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Daily Devo: Day 4

  • SOZO Loveland 9781 Fields Ertel Road Loveland, OH, 45140 United States (map)

Purity and Power

Christmas is HTB is usually one of the biggest events in our church calendar. This year things have had to be scaled back due to COVID-19 and I've missed the excitement, the crowds and grandeur of our carol services. At our Christmas services, I sit right by our orchestra and choir. There are usually around 50 musicians in the orchestra. And 90 in the choir -- all members of the congregation volunteering their time and gifts. I'm not at all musical. In fact, I'm virtually tone deaf. However, I am always stunned by the beauty of the marvelous music and singing. It is a foretaste of heaven. The apostle John writes ‘And I heard a sound from heaven like the roar of rushing waters and like a loud peal of thunder. The sound I heard was like that of harpists, playing their harps. And they sang a new song before the throne’ (Revelations 14:2-3).  The heavenly orchestra and choir will sing a new song before a heavenly audience. John goes on to describe the complete church in heaven - their* purity* and their* power*. The two are connected. As Pastor Rick Warren has tweeted, ‘In ministry, *private purity* is the source of *public power*.’

Proverbs 31:1-9

Purity and the powerless

‘Leaders can't afford to make fools of themselves’ (vs. 4, MSG). King Lemuel was a leader. Who had been given wise teaching by his mother. She had warned him against impurity (vs. 3) and intoxication (vs. 4-7). These can ruin (vs. 3) your life. They can leave you forgetting what you should be doing(vs. 5a) and deprive the powerless of their rights (vs. 5b). Instead of using your power to indulge in self-gratification, use it for good: ‘Speak up for those who cannot speak for themselves, for the rights of all who are destitute.  Speak up and judge fairly; defend the rights of the poor and needy (vs. 8-9). Who are the voiceless in our society who ‘cannot speak for themselves’? Who are the people that you and I should be speaking up for? They will surely include the following:

  1. The poor.

About 10% of the world's population go to bed hungry every night. Every few seconds, poverty takes a child's life. Today, and every day until we act, thousands of children die of avoidable diseases or because they live in poverty. Millions under the age of five die every year. Over half of these early child deaths are due to conditions that could be prevented or treated with access to simple, affordable interventions. They are the ‘poor and destitute’ (vs 9, MSG).

  1. The enslaved.

There are probably now more slaves globally than at the height of the transatlantic slave trade. Human trafficking enslaves millions of people around the globe, many of them under the age of eighteen. Slavery is a terrible injustice. ‘Speak out for justice’ (vs. 9a, MSG)

  1. The unborn.

Those in the womb have no voice of their own. The journalist, Nigella Lawson, who describes herself as ‘pro-abortion’, has written, “If anecdotal evidence is anything to go by (and I suspect it is), [abortion] is becoming more and more a value - free, post - facto alternative to contraception’. ‘Yet few people have the courage to speak up for the unborn today - who have ‘no voice’ (vs. 8a, MSG).

  1. The prisoners.

Many around the world are in prison unjustly, and even those who are in prison justly are often treated inhumanely. But the vast majority are in no position to ‘speak for themselves’ (vs. 8a).

Prayer: Lord, help me to speak out for the voiceless, judge fairly, and defend the rights of the destitute, the poor and the needy.

Revelation 14:1-13

Purity and Proclamation

‘It took my breath away!’ (vs. 1, MSG). Jesus (the Lamb of God) stands on Mount Zion with his 144,000 followers ‘with Him, His Name and the Name of His Father inscribed on their foreheads’ (vs.  1, MSG).  They represent the complete church worshipping together. The five-fold description is one of complete purity. 

They:  1.  Are redeemed from the earth by the blood of the lamb (vs. 3).

2.  Have kept themselves pure and undefiled – ‘lived without compromise’ (vs. 4a,MSG).  

3.  Follow Jesus wherever He goes (vs. 4b).  

4.  Are purchased and offered as first fruits to God and the Lamb (vs. 4c). As Saint Paul writes, ‘We were bought at a price’ (1 Corinthians 6:20).  

5.  Are people of integrity: ‘No lie was found in their mouths; they are blameless’ (Revelations 14:5).

It is not coincidental that the vision of the pure church is followed by a vision of the proclamation of the eternal gospel: ‘to those who live on the earth – to every nation, tribe, language and people’ (vs. 6). This is the calling of the church -- to proclaim the good news of Jesus. This is represented by the first angel. The second and third angels show what humanity needs to be rescued from. Everyone needs to be rescued from the corrupting influence of ‘Babylon the Great’, ‘which made all the nations drink the maddening wine of her adulteries’ (vs. 8). They also need to be rescued from the ‘the beast’, who wants to put his mark on the forehead (vs. 11) and see them tormented. The good news is that no one needs to have this mark on their forehead. We, the people of God, need to proclaim the good news that every person can have the name of Jesus and Father's name written on their forehead (vs. 1).  You are called to patients endurance, obedience to God's commandments and faithfulness to Jesus (vs.12). Get the message out. So many people lack peace. There is ‘no rest day or night  for those who worship the beast and his image’ (vs. 11).  On the other hand, there is no greater blessing than following the Lamb: ‘Then I heard a voice from heaven say, “Write:  Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord from now on”. “Yes,” says the Spirit, “they will rest from their labor, for their needs will follow them’” (vs. 13).

Prayer: Lord Jesus, help us to be pure and undefiled. Followers of you, people of integrity, who know that we have been redeemed and bought at a price. Help us to proclaim the eternal gospel to every nation, tribe, language and people.

Ezra 8:15-9:15

Purity and prayer

Are you facing challenges ahead of you in your life? Ezra was facing the huge challenge of leading the return journey to Jerusalem and the rebuilding of the temple.  He had to lead a company of 5000 people, including women and children, on a four-month hazardous trek through uninhabited regions -- while carrying vast quantities of money and precious objects (8:15-27). Ezra wisely began with the leaders: ‘So I summoned... leaders and... men of learning’ (vs. 16).  Leadership was a keyed to the fulfillment of Ezra's vision for returning and rebuilding. The fulfillment of almost every God-given vision requires these three things:

  1. Everyone praying.

Ezra was a man of prayer. Before he set out on the journey, he proclaimed a fast. They all humbled themselves and asked God for a safe journey (vs. 21).  God heard their prayer: ‘So we fasted and petitioned our God about this, and He answered our prayer’ (vs. 23).

  1. Everyone giving. 

‘I weighed out to them the offering of silver and gold and the articles that the king, his advisors, his officials, and all Israel presented there had donated for the house of God (vs. 25).

  1. Everyone serving.

‘Then the exiles who had returned from captivity sacrificed... They also delivered the king's orders to the royal satraps and to the governors of Trans-Euphrates, who then gave assistance to the people and to the house of God’ (vs. 35-36).

God bless them in every way in the rebuilding of the house of God. But in spite of God's faithfulness to them, the people were not faithful to God. They did not keep themselves pure. It was not so much the fact that they had intermarried, but the fact that they had ‘polluted’ themselves (9:11) with the ‘detestable practices’ (vs. 1) of the nations around. The leaders and officials had led the way in their unfaithfulness (vs. 2).  Ezra by contrast, gives us a great example of not taking sin lightly. He is absolutely devastated: ‘When I heard all this, I ripped my clothes and my cape... I slumped to the ground, appalled’ (vs.3, MSG). He fell on his knees and with his hands spread out to the Lord, and prayed a prayer, which it may be good to pray for ourselves and for the church today: ‘O my God, I am too ashamed and disgraced to lift up my face to you, my God, because our sins are higher than our heads and our guilt has reached to the heavens. From the days of our ancestors until now, our guilt has been great. Because of our sins, we... have been subjected to... humiliation’ (vs. 6-7). Yet, as with the people in Ezra's time, so it is for the church today: ‘... our God has not deserted us ‘(vs. 9).

Prayer: Lord, help us to be pure, cleansed by the blood of Jesus, to speak up for the voiceless, proclaim the eternal gospel to the nations, and rebuild the church in our cities and nations.

Pippa Adds

Ezra 9:1-2

This seems quite a strong reaction to marrying people from other countries! It can't be only because they are foreigners, as Ruth was a Moabite. She is an example of faithfulness. And King David was one eighth Moabite. It must be because of their ‘detestable practices’ (vs. 1). As Solomon was corrupted by his wives, Ezra must have seen that the influence of these women would destroy the faith of God's people completely.

Earlier Event: December 21
Daily Devo: Day 3
Later Event: December 23
Daily Devo: Day 5