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Former Prophets
[not yet edited]
So the first part of the day we're going to do, I'm going to do a brief introduction to the Former Prophets, Joshua, Judges, Samuel, and Kings four books. And then we'll go through each of those four books and talk about basic content and key text and key themes that run through those things. And the designation of Former Prophets is actually a biblical designation. It appears a couple of times in the book of Zechariah when he's referring back to this period of time. So Zechariah 7:7 and Zechariah 7:12, the Former Prophets record historically the period of Israel's occupation of the land from approximately 1406 BC, which is the crossing of the Jordan river, to 586 BC, the destruction of Jerusalem by Nebuchadnezzar and that's recorded in second Kings 25. That's a pretty big chunk of history, almost a thousand years of history, we're going to try and cover in four or five lectures.
Speaker 2 (01:07):
The Former Prophets are... Well, let me back up and say, let me just show you. I have a sheet here to show you kind of some of the things that are going to be coming up. This is the kind of summary, some important dates way back in 2100 BC, Abraham moves from early [inaudible 00:01:22] of Canaan. We're now at 1400 BC. So 700 years... the promise of the land has been in the making 700 years. That's a long time for God to make a promise to someone like Abraham, and then take that long to fulfill it, waiting and hoping, waiting, and hoping. Then you have the patriarchal era that runs to about 1875. Then you have that time when Israel is enslaved in Egypt, and then they get out in 1446 and here we are now at 1406, the conquest of Canaan. When we enter into the book of Joshua, we're going to have the period of the Judges after the conquest of Canaan, then we're going to get into Samuel and Kings.
Speaker 2 (02:05):
We're going to have Saul being anointed king, David being anointed king, David's reign, Solomon's reign, the divided monarchy, and then the exile of north and the exile of the south. So those are the big events we're looking at. So those are some important dates all the way down to later, we'll be covering in with the latter profits. And in the writings, we'll be talking about some of those other dates down below when you get into exhibit and post exhibit periods after 586. Okay? So again, we started at about 2100 BC with Abraham and Genesis chapter 12. I'll give you land, descendants and blessings. We're about to embark on the part where they inherit the land. And that's where we're looking at these Former Prophets. The Former Prophets really constitute life in the land. It's framed theologically, or literarily by two important and programmatic texts.
Speaker 2 (02:56):
I have them written on the board over here for you. Joshua 23:14 and first Kings 8:56. Okay? These two texts set historically at two climactic points in the history of Israel. Joshua 23 is a covenant renewal ceremony where they have completed the first phase of the occupation of the land. And they're very excited and they're going to renew the covenant and then everyone's going to go to their inheritances. They've just been given their allotments. First Kings 8:56 is Solomon's dedication of the temple that took so many years to build. And it's the high point. It's really the high point of the mosaic covenant at that point. It's that for the divided covenant, but you got the temple in Jerusalem and everything's ready to go. So I'm going to read those two texts for you and lists. They sound similar and they're supposed to be.
Speaker 2 (03:50):
They're echoing one back to the other. And here you'll see the theme that runs through this corpus of literature, Joshua 23:14 says, and, now I'm about to go the way of all the Earth. This is Joshua talking and you know, in your hearts and souls, all of you that not one word has failed all the good things that the Lord, your God promised concerning you. All have come to pass for you. Not one of them has failed. This is a text where Joshua is stating that Yahweh has been completely faithful to his covenant people to fulfill every promise. In first Kings 8:56, Solomon rehearses this statement and again frames the Former Prophets, blessed be the Lord, in first Kings 8:56. Who has given rest to his people, Israel, according to all that he promised. Not one word has failed of all of his good promises, which he spoke by Moses, his servant.
Speaker 2 (04:48):
So you've got a bookend in the Former Prophets, once in Joshua, once in Kings, saying one of the key themes in this literature is the faithfulness of the Lord to fulfill all of his promises, right? So if you're studying, teaching, preaching, learning from this material, you should always be encountering the Lord's faithfulness to keep his promises. That's what you should be encountering. Now I also said, we can also say from that, the parallel theme is going to end up being... And Israel was completely unfaithful and kept none of God's rules and obligations in the covenant ever. And so that's going to be the counterpart to that one. We're going to talk about that next. When we look at Deuteronomy 29 to 31... back in those earlier lectures, when we were talking about how the Bible works in the big grand scheme of things, I noted that Deuteronomy 29 to 31 represents the backbone of the Former Prophets.
Speaker 2 (05:48):
If you took an x-ray of Joshua to Kings, you would see that the spinal cord running down it was Deuteronomy 29 to 31. It outlines the program of Israel's occupation of the land. So it's a very important text to understand. So we're going to take a minute and look at what Deuteronomy 29 to 31 says about the Former Prophets, so that we know how to assess the materials. It's like the Bible telling you in advance, how to read the material that's coming up. It's a great thing. The Bible tells you how to read itself. So in terms of theology, it describes the nature and purpose of the mosaic covenant, as it relates to the inheritance and the promised land. The obedience of the people of God is required to maintain their tenure in the land of inheritance. But the power to obey does not accompany the mosaic covenant.
Speaker 2 (06:40):
The mosaic covenant does not come with a prepackaged circumcised heart. You don't open that box, put it in. That's going to be the problem. So what does Deuteronomy 29 to 31 say about the Deuteronomic history? If I say Deuteronomy history, that basically means the history that is about to be recorded in the form of prophets. So Joshua to Kings, we'll call that the Deuteronomic history. In terms of history, Deuteronomy 29 to 31 says that there are going to be five stages of Israel's occupation of the land. Five stages. And I have those written up there for you on the board. First, they're going to occupy the land. That's going to take place in Joshua. Then they're going to become [inaudible 00:07:22] . That's going to be focused on in Judges, but all the way through to second Kings, then the Lord is going to bring judgment through his prophets.
Speaker 2 (07:30):
The prophets are going to come, execute prophetic lawsuit, say, please repent. So the Lord doesn't have to do this. They don't repent. And then judgment eventually comes. The Lord is then going to send them into exile. So that's going to be first Kings seven, I'm sorry. Second Kings 17 and second Kings 25 and second Kings 17, the south... Sorry. The north goes into exile. The 10 tribes up north, and then in two Kings 25, the north, I got it wrong. The south goes into exile. Finally, there's the promise for the return. And the return from exile does end up coming. It comes in 538 BC under Cyrus, the Persian. And so we'll talk about that when we get there as well. The mosaic covenant, especially as it relates to inheritance of the nation of Israel from one man in the occupation of the land, as an inheritance is stage one fulfillment of the Abraham promises in covenant.
Speaker 2 (08:23):
Meaning this, we had back here... I can kind of write it on the board here. This Abraham covenant. Remember that was back in Genesis 12, 15, 17, and 22. You got to remember that. 12, 15, 17, 22. And there's going to be two stages of the fulfillment of it. That's the MVP rule of two. There's going to be the mosaic stage. And then there's going to be the new covenant stage. And they are going to be mirror images of each other, type and anti type. So the mosaic covenant, and what we're about to see with the land, represents stage one. So listen to what Deuteronomy 29 then says about this stage one fulfillment. Deuteronomy 29:12 to 23. We're going to be kind of tracing back and forth through Deuteronomy 29 to 31. So you can have your Bibles open to that.
Speaker 2 (09:09):
It says in verse 12 of Deuteronomy 29, you are standing here in order to enter into a covenant with the Lord, your God. A covenant, the Lord, your God is making with you this day and sealing it with an oath to confirm you this day as his people, that he may be your God, as he promised. And as he swore to your fathers Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. So you see how the mosaic covenant is a furthering or an advance of the Abraham covenant. And they're all on this administration of the covenant of grace. It's all one big covenant. We're we've got a covenant of works and a covenant of grace. That's what only two we got, besides the redemption one way back there. And so everything that we see coming forth, Abraham, Mosaic, Dravidic, New, it's all an administration or different administrations of that one covenant. So there's unity and diversity. We can tackle that. Again we have this same thing of [inaudible 00:10:02] in Deuteronomy 13:19 to 20.
Speaker 2 (10:05):
And this is where he is going to enter into that witness stage. This day, I call heaven and earth as witnesses against you. That I have set before you life and death, blessings and curses, now choose life so that you and your children may live. And that you may love the Lord, your God, listen to his voice and hold fast to him for the Lord is your life and he will give you many years in the land, he swore to give your fathers Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. Again, rooting this mosaic covenant in Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. In fact, we can see that at the golden calf episode, when Moses intercedes for Israel. He doesn't intercede and say, be faithful to your people, because you just entered into a covenant with him here. He says, be faithful to them because you entered into a covenant with Abraham. He roots it back there, because he knew the Deuteronomy one or the Exodus one, would've gotten them killed.
Speaker 2 (10:58):
So, but contrary to the new covenant, mosaic covenant never imparted the power to obey the terms of this covenant and that's key. And the author or Moses right here, the author of Deuteronomy is making sure you understand that he's emphasizing it over and over in his speeches, Deuteronomy 29:4 puts it this way.
Speaker 2 (11:15):
But to this day, the Lord has not given you a mind that understands or eyes that see or ears that hear. You consider Jesus picking up on these words and when he is talking about his parables. And Isaiah seeing they do not see, hearing they do not hear. And so this is where that comes from. And Deuteronomy 31:16 says, the Lord said to Moses, you are going to rest with your fathers and these people will soon prostitute themselves to foreign gods of the land they're entering. They will forsake me and break the covenant I made with them. So already from the very beginning. They're not even over the land. This is bad news. This is rough parenting. You're about to go to college and you're soon going to fail and be back here.
Speaker 2 (11:55):
It's not a very motivating speech. Deuteronomy 31:27 says, this is now Moses saying for, I know how rebellious and stiff necked you are. That stiff neck designation comes from the golden calf episode. If you have been rebellious against the Lord while I'm still alive and with you, how much more will you rebel after I die? Now that's an important text. It's programmatic for the book of Judges because when the Judges are alive, the people appear to be more faithful to the covenant. Then the Judge dies and the people [inaudible 00:12:22] after the foreign gods, even more, then they get worse. They raise up another Judge, Judge dies. And so it highlights kind of the sense of really important leadership. If you have a faithful covenant leader that people follow, but if you don't, they don't. And so we can see that the importance of leadership like that. And that's why they're going to want a faithful covenant king, because Judges are individually raised up charismatically, like just at the Lord's will, but judges have this dynastic kind of thing, continuity.
Speaker 2 (12:51):
So, it's all also very important that when we think about the mosaic covenant and the Former Prophets to remember that the mosaic covenant never promised or provided for eternal life. It was never keep my covenant and I'll grant you [inaudible 00:13:08] life. The only thing you could get is prosperity and long life in the land. Deuteronomy 30:16 makes it this point, for I command you today to love Lord, your God, to walk in his ways and to keep his commands, decrees and laws, then you will live and increase and the Lord will bless you in the land you are entering to possess, but like Abraham, they too will die.
Speaker 2 (13:31):
Deuteronomy 30:20 puts it this way, for the Lord is your life. And he will give you many years in the land he swore to give to your fathers Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. So there is life, but it's life in the land. It's also important to note from this text that Israel's disobedience to the mosaic covenant and their ultimate exile from the land of inheritance constitutes plan A, from the perspective of the Lord. The very design of the mosaic covenant and the nature of its promises and blessings was always intended in a temporary and typological way because wouldn't it be a bummer, if the only thing you got out of the Abraham covenant was a piece of the land of Israel, and then you just died in it. That would not be great news for me. That would be it's okay news.I might rather live in Washington state for my life and die there, in Oregon, in Mississippi. So yeah, it's a real thing.
Speaker 2 (14:29):
So, listen, I've got a couple verse here. I won't read them all, but listen to Deuteronomy 31:16, it makes the point this way, and the Lord said to Moses, you are going to rest with your fathers and these people will soon prostitute themselves to foreign gods of where they are entering. They will forsake me and break the covenant I made with them. Deuteronomy 31:20, when I have brought them into the land flowing with milk and honey, this is a really great verse, by the way, for that five stage thing, this good summary of that. When I have brought them into the land, flowing with milk and honey, the land I promised on oath to their fathers and when they eat their fill, they will turn to other gods and worship them, rejecting me and breaking my covenant.
Speaker 2 (15:05):
You can see those two stages there, which will precipitate the last three stages. Next, it's important to know that the inheritance of the land under the mosaic covenant can be lost or forfeited through disobedience to the covenant. So this is a covenant that can be broken and the benefits of it be taken away. So that's not the kind of covenant I want to be in. In fact, Joshua at the end of his life, when they do covenant renewal, and we'll see in a minute, he says, you guys really aren't able to keep this covenant. It may be better for you not to be in it. And they say, no, we'll take a risk. We'll go. And it ended up turning out just how Joshua was said. So at least Joshua was honest with him. He gave him an out clause and they didn't do it.
Speaker 2 (15:44):
So, for example, it says in Deuteronomy 29:27 to 28, it's this [inaudible 00:15:52] I'm sorry [inaudible 00:15:53] Deuteronomy 31:17 to 18. But if your heart turns away and you are not obedient, and if you are drawn away to bow down to other gods and worship them, I declare to you this day that you'll certainly be destroyed. You'll not live long in the land you are crossing the Jordan river to enter and possess. It can be to taken away. So, you don't want to live in a covenant that can be taken away. That's why we have the new covenant, which Jeremiah will say, can't be broken. You want a covenant that can't be broken. So we got to figure out how do you get into a covenant that can't be broken? That's what where we're going to think about. Given historical outline of Israel's tenure in the land promised, presented in Deuteronomy 29 to 31.
Speaker 2 (16:36):
And the explicit statement in Deuteronomy 35, that when Israel does return to their inheritance from exile, that the return to state will exceed their previous state of occupation. So, I'm going to read this in a second. Meaning this, we're about to see that Deuteronomy 29 to 31 predicts Israel's exile, but they also, it also predicts Israel's return. And so let's see what it says about that return. It's found in Deuteronomy 30 verses one two five. I won't read all of it. I mean, versus one to six, but I'm going to read the first part in the last part. I'll begin in verse one. When all of these blessings and curses I have set before you come upon you and you take them to heart, wherever the Lord, your God disperses you among the nations in exile. And when you and your children return to the Lord, your God and obey him with all your heart, with all your soul, according to everything I've commanded you, then the Lord, your God will restore your fortunes and have compassion on you and gather you again from all the nations where he scattered you.
Speaker 2 (17:35):
Even if you've been banished to the most distant land under the heavens from there, the Lord, your God will gather you and bring you back. So here, we've got this promise of a return from exile. He will bring you again. There's three things here. He will bring you one, to the land that belonged to your fathers and you'll take possession of it. Two, he'll make you more prosperous and numerous than your fathers. And then three, the Lord, your God will circumstance your hearts and the hearts of your descendants. So that after that, you may actually love the Lord, your God with all your heart, your soul and live. So he is going to bring them back to the land. He's going to make them more prosperous and he is going to circumcise their hearts. So it's interesting. This text says that before your heart's going to be circumcised as a people, you're going to have to go into exile.
Speaker 2 (18:22):
So that's a sobering thing to remember again, the exile's plan A so that they can get to the plan B where we've got, or the next stage, not plan B where they can have circumcised hearts. We're not really there yet, but when we get down to that, Israel does get to come back. You can see down here, right in 5:38, the decree of Cyrus, 5:36 first return, dedication of the temple in 5:16, second return under Ezra, third return under Nehemiah. So they do get to come back, rebuild the temple and stuff like that. And we've got to ask the question. Was it more glorious than the first time when you think of like, for it to be more glorious in the first time you've got to think about, it's got to be better than it was at the height, which is Solomon, with the temple, with the wealth, with international influence at and international trade.
Speaker 2 (19:11):
And so we get someone like Hagi, a post exilic prophet who witnessed this stuff. And in chapter two of his prophecy verses one to three, it says this, and it's even dated on the 21st day of the seventh month, the word of the Lord came through the prophet Hagi says, speak to [inaudible 00:19:28], son of [inaudible 00:19:31] the governor of Judah to Joshua. And [inaudible 00:19:35] sorry, the high priest and to the remnant of the people and asked them who have you have, who have you has left? Who saw this house in its former glory? How does it look now? Does it not seem to you like nothing? So we've got internal kind of Bible evidence that the return from exile that we see later here is not a greater, more prosperous, super circumcised event, right? So the return is a flop. In fact, that's what the end of the book of the writings is going to tell us where we have here.
Speaker 2 (20:09):
We're going to have Ezra the, and Nehemiah, and then goes all the way through Chronicles. And I'll tell you this again, but right at the beginning of Ezra, Nehemiah, there's the decree of CYS in 5 83, that God's people can return. Then they return return, return, return, return, return Chronicles, redo it all. And they return return return. And right here, it, the decree of CYS again, says, Hey, you can go up and go again. So it's interesting. They started 5 30, 8 BC go down to about 400 BC and they go back at 5 38 BC, which is a tacit way of saying that this return from exile didn't work. We need a bigger, a bigger, a bigger and better return from exile. So you can see the arrangement of the cannon and the statement of Hagi show you that what happened at the end is a flop. Okay. It's not the success they had intended.
Speaker 2 (20:59):
Okay. Which means in review good that the mosaic covenant is a conditional temporary and technological covenant. However, it is undergirded by the unconditional unilateral, permanent and non logical covenant of grace that we see expressed through Abraham. Okay. Those connections are so important. The organic relationship between Abraham and Mo Moses and the new administrations is evident in the can and diagram, which I've kind of like redone there. Remember we had Genesis as the prologue, and then we have in the upper register, the mosaic covenant and the lower registered the new covenant. So that's what we're looking at. Like Adam's disobedience and expulsion from the garden. So is Israel's disobedience and expulsion from the land is God's original plan for this particular administration of the covenant of grace. So let me do then just summarize what we're going to encounter in these four books that are coming up in the Former Prophets.
Speaker 2 (21:53):
Okay. Number one, Joshua YWE fulfills through Joshua, the promise of the land of Canaan to Abraham under the leadership of land. The theme of Joshua is the inheritance of the land. Okay. And so therefore Yi's faithfulness. The theme of, of the book of judges is that Israel repeatedly fails to keep the covenant. And the Lord has to raise up judges to deliver Israel from the corruption and oppression caused by their idolatry. The theme here is, and the children of Israel did evil in the eyes of the Lord. That's the recurring theme in the book. That's the phrase that occurs more than anything else the children of, or the Israelites did evil and the eyes of the Lord. And it's always idolatry. The theme of the book of Samuel is kingship is kingship the establishment of the monarchy and the David line under the leadership of Samuel K CLIMA scene in the David covenant in two Samuel seven and the building of the temple in first Kings eight, when it's dedicated the that's.
Speaker 2 (22:49):
And that would be the first King's one in the book of Kings. We have the climax of the earthly kingdom of God in Solomon, and likewise, the demise of the earthly kingdom of God in Solomon, from rags to riches or from riches to rags in this case, right? You have this tremendous climax and success. And then this tremendous failure, and it rips the kingdom in half. And we end up with the divided kingdom and eventually the monarchy. So Joshua, the inheritance of the land and the faithfulness of Yahweh judges, the infidelity of Israel and the continuing faithfulness of yaw to raise up judges, Samuel, the establishment of the monarchy, and then Kings the climax of the monarchy and the fall of the monarchy. Again, all of these things falling out, right? We have it so good, right? Here's what the covenant is. Like God said, okay, you want heaven on earth.
Speaker 2 (23:40):
I'm going to give you everything. You need to have heaven on earth. I'm going to give you myself. I'm going to fight for you. I'm going to going to be in your presence. I'm going to give you my word. You have all the resources you need to rebuild Eden here, go. And in, you know, between, between Solomon getting between getting up here in the, in, in Solomon, in about, you know, 900, let's say it only took, you know, less than 500 years to lose it all, to make it completely corrupt, right? They had all the resources necessary, all the resources necessary. Think of all the wealth that Solomon had to achieve this, all of the wisdom that he had to achieve this, all of the lineage and background and the line to achieve it. They could make heaven on earth and it wouldn't work because their hearts were sinful and they had Unci hearts.
Speaker 2 (24:25):
So now I want to just make a quick point though. There were people who had circumcised hearts back then, right? There are people like David people like Moses people like Joshua and Caleb, right. But the people of God, as a whole did not have a circumcised heart, like the church does now, right. Church consists of those who have circumcised hearts. And so I'm not saying that no one had a circumcised heart back then I want to make that clear, but God's people as a whole and this, this mosaic economy as a whole, which was a national kind of economy. And so there were people with circumcised hearts. There were people who generate, there are people who are going to heaven from that time. Does that make sense? So want to make sure you understand that as well. All right. That's the end of this first lecture that kind of summarizes a little bit what we're going to be doing in these next four lectures. And so I'd be happy to take any questions and make any clarifications at this time.
Speaker 3 (25:18):
So is that the idea of a remnant that there's always people around that have circumcised hearts? Yes. And that because of the behavior of others, they have to suffer too. That's exactly right.
Speaker 2 (25:32):
They have to go through all that. Yeah. That's exactly right. Like you could see the kind of the original remnant is Noah and his family and he suffered under their, under the wickedness of his time. Right. Even though he was a preacher of the preacher of righteousness. Yeah. And so, yeah, so there was always a remnant and they're always suffering. Yeah. That's exactly right.
Speaker 4 (25:52):
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