The Son of Man Must Be
Lifted Up
John 12
23Jesus said:
The time has come for the Son of Man to be
given his glory. 24I tell you for certain
that a grain of wheat that falls on the ground will
never be more than one grain unless it dies. But if
it dies, it will produce lots of wheat. love your
life, you will lose it. If 25If you you
give it up in this world, you will be given eternal
life. 26you must go with me. My servants
will If you serve me, be with me wherever I am. If
you serve me, my Father will honor you.
27Now I am deeply
troubled, and I don't know what to say. But I must
not ask my Father to keep me from this time of
suffering. In fact, I came into the world to suffer. 28So
Father, bring glory to yourself.
A
voice from heaven then said, "I have already brought
glory to myself, and I will do it again!" 29When
the crowd heard the voice, some of them thought it was
thunder. Others thought an angel had spoken to Jesus.
30Then
Jesus told the crowd, "That voice spoke to help you,
not me. 31This world's people are now being
judged, and the ruler of this world is already being
thrown out! 32If I am lifted up above the
earth, I will make everyone want to come to me." 33Jesus
was talking about the way he would be put to death.
34The
crowd said to Jesus, "The Scriptures teach that the
Messiah will live forever. How can you say that the Son
of Man must be lifted up? Who is this Son of Man?"
35Jesus
answered, "The light will be with you for only a
little longer. Walk in the light while you can. Then you
won't be caught walking blindly in the dark. 36Have
faith in the light while it is with you, and you will be
children of the light."
The People Refuse To Have Faith
in Jesus
After
Jesus had said these things, he left and went into
hiding. 37He had worked a lot of miracles
among the people, but they were still not willing to have
faith in him. 38This happened so that what the
prophet Isaiah had said would come true,
"Lord, who has believed our message?
And who has seen your mighty strength?"
39The people could not have faith in Jesus,
because Isaiah had also said,
40"The
Lord has blinded the eyes of the people,
and he has made the people stubborn.
He did this so that they could not see or understand,
and so that they would not turn to the Lord
and be healed."
41Isaiah
said this, because he saw the glory of Jesus and spoke
about him. 42Even then, many of the leaders
put their faith in Jesus, but they did not tell anyone
about it. The Pharisees had already given orders for the
people not to have anything to do with anyone who had
faith in Jesus. 43And besides, the leaders
liked praise from others more than they liked praise from
God.
Jesus Came To Save the World
44In
a loud voice Jesus said:
Everyone who has faith in me also has
faith in the one who sent me. 45And
everyone who has seen me has seen the one who sent
me. 46I am the light that has come into
the world. No one who has faith in me will stay in
the dark.
47I am not the one who
will judge those who refuse to obey my teachings. I
came to save the people of this world, not to be
their judge. 48But everyone who rejects me
and my teachings will be judged on the last day by
what I have said. 49I don't speak on my
own. I say only what the Father who sent me has told
me to say. 50I know that his commands will
bring eternal life. That is why I tell you exactly
what the Father has told me.
King Baasha of Israel Invades
Judah
(1 Kings 15.16-22)
2 Chronicles 16 In
the thirty-sixth year of Asa's rule, King Baasha of
Israel invaded Judah and captured the town of Ramah. He
started making the town stronger, and he put troops there
to stop people from going in and out of Judah.
2When
Asa heard about this, he took the silver and gold from
his palace and from the LORD's
temple. Then he sent it to Damascus with this message for
King Benhadad of Syria: 3"I think we
should sign a peace treaty, just as our fathers did. This
silver and gold is a present for you. Would you please
break your treaty with King Baasha of Israel and force
him to leave my country?"
4Benhadad
did what Asa asked and sent the Syrian army into Israel.
They captured the towns of Ijon, Dan, Abel-Maim, and all
the towns in Naphtali where supplies were kept. 5When
Baasha heard about it, he stopped his work on the town of
Ramah.
6Asa
ordered everyone in Judah to carry away the stones and
wood Baasha had used to fortify Ramah. Then he fortified
the towns of Geba and Mizpah with these same stones and
wood.
Hanani the Prophet Condemns Asa
7Soon
after that happened, Hanani the prophet went to Asa and
said:
You depended on the king of Syria instead
of depending on the LORD your
God. And so, you will never defeat the Syrian army. 8Remember
how powerful the Ethiopian and Libyan army was, with
all their chariots and cavalry troops! You trusted
the LORD to help you then, and
you defeated them. 9The LORD
is constantly watching everyone, and he gives
strength to those who faithfully obey him. But you
have done a foolish thing, and your kingdom will
never be at peace again.
10When
Asa heard this, he was so angry that he put Hanani in
prison. Asa was also cruel to some of his people.
Asa Dies
(1 Kings 15.23, 24)
11Everything
Asa did while he was king is written in The History of
the Kings of Judah and Israel. 12In the
thirty-ninth year of his rule, he got a very bad foot
disease, but he relied on doctors and refused to ask the
LORD for help. 13He died
two years later.
14Earlier,
Asa had his own tomb cut out of a rock hill in Jerusalem.
So he was buried there, and the tomb was filled with
spices and sweet-smelling oils. Then the people built a
bonfire in his honor.
King Jehoshaphat of Judah
2 Chronicles 17 Jehoshaphat
son of Asa became king and strengthened his defenses
against Israel. 2He assigned troops to the
fortified cities in Judah, as well as to other towns in
Judah and to those towns in Ephraim that his father Asa
had captured.
3-4When
Jehoshaphat's father had first become king of Judah, he
was faithful to the LORD and
refused to worship the god Baal as the kings of Israel
did. Jehoshaphat followed his father's example and obeyed
and worshiped the LORD. And so the
LORD blessed Jehoshaphat 5and
helped him keep firm control of his kingdom. The people
of Judah brought gifts to Jehoshaphat, but even after he
became very rich and respected, 6he remained
completely faithful to the LORD. He
destroyed all the local shrines in Judah, including the
places where the goddess Asherah was worshiped.
7In
the third year of Jehoshaphat's rule, he chose five
officials and gave them orders to teach the LORD's Law in every city and town in
Judah. They were Benhail, Obadiah, Zechariah, Nethanel,
and Micaiah. 8Their assistants were the
following nine Levites: Shemaiah, Nethaniah, Zebadiah,
Asahel, Shemiramoth, Jehonathan, Adonijah, Tobijah, and
Tob-Adonijah. Two priests, Elishama and Jehoram, also
went along. 9They carried with them a copy of
the LORD's Law wherever they went
and taught the people from it.
10The
nations around Judah were afraid of the LORD's
power, so none of them attacked Jehoshaphat. 11Philistines
brought him silver and other gifts to keep peace. Some of
the Arab people brought him seventy-seven hundred rams
and the same number of goats.
12As
Jehoshaphat became more powerful, he built fortresses and
cities 13where he stored supplies. He also
kept in Jerusalem some experienced soldiers 14from
the Judah and Benjamin tribes. These soldiers were
grouped according to their clans.
Adnah
was the commander of the troops from Judah, and he had
three hundred thousand soldiers under his command. 15Jehohanan
was second in command, with two hundred eighty thousand
soldiers under him. 16Amasiah son of Zichri,
who had volunteered to serve the LORD,
was third in command, with two hundred thousand soldiers
under him.
17Eliada
was a brave warrior who commanded the troops from
Benjamin. He had two hundred thousand soldiers under his
command, all of them armed with bows and shields. 18Jehozabad
was second in command, with one hundred eighty thousand
soldiers under him. 19These were the troops
who protected the king in Jerusalem, not counting those
he had assigned to the fortified cities throughout the
country.
Psalm 78
[A special psalm by Asaph.]
What God Has Done for His People
1My friends, I beg you to listen as I teach.
2I
will give instruction
and explain the mystery of what happened long ago.
3These
are things we learned from our ancestors,
4 and we
will tell them to the next generation.
We won't keep secret the glorious deeds
and the mighty miracles of the LORD.
5God
gave his Law to Jacob's descendants,
the people of Israel.
And he told our ancestors to teach their children,
6so
that each new generation would know his Law
and tell it to the next.
7Then
they would trust God and obey his teachings,
without forgetting anything God had done.
8They
would be different from their ancestors,
who were stubborn, rebellious, and unfaithful to God.
9The
warriors from Ephraim were armed with arrows,
but they ran away when the battle began.
10They
broke their agreement with God,
and they turned their backs on his teaching.
11They
forgot all he had done, even the mighty miracles
12 he did
for their ancestors near Zoan in Egypt.
13God
made a path in the sea
and piled up the water as he led them across.
14He
guided them during the day with a cloud,
and each night he led them with a flaming fire.
15God
made water flow from rocks
he split open in the desert,
and his people drank freely, as though from a lake.
16He
made streams gush out like rivers from rocks.
17But
in the desert,
the people of God Most High
kept sinning and rebelling.
18They
stubbornly tested God
and demanded from him what they wanted to eat.
19They
challenged God by saying,
"Can God provide food out here in the desert?
20It's
true God struck the rock
and water gushed out like a river,
but can he give his people bread and meat?"
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