Immerse: Bible Reading Experience - NLT Daily Bible In A Year

Day 326: Chronicles - The Grand Story of Israel's Faith and Resilience

Welcome to Immerse: The Daily Bible Reading Experience, Day 326. Today’s session opens with a prayer for grounding in God's truth through the Holy Spirit. The focus is on immersing ourselves in the Bible deeply to make its great drama of restoration and new life the story of our lives. The unique structure of Immerse, devoid of chapter and verse markers, enhances the reading experience. This session introduces the books of Chronicles, Ezra, and Nehemiah, emphasizing their role in narrating Israel's history post-exile and the importance of true worship in the Jerusalem temple. These books address the questions of Israel’s identity and faithfulness, culminating in the ceremonial restoration of ancient worship and community practices by the returned exiles.

00:00 Introduction and Opening Prayer
00:54 The Gift of the Bible
02:01 Immerse: The Bible Reading Experience
02:54 Introduction to Chronicles
02:58 The Story of Israel's History
04:45 The Importance of True Worship
05:12 Post-Exile Challenges and Identity
08:10 The New History of Israel
09:25 Genealogy and Kingship
10:55 Return from Exile and Restoration

Buy Immerse: Chronicles Now!
Volume 6 — Chronicles, Ezra, Nehemiah, Esther, Daniel

Chronicles

Immerse: Chronicles is the sixth and final installment in Immerse: The Bible Reading Experience. Chronicles contains the remaining First Testament Books: Chronicles–Ezra–Nehemiah, Esther, and Daniel. These works were all written after the Jewish people fell under the control of foreign empires and were scattered among the nations. They remind God’s chastened people of their identity and calling to faithfully represent God to the nations and that there is still hope for the struggling dynasty of David.


4 Questions to get your conversations started:
1. What stood out to you this week?
2. Was there anything confusing or troubling?
3. Did anything make you think differently about God?
4. How might this change the way we live?

QUICK START GUIDE
3 ways to get the most out of your experience
  1. Use Immerse: Beginnings instead of your regular chapter and verse Bible. This special reader’s edition restores the Bible to its natural simplicity and beauty by removing chapter and verse numbers and other historical additions. Letters look like letters, songs look like songs, and the original literary structures are visible in each book.
  2. Commit to making this a community experience. Immerse is designed for groups to encounter large portions of the Bible together
    for 8 weeks–more like a book club, less like a Bible study. By meeting every week in small groups and discussing what you read in open,
    honest conversations, you and your community can come together to be transformed through an authentic experience with the Scriptures.
  3. Aim to understand the big story. Read through “The Stories and the Story” (p. 483) to see how the books of the Bible work together to tell God’s story of his creation’s restoration. As you read through Immerse: Beginnings, rather than ask, “How do I fit God into my busy life?” begin asking, “How can I join in God’s great plan by living out my part in his story?”
And for more great Bible podcasts for Christians and small groups, check out https://lumivoz.com or search for Lumivoz in your podcast app of choice.

What is Immerse: Bible Reading Experience - NLT Daily Bible In A Year?

Take a breath, find your place, and read deeply. Discover the joy of reading God’s word with the Immerse New Living Translation (NLT) Bible.

This daily Bible podcast will take you through the Bible in a year following the Immerse Bible Reading Experience. So grab your family and small group and go through the Bible in a year together with Immerse. Each of the 6 volumes is available online or at your favorite Christian bookstore.

Emily: welcome to immerse: the
daily bible reading experience.

Day 300 and 26

Chronicles

Almighty God, father of
our Lord Jesus Christ.

Grant, we pray that we might be grounded
and settled in your truth by the coming

of your Holy Spirit into our hearts.

What we do not know, reveal to us.

What is lacking within us?

Make complete that which we do know.

Confirm in us and keep us
blameless in your service

through Jesus Christ, our Lord.

Amen.

Welcome to Immerse the
Bible Reading Experience.

The Bible is a great gift.

The creator of all things entered
into our human story and spoke to us.

He inspired people over many centuries.

To shape words into books that
reveal his mind, bringing wisdom into

our lives and light to our paths.

But God's biggest intention for the Bible
is to invite us into its story, what God

wants for us more than anything else.

Is that we make the Bible's great
drama of restoration and new life.

The story of our lives too.

The appropriate way to receive a
gift like this is to come to know the

Bible deeply, to lose ourselves in it.

Precisely so that we can
find ourselves in it.

In other words, we need to immerse
ourselves in it to read God's words

at length and without distraction.

To read with deeper historical and
literary perspective, and to read

through the Bible with friends
in a regular three-year rhythm.

Immers.

The Bible reading experience has been
specially designed for this purpose.

Immerse the Reading Bible presents
each book of the Bible without the

distractions of chapter and verse markers.

Subject headers or footnotes, all
later historical additions to the text.

The Holy Bible New Living Translation
is presented in a single column

format with easy to read type to
provide meaningful perspective.

Book introductions, provide his.

Historical and literary context,
and the books are often reordered

chronologically or grouped with books
that share similar ancient audiences.

Every change from tradition in
this unique Bible enhances the

opportunity for readers to engage
with God's words in simple clarity.

Introduction to Chronicles.

We began our journey into the Bible's
first testament with a comprehensive

telling of Israel's history from
the creation story to Israel's

exile from the land of promise.

Then we heard the prophets delivering
the word of the Lord to Israel,

intervening as the people wandered again
and again from their allegiance to God.

We joined with Israel in singing songs of
both Lament and Praise, entering into the

worship of God in a way that acknowledges
a full range of human emotions.

We listened in as Israel's wisdom.

Teachers taught the good way of life
meant for all the creator's people.

This final part of the Immerse
First Testament contains

its three remaining books.

This last collection focuses
once again on telling stories.

The Hebrew expression
translated as Chronicles means

words or events of the days.

That is, it's a record of day-to-day
events, much like a diary or journal.

The stories in this volume are
all Chronicles that tell how the

people of God lived out their faith
after his covenants with Noah.

Abraham, Moses and David were established.

First comes the Book of Chronicles, Ezra.

Nehemiah.

This unique telling of Israel's
history is presented in most Bibles

as four separate books, although
it was originally a unified work.

Notice that the ending of
Second Chronicles overlaps

with the beginning of Ezra.

This book of Chronicles, Ezra, Nehemiah.

Emphasizes the importance
of the true worship of God.

The shorter books in this volume,
Esther and Daniel show God's people

facing extreme challenges in foreign
lands, whether in their careful

day-to-day observance of God's law, or
in their willingness to suffer death

through persecution, faithful and
courageous men and women demonstrate

an unfailing loyalty to God.

All three works presented here were
written after the Jewish people were

conquered by foreign empires and
scattered among the other nations.

These books tell stories that
carry on the grand story of God's

covenants in into later centuries.

It is important to read these final books
of the first Testament with the overall

development of the Bible's story in mind.

God created the world to be his temple.

The place where he would dwell
in fellowship with humanity

after sin entered the world.

God chose Abraham and his family, the
people of Israel as those who would bring

blessing and life back into the world.

But most of the story so far has
been about Israel's struggle to live

up to its divinely given vocation.

God initiated covenants with humanity in
order to move the story closer and closer

to his intention for all of creation.

But the goal has not been reached.

God wants a people who worship him
well so they can go out into the

world to share his light and life.

The exile had caused a
crisis in Israel's story.

Leading many to question God's own
faithfulness to the covenant, as well

as their status as his chosen people.

God's vision for Israel and for
the world could not be fulfilled as

long as foreign powers controlled
God's people and their land.

These books at the end of the
First Testament were written to

remind the people of their true
story and their ultimate hope.

The issues raised will continue
into the period between the First

Testament and the New Testament.

As the years go by and Israel's
struggles persist, the longing for

God to keep his covenant promises
will grow stronger and stronger.

This is a story begging
for its fitting conclusion.

Immersed in Chronicles, Ezra, Nehemiah.

In 407 bc, leaders of the Jewish
community on the Egyptian Island

fortress of Elephantine wrote to the
Persian governor in Judea for help.

They explained that their ancestors
had built a temple to Yahoo, Yahweh

there, but that it had recently been
destroyed by a mob, incited by the

priests of the Egyptian God canoe.

These Jewish leaders complained that they
had requested assistance from the priests

and elders in Jerusalem, but had heard
nothing back In response, the Persian

governor authorized them to rebuild their
temple, but why hadn't their fellow Jews

in Jerusalem been the first to help?

This request for the Jerusalem
community to invest in a temple in Egypt

illustrates why the writing of a grand
new history of Israel was necessary.

These Jews in Egypt were worshiping
Yahoo alongside other gods in a

mix of Jewish and pagan rituals.

This newly written history
repeatedly makes a vital claim.

True worship of God will follow the
instructions God gave in the law of

Moses and will occur in the place God
has chosen the temple in Jerusalem.

This history comprises the books
commonly known as First and Second

Chronicles, Ezra and Nehemiah.

It draws on accounts kept by
profits in earlier times on the

personal memoirs of Ezra and
Nehemiah and on community records.

These materials were brought together
into one large work to address the

particular challenges of this time.

Israel's previously written history from
Genesis to Samuel King's, addressed the

situation of Israel's exile and answered
the question, why did the exile happen?

Chronicles Ezra.

Nehemiah addresses the situation
of the people after the exile and

answers the question, who are we now?

This new telling of Israel's history
begins with an elaborate genealogy, a

list of ancestors that goes all the way
back to Adam and reveals the origins and

development of the 12 tribes of Israel.

Special attention is given to
Judah, the tribe of King, David

and Levi, the tribe of priests.

This genealogy helps the current
generation see that they are linked to

Israel's most ancient people and stories.

Thus, the lists begin the work of
reminding them of who they are.

As the book changes to narrative,
the reigns of David and Solomon

come into the spotlight.

The story alternates three times
between accounts of David's wars and

long descriptions of arrangements he
made for true worship in the temple.

David is careful to ensure that God
will be worshiped in the place and in

the way that God Himself has chosen.

But since David is a man of bloodshed
and war, God appoints his son

Solomon to actually build the temple.

With its completion, the key sign of God's
presence among his people is now in place.

The reigns of later kings are described
more briefly with the exceptions of

Hezekiah and Josiah, whose religious
reforms restore the proper worship of

the Lord after periods of idolatry.

In contrast, most of the kings lead
the people astray from God's ways.

This unfaithfulness becomes chronic
and widespread, and the people are

ultimately punished with exile.

The story continues with the
memoirs of Ezra and Nehemiah.

Describing the people's return to
Judea from exile, following God's

instructions, and with his help, they
rebuild Jerusalem's Temple and Walls.

As the story reaches its conclusion,
the returned exiles diligently restore

their ancient worship and community
practices at a grand ceremony.

The book of the law of Moses is
read aloud to the entire community,

leading first to weeping and
confession, and then to celebration.

As the people understand and respond to
God's words, the temple and the law lie

at the heart of the true worship of God.

The temple represents God's new world,
and the law reveals the path for the

community to become his renewed people.

This community, as the covenant people
are to presume their special role in

God's plan, so it's vital for them
to know and obey God's instructions,

to protect their faith from being
diluted and distorted and to worship.

And honor God in his holy place.