Title: Jude Class Schedule
1Jude Class Schedule
2- Jude, Judas and Judah in Scripture
- Jude - Ioudas - masc. proper noun transliterated
from - the Hebr. Yehudah
confessor of Jehovah, - praise. Judah or Judas.
The name of eight - persons mentioned in
Scripture. Zodhiates - Judah, the fourth son of Jacob and head of the
- tribe of
Judah Matt. 12, 3 Luke 333 - Judas or Judah, two of the ancestors of Jesus -
Luke 326, 30 - The eleventh name of two lists of the apostles
-
- Luke 616 Acts 113 - Judas the brother of James in gospels Jude
-
- Matt. 1355 Mark 63
3Jude, Judas and Judah in Scripture (cont.)
- Judas, surnamed Iscariot, meaning man of Kerioth,
- an apostle and
betrayer of the Lord Jesus - Judas surnamed Barsabas, a teacher sent from
Jerusalem - to Antioch with Paul and Barnabas -
Acts 1522, 27, 32 - Judas, a Jew living in Damascus with whom Paul
lodged -
at his conversion - Acts 911 - Judas, surnamed the Galilean - Acts 537
4The family tree of Jesus family
Mary
Joseph
Jude
Joses
Simon
sisters
James
Jesus
- Jesus was properly a half-brother to these
siblings - Jesus brothers did not believe in Him until
after Christ was - resurrected (John 75 Acts 114).
- The names James, Joses, Jude Simon are given in
Mark 63, - as is the fact that Jesus had sisters.
- Of Jesus brothers, James is the one of which the
most is - recorded.
adapter from Verns notes
5Historical Background of Jude
- Like James he was a Hellenized Galilean Jew
- who wrote with a cultivated Greek style
- James became a believer after Jesus' resurrection
- (1 Cor. 157) and we may assume that Jude
did too - Jesus' brothers were part of the praying group
that - awaited the coming of the Holy Spirit (Acts
114) - Jude's many allusions to the Old Testament
suggest - that his original readers were very familiar
with it -
- The time of writing is very difficult to
ascertain maybe - some years after the day of Pentecost
- (perhaps A.D. 66 - 69)
T. Constable
6Two key points in the book of Jude
1. the faith the teachings of the Apostles
and Prophets synonyms the faith the truth
sometimes the faith the
Gospel 2. apostasy a total departure from
ones faith or religion apostasia (gr)
lit to stand off from or away from Apostasy is
when you have heard the truth and understand what
it says and then you willingly reject it.
(McCalley) The brief epistle of Jude is without
parallel in the New Testament for its vehement
denunciation of libertines and apostates.
(Hiebert)
The Faith by V. Peterman Standard
Dictionary
7Outline of Jude from McCalley
- Jude presents a conflict between two classes of
men - Beloved (see v3, 17, 20)
- Certain men referenced as they, these or them
- (see v4, 8, 10, 12,14, 19)
- It also contrasts these two classes of men
- v16-17 -- these vs. but you beloved
-
- v19-20 -- these vs. but you beloved
- It tells us how to treat these men
-
8Jude 1 Â Jude, a bond-servant of Jesus Christ, and
brother of James, To those who are the called,
beloved in God the Father, and kept for Jesus
Christ 2 Â May mercy and peace and love be
multiplied to you. 3 Â Beloved, while I was
making every effort to write you about our common
salvation, I felt the necessity to write to you
appealing that you contend earnestly for the
faith which was once for all handed down to the
saints. 4 Â For certain persons have crept in
unnoticed, those who were long beforehand marked
out for this condemnation, ungodly persons who
turn the grace of our God into licentiousness and
deny our only Master and Lord, Jesus Christ. 5
 Now I desire to remind you, though you know all
things once for all, that the Lord, after saving
a people out of the land of Egypt, subsequently
destroyed those who did not believe. 6 Â And
angels who did not keep their own domain, but
abandoned their proper abode, He has kept in
eternal bonds under darkness for the judgment of
the great day, 7 Â just as Sodom and Gomorrah and
the cities around them, since they in the same
way as these indulged in gross immorality and
went after strange flesh, are exhibited as an
example in undergoing the punishment of eternal
fire. 8 Â Yet in the same way these men, also by
dreaming, defile the flesh, and reject authority,
and revile angelic majesties.
9Outline of Jude from McCalley
- II. Jude did not plan to write this book v3
- Jude was in the process of writing about our
common salvation -
- common - koinos - belonging to several
- said of things had in common
- He felt it necessary to write about contending
for the faith
10Outline of Jude from McCalley (cont.)
- III The theme is to contend for the faith
- contend is the idea to fight
- contend - epagonizomai - signifies "to contend
about - a thing, as a combatant" (epi, "upon or about,"
intensive, - agon, "a contest") see 1 Tim 612
- Two questions are addressed
- Why contend for the faith (v4 to v16)
- How to contend for the faith (v17 to v23)
11Outline of Jude from McCalley (cont.)
- Why contend for the faith (v4 to v16)
- God always judges apostasy (v5-7)
- Israel, angels, Sodom Gomorrah
-
- Sins of apostasy (v8-11)
- defile the flesh, reject authority, unreasoning
animals - Names for the apostate (v12-13)
- hidden reefs, clouds without water
- Doom of the apostate (v14-16)
12Outline of Jude from McCalley (cont.)
- How to contend for the faith (v17 to v23)
- remember the words spoken beforehand
- building yourselves up by your faith
- praying in the Holy Spirit
- keep yourself in the love of God
- waiting anxiously for the mercy of Christ to
eternal life - rescue who you can
- mercy on some
- save others
13Outline of Jude from McCalley (cont.)
- IV. Three separate destinies in Jude
- Beloved - to make you stand in the presence of
His glory blameless with great joy -
(v24b) - Angels - He has kept in eternal bonds under
darkness for the judgment of the great day -
(v6b) - Apostate - for whom the black darkness has been
reserved forever
(v13b)