The Bible Recap - Day 196 (2 Chronicles 28, 2 Kings 16-17) - Year 6
Episode Date: July 14, 2024SHOW NOTES: - Head to our Start Page for all you need to begin! - Join the RECAPtains - Check out the TBR Store - Show credits BIBLE READING & LISTENING: Follow along on the Bible App, or to lis...ten to the Bible, try Dwell! SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter/X | TikTok D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter/X TLC: Instagram | Facebook D-GROUP: D-Group is brought to you by the same team that brings you The Bible Recap. TBR is where we read the Bible, and D-Group is where we study the Bible. D-Group is an international network of Bible study groups that meet weekly in homes, churches, and online. Find or start one near you today! DISCLAIMER: The Bible Recap, Tara-Leigh Cobble, and affiliates are not a church, pastor, spiritual authority, or counseling service. Listeners and viewers consume this content on a voluntary basis and assume all responsibility for the resulting consequences and impact.
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble and I'm your host for the Bible Recap.
Okay Bible readers, it's time for our weekly check-in.
We've read a lot of new names, new places, and strangely worded prophecies this week,
so I just want to remind you, there will not be a quiz.
If you were to tell me the name of a king and ask me which kingdom he ruled over,
there'd be a good chance I'd have to guess. So, this is just your weekly
reminder that understanding all these details on your first or 50th pass
through Scripture isn't the point. The point is, what are you learning about God
and His character? Are you seeing more of Him? Are you delighting in Him more?
If so, thank Him. And if not, ask Him for help. He can open your eyes and He can change
your heart. But Jehovah has not so much, whoever that is.
Today we're back in the narrative section of Scripture in a time that overlaps with
the prophecies we're reading. These prophecies are being delivered during this time frame, and many, but not all, of
them are being fulfilled during this time frame as well.
Another portion of the prophecies were fulfilled after this time period, like the birth of
the Messiah, for instance.
And some have yet to be fulfilled, like the Messiah coming back to reign in peace on the
new earth.
For today, though, we're stuck in the final days of the kingdom of Judah.
They have a new king, Ahaz, and he's horrible, honestly. He's acted more like a northern king
than a southern king, building idols of his own and even initiating child sacrifices,
which is exactly what the Canaanites who were in the promised land before the Israelites were doing.
And that's why God used the Israelites to drive them out.
So this is a bit of foreshadowing here.
Because of Judah's sins,
God allows them to suffer defeat at the hands of both Syria and Israel.
But when the people of Israel try to enslave them,
a prophet named Obed shows up and rebukes them,
as do a few of their own leaders.
So they put clothes on the captives and take them back home to Judah.
Meanwhile, Judah gets attacked again,
this time by the Edomites.
And Ahaz is super stressed out about it all.
I would be too.
But instead of going to the king of the universe for help,
Ahaz goes to the king of Assyria.
He tries to bribe him into helping Judah
using money he stole from the temple.
Ahaz even rearranges the temple according to the specifications of the king of Assyria
instead of God's specifications. Talk about walking in the fear of man, not of God.
It seems like the king of Assyria pretends like he's going to help, but then doesn't fulfill his
end of the deal. You'd think this would be where Ahaz hits rock bottom, but it isn't.
There's still rock bottomer.
He sacrifices to more foreign gods.
Then he destroys the holy vessels of the temple and locks the temple.
This scent chills down my spine.
He commissions the priest Uriah to make a replica of a foreign altar for him, and the
priest did it.
The priest.
You can see what Micah meant yesterday when he said all the leaders of the land, the king's
prophets and priests, were wicked.
King Ahaz goes all over town setting up altars of his own like their Starbucks franchises
or something.
One on every corner.
And 2823 says, they were the ruin of him and of all Israel.
Meanwhile, in the Northern Kingdom,
we're still heading toward their complete downfall.
And here's what you need to know for the next several days.
This is a really challenging timeline
to splice up chronologically without cutting chapters
and whole prophetic books in half.
So just know we have a little back and forth here
with Israel's demise.
Hopefully it won't be confusing. Today we met Hoshea, another evil king in the north,
and it's during his reign that Second Kings records the captivity of Israel.
Here's how it finally happens. I'm not super familiar with how the mob works, but from what
I understand, the mob might collect money from someone routinely as a price for protecting them.
But the person the mobster is protecting them from is themselves, because if they don't pay, there's trouble.
So it's basically like paying the bully an annual fee not to beat you up.
In ancient times, they called this paying tribute.
This is where a weaker or smaller country acts as a vassal to a larger country, and it plays an important role in how things unfold with Israel.
The king of Assyria slash mob boss has been collecting regular payments from
Hoshea, king of Israel. But one year, Hoshea skips out on that payment, and the
king of Assyria finds out that Hoshea has been texting the king of Egypt behind
his back. And the king of Assyria is not having it.
He goes to Samaria, Israel's capital, and besieges it for three years until he finally
captures it.
Then he exiles all the Israelites to Assyria, just as the prophets have been saying.
The Israelites wouldn't turn from their idolatry no matter how many warning flares were fired.
1715 says, they went after false idols and became false.
Eventually, we become like what we worship.
Whatever we fix our eyes on begins to capture our hearts
and our minds and it gradually shapes us.
That's why I'm so glad you're here in the scriptures today.
This is having a formative effect on us all.
And I truly believe we're being conformed
to the beautiful image of Christ
as we fix our eyes on him every day.
Meanwhile, back in Samaria,
the vacant capital of the newly captured Israel,
the king of Assyria decides to repopulate the city
with a bunch of other people he's captured.
These people all worship the false gods
of their own countries,
but Yahweh is
still working out His plan to sanctify the Promised Land. So He sends some lions to kill
the new inhabitants. Word gets back to the King of Assyria that things aren't going
so well and he's like, okay, plan B. We'll send one of the Israelite priests back there
to teach them how to serve the God of that land. But if you remember anything about those captured Israelite priests,
they weren't exactly walking in righteousness and honoring Yahweh,
so they probably weren't leading by example very well.
And while the people do pick up some reverence for Yahweh,
they try to fuse worship of Yahweh with worship of their other gods.
We've talked about this before. It's called syncretism,
and it's an idea that's compatible with pretty much every other religion,
because their perspective is the more the merrier when it comes to God's, but not Yahweh.
Today, my God shot was in our final chapter as we read the long, sad narrative of Israel's demise.
I saw God's immense patience with His people.
Here's what verses 13 through 14 say about it, and
we've already seen a lot of this as we've started digging into the books of
the prophets. Yet the Lord warned Israel and Judah by every prophet and every
seer saying, turn from your evil ways and keep my commandments and my statutes in
accordance with all the law that I commanded your fathers, and that I sent
to you by my servants the prophets. But they would not listen, but were stubborn,
as their fathers had been, who did not believe
in the Lord their God."
God not only established His covenant with them
and showed them how to live in a relationship with Himself,
but He also sent them multiple warnings over the centuries
when they continued to rebel against Him.
In our current spot in the storyline,
He has brought captivity in order to reveal
captivity. They're held captive to their idols, and only in exile do they realize that.
This may feel like punishment for Israel, but it's an act of great mercy. He's patient.
He's merciful. And he's where the joy is.
He's merciful, and He's where the joy is.
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