Recorded yesterday please #pray for Lewiston Idaho Clarkston WA Asotin Praying and spiritual warfare March 17th 2023
Recorded yesterday please #pray for Lewiston Idaho Clarkston WA Asotin Praying and spiritual warfare March 17th 2023 #prayer #spiritualwarfare
What We Teach about the Biblical Food Laws | #clean
Thought for Today: Shabbat March 18:
We must always walk with Adonai Elohiym in the freedom of forgiveness. The path we follow together is sometimes steep and slippery. If we carry a burden of guild on our backs, we are more likely to stumble and fall. At our requests, Adonai will remove the heavy load from us and bury it at the foot of the cross. When He unburdens us, we are undeniably free. We need to stand up straight and tall in His Presence today, so that no-one can place more burdens on our backs. Let us lift our eyes and look into His Face and feel the warmth of His Love-Light shining upon us. It is this unconditional Love that frees us from both fears and sins. Spend time basking in the Light of Adonai’s Presence and remember, as we come to know Him more and more intimately, we grow increasingly free.
SERIES J --- THE WARRIOR KING --- LESSON 18
DAVID AND BATHSHEBA
DAVID AND BATHSHEBA
From 2 Samuel 11:2-27
While Joab and his army went to Rabbah to begin their military campaign against the Ammonites, David remained behind at his palace in Jerusalem. One evening he got up from his couch and went for a walk on the palace roof. As he looked down into the courtyard of a nearby house, he saw a very beautiful woman taking a bath. David inquired about the woman and was told that she was Bathsheba, the daughter of Eliam and the wife of Uriah the Hittite. David sent for her and when she came, he made love to her. Then she returned to her house. When Bathsheba found that she was going to have a baby, she sent word to David. In an effort to free himself from the blame, David sent a note to Joab to send Bathsheba’s husband Uriah home to Jerusalem. Uriah arrived and David asked him about the battle and how things were going with Joab and the army. Then, as he dismissed Uriah, David said, ‘go home and rest.’ David even sent a gift for Uriah to his house. But Uriah did not go home. Instead, he slept that night with the king’s servants at the gateway of the palace. Someone told David what Uriah had done, so David summoned him again. ‘After all that travel, you didn’t even go home last night?’ David asked. ‘Why not? Why didn’t you go home and sleep with your wife?’ ‘The Ark of YHVH, the armies of Israel and my general and his officers are all camping out in the open fields,’ Uriah answered. ‘How can I go home and eat and drink and enjoy the evening with my wife? I vow to you that I will never do such a thing.’ ‘Very well, you may stay here tonight again,’ David told him. ‘Tomorrow you may return to your place with the army.’ Uriah stayed at the palace that night. David had him come to dinner and gave him so much wine that he became drunk. But even so he did not go home that night either. Instead, he slept again at the gateway of the palace. The next morning David sent Uriah back to Joab with a sealed message. ‘Put Uriah in the most dangerous part of the battle,’ said the message ‘and then withdraw from him so that he will be killed.’ Joab obeyed David’s orders and put Uriah in a place by the city where the enemy was strongest. When the Ammonites attacked, several soldiers of Israel were killed, including Uriah. Then Joab sent a report to King David about this part of the battle. He instructed the messenger also, ‘if the king is angry and asks why we came so near the city and why we didn’t realize that they would shoot from the wall and why we didn’t remember that Abimelech was killed at Thebez by a woman who threw a millstone from the wall, then tell him that his servant Uriah is dead also.’ The messenger went to Jerusalem and told King David all that Joab had said. ‘The men attacked in the field and we went after them to the city gates. Then archers shot from the wall and killed some of our soldiers, including Uriah the Hittite,’ the messenger said. ‘Tell Joab not to let this incident discourage him,’ said the king. ‘Sometimes people get killed one way and sometimes another way. Tell him to do better next time and he will conquer the city. Encourage him by saying that he is doing well.’ When Bathsheba heard the news about her husband Uriah, she mourned for him. When the period of mourning was over, David sent for her and made her one of his wives and she gave birth to his son. But Adonai was greatly displeased with what David had done.
COMMENTARY
THE HITTITES
A thousand years before David was anointed king over Israel, the Hittites ruled in Asia Minor. They were an important political force in the ancient Near East with influence that went far beyond their own borders. At the height of their power, the Hittites controlled all of the hand from Lebanon to the Euphrates River. After eight hundred years of political supremacy, the Hittite Empire collapsed under the pressure of the invading [Sea Peoples.] But though the old kingdom was conquered, the Hittite culture did not disappear. It continued to thrive among the independent city-states of Syria. Uriah, Bathsheba’s husband, belonged to the Syrian line that kept up the ways of the old Hittites. As a hired soldier under King David, he brought with him the military ability he inherited from his cultural ancestors. The old Hittites were adept with sword or bow and skilled in the use of lightweight war chariots. They were famous for their masterful use of battle strategy and respected for their honourable treatment of war prisoners. They waged war with the same sense of honour Uriah showed when he refused to desert his fellow soldiers for the comforts of home.
This coming week, March 19-25 (26 Adar-3 Nisan), the Bible reading plan covers the portion Vayikra (And He Called).
19 Mar Leviticus 1:1-13 2 Chronicles 25:15-26:5 John 10:22-42 Psalm 73:1-28
20 Mar Leviticus 1:14-2:6 2 Chronicles 26:6-28:27 John 11:1-16 Proverbs 16:1-8
21 Mar Leviticus 2:7-16 2 Chronicles 29:1-30:12 John 11:17-37 Proverbs 16:9-16
22 Mar Leviticus 3:1-17 2 Chronicles 30:13-32:8 John 11:38-57 Proverbs 16:17-24
23 Mar Leviticus 4:1-26 2 Chronicles 32:9-33:20 John 12:1-26 Proverbs 16:25-33
24 Mar Leviticus 4:27-5:10 2 Chronicles 33:21-35:9 John 12:27-50 Psalm 74:1-23
25 Mar Leviticus 5:11-6:7 Isaiah 43:21-44:23 John 13:1-20 Proverbs 17:1-7
https://thebarkingfox.com/2023..../03/17/weekly-bible-
This coming week, March 19-25 (26 Adar-3 Nisan), the Bible reading plan covers the portion Vayikra (And He Called).
19 Mar Leviticus 1:1-13 2 Chronicles 25:15-26:5 John 10:22-42 Psalm 73:1-28
20 Mar Leviticus 1:14-2:6 2 Chronicles 26:6-28:27 John 11:1-16 Proverbs 16:1-8
21 Mar Leviticus 2:7-16 2 Chronicles 29:1-30:12 John 11:17-37 Proverbs 16:9-16
22 Mar Leviticus 3:1-17 2 Chronicles 30:13-32:8 John 11:38-57 Proverbs 16:17-24
23 Mar Leviticus 4:1-26 2 Chronicles 32:9-33:20 John 12:1-26 Proverbs 16:25-33
24 Mar Leviticus 4:27-5:10 2 Chronicles 33:21-35:9 John 12:27-50 Psalm 74:1-23
25 Mar Leviticus 5:11-6:7 Isaiah 43:21-44:23 John 13:1-20 Proverbs 17:1-7
https://thebarkingfox.com/2023..../03/17/weekly-bible-