Mike Tune is the son of missionary parents - his father currently leads an underground church in Vietnam. Mike grew up in Hong Kong, and in his High School years, Nashville, Tennessee. He graduated from Murray State University in Murray, KY with a Bachelors degree in Accounting and Finance and went on to complete a Masters degree in Religion at Harding University's Graduate School of Religion.

Mike and his wife Monica met in Murray, and married a year after his graduation while he was serving as the Pulpit Minister for the Harrisburg church of Christ in Illinois. They have three sons, all grown, and two grandchildren. Mike has served churches in Tennessee (Paris and Lebanon), Louisiana(Monroe), and now in Virginia (Falls Church). He founded the Gospel Advocate's AIM program and taught Bible teachers throughout the United States for six years in that ministry. He served one year as the author of the Gospel Advocate Companion Adult Bible study materials. His writings have appeared in every Church of Christ publication and he is the author of Going Home, an eight-lesson Bible correspondence course. He is also president of Amazing Grace International, a non-profit corporation dedicated to using mainstream media to reach Bible students. Thus far, over 6000 students have taken their Bible courses. Mike serves as president of a French corporation dedicated to providing educational funding for poor students in Vietnam.

In June of 2007, Mike will complete his 8th year with the Falls Church congregation and will become our longest tenured minister in a nearly 60 year history. In August of 2007, he will complete his 33rd year of full-time ministry. His hobbies are reading and golf.

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Thursday, March 20, 2008

Introduction to the Bible - Numbers

The Hebrew title for the fourth book of the Bible is “In the Wilderness,” a much more appropriate title than “Numbers”, which doesn’t tell you much about the book. Numbers takes up in the second year after Israel’s Exodus from Egypt. It begins with a census of the people at Sinai and continues with Israel’s move to enter the Promised Land. It gives us the details of her refusal to enter the land, and then provides us with a chronicle of her forty year wandering in punishment for her disobedience. At the end of the 40 years, there was another census (chapter 26) and a review of some of the laws Israel was to give attention to when she finally entered Canaan.

Every one of the first five books of the Bible serves to emphasize something about God. Genesis emphasizes his power and grace. Exodus His deliverance. Leviticus His holiness, and Deuteronomy his jealousy. Numbers is about God’s presence.

Numbers can be divided into three sections:
1) At Sinai (chapters 1-9) the census itself underscores God’s presence and care. As he knows the very number of the hair on our heads, he knows exactly the number of people who belong to Him. They don’t move without him and when they move, He is there.
2) In the Wilderness (chapters 10-21) contains the stories of at least seven rebellions against God. Though God had every reason to desert his people, he did not.
3) As Israel prepares to enter the land again (chapters 22-36), Moses tells Israel a story she would not have known had he not put it down. It is the story of an attempt to curse the people of God by a foreign nation. Through it all, unseen by Israel, God protected them.

Everyone numbered in the census of Israel was counted as a member of the community of God. God delivered Israel to be one community. There are more references to that community in Numbers than in any other book of the Bible. The worst thing that could happen to anyone in Israel was to be placed outside the community, known in Numbers as “outside the camp.”

Three thousand years after Moses, Numbers remains a relevant message to the people of God. The God who was a constant presence for Israel is a constant presence for us. He knows our number, and walks with us. He is present when we rebel, and present, working out his will and protecting us, in ways we cannot see. In a way, we are all traveling through the wilderness looking to enter the promised land. Until we do, we must allow God to be our leader and guide, and we must, as the Church, stick together as the people of God.

And that title, “Numbers,” how did that come about? When the Old Testament was translated into Greek, then Latin, those census reports stood out in the translators minds. The Greeks called it “arithmoi,” and in Latin, it became “Numeri.” From there, it was but a short hop to “Numbers” in English.

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