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What Can We Learn from the Bad Guys of the Bible?: An Interview with JR. Forasteros

JR. ForasterosDo we have anything in common with the bad guys of the Bible? How do we guard against the sins of wrath, idolatry, and abuse of power? How can we learn at the warnings of lives gone wrong?

Bible Gateway interviewed JR. Forasteros (@jrforasteros) about his book, Empathy for the Devil: Finding Ourselves in the Villains of the Bible (InterVarsity Press, 2017).

Please explain the title.

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JR. Forasteros: There are three answers to this question. First, I love the play on the Rolling Stones song, Sympathy for the Devil. Second, because the difference between Empathy and Sympathy is really important. To have empathy doesn’t require that we agree with or condone the actions of another person, only that we understand them. It’s something I think we’re deeply lacking in our contemporary world. We turn our enemies into devils far too easily. With that in mind, third, I thought if I could invite my readers to have a tiny bit of empathy even for Satan, then it shouldn’t be so hard to bridge a cultural, religious, or political divide at home, work, or church.

Are you using in this book similar literary techniques C.S. Lewis used in The Screwtape Letters?

JR. Forasteros: Yes and no. Empathy for the Devil does use fiction, but in a slightly more realistic way (mostly) than what Lewis did. I chose seven of the Bible’s worst villains to investigate. As I was working through the historical material on them, I realized that just presenting a history lesson wouldn’t get at how I wanted readers to identify with these villains.

Psychologists tell us that reading fiction is one of the best ways to practice empathy, because in fiction, we get to live inside the mind of another person. So I set out to write fictionalized reimaginings of each villain’s big moment. Obviously, with Satan’s story being set in Heaven, I had to get even more creative, but I did try to keep it—ahem—grounded in visions of the Heavenly throne room we find throughout Scripture (like Isaiah 6, Zechariah 3, and Revelation 4.

The biggest difference between Screwtape and Empathy is probably that I really want you to like Satan and find his fall tragic. We forget, I think, that God loves Satan as God loves everything and everyone God created. That, and my fiction is somewhat less didactic than Lewis’, I think.

How did your visit to the Dachau Nazi concentration camp shape your thinking?

JR. Forasteros: We always wonder how the German people could’ve participated in the Holocaust. Dauchau—which is named for the city by which it was built—answers that question very dissatisfactorily: no one (except Hitler) got up one day and decided to murder millions of Jews. It happened slowly, one day after another, in a million little compromises and decisions to look the other way.

Dachau showed me that the path to villainy is easy to walk and hard to differentiate from the path of ‘just getting along.’ In fact, they begin in the same place.

How do we begin to rediscover empathy by looking at the villains of the Bible?

JR. Forasteros: When we find ourselves marveling at how much we have in common with Cain, or how bad we feel for Jezebel or maybe even guilty for how ill we’ve thought of Judas, it should give us pause when we turn to vilify those we’ve declared our enemies. These villains let us practice that timeless biblical wisdom: “Be quick to listen, slow to speak and slow to become angry” (James 1:19).

What villains do you explore in the book?

JR. Forasteros: My seven villains are Cain (Gen 4:1-16), Delilah (Judges 16), Jezebel (1 Kings 16 and following), Herod (Matthew 2:1-12), Herodias (Mark 6:14-29), Judas (Mark 14:1-11) and Satan (Revelation 12:1-12).

I begin with Cain’s name. It means strength or spear while his brother’s means vapor or mist. It’s not hard to tell that Cain was the favorite son, which is no surprise in a culture that placed so much value on the firstborn son. He put his identity in being best, first, most important.

Then God rejects his offering and doesn’t tell him why (no one in the story seems to know why, though we’ve got our explanations ready today). And then God asks why he’s angry and promises, “If you do right, you will be accepted.” Which seems to indicate that God hasn’t rejected Cain yet.

I spend the chapters exploring Cain’s anger and our anger and how all that’s tied to our identities. I ask if anger might be God’s way of warning us that something’s wrong inside of us and that lashing out in anger, as Cain did, actually keeps us from encountering not only each other, but God.

Who did you have in mind as you wrote your book and why?

JR. Forasteros: Ultimately, I wrote this book for the church in my context: evangelical America (I pastor in Texas). Our culture is deeply divided, and rather than offer a holy alternative, the church is leading the charge, deepening the divide. I pray that this book engenders empathetic conversations.

What do you mean “there’s no such thing as monsters”?

JR. Forasteros: Monster-making is a form of scapegoating (that’s what I’m working on in my next book). Rather than face the darkness in our own spirits, we cast it outside of ourselves and onto someone else—usually someone who can’t defend themselves. But if we’ll look more closely, we’ll find one who bears the image of God peeking out from behind the monstrous mask.

What do you want readers of your book to learn?

JR. Forasteros: That we have more in common with the people we demonize than we’re comfortable admitting. And that there is deep spiritual value in becoming a good empathizer. This is a practice the church definitely needs to recover.

What is a favorite Bible passage of yours and why?

JR. Forasteros: I’ve long been in love with Hebrews 5:8-9. “Even though Jesus was God’s Son, he learned obedience from the things he suffered. In this way, God qualified him as a perfect High Priest, and he became the source of eternal salvation for all those who obey him.”

I’ve been captivated by the incarnation since before I knew the fancy theological term for it. I love that Jesus willingly embraced our humanity for no gain of his own. I love that we can learn faithfulness by following in his footsteps. It’s a radical idea that is as challenging as it is simple: for God to work in us, we have to let God work in us. Surrender. Obey.

What are your thoughts about Bible Gateway and the Bible Gateway App?

JR. Forasteros: I love Bible Gateway. As a pastor, I use it nearly daily. I love how accessible it makes the Scriptures! I also just used it to double-check Hebrews 5:8-9 before I cited it.

Is there anything else you’d like to say?

JR. Forasteros: I’m grateful to Bible Gateway for featuring this interview. It’s a true honor!


Bio: JR. Forasteros is an author, pastor, and podcaster. He serves as the teaching pastor at Catalyst Church in Dallas, TX. He blogs on faith and pop culture at NorvilleRogers.com and co-hosts the StoryMen and In All Things Charity podcasts. He offers a weekly email newsletter on faith and pop culture called Stuff You’ll Probably Like. He and his wife Amanda love roller derby, cooking and travel.

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Sneak Peek: The Rock, the Road, and the Rabbi by Kathie Lee Gifford

Kathie Lee GiffordAs a lifelong student of Scripture, Kathie Lee Gifford (@KathieLGifford) has always desired a deeper understanding of God’s Word and a deeper knowledge of God himself. But it wasn’t until she began studying the biblical texts in their original Hebrew and Greek—along with actually hiking the ancient paths of Israel—that she found the fulfillment of those desires.

In her book The Rock, the Road, and the Rabbi: My Journey into the Heart of the Scriptural Faith and the Land Where It All Began (Thomas Nelson, 2018), you’ll be able to walk with Kathie Lee on a journey through the spiritual foundations of her faith:

  • Buy your copy of The Rock, the Road, and the Rabbi in the Bible Gateway Store where you'll enjoy low prices every day The Rock (Jesus Christ): Hear directly from Kathie about her life-changing and ever-deepening connection with Jesus, the Lover of her soul.
  • The Road (Israel): Explore dozens of ancient landmarks and historical sites from Israel, the promised land of God’s covenant.
  • The Rabbi (God’s Word): Go beyond a “Sunday school” approach to the Bible by digging into the original languages and deeper meanings of the Holy Scriptures.

You’ll also find additional content from Messianic Rabbi Jason Sobel throughout the book. Jason’s insight into the Hebrew language, culture, and heritage will open your eyes to the Bible like never before. To begin your journey toward a deeper faith through The Rock, the Road, and the Rabbi, read this excerpt (and click here to get an exclusive sneak peek of the “Bethlehem” chapter from Kathie Lee’s new book):

Bethlehem
Church of the Nativity

But you, Bethlehem Ephrathah,
though you are small among the clans of Judah,
out of you will come for me
one who will be ruler over Israel,
whose origins are from of old,
from ancient times.
Micah 5:2 (NIV)

I was deeply disturbed when our tour group visited modern-day Bethlehem. Scripture tells us Bethlehem was the birthplace of Jesus, the Messiah, prophesied in Micah 5:2 sometime between 750 BC and 686 BC (700 years before Jesus’ birth): “But you, Bethlehem Ephrathah, though you are small among the clans of Judah, out of you will come for me one who will be ruler over Israel, whose origins are from of old, from ancient times.”

Today, the city of Bethlehem is controlled by the Palestinian Authority, and it feels—as my daughter, Cassidy, described it—“darkly oppressive.” There are military checkpoints as you enter and exit. It hardly feels joyful or anything like the way the shepherds would have experienced it two millennia ago, as a place of great rejoicing at the Savior’s birth.

Come . . . to Bethlehem!

The Significance of Bethlehem

Shortly after the birth of Jesus in Bethlehem, an angel of the Lord appeared to shepherds guarding their sheep at night and announced to them, “Today in the town of David a Savior has been born to you; he is the Messiah, the Lord” (Luke 2:11). And the sign given to them was that they would find “a baby wrapped in cloths and lying in a manger” (v. 12). Of all the possible signs that could have been given to these shepherds, why did the Lord choose a baby lying in a manger and wrapped in swaddling clothes? Why was this so significant?

To answer this question, we need to dig deeper and explore the Jewish context in which the New Testament was written. Good students of the Bible are like detectives who ask lots of questions of the text. The first questions we need to ask is: Who are these shepherds? Is there anything unique about them?

Click here to get an exclusive sneak peek of the “Bethlehem” chapter from Kathie Lee’s new book, The Rock, the Road, and the Rabbi.


Kathie Lee Gifford is the three-time Emmy-winning cohost of the fourth hour of TODAY, alongside Hoda Kotb. The Gifford-Kotb hour has been hailed as “appointment television” by Entertainment Weekly, and “TODAY’s happy hour” by USA TODAY. Gifford has authored three New York Times bestselling books, including Just When I Thought I’d Dropped My Last Egg and I Can’t Believe I Said That.

Rabbi Jason Sobel is a thought leader, spiritual guide, and Jewish follower of Yeshua (Jesus). He is cofounder of Fusion with Rabbi Jason, a ministry dedicated to sharing teachings and resources that reconnect ancient Jewish wisdom with the teachings of the New Testament. Learn more at www.rabbisobel.com.

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Bible News Roundup – Week of December 24, 2017

Read this week’s Bible Gateway Weekly Brief newsletter
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Bible Translations Flourish Despite Persecution
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Bible Pulled Intact From Fire Rubble Restores Family’s Faith
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Macon Church Reads the Bible Out Loud for 24 Hours
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Read the Bible Gateway Blog post, Scripture Says Reading the Bible in Public is Important

Kentucky Churches Take Bible Reading Marathon Into Third Year
Commonwealth Journal

Hardin County Kentucky to Host Bible-Reading Marathon
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Atheist Flag Will Be Raised Over Ten Commandments Monument
NPR
Read the Ten Commandments in Exodus 20:1-17 on Bible Gateway
Read the Bible Gateway Blog post, The Ten Commandments Past and Present: An Interview with David L. Baker
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Biblical Archaeology’s Top 10 Discoveries of 2017
CT
See the Biblical Archaeology section in the Bible Gateway Store

Explorers Claim They’ve Discovered Noah’s Ark From Book of Genesis
Newsweek
Read Genesis 8:4 on Bible Gateway
Read about Aarat in Smith’s Bible Names Dictionary on Bible Gateway
Read the Bible Gateway Blog post, Latest Biblical Archaeology Research

Bible Saved Marine’s Life at Iwo Jima in WWII
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Search to Find the Rightful Owner of Family Bible Dating Back to 1881
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In Ethiopia and Horn of Africa, Scripture Distribution is Made Possible
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A Tour Through the Bible: An Interview with John Goldingay

John GoldingayApproaching the Bible for the first time can be intimidating. At 66 books, nearly 800,000 words, and numerous kings, prophets, and deliverers, as well as priests and apostles, where should you begin? In what order should you read it? Is there an alternative to reading the Bible from Genesis to Revelation?

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Bible Gateway interviewed John Goldingay (@JazzGoldingay) about his book, A Reader’s Guide to the Bible (InterVarsity Press, 2017).

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Explain the history and composition of the Bible for someone new to it.

John Goldingay: The Bible is a collection of writings by lots of different people written over maybe a thousand years, from a number of centuries before Jesus to a century after Jesus. I often like to refer to it as “the Scriptures” (which is the word that comes in the Bible itself), to make that point about it being lots of writings that were originally separate. What these writings have in common is that “the Old Testament” is writings that grabbed the Jewish people; writings that convinced them that they were God’s word to them. And “the New Testament” is writings that grabbed people who believed in Jesus in the same way. So put together, they’re a collection of what Christians need to know about Christian faith.

Why do Catholic and Orthodox Bibles have more books in them than do Protestant Bibles?

John Goldingay: Because the church came to accept some of Jewish writings as scriptures which the Jewish people themselves had not accepted. Then when church people realized what had happened, some of them thought we should take out those extra ones.

Why do you spend time in the book describing the land of the Bible?

John Goldingay: Because the stories and the messages refer a lot to the land where the stories happened and where the teaching was given, so understanding what the land was like helps you to understand the stories and the teaching.

You group the books of the Bible into three categories: the story of God and his people, the word of God to his people, and the people’s response to God. Which books go where and why?

John Goldingay: The story is roughly Genesis to Esther and Matthew to Acts. The word of God to his people is roughly the Prophets and the Letters of Paul and other people. And the response is chiefly the Psalms. They go there because that’s the nature of the thing that they are: stories or God speaking to people or people speaking to God.

What are some of the dominant themes running through the Bible of which the modern reader should be aware?

John Goldingay: That God is real and has been involved with the world and with Israel over the entire story that it tells. That God has been working at a purpose to have a good world. That he’s spoken to people and explained things so that we can understand what he’s been doing and is going to do and can come to understand ourselves. And that he wants to hear from us.

Why do you say, “In some respects, the Epistles are the most surprising part of the Bible”?

John Goldingay: Because you might expect a religious book to be a collection of teaching that looks timeless and designed for everyone, whereas the epistles are letters that address particular people in particular contexts. Of course there’s a sense in which they are timeless—they speak beyond their particular time. And there’s a sense in which they’re designed for everyone—God designed them that way!

How should a person use your book in connection with reading the Bible?

John Goldingay: I guess you could read a chapter about a particular book, then read the book, then maybe read the chapter again.

What’s a favorite Bible passage of yours and why?

John Goldingay: “Enjoy life with the woman whom you love all the days of your fleeting life which he has given to you under the sun.” That’s Ecclesiastes 9:9. I like the invitation to enjoy life, to enjoy love, to see life as a gift from God, but also to be real about the fleeting nature of this life. (The word for “fleeting” is the word for a breath.)

What are your thoughts about Bible Gateway and the Bible Gateway App?

John Goldingay: I LOVE the online scriptural resources—for example, all the different translations of a verse. I used it to get a translation of that Ecclesiastes verse that I liked. I use them nearly every day.

Is there anything else you’d like to say?

John Goldingay: I’m excited about the fact that some people seem to be interested in A Reader’s Guide to the Bible because I’m excited about the Scriptures themselves and I’m sad that Christians don’t read them for themselves. Many people rely on what their Sunday School teacher tells them the Scriptures say or on what their pastor says instead of reading the Scriptures themselves. So if this book helps one or two people to read the Scriptures, I shall be excited!


Bio: John Goldingay (PhD, University of Nottingham; DD, Archbishop of Canterbury at Lambeth) is David Allan Hubbard Professor of Old Testament at Fuller Theological Seminary. He was previously principal and a professor of Old Testament and Hebrew at St John’s Theological College in Nottingham, England. His many books include An Introduction to the Old Testament, The Theology of the Book of Isaiah, Reading Jesus’s Bible: How the New Testament Helps Us Understand the Old Testament, Biblical Theology, and Key Questions about Christian Faith. He has also authored the three-volume Old Testament Theology and the 17-volume Old Testament for Everyone series.

Goldingay also serves as priest-in-charge at St. Barnabas Episcopal Church, Pasadena. He holds membership in the Society of Biblical Literature and the Society for Old Testament Study, and served on the Task Force on Biblical Interpretation in the Anglican Communion and the editorial board for the Library of Hebrew Bible/Old Testament Studies.

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What Is the Role of “Law” In Living the Bible?

howtostudythebible

This is the eighth lesson in author and pastor Mel Lawrenz’ How to Live the Bible series. If you know someone or a group who would like to follow along on this journey through Scripture, they can get more info and sign up to receive these essays via email here.


[Special note… see Mel Lawrenz’s “A Prayer for the Christmas Season” in text, printable PDF, or audio.]

It is inevitable that, when we talk about “living the Bible,” our minds will drift toward verses and passages that are commands or laws which seem to beckon us toward obedience to God. “You shall not commit adultery,” or “you shall not murder,” or “you shall not steal,” and other parts of the Ten Commandments, for instance, seem pretty straightforward.

Man with open Bible

But the New Testament writers tell us that, with the coming of Jesus, everything has changed. It is not that the old covenant has been contradicted, but it has been fulfilled. Whereas the covenant God gave the Israelites included the more than 600 laws in the first five books of the Bible, in the new covenant God has advanced his relationship with us by internalizing the law: “I will put my law in their minds and write it on their hearts” (Jer. 31:33).

That is why the law-obsessed Pharisee Saul of Tarsus became Paul, the “Apostle of the heart set free” as F.F. Bruce put it. Paul offered a revolutionary new view of how God’s “law” works. He asserted that we have “died to the law through the body of Christ, so that [we] might belong to another, to him who was raised from the dead, in order that we might bear fruit for God” (Rom. 7:4). In other words, the fruitful, productive, good life is truly possible when we come to live within the higher law of Jesus Christ, which is not a system of rules and mechanical conformity, but a new “law of the Spirit who gives life and [sets us] free from the law of sin and death” (Rom. 8:1).

This could be confusing, so let’s be careful here. The word “law” in the Old and New Testaments is used in different senses. It is used in the Old Testament for the body of laws given to Israel, which define the boundaries of their covenant relationship with God, but “law” can also refer to the first five books of the Old Testament, or the specific body of laws contained in them. In the New Testament, “law” can refer to Mosaic regulations, or to the Scriptures as a whole, or to governing principles of life or spiritual dynamics, as in “the law of sin and death” (Rom. 8:2) or “the law of Christ” (Gal. 6:2).

To sort this out, let’s focus on the example of Paul whose teaching is consistent with the rest of the New Testament, including that of Jesus himself who said that he did not come to abolish the law, but to fulfill it (Matt. 5:17). When Paul wrote to the Philippians from his imprisonment, thinking he may be living in the last days of his life, he wrote about his prior “confidence” in following the law of God as a Pharisee: “circumcised on the eighth day, of the people of Israel, of the tribe of Benjamin, a Hebrew of Hebrews; in regard to the law, a Pharisee; as for zeal, persecuting the church; as for righteousness based on the law, faultless.” And then he says: “But whatever were gains to me I now consider loss for the sake of Christ. What is more, I consider everything a loss because of the surpassing worth of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord, for whose sake I have lost all things. I consider them garbage, that I may gain Christ and be found in him, not having a righteousness of my own that comes from the law, but that which is through faith in Christ—the righteousness that comes from God on the basis of faith” (Philippians 3:7-9).

That is the personal testimony of a man who was expert in obedience to laws, but who found that to be rubbish compared with the righteousness that comes from God by faith.

In Romans 7:4-6 Paul explains why “dying” to the law, or “the way of the written code” is necessary for us to live in “the new way of the Spirit” and so “bear fruit.” If anything, the laws of Scripture reveal how incapable we are to live rightly. The law is like a tutor, leading us to Christ (Gal. 3:24). This should not make us think the laws of the Old Testament are wrong. “The law is holy, and the commandment is holy, righteous, and good” (Rom. 7:12).

Looking at these and many other New Testament passages about “law,” the fundamental point is this: Scripture does not contain laws so that we can read them and simply obey them, and so live good and right lives. Sin has a crippling effect. We need God’s grace and power to carry us toward righteousness. We need to be freed from the curse of sin and freed toward life in the Spirit, which is how obedience is possible.

“It is for freedom that Christ has set us free” is how Paul put it in Galatians 5:1. But he then goes on to warn people not to think that they are “free” to live however they want. “Do not use your freedom to indulge the flesh; rather, serve one another humbly in love. For the entire law is fulfilled in keeping this one command: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’” (vss. 13-14).

(To be continued…)

[Get Christmas Joy–A Devotional by Mel Lawrenz to read in December]

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Mel Lawrenz (@MelLawrenz) trains an international network of Christian leaders, ministry pioneers, and thought-leaders. He served as senior pastor of Elmbrook Church in Brookfield, Wisconsin, for ten years and now serves as Elmbrook’s minister at large. He has a PhD in the history of Christian thought and is on the adjunct faculty of Trinity International University. Mel is the author of 18 books, including How to Understand the Bible—A Simple Guide and Spiritual Influence: the Hidden Power Behind Leadership (Zondervan, 2012). See more of Mel’s writing at WordWay.

Who Was Herod?

Herod the GreatOne of the central figures in the Christmas story is Herod the Great, who was king of the Jews when Jesus was born. Herod and his sons ruled Judea during Jesus’ life and ministry.

But who was this man? And why was he so hostile to the news of the birth of Jesus?

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How Herod Got His Power

Herod “the Great” ruled as king of the Jews under Roman authority for thirty-three years, from 37–4 BC. It is this Herod who appears in the account of Jesus’ birth (Matt. 2:1–19; Luke 1:5).

From the start, Herod proved to be an extraordinary political survivor. When civil war broke out in Rome between Mark Antony and Octavian, Herod first sided with Antony and his ally Cleopatra VII, queen of Egypt.

Then, when Octavian defeated Antony and Cleopatra at Actium in 31 BC, Herod immediately switched sides, convincing Octavian of his loyalty.

Following his victory, Octavian returned to Rome, where the Roman senate made him imperator, or supreme military leader, and gave him the honorary title “Augustus” (“exalted one”).

Historians mark this event as the end of the Roman Republic and the beginning of the Roman Empire, the transfer from rule by the senate to rule by a supreme emperor.

Under the patronage of Octavian—now Caesar Augustus—Herod’s position as king of the Jews was secure. For his Roman soldier part, Herod would prove to be a loyal subject to his Roman overlords, maintaining order in Israel and protecting the western flank of the Roman Empire.

What Herod Was Like

Herod was a strange mix of a clever and efficient ruler and a cruel tyrant.

On the one hand, he was distrustful, jealous, and brutal, ruthlessly crushing any potential opposition. The Jews never accepted him as their legitimate king, and this infuriated him.

He constantly feared conspiracy. He executed his wife when he suspected she was plotting against him. Three of his sons, another wife, and his mother-in-law met the same fate when they too were suspected of conspiracy.

Mary and Joseph escaping Herod to Egypt

Herod, trying to be a legitimate Jew, would not eat pork, but he freely murdered his sons! Matthew’s account of Herod’s slaughter of the infants in Bethlehem fits well with what we know of the king’s ambition, paranoia, and cruelty (Matt. 2:1–18).

Was there a good side to Herod?

Herod wasn’t all bad. He presented himself as the protector of Judaism and sought to gain the favor of the Jews.

He encouraged the development of the synagogue communities and in time of calamity remitted taxes and supplied the people with free grain.

He was also a great builder, a role which earned him the title “the Great.” His greatest project was the rebuilding and beautification of the temple in Jerusalem, restoring it to even greater splendor than in the time of Solomon.

Judea prospered economically during Herod’s reign. He extended Israel’s territory through conquest and built fortifications to defend the Roman frontiers.

Herod was a committed Hellenist and an admirer of Roman culture. He built Greek-style theaters, amphitheaters, and hippodromes (outdoor stadiums for horse and chariot racing) throughout the land. While this earned him the favor of many upper-class Jews, it brought disdain from the more conservative Pharisees and the common people.

The Herodians mentioned in the Gospels (Mark 3:6; 12:13) were Hellenistic Jewish supporters of the Herodian dynasty, who favored the stability and status quo brought by Roman authority.

The Death of Herod

Herod died in 4 BC (cf. Matt. 2:19), probably from intestinal cancer.

As a final act of vengeance against his contemptuous subjects, he rounded up leading Jews and commanded that at his death they should be executed. His reasoning was that if there was no mourning for his death, at least there would be mourning at his death! (At Herod’s death, the order was overruled and the prisoners were released.)

Chart of the Herodian Dynasty; click to enlarge

Herod’s Sons

But wait—if Herod died in 4 BC, who was the Herod who appears later in the Gospels—the Herod Jesus interacts with?

There was actually more than one.

Herod had changed his will several times during his life, and after his death it was contested by three of his sons. They appealed to Caesar Augustus, who divided the kingdom among them.

Archelaus

Archelaus (4 BC–AD 6) became ethnarch of Judea, Samaria, and Idumea, with the promise that if he ruled well, he would be made king.

Instead, he proved to be oppressive and erratic, and Augustus removed him from office in AD 6. Matthew notes that Joseph and Mary moved to Galilee to avoid Archelaus’s rule (Matt. 2:21–23).

When Archelaus was removed from office, Judea and Samaria were transferred to the control of Roman governors, known as prefects and, later, procurators.

The most important of these for the study of the New Testament is Pontius Pilate (AD 26–36), under whose administration Jesus was crucified. Other governors who appear in the New Testament are Felix (AD 52–59) and Festus (AD 59–62), before whom Paul stood trial (Acts 23–26).

[Go deeper into the Bible with Bible Gateway online courses taught by leading scholars]

Herod Antipas

Herod Antipas became tetrarch of Galilee and Perea from his father’s death in 4 BC until he was deposed by the emperor Caligula in AD 39.

The title tetrarch originally meant ruler of a fourth part of a region but came to be used of any minor ruler.

This is the Herod of Jesus’ public ministry. He imprisoned and eventually executed John the Baptist when John spoke out against his marriage to Herodias, his brother Philip’s ex-wife (Luke 3:19–20; Mark 6:17–29).

He also wondered about Jesus’ identity when people speculated that John had risen from the dead (Mark 6:14–16, par.).
When warned by some Pharisees that Herod was seeking his life, Jesus derisively called him “that fox,” probably a reference to his cunning and deceit (Luke 13:31–32).

Eventually, Antipas got his wish to see Jesus when Pilate sent Jesus to stand before him at his trial (Luke 23:7–12; cf. Acts 4:27).

Herod Philip

Herod Philip became tetrarch of Iturea, Trachonitis, Gaulanitis, Auranitis, and Batanea, regions north and east of Galilee.
He died without an heir, and his territory became part of the Roman province of Syria.

He is mentioned in the New Testament only in Luke 3:1 (the Philip of Mark 6:17 [cf. Matt. 14:3] is a different son of Herod the Great).

Herod the Great’s Grandsons

Only two other members of the Herodian dynasty appear in the New Testament, both in Acts. Herod Agrippa I was the son of Aristobulus and the grandson of Herod the Great.

He executed James, the brother of John, and arrested Peter (Acts 12). His death at Caesarea as judgment by God is recorded both by Luke and by the Jewish historian Josephus (Acts 12:19–23; Josephus, Ant. 19.8.2 §§343–52).

Herod Agrippa II was the son of Agrippa. It was this Herod, together with his sister Bernice, who was invited by the Roman governor Festus to hear Paul’s defense at Caesarea (Acts 25–26). Another sister, Drusilla, was married to the Roman governor Felix (Acts 24:24).

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This post is adapted from the Four Portraits, One Jesus online course, taught by Mark Strauss. Take a look at the FREE introductory video from Dr. Strauss:

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Saved by Faith and Hospitality: An Interview with Joshua W. Jipp

Joshua W. JippWhat is Christian hospitality and how important is it? How is God’s relationship to us fundamentally an act of hospitality to strangers? How is hospitality part of the salvation message?

Bible Gateway interviewed Joshua W. Jipp (@TheRealJoshJipp) about his book, Saved by Faith and Hospitality (Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 2017).

Define what you mean by hospitality.

Joshua W. Jipp: Hospitality is the process whereby space is opened up for a stranger or outsider, such that the stranger is transformed into a friend. Hospitality is not safe, tame, or always domestic. There’s risk involved as we either enter into (as a guest) a space where we’re the stranger, or where we extend welcome to someone who’s not part of our normal, comfortable friendship network. The Bible portrays Abraham, for example, as one whose eyes are attentive toward travelling strangers, who takes the risk to invite them into his space, and who extends kindness upon them through granting food, drink, and shelter (Gen. 18:1-18).

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What leads you to say that too few Christians understand how hospitality to strangers and the marginalized is an essential part of the church’s identity?

Joshua W. Jipp: My guess is that most Christians undervalue the extent and forcefulness of the Scriptural teaching of hospitality to strangers. The Scriptures demand that Israel extend welcome to the immigrant because God loves the immigrant and because they know what it’s like to be exploited as a people of immigrants from their time in Egypt (Exod. 22:21; 23:9; Lev. 19:33-34; Deut. 10:17-20). In the Gospel of Matthew, Jesus declares that the sheep and the goats will enter into their eternal reward or judgment based upon whether or not they showed hospitality to “the least of these my brothers and sisters” (Matt. 25:31-46). Jesus consistently extends God’s hospitality and his saving presence to those on the margins through sharing meals with sinners, tax-collectors, and the poor (Luke 5:27-32; 7:36-50; 9:11-17; 19:1-10). It’s precisely Jesus’ practice of extending hospitality to “the wrong people,” so to speak, that elicits such anger from some of Israel’s religious leaders and results in the stereotype of Jesus as a “glutton and drunkard, a friend of sinners and tax collectors (Luke 7:34; also, 15:1-2).

Why do you say hospitality is at the heart of Christian faith?

Joshua W. Jipp: I argue that there’s a pattern that pervades the Christian Scriptures that can be summarized in this way: God’s hospitality elicits human hospitality. Stated another way, humanity’s fundamental problem is that it’s alienated from God and from one another. God’s hospitality, made known climactically in Jesus, transforms us into friends (John 15:12-17). This divine hospitality demands that God’s people be characterized by friendship with one another and ever seeking to extend this welcome to others (Acts 2:42-47).

Explain the meaning of the book’s title.

Joshua W. Jipp: The title of the book originates from an early Christian writing called 1 Clement. The author is a bishop in Rome who’s responding to divisions and in-fighting taking place in the Corinthian congregations. One of the antidotes for this internal strife is hospitality. Clement argues that Abraham, Lot, and Rahab were saved due to their faith and hospitality (1 Clem. 10:6-7; 11:1; 12:1-3). It’s interesting that we find a similar theme in the book of James where he argues that saving faith is demonstrated by Abraham, Rahab, and others who have a faith that produces good deeds (James 2:14-26). I take this as a jumping off point for arguing that hospitality is inextricably connected with how a variety of biblical authors depict God’s salvation.

So exhibiting hospitality is not optional for a Christian?

Joshua W. Jipp: Since our identity as the church is rooted in God’s hospitality to us, extending hospitality to one another and to strangers is a non-negotiable practice for God’s people. This is why we find a variety of biblical authors commanding the church to practice hospitality to strangers and upholding it as a necessary virtue for leaders in the church (Rom. 12:13; 1 Tim. 3:2; 1 Pet. 4:9; Heb. 13:2). I believe, therefore, that the church is at its best when it’s seeking to extend God’s presence and gifts to all people, rather than hoarding the gifts of God. The book of Acts tells us that the early church was devoted to apostolic teaching, prayers, and eating together in each other’s homes and that it was in this way that the Lord “was adding to their midst those who were being saved each day” (Acts 2:47).

What is a favorite Bible passage of yours and why?

Joshua W. Jipp: One of my favorite biblical texts is Luke’s depiction of how the risen Jesus reveals himself to the two disciples on the Emmaus road (Luke 24:13-35). The disciples are walking together with the risen Jesus, and it’s not their sight of him before the eyes that enables them to recognize Jesus. Jesus even explains how Israel’s Scriptures had foreshadowed that the Messiah would suffer and then be raised on the third day. But it’s only when the two disciples welcome the traveling stranger into their home and when Jesus breaks bread with them that their eyes are opened and they see that they’ve been traveling, conversing, and now eating with the risen Jesus (Luke 24:31, 35). I love the passage because it’s filled with irony, suspense, and drama. But even more, I love that the resolution of the suspense comes through table fellowship. I believe one of the calls here to the church is that we can continue to know and experience Jesus when we eat together in his presence (so Acts 2:42-47).


Bio: Bio: Joshua W. Jipp has taught New Testament at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School since 2012. He completed his PhD at Emory University, ThM at Duke Divinity School, and MDiv at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School. He is the author of Divine Visitations and Hospitality to Strangers in Luke-Acts (Brill), Christ Is King: Paul’s Royal Ideology (Fortress), and most recently Saved by Faith and Hospitality. He lives in Chicago with his wife and two boys.

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Reformation Trust Releases New Condensed Edition of the Reformation Study Bible (ESV)

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Reformation Trust Publishing, the publishing division of Ligonier Ministries, has released the Reformation Study Bible, Condensed Edition. After distributing more than 110,000 copies of the Reformation Study Bible since 2015, this new Condensed Edition represents an expansion to the product family in order to serve Bible readers looking for a more portable solution.

[Read the Bible Gateway Blog post, How to Freely Access the Reformation Study Bible on Bible Gateway]

[Read the Bible Gateway Blog post, The Reformation Study Bible: An Interview with Dr. R.C. Sproul]

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“Christians value the verse-by-verse commentary found in the Reformation Study Bible,” says Mr. J.D. Bridges, Ligonier’s vice president of global outreach. “This new Condensed Edition includes the best of that commentary in a portable study Bible, half the weight of the original and designed for life on the go. With the 500th anniversary of the Reformation upon us, our mission remains the same-we want to continue serving churches and discipleship by producing trustworthy resources that help growing Christians around the world.”

[Read the Bible Gateway Blog post, What Was the Reformation and Why Does it Matter Today?]

Read a Sample of the Reformation Study Bible, Condensed Edition, Book of Ephesians (double click image to enlarge)

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“This is our ultimate aim: to get God’s people not only to read God’s Word but to study God’s Word, love God’s Word, obey God’s Word, apply God’s Word, hide God’s Word in their hearts, and teach God’s Word to their families, their neighbors, and the nations. That is why we publish study Bibles-to help fulfill the Great Commission of Jesus Christ, for his glory, not our own,” writes Dr. Burk Parsons, co-pastor at Saint Andrew’s Chapel, Ligonier Ministries teaching fellow and chief publishing officer, associate editor for the Reformation Study Bible, and editor for Tabletalk magazine.

Some features of the new Condensed Edition include single-column Scripture from the English Standard Version (ESV), Christ-centered introductions for each book of the Bible, cross-references, concordance, and high-resolution color maps in the back. Initially released in four cover styles, Mr. Bridges notes, “Response has been strong and, Lord willing, we’ll continue to release more cover styles in upcoming months.”

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[Browse the many editions of the Reformation Study Bible in the Bible Gateway Store]

Many students of God’s Word have warmly welcomed the Reformation Study Bible because of its reliable commentary endorsed by ministry leaders and authors such as Dr. R. Albert Mohler Jr., Mrs. Joni Eareckson Tada, Rev. Kevin DeYoung, Dr. Mark Dever, Dr. Ligon Duncan, Dr. Rosaria Butterfield, Dr. David F. Wells, and many more. With each purchase, Ligonier includes an extra $400 worth of additional study resources (both digital and print) available for free through an online registration process.

About Reformation Trust
Founded in 2006 as a publishing imprint of Ligonier Ministries, Reformation Trust Publishing seeks to proclaim and explain the great truths of the historic Christian faith for a new generation.

Ligonier Ministries is an international Christian discipleship organization founded by theologian Dr. R.C. Sproul in 1971 to equip Christians to articulate what they believe, why they believe it, how to live it, and how to share it. Proclaiming God’s holiness is central to Ligonier’s purpose.

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Bible News Roundup – Week of December 17, 2017

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Archaeological Discovery: Biblical City Corinth, Visited by Apostle Paul, Found Underwater
The Guardian
Read about Corinth in Smith’s Bible Names Dictionary on Bible Gateway
Read 1 Corinthians on Bible Gateway
Read 2 Corinthians on Bible Gateway
See the Biblical Archaeology section in the Bible Gateway Store

5,000-Year-Old Cosmetics & Jewelry Show Rise of Ancient Jericho
National Geographic
Read about Jericho in Smith’s Bible Names Dictionary on Bible Gateway
Read about the destruction of Jericho in Joshua 6 on Bible Gateway

Jesus in 2017: Biblical Archaeologists Had a Big Year
Live Science

UK Churches Urged to Back #TruthToPower Campaign to See Entire Bible Read in Parliament Square in 2018
Christian Today

Wycliffe Reaches Out to the Deaf with Sign Language Bible Translations
CBN News

Jesus Film Project Premieres 1,500th Translation of ‘JESUS’ From the Gospel of Luke
News release
Read the Gospel of Luke on Bible Gateway

Savosavo Bible Translation to Start
Solomon Star

Roman Catholic Edition of New Testament in Belarusian Presented in Minsk
BELTA

The Metropolitan Museum of Art Buys 14th Century Spanish Hebrew Bible for an Unspecified Sum
The New York Times

Israeli Farm Recreates Magi’s Gifts to Jesus
US News & World Report
Read about Magi in Smith’s Bible Names Dictionary on Bible Gateway
Read Matthew 2 on Bible Gateway

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Died: Bible Scholar and Author Dr. R.C. Sproul

R.C. Sproul

Theologian, author, broadcaster, and founder of Ligonier Ministries, Dr. R.C. Sproul (@RCSproul), 78, died today (Dec. 14) around 3 pm EST surrounded by his wife, Vesta, and family in his hospital room in Altamonte Springs, Fla.

See the CT article, Died: R. C. Sproul, Reformed Theologian Who Founded Ligonier Ministries.

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From the Ligonier Ministries blog: He died peacefully after being hospitalized 12 days ago due to severe respiratory difficulties exacerbated by the flu and complicated by chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).

[Browse the many books by Dr. R.C. Sproul in the Bible Gateway Store]

Known to millions of Christians as simply “R.C.,” he was used of the Lord to proclaim, teach, and defend the holiness of God in all its fullness. Through his teaching ministry, many of us learned that God is bigger than we knew, our sin is more deeply rooted than we imagined, and the grace of God in Jesus Christ is overwhelming.

[Read the Bible Gateway Blog post, The Reformation Study Bible: An Interview with Dr. R.C. Sproul]

God called R.C. to proclaim the gospel to as many people as possible. R.C. did this knowing the Lord did not need him. In fact, he wanted people to know the enduring, faithful witness of God’s servants throughout church history. God powerfully used R.C.’s ministry in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries to awaken people around the world to the truths of classical Christianity.

It belongs to others in the days, weeks, months, and years ahead to assess the impact of R.C.’s ministry in the history of the church. In this moment, we feel loss—immense sadness and profound loss—the loss of a pastor, a teacher, a leader, a brother-in-Christ, a friend.

R.C. now sees the object of his faith, the risen Christ, high and lifted up. He now hears the seraphim’s song before the throne, “Holy, holy, holy is the Lord of hosts; the whole earth is full of his glory!”

[Read the Bible Gateway Blog post, How to Freely Access the Reformation Study Bible]

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