Day 238 & 239—We are in the eighth month of Bible reading, with more of Lamentations about the destruction of their land. And the beginning of the book of Ezekiel.
NOTE: Sundays and Mondays are posted together.
Day 238 – Lamentations 3 – 5 (more acrostics in chapters 3 & 4 of sorrow and hope, a prayer)
Lamentations 3 is also an acrostic of the 22-character Hebrew alphabet but with 3 verses per letter. In the middle of his wailing about affliction and horror (of himself and Judah)…Jeremiah turns to God’s faithfulness.
“I am the man who has seen affliction under the rod of his wrath.” “He has broken my bones.” He has made me dwell in darkness like the dead;” “He has made my chains heavy;” “He has made me desolate;” ” Though I call and cry for help, He shuts out my prayer;” ” He has made my paths crooked.” He has filled me with bitterness;” “my soul is bereft of peace;” “I have forgotten what happiness us;”
3:21-24
"But this I call to mind,
and therefore I have hope;
The steadfast love of the LORD never ceases,
His mercies never come to an end;
they are new every morning;
great is Your faithfulness.
The LORD is my portion, says my soul,
therefore I will hope in him.
The LORD is good to those who wait for Him,
to the soul who seeks Him.
3:31-33
For the Lord will not
cast off forever,
but though He causes grief, He will
have compassion
according to the abundance of His
steadfast love;
for He does not willingly afflict
or grieve the children of men.
“Let us test and examine our ways and return to the LORD! Let us lift up our hearts and hands to God in heaven; We have transgressed and rebelled….”
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Lamentations 4. (another acrostic) Again, the lamentation turns to the destruction of Jerusalem and her People.
“The holy stones lie scattered at the head of every street. The precious sons of Zion, worth their weight in fine gold, how they are regarded as earthen pots…” “Those who once feasted on delicacies perish in the streets; those brought up in purple embrace ash heaps.” “Happier were the victims of the sword than the victims of hunger…”
“The LORD gave full vent to His wrath; he poured out His hot anger, and He kindled a fire in Zion that consumed its foundations.”
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Lamentations 5 is a (non-acrostic) prayer to God for restoration.
“Remember, O LORD, what has befallen us…” “Our fathers sinned and are no more, and we bear their iniquities.” “The joy of our hearts has ceased; our dancing has been turned to mourning. The crown has fallen from our head; woe to us, for we have sinned!”
“But you, O LORD, reign forever….. restore us to yourself, O LORD, that we may be restored! Renew our days as of old…unless…You have utterly rejected us, and you remain exceedingly angry with us.
(The godly sorrow over sin was the beginning of that restoration.)
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Ezekiel 1 – 4 (The call & first visions of Ezekiel)
The book of Ezekiel backtracks some from where we finished in Jeremiah. Ezekiel was taken captive in the second siege of Jerusalem when Nebuchadnezzar took 10K Jews captive along with the surrendered King Jehoiachin. (Daniel was taken in the first invasion 7 years earlier). Ezekiel was 25 when taken, and God called him at 30 to serve as a prophet. (He would have assumed duties as a priest at that age, before captivity.) It would be about six more years before Nebuchadnezzar’s final siege and Jerusalem fell and was destroyed.
Ezekiel 1. While Ezekiel sat by a canal in Babylon, God showed him the first of his extraordinary visions. It’s a picture of the Glory of the LORD, and while many have tried to illustrate the vision, it stands as something unseeable and unknowable. A stormy wind out of the north, a great, bright cloud, and fire flashing continuously with what seemed like gleaming metal in the middle of the fire. (Got that picture?)
Then, the “likeness” (he can’t actually describe it) of four living creatures…human in form, but not really. They had 4 faces and 4 wings. Their legs were straight, with hard callouses on the bottom of their feet. And they sparkled.
Each had four wings; two went down, covering their hands and bodies. The other two wings were outstretched, tips touching the other creatures’ wings facing out at the four corners. The heads of these creatures each had four faces facing in four directions, human, lion, ox, and eagle. They could travel straight forward in any direction. They glowed like burning torches, and lightning shot from them.
And beside each creature, but not touching it, was a gleaming wheel. They actually looked like a wheel within a wheel. The rims were tall and awesome and had eyes all around them. (like a giant war machine)
Over the heads of the living creatures was a shining, awe-inspiring crystal platform. When it moved, the wings that covered the creatures’ bodies went into action with the sound of rushing water or the tumult of war. On that shining, crystal platform was a throne, like a sapphire. Seated on the throne was “a likeness with a human appearance.” And upward and downward from this being the appearance of gleaming, bright metal on fire. And a bright rainbow all around.
And Ezekiel concluded this was “the appearance of the likeness of the glory of the LORD.” And when he saw it, he fell flat on his face.
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Ezekiel 2 & 3. God speaks to Ezekiel and commissions him as a prophet. As God spoke to Ezekiel, the Spirit entered him and stood him on his feet. “Son of man, I send you to the people of Israel, to the nations of rebels, who have rebelled against me. Whether they hear or refuse to hear, they will know that a prophet has been among them.”
“Be not afraid of them nor of their words, nor be dismayed at their looks, for they are a rebellious house. You shall speak my words to them whether they hear or refuse to hear.”
Then the LORD gives Ezekiel a scroll with the words of lamentation, mourning, and woe written on both sides. Ezekiel is to eat it. He does, and it tastes like honey. Then God tells him to speak to the exiles of Israel (not Babylon), but they won’t listen to him. “Fear them not, nor be dismayed at their looks.”
Then a voice like an earthquake boomed, “BLESSED BE THE GLORY OF THE LORD FROM ITS PLACE.” Then the roaring of the angel wings and the wheels and the earthquake. And the Spirit lifted up Ezekiel and took him away to the exiles at the Chebar canal and sat him there – silent for seven days.
Then God told Ezekiel how he would be a WATCHMAN FOR ISRAEL. He was to warn them. If he doesn’t, THEIR blood will be on HIS hands.
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Ezekiel 4. In this chapter, Ezekiel is to perform a series of “object lessons.” He first builds a miniature replica of Jerusalem and places siegeworks around it, pressing in.
Next, he was to assume the role of a scapegoat, be bound with ropes, and lie on his left side facing North 390 days, symbolizing judgment for the number of years of Israel’s sin. Then he was to do the same on his right side for 40 days, symbolizing Judah’s years of sin.
(Whew, the life of a prophet was very hard!)