Judges 16:1-31 Ephesians 4:11-16 “Christ says, “Give me All. I don’t want so much of your time and so much of your money and so much of your work: I…
Judges 16:1-31 Ephesians 4:11-16 “Christ says, “Give me All. I don’t want so much of your time and so much of your money and so much of your work: I…
Joshua 24:1-15 Genesis 15:12-21 Genesis 50:22-26 Joshua 24:1-15 Luke 5:1-11 Warren Wiersby once said: “When God wants to accomplish something, He prepares a servant for the task and prepares the…
Ecclesiastes 3:1-15 Ecclesiastes 1:1-11 Leviticus 12:2-4 Genesis 6:1-8 December 29, 1997, William Strauss and Neil Howe published the book “THE FOURTH TURNING” The subtitle: “What the Cycles of History Tell…
1 Peter 4:12-14 Matthew 28:1-10 Romans 5:1-5 2 Timothy 2:12 James 1:2-4 James 1:12 2 Corinthians 4:16-18 Pastor John MacBeath was a Scottish pastor. In his devotional titled: “Nothing is…
First Peter – Instructions To The Scattered Church 1 Peter 1:1-4 Luke 22:31-34 Isaiah 43:1-3 Isaiah 43:15-16 Isaiah 43:18-19 Exodus 13:17-18 Exodus 14:1-3 Exodus 14:13-14 Exodus 14:21-22 Matthew 27:50-53 The…
Carmen Joy Imes in her book “Bearing God’s Name” writes:
“Matthew’s gospel breaks neatly into five blocks of teaching, mimicking the five books of the Torah (Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy).
These five blocks of teaching are preceded by an introductory story in which Jesus’ life is in danger because King Herod, like Pharaoh, is killing Jewish babies. To escape, his parents take him to Egypt. It’s an inside-out Exodus story. When the coast is clear, they return to Palestine, retracting Israel’s journey from Egypt to the promised land. Next, we fast forward to Jesus’ adulthood, where he passes through the waters of baptism in the Jordan, reminding us of Israel’s crossing both the Red Sea and the Jordan.
After this, Jesus is sent by the Spirit into the wilderness for forty days, where he reenacts Israel’s wilderness wanderings.”
Baptism does not produce salvation in this text, Rather, it corresponds to something that does, THE DEATH OF JESUS (v 19) and the RESURRECTION (v 21)
“Baptism saves” if one makes a decision; a pledge of loyalty oath,
a public proclamation of who is on the Lord’s side in the cosmic war between good and evil.
Every Baptism is therefore a reiteration of the past and future doom of the Watchers in the wake of the gospel and the kingdom of God.
Early Christians understood the typology of this passage and its link back to 1 Enoch and Genesis 6:1-4.
This is why early baptismal formulas included a renunciation of Satan and his angels. Baptism was anything but routine. It was a symbol of spiritual warfare.” Dr. Michael Heiser “Reversing Hermon”
Who is Azazel?
We find the Biblical text in Leviticus 16:7-10
“And Aaron shall take the two goats, and he shall present them before Yahweh at the tent of assembly’s entrance. Then Aaron shall cast lots for the two goats: one lot for Yahweh and one for Azazel. And Aaron shall present the goat on which the lot for Yahweh fell, and he shall sacrifice it as a sin offering. But the must present alive before Yahweh the goat on which the lot for Azazel fell to make atonement for himself, to send it away into the desert to Azazel.”
R.T. France
“His Father is testing him in the school of privation, and his triumphant rebuttal of the devil’s suggestions will ensure that the filial bond can survive in spite of the conflict that lies ahead.”
Dr. Michael Heiser in the “Unseen Realm” makes this comment about that temptation:
“Had Jesus given in, it would have been an acknowledgment that Satan’s permission was needed to possess the nations. It wasn’t. Satan presumed power and ownership of something that, ultimately, was not his but God’s. The messaging behind Jesus’ answer is clear: Yahweh will take the nations back by his own means in his own time. He doesn’t need them to be given away in a bargain. Jesus was loyal to his Father.”