Today, we finish Psalm 119 with an amazing and meaningful letter, and take a look at God's message in the names in genealogy lists the returned exiles recorded. Psalm 119:161-168, 169-176; I Chronicles 1:1-54
We continue in Psalm 119, a psalm probably used by the Jews in their celebration of their return to Jerusalem after the exile. Psalm 119:121-128, 129-136, 137-144, 145-152, 153-160
We continue in Psalm 119, an acrostic psalm probably used by the Jews during their celebration of completing the city wall and Temple. Psalm 119:81-88, 89-96, 97-104, 105-112, 113-120
As the celebration continues in Jerusalem, we take a good look at the Acrostic Psalm 119 and dig into how the letter meanings enhance the meaning of the Psalm to us. Psalm 119:33-40, 41-48, 49-56, 57-64, 65-72
Nehemiah gets the folks in Jerusalem back on track and they have a celebration on the walls of the city and in the Temple. Nehemiah 12:27-43,44-47; 13:12-14,1-3; Psalm 119:1-8,9-16,17-24,25-32
Nehemiah gets things on track, leaves for a trip back to Persia, and finds things in a shambles when he returns. Nehemiah 9:26-38; 10:1-34; 13: 4-22,23-31
Nehemiah and Ezra get the people back on track with their first celebration, the Feast of Tabernacles. Nehemiah 7:66-73; 11:1-36; 12:1-26; 8:1-18; 9:1-15
The wall around Jerusalem gets completed under Nehemiah and he continues to govern fairly, but not without enemies. Nehemiah 5:1-19; 6:1-19; 7:1-65
Nehemiah goes back to Jerusalem and implements a smart and successful strategy to rebuild the walls, with big implications for us! Nehemiah 2:4-16,17-20;3:1-16,17-32; 4:1-6,7-23
Ezra works to cleanup the issue in Jerusalem of pagan wives. Fourteen years later, back in Persia, Nehemiah hears that things are still not going well. Ezra 7:8-10; 8:33-36; 9:1-15; 10:1-17,18-44;Nehemiah 1:1-11; 2:1-4