The blog contains daily devotions and notes from the weekly messages.  We encourage you to review the notes during the sermon or through the week!  Most of the posts will have an audio and/or video link at the end of the notes.  From time to time the pastors will share other insights and devotions here.
 
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Seize the Moment – Day 997

Overcome Discouragement!

Nehemiah 4

 

Good morning! This is Pastor Jerry Ingalls from New Castle First Baptist Church and today is Friday, December 9.

 

It is easy to become discouraged when we experience criticism or intimidation. Nehemiah’s successes in Jerusalem led to opposition from their neighbors. Nehemiah 4:1 reports, “Now it came about that when Sanballat heard that we were rebuilding the wall, he became furious and very angry and mocked the Jews.”

 

People oppose the work of God when they feel threatened by it. Sanballat was the governor of Samaria and the last thing he wanted was a revitalized Israel. The refortification of Jerusalem would provide a haven for the Jewish exiles to return from Babylonian captivity in droves. He first opposed the work with mockery to discourage the workers, and when that wasn’t enough to stop them, he intensified the opposition with fear and intimidation.

 

It would have worked if it wasn’t for Nehemiah’s efforts to counter the discouragement and oppose the threats. His first tactic to overcome discouragement was to seek God, as recorded in verses 4-5, “Hear, O our God, how we are despised! Return their reproach on their own heads and give them up for plunder in a land of captivity. Do not forgive their iniquity and let not their sin be blotted out before You, for they have demoralized the builders.” Prayer is our first response to overcoming discouragement.

 

Second, Nehemiah took active steps to embolden the workers with a higher calling. Nehemiah 4:14 narrates, “When I saw their fear, I rose and spoke to the nobles, the officials and the rest of the people: ‘Do not be afraid of them; remember the Lord who is great and awesome, and fight for your brothers, your sons, your daughters, your wives and your houses.’” Nehemiah led his people in prayer and then in setting up a defense (9). He gave their lives and work meaning (9-23). Living with purpose is our second response to overcoming discouragement.

 

Seize the moment and seek a higher calling for your life and work (Colossians 3:23-24).

 

God bless you!

 

If you would like to receive a personal phone call today, all you have to do is dial the phone number below right now and one of us will call you soon.

 

YOUTUBE:

If you prefer a video, Pastor Jerry reads his devotion on YouTube as well. Click HERE to visit the page.

Videos are posted about a week after the devotion appears in the blog.

 

 
 

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Seize the Moment – Day 996

The Security of God’s People!

Nehemiah 3

 

Good morning! This is Pastor Jerry Ingalls from New Castle First Baptist Church and today is Thursday, December 8.

 

Do you feel secure where you live? To what length will you go to feel secure?

 

Nehemiah had surveyed Jerusalem and determined that the walls and gates had to be their priority of work. Gates are important because they provide security for the inhabitants of a walled city. Nehemiah 3 describes the rebuilding of the wall around Jerusalem, with the work focused around the ten gates of the city: the Sheep Gate (1); the Fish Gate (3); the Old Gate (6); the Valley Gate (13); the Refuse Gate (14); the Fountain Gate (15); the Water Gate (26); the Horse Gate (28); the East Gate (29); and the Inspection Gate (31).

 

Nehemiah’s success was dependent upon all the people working together, and no one was exempt from the work, including the officials, as well as the priests and Levites (16-17). Nehemiah 3:1 starts, “Then Eliashib the high priest arose with his brothers the priests and built the Sheep Gate; they consecrated it and hung its doors.”

 

Whereas the security of a people has often been dependent on walls and gates; it will not be this way in the coming Eternal Kingdom of God. Revelation 21:25-27 gives us a glimpse of the gates of the wall in the New Jerusalem:

 

In the daytime (for there will be no night there) its gates will never be closed; and they will bring the glory and the honor of the nations into it; and nothing unclean, and no one who practices abomination and lying, shall ever come into it, but only those whose names are written in the Lamb’s book of life.

 

“Its gates will never be closed” is a powerful vision of security; it gives us hope! What truly secures God’s people is neither the weapons forged by man’s hand nor the walls and gates we build around ourselves. Rather, your security is found in nothing less than Jesus’ blood and righteousness.            

 

Seize the moment and find your security in Christ alone; rejoice that your name is “recorded in Heaven” (Luke 10:20).

 

God bless you!

 

If you would like to receive a personal phone call today, all you have to do is dial the phone number below right now and one of us will call you soon.

 

YOUTUBE:

If you prefer a video, Pastor Jerry reads his devotion on YouTube as well. Click HERE to visit the page.

Videos are posted about a week after the devotion appears in the blog.

 


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Seize the Moment – Day 995

Compelled to Act through Prayer!

Nehemiah 2

 

Good morning! This is Pastor Jerry Ingalls from New Castle First Baptist Church and today is Wednesday, December 7.

 

You should always pray before you act. Don’t do anything until you know it is God telling you to do it, but once you are compelled in the Spirit, act with conviction and authority – Don’t hesitate and don’t hold back!

 

Prayer is the most powerful activity we can participate in as God’s people – “The effective prayer of a righteous man can accomplish much” (James 5:16). Prayer is not idle time; it is hard work, and it is productive! Prayer makes the way for us to walk in the victory of God. We see the evidence of this in the life of Nehemiah, who after four months of fasting and praying, was confronted by King Artaxerxes for looking sad in his presence (Nehemiah 2:1-2). Nehemiah is rightfully scared because his sad disposition before the king violated court etiquette, but instead of covering it with a smile, he seized the moment! Nehemiah 2:4b-5 records the story,
 
“So I prayed to the God of heaven. I said to the king, ‘If it please the king, and if your servant has found favor before you, send me to Judah, to the city of my fathers’ tombs, that I may rebuild it.’”

 

In response, King Artaxerxes made Nehemiah governor of Jerusalem. This doesn’t happen by accident – from cupbearer to governor in an instant! Go God! As Nehemiah testified, “the good hand of my God was on me” (8). After four months of praying and fasting, which providentially led to this encounter with the king, the next place we find Nehemiah is arriving in Jerusalem surveying the damage, building consensus amongst the people, taking on the opposition, and starting the work (9-20). Nehemiah’s activity for God was shot out of the cannon of prayer!

 

Seize the moment and wait upon the Lord to compel you to act! Pray first then act with conviction and authority.

 

God bless you!

 

If you would like to receive a personal phone call today, all you have to do is dial the phone number below right now and one of us will call you soon.

 

YOUTUBE:

If you prefer a video, Pastor Jerry reads his devotion on YouTube as well. Click HERE to visit the page.

Videos are posted about a week after the devotion appears in the blog.

 

 
 

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Seize the Moment – Day 994

Cry out to God!

Nehemiah 1

 

Good morning! This is Pastor Jerry Ingalls from New Castle First Baptist Church and today is Tuesday, December 6.

 

Nehemiah was the cupbearer of Artaxerxes the king of Persia, a position of great trust and significant honor due to its proximity to the king (Nehemiah 1:11; 2:1-8). Like Daniel, he flourished in captivity, which speaks volumes about the character and competency of both these great men. We experience Nehemiah’s faith when he received disturbing reports coming out of Jerusalem, of its broken walls and burned gates. He responded in Nehemiah 1:4,
 
“When I heard these words, I sat down and wept and mourned for days; and I was fasting and praying before the God of heaven.”

 

Nehemiah 1:5-11 records Nehemiah’s brokenness before God, as he humbly fasted and fervently prayed. He took on the mantle of responsibility for his people and faithfully confessed the sins of Israel, as if the sins were his very own – “on behalf of the sons of Israel Your servants, confessing the sins of the sons of Israel which we have sinned against You; I and my father’s house have sinned” (6). His heart was broken for what broke God’s heart, and he lamented over Jerusalem. In verse 9, he cried out for God to respond according to His covenant faithfulness by invoking His ancient promises, specifically Deuteronomy 30:1-4.

 

If we want to see God do in us today what he did through Nehemiah in his day, we must start in the same place – with a broken heart over sin and the consequences of sin upon our world. Like Nehemiah, God can place you in just the right spot to see His power move in and through you. God is looking for faithful people, whom He can use for such a time as this.

 

Seize the moment and cry out to God – “O Lord, I beseech You, may Your ear be attentive to the prayer of Your servant and the prayer of Your servants who delight to revere Your name, and make Your servant successful today and grant him compassion before this man” (Nehemiah 1:11).
 

God bless you!

 

If you would like to receive a personal phone call today, all you have to do is dial the phone number below right now and one of us will call you soon.

 

YOUTUBE:

If you prefer a video, Pastor Jerry reads his devotion on YouTube as well. Click HERE to visit the page.

Videos are posted about a week after the devotion appears in the blog.

 

 


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Seize the Moment – Day 993

Embrace God’s Grace!

Ezra 10

 

Good morning! This is Pastor Jerry Ingalls from New Castle First Baptist Church and today is Monday, December 5.

 

Apart from God’s grace, not a one of us could call Heaven our eternal home. It is God’s grace that provides the solution to sin – “For by grace you have been saved through faith; and that not of yourselves, it is the gift of God” (Ephesians 2:8).

 

Ezra described Israel’s return from exile as “a brief moment grace” (Ezra 9:8). When he was confronted with the remnant’s sin of intermarriage with the Canaanites, he wasted no time to entreat God, and the people gathered around him in a large assembly weeping bitterly over their sin (Ezra 9:5-10:1). After three days, all the men of Israel gathered to Ezra the priest, who said to them in Ezra 10:10-12:

 

“You have been unfaithful and have married foreign wives adding to the guilt of Israel. Now therefore, make confession to the Lord God of your fathers and do His will; and separate yourselves from the peoples of the land and from the foreign wives.” Then all the assembly replied with a loud voice, “That’s right! As you have said, so it is our duty to do.”

 

Their confession of sin came with their willingness to repent. God’s grace to the people of Israel is the same call to us today, as commanded by Paul in Titus 2:11-14:

 

For the grace of God has appeared, bringing salvation to all men, instructing us to deny ungodliness and worldly desires and to live sensibly, righteously and godly in the present age, looking for the blessed hope and the appearing of the glory of our great God and Savior, Christ Jesus, who gave Himself for us to redeem us from every lawless deed, and to purify for Himself a people for His own possession, zealous for good deeds.

 

The grace of God always comes with a reward – “but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord” (Romans 6:23b). Ezra embraced grace, so should we in our lives.

 

Seize the moment and embrace the grace of God by walking closely with Jesus!

 

God bless you!

 

If you would like to receive a personal phone call today, all you have to do is dial the phone number below right now and one of us will call you soon.

 

YOUTUBE:

If you prefer a video, Pastor Jerry reads his devotion on YouTube as well. Click HERE to visit the page.

Videos are posted about a week after the devotion appears in the blog.

 


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Advent 2022 – Week 2

Welcome Home: Inviting Jesus to Make My Heart His Home!

A Home of Love

Ephesians 3:14-19

 

Kevin Stonerock to share about and play special song: Black Diamonds.

 

This song speaks to a situation that has been playing out for generations, in many shapes and sizes. There are the lost stories of the Civil War and World War I veterans who came home. There are the whispered stories of the World War II & Korea War veterans who came home. There are the loud stories that I grew up with of the Vietnam veterans who were homeless and struggling with substance abuse. There are the sensational stories of the Iraq and Afghanistan veterans coming home lost to themselves and their families, with devastating suicide rates.

 

These stories of veterans coming home from war and struggling to transition back into their families and communities have a theme – the soldier may have left the war to come home, but the war didn’t leave them just because they came home. We’ve said, “Welcome home!” Now let’s welcome soldiers home from war in a way that invites them to experience the qualities of a home of faith that will be healing to them and to all our families. A home characterized by the four virtues of the Advent season – hope, love, joy, and peace.

 

There is a lot of preparation that goes into a homecoming, for both those at home and the soldier who is returning. The home itself must be actively prepared to be a home of hope, love, joy, and peace, just as the soldier must intentionally work on transforming his mind and heart from a posture of hyper-vigilance (called “Battle Mind”) to being in a posture of rest. Jesus wants to make His home in each of our hearts and in all our homes, and it is His presence in our hearts and homes that transforms us.

 

This Christmas, I am inviting you to surrender your heart to be Christ’s home so that your home may become a home of hope, love, joy, and peace – a place where the weary of mind and body, a place where the heavy-burdened of heart and soul, can come and find rest (Matthew 11:28-30). If you want to transform your home, you must start with your own heart – you must become a person of hope, love, joy, and peace.

 

Last week we focused on transforming our hearts into homes of hope, today, the message will focus how our faith invites Jesus Christ to transform our hearts into homes of love. Our Scripture for this message is Ephesians 3:14-19:

 

For this reason I bow my knees before the Father, from whom every family in heaven and on earth derives its name, that He would grant you, according to the riches of His glory, to be strengthened with power through His Spirit in the inner man, so that Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith; and that you, being rooted and grounded in love, may be able to comprehend with all the saints what is the breadth and length and height and depth, and to know the love of Christ which surpasses knowledge, that you may be filled up to all the fullness of God.

 

Let us pray and ask the Holy Spirit to fill us to all the fullness of God so that we may know the love of Christ and be transformed by it, so that we, and our homes, may be homes of love.

 

The love of God is transformational. When Jesus Christ makes your heart His home through faith, then you become rooted and grounded in love. In other words, the love of God, through faith in Jesus Christ, transforms your story – God changes you and begins the process of changing your life, your marriage, your parenting style, your motivations for work, and your inspirations for living. Our entire life becomes a dialogue about the breadth and length and height and depth of God’s love because we are supposed to bring the love of God into every area of our life.

 

Here’s the secret to all of this, you don’t know something until you put it into practice. Teachers know that you haven’t learned the material until you can teach it. By the same principle, you can’t know the love of God until you express it, share it, give it in each circumstance of your life. The transformative quality of God’s love is a positive feedback loop. As you grow in spiritual maturity and learn more about God’s character and His love, you can ‘teach’ or demonstrate His love more and more through your actions. God transforms your understanding of His love as you grow in Christ, and that doesn’t mean that God or His love has changed because He is constant. Rather, it demonstrates the importance of our progressive sanctification. We must pursue the relationship to experience the fullness of the transformation so that we “may be able to comprehend with all the saints what is the breadth and length and height and depth, and to know the love of Christ which surpasses knowledge.”

 

You are transformed by the love of Christ because the Holy Spirit fills you to the fullness of God. This is when your home becomes a space of grace for returning soldiers, when you are a person in an ongoing conversation with God about His life and what His love looks like in every situation of your life. You are transformed by love by practicing the love you were first given, and, in doing so, you become a loving person. It’s kind of like this, if you are looking for friends, be one. If you are looking for good people, be one. Love transforms you through the giving and receiving of love. It’s not a theory, it’s an action that is constantly explored, a way that is walked, a life that is lived. If you don’t know how to react to a situation or person – love! It’s the golden rule at work, as Jesus taught us in Matthew 7:12, “In everything, therefore, treat people the same way you want them to treat you, for this is the Law and the Prophets.”

 

The love of God is not transactional – it is freely given! The motivation for the Christmas gift of Jesus Christ is explained in John 3:16, “For God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him shall not perish, but have eternal life.” Our salvation is an action of love. You could not be saved today, if God had not taken His essence of love and expressed it in action. You are transformed because God first acted toward you, as Paul explained in Ephesians 2:1-10:

 

And you were dead in your trespasses and sins, in which you formerly walked according to the course of this world, according to the prince of the power of the air, of the spirit that is now working in the sons of disobedience. Among them we too all formerly lived in the lusts of our flesh, indulging the desires of the flesh and of the mind, and were by nature children of wrath, even as the rest. But God, being rich in mercy, because of His great love with which He loved us, even when we were dead in our transgressions, made us alive together with Christ (by grace you have been saved), and raised us up with Him, and seated us with Him in the heavenly places in Christ Jesus, so that in the ages to come He might show the surpassing riches of His grace in kindness toward us in Christ Jesus. For by grace you have been saved through faith; and that not of yourselves, it is the gift of God; not as a result of works, so that no one may boast. For we are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand so that we would walk in them.

 

Therefore, because of God’s love, you are to walk in the good works of love – the activity of our salvation should be an expression of that same love He first gave you. Just like we give gifts at Christmas because God for gave to us on that first Christmas, our lives become love because we are transformed by His first love! The beloved of Jesus said in 1 John 4:7-5:4:

 

Beloved, let us love one another, for love is from God; and everyone who loves is born of God and knows God. The one who does not love does not know God, for God is love. By this the love of God was manifested in us, that God has sent His only begotten Son into the world so that we might live through Him. In this is love, not that we loved God, but that He loved us and sent His Son to be the propitiation for our sins. Beloved, if God so loved us, we also ought to love one another. No one has seen God at any time; if we love one another, God abides in us, and His love is perfected in us. By this we know that we abide in Him and He in us, because He has given us of His Spirit. We have seen and testify that the Father has sent the Son to be the Savior of the world. Whoever confesses that Jesus is the Son of God, God abides in him, and he in God. We have come to know and have believed the love which God has for us. God is love, and the one who abides in love abides in God, and God abides in him. By this, love is perfected with us, so that we may have confidence in the day of judgment; because as He is, so also are we in this world. There is no fear in love; but perfect love casts out fear, because fear involves punishment, and the one who fears is not perfected in love. We love, because He first loved us. If someone says, “I love God,” and hates his brother, he is a liar; for the one who does not love his brother whom he has seen, cannot love God whom he has not seen. And this commandment we have from Him, that the one who loves God should love his brother also. Whoever believes that Jesus is the Christ is born of God, and whoever loves the Father loves the child born of Him. By this we know that we love the children of God, when we love God and observe His commandments. For this is the love of God, that we keep His commandments; and His commandments are not burdensome. For whatever is born of God overcomes the world; and this is the victory that has overcome the world – our faith.

 

The love we are to fill our homes with is the love that overcomes the world; it is the love of God that comes through faith, not the love of the world that comes through the flesh; it is a fruit of the Spirit’s work in you, bringing God’s fullness into your life (Galatians 5:22-23). If you want to make your home a safe place for the soldiers to come and find rest for their heavy hearts and weary minds, then don’t give them a counterfeit love for which they must perform. Rather, give them the love that flows from the throne of grace.

When we give this to one another, then we proclaim the gospel of peace for all the world to see, as Jesus taught in John 13:34-35, “A new commandment I give to you, that you love one another, even as I have loved you, that you also love one another. By this all men will know that you are My disciples, if you have love for one another.”

 

Welcome home our soldiers by giving them a soft place to land, a space for grace to experience the security of love that will help them transform from being in a hyper-vigilant battle mind, always looking for the worst in other people, watchful for attacks and ambushes. Help them be restful at home, always looking to be their very best for other people, as they experience the peace and rest of a love that cannot be earned, and one that will never end because of that first Christmas gift. As the song O Holy Night teaches us, “Truly He taught us to love one another / His law is love and His gospel is peace / Chains shall He break for the slave is our brother / And in His name all oppression shall cease / Sweet hymns of joy in grateful chorus raise we, / Let all within us praise His holy name.”

 

Never forget, we can’t love with God’s love until we experience God’s love personally. I pray that you will accept Jesus Christ as your Lord and Savior and begin to experience the love of God for yourself personally; that’s where it all begins for each of us. For those who have already experienced God’s love, I pray that your home may become a great laboratory of learning to love as God first loved you. May you be transformed as you put into practice God’s Christmas gift to you and to me, and to all of humanity.

 

You can listen to the message by clicking below:

 

 

You can watch the message by clicking HERE.

 

 

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Seize the Moment – Day 991

Today’s hymn focus will be

Angels We Have Heard On High

 

Luke 2:13-14 (NASB95)              

 

 And suddenly there appeared with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host praising God and saying, “Glory to God in the highest, And on earth peace among men with whom He is pleased.”

 

Inspired by the French Christmas Carol “Les Anges dans nos campagnes” (translated means ‘the angels in our countryside’) James Chadwick did not specifically translate, but rather drafted a new set of lyrics that stay true in reflecting the original theme. The new version was shared in 1862 and quickly became popular in Western England. He did maintain the music of the original French song.

 

The hymn’s theme is a Nativity narrative taken from the Gospel of Luke, chapter 2, starting with the moment the angels appeared to the shepherds outside of Bethlehem and the instructions on how they will find the Christ Child.

 

            Angels we have heard on high, sweetly singing o’er the plains

            And the mountains in reply, echoing their joyous strains

 

During this advent season, we need to wake up and purpose in our hearts that each and every day we will proclaim glory to God in the highest and allow our lives to reflect His light and love in everything we do and say.

 

If you would like to receive a personal phone call today, all you have to do is dial the phone number below right now and one of us will call you soon.

 

YOUTUBE:

If you prefer a video, Pastor Ken reads his devotion on YouTube as well. Click HERE to visit the page.

Videos are posted about a week after the devotion appears in the blog.

 

If you would like to listen to this song, click on this link:

 

Angels We Have Heard On High

 
1
Angels we have heard on high,
sweetly singing o’er the plains,
and the mountains in reply
echoing their joyous strains.
 
Refrain:
Gloria in excelsis Deo,
gloria in excelsis Deo.
 
2
Shepherds, why this jubilee?
Why your joyous strains prolong?
What the gladsome tidings be
which inspire your heav’nly song? [Refrain]
 
3
Come to Bethlehem and see
him whose birth the angels sing;
come, adore on bended knee
Christ the Lord, the newborn King. [Refrain]
 
 
 

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Seize the Moment – Day 990

Live a Holy Life!

Ezra 9

 

Good morning! This is Pastor Jerry Ingalls from New Castle First Baptist Church and today is Friday, December 2.

 

Throughout the Bible, God calls His people to be holy – set apart from the impurities of the world for His divine purposes (1 John 2:15-17). God is not wanting to rain on your parade, He is desiring to reign over your life. The sacrifices you are asked to make may not make sense at the time, but it comes down to trusting God and that His ways are right and true, every time.

 

Ezra returned to Jerusalem to find that Israel had already disobeyed God by intermarrying with the Canaanites. As a priest and scribe, he was seeking to ensure God’s people were observing the Torah, and mixed marriages had been outlawed in Deuteronomy 7:1-6. Ezra’s response was recorded in Ezra 9:3,
 
“When I heard about this matter, I tore my garment and my robe, and pulled some of the hair from my head and my beard, and sat down appalled.”

 

It is hard for us to understand why Ezra was so upset upon his discovery of these intermarriages, but it is important to understand that this was about Israel’s religious purity, not the wives’ ethnicity. It was Israel’s disobedience that led them into captivity and caused the destruction of Jerusalem and the first temple, in the first place, so this was not a minor issue; this was life or death. Disobedience to God always comes with consequences – “for the wages of sin is death” (Romans 6:23a). Ezra could not let sin slide, nor should we in our lives.

 

Seize the moment and live a holy life by walking closely with Jesus – “For you are a holy people to the Lord your God; the Lord your God has chosen you to be a people for His own possession out of all the peoples who are on the face of the earth” (Deuteronomy 7:6; cf. 1 Peter 2:19).

 

God bless you!

 

If you would like to receive a personal phone call today, all you have to do is dial the phone number below right now and one of us will call you soon.

 

YOUTUBE:

If you prefer a video, Pastor Jerry reads his devotion on YouTube as well. Click HERE to visit the page.

Videos are posted about a week after the devotion appears in the blog.

 


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Seize the Moment – Day 989

Boast in the Lord!

Ezra 8

 

Good morning! This is Pastor Jerry Ingalls from New Castle First Baptist Church and today is Thursday, December 1.

 

Does God get glory from your success? That all depends on whom you boast! Ezra was caught in a catch-22 as he prepared to make the four-month journey from Babylon to Jerusalem, which covered approximately nine hundred miles of dangerous terrain. The priest describes his predicament in Ezra 8:21-23:

 

Then I proclaimed a fast there at the river of Ahava, that we might humble ourselves before our God to seek from Him a safe journey for us, our little ones, and all our possessions. For I was ashamed to request from the king troops and horsemen to protect us from the enemy on the way, because we had said to the king, “The hand of our God is favorably disposed to all those who seek Him, but His power and His anger are against all those who forsake Him.” So we fasted and sought our God concerning this matter, and He listened to our entreaty.

 

Ezra was an expert in God’s Word, so, in doing what he did, he was doing more than trying to save face with Artaxerxes the king of Persia. He was exercising his faith in God’s promise from Deuteronomy 20:1-4, which had been invoked previously by the prophet Isaiah (Isaiah 31:1-3). Ezra knew that the victory belonged to God, not in horses or chariots. Ezra 8:31 records the fulfillment of the promise in Ezra’s decision to entreat the Lord rather than the king for the caravan’s safety, “Then we journeyed from the river Ahava on the twelfth of the first month to go to Jerusalem; and the hand of our God was over us, and He delivered us from the hand of the enemy and the ambushes by the way.”

 

Seize the moment and boast in the Lord – “Some boast in chariots and some in horses, but we will boast in the name of the Lord, our God” (Psalm 20:7; cf. Proverbs 21:31; Jeremiah 9:23-24).
 

God bless you!

 

If you would like to receive a personal phone call today, all you have to do is dial the phone number below right now and one of us will call you soon.

 

YOUTUBE:

If you prefer a video, Pastor Jerry reads his devotion on YouTube as well. Click HERE to visit the page.

Videos are posted about a week after the devotion appears in the blog.

 

 


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Seize the Moment – Day 988

The Hand of God is Upon Me!

Ezra 7

 

Good morning! This is Pastor Jerry Ingalls from New Castle First Baptist Church and today is Wednesday, November 30.

 

What does it mean that the hand of God is upon a person? The Bible teaches us that God is spirit (John 4:24), so when the Bible states that the hand of God is upon someone it is not talking about a literal body part. Rather, it is using anthropomorphic imagery to illustrate God being on the side of His people to guide them and to bring about success in their work.

 

The following three verses emphasize how the hand of God was upon Ezra as he led the second wave of exiles back to Jerusalem:

 

  1. Ezra 7:6, “This Ezra went up from Babylon, and he was a scribe skilled in the law of Moses, which the Lord God of Israel had given; and the king granted him all he requested because the hand of the Lord his God was upon him.”
  2. Ezra 7:9, “For on the first of the first month he began to go up from Babylon; and on the first of the fifth month he came to Jerusalem, because the good hand of his God was upon him.”
  3. Ezra 7:28b, “Thus I was strengthened according to the hand of the Lord my God upon me, and I gathered leading men from Israel to go up with me.”

 

Ezra was essential to the plans of God, but apart from God’s hand being upon him no amount of support from King Artaxerxes (11-25) or his family lineage as a priest (1-5) would have brought about such success. The key to Ezra’s success was his faith, as emphasized in Ezra 7:10, “For Ezra had set his heart to study the law of the Lord and to practice it, and to teach His statutes and ordinances in Israel.” Ezra walked hand in hand with God so it’s no wonder that God’s hand was upon him!

 

Seize the moment and put your hand into the hand of God almighty (Isaiah 41:13; 42:6).

 

God bless you!

 

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YOUTUBE:

If you prefer a video, Pastor Jerry reads his devotion on YouTube as well. Click HERE to visit the page.

Videos are posted about a week after the devotion appears in the blog.

 


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