Haggai: Building God’s ChurchUzorak
At the end of the first chapter of Haggai, God’s people had started rebuilding the Temple after returning to Jerusalem from captivity. They had (finally) obeyed God, gathered resources, and started work on the foundation.
Less than a month later, the work comes grinding to a halt.
Why? Because they are discouraged. All they can think about is how glorious the previous Temple was before it was destroyed. Surely what they are working on will never match the majestic gold structure that once stood in the place where now only a few stones lay.
Have you ever had a moment of despair like that? A feeling that your effort is futile? Have you met someone whose knowledge about the Bible or unshakeable faith has left you feeling less than? Have you heard stories of heroic sacrifice—like missionaries in war-torn countries or people founding orphanages in impossibly hard circumstances—and felt like you could never match up? Like you could never be that good?
God has a message for you in moments like that. It’s repeated to the Jewish people fourteen times in the Book of Haggai. It’s repeated throughout Scripture—to Moses at the burning bush, to Joshua as he takes over leadership of Israel, to Mary as she’s called to be the mother of Jesus.
God says to them and to us, “I am with you.”
Almighty God, who knows and controls all things, is with us. Even though we’ve disobeyed. Even though what we have to offer seems so small. Even though other people, churches, and points in history seem more majestic than us, right here, right now.
God is with us. He has an eternal view of things. He knows precisely how our roles—no matter how small—fit into the magnificent work He is doing here on earth. He knows the glorious future, so He reminds us to check our perspective. To follow His lead and trust His wisdom. To do our work and believe that He will take what we offer and make it glorious—more glorious than anything that has been built before.
O ovom planu
God has called us to build His kingdom, but sometimes that task feels hopeless. Serving at church, investing in others, and sharing God’s love with a world that doesn’t care sometimes feels worthless. In the Book of Haggai, we meet a group of people at another point in history who felt the same way. In this 4-day plan, we’ll see how God encouraged them and what that means for us.
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