The Bible Recap - Day 115 (1 Chronicles 3-5) - Year 6
Episode Date: April 24, 2024SHOW NOTES: - Head to our Start Page for all you need to begin! - Join the RECAPtains - Check out the TBR Store - Show credits - How to Share Your Faith FROM TODAY’S RECAP: - Genesis 49:7 - Deute...ronomy 33 - Genesis 34:25-29 - Pre-order The Joy of the Trinity! BIBLE READING & LISTENING: Follow along on the Bible App, or to listen to the Bible, try Dwell! SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter/X | TikTok D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter/X TLC: Instagram | Facebook D-GROUP: D-Group is brought to you by the same team that brings you The Bible Recap. TBR is where we read the Bible, and D-Group is where we study the Bible. D-Group is an international network of Bible study groups that meet weekly in homes, churches, and online. Find or start one near you today! DISCLAIMER: The Bible Recap, Tara-Leigh Cobble, and affiliates are not a church, pastor, spiritual authority, or counseling service. Listeners and viewers consume this content on a voluntary basis and assume all responsibility for the resulting consequences and impact.
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble and I'm your host for the Bible Recap.
Today we drop back in on the genealogy we started reading two days ago.
It picked up with David, whose kingship is the focal point of the book itself.
But before we get to David's storyline, we have to wrap up these genealogies first. It's likely that the first part of today's reading that caught your attention
was in 4-9, where the text goes from listing names to sharing a brief narrative about a
man named Jabez. We learn that he's an honorable man and that he seeks God even though his
name means sorrow or pain, which is all the more interesting given that he asks God to
keep him from pain.
Remember how names in the Old Testament are intended to point toward character?
It seems like Jabez is sincerely asking God to protect him from himself, to make him a
new man, to do something different than his name would indicate.
And he knows that part of avoiding pain and sorrow is avoiding sin and harm, so he asks
God to keep him from those things too.
One of the other things he asks God for is an enlarged border, which is probably a literal
prayer for more land, because as we've seen, that's what a lot of the focus has been on
lately.
And the text tells us that God answers his prayer with a yes.
I'll touch more on this in my God shot.
Later in chapter 4, we see that the tribe of Simeon is shrinking.
Jacob hinted at this when he prophesied over Simeon way back in Genesis 49, saying,
"'Cursed be their anger, for it is fierce, and their wrath, for it is cruel.
I will divide them in Jacob and scatter them in Israel.'"
And Moses also hinted at this in Deuteronomy 33, right before he died, when he was blessing the tribes and failed to offer a blessing to Simeon.
It kind of blows my mind when I notice that God has been dropping a trail of breadcrumbs for a few thousand years.
And just so we don't forget what all this relates back to, it all started back in Genesis 34,
when Simeon and Levi killed all the men of Shechem to avenge their sister Dinah's rape.
So if you think back to that prophecy from Jacob
that I just mentioned, the one that says,
I will divide them in Jacob and scatter them in Israel,
that prophecy was for both Simeon and Levi,
for both brothers.
And we see that Levi has been scattered and divided as well.
The Levites don't have their own land,
and they live spread out among the other tribes. God fulfilled Jacob's prophecy for both tribes.
In chapter 5, we are reminded about the sins of another one of Jacob's sons,
Reuben. He slept with his father Jacob's concubine, which led to having his birthright taken away.
But despite Reuben's wickedness, his descendants have been blessed.
The Reubenites are primarily herdsmen, and their flocks are multiplying.
They live in the Transjordan with the tribe of Gad and the half-tribe of Manasseh.
Those 2.5 tribes seem to have a unique kind of unity happening.
Maybe it's their isolation across the Jordan River, but they really seem to get each other's
back, at least at this point.
Not only that, but they seek God together.
520 talks about when they all go to war against the Hagrites,
and it says, they cried out to God in the battle,
and He granted their urgent plea because they trusted in Him.
Because of that, their 44,000 men captured 100,000 of the enemy alive,
and they also carted off over 300,000 of their animals.
And all those
numbers are on top of the number of men they killed in the battle.
Alas, it's short-lived, because their famous, beloved leaders eventually fall into idolatry
and start worshipping the local pagan gods.
So God races up an enemy to come and cart them off, just like they'd done with their
enemies.
What was your God shot today?
I saw a lot about how God responds to prayers.
We read accounts of two specific prayers today.
There was the prayer I just mentioned where the Transjordan tribes cried out to God during
their war against the Hagrites, and it says,
"...He granted their urgent plea because they trusted in Him."
Was this a self-focused prayer or a God-focused prayer?
They're asking for help winning a war,
which could be considered self-motivated,
but it's also possibly considered a holy war
since it involves land occupied by the tribes,
even though the Transjordan
isn't technically the original promised land.
So what do we think of this prayer?
Put a pin in that for a second.
Then there was the prayer of Jabez in 4, 9-10, which says,
Oh, that you would bless me and enlarge my border, and that your hand might be with me,
and that you would keep me from harm so that it might not bring me pain.
This prayer has elements that pertain to righteousness, but it also has elements that pertain to personal
desires.
So, is this a selfish prayer or a God-focused prayer?
Can I tell you that I'm not even sure it matters?
God openly receives both kinds of prayers.
He doesn't rebuke Jabez for asking for more land,
and he doesn't tell the Transjordan tribes
that they should have stuck to the original promised land
if they wanted to win battles.
The reason I think this is so important
is because I know many people who struggle to
pray for other people, but I also know many people who struggle to pray for themselves
because they feel self-condemnation about the fact that it might be perceived as selfish.
And Jabez has modeled for us that not only are both kinds of prayers acceptable to God,
but both kinds of prayers seem to be honorable to God. These prayers come from a heart that knows God, that trusts Him, and that cries
out to Him as the source of all good things, from victories to land to
righteousness. I believe God can be trusted to take all our prayers, sift
them, and faithfully respond to us with what is best in each unique situation.
When it comes to his kids, God
leaves no prayer unanswered. There's no such thing as an unanswered prayer. He
hears and receives them all and always responds with yes, no, or wait. We already
know he wants a relationship with us. We already know he loves constant
communication. We already know he sees our hearts. So how beautiful is it that we get to mix all that together, that our relationship with
him consists of constantly talking to him about everything that's on our heart?
Nobody else can handle all that, but he can, and it's pretty fantastic.
Maybe when you're talking to him today, you might want to tell him that you know that
he's where the joy is. When you think about the Trinity, does it feel completely mind-boggling?
I want to help.
So I wrote a book for you called The Joy of the Trinity, One God, Three Persons.
While we won't ever fully understand the Trinity, we can understand it more.
And just like you're seeing with Scripture,
every new thing we learn is the path to more joy.
So pre-order your copy now on Amazon or wherever you buy books,
or click the link in the show notes.
He's Where the Joy Is has become the true catchphrase of the Bible Recap family.
You guys know it and love it.
And if you're curious to know where this phrase comes from
and how my life has changed because of it, click the link in the show notes to hear a
recent interview I did on the Wayfm's Mid-Days with Joy.