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Ezra Explained: Rebuilding Faith After Spiritual Collapse

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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...

One Nation Under God? What the Bible Actually Says About Faith and Country

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Every July, flags go up and the question returns: what does loyalty to God have to do with loyalty to country? The Bible's answer is more nuanced — and more freeing — than most people expect. Every Fourth of July, the same collision happens in churches across America. Flags appear on the platform. Patriotic hymns are woven into worship sets. Pastors navigate a tightrope between honoring the nation and keeping the gospel central. Some do it well. Many find themselves wondering, in private, exactly what the Bible has to say about all of this. It's a fair question. And it's one the Bible takes seriously — not with a simple slogan, but with centuries of layered teaching about kings and kingdoms, empires and exiles, earthly allegiances and heavenly citizenship. If you want to know what God actually says about faith and country, you have to follow the story all the way through. What you find is neither the baptized nationalism that makes the flag an idol nor the disengaged pietis...

Samuel: The Last Judge and the Man Who Heard God's Voice

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Samuel was judge, prophet, and kingmaker — the man God used to close the era of the judges and open the age of the monarchy. His life raises urgent questions about faithfulness, listening, and what it costs to serve God at a hinge point in history. The Man at the Hinge of History There are figures in Scripture who occupy a single moment in redemptive history with such completeness that it is almost impossible to imagine the story going forward without them. Samuel is one of those figures. He stands at the exact pivot point where the era of the judges ends and the era of the kings begins — and he does not merely witness the transition. He is the one God chooses to manage it, to grieve it, to warn against it, and ultimately to execute it with fidelity even when it broke his heart. He is the last of the judges and the first of the prophets in the classical sense — the inaugurator of a prophetic tradition that would run from his school of prophets all the way to Malachi. He anointed Israel...

2 Chronicles Explained: From Solomon's Glory to Exile and the Promise of Return

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2 Chronicles traces Judah's monarchy from Solomon's dazzling temple dedication to the fires of Babylonian conquest — and ends with a decree of return. It is a book about what happens when God's people forsake worship, and what grace looks like on the other side of judgment. Where 2 Chronicles Begins — and Why It Cannot Be Read Alone 2 Chronicles does not stand alone. It is the second half of a single literary and theological work that begins with Adam's genealogy in 1 Chronicles 1 and ends with Cyrus of Persia issuing a decree that the exiles may return home. To read 2 Chronicles without 1 Chronicles is to enter a story midstream — you will understand what is happening, but you will miss why it matters so deeply to the people for whom it was written. 1 Chronicles ended with David's death and Solomon's coronation, having spent its final chapters cataloguing David's extraordinary preparations for the temple he was not permitted to build. Everything in those ch...