Scripture Reading: Daniel 9:1-19
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AFTERNOON DEVOTION - "Evening, and morning, and noon, will I pray, and cry aloud: and He shall hear my voice" (Psalm 55:17, KJV).
Scripture Reading: Ezra 9:5-15
In 458 B.C. Ezra, the scribe, returned to Jerusalem to serve the Jewish remnant who had returned years earlier; some 80 years after Cyrus had issued the decree for the exiled Jews to return to their land. In 515 B.C. the second temple was completed and dedicated under Haggai and Zechariah. Daniel had lived a life holy and set apart to the Lord, and Ezra was sent to exhort the people to be holy unto the Lord (reference Leviticus 11:44). On his journey to Jerusalem, we find out that Ezra, like Daniel, was a man of prayer. Desiring safety for their journey, Ezra led the people with prayer and fasting to seek God's favor and protection. "So we fasted and petitioned our God about this, and He answered our prayer" (Ezra 8:23). Throughout the Scriptures, and without exception, every time God's servants humbled themselves with prayer and fasting - the Lord answered and delivered His people!
Approximately four months after arriving and settling in Jerusalem, some members of the community advised Ezra that some of the people had broken the covenant marriage laws, intermarrying with the pagan nations. Ezra had come to lead them in living holy lives, set apart for the Lord, and right away he received confirmation of God's purpose in his mission. The remnant who had been set free years earlier to come back to their homeland had carried with them the corruption of Babylon. They were a people chosen by God to be holy and set apart for the purposes of revealing the living God to the nations, but they had compromised their privileged position and rejected God's blessings; ultimately sacrificing their future. Ezra responded as Daniel had, he turned immediately to the Lord with fasting and prayer. "When I heard this, I tore my tunic and cloak, pulled hair from my head and beard and sat down appalled...Then, at the evening sacrifice, I rose from my self-abasement, with my tunic and cloak torn, and fell on my knees with my hands spread out to the LORD my God and prayed" (Ezra 9:3, 5, 6a).
Ezra's prayer was a prayer of confession for the sins of the nation:. "O my God, I am too ashamed and disgraced to lift up my face to you, my God, because our sins are higher than our heads and our guilt has reached to the heavens" (v.6). Although the sins that were committed were only committed by a small group of people, the whole nation was affected; everyone had their share of the blame because they turned a blind eye to the sins of their fellowman. Ezra stood in the gap on behalf of the sins of the people and cried out to God to preserve the remnant. Ezra had come to Jerusalem to enforce the Law of God, but God was after more than their outward conduct - He desired their hearts - when the people saw Ezra "praying and confessing, weeping and throwing himself down before the house of God" (v. 10:1), instead of preaching, their hearts were broken; God had them right were He wanted them. The Lord had gained the attention of His people just by the actions of His prophets' cry of repentance. Ezra withdrew from the people to continue fasting and praying; leaving the people to determine what they must do to make amends (v. 10:6). The Lord answered Ezra's humble, fervent, and repentant prayers and the community took responsibility for their actions and were purified and cleansed.
Heavenly Father,
."O LORD, God of Israel,
there is no God like You in heaven above or on earth below -
You who keep Your covenant of love with Your servants
who continue wholeheartedly in Your way..
Give attention to Your servant's prayer and his plea for mercy,
O LORD my God. Hear the cry and the prayer Your servant
is praying in Your presence this day.
Hear from heaven, Your dwelling place,
and when You hear, forgive...
When they turn back to You and confess Your name,
praying and making supplication to You...
then hear from heaven and forgive the sin of Your people..."
(1 Kings 8:23,28,30b,33,34a) In Jesus' Name. Amen.
[Ezra reminds us how complacent and apathetic we have become as the church; turning a deaf ear and a blind eye to the immorality and corruption that is plaguing and destroying our nation. We tolerate sin and compromise our own holiness every time we sit in a theatre or watch a television program or video that makes entertainment out of sinful behavior. The Lord desires that our hearts be broken over the sin of His creation; that we dispose of the laughter and begin to weep and mourn and repent. "Even now," declares the LORD, "return to Me with all your heart, with fasting and weeping and mourning. Rend your heart and not your garments. Return to the LORD your God, for He is gracious and compassionate, slow to anger and abounding in love, and He relents from sending calamity...Blow the trumpet in Zion, declare a holy fast, call a sacred assembly...Let the priests, who minister before the LORD, weep between the temple porch and the altar..." (Joel 2:12-13, 15, 17a).]
"Since the days of Pentecost,
has the whole church ever put aside every other work
and waited upon Him for ten days,
that the Spirit's power might be manifested?
We give too much attention to method and machinery
and resources, and too little to the source of power."
-Hudson Taylor |
If you would like to do this complete fast you can find it at http://www.trumpetandtorch.org/
Comments:
The Lord heard His servants' humble and repentant prayers, and He answered him by giving him favor with the king and paving the way for his return to Jerusalem to help with the rebuilding. Nehemiah oversaw the building of the wall and ministered to the people. When the wall was complete, the people gathered together, on the first day of the seventh month, for the New Year's celebration, the Feast of Trumpets, and Ezra stood before the people to give a public proclamation of the Book of the Law of Moses; some 13 years after he had arrived to do just that in Jerusalem. When the people heard the words of the Lord they wept. "For all the people had been weeping as they listened to the words of the Law" (Nehemiah 8:9b). The Word of God was read, day after day, and on the 24th day of that same month they set aside a day of penance. "The Israelites gathered together, fasting and wearing sackcloth and having dust on their heads...They stood in their places and confessed their sins and the wickedness of their fathers" (v.9:1, 3b). The people stood for three hours to hear the Word of God read aloud, and then spent another three hours confessing their sins and worshiping God. We can only hope and pray for a day when God's people would delight in standing in His presence and worshiping Him with no concern for the time that they might give Him the praise He deserves.
In the national prayer of repentance recorded in Nehemiah, the people lifted their voices, beginning with praise for the greatness of their God. "Blessed be Your glorious name, and may it be exalted above all blessing and praise. You alone are the LORD. You made the heavens, even the highest heavens, and all their starry host, the earth and all that is on it, the seas and all that is in them. You give life to everything, and the multitudes of heaven worship You" (vv.5b, 6). They went on to recount the goodness of God in forming the nation of Israel and the many blessings He bestowed upon His covenant people. They confessed where they had refused to obey the Lord and rejected His plan and purpose for them as a nation by following after the gods of the neighboring nations. They had become prosperous and lazy in the land of promise and forgot the reason God had chosen them in the first place. Their exile in Babylon cured them of their idolatrous behavior and now they were recommitting themselves to the Lord. In this prayer they did more than ask for mercy, they took action and made a solemn agreement with the Lord to obey His will and walk in His ways (reference Nehemiah 9:38; 10:29-39). It is not enough to confess our sins and seek God's forgiveness - we must also be willing to walk in obedience to God when we rise to our feet and walk out the door. This year may we each make a personal new beginning as we carry on what we have begun these first forty days, seeking the Lord in His Word and adding fuel to our prayers as we stand in the gap in fervent and earnest prayer, and waiting expectantly for the answers that will surely come as the Lord unleashes His power in our lives and upon our land.
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EVENING MEDITATION - "...and on His law he meditates day and night" (Ps. 1:2)
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