The Bible Recap - Day 261 (Ezra 4-6, Psalm 137) - Year 7
Episode Date: September 18, 2025FROM TODAY’S RECAP: - Video: Haggai Overview - Thrived/Survived Shirts Note: We provide links to specific resources; this is not an endorsement of the entire website, author, organization, etc. Th...eir views may not represent our own. SHOW NOTES: - Follow The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | TikTok | YouTube - Follow Tara-Leigh Cobble: Instagram - Read/listen on the Bible App or Dwell App - Learn more at our Start Page - Become a RECAPtain - Shop the TBR Store - Credits PARTNER MINISTRIES: D-Group International Israelux The God Shot TLC Writing & Speaking 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.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble, and I'm your host for the Bible Recap.
Yesterday, the exiles who returned from Babylon started rebuilding the temple in Jerusalem,
and today that comes to a screeching halt.
It starts out subtle. First, a few of Israel's enemies try to throw a wrench into the plan to rebuild.
The Israelites have been gone for decades, then all of a sudden they show back.
up to rebuild the ruins in the land these people have lived in for maybe all of their lives.
This doesn't sit well with their enemies who live there, of course, so their enemies hatch
a plan to put a stop to it. They're like, oh, you're rebuilding the temple to Yahweh? What a coincidence.
It just so happens we've been worshipping him too, so you should totally let us help.
But Zarubabel and Jesua send them packing. They say Cyrus has commanded that only the Israelites
who returned from exile should rebuild it. When the enemy's plan A doesn't work, they get
over the Israelites' heads. They start bribing officials and lying and scheming to put a stop to
things. And it seems to work. The construction project is officially put on hold for something like
15 years. Maybe some of you feel this way about your road system. By the way, the extent of this
delay kind of flies under the radar in the text because it's only evident if we pay attention
to the different kings mentioned. A lot of what happens in Chapter 4 isn't chronological. It's more
of a parenthetical statement that just shows us this is not a one-time situation that you
Jews are dealing with. Their enemies have been persistent. For instance, here are a few of the other
things Chapter 4 says their enemies do to deter them. When a new king, Ahasueres, begins his reign,
the locals write him a letter to make sure he knows why they've asked for the construction
project to be stopped. By the way, we'll read more about him in the days to come, so remember his
name. Then, when his successor, Artaxerxes, takes over the throne, the Israelites' enemies
whip out their laptops again and continue their letter writing campaign, making sure to highlight
some of the negative aspects of the Jews while also flattering the king. Their letter basically
says, those Jews who used to live there in Babylon that your people sent here, they're trying
to take over. And maybe you don't remember this, but when they lived here before, they were a
bunch of wicked rebels. So we think you should shut their construction project down, because
if they finish it, they will definitely not honor you. And look, we don't want to be gossips.
I mean, we didn't even really want to say anything, but we'd just hate to see you disrespected
like that. That's our primary concern. But you don't even have to take our
word for it. If you do a Google search for Israelites, rebels is what will come up at the top.
We promise. Okay, thanks. Bye. Right away, King Artaxerxes hops on the Googler, and sure enough,
the Jews are rebels. Oops. So he decides he needs to shut things down, just like the letter suggested.
When their enemies get the king's mandate in response, they rush right over to Jerusalem,
and as 423 says, by force and power made them cease.
Ugh, I feel so defeated. But Chapter 5 has better news for
us. First, some prophets show up among the Jews and speak words of encouragement to them when their
enemies start discouraging them. The prophet's names are Haggai and Zachariah. We'll read some of their
words over the next few days when we drop in on their books. As a result, Zerubabel and Jesua, the current
leaders of the returned exiles, rally the troops to start rebuilding. Meanwhile, the governor
and his crew swing by Jerusalem one day and they're like, hey, do you guys have a permit for
this and who are you anyway? Not a single one of you is wearing a hard hat.
We don't get any information about what the Jews said in response until the next chapter.
Verse five just says,
But the eye of their God was on the elders of the Jews.
So the governor and his crew let them keep working for the time being.
They decide to send it to the higher-ups for follow-up, namely Persia's new king Darius.
The governor drafts his letter to the king, and it goes something like this.
We were just in Jerusalem, and we noticed the Jews have a big construction project going.
It's pretty impressive, honestly.
We asked if they had a permit and we asked who they were, and they'd
just said, we are servants of the God of heaven and earth, and that they're rebuilding the
temple. Apparently their ancestors built it a long time ago, but then they angered God so he drove
them into exile. Now, they're saying Cyrus sent them back home and told them they could
rebuild their temple, and that he actually gave them a bunch of vessels for it. Does any of that
ring a bell? Could you double check the records to see if that's true, because we're not really
sure how to proceed here? In Chapter 6, Darius looks through all the archives. There's no Control
F on ancient scrolls, so it probably takes a while to find this information. Finally, they
find it in one of the storage rooms in the king's summer home in the mountains. That's not a joke. I'm just
glad they kept looking. And when they find it, it reveals that not only had Cyrus given them the
permit to rebuild the temple, but he also gave them permission to build it six times larger than
before, then followed that by saying, let the cost be paid from the royal treasury. What? Armed with
this new information, King Darius writes the governor back and says,
back off, let them rebuild. The only time you need to bother them is to write them a paycheck
because you're affording the bill for all of this. Give them whatever they need as far as supplies,
and even give them whatever they need for sacrifices and offerings, and give it to them every
single day. Do what they need so they can continue to seek their God and pray for me and my family.
Then King Darius adds a little P.S. that says,
No one can change this command or he'll get the death penalty and I'll turn his house into a
landfill. And may God overthrow anyone who tries to overthrow the Jews or destroy.
their temple. The end. I'm speechless just reading this 2,500 years later, so I can't imagine how the
governor felt in that moment when he got that letter. Can you imagine if people wrote laws like this
today? This is one of the greatest clapbacks of all time, and it's a legal document. The governor
did what he was commanded, and the Jews prospered in the land. The prophets Haggai and Zachariah continued
to prophesy to the people, and the construction crew kept working until they finished the house of
God and dedicated it to him with offerings and praise. Then they celebrated the Passover, 70 years after
their exile, just like God promised. And what's more, this Passover wasn't just for the Jews. It was for
anyone who had turned to worship Yahweh. Gentiles included. They were welcomed into the family of the
Israelites. This is huge. And I love what verse 22 says. The Lord had made them joyful and had turned the
heart of the king of Assyria to them, so that he aided them in the work of the house of God,
the God of Israel.
We wrapped up today's reading with Psalm 137.
It's one of the newest Psalms.
It makes reference to Jerusalem's destruction, so we know this had to come after David's
time.
It recounts the time when they were exiles in Babylon, remembering life in Jerusalem.
While it felt like torture to think about their homeland, it was also tortured to think
of forgetting their homeland.
They asked God to punish their enemies and to bring justice.
It ends with a pretty shocking expression of their anger and grief,
and once again, the Psalms remind us that God can handle even our worst emotions.
We can talk to him about even the feelings we know aren't true or right,
because he's the one who can set our hearts on straight.
What was your God shot today?
I cannot stop thinking about that letter from King Darius to the governor.
Wow.
And I also can't stop thinking about all the steps it took to get to that letter.
If the enemy hadn't tried to stop the Jews for rebuilding,
the Jews would have rebuilt, but they would have had to pay their own bills. Instead, God worked it out
so that the enemy's efforts to thwart his plans actually resulted in a better outcome for his people.
God's enemies deceive, frustrate, and accuse. They wield fear as a weapon, and if they can't stop you
outright, they'll try to discourage you into quitting. But God, he says, I'll take their lies and
their scheming and their manipulation, and I'll use them as tools to expose the truth,
bless my people, and advance my kingdom. No one can pull off that kind of redemption story like
Yahweh. He's where the joy is. Tomorrow we'll be reading the book of Haggai. It's two chapters
long. We're linking to a short video overview in the show notes to help set you up for success,
so check that out if you've got five minutes to spare. Have you ordered your t-shirt to celebrate
your trip to the Old Testament yet? Maybe you can say you throw
or maybe you feel like you survived, but we're here for both. Either way, you've accomplished
so much and this t-shirt is just a fun way for us to celebrate together. Order your t-shirt
today at thebibyl recap.com forward slash store or click the link in the show notes.