The Bible Recap - Day 214 (2 Kings 20-21) - Year 3
Episode Date: August 2, 2021SHOW NOTES: - All the info you need to START is on our website! - Join our PATREON family for bonus perks! - Get your TBR merch - Show credits FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: - Isaiah 38 - The Bible R...ecap - Episode 206 - Numbers 23:19 - Receive this month’s bonus content and memorize scripture with us by joining Patreon at the $10/month+ level! SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter TLC: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-GROUP: The Bible Recap is brought to you by D-Group - an international network of discipleship and accountability groups that meet weekly in homes and churches: Find or start one near you today!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
If you're reading a print Bible, it may have been challenging to flip backwards so far
today from where we were in Isaiah.
We've been reading Isaiah's prophecies about Israel being taken captive by Babylon, but
that hasn't happened yet.
He was foretelling it, but we're still about a hundred years off from when it actually
happens, which means we have a few final kings to meet.
Today we read the story of King Hezekiah's downfall, and if this all feels familiar to you,
it should, because we read it about a week ago in Isaiah 38 on day 206.
As a refresher, Hezekiah starts out as a 10 on the following God's
Gale, but plummets down to like a 2 in his final years. During the early years of his
reign, he was reestablishing worship and feast, tearing down high places, and generally not
missing a step. But then at one point, he gets sick, and God sends Isaiah to tell him it's
time to die. He's torn up about it. He begs God to let him live, and God says,
okay, you can have another 15 years.
Just put some smashed up figs on your boil
so you can recover.
Before we move on in his story,
let's investigate this a little bit
because it seems like God said something would happen
and it didn't happen.
So there are a couple of things that could be going on here.
A, God changes his mind.
Or B, God's plan all along
was to let Hezekiah live another 15 years,
and Isaiah's words of warning and Hezekiah's prayer
were both working in tandem to accomplish God's plan.
Option A, God changes his mind.
Does that happen?
Numbers 2319 is one of the many places in Scripture
that seemed to rule that out as an option.
It says, God is not man that he should lie, or a son of man that he should change his
mind.
Option B makes a lot more sense to me with everything we know about God so far.
First of all, we know that God often sends prophets to give a culture-appendence adjacent
to a promise of consequence, just
like with Jonah and Nineveh, so this isn't unusual.
But what I find so compelling in this story is the role Hezekiah's prayer plays in this
process.
I heard a pastor describe it like this.
Prayer is God's appointed means of achieving God's appointed plans.
In other words, our prayers are a tool in God's hand
to accomplish what He has planned for us.
By talking to Him, by confessing our sins
and sharing our fears and asking Him for what we want,
we are playing a vital role in His will being made manifest.
It may seem discouraging that we can't change God's mind,
and that might make you not want to pray at all.
If that's what's happening in your head right now, I want to encourage you to view prayer not as a means to get what you want from God, but to get God. And as an added bonus, if our prayers
are tools in his hands to accomplish his will, then this is actually all the more reason to pray,
because he will use it.
For his Akhaya, he lives another 15 years just as God promised.
But for the most part, he waste the blessing God generously gave him.
He spoolish and selfish and prideful.
He either disbelieves Isaiah's prophecy about his downfall, or he doesn't really care
since most of it pertains to what will happen after he dies.
After he dies, his son
manasseb a kems king and he's terrible. He rebuilds the high places after it took a
centuries to get rid of them. He consults with mediums and fortune tellers, he sets up an idol of
a shara in the temple for crying out loud. Oh, and he burns his sons as a sacrifice.
And here come his people following suit.
As goes the leader, so go the people.
And God promises them all that judgment is coming.
Next up is King Aemon, Manassas son and Hezekiah's grandson.
He's also horrible.
And eventually, a bunch of his servants kill him.
Then the people of the land are like,
too complete this game,
so they kill all the people who killed him
and put his son Josiah on the throne.
Today my God shot came when I was thinking about God's immense kindness to Hezekiah.
God knows how this will all play out over the next 15 years, but he still kind of Hezekiah
despite it all.
He hears the prayers of this selfish, arrogant man, and he answers them with a yes.
This also made me think about Hezekiah
and how I tend to be like him sometimes.
For instance, one of the things I find
most interesting about humanity
is that we spend so much time trying to avoid pain,
but pain is often where we draw near to God.
Pain is what prompted Hezekiah to pray
and to listen to the prophet Isaiah.
But when life is good and easy and we aren't desperately seeking God anymore, we begin
to feel a sense of distance.
We begin to grow complacent.
And before we know it, we remember what intimacy with God was like, but we can't quite access
it.
So we start to do our own thing.
We stop listening.
That's what Hezekiah did when he had all kinds of treasures and blessings
and suddenly felt like he didn't need to listen to God or his prophet anymore.
You know how people joke around by saying things like, not today, Satan, or talk about the
enemy attacking them? We almost always associate Satan with negative things. Flat tires and traffic
jams and bounce checks. We imagine him bringing all kinds of trials our way.
But what if he knows human nature better than we do?
What if his tactic is a more cunning one?
What if instead of trials, he brought abundance in a way that enables our hearts to get
callous and distracted, just like Hezekiahs?
What if the thing he wants to steal, kill, and destroy has less to do with our bank accounts
and more to do with our peace and our intimacy with God?
Satan certainly knows what's more valuable.
I want to learn from King Hezakaya's rise and fall that nothing is worth putting my
hope in besides God.
He's where the joy is.
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