.  He  should  be faithfully  performing  his  duties  of
explaining the Word and of warning the people.

The Word of the LORD to Ezekiel was:
    17  Son  of  man, I have made thee a watchman unto  the  house  of
    Israel:  therefore  hear  the word at  my  mouth,  and  give  them
    warning from me.
Ezekiel  is made a watchman unto the house of Israel. What is that,  a
watchman?  A watchman is one standing on the high towers or elsewhere,
to  warn  the  inhabitants of a place when the enemies come,  or  some
other danger. A faithful watchman will watch always that he might  see
whenever  the danger comes. And when he sees the danger, he will  warn
the  people  of  that place, that they might be on  their  guard.  The
prophet  Ezekiel is made of God such a watchman. Not only  Ezekiel  is
put  in  that office, but also the other prophets, and all  the  other
ministers  of the Word of God. They are required of God  to  warn  His
people  for  all dangers. That might be dangers coming  from  a  loose
manner  of life, or dangers ensuing from false doctrine. "Thy watchmen
shall lift up the voice; with the voice together shall they sing:  for
they shall see eye to eye, when the LORD shall bring again Zion."  Isa
52:8.  A faithful watchman will warn in good time, as soon as  he  has
seen the coming evil. But when we look around us, in our own times, it
seems  that  multitudes of watchmen are fallen asleep.  The  world  is
literally full of false doctrine, and many live a loose live under the
cloak of some religion. Where are the watchmen? Why don't they lift up
their  voice  to  warn their congregation? Why speak  they  of  peace,
instead  of coming danger? Nay, instead of the enemy being already  in
the  city? Why are the walls broken down, that every enemy might enter
the  city  and  burn down any true and valuable thing? Why  don't  the
watchers  warn?  It  is because they are fallen asleep.  Or  they  are
blind.  "His watchmen are blind: they are all ignorant, they  are  all
dumb  dogs, they cannot bark; sleeping, lying down, loving to slumber.
Yea,  they are greedy dogs which can never have enough, and  they  are
shepherds  that  cannot understand: they all look to  their  own  way,
every  one  for his gain, from his quarter." Isa 56:10,11.  Since  the
world  is so full of errors, and so full of people living loosely,  it
appears  evidently that our watchmen are spiritually blind;  they  are
dumb  dogs,  unable to bark, loving to sleep, lying down and  slumber.
And  indeed, sometime ago I heard one say that he stood up not  before
nine  in  the morning, and went to bed early, so that "I am  fit",  he
said. Yea, loving to slumber, lying down, sleeping, a silent dog.

But  let's  repeat the command to Ezekiel, and the charge  every  true
minister  of  the Word has: "Son of man, I have made thee  a  watchman
unto  the  house of Israel: therefore hear the word at my  mouth,  and
give  them  warning from me." This is the work of a true watchman:  1)
Hear the Word at God's mouth, and 2) Give them warning from God.

How should a spiritual watchman deal with the wicked?
    18  When  I say unto the wicked, Thou shalt surely die;  and  thou
    givest  him not warning, nor speakest to warn the wicked from  his
    wicked  way,  to save his life; the same wicked man shall  die  in
    his iniquity; but his blood will I require at thine hand.
In  this verse we read the task of a true prophet and watcher  in  the
case  he  meets a wicked one. "When I say unto the wicked, Thou  shalt
surely  die". This is the first thing a minister should do:  Hear  the
word  of God's mouth. And what says God? He says that the wicked  will
surely die. These words the watcher must first hear, and secondly,  he
should  act accordingly: tell it to the person concerned. But  in  the
case  a  watcher is blind, or ignorant, or loves sleeping, or  in  the
case  he  is  timid and fears the faces of the people - in  all  these
cases  the prophet will not warn the wicked. If "thou givest  him  not
warning, nor speakest to warn the wicked from his wicked way, to  save
his  life; the same wicked man shall die in his iniquity". So, we  see
that  the  warnings of the prophets, though they seem harsh, have  the
goal to "save his life". The wicked, when they listen to the warnings,
are  saved. But when the prophet keeps his mouth, and warns not,  then
the wicked one will die in his sins. When the prophet hasn't performed
his duty in warning the wicked people, and they therefore die in their
sins, is the prophet blameless then? No, for though the man shall "die
in  his iniquity," yet "his blood will I require at thine hand",  says
God. The prophet is guilty because he kept his mouth. The blood of the
wicked  people  will be required of his hand. So, we see  how  vitally
important  the work of the ministers is. They should speak, and  warn,
and  admonish,  and persuade, and teach, and give a  good  example  by
their life. They should do all to turn the people to God.

It  is said in this verse that the watchman should speak "to warn  the
wicked  from his wicked way, to save his life". Not that  any  man  is
able to save the life from any other man, but the verse means that the
wicked  might turn from his ways, his sins might be forgiven,  and  he
thus might be saved. The prophet's word is then the power of God.  God
saves  a  sinner, when he turns from his evil ways. "The preaching  of
the  cross  is to them that perish foolishness; but unto us which  are
saved  it  is the power of God." 1 Cor 1:18. Yes, God's word  is  "the
power of God" to save sinners.

What happens when the watcher faithfully has warned the wicked people,
but they yet refuse to listen?
    19  Yet  if  thou  warn  the wicked, and  he  turn  not  from  his
    wickedness,  nor  from  his  wicked  way,  he  shall  die  in  his
    iniquity; but thou hast delivered thy soul.
In the case the prophet has performed his duty but the wicked go on in
their  own  chosen ways, then the prophet has delivered his soul.  The
watchman has delivered his soul from the wrath of God that would  have
come  over him in case of his negligence. So we see that the ministers
should  labour in the Word, but that they are unable to make the  Word
fruitful.  They may labour, but God gives the power to  the  Word.  "I
have  planted,  Apollos watered; but God gave the  increase.  So  then
neither  is he that planteth any thing, neither he that watereth;  but
God  that  giveth the increase." 1 Cor 3:6,7. We see that the prophets
should  labour  always and ever, day and night, but that  they  should
leave  to  God the increase of the Word in the lives of their hearers.
Ministers may sow the seed, but when the hearts of the people  are  of
stone, then it will never come up. But their labour, how unfruitful it
may be, has yet this one advantage: "Thou hast delivered thy soul".

The  spiritual watchman have a task not only for the wicked  but  also
for  the  righteous.  Many say or think of themselves  that  they  are
righteous,  so  the  watchmen have work enough.  Many  pretend  to  be
righteous,  yet, when you ask if they know Christ, and  how  they  got
this  knowledge, then all is silent at a sudden. Yet they think to  be
righteous.
    20  Again,  When a righteous man doth turn from his righteousness,
    and  commit  iniquity, and I lay a stumblingblock before  him,  he
    shall  die: because thou hast not given him warning, he shall  die
    in  his sin, and his righteousness which he hath done shall not be
    remembered; but his blood will I require at thine hand.
In  this verse we read that it is possible that "a righteous man  does
turn  from his righteousness, and commit iniquity". Men may have lived
neatly, but become sinners afterwards. If they do that, God will  "lay
a stumblingblock before him", that he may fall in eternal destruction.
God  hates  the  sinners, and will lay a stumblingblock  before  their
feet,  that they may stumble and fall down in the pit. When "I  lay  a
stumbling  block before him", says the Lord, then "he shall die".  How
shall  he  die? In his sins, that is, without forgiveness of them.  He
will  die eternally. But it is the task of the watchmen to warn  these
people  before God lays a stumblingblock before them. When the watcher
sees  the  righteous  people turning form  their  ways,  and  becoming
sinners,  he  should warn them as soon as possible, lest they  stumble
and  fall  down. This is the task of our watchers. When they  are  not
asleep (like many sleep on), they will see the coming danger. When the
sinner continues in his ways, God will destroy them. But yet the  same
God  has  given ministers to warn the sinners. Let the ministers  then
warn them, that they may be saved in good time.

Our  verse  continues  with that sinner. In  the  case  he  shall  die
"because thou hast not given him warning, he shall die in his sin, and
his  righteousness which he has done shall not be remembered; but  his
blood  will I require at thine hand". So, when the minister keeps  his
mouth,  or when he is blind or drowsy, God will punish that unfaithful
minister.

    21   Nevertheless  if  thou  warn  the  righteous  man,  that  the
    righteous  sin  not,  and he doth not sin, he shall  surely  live,
    because he is warned; also thou hast delivered thy soul.
If  there is a righteous man, and he is warned by the prophet, that he
does not sin, he shall surely live. We see that it is the task of  the
ministers, not to flatter the righteous people, but to warn them, that
they  sin not. Even the righteous people need God's warning, lest they
sin.  If  the  minister  performs  his  office  faithfully,  then  the
righteous "shall surely live, because he is warned". Further, by doing
this, the servant of God "has delivered" his soul.




3.  Matthew 5:3 - The poor in spirit
----------------------------------------------------------------------


Blessed are the poor in spirit: for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.


Is there any one poor in spirit? He is blessed. The poor in spirit are
blessed, for the kingdom of heaven is for them. Blessed are those that
are  poor  in  spirit.  They are not rich  in  spirit.  They  are  not
righteous in themselves, but they are poor sinners.

Who are the poor in spirit? What kind of people are these? The poor in
spirit  are the humble. They are the people that are broken of  heart.
They  understand painfully their worthlessness. They have a low esteem
of themselves, and know that they cannot rest on own strength. Because
they  are without any good in themselves, they no longer trust on  own
power  or  on own righteousness, but they have put all their trust  in
the  LORD.  They trust on the grace of God in Jesus Christ.  They  are
poor  in  spirit, because they have nothing in themselves  whereon  to
rest  or  wherein to put confidence. They are so poor, that they  have
and  see  nothing in themselves. The poor in spirit;  those  that  are
spiritually bankrupt. They formerly were blind, and therefore  thought
they had all in themselves. But since God has opened their eyes to see
the  real truth, they discern so much evil in themselves, and so  much
vanity  in their heart, that they no longer trust in themselves.  They
are  the  poor  in  spirit. Jesus said that  they  are  blessed.  "The
sacrifices of God are a broken spirit: a broken and a contrite  heart,
O  God,  thou wilt not despise." Ps 51:17. No, God will not despise  a
broken and a contrite heart. Instead of that, God will bless that one.
Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.

The  world  thinks to be blessed when they have enough, and when  they
can  do  whatever they like. Like the pigs are at rest when  they  are
full,  so  is the world in silence when they have enough. The  worldly
people  think  that  this is a good blessing:  having  enough  of  all
things.  But Jesus' doctrine is totally different. And not only  Jesus
doctrine differs from the world's doctrine, but also Moses said, that,
when  they  became full, they kicked against God. "But Jeshurun  waxed
fat,  and  kicked: thou art waxen fat, thou art grown thick, thou  art
covered  [with  fatness];  then he forsook God  which  made  him,  and
lightly  esteemed  the Rock of his salvation." Deut  32:15.  As  said,
Jesus'  doctrine differs from the world's. Not those that are at  rest
like  the full pigs, are blessed, but: blessed are the poor in spirit.
The  world  thinks  to  be blessed because they have  all  goods  they
desire, but the poor in spirit are blessed, not because they have  the
earth's riches, but: blessed are they because theirs is the kingdom of
heaven. Let then the world have their perishing goods, but we have the
kingdom  of  heaven, which will remain always and ever. All  flesh  is
like grass that withers, but God's Word, and His Kingdom, are for ever
and  ever.  Let your treasures be in heaven, where they are safe.  The
earthly  treasures are often stolen, or otherwise corrupted.  But  the
poor in spirit are blessed, for their treasure is an eternal treasure.

Some  are indeed poor in spirit. But they are not poor in such a  ways
as  Jesus means here. They are cowardly and afraid. They are subjected
to the will of satan. They don't resist their corruptions of the body,
but  cowardly subject themselves and enslave themselves to them. Their
spirit is so poor and void of all courage, that they listen to people,
rather  then  to God. But this chicken-heartedness is not meant  here.
Not a sinful poverty of spirit is meant here, but a blessed poverty.

Who  are  the poor in spirit? The poor in sprit are content  with  the
measure God gives them here on earth. They are thankful for everything
God  gives them. Are they poor? Yet they are satisfied therewith.  Are
they  despised by the people? They delight in that. Are they  held  in
contempt?  They accept it. Many are poor in money, but  they  are  not
content  with that. They always and ever desire more and more.  These,
though  they  are  poor in money, are yet not poor  in  spirit.  Their
spirit  is always fighting against God Who has given them but a meagre
portion.  But  the poor in spirit are blessed, because theirs  is  the
kingdom of heaven.

The  poor in spirit are humble and meek in their own eyes. They  think
not high of themselves, but very mean. Some are rich in grace, but yet
poor  in  spirit. How is this possible? How can one be rich in  grace,
and yet poor in spirit? Very easy. The abundant outpouring of grace in
one's  soul, makes him think low of himself, but high of God.  Through
the  outpouring  of  the Spirit on one, he begins to  see  his  sinful
nature,  and  his corruption. These make him think low of himself.  He
becomes, through the received grace, poor in spirit, and thus blessed,
for he is an inheritor of the kingdom of heaven.

Blessed are the poor in spirit: for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.



----------------------------------------------------------------------
chr-exp@nic.surfnet.nl
"A Christian explanation of the Scriptures to Israel"
Institute Practical Bible-education
Web:  https://christian.net/pub/resources/text/ipb-e/ipbe-home.html
Written by Teus Benschop  --  t.benschop@pobox.ruu.nl
----------------------------------------------------------------------





file: /pub/resources/text/ipb-e/so: s-open-079.txt
.