DAY TWO HUNDRED-THIRTY THREE

 

____


August 21



   

Click any of the links below to read the devotional for the day and verses.






Devotional

For the Lord your God is gracious and merciful; he will not turn his face away from you if you return to him. 2 Chronicles 30:9b CSB

Have you ever been in a conversation with someone and you could tell that they were completely distracted? They were looking all around. They didn’t have good eye contact. They were distracted by their surroundings. In today’s verse, there is a promise of God’s undivided attention. This attention comes because of who God is. He is full of grace and mercy. Notice the condition for His undivided attention is based in your desire to return to Him. It’s not about meeting God halfway, because that’s not possible. It’s about you turning to Him and Him meeting you right where you are. It’s God’s grace and mercy that move you from where you are to where He would like you to be. Choose to turn to God and see what His undivided attention looks like in your life.

2 Chronicles 28 CSB

Judah’s King Ahaz

28
Ahaz was twenty years old when he became king, and he reigned sixteen years in Jerusalem. He did not do what was right in the Lord’s sight like his ancestor David, 2 for he walked in the ways of the kings of Israel and made cast images of the Baals. 3 He burned incense in Ben Hinnom Valley and burned his children in the fire, imitating the detestable practices of the nations the Lord had dispossessed before the Israelites. 4 He sacrificed and burned incense on the high places, on the hills, and under every green tree.

5 So the Lord his God handed Ahaz over to the king of Aram. He attacked him and took many captives to Damascus.

Ahaz was also handed over to the king of Israel, who struck him with great force: 6 Pekah son of Remaliah killed one hundred twenty thousand in Judah in one day—all brave men—because they had abandoned the Lord God of their ancestors. 7 An Ephraimite warrior named Zichri killed the king’s son Maaseiah, Azrikam governor of the palace, and Elkanah who was second to the king. 8 Then the Israelites took two hundred thousand captives from their brothers—women, sons, and daughters. They also took a great deal of plunder from them and brought it to Samaria.

9 A prophet of the Lord named Oded was there. He went out to meet the army that came to Samaria and said to them, “Look, the Lord God of your ancestors handed them over to you because of his wrath against Judah, but you slaughtered them in a rage that has reached heaven. 10 Now you plan to reduce the people of Judah and Jerusalem, male and female, to slavery. Are you not also guilty before the Lord your God? 11 Listen to me and return the captives you took from your brothers, for the Lord’s burning anger is on you.”

12 So some men who were leaders of the Ephraimites—Azariah son of Jehohanan, Berechiah son of Meshillemoth, Jehizkiah son of Shallum, and Amasa son of Hadlai—stood in opposition to those coming from the war. 13 They said to them, “You must not bring the captives here, for you plan to bring guilt on us from the Lord to add to our sins and our guilt. For we have much guilt, and burning anger is on Israel.”

14 The army left the captives and the plunder in the presence of the officers and the congregation. 15 Then the men who were designated by name took charge of the captives and provided clothes for their naked ones from the plunder. They clothed them, gave them sandals, food and drink, dressed their wounds, and provided donkeys for all the feeble. The Israelites brought them to Jericho, the City of Palms, among their brothers. Then they returned to Samaria.

16 At that time King Ahaz asked the king of Assyria for help. 17 The Edomites came again, attacked Judah, and took captives. 18 The Philistines also raided the cities of the Judean foothills and the Negev of Judah. They captured and occupied Beth-shemesh, Aijalon, and Gederoth, as well as Soco, Timnah, and Gimzo with their surrounding villages. 19 For the Lord humbled Judah because of King Ahaz of Judah, who threw off restraint in Judah and was unfaithful to the Lord. 20 Then King Tiglath-pileser of Assyria came against Ahaz; he oppressed him and did not give him support. 21 Although Ahaz plundered the Lord’s temple and the palace of the king and of the rulers and gave the plunder to the king of Assyria, it did not help him.

22 At the time of his distress, King Ahaz himself became more unfaithful to the Lord. 23 He sacrificed to the gods of Damascus which had defeated him; he said, “Since the gods of the kings of Aram are helping them, I will sacrifice to them so that they will help me.” But they were the downfall of him and of all Israel.

24 Then Ahaz gathered up the utensils of God’s temple, cut them into pieces, shut the doors of the Lord’s temple, and made himself altars on every street corner in Jerusalem. 25 He made high places in every city of Judah to offer incense to other gods, and he angered the Lord, the God of his ancestors.

Ahaz’s Death

26 As for the rest of his deeds and all his ways, from beginning to end, they are written in the Book of the Kings of Judah and Israel. 27 Ahaz rested with his ancestors and was buried in the city, in Jerusalem, but they did not bring him into the tombs of the kings of Israel. His son Hezekiah became king in his place.

2 Chronicles 29 CSB

Judah’s King Hezekiah

29
Hezekiah was twenty-five years old when he became king, and he reigned twenty-nine years in Jerusalem. His mother’s name was Abijah daughter of Zechariah. 2 He did what was right in the Lord’s sight just as his ancestor David had done.

3 In the first year of his reign, in the first month, he opened the doors of the Lord’s temple and repaired them. 4 Then he brought in the priests and Levites and gathered them in the eastern public square. 5 He said to them, “Hear me, Levites. Consecrate yourselves now and consecrate the temple of the Lord, the God of your ancestors. Remove everything impure from the holy place. 6 For our ancestors were unfaithful and did what is evil in the sight of the Lord our God. They abandoned him, turned their faces away from the Lord’s dwelling place, and turned their backs on him. 7 They also closed the doors of the portico, extinguished the lamps, did not burn incense, and did not offer burnt offerings in the holy place of the God of Israel. 8 Therefore, the wrath of the Lord was on Judah and Jerusalem, and he made them an object of terror, horror, and mockery, as you see with your own eyes. 9 Our fathers fell by the sword, and our sons, our daughters, and our wives are in captivity because of this. 10 It is in my heart now to make a covenant with the Lord, the God of Israel so that his burning anger may turn away from us. 11 My sons, don’t be negligent now, for the Lord has chosen you to stand in his presence, to serve him, and to be his ministers and burners of incense.”

Cleansing the Temple

12 Then the Levites stood up:

 Mahath son of Amasai and Joel son of Azariah from the Kohathites;
 Kish son of Abdi and Azariah son of Jehallelel from the Merarites;
 Joah son of Zimmah and Eden son of Joah from the Gershonites;
13 Shimri and Jeuel from the Elizaphanites;
 Zechariah and Mattaniah from the Asaphites;
14 Jehiel and Shimei from the Hemanites;
 Shemaiah and Uzziel from the Jeduthunites.

15 They gathered their brothers together, consecrated themselves, and went according to the king’s command by the words of the Lord to cleanse the Lord’s temple.

16 The priests went to the entrance of the Lord’s temple to cleanse it. They took all the unclean things they found in the Lord’s sanctuary to the courtyard of the Lord’s temple. Then the Levites received them and took them outside to the Kidron Valley. 17 They began the consecration on the first day of the first month, and on the eighth day of the month they came to the portico of the Lord’s temple. They consecrated the Lord’s temple for eight days, and on the sixteenth day of the first month they finished.

18 Then they went inside to King Hezekiah and said, “We have cleansed the whole temple of the Lord, the altar of burnt offering and all its utensils, and the table for the rows of the Bread of the Presence and all its utensils. 19 We have set up and consecrated all the utensils that King Ahaz rejected during his reign when he became unfaithful. They are in front of the altar of the Lord.”

Renewal of Temple Worship

20 King Hezekiah got up early, gathered the city officials, and went to the Lord’s temple. 21 They brought seven bulls, seven rams, seven lambs, and seven male goats as a sin offering for the kingdom, for the sanctuary, and for Judah. Then he told the descendants of Aaron, the priests, to offer them on the altar of the Lord. 22 So they slaughtered the bulls, and the priests received the blood and splattered it on the altar. They slaughtered the rams and splattered the blood on the altar. They slaughtered the lambs and splattered the blood on the altar. 23 Then they brought the goats for the sin offering right into the presence of the king and the congregation, who laid their hands on them. 24 The priests slaughtered the goats and put their blood on the altar for a sin offering, to make atonement for all Israel, for the king said that the burnt offering and sin offering were for all Israel.

25 Hezekiah stationed the Levites in the Lord’s temple with cymbals, harps, and lyres according to the command of David, Gad the king’s seer, and the prophet Nathan. For the command was from the Lord through his prophets. 26 The Levites stood with the instruments of David, and the priests with the trumpets.

27 Then Hezekiah ordered that the burnt offering be offered on the altar. When the burnt offerings began, the song of the Lord and the trumpets began, accompanied by the instruments of King David of Israel. 28 The whole assembly was worshiping, singing the song, and blowing the trumpets—all this continued until the burnt offering was completed. 29 When the burnt offerings were completed, the king and all those present with him bowed down and worshiped. 30 Then King Hezekiah and the officials told the Levites to sing praise to the Lord in the words of David and of the seer Asaph. So they sang praises with rejoicing and knelt low and worshiped.

31 Hezekiah concluded, “Now you are consecrated to the Lord. Come near and bring sacrifices and thanksgiving offerings to the Lord’s temple.” So the congregation brought sacrifices and thanksgiving offerings, and all those with willing hearts brought burnt offerings. 32 The number of burnt offerings the congregation brought was seventy bulls, one hundred rams, and two hundred lambs; all these were for a burnt offering to the Lord. 33 Six hundred bulls and three thousand sheep and goats were consecrated.

34 However, since there were not enough priests, they weren’t able to skin all the burnt offerings, so their Levite brothers helped them until the work was finished and until the priests consecrated themselves. For the Levites were more conscientious to consecrate themselves than the priests were. 35 Furthermore, the burnt offerings were abundant, along with the fat of the fellowship offerings and with the drink offerings for the burnt offering.

So the service of the Lord’s temple was established. 36 Then Hezekiah and all the people rejoiced over how God had prepared the people, for it had come about suddenly.

2 Chronicles 30 CSB

Celebration of the Passover

30
Then Hezekiah sent word throughout all Israel and Judah, and he also wrote letters to Ephraim and Manasseh to come to the Lord’s temple in Jerusalem to observe the Passover of the Lord, the God of Israel. 2 For the king and his officials and the entire congregation in Jerusalem decided to observe the Passover of the Lord in the second month, 3 because they were not able to observe it at the appropriate time. Not enough of the priests had consecrated themselves, and the people hadn’t been gathered together in Jerusalem. 4 The proposal pleased the king and the congregation, 5 so they affirmed the proposal and spread the message throughout all Israel, from Beer-sheba to Dan, to come to observe the Passover of the Lord, the God of Israel in Jerusalem, for they hadn’t observed it often, as prescribed.

6 So the couriers went throughout Israel and Judah with letters from the hand of the king and his officials, and according to the king’s command, saying, “Israelites, return to the Lord, the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Israel so that he may return to those of you who remain, who have escaped the grasp of the kings of Assyria. 7 Don’t be like your ancestors and your brothers who were unfaithful to the Lord, the God of their ancestors so that he made them an object of horror as you yourselves see. 8 Don’t become obstinate now like your ancestors did. Give your allegiance to the Lord, and come to his sanctuary that he has consecrated forever. Serve the Lord your God so that he may turn his burning anger away from you, 9 for when you return to the Lord, your brothers and your sons will receive mercy in the presence of their captors and will return to this land. For the Lord your God is gracious and merciful; he will not turn his face away from you if you return to him.”

10 The couriers traveled from city to city in the land of Ephraim and Manasseh as far as Zebulun, but the inhabitants laughed at them and mocked them. 11 But some from Asher, Manasseh, and Zebulun humbled themselves and came to Jerusalem. 12 Also, the power of God was at work in Judah to unite them to carry out the command of the king and his officials by the word of the Lord.

13 A very large assembly of people was gathered in Jerusalem to observe the Festival of Unleavened Bread in the second month. 14 They proceeded to take away the altars that were in Jerusalem, and they took away the incense altars and threw them into the Kidron Valley. 15 They slaughtered the Passover lamb on the fourteenth day of the second month. The priests and Levites were ashamed, and they consecrated themselves and brought burnt offerings to the Lord’s temple. 16 They stood at their prescribed posts, according to the law of Moses, the man of God. The priests splattered the blood received from the Levites, 17 for there were many in the assembly who had not consecrated themselves, and so the Levites were in charge of slaughtering the Passover lambs for every unclean person to consecrate the lambs to the Lord. 18 A large number of the people—many from Ephraim, Manasseh, Issachar, and Zebulun—were ritually unclean, yet they had eaten the Passover contrary to what was written. But Hezekiah had interceded for them, saying, “May the good Lord provide atonement on behalf of 19 whoever sets his whole heart on seeking God, the Lord, the God of his ancestors, even though not according to the purification rules of the sanctuary.” 20 So the Lord heard Hezekiah and healed the people. 21 The Israelites who were present in Jerusalem observed the Festival of Unleavened Bread seven days with great joy, and the Levites and the priests praised the Lord day after day with loud instruments. 22 Then Hezekiah encouraged all the Levites who performed skillfully before the Lord. They ate at the appointed festival for seven days, sacrificing fellowship offerings and giving thanks to the Lord, the God of their ancestors.

23 The whole congregation decided to observe seven more days, so they observed seven days with joy, 24 for King Hezekiah of Judah contributed one thousand bulls and seven thousand sheep for the congregation. Also, the officials contributed one thousand bulls and ten thousand sheep for the congregation, and many priests consecrated themselves. 25 Then the whole assembly of Judah with the priests and Levites, the whole assembly that came from Israel, the resident aliens who came from the land of Israel, and those who were living in Judah, rejoiced. 26 There was great rejoicing in Jerusalem, for nothing like this was known since the days of Solomon son of David, the king of Israel.

27 Then the priests and the Levites stood to bless the people, and God heard them, and their prayer came into his holy dwelling place in heaven.

2 Chronicles 31 CSB

Removal of Idolatry

31
When all this was completed, all Israel who had attended went out to the cities of Judah and broke up the sacred pillars, chopped down the Asherah poles, and tore down the high places and altars throughout Judah and Benjamin, as well as in Ephraim and Manasseh, to the last one. Then all the Israelites returned to their cities, each to his own possession.

Offerings for Levites

2 Hezekiah reestablished the divisions of the priests and Levites for the burnt offerings and fellowship offerings, for ministry, for giving thanks, and for praise in the gates of the camp of the Lord, each division corresponding to his service among the priests and Levites. 3 The king contributed from his own possessions for the regular morning and evening burnt offerings, the burnt offerings of the Sabbaths, of the New Moons, and of the appointed feasts, as written in the law of the Lord. 4 He told the people who lived in Jerusalem to give a contribution for the priests and Levites so that they could devote their energy to the law of the Lord. 5 When the word spread, the Israelites gave liberally of the best of the grain, new wine, fresh oil, honey, and of all the produce of the field, and they brought in an abundance, a tenth of everything. 6 As for the Israelites and Judahites who lived in the cities of Judah, they also brought a tenth of the herds and flocks, and a tenth of the dedicated things that were consecrated to the Lord their God. They gathered them into large piles. 7 In the third month they began building up the piles, and they finished in the seventh month. 8 When Hezekiah and his officials came and viewed the piles, they blessed the Lord and his people Israel.

9 Hezekiah asked the priests and Levites about the piles. 10 The chief priest Azariah, of the household of Zadok, answered him, “Since they began bringing the offering to the Lord’s temple, we have been eating and are satisfied and there is plenty left over because the Lord has blessed his people; this abundance is what is left over.”

11 Hezekiah told them to prepare chambers in the Lord’s temple, and they prepared them. 12 The offering, the tenth, and the dedicated things were brought faithfully. Conaniah the Levite was the officer in charge of them, and his brother Shimei was second. 13 Jehiel, Azaziah, Nahath, Asahel, Jerimoth, Jozabad, Eliel, Ismachiah, Mahath, and Benaiah were deputies under the authority of Conaniah and his brother Shimei by appointment of King Hezekiah and of Azariah the chief official of God’s temple.

14 Kore son of Imnah the Levite, the keeper of the East Gate, was over the freewill offerings to God to distribute the contribution to the Lord and the consecrated things. 15 Eden, Miniamin, Jeshua, Shemaiah, Amariah, and Shecaniah in the cities of the priests were to distribute it faithfully under his authority to their brothers by divisions, whether large or small. 16 In addition, they distributed it to males registered by genealogy three years old and above; to all who would enter the Lord’s temple for their daily duty, for their service in their responsibilities according to their divisions. 17 They distributed also to those recorded by genealogy of the priests by their ancestral families and the Levites twenty years old and above, by their responsibilities in their divisions; 18 to those registered by genealogy—with all their dependents, wives, sons, and daughters—of the whole assembly (for they had faithfully consecrated themselves as holy); 19 and to the descendants of Aaron, the priests, in the common fields of their cities, in each and every city. There were men who were registered by name to distribute a portion to every male among the priests and to every Levite recorded by genealogy.

20 Hezekiah did this throughout all Judah. He did what was good and upright and true before the Lord his God. 21 He was diligent in every deed that he began in the service of God’s temple, in the instruction and the commands, in order to seek his God, and he prospered.

Psalm 78 CSB

Lessons from Israel’s Past

A Maskil of Asaph.

1
My people, hear my instruction;
 listen to the words from my mouth.
2 I will declare wise sayings;
 I will speak mysteries from the past—
3 things we have heard and known
 and that our ancestors have passed down to us.
4 We will not hide them from their children,
 but will tell a future generation
 the praiseworthy acts of the Lord,
 his might, and the wondrous works
 he has performed.
5 He established a testimony in Jacob
 and set up a law in Israel,
 which he commanded our ancestors
 to teach to their children
6 so that a future generation—
 children yet to be born—might know.
 They were to rise and tell their children
7 so that they might put their confidence in God
 and not forget God’s works,
 but keep his commands.
8 Then they would not be like their ancestors,
 a stubborn and rebellious generation,
 a generation whose heart was not loyal
 and whose spirit was not faithful to God.

9 The Ephraimite archers turned back
 on the day of battle.
10 They did not keep God’s covenant
 and refused to live by his law.
11 They forgot what he had done,
 the wondrous works he had shown them.
12 He worked wonders in the sight of their ancestors
 in the land of Egypt, the territory of Zoan.
13 He split the sea and brought them across;
 the water stood firm like a wall.
14 He led them with a cloud by day
 and with a fiery light throughout the night.
15 He split rocks in the wilderness
 and gave them drink as abundant as the depths.
16 He brought streams out of the stone
 and made water flow down like rivers.

17 But they continued to sin against him,
 rebelling in the desert against the Most High.
18 They deliberately tested God,
 demanding the food they craved.
19 They spoke against God, saying,
 “Is God able to provide food in the wilderness?
20 Look! He struck the rock and water gushed out;
 torrents overflowed.
 But can he also provide bread
 or furnish meat for his people?”
21 Therefore, the Lord heard and became furious;
 then fire broke out against Jacob,
 and anger flared up against Israel
22 because they did not believe God
 or rely on his salvation.
23 He gave a command to the clouds above
 and opened the doors of heaven.
24 He rained manna for them to eat;
 he gave them grain from heaven.
25 People ate the bread of angels.
 He sent them an abundant supply of food.
26 He made the east wind blow in the skies
 and drove the south wind by his might.
27 He rained meat on them like dust,
 and winged birds like the sand of the seas.
28 He made them fall in the camp,
 all around the tents.
29 The people ate and were completely satisfied,
 for he gave them what they craved.
30 Before they had turned from what they craved,
 while the food was still in their mouths,
31 God’s anger flared up against them,
 and he killed some of their best men.
 He struck down Israel’s fit young men.

32 Despite all this, they kept sinning
 and did not believe his wondrous works.
33 He made their days end in futility,
 their years in sudden disaster.
34 When he killed some of them,
 the rest began to seek him;
 they repented and searched for God.
35 They remembered that God was their rock,
 the Most High God, their Redeemer.
36 But they deceived him with their mouths,
 they lied to him with their tongues,
37 their hearts were insincere toward him,
 and they were unfaithful to his covenant.
38 Yet he was compassionate;
 he atoned for their iniquity
 and did not destroy them.
 He often turned his anger aside
 and did not unleash all his wrath.
39 He remembered that they were only flesh,
 a wind that passes and does not return.

40 How often they rebelled against him
 in the wilderness
 and grieved him in the desert.
41 They constantly tested God
 and provoked the Holy One of Israel.
42 They did not remember his power shown
 on the day he redeemed them from the foe,
43 when he performed his miraculous signs in Egypt
 and his wonders in the territory of Zoan.
44 He turned their rivers into blood,
 and they could not drink from their streams.
45 He sent among them swarms of flies,
 which fed on them,
 and frogs, which devastated them.
46 He gave their crops to the caterpillar
 and the fruit of their labor to the locust.
47 He killed their vines with hail
 and their sycamore fig trees with a flood.
48 He handed over their livestock to hail
 and their cattle to lightning bolts.
49 He sent his burning anger against them:
 fury, indignation, and calamity—
 a band of deadly messengers.
50 He cleared a path for his anger.
 He did not spare them from death
 but delivered their lives to the plague.
51 He struck all the firstborn in Egypt,
 the first progeny of the tents of Ham.
52 He led his people out like sheep
 and guided them like a flock in the wilderness.
53 He led them safely, and they were not afraid;
 but the sea covered their enemies.
54 He brought them to his holy territory,
 to the mountain his right hand acquired.
55 He drove out nations before them.
 He apportioned their inheritance by lot
 and settled the tribes of Israel in their tents.

56 But they rebelliously tested the Most High God,
 for they did not keep his decrees.
57 They treacherously turned away like their ancestors;
 they became warped like a faulty bow.
58 They enraged him with their high places
 and provoked his jealousy with their carved images.
59 God heard and became furious;
 he completely rejected Israel.
60 He abandoned the tabernacle at Shiloh,
 the tent where he resided among mankind.
61 He gave up his strength to captivity
 and his splendor to the hand of a foe.
62 He surrendered his people to the sword
 because he was enraged with his heritage.
63 Fire consumed his chosen young men,
 and his young women had no wedding songs.
64 His priests fell by the sword,
 and the widows could not lament.

65 The Lord awoke as if from sleep,
 like a warrior from the effects of wine.
66 He beat back his foes;
 he gave them lasting disgrace.
67 He rejected the tent of Joseph
 and did not choose the tribe of Ephraim.
68 He chose instead the tribe of Judah,
 Mount Zion, which he loved.
69 He built his sanctuary like the heights,
 like the earth that he established forever.
70 He chose David his servant
 and took him from the sheep pens;
71 he brought him from tending ewes
 to be shepherd over his people Jacob—
 over Israel, his inheritance.
72 He shepherded them with a pure heart
 and guided them with his skillful hands.

2 Chronicles 28 CSB

Judah’s King Ahaz

28
Ahaz was twenty years old when he became king, and he reigned sixteen years in Jerusalem. He did not do what was right in the Lord’s sight like his ancestor David, 2 for he walked in the ways of the kings of Israel and made cast images of the Baals. 3 He burned incense in Ben Hinnom Valley and burned his children in the fire, imitating the detestable practices of the nations the Lord had dispossessed before the Israelites. 4 He sacrificed and burned incense on the high places, on the hills, and under every green tree.

5 So the Lord his God handed Ahaz over to the king of Aram. He attacked him and took many captives to Damascus.

Ahaz was also handed over to the king of Israel, who struck him with great force: 6 Pekah son of Remaliah killed one hundred twenty thousand in Judah in one day—all brave men—because they had abandoned the Lord God of their ancestors. 7 An Ephraimite warrior named Zichri killed the king’s son Maaseiah, Azrikam governor of the palace, and Elkanah who was second to the king. 8 Then the Israelites took two hundred thousand captives from their brothers—women, sons, and daughters. They also took a great deal of plunder from them and brought it to Samaria.

9 A prophet of the Lord named Oded was there. He went out to meet the army that came to Samaria and said to them, “Look, the Lord God of your ancestors handed them over to you because of his wrath against Judah, but you slaughtered them in a rage that has reached heaven. 10 Now you plan to reduce the people of Judah and Jerusalem, male and female, to slavery. Are you not also guilty before the Lord your God? 11 Listen to me and return the captives you took from your brothers, for the Lord’s burning anger is on you.”

12 So some men who were leaders of the Ephraimites—Azariah son of Jehohanan, Berechiah son of Meshillemoth, Jehizkiah son of Shallum, and Amasa son of Hadlai—stood in opposition to those coming from the war. 13 They said to them, “You must not bring the captives here, for you plan to bring guilt on us from the Lord to add to our sins and our guilt. For we have much guilt, and burning anger is on Israel.”

14 The army left the captives and the plunder in the presence of the officers and the congregation. 15 Then the men who were designated by name took charge of the captives and provided clothes for their naked ones from the plunder. They clothed them, gave them sandals, food and drink, dressed their wounds, and provided donkeys for all the feeble. The Israelites brought them to Jericho, the City of Palms, among their brothers. Then they returned to Samaria.

16 At that time King Ahaz asked the king of Assyria for help. 17 The Edomites came again, attacked Judah, and took captives. 18 The Philistines also raided the cities of the Judean foothills and the Negev of Judah. They captured and occupied Beth-shemesh, Aijalon, and Gederoth, as well as Soco, Timnah, and Gimzo with their surrounding villages. 19 For the Lord humbled Judah because of King Ahaz of Judah, who threw off restraint in Judah and was unfaithful to the Lord. 20 Then King Tiglath-pileser of Assyria came against Ahaz; he oppressed him and did not give him support. 21 Although Ahaz plundered the Lord’s temple and the palace of the king and of the rulers and gave the plunder to the king of Assyria, it did not help him.

22 At the time of his distress, King Ahaz himself became more unfaithful to the Lord. 23 He sacrificed to the gods of Damascus which had defeated him; he said, “Since the gods of the kings of Aram are helping them, I will sacrifice to them so that they will help me.” But they were the downfall of him and of all Israel.

24 Then Ahaz gathered up the utensils of God’s temple, cut them into pieces, shut the doors of the Lord’s temple, and made himself altars on every street corner in Jerusalem. 25 He made high places in every city of Judah to offer incense to other gods, and he angered the Lord, the God of his ancestors.

Ahaz’s Death

26 As for the rest of his deeds and all his ways, from beginning to end, they are written in the Book of the Kings of Judah and Israel. 27 Ahaz rested with his ancestors and was buried in the city, in Jerusalem, but they did not bring him into the tombs of the kings of Israel. His son Hezekiah became king in his place.

----

2 Chronicles 29 CSB

Judah’s King Hezekiah

29
Hezekiah was twenty-five years old when he became king, and he reigned twenty-nine years in Jerusalem. His mother’s name was Abijah daughter of Zechariah. 2 He did what was right in the Lord’s sight just as his ancestor David had done.

3 In the first year of his reign, in the first month, he opened the doors of the Lord’s temple and repaired them. 4 Then he brought in the priests and Levites and gathered them in the eastern public square. 5 He said to them, “Hear me, Levites. Consecrate yourselves now and consecrate the temple of the Lord, the God of your ancestors. Remove everything impure from the holy place. 6 For our ancestors were unfaithful and did what is evil in the sight of the Lord our God. They abandoned him, turned their faces away from the Lord’s dwelling place, and turned their backs on him. 7 They also closed the doors of the portico, extinguished the lamps, did not burn incense, and did not offer burnt offerings in the holy place of the God of Israel. 8 Therefore, the wrath of the Lord was on Judah and Jerusalem, and he made them an object of terror, horror, and mockery, as you see with your own eyes. 9 Our fathers fell by the sword, and our sons, our daughters, and our wives are in captivity because of this. 10 It is in my heart now to make a covenant with the Lord, the God of Israel so that his burning anger may turn away from us. 11 My sons, don’t be negligent now, for the Lord has chosen you to stand in his presence, to serve him, and to be his ministers and burners of incense.”

Cleansing the Temple

12 Then the Levites stood up:

 Mahath son of Amasai and Joel son of Azariah from the Kohathites;
 Kish son of Abdi and Azariah son of Jehallelel from the Merarites;
 Joah son of Zimmah and Eden son of Joah from the Gershonites;
13 Shimri and Jeuel from the Elizaphanites;
 Zechariah and Mattaniah from the Asaphites;
14 Jehiel and Shimei from the Hemanites;
 Shemaiah and Uzziel from the Jeduthunites.

15 They gathered their brothers together, consecrated themselves, and went according to the king’s command by the words of the Lord to cleanse the Lord’s temple.

16 The priests went to the entrance of the Lord’s temple to cleanse it. They took all the unclean things they found in the Lord’s sanctuary to the courtyard of the Lord’s temple. Then the Levites received them and took them outside to the Kidron Valley. 17 They began the consecration on the first day of the first month, and on the eighth day of the month they came to the portico of the Lord’s temple. They consecrated the Lord’s temple for eight days, and on the sixteenth day of the first month they finished.

18 Then they went inside to King Hezekiah and said, “We have cleansed the whole temple of the Lord, the altar of burnt offering and all its utensils, and the table for the rows of the Bread of the Presence and all its utensils. 19 We have set up and consecrated all the utensils that King Ahaz rejected during his reign when he became unfaithful. They are in front of the altar of the Lord.”

Renewal of Temple Worship

20 King Hezekiah got up early, gathered the city officials, and went to the Lord’s temple. 21 They brought seven bulls, seven rams, seven lambs, and seven male goats as a sin offering for the kingdom, for the sanctuary, and for Judah. Then he told the descendants of Aaron, the priests, to offer them on the altar of the Lord. 22 So they slaughtered the bulls, and the priests received the blood and splattered it on the altar. They slaughtered the rams and splattered the blood on the altar. They slaughtered the lambs and splattered the blood on the altar. 23 Then they brought the goats for the sin offering right into the presence of the king and the congregation, who laid their hands on them. 24 The priests slaughtered the goats and put their blood on the altar for a sin offering, to make atonement for all Israel, for the king said that the burnt offering and sin offering were for all Israel.

25 Hezekiah stationed the Levites in the Lord’s temple with cymbals, harps, and lyres according to the command of David, Gad the king’s seer, and the prophet Nathan. For the command was from the Lord through his prophets. 26 The Levites stood with the instruments of David, and the priests with the trumpets.

27 Then Hezekiah ordered that the burnt offering be offered on the altar. When the burnt offerings began, the song of the Lord and the trumpets began, accompanied by the instruments of King David of Israel. 28 The whole assembly was worshiping, singing the song, and blowing the trumpets—all this continued until the burnt offering was completed. 29 When the burnt offerings were completed, the king and all those present with him bowed down and worshiped. 30 Then King Hezekiah and the officials told the Levites to sing praise to the Lord in the words of David and of the seer Asaph. So they sang praises with rejoicing and knelt low and worshiped.

31 Hezekiah concluded, “Now you are consecrated to the Lord. Come near and bring sacrifices and thanksgiving offerings to the Lord’s temple.” So the congregation brought sacrifices and thanksgiving offerings, and all those with willing hearts brought burnt offerings. 32 The number of burnt offerings the congregation brought was seventy bulls, one hundred rams, and two hundred lambs; all these were for a burnt offering to the Lord. 33 Six hundred bulls and three thousand sheep and goats were consecrated.

34 However, since there were not enough priests, they weren’t able to skin all the burnt offerings, so their Levite brothers helped them until the work was finished and until the priests consecrated themselves. For the Levites were more conscientious to consecrate themselves than the priests were. 35 Furthermore, the burnt offerings were abundant, along with the fat of the fellowship offerings and with the drink offerings for the burnt offering.

So the service of the Lord’s temple was established. 36 Then Hezekiah and all the people rejoiced over how God had prepared the people, for it had come about suddenly.

----

2 Chronicles 30 CSB

Celebration of the Passover

30
Then Hezekiah sent word throughout all Israel and Judah, and he also wrote letters to Ephraim and Manasseh to come to the Lord’s temple in Jerusalem to observe the Passover of the Lord, the God of Israel. 2 For the king and his officials and the entire congregation in Jerusalem decided to observe the Passover of the Lord in the second month, 3 because they were not able to observe it at the appropriate time. Not enough of the priests had consecrated themselves, and the people hadn’t been gathered together in Jerusalem. 4 The proposal pleased the king and the congregation, 5 so they affirmed the proposal and spread the message throughout all Israel, from Beer-sheba to Dan, to come to observe the Passover of the Lord, the God of Israel in Jerusalem, for they hadn’t observed it often, as prescribed.

6 So the couriers went throughout Israel and Judah with letters from the hand of the king and his officials, and according to the king’s command, saying, “Israelites, return to the Lord, the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Israel so that he may return to those of you who remain, who have escaped the grasp of the kings of Assyria. 7 Don’t be like your ancestors and your brothers who were unfaithful to the Lord, the God of their ancestors so that he made them an object of horror as you yourselves see. 8 Don’t become obstinate now like your ancestors did. Give your allegiance to the Lord, and come to his sanctuary that he has consecrated forever. Serve the Lord your God so that he may turn his burning anger away from you, 9 for when you return to the Lord, your brothers and your sons will receive mercy in the presence of their captors and will return to this land. For the Lord your God is gracious and merciful; he will not turn his face away from you if you return to him.”

10 The couriers traveled from city to city in the land of Ephraim and Manasseh as far as Zebulun, but the inhabitants laughed at them and mocked them. 11 But some from Asher, Manasseh, and Zebulun humbled themselves and came to Jerusalem. 12 Also, the power of God was at work in Judah to unite them to carry out the command of the king and his officials by the word of the Lord.

13 A very large assembly of people was gathered in Jerusalem to observe the Festival of Unleavened Bread in the second month. 14 They proceeded to take away the altars that were in Jerusalem, and they took away the incense altars and threw them into the Kidron Valley. 15 They slaughtered the Passover lamb on the fourteenth day of the second month. The priests and Levites were ashamed, and they consecrated themselves and brought burnt offerings to the Lord’s temple. 16 They stood at their prescribed posts, according to the law of Moses, the man of God. The priests splattered the blood received from the Levites, 17 for there were many in the assembly who had not consecrated themselves, and so the Levites were in charge of slaughtering the Passover lambs for every unclean person to consecrate the lambs to the Lord. 18 A large number of the people—many from Ephraim, Manasseh, Issachar, and Zebulun—were ritually unclean, yet they had eaten the Passover contrary to what was written. But Hezekiah had interceded for them, saying, “May the good Lord provide atonement on behalf of 19 whoever sets his whole heart on seeking God, the Lord, the God of his ancestors, even though not according to the purification rules of the sanctuary.” 20 So the Lord heard Hezekiah and healed the people. 21 The Israelites who were present in Jerusalem observed the Festival of Unleavened Bread seven days with great joy, and the Levites and the priests praised the Lord day after day with loud instruments. 22 Then Hezekiah encouraged all the Levites who performed skillfully before the Lord. They ate at the appointed festival for seven days, sacrificing fellowship offerings and giving thanks to the Lord, the God of their ancestors.

23 The whole congregation decided to observe seven more days, so they observed seven days with joy, 24 for King Hezekiah of Judah contributed one thousand bulls and seven thousand sheep for the congregation. Also, the officials contributed one thousand bulls and ten thousand sheep for the congregation, and many priests consecrated themselves. 25 Then the whole assembly of Judah with the priests and Levites, the whole assembly that came from Israel, the resident aliens who came from the land of Israel, and those who were living in Judah, rejoiced. 26 There was great rejoicing in Jerusalem, for nothing like this was known since the days of Solomon son of David, the king of Israel.

27 Then the priests and the Levites stood to bless the people, and God heard them, and their prayer came into his holy dwelling place in heaven.

----

2 Chronicles 31 CSB

Removal of Idolatry

31
When all this was completed, all Israel who had attended went out to the cities of Judah and broke up the sacred pillars, chopped down the Asherah poles, and tore down the high places and altars throughout Judah and Benjamin, as well as in Ephraim and Manasseh, to the last one. Then all the Israelites returned to their cities, each to his own possession.

Offerings for Levites

2 Hezekiah reestablished the divisions of the priests and Levites for the burnt offerings and fellowship offerings, for ministry, for giving thanks, and for praise in the gates of the camp of the Lord, each division corresponding to his service among the priests and Levites. 3 The king contributed from his own possessions for the regular morning and evening burnt offerings, the burnt offerings of the Sabbaths, of the New Moons, and of the appointed feasts, as written in the law of the Lord. 4 He told the people who lived in Jerusalem to give a contribution for the priests and Levites so that they could devote their energy to the law of the Lord. 5 When the word spread, the Israelites gave liberally of the best of the grain, new wine, fresh oil, honey, and of all the produce of the field, and they brought in an abundance, a tenth of everything. 6 As for the Israelites and Judahites who lived in the cities of Judah, they also brought a tenth of the herds and flocks, and a tenth of the dedicated things that were consecrated to the Lord their God. They gathered them into large piles. 7 In the third month they began building up the piles, and they finished in the seventh month. 8 When Hezekiah and his officials came and viewed the piles, they blessed the Lord and his people Israel.

9 Hezekiah asked the priests and Levites about the piles. 10 The chief priest Azariah, of the household of Zadok, answered him, “Since they began bringing the offering to the Lord’s temple, we have been eating and are satisfied and there is plenty left over because the Lord has blessed his people; this abundance is what is left over.”

11 Hezekiah told them to prepare chambers in the Lord’s temple, and they prepared them. 12 The offering, the tenth, and the dedicated things were brought faithfully. Conaniah the Levite was the officer in charge of them, and his brother Shimei was second. 13 Jehiel, Azaziah, Nahath, Asahel, Jerimoth, Jozabad, Eliel, Ismachiah, Mahath, and Benaiah were deputies under the authority of Conaniah and his brother Shimei by appointment of King Hezekiah and of Azariah the chief official of God’s temple.

14 Kore son of Imnah the Levite, the keeper of the East Gate, was over the freewill offerings to God to distribute the contribution to the Lord and the consecrated things. 15 Eden, Miniamin, Jeshua, Shemaiah, Amariah, and Shecaniah in the cities of the priests were to distribute it faithfully under his authority to their brothers by divisions, whether large or small. 16 In addition, they distributed it to males registered by genealogy three years old and above; to all who would enter the Lord’s temple for their daily duty, for their service in their responsibilities according to their divisions. 17 They distributed also to those recorded by genealogy of the priests by their ancestral families and the Levites twenty years old and above, by their responsibilities in their divisions; 18 to those registered by genealogy—with all their dependents, wives, sons, and daughters—of the whole assembly (for they had faithfully consecrated themselves as holy); 19 and to the descendants of Aaron, the priests, in the common fields of their cities, in each and every city. There were men who were registered by name to distribute a portion to every male among the priests and to every Levite recorded by genealogy.

20 Hezekiah did this throughout all Judah. He did what was good and upright and true before the Lord his God. 21 He was diligent in every deed that he began in the service of God’s temple, in the instruction and the commands, in order to seek his God, and he prospered.

----

Psalm 78 CSB

Lessons from Israel’s Past

A Maskil of Asaph.

1
My people, hear my instruction;
 listen to the words from my mouth.
2 I will declare wise sayings;
 I will speak mysteries from the past—
3 things we have heard and known
 and that our ancestors have passed down to us.
4 We will not hide them from their children,
 but will tell a future generation
 the praiseworthy acts of the Lord,
 his might, and the wondrous works
 he has performed.
5 He established a testimony in Jacob
 and set up a law in Israel,
 which he commanded our ancestors
 to teach to their children
6 so that a future generation—
 children yet to be born—might know.
 They were to rise and tell their children
7 so that they might put their confidence in God
 and not forget God’s works,
 but keep his commands.
8 Then they would not be like their ancestors,
 a stubborn and rebellious generation,
 a generation whose heart was not loyal
 and whose spirit was not faithful to God.

9 The Ephraimite archers turned back
 on the day of battle.
10 They did not keep God’s covenant
 and refused to live by his law.
11 They forgot what he had done,
 the wondrous works he had shown them.
12 He worked wonders in the sight of their ancestors
 in the land of Egypt, the territory of Zoan.
13 He split the sea and brought them across;
 the water stood firm like a wall.
14 He led them with a cloud by day
 and with a fiery light throughout the night.
15 He split rocks in the wilderness
 and gave them drink as abundant as the depths.
16 He brought streams out of the stone
 and made water flow down like rivers.

17 But they continued to sin against him,
 rebelling in the desert against the Most High.
18 They deliberately tested God,
 demanding the food they craved.
19 They spoke against God, saying,
 “Is God able to provide food in the wilderness?
20 Look! He struck the rock and water gushed out;
 torrents overflowed.
 But can he also provide bread
 or furnish meat for his people?”
21 Therefore, the Lord heard and became furious;
 then fire broke out against Jacob,
 and anger flared up against Israel
22 because they did not believe God
 or rely on his salvation.
23 He gave a command to the clouds above
 and opened the doors of heaven.
24 He rained manna for them to eat;
 he gave them grain from heaven.
25 People ate the bread of angels.
 He sent them an abundant supply of food.
26 He made the east wind blow in the skies
 and drove the south wind by his might.
27 He rained meat on them like dust,
 and winged birds like the sand of the seas.
28 He made them fall in the camp,
 all around the tents.
29 The people ate and were completely satisfied,
 for he gave them what they craved.
30 Before they had turned from what they craved,
 while the food was still in their mouths,
31 God’s anger flared up against them,
 and he killed some of their best men.
 He struck down Israel’s fit young men.

32 Despite all this, they kept sinning
 and did not believe his wondrous works.
33 He made their days end in futility,
 their years in sudden disaster.
34 When he killed some of them,
 the rest began to seek him;
 they repented and searched for God.
35 They remembered that God was their rock,
 the Most High God, their Redeemer.
36 But they deceived him with their mouths,
 they lied to him with their tongues,
37 their hearts were insincere toward him,
 and they were unfaithful to his covenant.
38 Yet he was compassionate;
 he atoned for their iniquity
 and did not destroy them.
 He often turned his anger aside
 and did not unleash all his wrath.
39 He remembered that they were only flesh,
 a wind that passes and does not return.

40 How often they rebelled against him
 in the wilderness
 and grieved him in the desert.
41 They constantly tested God
 and provoked the Holy One of Israel.
42 They did not remember his power shown
 on the day he redeemed them from the foe,
43 when he performed his miraculous signs in Egypt
 and his wonders in the territory of Zoan.
44 He turned their rivers into blood,
 and they could not drink from their streams.
45 He sent among them swarms of flies,
 which fed on them,
 and frogs, which devastated them.
46 He gave their crops to the caterpillar
 and the fruit of their labor to the locust.
47 He killed their vines with hail
 and their sycamore fig trees with a flood.
48 He handed over their livestock to hail
 and their cattle to lightning bolts.
49 He sent his burning anger against them:
 fury, indignation, and calamity—
 a band of deadly messengers.
50 He cleared a path for his anger.
 He did not spare them from death
 but delivered their lives to the plague.
51 He struck all the firstborn in Egypt,
 the first progeny of the tents of Ham.
52 He led his people out like sheep
 and guided them like a flock in the wilderness.
53 He led them safely, and they were not afraid;
 but the sea covered their enemies.
54 He brought them to his holy territory,
 to the mountain his right hand acquired.
55 He drove out nations before them.
 He apportioned their inheritance by lot
 and settled the tribes of Israel in their tents.

56 But they rebelliously tested the Most High God,
 for they did not keep his decrees.
57 They treacherously turned away like their ancestors;
 they became warped like a faulty bow.
58 They enraged him with their high places
 and provoked his jealousy with their carved images.
59 God heard and became furious;
 he completely rejected Israel.
60 He abandoned the tabernacle at Shiloh,
 the tent where he resided among mankind.
61 He gave up his strength to captivity
 and his splendor to the hand of a foe.
62 He surrendered his people to the sword
 because he was enraged with his heritage.
63 Fire consumed his chosen young men,
 and his young women had no wedding songs.
64 His priests fell by the sword,
 and the widows could not lament.

65 The Lord awoke as if from sleep,
 like a warrior from the effects of wine.
66 He beat back his foes;
 he gave them lasting disgrace.
67 He rejected the tent of Joseph
 and did not choose the tribe of Ephraim.
68 He chose instead the tribe of Judah,
 Mount Zion, which he loved.
69 He built his sanctuary like the heights,
 like the earth that he established forever.
70 He chose David his servant
 and took him from the sheep pens;
71 he brought him from tending ewes
 to be shepherd over his people Jacob—
 over Israel, his inheritance.
72 He shepherded them with a pure heart
 and guided them with his skillful hands.




  BACK TO THE TOP  
 

LIFE INSPIRATION

Want to receive the daily devotion above straight to your inbox along with the links to our One Year Bible plan? Then sign up for Life Inspiration using the form below!

 
 
Life Center