Ruth 4:13-22; 1 Chronicles 2:9-55; 1 Chronicles 4:1-23; 1 Samuel 1:1-8
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Old Testament – Today we begin the book of First Samuel! This is an amazing book of the Bible. I cannot wait to read about Hannah, Samuel, Saul & David!  Below is an image of Samuel anointing Saul, which we will read about later this week:



First Samuel
Author: Unknown
Date: Probably tenth century B.C.
Content: The books of First and Second Samuel comprise one book in the Hebrew Bible because they form one continuous history covering the lives of Samuel, Saul, and David. They were separated into two books for convenience for reading. First Samuel deals with the Philistine wars and Saul’s ultimate failure to deal with the enemy. The book opens with Israel’s being oppressed by the Philistines (a war-like neighboring nation) and the emergence of the two early leaders, Samuel and Saul. Samuel was the religious leader and Saul ultimately became the king. Saul’s early victories are described, followed by his moral decline and tragic end. Balancing the decline of Saul is the rise of the youthful David who will assume leadership after the death of Saul.
Theme: The basic idea that pervades this book is that God does not make his people immune to the changes of human life, but give them grace to see things through to a satisfactory conclusion. The rise and fall of kings, times of peace and war – throughout it all God stays the same and controls human events in such a way that those who trust him will find comfort and the courage to endure. (Above commentary is from “The One Year Bible Companion” p. 5)


More commentary on First Samuel from Bible.org is at this link.
Here’s a great quote from this link: “One might conclude from reading the Book of Judges that the problem was the absence of a king in Israel: “In those days there was no king in Israel; everyone did what was right in his own eyes” (Judges 21:25). In First Samuel, Israel will get her king. Saul, Israel’s first king, will be the kind of king the people want, and prove to be the king Israel deserves. David, Israel’s second king, will replace Saul. He is God’s kind of king, a man after God’s heart. First Samuel tells the story of fascinating people like Hannah and Samuel, like Saul and David. There is never a dull moment in this masterfully well written history. The book closes with the death of Saul, and thus the end of David’s flight from the hand of Saul, who seeks to kill him as an enemy.”


Worship God: Today’s readings in reminded me of Third Day’s song “Show Me Your Glory:”



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1JbEQHmCEFU

Do you want God to show you His Glory? Click here for Glory!


Please join us in memorizing and meditating on a verse of Scripture today: “The women said to Naomi: “Praise be to the LORD, who this day has not left you without a guardian-redeemer. May he become famous throughout Israel!”  Ruth 4:14 NIV


Prayer Point: Pray in thanksgiving if Jesus is your guardian-redeemer!


Comments from You:  What verses or insights stand out to you in today’s readings?  Please post up by clicking on the “Comments” link below!

God bless,
Mike

p.s. Download our monthly Small Group study notes for our Chronological Bible readings at this link.

p.p.s. Download a schedule of our Chronological Bible readings for the year in PDF format at this link.

p.p.p.s. I would greatly appreciate it if you would pray for this Chronological Bible Blog ministry today. Thanks!

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2 responses to “April 8th Chronological Bible Readings”

  1. Mark Spencer Avatar
    Mark Spencer

    I love your Chronological Reading program for email! Thank you for all the work you have and are putting into it!
    I am interested if you know of a text to speech app that I could use to have it read the email to me?
    I have chronic pain and many times I can’t read when I hurt so bad. I have a motorola electrify Android phone and I’ve looked at many (and tried them) apps from the Play Store. I can’t find any app that would read the email for my phone. Even an app that would read your Web page that I’m on that has much of what’s in the email would be helpful as my second choice.
    But most of all I again want to thank you for your program. It’s great to read the Bible this way! May the Lord continue to bless you for this great work. All the links for further research is also a great help.
    Thank you and God bless,
    Mark S.

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  2. Mark Spencer Avatar
    Mark Spencer

    Mark s

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