
·S1 E254
The Chosen People Return
Episode Transcript
Previously on the chosen people.
Speaker 2He said, we can go back and reveal bit them.
Speaker 3We can go home.
Speaker 2Yes, can you believe it?
Speaker 4We'll finally see Jerusalem.
Speaker 1With that, men gathered their tools, women packed their woven baskets.
Elders dusted off family scrolls and whispered prayers of gratitude they hadn't thought would ever come.
Children ran through alleyways, wide eyed, overhearing talk of a city they'd only ever heard of in stories.
Jerusalem.
The Temple mount, once the dwelling place of the Most High, stood in ghostly quiet.
Its courtyards were covered in ash and debris.
The altar was gone, desecrated long ago, leaving behind a scorched imprint in the dust where fire had once burned.
Speaker 4For the Lord, bring the rems, the coats the chiefs without blemish, will begin and end each day with the ascension offering.
The entire sacrifice will be consumed on the fire of the altar of the burnt offering, and the fragrant aroma will be pleasing to the floor, represent of a constant, diligent devotion or abandons from him.
Speaker 1The people eagerly obey Jeshua, their high priest, as they re established the altar of burnt offering on the temple mount, the roaring fire like the steadfast North Star that lights the way home in a vast cosmos of desolation.
Speaker 5Shallo, my friends from here in the holy Land of Israel, i'm ya l Extein with the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews, and welcome to the Chosen People.
Each day we'll hear a dramatic story inspired by the Bible, stories filled with timeless lets, sins of faith, love, and the meaning of life.
Through Israel story, we will find this truth that we are all chosen for something great.
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I read every single one of them, and if you're interested in hearing more about the prophetic, life saving work of the Fellowship, you can visit IFCJ dot Org.
Let's begin.
Speaker 1The altar still burned, stubbornly and brightly, that tiny speck of light on the horizon of a vast and dark sea.
The temple around the altar remained a skeleton, half built, half forgotten.
Eighteen years had passed since the foundation was laid, and the joy turned to silence in the hills of Judo once more.
But God had not gone quiet, nor had he turned a deaf ear to the prayers of his most steadfast, faithful followers.
Despite the years of delay and disappointment.
He sent voices.
The prophets Hagai and Zechariah came to the city of Jerusalem and breathed new life and new found vigor into the people of God.
Speaker 3Is it time for you to live in paneled houses while the house of the Lord lies in ruins?
Build the temple that I may take pleasure in.
Speaker 6It, not by mine, not by power, but by my spirit, says the Lord.
Speaker 1Their words cracked through the complacency, and something stirred.
Sir uberbl stood again and once more rallied the people.
Jeshua took up his priestly robes with pride.
The people, once afraid, now remember they were not just survivors, they were builders.
But the enemies of the Jews picked up their scathing correspondences and conniving schemes.
Once more.
Letters were sent to the new king of Persia.
King Darius reports that the Jews were building again, reached his palace.
Was it rebellion.
The enemies of the Jews claimed that it was they stirred up trouble in all the ways they could concerned.
The new King Darius searched the records, but there buried in the archives of Persia was the decree of the former King Cyrus.
Jeshua rushed from his living quarters to where Zaruba Bell stood at the temple mount, overseeing the reinvigorated workforce, who was out of breath.
But the exuberant expression on the now elderly man's face tugged at a memory of long ago.
In Sir ruber Bell's mind.
He couldn't help but smile at Jeshua's irritation at not being able to choke out words after the exertion of running up the hills.
Speaker 4Rubrable, My old friend, you'll never believe.
Speaker 6Oh oh, here, read it.
Speaker 1Sir ruber Bell bit back his laughter, but then took the parchment and read aloud.
Speaker 6A decree of King Darius.
Speaker 1Sir ruber Bell's eyebrows shot up at Jeshua, just read it.
Speaker 2Therefore, you must stay away from that place.
At an eye.
Speaker 6Governor of the region west of the Euphrates River, I knew our enemies were at it again.
Keep going leave the construction of the House of God.
Speaker 3You, but the governor and.
Speaker 6Elders of the Jews, rebuild this House of God and its original site.
I hereby is your degree concerning what you are to do, so that the elders of the Jews can read.
Speaker 7The House of God.
Speaker 6The cost is to be paid in full to these men out of the royal revenue from the taxes of the region west of the Euphrates River, so that the work loss whatever is needed.
Young bulls, rams and lambs were burnt offerings to the God of the Heavens of wheat, salt, wine and oil, as requested by the priests in Jerusalem.
Let it be given to them every day without fail, so that they can offer sacrifices.
Speaker 7Of pleasing aroma to the God of the heavens and pray for the life of the King and his sons.
Yes, I can't believe what I'm reading.
Our God has been influencing the very hand of the King.
Speaker 2I also issued a creed concerning any man who interferes with disdirective.
Let a being be torn from his house and raised up.
He will be impaled on it and his house will be made into a garbage toumbe.
Because of this offense, May the God who caused his name to dwell there overthrow any king or people who dares to.
Speaker 6Farm or interfere with this house of Indians.
I there is have issued the decree.
Let it be carried out diligently.
Never in all my years.
Speaker 4Would you have ever expected to have a king defend you.
Oh, the last one gave us gold, and now this one will impale our enemies.
Speaker 1Sir Ruber Bell and Jeshua, two very old friends now at this point then howled with laughter and disbelief, and with that the resistance faded.
The work resumed, and the second temple, under Zaruba Bell's leadership was finished.
At last, it was in Solomon's temple.
It didn't shine with gold, but it stood whole and complete.
At long last.
Decades passed.
Jerusalem had a temple again, but something was still missing, and many more Jews still remained in exile in the far reaches of the Persian Empire.
They had been saved by the brave acts of Queen Esther and sustained by the cleverness of Mordecai the Jew.
In the years following the rebuilding of the temple.
Eventually, King Xerxes was replaced by King Artaxerxes, and a new generation of leaders arose, and so from the courts of Persia came a new voice.
He was a scribe of the priestly line of Arran.
He was a man devoted to the law of Moses, and the hand of the Lord was upon him.
His name was Ezra.
Ezra was a scholarly man, but he was no passive scribe.
His fiery devotion to the law of the Lord set him apart.
It could be polarizing, yes, but it also sparked something in the hearts of the people.
He taught with authority.
He called sin what it was, and he carried the weight of their covenant as if it were bound to his own soul.
His passion stirred minds, moved hearts, and inevitably caught the attention of the king.
One day, Ezra was summoned to the regal throne room of Babylon.
He entered wearing the simple robes of a scribe, threadbare, practical, ink stained, standing in stark contrast to the opulent grandeur that surrounded him.
Gold pillars, polished floors and rows of intimidating guards and nobles in fine linen.
Then the royal scepter was lifted.
Ezra straightened his spine, lifted his gaze, and summoned the fire that burned within him.
He stepped forward, not with entitlement, but with authority born from conviction.
He stood not only as a servant of Artaxerxes, but as a messenger of the Living God.
Speaker 3Tell me, Israel, for you have found favor with me.
What is it you desire more than anything else?
I will grant you anything your request.
Speaker 1Ezra stood stunned.
He held no title, no position in the palace, but he carried something greater.
The favor of the Lord and the law of Moses edged deep into his soul.
He had studied it, he had lived it, and now, more than anything, he longed to teach it, to awaken his people to the truth they had forgotten.
Speaker 8My King, You, you honor me, this is my request.
Allow me to return to my people in Jerusalem.
I long to worship the Lord there at the rebuilt Temple.
I also desire to bring the law of our prophet Moses.
I will bring spiritual revival to my people.
Speaker 3Then hear my decree Ezra, priests and scribe of the law of your God.
I am sending you not just as a servant, but as an ambassador of your people and of your God.
You may return to Jerusalem, and any of your fellow Israelites who wish to go with you, priests, levite servants, they may go as well.
You are to evaluate the state of Judah and Jerusalem according to the law you carry, and you shall bring with you silver and gold from my treasury and from my counselors, given freely to the God whose dwelling is in Jerusalem.
Gather also whatever your people offer freely with it, purchase sacrifices, bulls, rams, lambs, grain and drink offerings present on the altar of your God.
And whatever remains you may use as you see fit according to the wisdom of your God.
Take with you the sacred vessels given for the service of the temple, And if you lack anything, draw from the royal treasury without fear.
Let the needs of your God's house be met in full.
May your God be honored, for I desire no wrath to fall upon my realm or my sons.
Go in peace, Priest of Jerusalem, May the hand of your God be upon you.
Speaker 1As we fell to his knees.
Overcome with awe and gratitude, he thanked the king with formal words, but his heart poured thanks to the Lord alone.
He knew exactly whose hand had moved the heart of Persia.
True to his word, King Artaxerxes granted Ezra all that he asked, gold, silver, livestock for sacrifice, and the freedom to appoint judges and teach the law throughout the province.
It was an extraordinary favor meant to secure peace, order and divine protection over the empire.
So Ezra gathered a second wave of exiles, among them priests and levites, temple servants and gatekeepers, singers and scribes, families who still believed, elders who longed to see revival, sons and daughters who longed to walk in the promises of their ana ancestors.
Before they departed, Ezra assembled them all near the river a harve.
He looked upon the crowd, men, women, children, young and old, and knew the road ahead would demand more than travel.
It would demand obedience and discipline.
Speaker 9You are not merely returning to a land, You were returning to a covenant.
The road ahead will not be easy.
But we do not serve a god of ease.
We serve the Lord of heaven and Earth, who brought us out of Egypt, who brought us through exile.
Speaker 4That now calls us back to himself.
Speaker 9Let no one walked this road.
Lightly, purify your heart, prepare your hands.
Speaker 6We do not go home as we were.
We go home as a holy people.
Speaker 1The crowd gathered around and murmured with conviction.
Some even began weeping.
Others nodded solemnly, as for a great to warm the scrolls in his hand, and lifted them overhead.
Speaker 9This is the word of the Lord, the law of Moses, recorded here on these scrolls.
This is what sets us apart from every other nation.
Speaker 4This is not just tradition.
Speaker 9It's our identity, our inheritance, our life.
Our brothers have returned to the land of promise, and now we.
Speaker 3Must walk it once more.
Speaker 9Do you not remember the words of Moses before we first entered this land.
These are not idle words for you, They are your life.
Speaker 7He warned us.
Speaker 9Not to turn aside, not to the right or to letter.
And now, after all.
Speaker 8This exile, after all.
Speaker 9This loss, we must not lose our again, we will keep his commands, we will live by his word, and we will return not just to this land, but to our God.
Speaker 1And with that they fasted and they prayed as they prepared themselves for their long journey to Jerusalem.
The generations who remembered the first rounds of deportations from Judah had long died out.
So when Ezra and his second wave of returning exiles crested the final hill aways off from the Jerusalem of their people's collective memory, they were astonished.
The land of promise, the land of their forefathers, the city established by David.
But when Ezra stepped into Jerusalem scrolls in hand, the city felt different.
The city bustled, but the spiritual pulse was faint.
Sacrifices continued, but conviction was missing.
Ezra's heart sank as he walked the temple courts.
He watched men priests even walk hand in hand with women from nations who worshiped false gods.
He saw altars in alleyways and up on high places, incense curling into skies meant for bow Lord?
Speaker 3Is this what we have come to?
Speaker 10A temple built with clean.
Speaker 8Hands, defiled by divided hearts?
Speaker 1Ezra climbed the steps of the temple courtyard.
He fell to his knees before the old time.
His hands clutched his beard and tore at his garments.
Crowds began to gather.
They knew that the king had sent them an ambassador.
They knew he would be a holy man, someone important.
But when they saw his anguish, torment, and broken heart over their sins, their lack of conviction, the moments quieted.
No one had seen grief like this since the days of exile.
No one had seen profound, godly grief like this for lifetimes.
Ezra, the man who was tasked with bringing spiritual revival and reform to God's people, fell on his face before them and before the Lord my.
Speaker 6God, ashamed, a shamed the grief.
Speaker 10First, our guilt has written high that our heads and our black flowed waters rich nervants.
Speaker 1The people stilled further.
As they listened, they scarcely drew breath.
This favored official, this ambassador of the King, was lumping himself in with their sin.
He saw himself as one of them.
He knew that a failure for just one of God's people was a failure for all so special, so prized.
So loved were God's children that it grieved both the heart of God and his prophets and priests on their behalf.
Silence hung heavy and charged fertile soil for the seeds of conviction and repentance to take root from.
Speaker 8The days of our ancestors.
Until now we have sinned again and again.
Speaker 10Yet you God, have not destroyed us.
You gave us remnant, You gave us favor before kings.
You brought us home, You gave us hope, And we we have returned again.
Speaker 1What can we say?
Speaker 10We stand in eye guilt, and yet here we are because of your mercy.
Speaker 1The crowd stirred at his words.
Some knelt, others began to weep.
Speaker 3We have been unfaithful.
Is there still hope?
Speaker 1A man named Shekhanaya stepped forward, his voice steady.
Speaker 2Let us make a covenant before our God to do what is right, to send away these wives and their children according to the law.
Speaker 4Let it be done carefully, rightly, Let it be done.
Speaker 9Rise up, Ezra, This task is yours, and we are with you.
Speaker 1The people murmured, some sobbed, others turned their faces to the sky.
One by one, heads of households began to nod, then speak.
Speaker 5We were blind, but now we see Ezra.
Speaker 6Teach us again, teach us all.
Speaker 1Ezra's eyes burned with unshed tears.
He stood taller than before, not because of pride but purpose.
The law wasn't just in his hands.
It was alive again in the hearts of the people, and with humble, repentant hearts restored in Israel.
Once more, Ezra stood and began the difficult work of reform.
A thorough investigation followed, house by house, marriage by marriage, name by name.
Some left families behind, others walked away from comfort.
The process was painful, personal, and deeply complex, but it was also sacred because they were not just rebuilding a city.
They were rebuilding a covenant.
They had returned to the land, rebuilt the altar, and laid the ten or stone by stone.
But now at last they began to return to God, not just with their hands or their rituals, but with their whole hearts.
Spiritual revival had come not in the form of thunder or fire, but through repentance, realignment, and a return.
The ruins of their past were still visible, and the scars of exile had not fully faded, but something new had begun to rise from the rubble, something deeper than stone or gold.
God was planting righteousness where rebellion once grew, restoring what had been lost, exchanging ashes for beauty, mourning for joy.
And though the city's walls still lay in ruin, the hearts of the people had begun to stand tall again.
Another return was still to come, another rebuilding still awaited.
But the story of restoration was already in motion.
Because when God calls his people back, he doesn't just rebuild what was.
He restores what could be.
He calls them to return.
Speaker 5If your faith has been kindled by this podcast and it has affected your life, we'd love it if you left her review We read them, and me personally I cherish them as you venture forth boldly and faithfully.
I leave you with the biblical blessing from numbers six I Hashem vishmerechra Yeah Heir, hashempanavele y sa hashempanavelera Salon.
May the Lord bless you and keep you.
May the Lord make his face shine upon you.
May he be gracious to you.
Made the Lord turn his face towards you and give you peace.
Speaker 1Amen.
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Steve Katina, Max Bard, Zach Shellabarger and Ben Gammon are the executive producers of The Chosen People with Yile Eckstein, edited by Alberto Avilla, narrated by Paul Coltofianu.
Characters are voiced by Jonathan Cotton, Aaron Salvato, Sarah Seltz, Mike Reagan, Stephen Ringwold, Sylvia Zaradoc, Thomas Copeland Junior, Rosanna Pilcher, and Mitch Leshinsky, and the opening prayer is voiced by John Moore.
Music by Andrew Morgan Smith, written by Aaron Salvato, bre Rosalie and Chris Bay.
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