Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Ezra 3

4 comments:

Unknown said...

"And they offered burnt offerings on it to the Lord, morning and evening." v3

"But many of the older priests, Levites and family leaders who had seen the first Temple cried when they saw the foundation of this Temple. Most of the other people were shouting with joy.... noone could tell the difference between the joyful shouting and the sad crying." v12-13

Why were these men crying? For joy? No.... the adjective used here is "sad". I believe they were sad with regret for slipping away. For having been a part of that whole gradual, downward spiral we just read about Solomon. They allowed their worldview to slowly become contaminated, poisoned, and blurred, and then they lost sight of everything that mattered and indeed God let them go.

And now I believe they are crying for wasted years, wasted pursuits, lost years of communion, peace, hope and joy with the Father.

So sad, and such a sobering lesson for us. To be cautious to not let ourselves be dulled and softened by a daily dose of secular worldview, to like them, come and make our fellowship offerings with Him at the beginning and end of each day. To hide His word in our hearts so that we will not sin against Him but will see clearly, through the lens of truth when the ways of this world threaten to lure and lull us into a state of apathy or self deception.

Mac an Rothaich said...

A moving image to imagine all the elders weeping in sorrow as the young cry out in anticipation and excitement. A chapter of new beginnings and old regrets colliding. Thank the Lord that once we repent and redirect our focuses to him he wipes away every tear, regret and sin! And then even the 'old' can be young in him again!

Unknown said...

LOVED this comment, Becky. Just beautiful and so true.

Denise said...

That verse (v.12) stuck out to me as well PC. My notes say:

"Fifty years after its destruction, the Temple was being rebuilt. Some of the older people remembered Solomon's Temple, and they wept because the new Temple would not be as glorious as the first one. But the beauty of the builing was not nearly as important to God as were the attitudes of the builders and worshipers. God cares more about who we are than what we accomplish. Our world is always changing, and once-magnificent accomplishments decay and disappear. Seek to serve God wholeheartedly. Then you won't need to compare your work with anyone else's."