Ezra

Week of 3/7/21 - Pages 115 - 129

I spent time last week with a 93 year-old woman who shared stories about her life growing up in New York. Her father was a butcher and her family lived above his shop. She had 2 brothers and 1 sister and she fondly remembers family meals around the kitchen table. But what stands out to her most about that time is how her mother, a devout Catholic, would spend one hour every day in prayer. No matter how much there was to do raising 4 young children in the midst of the Great Depression and World War II, her mom lived by the adage that she was too busy not to pray.

If I’m being completely honest, I must confess that I struggle in my prayer life. Often I’m focused on all I have to get done and I leave little room for slowing down to pray. Often I’m not sure how to pray; there is so much going on in our world and in my life that I don’t even know where to begin. And then there are the times I doubt whether my prayers will really change anything—will God really act because I pray. Perhaps that is why I am drawn to Nehemiah’s prayer from this week’s Scripture reading. 

The book of Nehemiah demonstrates how prayer is powerful and pleasing to God and it shows us how to approach prayer in our own lives:

1.    His prayer invoked the character of God – Nehemiah’s prayer described and praised God at the same time (great and awesome God). It then made God’s character the foundation of God’s response to the prayer (the one who keeps his covenant of unfailing love with those who love and obey him).

2.    His prayer recalled God’s promises — Nehemiah reminded God of his promise that if his exiled people returned to him in obedience he would redeem them and bring them back to the Promised Land. I am beginning to see that remembering God’s promises is critical to answered prayer.

3.    His prayer confessed the sins of himself and his nation – Nehemiah acknowledged his own guilt and admitted the sins of his people in not obeying God’s commands. 

4.    His prayer emphasized his great need – Nehemiah prayed out of a broken heart weeping for the troubles his people were experiencing. Aren’t our prayers most fervent when we pray with the sense of great need and anguish?

After Nehemiah prayed, he still had to step out in faith to bring his plan before the king. The king could have charged Nehemiah with divided loyalty, but instead he responded with whole-hearted favor. Nehemiah’s prayer unleashed all of God’s influence and molded the will of the king. Such an important lesson as we begin to understand that we are too busy not to pray!

Week of 2/28/21 - Pages 103 - 115

God had promised through his prophet Jeremiah that he would bring his people back from captivity.  See Jeremiah 29:10-14.  The book of Ezra describes God’s faithfulness to his people and the events surrounding their return.

Upon their arrival, the priests rebuilt the altar and reinstituted sacrifices; then came the rebuilding of the temple; and finally (as we will see in Nehemiah) the Israelites rebuild the wall.  I find this sequence significant: first, comes a need for forgiveness and a way to get right with God; second, they need a means for worship and a place to meet with God; and then the people need security and protection from external threats.

Carrying out God’s plan was not without its challenges for the Israelites.  Enemies began opposing the temple rebuilding.  Notice their tactics: initially, the enemies pretend to offer their help to the Israelites, then they frustrate their plans, then they slander them to the authorities, and finally threaten them.  But, God’s will finally prevails and the temple is completed.

Of this same temple, Jesus said in Matt 12:6, “I tell you, there is one here who is even greater than the temple!”

How could Jesus make such a bold claim about himself?

God is immense.  Paul says in Acts 17:24, “He is the God who made the world and everything in it.  Since he is Lord of heaven and earth, he doesn’t live in man-made temples”.  In fact, Solomon says after building the first temple in Jerusalem, “But will God really dwell on earth?  The heavens, even the highest heaven, cannot contain you.  How much less this temple I have built!” (1 Kings 8:27)

And yet, in Jesus, “God was pleased to have all his fullness dwell in him, and through him to reconcile to himself all things, whether things on earth or things in heaven, by making peace through his blood , shed on the cross.” (Col 1:19-20)

Not only that, Jesus sent the Holy Spirit to all who put their trust in him.  1Cor 3:16 says, “Don’t you realize that all of you together are the temple of God and that the Spirit of God lives in you?”

Col 1:13-14 says, “For he has rescued us from the one who rules in the kingdom of darkness, and he has brought us into the Kingdom of his dear Son.  God has purchased our freedom with his blood and has forgiven all our sins.”

So, how is Jesus greater than the temple?  He accomplished what the altar, the temple, and the wall could never do.  Those were symbols pointing us to the way, the truth, and the life.  Jesus brought us out of captivity from the kingdom of darkness and established us in his kingdom.  Jesus himself was the sacrifice once for all, that all who would believe in him would receive forgiveness of their sins.  He made a way for God to dwell in our hearts, and for us to worship him in Spirit and in truth.  And, he protects us; for nothing can separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord. (see Rom 8:39)

Let us worship God the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit.