5/21/2017

JOB – my Redeemer live

Job lived sometime after Joseph but before Moses, around 1650BC – as far as we can tell
Job lived in Uz, modern day area in the regions bordered by Saudi Arabia, Iran, Jordan and Syria

Demonstration: Give candy – instruct children not to open – tell story – take away candy when it's told that all Job had was taken – give back two at end of story to demonstrate twice as much as before...

Facts about JOB before he lost it all
  • Job is a very rich man – he has 10 kids (7 boys, 3 girls), 7,000 sheep, 3,000 camels, 500 yoke of oxen, 500 burros (burden/pack animals) and many servants, so much so that “this man was the greatest of all the men of the east.” (1.1-3)
  • 1-2; Job is blameless, righteous and honors God (1.1) – so righteous, in fact that the Lord says to the devil in (1.8) “Hast thou considered my servant Job, that there is none like him in the earth, a perfect and upright man, one that feareth God, and escheweth evil?”
  • But his children were not so righteous – in fact they pretty much went against all the righteous ways of their Father (1.4, 5)
  • “yeah, yeah,” the devil says, “but you have put a hedge about him and all his possession and this is why he obeys you...put forth thine hand and touch all the he has, and he will curse thee to thy face.” (1.11, 12)
  • The Lord says, “okay, all that he hath is in thy power; only ...you can't take his life...” (1.12)
  • The “evil/bad” things begin; Job's children were all killed by the sword, burned up with the animals and servants or carried away and killed by tornadoes, his body was ravaged by sores that brought much torment...in short – Job lost all he had in a single day, including his health (1.13-19, 2.4-8)
  • His wife is a real comfort she says, “...curse God and die.” (2.9)
  • His friends, so-called begin to examine why all the calamity has come to Job – maybe he sinned, surely he sinned to have so many bad/awful things happen at one time.
  • His friends, so-called, also just sit and stare at him for days, pondering why he must suffer so.
  • Job replies “What? Shall we receive good at the hand of God and shall we not receive evil? The Lord gave, and the Lord hath taken away; blessed be the name of the Lord.” (1.21, 2.10)

What would you think, if you are saved and had been living right and God began to take away your possessions, your family, your encouragement?
Would you still serve him?
Is this treatment just? Is God just?
Why do bad things happen to good people?
  • Job knew he was innocent and that God was just – He remains faithful to God, regardless of his suffering (27.1-4) – thought he does weaken briefly at the onslaught of accusations by his so-called “friends”
  • One of his friends does point out that “adversity builds character” and this must be why God has visited so much suffering on Job (C32-37)
  • while this makes sense, it offers no consolation to Job
  • The Lord rebukes Job when he questions God and says “Where were you when I laid the foundations of the earth...and the stars sang...?” (38.4-7)

Does God owe anyone, any explantion about why bad things come into their lives?
  • He designed a perfect world but sin messed it up.
  • Job confesses and sides with God against himself, he says “I abhor myself and repent in dust and ashes.” (42.6)

Then, look what the Lord does for this righteous man who has suffered and humbly admitted, God is just in all He brings to our lives:

  • ...the Lord turned the captivity of Job...(and) gave Job twice as much as he had before...14,000 sheep (instead of 7,000), 6,000 camels (instead of 3,000) , 1,000 yoke of oxen (instead of 500), 1,000 donkey's (instead of 500), 7 boys/3 girls (even though he lost 10, he got back 10, he fathered 20 children!)” (42.10-13)

Give personal testimony:
  • age 6 – children's church, going to altar – being baptized – nothing changed
  • growing up – always in church, always in Sunday school, always at prayer meetings, always in revival meetings, singing in choir...but lost
  • age 15 – Wed pm, man preached from about the rich man in hell – went to altar asked the Lord to send someone to help me – no one did – got a nose bleed and had take care of that – nothing changed
  • age 18 – coming home from choir practice, Thursday pm July 1 1982 – praying in general, then for a family member I knew was lost – praying real big and the Lord said, “Yes, he is lost but so are you!” God's big eternal finger was pointed right at me. I couldn't deny He was truth. So, I took sides with the Lord against myself and admitted I needed Him in my heart.
  • The only way to describe the change is that a light went on in my heart and it was as if I was washed with the coolest, gentlest water – I felt clean, new, different
  • Went home, told momma, called the pastor, gave testimony that Sunday and have never looked back. Some say they have doubted, I can honestly say I never have. Doesn't mean I've always walked as straight and narrow as I should but it does mean “He's still working on me” and I can testify to that!

The only thing that matters in this life is if you are ready to live for Him.
The only thing that matters is that you are not ready to die if you are not ready to live.
Job thought he was ready to die until it was all taken away.
In the end he understood that if one is not ready to die, one is not ready to live.

If He took everything away from you, parents, sibilings, health would you trust Him
Could you say, like Job “the Lord giveth and the Lord taketh away, blessed be the Name of the Lord?
If you knew you might never draw another breath, could you say “I know my Redeemer liveth?
Do you know your Redeemer lives?
  • The truth is, He got out of the grave on the first Easter Sunday morning.
  • His suffering and torment, was over. He conquered death as our Passover Lamb.

4/05/2017

Esther - Mordecai (the intercessor)


100 years after Babylonian exile – during the time of Ezra and Nehemiah
Story set in Susa, the Persial Capital – modern day Iran
Main characters: Esther (Hadassah, her Hebrew name)
Mordecai, the cousin
King Ahaserus of Persia
Haman, the evil interloper

The story opens with a big party or banquet feast.

King Ahaserus: “I am the great King of Persia – everybody loves me, I can have or do anything I want because I am King. I am good looking, smart and wise. Doesn't everyone agree?”

The party goers: “Yes, of course my King. You are handsome, smart and wise. There is none like you in all the world.”

King Ahaserus: “I am so wonderful. I have the most beautiful wife in all the land. Bring me Queen Vashti!”

But Queen Vashti will not come – she knows the King is drunk and only wants to brag about her beauty and parade her in front of all the party goers, just to make himself look good.

King Ahaserus: “What do you mean she won't come? I am the King! I demand that she come! If she does not come then she will be banished from my sight – she will be exiled out of this land – I willfind another Queen!”

So, King Ahaserus holds a sorty of “beauty pageant” to look for a beautiful young queen that will once again make him look good.

Cousin Mordecai: “Hadassah, the King is looking for a new queen – he wants only the purest girls – you must hide yourself and if you are discovered, never let the Babylonians know you are a Jew or that you name is Hadassah. You must be known as Esther if you enter the King's court.”

So it is that Hadassah/Esther is taken with the other young girls in the land.

King Ahaserus: “Look at all these beautiful young ladies. But that one over there, yes, that one, bring her to me! Yes, this beautiful young lady will be my Queen.”

Thus, King Ahaserus and Esther are united in matrimony.
As it happens, the Lord has placed Esther's cousin Mordecai in a unique position in the Persian Palace. He is in the King's court as one of the Kings scribes. As he is in and out of the palace he overhears a plot to kill the King!

Mordecai: “Esther, I have overheard a plot to kill the King. You must tell him this and he will be spared being murdered by poision!”

Haman the Agagite (a descendant of the Canaanites that had troubled Israel for a long time 1 Sam 25) “I am Chief Advisor to the King. I answer to no one but the King. Everyone but the King must bow to me!”

But Mordecai refuses to bow whenever Haman passes by. You see, Mordecai knows that he should bow to only One, that is the God of the Jews. This so infuriates Haman that he begins to think of a way to get rid of Mordecai.

Haman: “That lousy, pompous old Jew! Why won't he bow to me? Doesn't he know who I am. I am second only to the King? I could have him killed if I wish. But then I would never see him bow to me. I will make him pay. I know, I'll destroy the Jews because if this one man won't bow, the others might not bow either and I'll never have control over these people!”

So Haman drafts a decree or law to destroy all the Jews and persuades the King to sign it. Unknown to Haman, he has decreed that the King's own wife, Esther is to be killed.
Since Esther/Hadassha, has not yet revealed her heritage, what is to be done? Based on a “roll of the dice” for the day of the event, the Jews are scheduled for execution about a year from the date wicked Haman had this law signed.

Esther and Mordecai realize that she must now reveal her true identity as a Jew to the King. But to approach the King unsummoned is to die.

Esther: “Cousin Mordecai, how am I to go unsummoned to the King? You know it is forbidden and I could lose my life for this act.”

Mordecai: “My dearest Hadassah, maybe you have come into the Kings palace for just such a time as this.”

Esther: “Cousin Mordecai, yes, it is dangerous and yes, I could lose my life. But in my heart I am determined that “if I perish, I perish, but I must try.” I will make a feast and invite my King and Haman and tell of my petition to spare my people. It is then that I will make my heritage known.”

After learning of being invited to a banquet given by the Queen, Haman proudly struts home to tell his family. On the way home, once again, he encounters that insolent old Jew, Mordecai, who will not bow to him. It makes him so made he orders a gallows built to hang Mordecai. One way or another, this Jew must die!

But one night before the Queen's banquet, the King has trouble sleeping. He orders that the records/chronicles be read to him. While listening to the records/chronicles being read, the King zeroes in on the story of his scribe, Mordecai and how he stopped a plot to kill the King. The next day he looks to his right hand mane, Haman, to give him counsel.

King Ahaserus: “Haman, there is a man I understand has done a great service for the King. What should be done for a man in whom the King delighteth to honor?”

Haman: “If I please the King, let a royal robe be brought, a horse from the King's own stable for the man to ride and a crown be put on the man's head and let this man ride through the streets being led by one saying 'this is the man in whom the King delighteth to honor.'”

King Ahaserus: “So it is written, so it is done. Haman gather all this and give and for Mordecai, the scribe and say 'this is the man in whom the King delighteth to honor.'”

So, Haman had to do that for Mordecai!
Haman had to parade the streets with Mordecai in the Kings robe, a crown and the Kings horse under him and say “a man in whom the King delighteth to honor,” to the old Jew who would not bow to him! Boy was he not a little upset!

Back to the Queen's banquet:

King Ahaserus: “Esther, my Queen, what a deligthful feast. Now, what is it you wish to ask me?”

Remember, Haman is at this banquet too!

Esther: “If I have found favor in thy sight, O King, and if it please the King, let my life be given me at my petition and my people at my request. For we are sold, I and my people, to be destroyed, to be slain and to perish.” (7.3,4)

King Ahaserus: “Who is he, and where is he, that durst presume in his heart to do so?”

Esther: “The adversary and enemy this wicked Haman.”

And the King arising from the banquet – realizing the entire matter...had Haman hanged on the gallows that he had built for Mordecai. (7.7-10)

Esther: “If it please the King, and if I have found favor in his sight...let the decree written by Haman for the destruction of the Jews, be reversed.” (8.5)

So it was written, so it was done.

Because of Divine Providence in putting an exiled people in the the King's household, an ENTIRE race of people, the Jews were spared.

  1. How would you feel if you had to be taken from your home to live among strangers who did not believe as you did?
  2. Would you remain true to your beliefs or conform to riducule?
  3. Did you know that God is not mentioned once in the book of Esther?
  4. Do you believe He ordained events to preserve a race of people?
  5. How do you know thing? Was it mere coincidence that placed Esther in the kings palace?
  6. Is it coincidence or Divine Providence, that orders events in your life?
  7. Who was the intercessor or guide in this story? Who gave Esther direction? (Mordecai)
  8. Who is our intercessor or go between in talking with God? (Jesus)
  9. Who was the mountpiece for Mordecai? (Esther)
  10. Who speaks for the intercessor to God? Who speaks for Jesus from the pulpit? (preacher)
  11. Who, in the story, is a type of the Lord Jesus as intercessor? (Mordecai)
  12. Who is witness of what goes on in the King's house? (Esther)
  13. Who is to be a witness for the Lord Jesus? (believers/christians)
  14. If you don't know the King, the Lord Jesus, how can you testify of Him?

Nehemiah - wallbuilder

  • (1.8) Because Nehemiah, like Ezra the Scribe, knew the law of God that said He would “scatter them among the nations” (Deut 4.25-27), also understood why the people were captive and the walls of Jerusalem were “broken down.”
  • God's unchangeable law of sowing and reaping (Gal 6.7) applies to all
  • Have you seen things go wrong because you did wrong?
  • (1.11) Nehemiah was the cupbearer for King Artaxerxes – and while this may seem a noble position be aware many wanted to poison the King – so the cupbearer who also “tasted” the contents of the King's cup – lived with the possibility of death every day!
  • This could also be a picture of the sinner under the condemnation of God! “the wages of sin is death” (Rom 6.23)
  • Are you living under the condemnation of God's law? Are you saved?
  • (2.1-8) But God in wrath remembered mercy. N. was sent by the King to survey the damage and gather the materials needed to rebuild the wall. The King gave N. “letters of passage” for each step of the journey from Babylon to Jerusalem. Just as we have God's Word to guide us safely to heaven in the journey of life.
  • (2.10, 19, 4.1, 62) As always, Satan attempts to halt N's progress. Sanballat & Tobiah did not want N to rebuild, most likely for no other reason than jealousy.
  • Has grace been applied to your life of “broken down walls?”
  • (2.11-16) N kept all the details to himself and examined what was to be done by cover of night. So it is when the Lord gives one a directive, one d/n boast and say, “Look what I've done!” Because without God you could do nothing. I also believe another reason for surveying what should be done by cover of night was so that Satan c/n get the upper hand in the details. To keep the devil from knowing what God has put on YOUR heart, is another reason not to brag!
  • Do you brag about doing good deeds or are you satisfied that you did what was right and need no praise?
  • (2.20) So, they began to build, according to the encouragement of God's man.
  • Are you encouraged by the preacher's message to “build” in the work God gave for your life?
  • (4.2) When you work for the Lord – you know you are doing a thing He has placed on your heart – prepare to be mocked – as Sanballat and Tobiah mocked the Jews.
  • (4.6) But, because of the encouragement of the preacher and God's Word, “the people had a mind to work.”
  • (4.7,8) Because of the fierceness of the enemy, God's people had to “watch & pray” (Mt 26.41). They worked with a weapon in one hand and laboring tools in the other. (4.17)
  • Be warned to NEVER let down your guard when all seems to be going well – thank God for the good stuff and keep going.
  • It is Satan's mission to exploit Christian's at their weakest point.
  • Do you continue to pray and read God's Word when things are going well and especially when they aren't?
  • (6.15) God honored their faithfulness and the work was finished in 52 days! No electricity, machines or running water. No grocery stores, cars or fast-food restaurants.
  • What have you faithfully put your hand to that God honored?
  • What walls have you built to strengthen your Christian walk and to keep the enemy out?

Ezra - Scribe

scribe: a public writer. In Ezra's day: (8.1) A writer and a doctor of the law; a man of learning; one skilled in the law; one who read and explained the law to the people.

Ezra's job was to unify the people with the Word of God

The Book of Ezra describes how he led a group of Judean exiles living in Babylon to their home city of Jerusalem (Ezra 2.1, 8.2-14) where he preached observance of the God's law, exhorting the Israelite people to be sure to follow the Law and not to intermarry with people of other lands and religions that did not know God.

Decree to rebuild the temple and the people's reaction:
Ezra 1.3 – Cyrus, King of Persia to build a house to the Lord
  • 3.4 offerings to the Lord
  • 3.10-11 worshiped in song with the foundation was laid
  • 3.13 they shouted and wept for happiness
What is your reaction to the Word of the Lord?

Satan's interference:
  • Artaxerxes, King of Persia sent a letter from Zerubbabel, an elder of Jerusalem, saying the people had sinned and didn't deserve a place to worship and most certainly would not pay taxes! (4.1-13)
  • Then a letter was sent to the next King, King Darius, explaining how the first temple was destroyed and they were unable to rebuild at that time. (5.1-17)
  • But this King had a heart for the subjects of his kingdom and King Darius decreed by for the temple to be rebuilt. (6.1-13)
What do you do when Satan interfere's with your desire to do a thing for God?

But somebody was praying:
  • And the elders of the Jews builded, … (6.14) God always used the elders to direct the younger folks in His work. In building the temple, listen to the Word of the Lord about how it is to be financed:
  • let the expenses be given out of the king's house.” (6.4) Where else but the “king's storehouse” do we find our every need met?
Are you always mindful of listening to your “elders?” Do you agree they usually know more than you do about life?

The work was completed during the reign of
  • 3 Persian Kings: Cyrus, Darius and Artaxerxes,
  • two prophets; Haggai, Zechariah and
  • one scribe, EZRA (6.14)

Ezra described (7.6, 10, 12)
  • ...a ready scribe in the law of Moses,
  • Ezra had prepared his heart
Is your heart “ready to receive God's Word in faith and obedience?

God answered their heart's desire: (7.13)
King Artaxerses gave leave to “All that were minded, of their own free will to go to Jerusalem (to worship)”

Ezra's response to answered prayer: (7.27, 28)
  • Ezra's prayer of thanksgiving for the Lord working out all the details to rebuild the temple and restore the captives back to their home.
  • Blessed be the Lord God of our fathers, which hath put such a thing as this in the king's heart, to beautify the house of the Lord which is in Jerusalem:
  • And hath extended mercy unto me before the king, and his counsellors, and ...might princes. And I was strengthened as the hand of the Lord my God was upon me...
How do you respond to answered prayer? Have you ever had a prayer answered?

After all the effort and answered prayer made
on their behalf for a place to worship...

The people's response after answered prayer: (9.1-3)
After all this, the people sinned in that the men began to take wives of the people of other lands, in direct disobedience to the law, thus Ezra set down and tore his cloths and plucked off the hair in his head and his beard

Ezra's petition for the sins of the people (9.5-15, 10.1-19)
He begins to beg God for the sins of the people. In anguish he tears his clothes, tears out his hair and his beard. The people seeing the results of their sins against God by way of the prophet's actions and prayers, repented.
So, the people were ready, to begin the building of the Temple.
Would you agree, God is One of mercy?
Why?
What was His response even though the people sinned?
Who prayed for them?
Who petitioned the Lord to forgive them?
Who interceded for them?
Who intercedes for us for mercy from heaven? The Lord Jesus







3/20/2017

I/II Kings, I/II Chronicles - Reigning King

SAMUEL
Remember in the book of Samuel, the people told the old prophet, “we don't want Judges or Prophets, we want a King to rule over us.” - God gave them Saul who became proud in his own eyes and the Kingdom was taken from him. This paved the way for the King God planned for Israel all along, the great grandson of Ruth and Boaz, King David – who is know as the greatest King Israel ever had. Then, David's son, Solomon took the throne and was known far and wide as the wisest man on earth.  King Solomon is also the man God appointed to build the Temple for the people to have a place to come together to worship the Lord. (I Kings 5-8).   It seemed things were going well for Israel but not so...now the reign of kings, good and bad in the book of Kings/Chronicles.   King Solomon began marrying daughters of rival kingdoms to create an alliance with Israel and in the process worships other Gods (I Kings 9-11).
DAVID
SOLOMON
After the death of King Solomon – other Kings, good and bad, reigned – the Kingdom was split into two parts: Israel in the North, Judah in the South. (I Kings 12-16)








In His everlasting mercy, the Lord sends two more fiery prophets, first Elijah – who battles wicked King Ahab and his wife, Jezebel and second, Elisha. (I Kings 18 – II Kings 2) – who watches Elijah go to heaven in a whirlwind on a “chariot of fire and horses of fires,” (II Kings 2.12).


ELIJAH - AHAZ
ELISHA










HEZEKIAH
Then, Hezekiah (II Kings18.4) who “brake the images” of the high places.
JABEZ
Finally, the “Chronicles” of good men such as Jabez, an ordinary man, not a prophet, priest or king, who was “more honorable than his brethren” and prayed a prayer God granted, that would keep him clean from evil. (II Chr 4.10). Are you such an one for the Lord Jesus?

In all this, we see the Lord Jesus as He is and will be when He comes again, Reigning King.
We have studied Prophets of God's choosing to point His people to Himself, the Lord God Jehovah.
We have studied good kings and bad kings and good kings who ended up bad kings. They are all “types” of the one true King, the Lord Jesus.
As Prophet, Jesus knows all, is before all and knows what will be.
As King, Jesus is above all and Authority over all.

What characteristics of the individuals we have studied so far make you think of Jesus?