Chapter 18 is more
negative (by which I mean giving “prohibitions”) while Ch. 19 is more positive
(giving encouragements). Not that there are no prohibitions in Ch. 19; there
are many, but even those have embodied the wider positive truth to be
followed. Here is a listing of the laws
in this chapter; we will follow it with a list of encouragements in the
chapter.
·
19:2: The reason for the laws: that we will be
holy!
·
v4: Prohibits idolatry, graven images.
·
v11-13: Concerns over other people’s property.
·
v14: Prohibits being unkind to the physically
handicapped.
·
v15: Prohibits respect of persons in judgment
(bias, prejudice).
·
v16: Prohibits tail-bearing (gossip).
·
v17-18: Prohibits hatred and grudges.
·
v20: Prohibits immorality.
·
v28: Prohibits tattooing.
·
v30: Requires respect on the Lord’s Day and in
His house.
·
v32: Requires respect for the aged.
· v33-34: Requires kindness for strangers (non-Israelites).
· v35-37: Requires honesty in business.
Now, the
encouragements:
·
v3: Respect parents; honor Sabbaths.
·
v5-8: Fellowship offerings are to be done right.
·
v9-10: Leave the corners of fields, etc., for
the poor.
·
v15: Fear God.
·
v15: Judge your neighbor fairly.
·
v17: Rebuke your neighbor frankly.
·
v18: Love your neighbor as yourself. Yes, this law, again, tucked away in
Leviticus, is what Jesus said was the second greatest command.
·
v23-25: Care for fruit trees in the new land.
·
v30: Honor Sabbaths and the Sanctuary.
·
v32: Show respect for the elderly, fear God.
· v33-34: Love aliens/strangers. Foreigners were to be welcomed into the land. But (20:2) not to introduce false religion. Being in the land meant living by the laws and customs of the land, which in Israel, were all given to them by God.
· v35-36: Use honest scales.
The summary for all of this is: I AM THE LORD
(v37). As J. Vernon McGee used to say, “when
you create a universe, you can make the rules.”
1 comment:
Loved how this chimes in with accepting 75 Afghanies into Mssla
19:33-34: Love aliens/strangers. Foreigners were to be welcomed into the land. But (20:2) not to introduce false religion. Being in the land meant living by the laws and customs of the land, which in Israel, were all given to them by God.
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