|  Forgot password?
MEMORIAL DAY PREACHING BUNDLE »
Home » All Resources » Sermons on Heart » Ed Vasicek, The Problem Within Deuteronomy 5:28-29, 10:12-16; 30:6 - Page 1 of 3

The Problem Within Deuteronomy 5:28-29, 10:12-16; 30:6

Topic: #131 of 221 for Sermons on Heart
Denomination: Independent/Bible
Date Added: October 2009
Audience: Believer Adults (31 - 49)
Introduction to the Series, followed by the sermon
"The Problem Within" from Deuteronomy 5:28-29, 10:12-16; 30:6
Introduction can be used as a bulletin instery

Jesus Favorite Book: Deuteronomy
An introduction to our series
By Ed Vasicek

"The fifth book of the Pentateuch is …a new and fresh statement of Yahweh’s covenant purposes to a new generation in a new place with new prospects. The nation with whom the Sinai covenant had been made had died in the wilderness and so was no longer on the scene (Num 14:26-35). Deuteronomy was addressed to their offspring who were poised to enter the land of promise, and needed reassurance of Yahweh’s covenant promises in light of the challenge of impending conquest and settlement.
"…In light of the indisputable connection between form and function, it is safe to say that the concept of covenant lies at the center of the theology of Deuteronomy." Deuteronomy follows the pattern of Suzerain treaties (between "lords" and "vassals") of that culture and era. [Baker’s Evangelical Dictionary of Biblical Theology]

Our current series is not really so much about the Book of Deuteronomy as it is about the portions of Deuteronomy Jesus expounded. Jesus was one of hundreds of Rabbis who roamed the countryside with bands of disciples. Jewish society primed young men to give up months or even a few years of their lives to follow a Rabbi and study the Torah. Although Jesus was not just another Rabbi -- but the Son of God, our Savior and Lord -- He was not perceived as such when His disciples originally followed Him.

"Parables such as Jesus used were extremely prevalent among ancient Jewish sages, and over 4,000 of them have survived in rabbinic literature…the rabbis of Jesus’ day spent much of their time traveling throughout the country…to communicate their teachings and interpretations of Scripture. An itinerant rabbi was the norm rather than the exception. Hundreds and perhaps thousands of such rabbis circulated in the land of Israel in the first century.

"To ’make many disciples’ was one of the three earliest sayings recorded in the Mishnah, and perhaps the highest calling of a rabbi. Often he would select and train large numbers of disciples, but he was perfectly willing to teach as few as two or three students. It is recorded that the Apostle Paul’s teacher Gamaliel had one thousand disciples who studied with him." [from, "New Light on the Difficult Words of Jesus" by David Bivin, pp 12-14].

Although Jesus taught original material, much of His teaching was similar to that of other Rabbis; Jesus took portions of the Torah (first 5 books of the Bible) and gave His disciples a midrash. A "midrash" is defined by Bivin as, "A rabbinic interpretation or expansion of a Bible text with a story to explain the passage." I believe that most of, The Sermon on the Mount, for example, is a midrash from Deuteronomy 15:7-20 and Leviticus 19:9-18, 34. The key to interpretation: find the passage being expanded!

The book of the Old Testament Jesus quoted most (based upon what is recorded in the Gospels) is Deuteronomy. In addition, many of His teachings seem to be a midrash from Deuteronomy; the connection can be demonstrated but not proven (you can be the judge as our series progresses).

Boldly Going Where We’ve Never Gone Before

This series is unique, as far as I know. We will begin with an exposition
Rate this Sermon
(click a star to rate)
next page »
View on one page
<< Previous
1
Celebrate God's Word with The Preacher's Pledge
Free Download: All New Outreach Ideas
Free Download: All New Outreach Ideas

Download immediately when you sign up for emails from SermonCentral.com & partners.

Comments

Be the first to leave a comment!

Join the discussion

  |  Forgot password?
Sign in to join the discussion New to SermonCentral? Create an account
New Better Preaching Articles
Featured Resource
Today's Most Popular
Sponsored Links
Sponsored By:
SermonCentral
Additional Resources
SermonCentral Partners