Real Faith

Re:Verse passage – Nehemiah 9:1-3 (day six)

Because of all this we are entering into a binding covenant in written form; our leaders, our Levites, and our priests have affixed their names on the sealed document. Nehemiah 9:38

Confession and repentance go together, but they’re not the same. In Nehemiah 9, confession happens in verses 1-3, but repentance doesn’t occur until verse 38 when they renew their covenant to obey God. Confession is naming our sin before God. Repentance is turning from obeying the false gods of this world and re-aligning our lives under King Jesus.

They’re the two sides of real faith. Confession without repentance stays stuck. Repentance without confession misses the heart.

When repentance becomes communal, it creates a new culture—one shaped not by the age, but by allegiance to Christ.

Revival and Renewal

“While they stood in their place, they read from the book of the law of the Lord their God for a fourth of the day;”

Now that the Israelites have finished working on the wall, God has begun working on them. Have you noticed how much and how often the scriptures are being read and taught?  Have you also considered that God’s Word is accurately accomplishing its plan and purpose?  It is a lamp and light, and it is also a sword (Hebrews) and a mirror (James). There is an intense tension as the scriptures reveal a loving and holy God as well as a finite and flawed people. The scriptures guide, guard, and grieve the human heart. The scriptures also reveal the glory and goodness of God- for the purpose of redemption and renewal. “Will You not Yourself revive us again, That Your people may rejoice in You?”
May the scriptures do that work in us as we read, study, pray, confess, and worship!!

 

Repentance

Re:Verse passage – Nehemiah 9:1-3 (day four)

This is one of the many instances in Scripture where we see God’s people using ashes or dirt in their process of grieving over sin. They did this as an outward sign of their repentance and humility before God, showing their sorrow over their sins against God and one another. These instances in Scripture inspired what would become Ash Wednesday, an annual reminder that sin is grievous and makes us worthy of death, though through the grace of Christ we are granted life.

Echoing what Aaron stated in Re:Vlog, I don’t often become grieved by my sin in the way I ought to. Yes, we have perfect forgiveness of sin through Christ, but sin still grieves the heart of God, which means it should grieve our hearts as well. While Ash Wednesday is a wonderful annual opportunity to do this, we must make genuine repentance an ongoing activity. How might you incorporate this kind of repentance – sorrow over sin and gratitude for God’s forgiveness – into your life? Maybe this becomes the focus of your response time during Sunday worship, or maybe you find an accountability partner to pray with once a week. Whatever this looks like for you, we know that spending time in regular repentance will make us look more like Christ. What a wonderful reward!

Repair

Re:Verse passage – Nehemiah 9:1-3 (day three)

“The sons of Israel assembled with fasting, in sackcloth and with dirt upon them.”

One of the hallmarks of a depressive state is the lack of care for the body, sometimes manifesting as the cessation of eating, apathy towards personal grooming, and lack of attention to hygiene. In such a state, time slows to a crawl and the seconds of the day stretch into one undifferentiated moment in which, from the standpoint of the person experiencing the mood disorder, nothing happens and no changes occur. The act of communal confession chronicled here does not present people in a depressive state. There is a pause in giving attention to the body, yes. There is a mood of deep solemnity and sorrow, certainly. But the people are experiencing a time of repair, not despair. God accepts them, the breach is healed, and they become whole.

Confess and Worship

Re:Verse passage – Nehemiah 9:1-3 (day two)

While they stood in their place, they read from the book of the law of the Lord their God for a fourth of the day; and for another fourth they confessed and worshiped the Lord their God. v. 3

The confession of God’s people should be a cathartic experience. Whenever we confront our sin, we cycle through many emotions. No one wants to grieve the heart of God, and shame can often accompany our confession. Our confessions may recognize hurt and anguish as we let go of self and assume a repentant posture. When viewed from the outside this seems to be a lonely and uncomfortable place to be, and for anyone who has repented their sin they can attest to that discomfort. Whatever has brought us to a place where repentance is needed should grieve our hearts, but the catharsis is the release. Even without the promise of forgiveness, which we have, the unburdening of our hearts is cause for worship. To have a God who will hear our cries is a tremendous comfort. Worship may feel different when we are in a repentant posture than we are celebrating, but it is no less genuine. May our repentance always have an element of worship.

Monday Re:Vlog – 8/4/25

Re:Verse passage – Nehemiah 9:1-3 (day one)

Join us as Senior Pastor Chris Johnson, Associate Pastor Aaron Hufty, and Associate Pastor Bryan Richardson walk us through Nehemiah 9:1-3 in our Summer Re:Verse Series: “Nehemiah – Rebuild. Renovate. Restore.”

Hear and Understand

Re:Verse passage – Nehemiah 8:9-12 (day seven)

because they understood the words which had been made known to them. vs 12b

This was not the first time the Israelites had heard the laws from Scripture be told to them, but this was the first time they heard The Law in a way that touched them to the core.

As we wind down the summer, I reflect back on Impact Camp. Something special happens at camp where students hear and understand scripture on a level that touches them to the core. The speaker is saying the same thing that we tell them every week, the Holy Spirit is the same God, and their Bible is the same Bible. What makes camp so special? Separation, Saturation, and Expectation. They are separated from their normal pattern of life, saturated in Scripture all week, and they expect for God to do something big.

What if it wasn’t just camp? What if we saturated ourselves in Scripture all week? What if we were to walk into Sunday morning Bible Study and Worship with the same expectation as youth do for camp? What if it wasn’t just something we checked off the box? What if we really listened to understand the sermon instead of just hearing another word? Maybe we too will weep. Maybe we too will be filled with the joy of the Lord. Expect for God to do something Big!

Generosity

Re:Verse passage – Nehemiah 8:9-12 (day six)

So the people went away to eat and drink at a festive meal, to share gifts of food, and to celebrate with great joy because they had heard God’s words and understood them. Nehemiah 8:12

Ezra, Nehemiah, and the Levites make one thing unmistakably clear: this day was sacred, and sacred days are cause for celebration and generosity.

Why does hearing and understanding God’s Word lead to generosity?

Because the Word of God always moves in two directions: upward and outward. It draws us upward in love for the Lord with all our heart, soul, mind, and strength. And it sends us outward in love for our neighbor.

When the Word takes root, it doesn’t end with us. It overflows.

Where’s It Come From?

Re:Verse passage – Nehemiah 8:9-12 (day five)

Have you ever sung this VBS song?
“I’ve got joy, down in my heart, deep deep down in my heart.
J-O-Y down in my heart, deep deep down in my heart.
(Where’s it come from?) Jesus put it there, and nothing can destroy it, stroy it, stroy it.
I’ve got joy, down in my heart, deep deep down in my heart.”

I’ve led this song on guitar no less than a thousand times.

In actuality, the song asks a very deep and meaningful question. “Where’s it come from?“ The song quickly answers the question with a significant truth. “Jesus put it there.” Yes, as believers we do have joy. But left to our own strength, effort, and energy, we cannot produce it. Just like His other gifts and provisions, we must steward God’s joy.  The joy OF THE LORD (my emphasis) is your strength. This is what the people in our Re:Verse text were promised and experienced. God’s joy and His strength. Make no mistake, it is His, it comes only from Him. Same for us today. See John 15:11. “These things I have spoken to you so that My joy may be in you, and that your joy may be made full.”  (Blog for another time- the connection between God’s Word and joy).

Fasting and Feasting

Re:Verse passage – Nehemiah 8:9-12 (day four)

I love that throughout Scripture, God commands fasting and feasting in equal measure, often in symmetry to each other. Our God is not one who commands constant mourning or asceticism, nor does he desire for us to live in unending indulgence and leisure. Both fasting and feasting are good and proper ways to respond to God’s word, and we see them both displayed by the heroes of our faith. Depending on the people in question and the way God is moving amongst them, some encounter God’s law and holiness and rightly fall on their face, mourning over their sin. Others, as we see Nehemiah encouraging here, rightly breakout in rejoicing because the Lord of Lords is on their side, and as the writer of Lamentations states, “His mercies are new every morning.” Both are needed – we must mourn over our sin and tremble at God’s holiness, but we must also rejoice that such a holy God pursues us with love and grace. The more we understand Scripture, just as the Jews did in this passage, the more we will feel led to both fast and feast in response to God’s Word.