Day 1

Scripture to Read: Nehemiah 1:1-11

As we begin in Nehemiah 1, here’s a little background. About 1,000 years after Moses and nearly 400 years before Christ, the nation of Israel lay in ruins. The northern kingdom, Israel, and the southern kingdom, Judah, had been conquered by Babylon. In the city of Jerusalem, the temple of Solomon had been destroyed. The Babylonians had deported almost all of the Jews to Babylon for 70 years. Over time, many of the Jews settled in Babylon. The Jews still worshipped God but had little desire to return to the land God had promised to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. After 70 years of captivity, the Jews were allowed to return to their Promised Land. Out of the two or three million Jews in Babylon, only about 50,000 returned to the Promised Land. In the days of Ezra, the Jews who returned rebuilt the temple and laid a renewed spiritual foundation for Israel. The Book of Nehemiah starts about 15 years after the Book of Ezra ends; about 90 years after the first Jews returned to the Promised Land; about 140 years after Jerusalem was destroyed. After all this time, the walls around Jerusalem were still not rebuilt. In Ezra 4:6-23, 75 years before, the Jews tried to rebuild the walls but were stopped by their enemies, so Artaxerxes, the king of Persia, issued a decree to stop the project. The Jews had given up hope, so the walls around Jerusalem lay in ruin, offering the people no protection.

Challenge & Application

1. When you consider your foundation in Christ, how solid is it to be able to overcome persecution and the test and trials this life brings? 2. What trials have caused you to lose hope and feel your life was laid in ruin? How did you overcome?

Don’t forget to pray using the A.C.T.S. (Adoration, Confession, Thanksgiving, Supplication) method!

Devotionals from this week

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Day 1

As we begin in Nehemiah 1, here’s a little background. About 1,000 years after Moses and nearly 400 years before Christ, the nation of Israel lay in ruins. The northern kingdom, Israel, and the southern kingdom, Judah, had been conquered by Babylon. In the city of Jerusalem, the temple of Solomon had been destroyed. The Babylonians had deport...

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Day 2

God raised up some faithful Jews, taken into captivity to places of authority in Babylon and, of course then in Persia. Remember, Nebuchadnezzar had destroyed the walls in Jerusalem in 586 B.C. But in 539 B.C., the Medes and Persians conquered Babylon while the Jews were still in Babylon. God blessed some of the faithful Jews to positions of ...

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Day 3

Today our focus will be on Nehemiah 1:5, as Nehemiah begins his prayer. Nehemiah starts his prayer recognizing how great, awesome, excellent, magnificent, and wonderful is our Lord God Almighty. Prayer is such an incredible privilege for each believer, and we must take advantage of our awesome opportunity to pray every day. As we pray, we mus...

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Day 4

Continue reading Nehemiah 1:1-11. Our focus today is on Nehemiah 1:6-7 as we continue to unpack Nehemiah’s prayer. We already know we have the incredible honor of praying to our Heavenly Father, through our Lord Jesus Christ, because His Holy Spirit lives in us. The Old Testament saints did not have this same privilege, or assurance, because ...

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Day 5

Confession is a huge part of our prayer life, or it should be if it is not. Confession is NOT about gaining God’s forgiveness, but confession is all about us staying in right fellowship with God Almighty. Confession comes when God, through His Spirit in us, convicts us of sin that we have committed and have not dealt with yet. Sin breaks our ...

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Day 6

God loves for us to fellowship with Him through prayer. Through prayer, God’s Holy Spirit in us reveals to us any unconfessed sin, and He also guides us to deepen our intimacy with our Heavenly Father and opens our eyes to see our need for God in all areas of our life. As Nehemiah is praying in Nehemiah 1:8-9, he is reminded of God’s promises...

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Day 7

As we close out in Nehemiah 1:10-11, we read the final part of Nehemiah’s prayer to God the Father. God led Nehemiah to talk to God about God’s deliverance of Israel from the land of Egypt, which happened about 1000 years earlier. What God led Nehemiah to mention was that the people of Israel were God’s servants, God’s people, whom God redeem...

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