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Showing posts with label Zerubbabel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Zerubbabel. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 28, 2018

ZECHARIAH+—An Illustrated Summary of Life Applications from Every Chapter of the Bible by G. Campbell Morgan

"On every page of the God-breathed writings are many thoughts that stretch out like long, clear arms of light across the darkness, discovering things otherwise hidden and illuminating wider areas than those of the immediate context. They are searchlights. I have selected one in each chapter of Scripture, for at least one central thought in every chapter should arrest the mind and affect the life," wrote G. Campbell Morgan, a skilled, wise, warm-hearted Bible teacher who conducted a classic 3-year study called Life Applications from Every Chapter of the Bible. Here is the fruit of that research—summarized, illustrated, and amplified with useful details—on all 66 books of the Bible.


Zechariah 1:4 "Do not be like your fathers." This prophetic book has been called the Apocalypse of the Old Testament because it visually represents the destiny of all God's people. The prophet Zechariah was contemporary with Haggai, and helped him in his work. Zechariah's book is divided into 4 parts: 1. An opening message to people who were looking back (1:1-16, delivered about a month after Haggai's second message). 2. A series of 8 dramatic visions (1:7—6:15, delivered 2 months after Haggai's fourth and last message). 3. Messages of encouragement (chapters 7-8, delivered 2 years later). 4. The coming King of kings and Lord of lords (chapters 9-14, delivered after the Temple was rebuilt, at least 4 years after Haggai). This opening message is to people looking back and lamenting the past greatness of Solomon's Temple, which was completely destroyed by the Babylonians in 586 B.C. That was over a lifetime ago. Haggai announced the tremendous news that the glory of the new, smaller Temple would actually exceed the glory of the other. Zechariah reinforces Haggai's announcement from another standpoint. He charges them to learn the true lesson of the backward look: the glory of the former Temple was lost through the disobedience of their ancestors to the Word of God. This remains a life-giving message: it is a persistent habit to talk of "good old days" to the point that we weaken our powers to serve in our own age. It serves us well to remember and be reminded that in many ways, they were bad old days. When we take warning from failures of the past, we make our current work of a more abiding nature.

Zechariah 2:5 "'I will be to her a wall of fire all around,' declares the Lord, 'and I will be the glory in her midst.'" At the seventh verse of chapter 1 begins a series of 8 visions in which the history of all God's people from this point to the consummation of the divine purpose is here foretold. The first, that of myrtle trees (1:7-17), shows the long period during which those who love the Lord must live in shadows and wait patiently for Him to act. The second, that of horns and blacksmiths (1:18-21), recognizes the forces that will be arrayed against the people of God, and the forces God raises up to destroy those who scatter them. The third (2:1-13), that of an angel looking like a man with a measuring line in his hand, is a radiant description of the New Jerusalem or final City of God that He will establish for His people. The angel is eventually stopped in his measurements with the declaration that no measurement of his could encompass the spacious glory of that city. When the city, personified as a lady, is established at last, she will need no material walls for safety. The Lord Himself will encompass her as a wall of fire, and be in the midst of her as His people's supreme glory. The City of God remains the goal of men and women with the faith of Abraham,  who "was looking forward to the city with foundations, whose architect and builder is God" (Hebrews 11:10).

Zechariah 3:8 "I will bring forth My Servant, the Branch." This chapter (3:1-10) contains the fourth vision: that of Joshua the high priest, dressed in filthy garments and accused by Satan before the Lord, but then defended by the Lord and cleansed spiritually and physically. Through the Jewish people would come God's special Servant called the Branch, which speaks of that which rises or springs up. The equivalent word used in the New Testament is Dayspring, where it is prophesied of John the Baptist and Jesus: "You will go before the face of the Lord to prepare His ways, to give knowledge of salvation to His people by the forgiveness of their sins through the tender mercy of our God, with which the Dayspring from on high has visited us to give light to those who sit in darkness and the shadow of death, to guide our feet into the way of peace " (Luke 1:76-79). Zechariah will have more to say about this divine Branch.

Zechariah 4:6 "'Not by might, nor by power, but by my Spirit,' says the Lord of hosts." In this chapter we have the fifth vision (4:1-14), that of the golden candlestick. In the Holy Place within the Temple, just outside the Most Holy Place, stood the golden lampstand or menorah with 7 pipes leading to 7 lamps: a perpetual symbol of the people's service to God, just as the table nearby with loaves of fresh bread was a symbol of their fellowship with Him. Israel was created to be a center of light to all the nations. The visions granted to Zechariah represent an ideal Israel with a cleansed priesthood and renewed call to service as light bearers. Not by might or power among the nations could Israel as a nation reveal the truth about God, but only by lives illuminated and energized by His Spirit. Zerubbabel and Joshua stood symbolically for the offices of king and priest, merged in the Messiah, whom Zechariah will go on to describe prophetically.

Zechariah 5:11 "A house for it in the land of Shinar [Babylon]." Two visions, the sixth and seventh, appear in this chapter: that of the flying scroll and the flying basket. The flying scroll contains a curse against evil, specifically against thieves, liars, and religious hypocrites. It represents the principle of law, for evildoers will be discovered and punished. The basket, inside and out, is associated with wickedness incarnate in feminine forms. That basket is set in the land of Babylon, where it waits to be unleashed in a final economic and religious conglomeration called the whore of Babylon and Mystery Babylon in the book of Revelation—the New Testament counterpart to the book of Zechariah. Evil continues to be kept in check, but it will get exponentially worse, only to be finally and forever defeated.

Zechariah 6:13 "The counsel of peace shall be between them both." In this chapter we have the eighth and final vision, that of four chariots driven between two mountains of bronze. The explanation given is that they represent four spirits from heaven moving throughout the earth, suggesting the spiritual forces at work regularly accomplishing the Lord's will on earth as it is in heaven. Zechariah then goes on to describe a special coronation in which he took part, uniting both the offices of king and priest to bring peace. The priest Zechariah crowned was Joshua, whom he mentioned in chapter 3 as a symbol of the Branch, the messianic King-Priest. In the midst of long and increasingly disastrous and bloody wars, statesmen and women have discussed "the counsel of peace" without finding any lasting solution. "The way of peace they do not know" (Isaiah 59:8) is still as timely a statement as when the prophet first wrote it. There is only one way of peace: the coming Kingdom of the Christ or Messiah who is both Priest and King. The One who is able to loose men and women from sin is the only One who is able to bind them together in permanent peace.

Zechariah 7:3 "Should I weep in the fifth month and fast, as I have done for so many years?" In this chapter and the next, Zechariah gives 3 messages from God to the people 2 years after he gave the 8 visions, and 2 years before the completion of the Temple. The highlighted verse refers to one of 4 monthly fasts listed in Zechariah 8:19. This question came to Zechariah from people wanting to know if they should keep on mourning over their past national tragedies now that things were going better for them, such as their walls being rebuilt. The Lord answers in two ways: first by reminding them that He did not command those fasts; they themselves instituted them. He does not say it was wrong for them to have done so, but implicated in His words is the warning not to give divine sanction to human arrangements. The second reminder is that the calamity that led them to create the fasts came because of their disobedience. This suggests that human appointments may be justified by circumstances arising out of human attitudes that are not justified. They never should be equated with divine ordinances.

Zechariah 8:19 "The fast ... and the fast ... and the fast ... and the fast ... shall be ... feasts." This chapter sets forth God's determination to restore Zion (8:1-17) and turn their fasts into feasts (8:18-23). The Lord through Zechariah appeals for the people to act in accord with this gracious determination. He begins with the arresting statements, "I am zealous [or jealous with a holy jealousy] for Zion with great ... fervor.... I will return to Zion.... Jerusalem shall be called the City of Truth ... the Holy Mountain" (verses 2-3). This will bring great security to young and old alike. The former fasts were instituted by the people after disasters that came upon Jerusalem by their enemies (a lengthy siege, breach of the wall, and consequent destruction) and by their own people (the assassination of Governor Gedaliah). All those things resulted from their sins, including the fasts themselves. But now God is promising to forgive and restore His people by His grace. The grace of God continues to transform the fast of repentance into a feast of love. That, in fact, is the meaning of the Lord's Supper inaugurating the New Covenant or Testament of the Messiah, whom the rest of Zechariah describes in detail.

Zechariah 9:17 "How great is His goodness, and how great is His beauty!" The last 6 chapters of Zechariah focus on two aspects of the Messiah's work: near and far. His previous chapters inspired the people to finish building the Temple by showing them the far-reaching effect of their work in its relation to the coming Kingdom of the Messiah. Some of the prophecies in this chapter have already taken place: the protection of Jerusalem from Alexander the Great (9:1-8), the victory of Judas Maccabeus against Antiochus IV (9:10-16), and the coming of King Messiah not on a war horse to drive out all enemies, but on a humble donkey colt as a minister of peace (9:9; depicted movingly in an episode from The Chosen). We learn that the Messiah will return on a war horse in a final triumph yet future over all enemies, establishing everlasting "peace to the nations, and His dominion shall be from sea to sea" (verse 10). This revelation from God leads Zechariah to praise the greatness of His goodness and beauty as seen in the face of the Messiah. We who have the further revelation of the New Testament have all the more reason to give this praise.

Zechariah 10:1 "Ask the Lord for rain..." This chapter begins after the high point of the previous chapter on the beauty of the Messiah, whose final Kingdom will be so abundant that "grain shall make the young men thrive, and new wine the young women" (9:17). Zechariah makes a direct appeal for his immediate audience to seek those blessings now by asking the Lord for rain. This is an element in prophecy of perpetual application: never to forget the importance of an immediate response of obedience to prophetic truth. Prophecy is never meant merely to satisfy curiosity, even on matters of the highest level. Let those who long for ultimate blessing remember it will come from lesser blessings the Lord will send, including rains available now if we but ask. Let there be an immediate seeking for the divine rains by which both present and ultimate fruitfulness will come.

Zechariah 11:7 "So I pastured the flock doomed to slaughter ... and I took for myself two staffs: the one I called Beauty [or Favor] and the other I called Bands [or Union]." This chapter speaks of the rejection the coming Messiah would experience, an echo of where it is described best: Isaiah 53. The Messiah exercises the double office of King and Shepherd over His people, represented by two staffs called Beauty and Bands. The Jewish people are seen oppressed by false shepherds, but then God raises up the Good Shepherd, who is the true King. Beauty speaks of the grace of the King, both in His method and purpose for His people (cf. John 1:17). Bands tells of His might, but verses 12-13 reveal what is shockingly given to Him as His due: 30 pieces of silver—the price of a slave! Therefore He breaks both staffs and throws them away. The nation of Israel then passes under the oppression of other false shepherds, all of this pointing to their leadership's rejection of the Messiah and the Roman destruction of Jerusalem in A.D. 70. "Even from the beginning I have declared it to you; before it came to pass I proclaimed it to you," says the Lord (Isaiah 48:5). Let us therefore praise Him for the exact foretelling and fulfillment of every detail of His prophetic Word.

Zechariah 12:10 "They will look on Me whom they have pierced." The King whose rejection was foretold in the previous chapter is  now seen coming into His Kingdom. 12:1—13:6 shows how opposing nations will be dealt with in judgment, and how Jewish people on a large scale will be restored to God through the acknowledgement of their rejected Messiah, and by their own spiritual cleansing. 13:7-14 views the same events from the standpoint of the King, going back first to when He was rejected and struck down, and then to the spiritual blessings that will result from His return in glory. The highlighted verse is most striking here and in its New Testament counterpart: "Behold, He is coming with clouds, and every eye will see Him, even they who pierced Him. All the tribes of the earth will mourn because of Him. Even so, Amen" (Revelation 1:7). Hundreds of years before crucifixion even existed, Psalm 22:16 gives this prophecy about the Messiah: "They pierced My hands and My feet." In addition, detailed eyewitness testimony is given about what happened when a Roman soldier pierced Jesus' heart with a spear to confirm His death beyond any doubt (John 19:31-37). What a day it will be for God's ancient people when many of them discover that the One whom most of their ancestors rejected is indeed their Messiah—what sorrow will be theirs, yet because of God's grace to them, their sorrow will turn to joy!
 
Zechariah 13:1 "In that day a fountain will be opened for the house of David and for the inhabitants of Jerusalem, for sin and impurity." When the people are brought to sorrow by the revelation of their Messiah as the One whom they had rejected, they will find that God wrought, through that very rejection, a way for their cleansing. That is a mystery of divine grace, but some parts of it are understandable. Spiritual cleansing is provided for all who are willing through Christ alone. It is the only way God's purposes for all His people can be realized. Sin and uncleanness must be put away. They cannot be excused, condoned, or compromised with. The foundations of God's rule are righteousness and justice; the foundations of human society are morality and integrity in thought and deed. Those principles are fundamental in all the messages of the prophets, but the key is this: spiritual cleansing is essential, but divine grace alone is able to provide that cleansing.

Zechariah 14:9 "The Lord will be King over all the earth. In that day the Lord will be the only one, and His name the only one." That verse describes the ultimate victory, the divine event toward which all creation is moving, the goal of God's activity, and the realization of humanity's highest experience of life. That hour will come when the feet of the once-rejected King stand again upon the Mount of Olives, no longer in the pathway of sorrow, but in recognized and acknowledged authority. Zechariah begins this chapter, "Behold, the Day of the Lord is coming.... [He] will gather all the nations to battle against Jerusalem ... and fight against those nations.... In that day His feet will stand on the Mount of Olives, which faces Jerusalem on the east" (verses 1-4). Notice these last words of Jesus and what happened immediately after He said them: "'You will be My witnesses in Jerusalem and in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth.'  When He said these things, as they were looking on, He was lifted up, and a cloud took Him out of their sight.  While they were gazing into heaven as He went, behold: two men stood by them in white robes and said, 'Men of Galilee, why do you stand looking into heaven? This Jesus, who was taken up from you into heaven, will come in the same way as you saw Him go into heaven.' Then they returned to Jerusalem from the mount called Olivet" (Acts 1:8-12). Since then, Jesus' disciples have been serving as His witnesses, which includes telling people that He will return as the perfect King in a manner similar to the way He left. Zechariah's prophetic counterpart, Daniel, summarizes Christ's Ascension and Return in two amazing verses quoted often by Christ Himself: "Behold, One like the Son of Man, coming with the clouds of heaven! He came to the Ancient of Days.... Then to Him was given dominion and glory and a Kingdom, that all peoples, nations, and languages should serve Him. His dominion is an everlasting dominion, and His Kingdom the one that shall not be destroyed" (Daniel 7:13-14; 2:44).


How Zechariah (about 520 to 490 B.C.) relates to other prophetic writings and historical events.

Saturday, July 18, 2015

EZRA+—An Illustrated Summary of Life Applications from Every Chapter of the Bible by G. Campbell Morgan

"On every page of the God-breathed writings are many thoughts that stretch out like long, clear arms of light across the darkness, discovering things otherwise hidden and illuminating wider areas than those of the immediate context. They are searchlights. I have selected one in each chapter of Scripture, for at least one central thought in every chapter should arrest the mind and affect the life," wrote G. Campbell Morgan, a skilled, wise, warm-hearted Bible teacher who conducted a classic 3-year study called Life Applications from Every Chapter of the Bible. Here is the fruit of that research—summarized, illustrated, and amplified with useful details—on all 66 books of the Bible.



Ezra 1:1 "The Lord stirred up the spirit of Cyrus." To human observation God's purposes often seem delayed. The consistent message of the Bible is they are never abandoned, and from God's perspective, they are not delayed but right on time. The historical books before Ezra tell the story of the complete failure and breakup of a nation chosen by God for His high purposes. That nation had become a people scattered and peeled, having lost national position and power—and even a sense of national consciousness. Nevertheless, God still moved on toward His ultimate purpose of redemption, not only of the Jewish people, but of the human race through them by the Jewish Messiah. Through 70 years of captivity, by the very processes of suffering, He prepared a remnant to return, rebuild, and essentially hold the fort until the Messiah, the true Seed and Servant, would come at the perfect time. The history of this return to Jerusalem sets forth clearly the truth of God's supreme rule over all. He compelled the most unlikely instruments to accomplish His will. Babylon had carried away His people into captivity, and by so doing had fulfilled His purpose. They, however, treated the conquered nation with undue severity so in process of time, and in fulfillment of the distinct prophecy from Isaiah well over 100 years before, Cyrus of Persia broke the power of Babylon. In Ezra 1 we see Cyrus as chosen and commissioned by God to restore the Jewish people to their own land. Cyrus himself had an obvious sense of that reality. How constantly in human history God has compelled kings and rulers to carry out His sovereign will!

Ezra 2:70 "Now the priests and the Levites, some of the people, the singers, the gatekeepers and the temple servants lived in their cities, and all Israel in their cities." These words summarize the lengthy chapter that they close. It contains the register of those who, taking advantage of Cyrus's decree, turned their faces toward their homeland. The list proceeds in a definite order from the leaders downward. First the names are given of those immediately associated with Zerubbabel, a direct descendant of David and ancestor of the Greater David (verses 1-2). Then follow the names and numbers of families (verses 3-35), the names of members of the priesthood (verses 36-39), the list and numbers of the Levites (verses 40-42), the temple servants (verses 55-58), the children of Solomon's servants (verses 55-58), a number who had lost track of their genealogical ties (verses 59-63), and finally the surprisingly paltry total of the people (under 50,000) and livestock. It is an interesting record, showing the mixed and representative nature of the returning remnant. The people thus returning are distinctly spoken of as "the men of the people of Israel" (verse 2). That reference clearly is not to the Northern Kingdom only, for it was the Southern Kingdom that Nebuchadnezzar had carried away. It apparently means that representatives of tribes from the Northern Kingdom also returned. Noticeable also is that relatively few Levites are named; 10 times as many priests compared to Levites returned.

Ezra 3:12 "The old men who had seen the first Temple wept with a loud voice when the foundation of this house was laid before their eyes, while many shouted aloud for joy." The leaders in this great movement of return were conscious of what really mattered in the life of the people. This chapter begins by telling us that as soon as they briefly settled in their cities, "the people gathered together as one man to Jerusalem" (verse 1). The first thing they did was establish the altar and observe the Feast of Tabernacles, the most joyful of all the feasts. Then they established all the other feasts and the divinely appointed order of daily worship. Notice their mysterious motivation: "for they were terrified because of the peoples of the lands" (verse 3). Different interpretations have been suggested, but the one that seems to suit the situation best is they were painfully aware of how much trouble their people got into before by neglecting the altar and adopting the idolatrous practices of surrounding peoples. To prevent a repetition of such failure, they immediately set up the true altar. (To their credit, the Jewish people have never returned to idolatry after the Babylonian Captivity.) The next step was rebuilding the Temple. The foundations were laid in the second year of their return, commemorated with fitting ceremonies and celebration. Then it was that the lamentations of the old men broke out, highlighted above. They realized that this Temple would be smaller and less magnificent than the Temple they remembered. We can sympathize with their feelings, but should recognize the danger. Regrets over the past that paralyze work in the present are always wrong. The backward look that discounts present activity blinds the eyes to the true value and significance of the present, which always take time and patience to discern.

Ezra 4:3 "You have no part with us in building a Temple to our God." This chapter tells about opposition to the Temple work by the neighboring Samaritans. It proved successful for a time. The first method of opposition was an offer of cooperation. Zerubbabel was asked to admit into partnership those who really were enemies of the work. It was a subtle peril. Human reasoning, acting on the level of policy merely, might be inclined to think there could be no harm, but only advantage in gaining help from any source. Men and women of faith have often fallen into that blunder by associating themselves closely with people who do not share their faith, and are therefore in the deepest sense opposed to their priorities. Zerubbabel and company were not deceived. They detected the peril at once and gave the well-reasoned response highlighted above. Those words reveal a principle of perpetual application and persistent urgency. God must be our God before we can build a House for Him. People who do not submit to Him can have no part in doing His work. It would be an affront to God and does injury to them by giving them a false sense of security. To have done many works for the King is of no value if, as Jesus concluded in the Sermon on the Mount, the King is obliged to say, "I never knew you; depart from Me, you who practice lawlessness" (Matthew 7:21-23).

Ezra 5:2 "With them were the prophets of God, helping them." This chapter sheds light on the true relationship between prophetic ministry and national life. The good work of building the Temple stopped for 16 years because of local opposition, so God led the prophets Haggai and Zechariah to tell the leaders and the people to press on with finishing the Temple. Judged by human standards, Zerubbabel and Joshua the High Priest were tempted to plead the difficulties of their situation and their need to obey the edict of the reigning king. Judged by the divine standard, they had no right to cease the work God called them to do. That is the special contribution the prophets of God are called to make to national life. They introduce into human thinking eternal realities that are all too easily forgotten: in this case that national strength consists in recognizing God's reign and relating rightly to it. Any government that forgets God is powerless to realize the highest conditions for its people. When all aspects of life are considered in the light of His revealed will and wisdom, they assume their proper proportions. Under the inspiration they received from Haggai's and Zechariah's biblical instruction, Zerubbabel and Joshua took up their work again on the new Temple and carried it through to completion. The opposition did not stop, but the prophets' ministry renewed the people's awareness of God's will,  and they went forward in spite of challenges from their enemies. A nation's moral life reaches the highest degree of strength when its people are rightly related to God and His purposes.

Ezra 6:14 "According to the commandment of the God of Israel, and according to the decree of Cyrus, Darius, and Artaxerxes, kings of Persia." The right to rebuild the Temple came directly from King Cyrus. The governor Tattenai, who was leading the opposition against the Temple work, either did not believe that Cyrus ever gave such a decree or thought it was long enough by now with a new king on the scene that the decree would be lost or buried in obscure records. The elders of the Jews, the eye of their God being upon them, persisted in the Temple reconstruction. Tattenai appealed to King Darius I that a search for Cyrus's decree should be made and Darius agreed, rather than merely ruling immediately one way or another. He proved to be an instrument of God in the same way Cyrus was, for the search he authorized was thorough. We know that because we are told where Cyrus's decree was found. The search naturally began in the archives at Babylon, but it was not there. It was eventually found in a fortress town. Imagine how easily the search could have been abandoned! But under divine compulsion the search continued until Cyrus's decree was found, vindicating the Jewish elders. Later, another royal decree from the following Persian king, Artaxerxes, made possible the coming of Ezra and the beginning of a new spiritual movement in Israel.

Ezra 7:6 "A skilled scribe." This phrase, descriptive of Ezra, is connected with a new order in the life of the nation. Under Israel's united kingdom, a scribe was a royal secretary. Under the divided kingdom, the scribes had become men whose business it was to copy and to study the laws of the nation. With Ezra a new order began. The scribes now had as their chief business interpreting the Law of God and applying it to all the changing conditions of life in Israel, for new circumstances were constantly arising. As messengers of the will of God, they eventually took the place of the prophets, for Haggai, Zechariah, and Malachi (who preached during Ezra's time) were the last prophets until the New Testament era 400 years later. The scribes did not receive new revelations, but instead explained and applied the old. Of this new order, Ezra was the founder and example. The word "skilled" highlighted above does not refer to Ezra's pen but to his mind. He was an expert in the exposition and application of God's Word. Notice Ezra's qualifications in verse 10: he "set his heart to study the Law of the Lord, to practice it, and to teach." Those were the priorities then, and they are the priorities now for Bible teachers explaining and applying "the Faith that the Lord has once for all entrusted to His people" (Jude 1:3).

Ezra 8:22 "I was ashamed to ask the king." Those words reveal the quiet strength and true greatness of Ezra. The journey before him and those who were about to accompany him was full of peril. Ezra was keenly aware of those potential problems, yet would not ask for help from an earthly king, however well-inclined that king might be. He said he was ashamed to do so because he had boasted to King Artaxerxes about the strength of the Lord God Almighty. That boast was by no means an empty one. To Ezra the matter of supreme importance was the honor of God in the mind of the king. The voluntary gifts of the king were welcome. They were expressions of the king's sense of the greatness of the God Ezra faithfully told him about. It would have been another matter if he asked the king to help him do what he had declared God was able to do for him. To ask for soldiers would have been to make a tacit confession of doubt in his own heart of God's ability or willingness to protect his enterprise. Ezra had no doubt so he made no such request. This is a good illustration of the dependence and independence of those who put their confidence in God. God never fails those who act in full dependence on Him, and so in complete independence of all others.

Ezra 9:4 "I sat there appalled until the evening offering." On Ezra's arrival in Jerusalem, officials there acquainted him with the failure and sin of the people. During the 80 or so years that elapsed since the return under Zerubbabel, there had been no return to idols, but there had been something close to it in the willful breaking of God's Law against intermarriage with the peoples of the land. The chief offenders had been the rulers themselves! When Ezra heard, he was filled with righteous indignation and profound grief. As the storm of his emotions subsided, in which he tore his garments and plucked at his beard, he settled into silent astonishment until the evening offering. Then he fell upon his knees before God and poured out his soul in prayer. That prayer is recorded in this chapter. Ezra identified himself with the people as he spoke of "our sins...our guilt." He reviewed the nation's history in contemplation as knelt before God, and saw it had been one long story of failure and consequent disaster. He then remembered and spoke of God's grace in making possible the return of the remnant through the favor of the Persian kings. Then the surging sorrow of his heart concerning the future and repeating past mistakes found expression in free and full confession. At last, without any petition for deliverance, he cast himself and the people upon God, recognizing His righteousness and their inability to stand before Him. This is a revelation of the only attitude in which a man may become a mediator: he must first have a biblical sense of sin, which is the outcome a deeper sense of the righteousness and grace of God. It finds expression in a confession of sin in which he identifies himself with the sinners.

Ezra 10:4 "Be of good courage and do it." The sincerity and passion of Ezra's vicarious repentance produced immediate results. The people had gathered about him during the long hours of the day, and became painfully aware of the enormity of their sin as they saw this godly man so deeply affected by it. At last one of their number, Shecaniah, spoke to Ezra, acknowledging the sin and suggesting the remedy. Using the words highlighted above, he urged Ezra to courageous action. It was true advice Ezra had been waiting for. He immediately responded, first calling them into a sacred covenant that they would stop their evil practice and carry out their covenant with fair and impartial justice. All the marriages contracted with the women of the land were annulled. They were legally declared invalid because the men had no right to enter into them. God's Law protected the Messianic line, but once the Messiah came, the New Testament or Covenant declared a new Law. One example of the difference the Gospel makes is "the unbelieving husband is sanctified through his wife, and the unbelieving wife is sanctified through her believing husband; for otherwise your children are unclean, but now they are holy" (1 Corinthians 7:14). That does not mean unbelieving spouses and children automatically become believers, but it reassures believers that they are not in a defiling situation like the people Ezra was ministering to. By following through on their covenant, those people were brought back into the place of separation. How widespread their sin was may be gathered from the list of the names that close this chapter. Priests, Levites, rulers, and people in general had been guilty. None was exempt from the reformation, which was carried out with complete thoroughness. Such action is the only satisfactory expression of sorrow over sin. The man who sets "his heart to study the Law of the Lord, to practice it, and to teach" (Ezra 7:10) will invariably bring himself into places where sorrow enters his heart, and intrepid courage is the only remedy for all concerned.