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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.
Henry: Welcome To Immerse: The
Daily Bible Reading Experience.
Day two hundred and 91.
I am the one who has seen the
afflictions that come from
the rod of the Lord's anger.
He has led me into darkness,
shutting out all light.
He has turned his hand against
me again and again All day long.
He has made my skin and flesh grow old.
He has broken my bones.
He has besieged and surrounded
me with anguish and distress.
He has buried me in a dark
place like those long dead.
He has walled me in and I cannot escape.
He has bound me in heavy chains
and though I cry and shout,
he has shut out my prayers.
He has blocked my way
with a high stone wall.
He has made my road crooked.
He has hidden like a bear or
a lion waiting to attack me.
He has dragged me off the path
and torn me in pieces, leaving
me helpless and devastated.
He has drawn his bow and made
me the target for his arrows.
He shot his arrows deep into my heart.
My own people laugh at me all day long.
They sing their mocking songs.
He has filled me with bitterness and
given me a bitter cup of sorrow to drink.
He has made me chew on gravel.
He has rolled me in the dust.
Peace has been stripped away, and I
have forgotten what prosperity is.
I cry out.
My splendor is gone.
Everything I'd hoped for
from the Lord is lost.
The thought of my suffering and
homelessness is bitter beyond words.
I will never forget this awful
time as I grieve over my loss,
yet I still dare to hope.
When I remember this, the faithful
love of the Lord never ends.
His mercies never cease.
Great is his faithfulness,
his mercies begin afresh.
Each morning I say to myself,
the Lord is my inheritance.
Therefore, I will hope in him.
The Lord is good to those who depend
on him, to those who search for him.
So it is good to wait quietly
for salvation from the Lord.
And it is good for people to submit at an
early age to the yoke of his discipline.
Let them sit alone in silence
beneath the Lord's demands.
Let them lie face down in the
dust for there may be hope.
At last, let them turn the other
cheek to those who strike them and
accept the insults of their enemies.
For no one is abandoned
by the Lord forever.
Though he brings grief, he also shows
compassion because of the greatness of
his unfailing love for he does not enjoy
hurting people or causing them sorrow.
If people crush underfoot, all
the prisoners of the land, if they
deprive others of their rights in
defiance of the most high, if they
twist justice in the courts, doesn't
the Lord see all these things?
Who can command things to happen
without the Lord's permission?
Does not the most high,
send both calamity and good.
Then why should we mere humans complain
when we are punished for our sins?
Instead, let us test and examine our ways.
Let us turn back to the Lord.
Let us lift our hearts and hands to God
in heaven and say we have sinned and
rebelled, and you have not forgiven us.
You have engulfed us with your anger,
chased us down and slaughtered us.
Without mercy, you have hidden yourself in
a cloud, so our prayers cannot reach you.
You have discarded us as refuse
and garbage among the nations.
All our enemies have
spoken out against us.
We are filled with fear for we are
trapped, devastated, and ruined.
Tears stream from my eyes because
of the destruction of my people.
My tears flow endlessly.
They will not stop until the Lord
looks down from heaven and sees
my heart is breaking over the fate
of all the women of Jerusalem.
My enemies, whom I have never
harmed, hunted me down like a bird.
They threw me into a pit
and dropped stones on me.
The water rose over my
head and I cried out.
This is the end.
But I called on your name,
Lord, from deep within the pit.
You heard me when I cried.
Listen to my pleading,
hear my cry for help.
Yes, you came when I called,
you told me do not fear Lord.
You have come to my defense.
You have redeemed my life.
You have seen the wrong
they have done to me.
Lord, be my judge and prove me right.
You have seen the vengeful plots.
My enemies have laid against me, Lord.
You have heard the vile names.
They call me.
You know all about the plans.
They have made my enemies
whisper and mutter as they
plot against me all day long.
Look at them, whether they sit or stand.
I am the object of their mocking songs.
Pay them back, Lord.
For all the evil they have done.
Give them hard and stubborn hearts,
and then let your curse fall on them.
Chase them down in your anger, destroying
them beneath the lord's heavens.
How the gold has lost its luster,
even the finest gold has become dull.
The sacred gemstones lie
scattered in the streets.
See how the precious children of
Jerusalem worth their weight in
fine gold are now treated like pots
of clay made by a common potter.
Even the jackals feed their
young, but not my people.
Israel, they ignore their children's
cries like ostriches in the desert.
The parch tongues of their
little ones stick to the roofs
of their mouths in thirst.
The children cry for bread, but
no one has any to give them.
The people who once ate the
richest foods now beg in the
streets for anything they can get.
Those who once wore the finest clothes,
now search the garbage dumps for food.
The guilt of my people is greater than
that of Sodom, where utter disaster struck
in a moment and no hand offered help.
Our princes once glowed with health
brighter than snow, whiter than milk.
Their faces were as ruddy as rubies,
their appearance like fine jewels, but
now their faces are blacker than soot.
No one recognizes them in the streets.
Their skin sticks to their bones.
It is as dry and hard as wood.
Those killed by the sword are better off
than those who die of hunger, starving.
They waste away for lack
of food from the fields.
Tenderhearted women.
Have cooked their own children.
They have eaten them to survive
the siege, but now the anger
of the Lord is satisfied.
His fierce anger has been poured out.
He started a fire in Jerusalem that
burned the city to its foundations.
Not a king in all the earth.
No one in all the world would've
believed that an enemy could march
through the gates of Jerusalem.
Yet it happened because of the sins
of her prophets and the sins of her
priests who defiled the city by shedding
innocent blood, they wandered blindly
through the streets, so defiled by
blood that no one dared touch them.
Get away.
The people shouted at them,
you're defiled, don't touch us.
So they fled to distant lands and
wandered among foreign nations,
but none would let them stay.
The Lord himself has scattered
them and he no longer helps them.
People show no respect for the priests
and no longer honor the leaders.
We look in vain for our allies to
come and save us, but we were looking
to nations that could not help us.
We couldn't go into the streets
without danger to our lives.
Our end was near.
Our days were numbered.
We were doomed.
Our enemies were swifter
than Eagles in flight.
If we fled to the
mountains, they found us.
If we hid in the wilderness,
they were waiting for us there.
Our king, the Lord's anointed,
the very life of our nation
was caught in their snares.
We had thought that his shadow would
protect us against any nation on earth.
Are you rejoicing in the land of us?
Oh, people of Edem.
But you too must drink from
the cup of the Lord's anger.
You too will be stripped
naked in your drunkenness.
Oh, beautiful.
Jerusalem.
Your punishment will end.
You will soon return from exile.
But Edam, your punishment
is just beginning soon.
Your many sins will be exposed.
Lord, remember what has happened to us.
See how we have been disgraced.
Our inheritance has been turned over
to strangers, our homes to foreigners.
We are orphaned and fatherless.
Our mothers are widowed.
We have to pay for water to drink,
and even firewood is expensive.
Those who pursue us are at our heels.
We are exhausted but are given no rest.
We submitted to Egypt and Assyria
to get enough food to survive.
Our ancestors sinned, but they have died.
We are suffering the
punishment they deserved.
Slaves have now become our masters.
There is no one left to rescue us.
We hunt for food at the risk of
our lives for violence rules.
The countryside, the famine has blackened
our skin as though baked in an oven.
Our enemies rape the women in
Jerusalem and the young girls
in all the towns of Judah.
Our princes are being hanged
by their thumbs, and our elders
are treated with contempt.
Young men are led away to work
at Millstones and boys stagger
under heavy loads of wood.
The elders no longer
sit in the city gates.
The young men no longer dance and sing.
Joy has left our hearts.
Our dancing has turned to mourning.
The garlands have fallen from our heads.
Weep for us because we have sinned.
Our hearts are sick and weary,
and our eyes grow dim with tears.
For Jerusalem is empty and desolate.
A place haunted by jackals.
But Lord, you remain the same for forever.
Your throne continues from
generation to generation.
Why do you continue to forget us?
Why have you abandoned us for so long?
Restore us Oh Lord.
And bring us back to you again.
Give us back the joys we once had,
or have you utterly rejected us.
Are you angry with us still?
This concludes today's
immerse reading experience.
Thank you for joining us.