Daily Broadside | A Brief Reflection on the Amazing Name of Joshua

Daily Verse | Joshua 2:9
“I know that the Lord has given this land to you and that a great fear of you has fallen on us, so that all who live in this country are melting in fear because of you.”

Friday’s Reading: Joshua 6-8
Saturday’s Reading: Joshua 9-12

Happy Friday and welcome to the weekend. If you’re following the Bible reading plan, we’re now in the book of Joshua—which is an amazing name.

Why? Glad you asked.

Joshua was the successor of Moses, the man brought up in Pharaoh’s household and the leader who brought the people of Israel out of slavery in Egypt. Joshua is described as Moses’ “young aide” (Exodus 33:11) and one “who had been Moses’ aide since youth” (Numbers 11:28).

Joshua was commissioned by God Himself to lead the Israelites just before the LORD took them into the land of Canaan (Deut. 31:23):

The Lord gave this command to Joshua son of Nun: “Be strong and courageous, for you will bring the Israelites into the land I promised them on oath, and I myself will be with you.”

Here are some facts about the name “Joshua” that give us a more robust (and inspiring!) understanding of how the Old Testament (the Jewish Tanakh) points to Jesus.

In Hebrew, Joshua is spelled יְהוֹשֻׁעַ (Yehoshu’a) (and always reading right to left in Hebrew). It means, “Yahweh is salvation,” from the roots יְהוֹ (yeho) referring to the Hebrew God and יָשַׁע (yasha’) meaning “to save.”

Included in the name Joshua is a shortened form of the Tetragrammaton, i.e. the name of the Lord: YHWH (יהו). YHWH is unpronounceable,

“… and wherever the text called for YHWH, a reader would pronounce the Hebrew word for lord, namely Adonai. In the Middle Ages, the Masoretes began to fear that the traditional pronunciation of the written text might become lost and inserted symbols to help preserve it. That caused the pronunciation of the word Adonai to be linked to the spelling of YHWH, which in turn resulted in the impossible hybrid “name” Jehovah.

Other Jewish traditions handled the vocalization of YHWH by inserting the word Hashem, which is the word for “name” … plus the definite article: The Name.

The name Joshua, then, is associated with God and with salvation.

Second, Joshua is the original Hebrew form of the Greek name Jesus, which comes from a Greek translation of the Aramaic short form יֵשׁוּעַ (Yeshu’a). As The New International Dictionary of New Testament Theology (ed. Colin Brown) puts it,

Iēsous is the Gk. form of the OT Jewish name Yēšua‘, arrived at by transcribing the Heb. and adding an -s to the nom. to facilitate declension. šua‘ (Joshua) seems to have come into general use about the time of the Babylonian exile in place of the older Yᵉhôšûa‘. The LXX rendered both the ancient and more recent forms of the name uniformly as Iēsous … It is the oldest name containing the divine name Yahweh, and means “Yahweh is help” or “Yahweh is salvation” (cf. the vb. yiisa’, help, save).

The name Joshua, then, is also associated with Jesus.

Finally, the name Joshua is the exact reverse of the name Isaiah (ישעיה).

The name Isaiah(u) consists of two parts: The final part is יה or יהו, both abbreviated forms of יהוה; YHWH or Yahweh. The first part of the name Isaiah comes from the verb ישע (yasha’), meaning to be saved or delivered … The verb ישע (yasha’) means to be unrestricted and thus to be free and thus to be saved (from restriction, from oppression and thus from ultimate demise). A doer of this verb is a savior.

Where have we heard that before?

The name Joshua, then, is also associated with Isaiah and thereby reinforced in its meaning of “Yahweh is salvation.”

One more interesting and related fact. The name Moses is the Latin version of the Greek name Μωσης (Moses), which in turn is a transliteration of the Hebrew name משה (Moshe). If you spell the name of Moses backward in Hebrew (השם), it spells the word Hashem, which is Jewish for The Name.

Remember that from above?

Mind, blown.

Let’s put it all together. Moses, whose name is associated with “The Name” leads the Israelites out of Egyptian bondage into the Promised Land with the help of his young aide, Joshua, whose name means “Yahweh is salvation” and is associated with Jesus.

What you’re reading in the account of the exodus from Egypt and the conquest of the land “flowing with milk and honey” (Exodus 3:8) is a type which, in scripture, is a person or thing in the Old Testament that foreshadows a person or thing in the New Testament.

An Old Testament type’s details don’t all necessarily have a one-to-one correlation in the New Testament, but the broad parallels in the account of Moses, Joshua and the Israelites with Jesus Christ and his work are pretty hard to miss.

Exciting!

Have a good weekend.

Daily Broadside | How to Stay Calm Even as the Country is Wrecked by Our Leaders

Daily Verse | Exodus 33:11
The Lord would speak to Moses face to face, as a man speaks with his friend.

Monday’s Reading: Exodus 35-37

Monday and one of my kids playfully asked me how she could have a good weekend after reading what I wrote on Friday. Truthfully, I’ve had the same thought at times: after laying out what we’re faced with in this country, isn’t it kind of cynical to wish someone a good weekend?

I don’t know how what I write lands on you, but I’m able to enjoy my weekend after surveying the wreckage that our ruling class is visiting on us a nation for one main reason. First and foremost, above all else, I trust that Jesus is who he said he is and that he will do what he said he will do.

I make no apology for believing that. I don’t minimize it, excuse it or dissemble about it. He is my hope, not Brandon. Or Trump, for that matter.

Jesus is the answer to every question that mankind has ever posed, including what is going on in the United States and around the world right now.

In the beginning was the Word [Jesus], and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was with God in the beginning. Through him all things were made; without him nothing was made that has been made. In him was life, and that life was the light of all mankind. The light shines in the darknessand the darkness has not overcome it. —John 1:1-5

Nobody knows what’s going to happen in the future, either distant or immediate. Not you, not me, not anyone but God. The worst thing we can do is worry about it, since we can neither know what will happen nor control it. That’s something Jesus taught us in the gospel of Matthew.

Therefore do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself. Each day has enough trouble of its own. —Matthew 6:34

The word translated as “worry” literally means to be divided or to be distracted. In the context of Matthew 6, Jesus is saying that God knows our material needs and that we should prioritize pursuing him first, and the material needs will follow; therefore, we shouldn’t allow ourselves to be divided or distracted in where we put our attention.

That doesn’t mean we can’t be curious or concerned about what we see taking place around us in terms of civic order and a safe society. When God sets up rulers (see Romans 13:1-7) they are expected to govern according to the laws of God. When they don’t, they are being untrue to their responsibilities as “God’s servants.”

I don’t know about you, but it’s clear to me that those God has placed in authority to govern this nation are not staying in their given lanes. Are they governing according to the laws of God? By and large they are not. They are immersed in deceit, grift, and immoral lawmaking. They are steadily bringing citizens under their control and demanding that we follow their dictates, no matter how they violate human norms, constitutional rights or the moral order God provided.

And that’s because they don’t fear God and they don’t respect the rights of We the People in the United States of America.

This blog is my attempt to call attention to the ways in which our governing elite are being untrue to the established law of the land and the ultimate laws of God. You and I can call it what it is, pray intelligently about it, then leave it in his hands without allowing it to become an unhealthy preoccupation.

With that in mind, let’s have a good week.

Daily Broadside | That Time Jesus “Transgendered Himself” in the Gospels

Daily Verse | Exodus 15:11
Who among the gods is like you, Lord?
Who is like you—majestic in holiness,
awesome in glory, working wonders?

Tuesday’s Reading: Exodus 19-21

Happy Tuesday and if you’ve been reading this blog for any length of time you know that it’s mostly focused on the crazy of our political class and its intersection with American culture. I also try to pay attention to where faith is making a statement in our culture, but come at all of it as an unapologetic conservative evangelical Christian.

With that in mind, I recently came across an article that showcases how the culture has, at least in one instance, twisted the very person of Christ himself in service to an agenda. In the following video, Simon Woodman of London’s Bloomsbury Central Baptist Church holds forth on his unique interpretation of Jesus’ activities. (Yes, I know it’s Britain, but “woke” is international and we know this stuff is here in the U.S.)

In case you don’t have time to watch it all, here’s what this misguided pretender said (my transcription):

So, if we think of Jesus as, um, the one who reveals God, uh, I was really struck by Angela saying earlier that “God is queer.” And, uh, I, I think, as humans we have a tendency to construct God in our own image, rather than to recognize that we are made in the image of God. And, therefore, the dominant expression of humanity ends up writing itself onto God, and making that God. And, and I think, in, in the story of Jesus, the stories of Jesus’ life, we, we find that being very condemned, um, in, in some quite radical ways, which is then having the ‘knock-on effect’ of altering the way we understand who God is in relation to humanity. So, I think Jesus, um, transgenders himself on a number of occasions. Um, I, I think, you know, just, just the little phrase, uh, Jesus is lamenting over Jerusalem, longing to gather Jerusalem as a mother hen gathers her chicks. Um, I think if you look at, um, the foot-washing from John’s gospel, foot-washing elsewhere in both Old and New Testaments, that it, it’s consistently done by, by women. And, yet, Jesus takes this on. People often cast that as being the servant’s role — it was the women’s role. And, and Jesus does it and becomes the woman at that point. And, and, I think, you know, we’ve observed that either he’s a marriage [sic], he’s childless, he defies gender and sexual norms of his day, he’s known for associating with those whose own sexual history or gender identity may be ambiguous. So, I think in Jesus, we’ve got a revelation of God as encompassing far more, than what historically and recently, at least, um, Christians have tended to construct God as being. And I think there’s a bit of an antidote to, uh, heteronormative idolatry hidden in the story of Jesus.

This statement is so full of holes and absurdities and contradictions and half-truths it’s hard to know where to start. But let me try. The logical flow of his argument is:

1) Jesus reveals God;

2) Humans “construct” God in their own image;

3) Therefore, the “dominant expression of humanity” makes God “heteronormative” (i.e. men attracted to women and vice-versa);

4) But, Jesus condemns that understanding of God by “transgendering” himself multiple times;

5) Ergo, Jesus reveals God as embracing transgenderism, which is an antidote to “heteronormative idolatry.”

So much theological nonsense, so little time.

We agree that Jesus reveals God. Jesus says, “Anyone who has seen me has seen the Father” (John 14:9). We can also agree that people often imagine (“construct”) God according to their own ideas or “image.” After that, we disagree with everything else he says.

God Himself is not “heteronormative” nor “transgender” because he is Spirit and “not a man.” Woodman argues that the “dominant” practice of humanity is heterosexuality (true), which mankind has projected (or written) onto God. The scripture says otherwise from the very beginning: “For this reason a man will leave his father and mother and be united to his wife, and they will become one flesh” (Genesis 2:24). God “wrote” that onto humanity.

Woodman claims that Jesus “transgenders” himself. What the heck does that even mean? Nobody saw Jesus as a “transgendered” individual. For instance, the Jews were ready to stone Jesus in John 10:33 because “you, a mere man, claim to be God.” Is Woodman suggesting that Jesus “pretended” to be a man pretending to be a woman? And then went back to being a man?

It’s sheer nonsense.

Woodman also claims that foot-washing is done by women in both old and new testaments. This is not at all clear from the texts that mention washing feet. In fact, it seems like most of the time guests were expected to wash their own feet (see Genesis 18:4, 19:2, and 24:32 for three quick examples).

As far as Jesus hanging out with sexually “ambiguous” people — Woodman gives no examples of such people in scripture. However, the people that Jesus was most often associated with in the gospels were “sinners and tax collectors.” Some of the sinners were sexually immoral, like the woman caught in adultery (John 8:1-11) or the Samaritan woman who had five husbands and was living with a sixth not her husband. All heteronormative relationships, I might add, even if sinful.

What’s so ironic is that Woodman starts off his argument by admitting that “as humans we have a tendency to construct God in our own image,” and then proceeds to do exactly that. None of his arguments hold up under scrutiny.

This is a case of someone with an agenda who “writes” onto God what he wants to see. You know how I know? Count the number of times he says, “I think.”

I’ll save you the trouble: eight times.

Eight times in roughly 13 sentences Woodman starts his thought with, “I think.” His entire statement is what he thinks—not what God thinks and not what the scripture teaches.

And when he concludes with the charge of “heteronormative idolatry,” that gives away the game.

Wokeness is envy run amuck.

Daily Broadside | Ring Found with Image of Good Shepherd from Third Century

Daily Verse | Genesis 14:13
One who had escaped came and reported this to Abram the Hebrew.

Friday’s Reading: Genesis 15-17
Saturday’s Reading: Genesis 18-20

It’s Friday and the end of the first week of January 2022, the 93rd week and third year of “two weeks to flatten the curve.” It’s also the 50th week since the disaster known as Brandon was foisted on these United States. I think just as the Democrats commemorated the January 6 riots with melodramatic speeches, a performance by the cast of Hamilton and a candlelight vigil organized by an antifa-linked group, the Republicans should hold a memorial on January 20 to mourn the death of America as founded, reciting all the failures of the current administration and the malfeasance of the Democrat Party that is now a rabid anti-American Marxist cabal.

But enough of that. Let’s close out the week with a stunning discovery reported just before Christmas.

Israeli researchers on Wednesday displayed a Roman-era golden ring with an early Christian symbol for Jesus inscribed in its gemstone, found in a shipwreck off the ancient port of Caesarea.

The thick octagonal gold ring with its green gemstone bore the figure of the “Good Shepherd” in the form of a young shepherd boy in a tunic with a ram or sheep across his shoulders.

In the Facebook post linked from the image, the Israel Antiquities Authority writes:

This image, of the ‘Good Shepherd’, is known in ancient Christian art as a symbol of salvation; it is a parable of Jesus as the merciful shepherd of mankind, or as the one who has shown the protection of man or the testimony of his believers. The investigators are sobbing, who carried the ring, was one of the first Christians; the ring was revealed in the vicinity of Caesarea, which has great significance in the Christian tradition, as in Caesarea was one of the oldest centers of Christianity.

The shipwreck from which the ring was taken was dated to about 1,700 years ago.

Sokolov said that while the image exists in early Christian symbolism, representing Jesus as a caring shepherd, tending to his flock and guiding those in need, finding it on a ring was rare.

The presence of such a symbol on a ring probably owned by a Roman operating in or around Caesarea made sense, given the ethnically and religiously heterogenous nature of the port in the third century, when it was one of Christianity’s earliest centers.

I’ve written before about discoveries like this, which are always exciting because they independently fortify our faith in Christ. If you’re a believer, you understand what I mean. If you’re not, perhaps it appeals to your curiosity about the veracity of the Bible.

Have a good weekend.

Daily Broadside | What Would Jesus Do? Not That.

Daily Verse | Proverbs 22:2
Rich and poor have this in common:
The Lord is the Maker of them all.

Happy Monday everyone!

I wonder how many of us get discouraged by our lack of faith at times. We wonder if God is really there, if He really loves us, if He will really provide for us. We know that we should trust Him, but our doubts and fears get the best of us and we try to control our circumstances, and then we feel guilty about not trusting Him and that creates tension inside of us that needs to be resolved somehow and suddenly we decide to do something drastic to prove to ourselves — and to God! — that we really do have faith.

An Ohio woman reportedly crashed her car into two other vehicles and a house after taking her hands of [sic] the wheel and letting God take control at a speed of 120 mph (190km/h), as a way to test her faith.

Authorities claim that the unnamed 31-year-old was driving a car with her daughter, aged 11, down the streets of Beachwood, Ohio, at around midnight on June 15. Security footage shows her car running a red light and eventually spin out of control, hit a utility pole and two other vehicles before stopping into a house. Luckily, neither the driver nor her child were seriously hurt, and the house they crashed into, which was empty at the time, suffered only minor damage. Upon questioning the driver about the accident, police officers were shocked to hear that she had been going through trials and tribulations lately, and simply decided to “let go and let God take the wheel”.

Make sure you click through and see the video of the car blazing through a red light and clipping another car that was in the intersection. It was an act of God’s mercy that prevented any serious injuries or death in the situation.

This is pop theology taken literally. While I don’t know where she got the idea, I can imagine that she had been listening to “Jesus Take the Wheel.”

She was driving last Friday on her way to Cincinnati on a snow white Christmas Eve
Going home to see her mama and her daddy with the baby in the backseat
Fifty miles to go, and she was running low on faith and gasoline
It’d been a long hard year
She had a lot on her mind, and she didn’t pay attention
She was going way too fast
Before she knew it she was spinning on a thin black sheet of glass
She saw both their lives flash before her eyes
She didn’t even have time to cry
She was so scared
She threw her hands up in the air

Jesus, take the wheel
Take it from my hands
‘Cause I can’t do this on my own
I’m letting go
So give me one more chance
And save me from this road I’m on
Jesus, take the wheel

Now, I don’t know anything other than what the report says. The woman had been “going through trials and tribulations,” having lost her job, and decided to take her hands off of the steering wheel to “test her faith” in God. She was obviously in doubt about whether she had enough faith to trust God to provide for her.

There’s a lot wrong with this scenario, starting with her stated purpose: to test her faith in God. It seems that if she literally put her physical life (and that of her daughter’s) in God’s hands, that would confirm to her and to God how full of faith she was — or was willing to be.

The danger here is that she was forcing God’s hand to act, as it were, putting Him to the test to see if He was faithful. And that’s a big no-no.

At the beginning of Jesus’ ministry in Israel, we read that he “was led by the Spirit into the desert to be tempted by the devil” (Matthew 4:1). “The tempter,” a.k.a. Satan, or Lucifer, came to Jesus and tempted him three times and each time, Jesus responded with scripture. The second temptation is relevant for the news we just read.

Then the devil took him to the holy city and had him stand on the highest point of the temple. “If you are the Son of God,” he said, “throw yourself down. For it is written,

“‘He will command his angels concerning you,
and they will lift you up in their hands,
so that you will not strike your foot against a stone.'”

Jesus answered him, “It is also written: Do not put the Lord your God to the test.”
— Matthew 4:5-7

Satan knows the scriptures as well or better than we do (see James 2:19), and he used a couple of verses from Psalm 91 to tempt Jesus. But Jesus responds with scripture to refuse what would amount to a manufactured crisis, not a crisis that came about naturally in the course of His life.

“Do not put the Lord your God to the test.” This is a reference to when the Israelites grumbled against Moses and against God when they were thirsty and said, “Give us water to drink.” Moses named that place Massah and Meribah because “they tested the Lord saying, ‘Is the Lord among us or not?'” (Exodus 17:7).

That’s what this woman did in letting God “take the wheel.” Instead living in a relationship of trust in the midst of the circumstances she was in, she decided to manufacture a crisis in which she hoped God would approve of her faith and steer her to some kind of a safe conclusion. It did not, of course, work out that way.

The woman has now been charged with felony assault, endangering a child and driving under suspension, and a grand jury is expected to consider the case later this week. Local media reports that, despite the charges against her, the young mother continues to claim that she did the right thing by letting God take the wheel to see if it would put her on the ‘right path’

“Do not put the Lord your God to the test.” Knowing that she was going through “trials and tribulations,” perhaps she could have read James 1:2-4.

Consider it pure joy, my brothers, whenever you face trials of many kinds, because you know that the testing of your faith develops perseverance. Perseverance must finish its work so that you may be mature and complete, not lacking anything.

Did you notice the reversal of the testing there? “The testing of your faith.” I think the poor woman missed that God was already testing her faith in the midst of the jobless situation she was in. That was the test she needed to pass, not the one she created for God to address.

You may not be going through anything severe right now, like the loss of a job, but where are you tempted to “test God”? When do you feel the tension mounting between your degree of faith and your life’s circumstances? Instead of trying to force God’s hand, stay the course and live in a trusting relationship with Him. Let Him (metaphorically!) “take the wheel” and provide for you in His time and in His way.

Daily Broadside | 7 May 20

“But Lot’s wife looked back, and she became a pillar of salt.”
Genesis 19:26

I remember discovering that this is the whole “story” of Lot’s wife and being amazed that it’s only one verse. But there is so much packed into it.

Lot and his family were told not to look back: “Flee for your lives! Don’t look back, and don’t stop anywhere in the plain! Flee to the mountains or you will be swept away!” (v.17).

That “look back” apparently demonstrated the depth of longing in her heart for her life in Sodom and, whether because she dragged her feet or was punished in that moment, it led to her death. She was consumed by the burning sulfur rained down on Sodom and Gomorrah (v24) and she became a pillar of salt, a monument to disobedience.

We get further insight and confirmation as Jesus tells us of his eventual return in Luke 17:26-30:

“It was the same in the days of Lot. People were eating and drinking, buying and selling, planting and building. But the day Lot left Sodom, fire and sulfur rained down from heaven and destroyed them all.

“It will be just like this on the day the Son of Man is revealed. On that day no one who is on the housetop, with possessions inside, should go down to get them. Likewise, no one in the field should go back for anything.

Remember Lot’s wife! Whoever tries to keep their life will lose it, and whoever loses their life will preserve it.”

This gives us some insight into why Lot’s wife looked back: she was trying to keep her life. She didn’t want to let go of it. But she couldn’t have it both ways.

It’s the same, Jesus says, with following him. Either you let go of your old life and follow, or you hold on to it and are destroyed.

Remember Lot’s wife!

GOOD FRIDAY

Today on Good Friday, Christians soberly remember the execution of Jesus Christ on the cross. We remember that his death was the result of our sin and mourn the part we played in his crucifixion. We also breathe a prayer of genuine relief and thanksgiving that it was he, and not we, who experienced the cross and all that it encompassed.

Unfortunately, his atoning death on the cross proves to be a hurdle for some unbelievers and a trip hazard for some of the faithful.

In my discussions with atheists, one of the objections sometimes raised is that it is unfair for someone to punished for someone else’s crimes. Not only is it unfair, but it violates true justice because the criminal himself doesn’t actually suffer any consequences for what he did wrong. Therefore, the idea that Jesus died for everyone’s sins is irrational and not truly just.

Usually their objection boils down to a question similar to this one: How is it possible for someone to be punished for someone else’s crimes, for which that person, and that person alone, is responsible?

To make it even more concise the question is, Why should I have to pay for what Adam did and why should Jesus have to pay for what I did?

To understand how this is possible, we need to first separate our local standard of justice from the biblical standard of justice. Trying to understand God’s justice through the world’s system of justice is exactly the wrong way to do it. We need to flip our approach 180 degrees and start with what the Bible says about sin, its consequences, and how Jesus assumes the consequences on our behalf.

THE ORIGIN OF SIN AND DEATH
Most atheists are familiar with the account of Adam and Eve in the book of Genesis, even if they dismiss it as myth. But it is here that we start because we’re looking at what the Bible says about justice, not what we say about it.

After creating the world and stocking it with flora and fauna, God created Adam and placed him in the Garden of Eden, “to work it and take care of it.” But he also warned him, “You are free to eat from any tree in the garden; but you must not eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, for when you eat from it you will certainly die” (see Gen. 2:15-17).

Here we see a command to follow—don’t eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil—and the consequence of disobedience: if you do, you will die. What this meant was that, in addition to physically wearing out, Adam would be spiritually separated from God.

Adam, as we all know, takes that consequential bite of the forbidden fruit and “sin entered the world through one man, and death through sin, and in this way death came to all people, because all sinned” (Romans 5:12).

There are several options for interpreting this Pauline passage with various levels of support, but the one shared most widely by biblical scholars is that we were all “in” Adam when he sinned. The term “world” is a reference to humanity, the whole of which existed in Adam (whose name, after all, means “man” or “mankind”) at the fall. As the British theologian John Stott put it in his commentary on this passage, “All died because all sinned in and through Adam, the representative or federal head of the human race.”

Interestingly, this does not absolve us of individual acts of disobedience, “because all sinned.” While we cascaded from Adam under judgment spiritually and biologically, we are each responsible for the choices we make to sin. Writes Grant Osborne,

All people have inherited corruption from Adam and then have participated in that sin. Therefore, they are guilty from two directions—the sinful nature inherited from Adam (passive sin) and their personal participation in that via their own sins (active sin). In fact, this is the basic difference of Christianity from all other religions, the nature of total depravity and the universal guilt of all people under sin. It is this that necessitated the cross, for this guilt is so severe that no human effort could ever assuage it” (The IVP New Testament Commentary Series: Romans, 2004; emphasis added).

THE NECESSITY OF THE CROSS
Here’s the dilemma, then: mankind has sinned in Adam and is, therefore, subject to death, the penalty for that sin. What to do? How does one pay for sin without suffering death? “The wages of sin,” writes Paul, “is death” (Rom. 6:23). It’s what we earn for being sinners. We are utterly incapable of freeing ourselves from the consequences because the penalty must (literally) be paid.

Originally God instituted the sacrificial system found in the Old Testament as a temporary means of atonement, a substitutionary act which covers or satisfies payment for an offense. These sacrifices often required the death of an animal—a blood sacrifice—because “the life of a creature is in the blood, and I have given it to you to make atonement for yourselves on the altar; it is the blood that makes atonement for one’s life” (Leviticus 17:11).

As long as the Israelite community made regular sacrifices, they held God’s wrath at bay. But we’re told in Hebrews that such sacrifices were inadequate. “Day after day every priest stands and performs his religious duties; again and again he offers the same sacrifices, which can never take away sins” (Hebrews 10:11). In other words, it was not a permanent remedy for sin.

And that brings us back to what Paul wrote in Romans 5. “Just as one trespass resulted in condemnation for all men, so also one righteous act resulted in justification and life for all men. For just as through the disobedience of the one man the many were made sinners, so also through the obedience of the one man the many will be made righteous” (vv. 18-19).

In other words, just as Adam’s one act of disobedience was enough to condemn every one of his human descendants, so Jesus Christ’s one act of obedience—his death on a cross—was enough to absolve all of those who are “in Christ” of Adam’s sin.

And that is what the next verses in Hebrews 10 affirm: “But when this priest had offered for all time one sacrifice for sins, he sat down at the right hand of God, and since that time he waits for his enemies to be made his footstool. For by one sacrifice he has made perfect forever those who are being made holy” (12-14).

This is perhaps the greatest misunderstanding of all: Jesus didn’t come to condemn the world. That boat has sailed. Condemnation is where we start because being under condemnation is the world in its natural state.

“For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life. For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through him. Whoever believes in him is not condemned, but whoever does not believe stands condemned already because they have not believed in the name of God’s one and only Son” (John 3:16-18).

We are, all of us, blithely drifting on a tide that terminates in permanent separation from God. Jesus’ death on the cross, which we remember today, is the only permanent solution to avoid that fate. By his substitutionary atonement, Jesus frees us from the penalty of universal and personal sin and graciously welcomes us back to where we belong—in relationship with God.

May we see it and rejoice.

Morning Links

YOU DON’T LOOK A DAY OVER 29. 400-year-old Greenland shark ‘longest-living vertebrate’

Because radiocarbon dating does not produce exact dates, they believe that she could have been as “young” as 272 or as old as 512. But she was most likely somewhere in the middle, so about 400 years old.

It means she was born between the years of 1501 and 1744, but her most likely date of birth was in the 17th century.

“Even with the lowest part of this uncertainty, 272 years, even if that is the maximum age, it should still be considered the longest-living vertebrate,” said Mr Nielsen.

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IF YOU’RE IN AN ABUSIVE RELATIONSHIP, GET HELP. Authorities Brace For Increase In Domestic Violence

“Regardless, though, there’s absolutely no excuse to get physical with your partner. At a minimum, it’s important to take a step back and evaluate your need for some cool-off space. Force the issue if you have to, but do not allow yourself to lose control.

“If your partner is the one who might lose control, though, get away if you can. I have no idea if the shelter in your area is open or not.”

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I NOTICE THEY HAVEN’T DEMANDED AN INVESTIGATION INTO WHY THE WHISTLEBLOWER COMPLAINT FORM WAS SECRETLY REVISED. One Word Used By Kushner Set Off The Left, Investigation Demanded

“So, four Democrat senators – Sens. Tammy Duckworth, Mazie Hirono, Elizabeth Warren, and Ed Markey – signed a letter to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) office of inspector general. They want an investigation to be launched into why the description has been changed.”

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HOLY WEEK PRESENTS AN OPPORTUNITY TO CONSIDER THE BIBLE’S CLAIMS. HARD FACTS: Is the Claim Jesus Rose From the Dead Just Another Fairy Tale Like the Easter Bunny?