Good morning friends,
I think that the return from exile is a fascinating portion of Jewish history. As you will see in thoughts for today, the return was not a single event and made me wonder about why it took so long and why some never returned. I must admit that sometimes I stray from instruction as what does passage teach me about God. This is one of those days. But the Reformers held that salvation has always been by faith and the OT church was Israel,
Blessings,
Jeff
Almost 100 years after the first group and 20 years after Ezra, Nehemiah is saddened by reports of the condition of Jerusalem. This is really very shocking to me. He describes it as the place of his father's graves. But it had been 170 years since deportation. A good number of generations of his family were buried in Babylon. None of them had apparently expressed a desire to go back to Promised Land. Seems likely that a good number of Jews never went back. What is the lesson for the Church?
If Reformation was restoration of Biblical Christianity, why do so many churches today refuse to stand on that ground? This is parallel to being sent into exile with a 70 year time limit and then choosing not to go back. Rejecting God's plan for Judah.
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