Ezra Explained: Rebuilding Faith After Spiritual Collapse
A people came home to ruins. The book of Ezra is the story of how God rebuilt them; stone by stone, and then heart by heart. Ezra tells how God rebuilt a broken people after exile — first a temple, then a faith. Discover how the book traces restoration from collapse to covenant renewal. When the Story Picks Up: Israel After the Collapse To understand the book of Ezra, you have to feel the silence that came before it. For most of a lifetime, there had been no temple in Jerusalem. The walls were rubble. The altar was cold. The people of Judah had been carried off to Babylon, and the questions they carried with them were heavier than any baggage: Had God abandoned His promises? Was the covenant over? Had the darkness simply won? The exile was not a random tragedy. It was the long-threatened consequence of covenant unfaithfulness — generations of idolatry, injustice, and ignored prophets. When Jerusalem fell in 586 B.C., it looked like the end of the story. The line of David seemed extingu...