The Bible Recap - Day 272 (Nehemiah 11-13, Psalm 126) - Year 5
Episode Date: September 29, 2023SHOW NOTES: - Head to our Start Page for all you need to begin! - Join the RECAPtains - Check out the TBR Store - Show credits - To enter to win a trip to the Museum of the Bible, click here! ... FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: - Article: King David's Palace is Found* *Should open on a computer, but possibly not a phone. - Article: 7th Century BC Stamp Bearing Name of King David's Son Unearthed in Jerusalem - Video: Malachi Overview - Invite your friends to join us: NT Reading Plan - Sign up to receive the Priority Time Toolkit 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! DISCLAIMER: The Bible Recap, Tara-Leigh Cobble, and affiliates are not a church, pastor, spiritual authority, or counseling service. Listeners and viewers consume this content on a voluntary basis and assume all responsibility for the resulting consequences and impact.
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble, and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
Today we finished our 37th and 38th books of the Bible.
When Chapter 11 opens today, we zoom in on some real estate details.
The leaders live in Jerusalem, but they need some other people to live there, too, otherwise
who's going to open all the Starbucks on every street corner? Actually,
it probably has more to do with keeping a strong military presence in the city, but
soldiers need coffee.
Okay, moving on. So they have a lottery and 10% of the people are chosen to move to the
city while some others go voluntarily. All in all, about 3,000 men are counted as living
in Jerusalem at this point. But the total population is probably around two to three times that amount,
since Nehemiah's count doesn't appear to include people who can't serve in the military.
The other 90% of the population lives in the surrounding towns and villages.
After everybody gets unpacked, Nehemiah holds a grand opening ceremony to dedicate the
newly finished wall. The Levites and priests and singers all gather for the huge event, singing
and praising God,
and one of the seemingly insignificant details listed in this passage recently served a huge
purpose.
1237 says,
At the fountain gate, they went up straight before them by the stairs of the city of David,
at the ascent of the wall, above the house of David, to the Watergate on the east.
When we read that passage today, it's easy to be like blah, blah, blah, get onto the good
stuff.
But little things like this that are eyes and ears fly past have made significant impact
on recovering the history of ancient Jerusalem.
That verse in particular helped archaeologists locate an unearthed King David's palace
less than two decades ago.
Discoveries like that help us understand Scripture better,
and even sometimes help us understand God better too.
When I read that passage, I can picture myself standing there
in his palace, looking east over the rooftops.
We'll link to an article about this in the show notes.
And by the way, in this same spot earlier this year,
they were covered in ancient seal used by King David's son.
We'll link to an article about that too.
Nehemiah and his people are standing in that spot
for the big dedication of the wall.
They march along the broad wall,
which you can still see in Jerusalem today,
and around the people.
They offer sacrifices and shouts of praise
so loud that the neighboring towns can even hear it.
It's like Coachella, but not at all.
There's also a bit of a job they are going on.
They appoint people to new jobs like Storehouse Manager, Gay Keeper, Singer, Musician, and
all the people are thrilled about it, because this signals to them that things are really
moving forward with their new life in the old city.
While they're all gathered around, they decide to read from the Torah again so they can
keep learning what God says.
And they find out that, oopsie, they're accidentally disobeying some of his commands.
But as soon as they're informed about their sin, they set out to obey God.
Meanwhile, remember Tobiah, the neighboring governor who taunted Nehemiah and tried to stop him for me building the wall?
He's back!
While Nehemiah was out of town on a business trip, Tobiah plotted with an insider to build a room for him in the temple courts.
Are you kidding me?
Nehemiah is furious, and with good cause, this is righteous anger.
He throws all Tobias furniture out into the street.
Not gonna lie, I kinda wanted him to set it on fire.
Then he purifies things and puts everything back in order.
He also finds out that the Levites and singers
haven't been paid or fed.
They're having to fend for themselves.
This is not what the people promised they would do
when he read them the Torah, and they made a covenant to give generously to the
temple and its workers. He calls all the people to account and they bring what they've been
withholding. We're already starting to see that things are not going according to what
the people promised, so it's no surprise that they're working on the Sabbath again.
Not only that, but every Sabbath is basically a big flea market where all the people from
outside town bring in stuff to sell to the locals.
So Nia Maya first warned the locals that they're inviting disaster because they're breaking
the covenant.
Then he starts locking the city gates every Sabbath so the outsiders can't come in and
sell things to the locals.
He threatens to physically harm them if they come back again.
He'd rather fight the vendors personally than have God bring punishment on Jerusalem
for breaking the covenant.
He knows what exile is like, and it's no good.
While they're all up to their old sins,
they also circle back around to marrying people
who don't love Yahweh.
They're having children with those people,
and they aren't teaching their children
about Yahweh in his ways either.
This was the biggest problem of all for Nehemiah,
because this has indefinite consequences.
With this, he can't just lock a gate and solve things. This will impact generations. He's angrier
than we've seen him in the whole book so far. Back when Tobiah and Sam Ballet were taunting
him, he just ignored them and kept working. But this time, when God's people are rebelling
against the covenant they made with God, Nehemiah takes matters into his own hands. Literally.
He takes hair, their hair, into his own hands. Literally, he takes hair, their hair, into
his own hands. He curses at them and beats some of them up physically and pulls out their hair.
Then he makes them promise that they'll knock it off. He reminds them how this has gone poorly
in the past, even with some of their most noteworthy ancestors like Solomon. He knows how this story
ends, and had rather get into a few fist fights hoping to stop it, then see the demise of Israel as a nation.
Scripture doesn't defend or rebuke Nehemiah's violence.
It sounds like righteous anger for sure, but it's hard to know exactly which of his actions
were God's directives.
He seems to have a clear conscience about it, though, because he keeps asking God to
remember that he did these things, that he cared about justice and obedience, and he asked
God to remember what the people have done as well.
Psalm 126 is a song praising God for bringing a restoration to the people of Israel.
Their mouths are filled with shouts of joy.
We saw that today when their praise could be heard from far away, but even the song acknowledges
that there are still things yet to be restored.
And in all of today's reading, we saw that the people have had everything given back to
them, but they're still the same people. Nothing much has really changed. They've just moved a few times.
But no matter where they go, they take their same stone hearts with them. They need the new hearts
of flesh God promised them. What was your God shot today? Mine was during their praise service
at the dedication of the new wall. In 1243, it says they offered great sacrifices
that day and rejoiced for God had made them rejoice with great joy. Here's what I love
about that first. It says God made them rejoice with great joy. How did he do that? Did he
legislate it? Did he force them to rejoice with great joy? Did he threaten them with punishment
if they weren't filled with great joy? You can't force someone to have joy.
You could maybe force someone to act to joyful, but you can't force them to be joyful.
So when it says that God made them rejoice with great joy, it's a testament to His work
on them at a heart level.
He produces a joy in them that they wouldn't have otherwise.
Yes, they've still got miles to go, but don't we all?
Yes, they still fail and break his laws,
but their hearts know deep down
that he's where the joy is.
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