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SHEEP IN THE WORD MINISTRIES Rev. Robert C. Lewis Glendale Baptist Church Houston, Texas quicknotes.org 2007.

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Presentation on theme: "SHEEP IN THE WORD MINISTRIES Rev. Robert C. Lewis Glendale Baptist Church Houston, Texas quicknotes.org 2007."— Presentation transcript:

1 SHEEP IN THE WORD MINISTRIES Rev. Robert C. Lewis Glendale Baptist Church Houston, Texas quicknotes.org 2007

2 CONFESSION OF SIN IN THE OLD TESTAMENT The Ins and Outs of Confession

3  

4 ISRAEL AT KADESH Numbers 14

5 their sin: unbelief (Numbers 14:11) complaining and disobedience (Deuteronomy 1:26)

6 their confession: they confessed (14:40) but immediately disobeyed (Numbers 14:41–45)

7 consequences: their confession (14:40) did not restore their inheritance (14:22–23) or remove the sin unto death (14:29, 32–35; 26:64–65)

8 intercession: Moses' intercession gained their pardon (14:20) and reduced their discipline: they died over 40 years (14:33–34) instead of immediately (14:12)

9 principle: confession may come to late to avert divine discipline

10  

11 ACHAN Joshua 7

12 his sin: stealing things under a ban (Joshua 7:1, 11)

13 his confession: he admits his guilt and names his sin (7:20–21)

14 the opposite of confessing is hiding sin (7:19)

15 consequences: confession did not reduce his punishment or lift the ban— his whole family was stoned and burned (7:24–26)

16 consequences: 36 men died because of his sin (7:5)

17 principle: confronting sin may bring about confession (7:19; cf. Genesis 3:8–13; 1 Samuel 12:17; 15:14–23)

18  

19 ISRAEL UNDER THE JUDGES 1 Samuel 12:9–11

20 their sin: idolatry (1 Samuel 12:10)

21 their confession: they admit their guilt and name their sin (12:10)

22 consequences: confession and repentance removed their discipline (compare 12:9 with 12:11)

23 principle: discipline often brings us to the point of confession

24  

25 ISRAEL 1 Samuel 12:12–22

26 their sin: asking for a king (1 Samuel 12:17, 19, 20)

27 their confession: they admit their guilt and name their sin (12:19)

28 consequences: their confession did not restore the rule of the judges— they will pay dearly (8:9–18)

29 principle: confession may not remove God's permissive will or restore God's perfect will

30 principle: some sins have irreversible consequences

31 principle: continue serving the Lord after confessing your sins

32  

33 SAUL 1 Samuel 15

34 his sin: keeping things placed under a ban (1 Samuel 15:2–3, 8–9, 18–19

35 his confession: he finally confesses his sin after being confronted by Samuel (15:24–25)

36 excuses: he rationalized, made excuses, and passed the buck (15:15, 21)

37 consequences: his confession did not restore his throne (15:26–29) or lift the ban from him (31:1– 6)

38 consequences: confession reduced and postponed his discipline—he was not replaced immediately and his family and possessions were not all killed and burned

39 principle: others may cause you to sin, but you're responsible (cf. Adam and Eve, Genesis 3:12, 13)

40  

41 DAVID 2 Samuel 24

42 David’s Sin (24:1–9) David’s Confession (24:10–14) David’s Punishment (24:15–17) David’s Sacrifice (24:18–25)

43 his sin: numbering the people (2 Samuel 24:1–9)

44 his confession: his confession (10, 17) did not remove the divine discipline (11–17)

45 consequences: he was given a choice of three punishments (13)

46 consequences: 70,000 die after his confession

47 shared guilt: Israel was not without guilt (1)

48 principle: others may be punished severely for your sin (15–16) David asked to be punished instead of Israel but his substitutionary offer was ignored (17)

49 principle: a guilty conscience often motivates confession (10)

50  

51 DAVID 2 Samuel 12:7–18

52 his sins: adultery (2 Samuel 11:4) and murder (11:14–17; 12:9)

53 his confession: confession and forgiveness (13) reduced but did not remove his divine discipline

54 two capital offenses: capital punishment was waived by God (13; cf. Lev 20:10; 24:17)

55 consequences: immediate discipline— the baby will die (14)

56 consequences: future discipline—trouble in his family from now on (10– 12)

57 principle: one sin can bring divine discipline for the rest of your life

58 Ñ Ñ

59 SHIMEI 2 Samuel 19:16–23

60 his sin: he cursed and threw stones at David—the LORD's anointed (2 Samuel 16:5–13; 19:21; cf. Exodus 22:28)

61 his confession: he confesses his sin to David at a ford of the Jordan (20)

62 he asked David to not count and not remember his sin (19)

63 sacrifice: he does good deeds to show his repentance, submission, and desire for fellowship (16–18)

64 forgiveness: David overlooks and forgets his sin (22–23)

65 consequences: confession, initiative (16, 17, 20), and good works saved his life (23)

66 principle: …confess your sins to one another… (James 5:16a)

67 Shimei sinned against David (16:5–13) and against God (Exodus 22:28) so he confessed his sin to David (19:19–20) and presumably also to God

68  

69 RESTITUTION Numbers 5:6–8

70 sin: theft

71 confession plus restitution plus a penalty: confession, full restitution, and a 20% penalty is required

72 recipients: full restitution is given to the victim (7), or to the closest relative (8a), or to the LORD for the priest (8b)

73 sacrifice: a guilt offering is given to the LORD (8c; cf. Leviticus 6:1–7)

74 forgiveness: after (1) confessing his sin to the victim and to God (Numbers 5:7), (2) making full restitution, (3) adding 20% for compensation, and (4) making a guilt offering to the LORD, he is forgiven (Leviticus 6:7)

75 SHEEP IN THE WORD MINISTRIES Rev. Robert C. Lewis Glendale Baptist Church Houston, Texas quicknotes.org 2007


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