Sunday, October 21, 2012

A Man after God's Own Heart

What does it mean to be a man after God's own heart? It our current sermon/Bible study series, people seem to assume that it means an upstanding moral character, with perhaps with a t-shirt reading 'Jesus saves'.
I suppose they're justified:

1 Samuel 13:14 - "kept the Lord's commands"
Acts 13:22 - "did all My will"
Psalm 16:2 - "apart from the Lord I have no good thing"
Psalm 38:9,15 - "Lord, all my desire is in You"
1 Kings 3:6 - "walked before You in truth and righteousness and uprightness of heart"
1 Kings 3:14 - "kept My statutes and commandments"
1 Kings 9:4 - "walked before Me in integrity of heart and uprightness, doing according to all that I commanded him"
1 Kings 11:4 - "his heart was wholly devoted to the Lord his God"

But I think a bare moralistic interpretation denigrates God's grace and condescension:

Psalm 32 - "I confessed my sin and you forgave me"
Psalm 51 - "I know my transgressions—create in me a clean heart"

Monday, October 8, 2012

Finrod in Tol-in-Gaurhoth

Finrod in Tol-in-Gaurhoth: the closest an elf ever came to knowing what it feels like to be a man.

Prophets

The Hebrew words נָבָא (chôzeh), רֹאֶה (ro-eh'), נְבִיא (nebı̂y'), and נָבִיא (nâbı̂y') are variously translated as seer or prophet. Apparently the meanings of these words changed and merged over time (1 Samuel 9:9), making context necessary to determine what is meant in each case. Three of them are used as distinct appellations in 1 Chronicles 29:29.

Possible meanings include:
Prophets can be led by God to lie (2 Kings 8:10); they can receive divine inspiration from minstrelsy (2 Kings 3:15); they can be left without inspiration (2 Kings 4:27).


The English word prophet is directly derived from the Greek προφήτης (prophétés), meaning one who reveals or relates God's word or will. When the NT refers to an OT 'prophet', it is generally in the sense of one who foretold or foreshadowed Jesus Christ, but this is not the case for NT prophets.

Προφήτης is also used of the pagan Greek poet Epimenides.