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Be Like Ezra Episode #167

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Content provided by Jan L. Burt - host of The Burt (Not Ernie) Show. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Jan L. Burt - host of The Burt (Not Ernie) Show or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
Fig Tree Books & More location info Fig Tree Books & More on Instagram

Well hey there! Hello to you today and I hope you had a wonderful Thanksgiving, spent time resting and also able to spend time with loved ones, and of course had the chance to express your thankfulness for what God has done and will do in your life. He is good and He acts out of His lovingkindness toward His children, and that is something that we should never stop being thankful for. I really do believe that Christians ought to be the most thankful people on this planet. Thanksgiving is a time to express that thankfulness in all sorts of ways, and I do hope yours was wonderful. I am thankful for you.

You’re listening to The Burt (Not Ernie) Show, part of the Spark Network, now playing in the Edifi app. Today’s episode is sponsored by Fig Tree Books & More, located in Branson. If you are planning a trip to the Branson area at any point in the future, I hope you get the chance to swing by Fig Tree Books. You will not regret it, that I can promise you! It’s more than a bookstore, it’s an experience with some of the most rock-solid, Jesus loving believers I have ever met. I’ll have the link to their Instagram here in the show notes as well as a link to their exact address. Fig Tree Books & More, thank you for the work you are doing for the Kingdom, for every prayer you pray with customers, for every product selection you make with such care, for reaching your community and for being a haven for those visiting the Branson area. May the Lord bless you and the work of your hands in ways beyond your wildest imagination. I am thankful for you! This is episode number 167, and today we are looking at the book of Ezra.

The Amplified Bible is what I’ll be referencing for this episode, and I’m going to read a couple of verses from Ezra chapter 7. Verses 9b and 10 say this: …because the good hand of his God was on him. For Ezra had set his heart (resolved) to study and interpret the Law the the LORD, and to practice it and teach His statutes and ordinances in Israel.

Ezra lived in captivity in Babylon, so think about Daniel and his life in Babylon and Nehemiah and his calling to work on rebuilding the Temple at the end of this season of Israel’s captivity. Ezra was alive in this same era. He left Babylon and traveled for months to get to Israel, according to verse 9 of Ezra chapter 7. Months of travel. What do we do for months? Like, what’s worth that to us? Granted this was normal in that day, travel from Iraq (which is modern day Babylon) to Israel just took that long, and it doesn’t take that long today, but it is worth thinking about, this idea of what is worth a long journey for us? And have you considered as of late that you are on a long journey? A journey home, to eternity with Jesus. You are on a long trek, you are a pilgrim on your way to your final destination. We as Christians are, in a way, sort of like Ezra. And the destination is more than worth the long, hard road we walk to get there.

When the Temple was rebuilt at the end of this time of captivity, as we see in Ezra chapter 6, the Temple was completed and dedicated and Passover observed in the homeland of the Jewish people once again, then we move into chapter 7 and we see Ezra making the journey to Jerusalem.

The promise in these verses is that when we, God’s people who bear His name, have the good hand of our God on us (not the heavy hand of the Lord on us, as we find in the Bible at times, but the good hand of our God), we are able to do hard things for His Kingdom and His purposes. Ezra had set his heart to study and interpret the Law, the first five books of the Bible written by Moses, the Torah. How about us? Are we set like that? Do we have our hearts set on studying the Bible? It’s easy to answer, yes or no, there is no middle ground or wiggle room on this…the question begs an answer, an immediate and honest one. Is my heart set on studying God’s Word? Yes or no. Can you be brave enough to answer this honestly? And then, be brave enough to ask the Lord to make your heart set upon this, if the answer is no…and make it even more set upon it if the answer is yes? I’m not bagging on anyone, but I am asking an important question that warrants and honest and introspective answer because Jesus held back nothing to save us from death and hell, and He is worth everything, including our hearts set on knowing Him better and better day by day as a result of studying the Bible.

The Amplified says “resolved”. Ezra had set his heart resolved to study and interpret the Law of the Lord. How resolved are we in our study of God’s Word?

Ezra made this long journey to a place that had been decimated and trashed during this terrible exile season in Israel’s history, and at this time it was on the uptick. He was going back home, but to a home that had been broken down alongside a people who had been broken down. Sometimes the journey we make in life is alongside those who have also been broken down. You know, we want those strong leaders to lead us…and I think when we are strong in the Holy Spirit, when we are weak then God is strong in us and through us, that’s good strength. But it doesn’t always look pretty and it isn’t always neat and tidy and polished the way the world tells us our leadership ought to look. Looks don’t seem to matter as much to God as they do to man, to you and to me. Good leadership, chosen and appointed by God, may not look shiny and lovely. Good leadership may be the guy next to you, walking the same path you’re walking, who has answered God’s call to leadership. It may be the lady who is just a few steps beyond you on the road of life, she’s far from perfect and she’s got her hair in a messy bun or a banana clip and she may be walking with a limp…but she’s going where God says to go, following His leading as she obeys His call to lead others. You want leaders who are good followers, who follow Jesus closely and who obey quickly, immediately, because otherwise they’re not fit to lead anybody and they know it. What might happen if that kind of leadership became what we as the Church look for rather than wanting only leaders who look like the world, act like the world, and run the Church like a business, like the world. I have been young and now, I’m getting older and I’ve seen both kinds of leaders. And I know which kind have impacted me the most with the things of the Lord, and it’s not the polished and social media post perfection kind of ones who made real impact. It’s the one just a few steps ahead, been through some stuff in life, and they just keep on loving, serving, trusting, following, obeying and honoring God with the whole of their messed up, messy life.

Ezra may have been somewhat weary before his journey even got started. Anybody else ever feel like that? Lord, I’m so tired from this…and now You are asking me to start this next leg of my race when I’m feeling weary? Sometimes that is how it goes. I’m not against rest, but I think I can honestly say that we can have sabbath rest, resting in Jesus, even while walking the path He’s called us to. How many Bible characters were totally ready for the task God called them to? The blessing came from their obedience. Lack of obedience would not have yielded the same degree of blessing…or likely much blessing at all.

Sometimes we feel weary before the journey begins.

Others were probably weary too, and Ezra as a leader was dealing with his weariness and theirs. It can be hard to lead weary people. Not always, but at times our flesh cries out for ease and after a long season of reign by an oppressor, some happy news may have been pretty appealing. But an honest study of the first five books of the Bible would come with conviction and a real hard and honest look in the mirror. Weary people can want an answer and a solution more than they want to be taught, and Ezra was called in verse 10 to teach Israel what the Bible had to say.

The point here is that Ezra did not have the easy street assignment, and even when he was weary, he still obeyed. That’s the mark of a mature believer. Ezra had a tough role to play, but he did it. Do we want the good hand of God on our lives?

Do we really?

Verse 25 tells us that Ezra was tasked with appointing magistrates and judges in accordance with God’s wisdom and instruction. He was to appoint those who knew the laws of God, and he was told to teach anyone who did not know God’s law.

If hard times come - and I mean hard hard times, not so so hard times, but hard hard times, if those times come, do you realize there may be a special role for you provided you know the Bible well? I’m serious about this! Do you know any part of your Bible well enough to instruct someone about it? Over a cup of coffee, as part of a Bible study group, in a group text of Christian friends. The need may well arise. Are we ready if it does? Because when hard hard times come, people tend to land in one of two camps, and it’s pretty distinct. They either want to know more about God, what the Bible says, how to pray, or they get hard hearted and want to shut God out while blaming Him for everything that has gone wrong. But those that will want to know how to seek and to find the Lord in the hard hard times may need someone to show them the way, to explain the Bible to them, to pray with them. Could that someone be you?

Now these may not seem like promises at first glance, the verses I’m sharing today. But I think they actually are. Can you imagine receiving the call of the Lord to teach people about His word in hard times, in a season that could be considered the tail end of a long spiritual famine?

Church attendance in the United States post COVID has dropped and remained below 50% for the first time since attendance began being tallied or monitored in our country. It’s below and it’s staying below. How’s that for the mark of a spiritual famine? I think we’re in one in the US. It’s also a bit of an indictment on us as a so-called Chrsitian nation. Where will you and I land in this post-Christian era in which we live? Will we be ready to teach others what the Bible says, or fail to be ready? And as far as hard times go, the writing is on the wall, so to speak, when the people in a nation have turned away from, even against, the God of the Bible. We know what happened to such nations in the past. We know from the book of Revelation what will happen to those who deny the Lord God Almighty in the future. And so we understand that in our day, hard times may come, probably will come sooner rather than later.

We also know that persecution grows Jesus’ Church. Hard times drive people to their knees in prayer. And we have this moment, this era, to ready ourselves to serve God in like manner as Ezra when those days come to pass. But only if we know His Word! We cannot teach what we do not know!

In the new year, I’m planning to start sharing monthly Bible reading plans and some pdf Bible study tools and do a weekly study of the psalms in my private prayer group on Facebook, working through all 150 psalms week by week and praying based on what we find in those passages. These are just a couple of ways I hope to encourage people to get in the Word and to learn it, to live it, and to know it well enough to teach it to others. Which is discipleship 101 and Titus 2 ministry in a nutshell.

On my other podcast, The Prayer Podcast, this week I’m going to share and pray from Ezra chapter 8, a prayer for protection that God answered powerfully, you can find this in verses 21-32. And also, side note, on TPP soon we will start a series on the NT book of James and it’s going to be a good prayer series because the book of James brings life change, like, every single time we read it and apply it and study it and believe it and pray that what it says will become our reality. I’d love to have you join us for that series on The Prayer Podcast.

But when we look at Ezra 8, verse 23 from the Amplified, we find this: So we fasted and sought help from our God concerning this matter and He heard our plea. And verse 31 - We set out from the river Ahava on the twelfth day of the first month to go to Jerusalem: and the hand of our God was upon us, and He rescued us from the hand of the enemy and those who lay in ambushes along the way.

Does God answer prayer? Yes

Does God still in our day and age answer prayer? Yes

Can we really expect Him to help us? Yes

Can we talk to Him about anything and everything, specific matters that concern us and not just high and lofty spiritual things? Yes

Can we do what He is calling us to do and make the impact that He wants us to make (or rather, to allow Him to make the impact He wants to make through us)? Yes

Can we get to our destination safely, protected from marauders, fully able to do what comes next once we get to that place? Yes

Can we ask Him to see us safely all the way home? Yes

More than just a single promise from the book of Ezra, preparing for this episode has shown me that the whole of Ezra, the whole book is God’s promises being fulfilled. It’s proof positive that God keeps His promises, every single one, in perfect detail. And it’s a call to be reconciled to God. Our reconciliation should lead us to trust more. If it doesn’t, are we really reconciled? I’m not fully reconciled to someone if I do not trust them. The two go together. Be reconciled to God and trust Him completely.

Pray to Him and listen for His answer to your prayers.

Be like Ezra.

That’s all for this episode of The Burt (Not Ernie) Show. Thanks for joining me today and don’t forget to check out Fig Tree Books & More when you’re in the Branson area.

See you next time. Bye bye!

  continue reading

183 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 386655181 series 3352037
Content provided by Jan L. Burt - host of The Burt (Not Ernie) Show. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Jan L. Burt - host of The Burt (Not Ernie) Show or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
Fig Tree Books & More location info Fig Tree Books & More on Instagram

Well hey there! Hello to you today and I hope you had a wonderful Thanksgiving, spent time resting and also able to spend time with loved ones, and of course had the chance to express your thankfulness for what God has done and will do in your life. He is good and He acts out of His lovingkindness toward His children, and that is something that we should never stop being thankful for. I really do believe that Christians ought to be the most thankful people on this planet. Thanksgiving is a time to express that thankfulness in all sorts of ways, and I do hope yours was wonderful. I am thankful for you.

You’re listening to The Burt (Not Ernie) Show, part of the Spark Network, now playing in the Edifi app. Today’s episode is sponsored by Fig Tree Books & More, located in Branson. If you are planning a trip to the Branson area at any point in the future, I hope you get the chance to swing by Fig Tree Books. You will not regret it, that I can promise you! It’s more than a bookstore, it’s an experience with some of the most rock-solid, Jesus loving believers I have ever met. I’ll have the link to their Instagram here in the show notes as well as a link to their exact address. Fig Tree Books & More, thank you for the work you are doing for the Kingdom, for every prayer you pray with customers, for every product selection you make with such care, for reaching your community and for being a haven for those visiting the Branson area. May the Lord bless you and the work of your hands in ways beyond your wildest imagination. I am thankful for you! This is episode number 167, and today we are looking at the book of Ezra.

The Amplified Bible is what I’ll be referencing for this episode, and I’m going to read a couple of verses from Ezra chapter 7. Verses 9b and 10 say this: …because the good hand of his God was on him. For Ezra had set his heart (resolved) to study and interpret the Law the the LORD, and to practice it and teach His statutes and ordinances in Israel.

Ezra lived in captivity in Babylon, so think about Daniel and his life in Babylon and Nehemiah and his calling to work on rebuilding the Temple at the end of this season of Israel’s captivity. Ezra was alive in this same era. He left Babylon and traveled for months to get to Israel, according to verse 9 of Ezra chapter 7. Months of travel. What do we do for months? Like, what’s worth that to us? Granted this was normal in that day, travel from Iraq (which is modern day Babylon) to Israel just took that long, and it doesn’t take that long today, but it is worth thinking about, this idea of what is worth a long journey for us? And have you considered as of late that you are on a long journey? A journey home, to eternity with Jesus. You are on a long trek, you are a pilgrim on your way to your final destination. We as Christians are, in a way, sort of like Ezra. And the destination is more than worth the long, hard road we walk to get there.

When the Temple was rebuilt at the end of this time of captivity, as we see in Ezra chapter 6, the Temple was completed and dedicated and Passover observed in the homeland of the Jewish people once again, then we move into chapter 7 and we see Ezra making the journey to Jerusalem.

The promise in these verses is that when we, God’s people who bear His name, have the good hand of our God on us (not the heavy hand of the Lord on us, as we find in the Bible at times, but the good hand of our God), we are able to do hard things for His Kingdom and His purposes. Ezra had set his heart to study and interpret the Law, the first five books of the Bible written by Moses, the Torah. How about us? Are we set like that? Do we have our hearts set on studying the Bible? It’s easy to answer, yes or no, there is no middle ground or wiggle room on this…the question begs an answer, an immediate and honest one. Is my heart set on studying God’s Word? Yes or no. Can you be brave enough to answer this honestly? And then, be brave enough to ask the Lord to make your heart set upon this, if the answer is no…and make it even more set upon it if the answer is yes? I’m not bagging on anyone, but I am asking an important question that warrants and honest and introspective answer because Jesus held back nothing to save us from death and hell, and He is worth everything, including our hearts set on knowing Him better and better day by day as a result of studying the Bible.

The Amplified says “resolved”. Ezra had set his heart resolved to study and interpret the Law of the Lord. How resolved are we in our study of God’s Word?

Ezra made this long journey to a place that had been decimated and trashed during this terrible exile season in Israel’s history, and at this time it was on the uptick. He was going back home, but to a home that had been broken down alongside a people who had been broken down. Sometimes the journey we make in life is alongside those who have also been broken down. You know, we want those strong leaders to lead us…and I think when we are strong in the Holy Spirit, when we are weak then God is strong in us and through us, that’s good strength. But it doesn’t always look pretty and it isn’t always neat and tidy and polished the way the world tells us our leadership ought to look. Looks don’t seem to matter as much to God as they do to man, to you and to me. Good leadership, chosen and appointed by God, may not look shiny and lovely. Good leadership may be the guy next to you, walking the same path you’re walking, who has answered God’s call to leadership. It may be the lady who is just a few steps beyond you on the road of life, she’s far from perfect and she’s got her hair in a messy bun or a banana clip and she may be walking with a limp…but she’s going where God says to go, following His leading as she obeys His call to lead others. You want leaders who are good followers, who follow Jesus closely and who obey quickly, immediately, because otherwise they’re not fit to lead anybody and they know it. What might happen if that kind of leadership became what we as the Church look for rather than wanting only leaders who look like the world, act like the world, and run the Church like a business, like the world. I have been young and now, I’m getting older and I’ve seen both kinds of leaders. And I know which kind have impacted me the most with the things of the Lord, and it’s not the polished and social media post perfection kind of ones who made real impact. It’s the one just a few steps ahead, been through some stuff in life, and they just keep on loving, serving, trusting, following, obeying and honoring God with the whole of their messed up, messy life.

Ezra may have been somewhat weary before his journey even got started. Anybody else ever feel like that? Lord, I’m so tired from this…and now You are asking me to start this next leg of my race when I’m feeling weary? Sometimes that is how it goes. I’m not against rest, but I think I can honestly say that we can have sabbath rest, resting in Jesus, even while walking the path He’s called us to. How many Bible characters were totally ready for the task God called them to? The blessing came from their obedience. Lack of obedience would not have yielded the same degree of blessing…or likely much blessing at all.

Sometimes we feel weary before the journey begins.

Others were probably weary too, and Ezra as a leader was dealing with his weariness and theirs. It can be hard to lead weary people. Not always, but at times our flesh cries out for ease and after a long season of reign by an oppressor, some happy news may have been pretty appealing. But an honest study of the first five books of the Bible would come with conviction and a real hard and honest look in the mirror. Weary people can want an answer and a solution more than they want to be taught, and Ezra was called in verse 10 to teach Israel what the Bible had to say.

The point here is that Ezra did not have the easy street assignment, and even when he was weary, he still obeyed. That’s the mark of a mature believer. Ezra had a tough role to play, but he did it. Do we want the good hand of God on our lives?

Do we really?

Verse 25 tells us that Ezra was tasked with appointing magistrates and judges in accordance with God’s wisdom and instruction. He was to appoint those who knew the laws of God, and he was told to teach anyone who did not know God’s law.

If hard times come - and I mean hard hard times, not so so hard times, but hard hard times, if those times come, do you realize there may be a special role for you provided you know the Bible well? I’m serious about this! Do you know any part of your Bible well enough to instruct someone about it? Over a cup of coffee, as part of a Bible study group, in a group text of Christian friends. The need may well arise. Are we ready if it does? Because when hard hard times come, people tend to land in one of two camps, and it’s pretty distinct. They either want to know more about God, what the Bible says, how to pray, or they get hard hearted and want to shut God out while blaming Him for everything that has gone wrong. But those that will want to know how to seek and to find the Lord in the hard hard times may need someone to show them the way, to explain the Bible to them, to pray with them. Could that someone be you?

Now these may not seem like promises at first glance, the verses I’m sharing today. But I think they actually are. Can you imagine receiving the call of the Lord to teach people about His word in hard times, in a season that could be considered the tail end of a long spiritual famine?

Church attendance in the United States post COVID has dropped and remained below 50% for the first time since attendance began being tallied or monitored in our country. It’s below and it’s staying below. How’s that for the mark of a spiritual famine? I think we’re in one in the US. It’s also a bit of an indictment on us as a so-called Chrsitian nation. Where will you and I land in this post-Christian era in which we live? Will we be ready to teach others what the Bible says, or fail to be ready? And as far as hard times go, the writing is on the wall, so to speak, when the people in a nation have turned away from, even against, the God of the Bible. We know what happened to such nations in the past. We know from the book of Revelation what will happen to those who deny the Lord God Almighty in the future. And so we understand that in our day, hard times may come, probably will come sooner rather than later.

We also know that persecution grows Jesus’ Church. Hard times drive people to their knees in prayer. And we have this moment, this era, to ready ourselves to serve God in like manner as Ezra when those days come to pass. But only if we know His Word! We cannot teach what we do not know!

In the new year, I’m planning to start sharing monthly Bible reading plans and some pdf Bible study tools and do a weekly study of the psalms in my private prayer group on Facebook, working through all 150 psalms week by week and praying based on what we find in those passages. These are just a couple of ways I hope to encourage people to get in the Word and to learn it, to live it, and to know it well enough to teach it to others. Which is discipleship 101 and Titus 2 ministry in a nutshell.

On my other podcast, The Prayer Podcast, this week I’m going to share and pray from Ezra chapter 8, a prayer for protection that God answered powerfully, you can find this in verses 21-32. And also, side note, on TPP soon we will start a series on the NT book of James and it’s going to be a good prayer series because the book of James brings life change, like, every single time we read it and apply it and study it and believe it and pray that what it says will become our reality. I’d love to have you join us for that series on The Prayer Podcast.

But when we look at Ezra 8, verse 23 from the Amplified, we find this: So we fasted and sought help from our God concerning this matter and He heard our plea. And verse 31 - We set out from the river Ahava on the twelfth day of the first month to go to Jerusalem: and the hand of our God was upon us, and He rescued us from the hand of the enemy and those who lay in ambushes along the way.

Does God answer prayer? Yes

Does God still in our day and age answer prayer? Yes

Can we really expect Him to help us? Yes

Can we talk to Him about anything and everything, specific matters that concern us and not just high and lofty spiritual things? Yes

Can we do what He is calling us to do and make the impact that He wants us to make (or rather, to allow Him to make the impact He wants to make through us)? Yes

Can we get to our destination safely, protected from marauders, fully able to do what comes next once we get to that place? Yes

Can we ask Him to see us safely all the way home? Yes

More than just a single promise from the book of Ezra, preparing for this episode has shown me that the whole of Ezra, the whole book is God’s promises being fulfilled. It’s proof positive that God keeps His promises, every single one, in perfect detail. And it’s a call to be reconciled to God. Our reconciliation should lead us to trust more. If it doesn’t, are we really reconciled? I’m not fully reconciled to someone if I do not trust them. The two go together. Be reconciled to God and trust Him completely.

Pray to Him and listen for His answer to your prayers.

Be like Ezra.

That’s all for this episode of The Burt (Not Ernie) Show. Thanks for joining me today and don’t forget to check out Fig Tree Books & More when you’re in the Branson area.

See you next time. Bye bye!

  continue reading

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