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In the Lord’s Sight

Yahweh wanted to be King of His people and make a place for them. They rejected Him, and He warned them. He gave them what they wanted, and they became enslaved like everyone else. In 1 & 2 Kings and 2 Chronicles, people are faced with choices. Would they continue to reject the Lord and create their own high places of worship, or return to the Lord and His rightful place of worship? Would they do what was right IN THE LORD'S SIGHT as written in His word, or what was evil IN THE LORD'S SIGHT that seemed to work in the world? We face the same choices today...IN THE LORD'S SIGHT. #1kings #2kings #2chronicles #2023


Starter

Pray

Lord we thank You that You see all things. Help us to trust your plan for this world now, the world that you are currently building, and the new world you will bring when You return. As we look at the Kings of Your people and your people’s response from ages past, help us to see you and see ourselves. May we strive to understand our standing in Your sight as our King. May we long for the day when we will stand with all your people In the Lord’s Sight. Lord thank you that we can rely on you and one another. Help us in our discussion today to be responsive to the reality of death and put our affairs in order with You. Amen

Study Questions

God had made a people of His own from Abraham. He had delivered them from slavery, subdued their enemies, and had brought them into the land that he promised them. However, because of their unwillingness to listen to God, his prophets, and his judges they asked for a king. God wanted to be their King. However, they rejected The Lord as King because they wanted an earthly King and earthly benefits now like all the other people of the earth seemed to have.

They thought an earthly king could do for them and provide for them what only God could. For 430 years, God allowed his people to experience the reality of rejecting Him as King and pursuing what they wanted in an earthly King. Thankfully in our King Jesus, the gift of His word, the power of His Holy Spirit, and the encouragement of His body the church, we can be confident of who we are in The Lord’s Sight.

The northern Kingdom of Israel, who refused to heed God’s loving patient warnings and continued in the “sins of Jeroboam” for 200 years, has now been wiped out and carried off into slavery by the brutal Assyrian empire. The southern kingdom of Judah has a decision to make about how they will respond.

Hezekiah turns from the sins of his fathers and leads one of the greatest spiritual renewals in the entire Bible. He consecrates himself and tells the priests, leaders, people, and nation to consecrate (set apart) themselves. He calls all of Israel and Judah to celebrate Passover which had not been done in a long time. The King of Assyria is not happy with the celebration of God delivering His people from enslavement to a foreign King and the people had to answer the question, What are you relying on? This week Hezekiah must face the reality of life, and put his affairs in order because Isaiah the prophet has told him, “You are going to die.

READ 2 Kings 20:1-3, Psalm 90:4, 2 Peter 3:8-9

  1. How is Hezekiah’s prayer a example of trust in God and God’s will be done?
  2. How would you have prayed in this situation?
  3. How is the reality of death the greatest tool to turn men’s hearts back to God and get their affairs in order?
  4. The King James Version says, “20:1 In those days was Hezekiah sick unto death…Set thine house in order; for thou shalt die, and not live.” Why might this be a better translation than some others like the HCSB?

READ 2 Kings 20:4, Deuteronomy 18:19-22, 2 Peter 2:1-3

Isaiah was not a false prophet. He spoke the truth. He told Hezekiah to do what all of us should be doing by ordering our affairs. Isaiah also said what is true of all mankind, “thou shalt die, and not live.” He listened closely to the voice of God and spoke carefully.

  1. How do these passages tell us the difference between someone speaking false prophesies and true prophesies?
  2. What will be the consequences for false prophets according to both Moses and Peter?