The Bible Recap - Day 331 (1 Thessalonians 1-5, 2 Thessalonians 1-3) - Year 5
Episode Date: November 27, 2023SHOW NOTES: - Head to our Start Page for all you need to begin! - Join the RECAPtains - Check out the TBR Store - Show credits - Listen to Scrooge: A Christmas Carol FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: - Vi...deo: 1 Thessalonians Overview - Video: 2 Thessalonians Overview - Acts 17:1-9 - Invite your friends to join you next year! - TBR Start Page SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter TLC: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-GROUP: The Bible Recap is brought to you by D-Group - an international network of discipleship and accountability groups that meet weekly in homes and churches: 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.
If you're doing our New Testament plan, today we finished our seventh and eighth books.
And if you're doing the whole Bible, we finished our 46th and 47th books.
These two books are Paul's letters to the church at Thessalonica.
We met them yesterday in Acts 17.
Paul, Silas, and Timothy spent a lot of time with them until the local Jews, who were jealous
of their ministry, formed a mob and basically drove them out of town.
Paul really loves the people of this church, so he writes them this letter to speak words
of encouragement and love.
He starts out by telling them a few of the ways their lives demonstrate that God has
chosen them to be a part of his family. First of all, they've received the gospel wholeheartedly
and the Holy Spirit came to them as well. Second, they started spreading the word to other people.
They received and lived out and shared the gospel. Paul says he and the guys mentored them and then
they started mentoring others. They took what they learned from Paul and made Macedonian mentees.
started mentoring others. They took what they learned from Paul
and made Macedonian mentees.
Third, they've turned from their idolatry
and worshiped the one true God.
We also see here that there is wrath coming,
but Jesus is the one who delivers us from it
because God's kids will never experience his wrath.
Then Paul recounts the story of how they met.
He'd just been beaten up and imprisoned in Philippi,
but he didn't stop preaching.
He came to Thessalonica to share the gospel with them even in the face of opposition.
He didn't come there to be popular or powerful, and he didn't come there to get rich.
Even though the apostles had a right to demand that the church take care of them,
they didn't make use of that right. In fact, they worked overtime so that they could share
the gospel and their lives with the Thessalonians. 212 says Paul exhorted and encouraged
and charged them to live in a way
that shows they believe the gospel and that glorifies God.
They did.
And as a result, they encountered persecution.
Paul really wants to see them again,
but he says Satan hindered him.
Some scholars think this is a reference
to what happened the last time he was there
when Jason posted Baal.
It seems like there may be some kind of restriction
against Paul returning,
or it could be something totally different, we don't know.
But he reassures them that it's not his choice.
He loves them.
He even calls them his crown of boasting before God.
So there are two things worth pointing out here.
First, the idea of boasting to God sounds ridiculous, right?
Of course, but Paul isn't boasting in what he has done.
He didn't save the Thessalonians. God sounds ridiculous, right? Of course. But Paul isn't boasting in what he has done.
He didn't save the Thessalonians. The crown of boasting is boasting in what God has done.
In fact, some scholars believe these are the crowns we will lay at his feet, the people
we've led to him and built up in him. In chapter 3, Paul talks about the struggles
they've been enduring separately. Both he and the Thessalonians have suffered persecution.
He tells them that we are promised struggles. They shouldn't come as a
surprise. But because Paul wanted to check in on them in the midst of their
trials, he sent Timothy to them, who comes back with word that they're doing
awesome. It makes Paul all the more excited to see them again, so he prays
that God will give them that opportunity. In the meantime though, he continues
doing what he does. Exhort, encourage, and charge.
He tells them to keep living lives of honor and purity, even when it comes to things that
are culturally dishonored, like sex, because that is God's will.
In fact, this is one of the few places in Scripture where God's will is stated loud
and clear.
4.
3-5 says, This is the will of God, your sanctification, that you abstain from sexual immorality, that
each one of you know how to control his own body in holiness and honor, not in the passion
of lust, like the Gentiles who do not know God.
God's will is that we be sanctified.
That word basically means made clean.
You may remember that in Christ we've already been declared clean.
The word for that is justified.
But to be made clean is to be
sanctified. Justification is a one-time event. Sanctification is a lifelong process. And 523
tells us that God Himself is the one who sanctifies us. We can't and don't do that ourselves. It's His
will and it's His work. He provides all that He requires of us. God also says His will is that even our
sexual impulses are controlled by the Spirit, not by the flesh or the culture. So if you
want to pray a prayer that God loves to say yes to, ask Him to sanctify you, because we
already know that's His will, so we can pray according to His will.
We hit another loud and clear declaration of God's will in 5, 16, through 18, which says, rejoice always, pray without ceasing, give thanks in all circumstances, for this is
the will of God in Christ Jesus for you. In chapter 4, it seems they may have been
concerned about all those who lived before them, who died before they ever
heard about Jesus. In 414, he reassures them that any of their ancestors who
believe in the promise, even though they've never heard of Jesus, were still saved by Him through faith in God's promise.
It says, through Jesus, God will bring with Him those who have fallen asleep.
People in the Old Testament were saved by faith, not by works, just like those of us
who live after Christ died.
After Paul sends his first letter, the church's circumstances grow worse.
They're under more persecution externally, and internally there are some false teachers spreading
lies and sometimes even claiming those false messages are from Paul himself, probably by
forging a letter from him, because he goes to great lengths at the end of this letter to make
sure they know it's authentic. They're scared and confused, so Paul writes his second letter to help
set the record straight. He starts out his encouragement by reminding them that God will give them relief in their
persecution and that he can be trusted to bring judgment on their persecutors.
In 1 9, he says they'll suffer eternal destruction.
And this isn't in the text, but it's kind of obvious given that Paul Saul is the one
writing this letter.
The other alternative, besides destruction, is that the persecutors repent, like Paul did.
In which case, the persecutors don't receive justice, they receive mercy,
and their punishment is transferred to Christ.
Paul devotes a lot of chapter 2 to one of the lies the false teachers have been spreading in the church.
They say that Jesus has already returned and that they've been forgotten and abandoned by him.
Paul is like, no, no, no, he has not come back yet. If he had, you
would know it. It would be obvious, not just some rumor. Paul says there will be a major
rebellion against God, led by the man of lawlessness, who will try to take control of the temple
of God. The way the phrase temple of God is used in Greek gives it a lot of flexibility.
It doesn't necessarily have to refer to the Jewish temple in Jerusalem, which was destroyed
in 70 AD shortly after this letter was written.
It could refer to a pagan temple, or it could even be more symbolic than literal, referring
to him trying to take over a position of leadership in the church.
Regardless, Paul says they don't need to lose any sleep over it, because Jesus will
put a stop to it by the breath of his mouth.
Wow.
And as for those who want nothing to do with God,
he's finally and eternally giving them what they want. They refuse the truth and God gave them over
to believe the lie. And as for God's kids, Paul encourages them in chapter 3 that God will protect
them from Satan and his lies. He encourages them not to lose heart, to stay awake, to not grow weary.
My God shot is all of God's action in these books.
Even though Paul's letters seem to speak primarily
to the relationship he has with the church
and what's happening in their lives,
these pages are dense with theology.
We can barely make it four lines
without Paul giving God the credit
for something amazing that's happening.
If you have time, go back and slow down
and look for all the things God is doing here. Here are a few of my favorites. From 1 Thessalonians 312 says, May the Lord make you
increase and abound in love for one another and for all. God grows love. In 313, Paul asked God to
establish your hearts in blameless and holiness. From 2 Thessalonians, 1 3 says,
We ought always to give thanks to God for you, because your faith is growing abundantly and the
love of every one of you for one another is increasing. Paul thanks God, not them, that
their love and faith is growing. He credits God as the initiator of faith and love.
1 11 says, To this end we always pray for you, that our God may make you worthy of His calling,
and may fulfill every resolve for good and every work of faith by His power.
God is the one who makes us worthy of His calling.
God is the one who fulfills our resolves for good works.
213 says, We ought always to give thanks to God for you, because God chose you as the
firstfruits to be saved, through sanctification by the Spirit and belief in the truth.
Look at all the things He's doing, and this isn't even the half of it.
This sets my heart at rest.
All the striving to be worthy, all the attempts to get my act together, I can lay it all down
and be carried by the God who provides all He requires.
He's where the rest is, and He's where the joy is.
Next year is a leap year, and we'd love for you to join us again or for the first full
time if you just recently joined for the New Testament. Since 2024 is a leap year, you're
going to get an extra day on this reading plan. Do not stress about how this is going
to work out. Our team is already on top of it, making sure the plan is still set up for
you even with the bonus day. Our plan is to drop the February R&C episode on February 29th,
so there will still be an episode for you. And you can either use that day as a catch-up day,
or if you're still on track, just pop over to your favorite psalm or proverb or book in the New
Testament. And if you do our plan on the Bible app, just opening the app on that day will keep your streak. You won't lose it. Hooray!
So as we wrap up 2023 and prepare for leap year 2024, here's what I want you to be thinking
about. Who can you invite to join our TBR family next year? We want to help you invite
them. We've got some graphics you can post on your socials or text or email to your friends
or family or your home group. We've got it all on the start page of our website, thebiblerecap.com, or click the link in the show
notes. There's a brand new Christmas podcast called Scrooge, a Christmas Carol podcast,
and Sean Astin from Lord of the Rings voices the Scrooge character. This version has been
revamped to point people to the hope that's found in Jesus instead of to the consumerism of Christmas. To check it out, text SCRUGE to 67101
or click the link in the show notes.