The Bible Recap - Day 262 (Haggai 1-2) - Year 6
Episode Date: September 18, 2024SHOW NOTES: - Head to our Start Page for all you need to begin! - Join the RECAPtains - Check out the TBR Store - Show credits FROM TODAY’S RECAP: - Video: Haggai Overview - Ezra 5:1 - The Bible R...ecap - Day 252 - Job 42:12 - Video: Zechariah Overview - Printable Reading Plan (Step 1, Print User) BIBLE READING & LISTENING: Follow along on the Bible App, or to listen 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.
Today we finished our 33rd book of the Bible.
And in the next 11 days, we'll be finishing six more books and the whole Old Testament.
We first met the Minor Prophet Haggai yesterday in Ezra 5, where he was standing around the
construction site of the deconstructed temple with his buddy Zechariah, another minor prophet.
They were there encouraging the returned exiles of Judah.
Today we find out exactly what it was he said to encourage them.
And we might even find out the exact day he said it.
Scholars believe it was August 29, 520 BC.
After the exiles returned from Babylon,
their first high priest is a guy named Jeshua.
But in today's reading, it's spelled like Joshua.
We'll keep calling him Jeshua since that's how we met him
and since we're already friends with another Joshua.
Today Haggai has a conversation with Jeshua the high priest
and Zerubbabel, who is the local ruler over the people of Judah.
And he confronts them both
about the misplaced priorities of the people.
Haggai says,
look, I know you all want to put shiplap in your houses,
it's apparently a thing now,
but we've got more important walls to panel.
No matter what you do to your homes and your wardrobes
and your lifestyles, it will never be enough.
You'll always want more.
Stop scrolling Instagram and Amazon
long enough to face that reality.
Nothing you're investing your time and effort and emotion into is paying any kinds of dividends
for you.
You're just left with stress and frustration.
But do you know what would be a wise use of your time?
Do you know what would be a righteous use of your energy?
Rebuilding God's house.
And until you focus on what matters, God is going to continue to withhold everything
you're trying to access and save up.
Jeshua the high priest and Zerubbabel the local leader know Haggai's words are true.
But Haggai's words aren't only correction. He offers them some consolation, too. He tells
them God said, I am with you, declares the Lord. Then God stirs up their spirits and
the spirits of the people to obey him.
And within a month or two,
they're back to building the temple again.
When chapter two opens,
they've been rebuilding for about a month.
God tells Haggai to call a meeting
and to identify all the people
who are at least 70 years old
and who saw the temple with their own eyes
before the Babylonians destroyed it.
Then he's like, this new temple we're building
doesn't look like much, does it?
It's a shadow of the first one, right?
But don't worry, this is just the beginning.
Then God says something really encouraging in verses 4 through 6.
He says, work, for I am with you, declares the Lord of Hosts.
My spirit remains in your midst.
Fear not.
He reminds them not to be afraid, to keep their heads down and keep being diligent because he is with them.
And when all their enemies come and try to thwart their construction over and over again, like we read about yesterday,
he wants them to remember that he is with them.
The awareness of God's nearness eradicates fear.
Then God promises that he's in the process of building something they can't see yet.
He owns all the silver and gold. He owns all the treasures of all the nations.
And someday, all of that will be evidenced
in the place where he chooses to dwell.
He doesn't say when, but he says he's going
to make his dwelling place magnificent.
A couple months later, while they're still working
on the construction project, God gives Haggai a question
for Jeshua the high priest.
He asks him, if a piece of holy food touches a piece of common food, does it make the common food holy?
Before we get to the answer, let's revisit something we've covered in the past.
On day 252, we read that the priest had to change clothes after they'd been in the presence of God
in order to avoid accidentally transmitting holiness to unclean or wicked people.
So why is it true that priest garments could transmit holiness, but that meat used for
a sacrifice can't transmit holiness?
The unique thing about the priest garments after they left the holy place or the Ark
of the Covenant that Uzzah touched is that those things had been in the presence of the
glory of Yahweh, whereas the food Haggai is referencing is just holy in the sense that
it's been used for sacrifice.
The word holy just means set apart, but the glory and weight of Yahweh's holiness far outweighs something that's just been designated for a sacrifice.
Okay, back to the original question and its answer.
No, holiness can't be transmitted from food to food.
Then Haggai has another question.
Can uncleanness be transmitted?
This time the answer is yes.
Even though modern Western culture is very different
from ancient Jewish culture,
this still makes perfect sense to us.
If our clean hand touches a dirty faucet,
the faucet doesn't become clean,
but our hand does become dirty.
Same, same.
Then Haggai gets to the point he's been driving toward.
God says, because that's how things work, we have a real problem with the people who've been building the temple.
Their hearts aren't clean, so their hands aren't clean,
so they're building a defiled temple from the ground up.
Maybe you've noticed that I keep thwarting their efforts to finish it.
Maybe you've seen how it's all two steps forward, one step back.
That's me. I'm doing that on purpose.
Because I don't want you to get to the end of this project
and have it all be a big unclean building that I can't dwell in and you can't worship in.
I want their hearts, not their hard work.
We've got a heart problem, not a construction problem.
But the good news is, I'm here to change that.
Then God promises he's got big things in store for Zerubbabel.
And by the way, he's a direct descendant of King David.
What was your God shot today?
Mine was in 2.9 where he says,
The latter glory of this house shall be greater than the former.
You'd think after all Israel has done to break God's heart through the years,
he'd give them a downgrade.
And it's not like they've learned their lesson.
Even today we see them selfishly focused on their own houses instead of his,
being greedy and foolish again and even building with unclean hands and hearts.
But he still promises them
that not only will he dwell among them again,
but that it will be even better than before.
This reminds me of the story of Job, where God says,
and the Lord blessed the latter days of Job
more than his beginning.
Maybe you relate more to Job,
who suffered because of his circumstances.
Or maybe you relate more to Israel, who suffered because of his circumstances. Or maybe you relate more to Israel, who suffered because of their sins.
But whether you're Israel or Job, there is still hope for you,
because this is what Scripture says about God.
No matter how much is destroyed, God can rebuild.
And when God rebuilds something, he improves on it.
He's where the joy is.
Tomorrow we'll be starting the book of Zechariah.
It's 14 chapters long.
We're linking to a short video overview in the show notes that will really help set you
up for success.
Check it out if you've got eight minutes to spare.
Just a friendly reminder, did you know we have a printable version of our reading plan?
You can download it for free at TheBibleRecap.com forward slash start.
It's a great resource for those of you who want the satisfaction of physically crossing
something off your list or filling it in with your special color coding process.
Also, if you've invited a friend to start reading the New Testament with us on October
1st, be sure to share this resource with them.
Again, that's TheBibleRecap.com forward slash start or click the link in the show notes.