40.day

Day 24: People of the Book

A LoveSingapore 40.Day prayer and fast devotional, following 2021's theme of From the Ground Up: A Prayer Journey Through the Book of Nehemiah.

LoveSingapore // July 24, 2021, 12:01 am

24-wbs

Bible reading for 40.DAY 2021 |  Nehemiah 8:13–18


Once you’ve tasted the pure Word of God, you will always hunger for more. On the first day of the month, a holiday, Ezra feasted Israel on the Bread of Life for half the day. On the second day, not a holiday, the priests, Levites, and heads of fathers’ houses came back for more (Nehemiah 8:13).

Great teachers don’t just teach. They create an appetite for the Word. And they don’t stop there.

They teach people to feed themselves with the Word of God. Ezra’s newly formed Bible study fellowship immediately began digging into the Word for themselves. And they found it written … ! (Nehemiah 8:14)

Great teachers don’t just impart knowledge. They inspire obedience.

Great teachers don’t just impart knowledge. They inspire obedience. They close the gap between theory and practice.

No sooner had Ezra’s students found it written than tents sprang up all around Jerusalem (Nehemiah 8:14-17). They wasted no time preparing for the upcoming Feast of Booths that commemorates Israel’s wilderness journey.

Since the days of Joshua, there had not been a Festival of Booths like this one. There was great rejoicing (Nehemiah 8:17).

Obedience to the Word brings great joy.

Great teachers not only teach others. They also teach others who teach others who teach others. This is the life and legacy of Ezra the scribe. No nationwide attempt to teach the Law had been made since the exile. … A massive programme of educating people in the divine law was very urgently needed (JI Packer).

Obedience to the Word brings great joy.

Ezra met this urgent need. He reset the nation from the ground up by putting the Word of God into the hands of the laity. He started with faithful men who would be able to teach others also (2 Timothy 2:2).

The heads of fathers’ households who studied under Ezra in the Water Gate Revival were not just heads of immediate families. They were leaders of ancestral clans (Nehemiah 8:13). They were, in effect, successors of the Patriarchs. They had the stature and bandwidth to disseminate and impart the knowledge of God to all the families of Israel, post-exile.

Judaism rightly recognises Ezra as a Second Moses. Apart from the Lawgiver himself, Ezra did more than any other to transform the Jewish people into The People of the Book, as they are known to this day.

Will the Singapore Church be known as The People of the Book?

Wall of duty

1. Is this your cry? O give me that book! At any price, give me the book of God! (John Wesley). Blessed are those who hunger for the Word. And blessed are those who, like Ezra, teach the Word in ways that make us hungry for more.

Blessed are those who hunger for the Word.

2. Do you know? The men who studied the Word under Ezra were anything but novices. They were the heads of fathers’ houses (Nehemiah 8:13). Their predecessors included mighty men of valour, commanders of armies, and leaders of whole tribes (1 Chronicles 26:32; 2 Chronicles 26:12-13).

They were trustworthy men of outstanding ability. They could influence and teach many others who, in turn, could do the same.

Pray for the Singapore Church. Ask God for a nationwide movement of Biblical education. Veterans of the Word teaching next generation leaders. One-to-one mentoring, life-on-life discipleship, passing down their wealth of Bible knowledge and expository skills to the young. Ask God to knit their hearts, amplify their voices, and anoint them mightily to teach others who teach others who teach others.

3. Do you realise? The online world has become a dumpster for false teaching, as predicted: For the time is coming when people will not endure sound teaching, but having itching ears they will accumulate for themselves teachers to suit their own passions, and will turn away from listening to the truth and wander off into myths (2 Timothy 4:3-4).

The pandemic is an opportunity to rethink, reimagine, and remake church.

Watch and pray. May all our churches ramp up efforts to intentionally disciple digital natives in the Word. May God stir our young to dig deep into the Scriptures for themselves, and find it written. May they engage critically and confidently with an increasingly secular generation – to counter half-truths, lies, liberal world views, strange teachings, and weird practices.

May they heed the Word: Follow the pattern of the sound words that you have heard from me, in the faith and love that are in Christ Jesus. By the Holy Spirit who dwells within us, guard the good deposit entrusted to you (2 Timothy 1:13-14).

4. Can you see? The pandemic is not a death sentence. It is an opportunity to rethink, reimagine, and remake church. A trumpet call to keep the main thing the main thing.

Pray: God, help us to uphold the centrality of Christ and Your Word. Bring us back to the roots of the Early Church: Discipleship in community. In-person gatherings, large and small, that prioritise Your Word (Acts 2:42-47). We take full ownership of this sacred duty to mould minds, shape values, and tutor hearts to hear and obey Your Word. Make us a People of the Book. Turn every local church into a centre of excellence for biblical preaching, teaching, and practice.


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About the author

LoveSingapore

Founded in 1995, LoveSingapore is a unity movement motivated by love, fuelled by prayer, and inspired by a common vision: God's greatest glory seen through a life changed, a church revived, a nation transformed, and a world evangelised.

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