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.

Blog:

Monday, April 21, 2008

Introduction to the Bible - Deuteronomy

Chuck Swindoll says that Moses spent his first forty years thinking he was a somebody, the next forty learning he was a nobody, and his final forty learning what God can do with a nobody. It was near the end of these last forty years that Moses spoke the words we find in the book of Deuteronomy. The late Peter Craigie, Bible scholar and former vice-president of the University of Calgary wrote: “Deuteronomy is a book about a community being prepared for a new life. Hardship and wilderness lie behind; the promised land lies ahead. But in the present moment, there is a call for a new commitment to God and a fresh understanding of the nature of the community of God’s people. . . [I]n the midst of world events, a relatively small community was being urged by Moses, the “man of God,” to commit itself wholeheartedly to the Lord, before engaging in the struggle for the promised land.”

Deuteronomy contains five speeches of Moses and begins with the line “These are the words . . .” That is, in fact, the Hebrew title of the book The English title comes from a later Greek translation of Deuteronomy 17:18 where the King is commanded to make a copy of the law of God. The translation made the text say the king was to make a “second” law, a “deuteronomion” to keep with him and be his guide. The translation was carried over into the Latin translation and continued into English.

I) Deuteronomy begins (chapters 1-4) with a call to justice and a review of how Israel came to be east of the Jordan river in the territory of Moab. Moses reviews Israel’s failures and successes and points out that they owe every success to God. Moses wants Israel to know that God is serious about being His people and reminds them all (five times) that, despite the fact he has been with Israel since they left Egypt, he will not get to enter the promised land. The reason is due to his own failure, and Israel’s.

II) Chapters 5-11 set forth the law of God in an abbreviated form (the Ten Commandments) and calls Israel to obedience. The Ten Commandments serve as a foundation for all the laws of God and all are, in some way, related to one of the ten. The ten commandments were spoken directly to Israel by God, and written by God personally on stone.

III) Chapters 12-26 provide an elaboration on the Ten Commandments, showing how the commands apply in a broader sense.

IV) Chapters 27-28 list curses for those who do not follow the law of God, and blessings for those who do.

V) Chapters 29-34 is a final call to faithfulness and concludes with the death of Moses.

Obedience is paramount in Deuteronomy. Israel should obey not in order to receive the promises, but in order to keep from losing them. This is a significant point. The false doctrine of Salvation by Works does not just teach that works are involved in salvation. It teaches that by "works" one can "secure" his own salvation. The people of Israel however had already been saved by God’s grace. If they wanted to stay saved, and wanted their lives to go well, they would have to be obedient. The same is true of us. Again, as Peter Craigie puts it: Deuteronomy “provides a paradigm for the kingdom of God in the modern world; it is time for renewing commitment within the New Covenant and turning to the future with a view to possessing the promise of God.”

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