• Profile picture of JumpsH00ps

    JumpsH00pssubscribermega-noder 2023-10-15 10:48:33 UTC

    ‭‭2 Chronicles‬ ‭29:1‭-‬36‬ ‭MSG‬‬
    [1-2] Hezekiah became king when he was twenty-five years old and was king in Jerusalem for twenty-nine years. His mother was Abijah daughter of Zechariah. In God’s opinion he was a good king; he kept to the standards of his ancestor David. [3-9] In the first month of the first year of his reign, Hezekiah, having first repaired the doors of The Temple of God, threw them open to the public. He assembled the priests and Levites in the court on the east side and said, “Levites, listen! Consecrate yourselves and consecrate The Temple of God—give this much-defiled place a good housecleaning. Our ancestors went wrong and lived badly before God—they discarded him, turned away from this house where we meet with God, and walked off. They boarded up the doors, turned out the lights, and canceled all the acts of worship of the God of Israel in the holy Temple. And because of that, God’s anger flared up and he turned those people into a public exhibit of disaster, a moral history lesson—look and read! This is why our ancestors were killed, and this is why our wives and sons and daughters were taken prisoner and made slaves. [10-11] “I have decided to make a covenant with the God of Israel and turn history around so that God will no longer be angry with us. Children, don’t drag your feet in this! God has chosen you to take your place before him to serve in conducting and leading worship—this is your life work; make sure you do it and do it well.” [12-17] The Levites stood at attention: Mahath son of Amasai and Joel son of Azariah from the Kohathites; Kish son of Abdi and Azariah son of Jehallelel from the Merarites; Joah son of Zimmah and Eden son of Joah from the Gershonites; Shimri and Jeiel sons of Elizaphan; Zechariah and Mattaniah sons of Asaph; Jehiel and Shimei of the family of Heman; Shemaiah and Uzziel of the family of Jeduthun. They presented themselves and their brothers, consecrated themselves, and set to work cleaning up The Temple of God as the king had directed—as God directed! The priests started from the inside and worked out; they emptied the place of the accumulation of defiling junk—pagan rubbish that had no business in that holy place—and the Levites hauled it off to the Kidron Valley. They began the Temple cleaning on the first day of the first month and by the eighth day they had worked their way out to the porch—eight days it took them to clean and consecrate The Temple itself, and in eight more days they had finished with the entire Temple complex. [18-19] Then they reported to Hezekiah the king, “We have cleaned up the entire Temple of God, including the Altar of Whole-Burnt-Offering and the Table of the Bread of the Presence with their furnishings. We have also cleaned up and consecrated all the vessels which King Ahaz had gotten rid of during his misrule. Take a look; we have repaired them. They’re all there in front of the Altar of God.” [20-24] Then Hezekiah the king went to work: He got all the leaders of the city together and marched to The Temple of God. They brought with them seven bulls, seven rams, seven lambs, and seven he-goats to sacrifice as an Absolution-Offering for the royal family, for the Sanctuary, and for Judah as a whole; he directed the Aaronite priests to sacrifice them on the Altar of God. The priests butchered the bulls and then took the blood and sprinkled it on the Altar, and then the same with the rams and lambs. Finally they brought the goats up; the king and congregation laid their hands upon them. The priests butchered them and made an Absolution-Offering with their blood at the Altar to atone for the sin of all Israel—the king had ordered that the Whole-Burnt-Offering and the Absolution-Offering be for all Israel. [25-26] The king ordered the Levites to take their places in The Temple of God with their musical instruments—cymbals, harps, zithers—following the original instructions of David, Gad the king’s seer, and Nathan the prophet; this was God’s command conveyed by his prophets. The Levites formed the orchestra of David, while the priests took up the trumpets. [27-30] Then Hezekiah gave the signal to begin: The Whole-Burnt-Offering was offered on the Altar; at the same time the sacred choir began singing, backed up by the trumpets and the David orchestra while the entire congregation worshiped. The singers sang and the trumpeters played all during the sacrifice of the Whole-Burnt-Offering. When the offering of the sacrifice was completed, the king and everyone there knelt to the ground and worshiped. Then Hezekiah the king and the leaders told the Levites to finish things off with anthems of praise to God using lyrics by David and Asaph the seer. They sang their praises with joy and reverence, kneeling in worship. [31-35] Hezekiah then made this response: “The dedication is complete—you’re consecrated to God. Now you’re ready: Come forward and bring your sacrifices and Thank-Offerings to The Temple of God.” And come they did. Everyone in the congregation brought sacrifices and Thank-Offerings and some, overflowing with generosity, even brought Whole-Burnt-Offerings, a generosity expressed in seventy bulls, a hundred rams, and two hundred lambs—all for Whole-Burnt-Offerings for God! The total number of animals consecrated for sacrifice that day amounted to six hundred bulls and three thousand sheep. They ran out of priests qualified to slaughter all the Whole-Burnt-Offerings so their brother Levites stepped in and helped out while other priests consecrated themselves for the work. It turned out that the Levites had been more responsible in making sure they were properly consecrated than the priests had been. Besides the overflow of Whole-Burnt-Offerings there were also choice pieces for the Peace-Offerings and lavish libations that went with the Whole-Burnt-Offerings. The worship in The Temple of God was on a firm footing again! [36] Hezekiah and the congregation celebrated: God had established a firm foundation for the lives of the people—and so quickly! * * *

    https://bible.com/bible/97/2ch.29.1-2.MSG

    9
    • Verses 25-30 is my response to people who believe that having musical instruments in the church during worship is wrong. ‭‭Yes, Habakkuk‬ ‭2:20‬ ‭NKJV‬‬ says “But the Lord is in His holy temple. Let all the earth keep silence before Him.” (all of the other translations I checked say pretty much the same thing), but that’s just an exclamation of how holy God is and we are supposed to be in awe of Him. And in the verses before it, it talks about how there’s no point in having false gods because they don’t do anything, and then it says this verse as a complete contrast because God is a complete contrast. Yes, ‭‭Colossians‬ ‭2:22‭-‬23‬ ‭ERV‬‬ says, “These rules are talking about earthly things that are gone after they are used. They are only human commands and teachings. These rules may seem to be wise as part of a made-up religion in which people pretend to be humble and punish their bodies. But they don’t help people stop doing the evil that the sinful self wants to do.”, but, for one, musical instruments in the church cannot be a man-made concept because here, in 2 Chronicles, is proof that God Himself approves of it, and for another, there’s no hard evidence proving that musical instruments are part of the “evil” that we want to do. If you want to say music is evil because we want it, therefore our flesh wants it, then you need to do that with literally everything else that we humans enjoy. You enjoy riding motorcycles? That’s evil. You enjoy shopping? That’s evil. You enjoy hanging out with your friends and family, making them laugh, and them making you laugh? Oh, how evil that is. God didn’t put us on this planet to be miserable and if you enjoy any part of your life you will burn in hell with all of the murderers and child rapists. You see, there is an unbelievably careful balance that we need to have when deciding what is evil, what is good, and what is neutral. Yes, ‭‭Amos‬ ‭5:21‭-‬23‬ ‭AMP‬‬ says, “I hate, I despise and reject your [sacred] feasts, And I do not take delight in your solemn assemblies. [22] Even though you offer Me your burnt offerings and your grain offerings, I will not accept them; And I will not even look at the peace offerings of your fattened animals. [23] Take the noise of your songs away from Me [they are an irritation]! I shall not even listen to the melody of your harps.”, and ‭‭Amos‬ ‭6:5‬ ‭AMPC‬‬ says, “Who sing idle songs to the sound of the harp and invent for themselves instruments of music like David’s, [I Chron. 23:5.]”, but the reason any of this is getting said at all is because the group of people that God is speaking to through Amos are very evil. And these people think that they can ask God for forgiveness and praise God and assemble as a church and keep sinning. They think that these physical actions will protect them from any kind of punishment. They don’t understand that their intentions matter more than the physical actions of worship and animal sacrifice. So God is telling them that because they are so evil, He’s going to punish them.

      2023-10-15 12:18:58 UTC 5
      • Replying to: JumpsH00psVerses 25-30 is my response to people who believe that havin

        You enjoy riding motorcycles? That’s evil. You enjoy shopping? That’s evil. You enjoy hanging out with your friends and family, making them laugh, and them making you laugh? Oh, how evil that is

        You enjoy Stick Nodes? Ah man you going one way ticket to heck.

        2023-10-15 12:37:45 UTC 4
        • Replying to: Ralph (Developer)> You enjoy riding motorcycles? That’s evil. You enjoy sh

          Pretty much

          2023-10-15 17:14:32 UTC 1