March 3, 2025; Day 2 of Week 49
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Daily Dose of Hope
March 3, 2025
Day 2 of Week 49
Scripture: Ezra 7-10; Psalm 97; Revelation 4
Welcome back, friends, to the Daily Dose of Hope, the devotional and podcast that complements the New Hope daily Bible reading plan.
For our Old Testament Scripture, we head back to the book of Ezra. In chapters 7 and 8, we read about Ezra returning to Jerusalem. The king of Persia has given him and any Jews who want to return permission to do so. But it’s quite a journey. Ezra records all that come with him.
One interesting thing about Ezra is that he was a leader who invested in his people. He didn’t just tell the people what to do, he actually taught the people Scripture and how to interpret it. Thus, as we move into chapters 9 and 10, the people are now recognizing that what is going on among them is wrong. They see how the Jewish people are out of alignment with God’s law and they decide to bring their concerns to Ezra.
What’s the issue? Well, the people of God have been intermarrying with all the pagan nations and cultures around them. They have given their daughters in marriage to Canaanites and Hittites. They have accepted Moabite and Amorite men as husbands for their daughters. God asked them to be a holy, set-apart people and they have done anything but. There are certainly instances in the Old Testament when Jewish people have married foreigners(think Ruth the Moabite) and things have turned out well. But in those cases, the foreign spouse became dedicated to the one true God. In other instances, when things didn’t turn out so well (think Solomon and all his wives), it was because the spouses remained pagan and brought their pagan gods into the home. It is hard to be holy and set apart when Pagan influences are at your kitchen table and in your bedroom.
As believers in Jesus, we are also to be set apart people. That doesn’t mean we isolate ourselves from the world, but rather we live differently. Our values are different than the world’s values. Our lifestyle should be different from the world’s lifestyle. When it comes to marriage, the New Testament also implores believers to marry other believers. It isn’t a command but it makes sense. When a person of one worldview covenants with the person of a totally different worldview, it can be really, really hard. When one spouse is committed to Jesus and the other isn’t, there will be value clashes.
Think about your own relationships, maybe your marriage. How might your pray for those closest to you in regard to faith? We know that God isn’t done with anyone yet. What relationship is heavy on your heart right now? Take a moment and pray.
Back to the Scripture - the people truly loved and respected Ezra and when they see how distraught he is, they also become distraught. Ezra really doesn’t have to force the people to acknowledge their wrongdoing. They know their guilt before God is significant. They have intermarried with people who worship other gods. They have broken God’s law and they know it. Now what is to be done?
Ezra as the leader guides the people but doesn’t force them into any specific solution. It is the people themselves who decide that the foreign wives and their children should be banned from their fellowship. This is a hard one for me. Presumably, some of these are innocents. It wasn’t their fault that their father decided to marry a foreign woman. And yet, they would be sent away. Sin always has consequences.
I think that is a hard lesson for us. Sin always has consequences. Sometimes, the consequences are more severe than others. In our case, we can receive forgiveness through Jesus Christ and be reconciled to God but that doesn’t remove the consequences for ourselves and others. Sin always has consequences.
Now we head to our New Testament reading in Revelation. We’ve moved from the concerns of the churches to the heavenly realm in chapter 4. John describes heaven’s throne room with God on the throne. Human words fail John at this moment and he can only describe God as having the appearance of jasper and ruby. I’ve tried to envision this. Jasper is a beautiful stone that can be either a deep red or dark green. Ruby is obviously a brilliant red. So God, in John’s vision, includes the flashing radiance of reds and greens. Take a moment, close your eyes, and try to imagine what John is seeing.
The main throne is surrounded by twenty-four other thrones occupied by twenty-four elders. Scholars have debated for years as to who these elders might be but it probably isn’t all that relevant. What is relevant is the majesty of it all. From that central throne, there are flashes of lightning and the sounds of thunder. There are seven blazing lamps around the throne, symbolizing the Holy Spirit. What is most interesting to me are the four creatures who surround the throne. They seem to serve as guardians of some kind. They are covered with eyes and they each have six wings. They are similar to the fantastic beings described in Ezekiel (chapters 1 and 10). And these beings never stop praising God. All the time, never-ending praise: “Holy, holy, holy is the Lord God Almighty,’ who was, and is, and is to come.”
When the four creatures give praise, the twenty-four elders do as well, falling down and worshiping God. Think of it–praise to God all the time; continuous, nonstop worship and praise. In heaven, God is being worshiped constantly without breaks or pauses. Why? Because he is God. Because he is creator, because he is sustainer, because he is Savior and Lord of all. Ceaseless praise.
How much time do we spend praising God in our lives on earth? Be honest. What’s your praise level? How might we begin to worship and praise God on a continuous (or at least daily) basis? How might this change how we view God? How might this change how we view the world?
Blessings,
Pastor Vicki




