The Bible in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 206: The Book of Baruch (2025)
Episode Date: July 25, 2025Fr. Mike explains the context of the book of Baruch, he also highlights Isaiah's warning against complacency and how God's justice applies to everyone, even those who don't believe in Him. The reading...s are Isaiah 32-33, Baruch 1-2, and Proverbs 11:17-20. For the complete reading plan, visit ascensionpress.com/bibleinayear. Please note: The Bible contains adult themes that may not be suitable for children - parental discretion is advised.
Transcript
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Hi, my name is Father Mike Schmitz and you're listening to the Bible in a Year podcast where
we encounter God's voice and live life through the lens of scripture.
The Bible in a Year podcast is brought to you by Ascension.
Using the Great Adventure Bible timeline, we'll read all the way from Genesis to Revelation,
discovering how the story of salvation unfolds and how we fit into that story today.
It is day 206 and we're reading from Isaiah chapters 32 and 33.
We're also reading from the prophet Baruch chapter 1 and 2, also Proverbs chapter 11
verses 17 through 20. As always the Bible translation that I'm reading from is
the Revised Standard Version, second Catholic edition. I'm using the Great
Adventure Bible from Ascension. If you want to download your own Bible in a
year reading plan you can go to ascensionpress.com slash Bible in a year
and you can also subscribe to this podcast to receive daily episodes.
As I said, today's day 206, we're reading Isaiah 32 and 33.
Also Baruch.
Baruch is also one of those seven Deuterocanonical books that if you have only
read Protestant Bibles where Martin Luther had taken out those seven extra,
well, they're extra to you.
But for us as Catholics, they are part of the canon and for the Orthodox,
that's part of the canon for the first Christians, they are part of the canon and for the Orthodox, that's part of the canon.
For the first Christians, they are part of the canon.
So we're gonna read and hear from the Prophet Baruch chapter 1 & 2 as well as Proverbs 11 verses 17 through 20.
The book of the Prophet Isaiah chapter 32, Reign of Righteousness and Justice.
Behold, a king will reign in righteousness, and princes will rule in justice. Each will
be like a hiding place from the wind, a covert from the tempest, like streams of water in
a dry place, like the shade of a great rock in a weary land. Then the eyes of those who
will see will not be closed, and the ears of those who hear will listen. The mind of
the rash will have good judgment, and the tongue of
the stammerers will speak readily and distinctly. The fool will no more be called noble, nor the
knave said to be honorable. For the fool speaks folly, and his mind plots iniquity, to practice
ungodliness, to utter error concerning the Lord, to leave the craving of the hungry unsatisfied,
and to deprive the thirsty of drink.
The navories of the knave are evil.
He devises wicked devices to ruin the poor with lying words,
even when the plea of the needy is right.
But he who is noble devises noble things,
and by noble things he stands.
Rise up, you women who are at ease.
Hear my voice.
You complacent daughters, give ear to my speech.
In little more than a year you will shudder, you complacent women, for the vintage will fail, the fruit harvest will not come.
Tremble, you women who are at ease. Shudder, you complacent ones. Strip and make yourselves bare, and put sackcloth upon your loins. Beat upon your breasts for the pleasant fields,
for the fruitful vine, for the soil of my people growing up in thorns and briars. Yes,
for all the joyous houses in the joyful city. For the palace will be forsaken, the populous
city deserted. The hill and the watchtower will become dens forever, a joy of wild donkeys,
a pasture of flocks until
the spirit is poured upon us from on high and the wilderness becomes a
fruitful field and the fruitful field is deemed a forest then justice will dwell
in the wilderness and righteousness abide in the fruitful field and the
effect of righteousness will be peace and the result of righteousness quietness
and trust forever my people will be peace, and the result of righteousness quietness and trust forever.
My people will abide in a peaceful habitation,
in secure dwellings, and in quiet resting places,
and the forest will utterly go down,
and the city will be utterly laid low.
Happy are you who sow beside all waters,
who let the feet of the ox and the donkey range free.
Chapter 33 A Prop prophecy of deliverance.
The Lord, the majestic King.
Woe to you, destroyer, who yourself have not been destroyed.
You treacherous one, with whom none has dealt treacherously.
When you have ceased to destroy, you will be destroyed,
and when you have made an end of dealing treacherously, you will be dealt with treacherously.
O Lord, be gracious to us.
We wait for you.
Be our arm every morning, our salvation in the time of trouble.
At the thunderous noise, peoples flee, at the lifting up of yourself, nations are scattered,
and spoil is gathered as the caterpillar gathers.
As locusts leap, men leap upon it.
The Lord is exalted, for He dwells on high.
He will fill Zion with justice and righteousness, and He will be the stability of your times.
Abundance of salvation, wisdom and knowledge.
The fear of the Lord is His treasure.
Behold, the valiant ones cry out. knowledge. The fear of the Lord is his treasure.
Behold, the valiant ones cry out. The envoys of peace weep bitterly. The highways lie waste.
The wayfaring man ceases. Covenants are broken. Witnesses are despised. There is no regard
for man. The land mourns and languishes. Lebanon is confounded and withers away, Sharon is like a desert, and Bashan and Carmel shake off their leaves.
Now I will arise, says the Lord, now I will lift myself up, now I will be exalted.
You conceived chaff, you bring forth stubble, your breath is a fire that will consume you,
and the peoples will be burned as if burned to lime, like thorns cut down, that are burned in the fire.
Here, you who are far off what I have done, and you who are near, acknowledge my might.
The sinners in Zion are afraid, trembling, has seized the godless.
Who among us can dwell with the devouring fire? Who among us can dwell with the everlasting burnings?
He who walks righteously and speaks uprightly,
who despises the gain of oppressions,
who shakes his hands lest they hold a bribe,
who stops his ears from hearing of bloodshed
and shuts his eyes from looking upon evil.
He will dwell on the heights.
His place of defense will be the fortresses of rocks.
His bread will be given him. His place of defense will be the fortresses of rocks. His bread will
be given him. His water will be sure. Your eyes will see the king in his beauty. They
will behold a land that stretches afar. Your mind will muse on the terror. Where is he
who counted? Where is he who weighed the tribute? Where is he who counted the towers? You will
see no more the insolent people,
the people of an obscure speech which you cannot comprehend,
stammering in a tongue which you cannot understand.
Look upon Zion, the city of our appointed feasts.
Your eyes will see Jerusalem, a quiet habitation, an immovable tent,
whose stakes will never be plucked up, nor will any of its cords be broken.
But there the Lord in majesty will be for us a place of broad rivers and streams,
where no galley with oars can go, nor stately ship can pass.
For the Lord is our judge, the Lord is our ruler, the Lord is our King.
He will save us.
Your tackle hangs loose.
It cannot hold the mast firm in its place or keep the sail spread out.
Then prey and spoil in abundance will be divided.
Even the lame will take the prey.
And no inhabitant will say, I am sick.
For people who dwell there will be forgiven their iniquity.
The Book of Baruch.
Chapter 1. Baruch and the Jews of Babylon.
These are the words of the book which Baruch, the son of Neriah, son of Massiah, son of
Zedekiah, son of Hasadiah, son of Hilkiah, wrote in Babylon in the fifth year on the
seventh day of the month, at the time when the Chaldeans took Jerusalem and burned it
with fire.
And Baruch read the words of this book in the hearing of Jeconiah,
the son of Jehoiakim, king of Judah,
and in the hearing of all the people who came to hear the book,
and in the hearing of the mighty men and the princes,
and in the hearing of the elders,
and in the hearing of all the people small and great,
all who dwelt in Babylon by the river Sud.
Then they wept, and fast fasted and prayed before the Lord and
they collected money each giving what he could and they sent it to Jerusalem to
Jehoiakim the high priest the son of Hilkiah son of Shalom and to the priests
and to all the people who were present with him in Jerusalem. At the same time
on the tenth day of Sivan Baruch took the vessels of the house of the Lord
which had been carried away from the temple to return them to the land of
Judah. The silver vessels which Zedekiah, the son of Josiah, king of Judah, had made after Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon, had carried away from
Jerusalem, Jeconiah, and the princes and the prisoners and the mighty men and the people of the land and brought them to Babylon.
A letter to Jerusalem.
to Babylon. A letter to Jerusalem. And they said, Herewith we send you money. So buy with the money burnt offerings and sin offerings and incense and prepare a
cereal offering and offer them upon the altar of the Lord our God and pray for
the life of Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon and for the life of Belshazzar
his son that their days on earth may be like the days of heaven and the Lord
will give us strength,
and he will give light to our eyes, and we shall live under the protection of Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon, and under the protection of
Belshazzar, his son. And we shall serve them many days and find favor in their sight. And
pray for us to the Lord our God,
for we have sinned against the Lord our God, and to this day the anger of the Lord and His wrath have not turned away from us.
And you shall read this book which we are sending you, to make your confession in the house of the Lord on the days of the feasts and at appointed seasons.
Confession of Sins
And you shall say, Righteousness belongs to the Lord our God, but confusion of face as at this day to us, to the men of Judah, to the inhabitants
of Jerusalem, and to our kings and our princes and our priests and our prophets and our fathers,
because we have sinned before the Lord and have disobeyed him, and have not heeded the voice of
the Lord our God to walk in the statutes of the Lord which he set before us. From the day when
the Lord brought our fathers out of the land of Egypt until today, we have
been disobedient to the Lord our God, and we have been negligent in not heeding his
voice.
So to this day there have clung to us the calamities and the curse which the Lord declared
through Moses his servant at that time when he brought our fathers out of the land of
Egypt to give to us a land flowing with milk and honey.
We did not heed the voice of the Lord our God in all the words of the prophets whom he
sent to us, but we each followed the intent of his own wicked heart by
serving other gods and doing what is evil in the sight of the Lord our God.
Chapter 2. So the Lord confirmed his word which he spoke against us and against
our judges who judged Israel and against our kings and against our princes and against the men of Israel and Judah.
Under the whole heaven there has not been done the like of what he has done in Jerusalem in accordance with what is written in the law of Moses,
that we should eat one the flesh of his son and another the flesh of his daughter and he gave them into subjection of all the kingdoms around us to be a reproach and a desolation among all the surrounding peoples
where the Lord has scattered them.
They were brought low and not raised up, because we sinned against the Lord our God in not
heeding his voice.
Righteousness belongs to the Lord our God, but confusion of face to us and our fathers as at this day.
All those calamities with which the Lord threatened us have come upon us.
Yet we have not entreated the favor of the Lord by turning away each of us from the thoughts
of his wicked heart.
And the Lord has kept the calamities ready, and the Lord has brought them upon us, for
the Lord is righteous in all his works which He has commanded us to do. Yet we have not obeyed His voice to walk in the statutes of the Lord which He set before us.
Prayer for Deliverance
And now, O Lord God of Israel,
who brought your people out of the land of Egypt with a mighty hand,
and with signs and wonders, and with great power and outstretched arm,
and have made you a name as at this day,
we have sinned, we have been ungodly.
We have done wrong, O Lord our God, against all your ordinances.
Let your anger turn away from us, for we are left few in number
among the nations where you have scattered us.
Hear, O Lord, our prayer and our supplication, and for your own sake deliver us,
and grant us favor in the sight of those who have carried us into exile,
that all the earth may know that you are the Lord our God,
for Israel and his descendants are called by your name.
O Lord, look down from your holy habitation and consider us.
Incline your ear, O Lord, and hear. Open your eyes, O Lord, and see.
For the dead who are in Hades, whose spirit has been taken from their bodies,
will not ascribe glory or justice to the Lord,
but the person that is greatly distressed, that goes about bent over and feeble,
and the eyes that are failing, and the person that hungers,
will ascribe to you glory and righteousness, O Lord.
For it is not because of any righteous deeds of our fathers or our kings that we bring before you our prayer for mercy, O Lord
our God. For you have sent your anger and your wrath upon us, as you declared by
your servants the prophets, saying, Thus says the Lord, Bend your shoulders and
serve the King of Babylon, and you will remain in the land which I gave to your
fathers. But if you will not obey the voice of the Lord,
and will not serve the King of Babylon,
I will make to cease from the cities of Judah
and from the region about Jerusalem
the voice of mirth and the voice of gladness,
the voice of the bridegroom and the voice of the bride,
and the whole land will be a desolation without inhabitants.
But we did not obey your voice to serve the king of Babylon, and you have confirmed your
words which you spoke by your servants the prophets, that the bones of our kings and
the bones of our fathers would be brought out of their graves.
And behold, they have been cast out to the heat of day and the frost of night.
They perished in great misery by famine and sword and pestilence, and the house which is called by your name you have made as it is today,
because of the wickedness of the house of Israel and the house of Judah."
God's covenant recalled,
Yet you have dealt with us, O Lord our God, in all your kindness and in all your great compassion,
as you spoke by your servant Moses on the day when you commanded him to write your law
in the presence of the people saying,
if you will not obey my voice,
this very great multitude will surely turn
into a small number among the nations
where I will scatter them.
For I know that they will not obey me,
for they are a stiff-necked people,
but in the land of their exile,
they will come to themselves and they will know that I am the Lord their God
I will give them a heart that obeys and ears that hear and they will praise me in the land of their exile and
Will remember my name and will turn from their stubbornness and their wicked deeds
For they will remember the ways of their fathers who sinned before the Lord
I will bring them again into the land which I swore to give to their fathers, to Abraham and to Isaac
and to Jacob, and they will rule over it. And I will increase them, and they will not
be diminished. I will make an everlasting covenant with them to be their God, and they
shall be my people. And I will never again remove my people Israel from the land which I have given them."
The book of Proverbs chapter 11 verses 17 through 20
A man who is kind benefits himself, but a cruel man hurts himself.
A wicked man earns deceptive wages, but one who sows righteousness gets a sure reward
He who is steadfast and righteousness will live but he who pursues evil will die
Men of perverse mind are an abomination to the Lord, but those who blameless ways are his delight
Father in heaven we give you praise and glory we ask you to please help us once again we as we pray these Proverbs how we ask you to help us to become the
people who are kind and the person who is righteous and the person who lives in
your right relationship with you help us to actually live in right relationship
with you this day and every day or God help us to hear your words clearly to
understand them and understand not only how you spoke to
your people Israel but also how you are speaking in your scripture today to us
to your people now we bear your name like they bore your name so please as
you were faithful with them be faithful with us and we give you praise we love
you we make this prayer in the mighty name of your son Jesus Christ our Lord
Amen in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen. Wow, okay, so oh man
So we're gonna get to Baruch in just a second
But first Isaiah 32 and 33 just a little context
the first thing we have in chapter 32 is we have this prophecy of a righteous king and one of the things that Isaiah could
Be talking about he could be he could be talking about Hezekiah. Hezekiah in many ways was righteous, right?
Remember Hezekiah prayed before the Lord as the Assyrians led by Sennacherib were coming into Jerusalem and
It was desperate hugely desperate situation. What did Hezekiah do?
Hezekiah took that letter from Sennacherib and he put it and brought it into the temple of the Lord
He placed himself basically, you know face down and just honored the Lord
and asked his for his intercession and God heard his prayer. So it could be that
Hezekiah is that righteous king. But also could be that the great great I think
I think it's the great great grandson no just the great grandson of Hezekiah was
Josiah and Josiah definitely was a righteous king. Second Kings chapter 22
mentions that. And so this could be you know
Isaiah saying okay talking about his Akai
I could be Isaiah prophesying about the future King King Josiah who would be a righteous king
but also he's calling people back, you know, gosh, there's this recognition of
not only the righteousness and integrity from the king and how to blessing that is in chapter 32
but also a call to prepare for the coming of the Holy Spirit.
And it talks about those complacent women, right?
And sorry, ladies, a lot of times it's you men of Judah,
turn back to the Lord because you're wicked.
Today, it's the complacent women.
And what is that essentially?
The women who are at ease or complacent daughters.
You could be a people, it doesn't just be the women,
but it's the people who are self-indulgent, right?
Self-focused life, just like I'm untroubled
by all the trouble happening around me.
And that complacent, that self-satisfied,
and what it ultimately can become is lukewarm, right?
So we know in the book of Revelation
that the Lord God says,
to the church, allow it to see you, I believe.
He says, I wish you were hot or cold,
but you're lukewarm.
Because you're lukewarm, I'd like to spew you
out of my mouth, I want to vomit you out of my mouth.
And there's this element here where the complacent women
of Judah, or complacent people of Judah,
yeah, I'm self-satisfied, so therefore I'm self-indulgent,
and I just don't really care about the troubles
that are happening around me.
And so there's this call to wake up from this,
and a call to turn back to the Lord,
because, as I say at 34
talks about what talks about the
the righteous justice of the Lord against all the nations
and the completeness of the judgment we read about the completeness of God's judgment in the other prophets where it was like no
there's there's no one who's going to escape God's judgment and here is chapter 34 that
There's no one who's going to escape God's judgment and here is chapter 34 that
re-emphasizes this to when it comes all you nations here all you people
listen to me because the indignation of the Lord is coming against all nations his justice come against all nations and
It's it's thorough, right? and so one of the things that we can take away from this is not only that God is calling the people of Israel and therefore
now here in the current context the Christian people back to repentance but everything
belongs to God that even those people who don't believe in God belong to God
that even those who don't profess any religion still belong to God and at this
recognition that all those things that are not handed over to God will be
burned away everything that doesn't belong to the Lord
will fade into oblivion.
And so if I don't want to belong to the Lord,
then that's one of the things that'll be burned away.
Man, it's powerful and it's dreadful,
but it is also true.
Now, let's go to the book of the prophet Baruch.
Baruch, just a little context.
So Baruch, as I said, is one of the Deuteronocles.
It's part of the canon. Remember, I mentioned I didn't fully explain this when we were talking
about the book of Tobit, but if you remember there are Sadducees and
there's Pharisees in the time of Jesus. I mean there's also Essenes and some other
groups of people, but you have the Pharisees and Sadducees and when it
comes to the canon of the Bible, like all the lists of the books of the Bible, the
Sadducees, they only acknowledge the first five books of Moses as canon.
And so Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy, they acknowledged only those five as part of the canon,
whereas the Pharisees and others had a larger canon, and the Essenes had a lot of writings as well.
And so we even can see that in the time of Jesus, there was no established canon,
and that's why I pointed out that since there was no established canon at the time of Jesus, who was up to who to
establish a canon? Well not the Jewish people post Jesus because the Jewish
people post Jesus are meant to be in the fulfillment, right? They're
messianic people now. They were waiting for this the Messiah. The Messiah came in
Jesus and so Jesus fulfilled all of the hopes and all the promises, all the
prophecies. He fulfilled everything that was meant to be fulfilled in Jesus and so Jesus fulfilled all of the hopes and all the promises all the prophecies he fulfilled everything that was meant to be
Fulfilled in Judaism and so he wasn't in some ways you can say he wasn't
Starting something new but he was doing something new but he was he was fulfilling the ancient prophecies
He's fulfilling Judaism in himself. And so those first Christians are the fulfillment of Judaism
Because of that those who did not accept Christ have
Essentially no authority to establish a canon
It took the church that Christ founded to establish the canon and Baruch is part of that canon that Christ Church founded
If that makes any sense
Okay, so the little context is the book of the prophet Baruch
Baruch was a contemporary of Jeremiah. In fact, he would be a, I don't want to just say a
traveling companion with Jeremiah. He might have been Jeremiah's scribe. He
might have been a co-prophet with Jeremiah. And so he is writing after the
Babylonian exile. That's what he's saying. He's actually writing to the people of
the exile. So that's why he's in the baby blue, right?
Jeff is the color-coded nest that we're in baby blue because they're singing the blues in exile.
And what happens is here is Baruch who's ministering to the people who are in Babylon.
And a number of the things that he's doing is he's writing a letter to Jerusalem,
basically saying we're taking up a collection and we're asking you,
because here we are in Babylon, we're exiled, we're not in the temple, we're not in Jerusalem, that's the only place worship can happen, so we're up a collection and we're asking you because here we are in Babylon we're exiled we're not in the temple we're
not in Jerusalem that's the only place worship can happen so we're taking a
collection and we're sending it to you please pray for us offer worship on our
behalf but also this is crazy offer worship on behalf of Nebuchadnezzar king
of Babylon and for Belshazzar his son and that's just it's remarkable but you
know st. Paul's gonna repeat this in Romans chapter 13, talking about praying for the rulers, even unjust rulers.
Because at the time of Paul, there was pretty unjust rulers,
and Nebuchadnezzar is the one who brought them all into exile in the first place,
and so it's remarkable that here, and even in the Old Testament, they're saying,
pray for the rulers.
But then they go on to have a confession of their sins,
and talk about how, yeah, we disobeyed the Lord, we knew his law,
we didn't lack anything.
The only thing we lacked were hearts
that were willing to be changed,
ears that were willing to listen,
eyes that were willing to truly see,
and lives that were willing to truly be
who God had called us to be.
So this lengthy confession,
because righteousness belongs to God,
but know what we chose?
We chose something other than righteousness.
And then he leads them into this prayer for deliverance.
Basically saying, Lord God, bring us back, bring us back.
And even Baruch even includes the words of God himself
saying, well, don't worry, I'm going to bring you home.
I am going to bring you out of this land of exile.
Because why?
Because I have established my covenant
and I will bring you back.
And this is the beginning of the book of the prophet Baruch
We're gonna continue journeying with him for a couple days and just three days total and it's just it's remarkable to be able to
Not only be with Isaiah as he's with you know, these these kings Ahaz and Uzziah and Hezekiah
Before the Babylonian exile but also to hear the words of Baruch during the Babylonian exile
Where here is a people that have been humbled
they were a massive people that have been
Become a small remnant and yet that remnant is saying God don't forget
God in a in the declaration of faith God you won't forget and you will bring us home
It's just so good in the last line of chapter 2
It says I will make an everlasting covenant with them to be their God and they shall be my people will bring us home. All right, it's just so good. Last line of chapter two, it says,
I will make an everlasting covenant with them
to be their God and they shall be my people
and I will never again remove my people Israel
from the land which I have given them.
And that's just God's promise.
And we just, we give God thanks and we're so grateful.
I'm grateful for you.
So keep on praying, I'm praying for you.
Please pray for me.
My name is Father Mike.
I cannot wait to see you tomorrow.
God bless.