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Zephaniah: The Humble Inherit the Earth | Video Devotional預覽

Zephaniah: The Humble Inherit the Earth | Video Devotional

5 天中的第 2 天

Recap

Today, we'll learn that the humble will finally be safe after another day of fire falls to undo the proud speech of the earth. This day of fire, symbolized by Pentecost, brings good news to a scattered minority, purged of deceit and filled with truth, proclaiming the resurrection of Jesus and the comfort of his Holy Spirit.

What’s Happening?

When God first made the Earth, we’re told he singled out two creatures to image his moral purity, love, and generosity to the world (Genesis 1:28). God chose humanity to be the only image of God. But in pride, the first carriers of God’s image abdicated their call. That day led to the world’s ruin (Genesis 3:16-19). The prophet Zephaniah warns history is about to repeat itself. On a day in the near future, God will raise up an empire to end the pride, violence, and idolatry of both Judah and the rest of the world’s leaders. Zephaniah calls it the “Day of the Lord'' (Zephaniah 1:7). It’s a day when God will visit the Earth—not to create it, but to undo it. God will uncreate all his images that have failed to image him (Genesis 1:26; Zephaniah 1:3).

As a nation, Judah was supposed to reflect God’s purity, love, and generosity to a watching world, but it failed (Zephaniah 1:4). Instead, her people set up shrines to the stars and bowed to images of the gods Baal and Molech (Zephaniah 1:5-6). God’s chosen nation has abdicated her call, and her failure will ruin the Earth again. The first time God’s images failed like this God sacrificed an animal to signal he would still be faithful (Genesis 3:21). But now God says he will make a sacrifice out of his people (Zephaniah 1:8). On the Day of the Lord, God will consume kings, princes, and leaders like a sacrificial meal (Zephaniah 1:9-13).

Practically, the Day of the Lord’s decreation and sacrifice will come through war (Zephaniah 1:14). Soon, the Babylonian empire will be the agent of God’s anger on Judah and all other nations who have copied Jerusalem’s idolatrous ingratitude and pride (Zephaniah 1:15-16). On God’s day of war, trauma will blind the world as Babylon’s armies disembowel and drain their victims of their blood (Zephaniah 1:17). God’s burning passion will consume the earth through Babylon’s armies (Zephaniah 1:18).

But this inevitable day of destruction for the world doesn’t mean the destruction of all God’s people. Zephaniah’s prophecy warns those willing to listen (Zephaniah 2:1-2). Yes, the world as they know it will end, and Judah will fall. But the humble will be protected during the Day of the Lord (Zephaniah 2:3).

Where is the Gospel?

We’re told that Zephaniah prophesied during the time of Josiah (Zephaniah 1:1). Josiah found a long-lost copy of God’s laws and realized, to his horror, the extent of Judah’s sins (2 Kings 22:13). Immediately, Josiah tore down the images of other gods. But Josiah’s willingness to represent God’s moral purity, love, and generosity would only save Josiah (2 Kings 22:16). It would not stop the inevitable Day of the Lord against Judah’s accumulated failings (2 Kings 22:19). Babylon was still coming. The sins of a representative few can indict entire nations—and even all of humanity. But the obedience of a good king only lasts for a generation.

Josiah couldn’t save his kingdom, but Jesus has. Jesus accepted his role to reflect God’s moral purity, love, and generosity to the world (Hebrews 1:3). He refused to abdicate that call, even when it meant becoming a sacrifice for his people (Luke 22:42). And like a righteously angry warrior, Jesus went to war against idolatry and pride on the cross. The wartime terror of Zephaniah’s judgments all came true (Matthew 27:51-52a). These judgments were not meted out by Jesus on his people but on himself. He allows the armies of Rome to blind his eyes in death and drain his body of blood so that we would know God’s burning passion was entirely consumed. God will no longer undo creation because the Creator was undone for us. God will not sacrifice his people because he has sacrificed himself. Jesus experienced the Day of the Lord so the humble can be protected.

Jesus saved his Kingdom because Jesus rose from the dead. Josiah’s obedience protected his life, but Jesus’ obedience protects even after death. Jesus cannot die again. Just as chaos, ruin, and death entered the world through the sins of a representative few, Jesus’ resurrection represents the hope of the world (1 Corinthians 15:20-22). Jesus is just the first to be protected from the Day of the Lord by resurrection (1 Corinthians 15:23). Everyone who accepts the call to extend God’s image is invited to enter a recreated world where neither pride nor death live anymore (1 Corinthians 15:24-25).

A Time of Prayer

Holy Spirit, open my eyes to see the God who brings destruction. And may I see Jesus as the one consumed and sacrificed so that the humble inherit his Kingdom.

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Zephaniah: The Humble Inherit the Earth | Video Devotional

This 5-day plan will walk you through the book of Zephaniah. Each day is accompanied by a short video that explains what’s happening in the text. In this plan, you will learn how God's purifying fire is not for destruction but for creating a world where the humble are exalted and learning to embrace humility as the key to inheriting God's kingdom.

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