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Appointments With God Tabernacles

Blessings of the statutes and judgments

Moses’ final words about the “statutes and judgements” have a particular significance for us during Sukkot. There are no amendments to the statutes of God. And we aren’t allowed change or alter God’s judgements. We should read them not to challenge them but to understand them, wrestle with them and apply them to our lives.

Moses’ final words about the “statutes and judgements” have a particular significance for us during Sukkot. There are no amendments to the statutes of God. And we aren’t allowed change or alter God’s judgements. We should read them not to challenge them but to understand them, wrestle with them and apply them to our lives.

Thought Questions

Passages: Deut. 4:1-5, 6:1-6, 10:12-13; Heb. 8:7-13. 10:19-22; 1 John 3:18-22; Matt.11:25-27; Rom. 6:16-18

Have you fallen short of God’s statutes and judgements??Why do you care about the statutes of God?

How do God’s statutes and judgements make a nation wise? ?Why is it important that the nation be seen as wise not just us as individuals?

Did God leave anything out of the Torah (Matt. 5:18-20)?

How many generations do the blessings of Torah observance carries?

How does the land “flow with milk and honey”?

Are we dumb because we fall short?

How do we have wisdom and understanding?

What is the “first love”?

What does it mean to be a man or woman “after God’s own heart”?

How do you know God?

Do we keep the statutes and judgements to earn salvation?

What is the difference between being taken by the hand v. having God’s word written in our hearts?

How does your heart condemns you?

What does that mean?

How do we know the Father?

Speaker: Richard Agee

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