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BSF Study Questions Exile & Return: A Time to Build Lesson 23, Day 2: Nehemiah 1

Summary of Nehemiah 1

Nehemiah reports that Jerusalem is broken and the gates have burned. He prayed to God, saying he confessed the sins he and the Israelites had made. They have not obeyed. He reminds God of His promise to gather them back to the Promised Land if they return to Him and obey. He asks for favor before the Lord.

BSF Study Questions Exile & Return: A Time to Build Lesson 23, Day 2: Nehemiah 1

3) Nehemiah heard that the exiles who returned to Jerusalem are in trouble and disgrace. The wall of Jerusalem is borken and its gates have been burned. He responds by mourning, weeping, fasting, and prayingbefore the Lord, repenting of his/their sins and asking God for favor.

4a)

God’s character: “Lord, the God of heaven, the great and awesome God, who keeps his covenant of love with those who love him and keep his commandments”

God’s people: God’s people are His servants. He confesses that the people have sinned, acted wickedly against God, and not obeyed His commands, decrees, and laws.

God’s promises: “If you (the people) return to me (God) and obey my commands, then even if your exiled people are at the farthest horizon, I will gather them from there and bring them to the place I have chosen as a dwelling for my Name.”

Nehemiah’s desire: “Lord, let your ear be attentive to the prayer of this your servant and to the prayer of your servants who delight in revering your name. Give your servant success today by granting him favor in the presence of this man.”

b) This shows that Nehemiah understands God and His character. He represents the people by confessing for them. His prayer reveals a relationship of deep intimacy and corporate solidarity. He approaches God confidently based on His covenant faithfulness, yet humbly identifies with the people’s sin (“we have sinned,” v.6). This is vital because true spiritual leadership requires owning the community’s failures as one’s own to intercede effectively.

5) I’m currently searching for God’s will in my life right now. I have an important medical procedure coming up that I am anxious about. I am trying to determine what God wants for my life right now, what is His will for the rest of my life. I’m asking God for guidance and to move me in His direction, not mine.

Conclusions BSF Study Questions Exile & Return: A Time to Build Lesson 23, Day 2: Nehemiah 1

I love this example of prayer: praise God for who He is, confess your sins, remind God of His promises, ask for what you want/need. Good stuff!

End Notes BSF Study Questions Exile & Return: A Time to Build Lesson 23, Day 2: Nehemiah 1

It’s been 1,000 years since Moses, and the people of God have 400 more years to wait for Jesus. Both Judah and Israel were in shambles. They had been exiled by Babylon, and only about 50,000 of the Jews decided to return when given the opportunity. It’s around 444 B.C.

We pick up the Israelites’ story 15 years after the Book of Ezra ends, so almost 100 years after the captives were allowed to return to Jerusalem. The walls of Jerusalem are still in rubble from the Babylonian conquest.

Nehemiah lives in the capital of the Persian empire and in the palace, so he is a person of import. He is tasked with rebuilding Jerusalem’s walls and the city. He spent about 13 years leading God’s people to rebuild the city.

The survivors were living in a city with no wall, and therefore, in constant fear of attack.

God would use Nehemiah, but first He has to do work inside of Nehemiah.

Nehemiah is a leader, as we all are in some part of our lives. He fasted and prayed before he did.

If your vision is big, you must pray. We’ll see that Nehemiah prayed for months before he did anything Nehemiah 1:1-4 and 2:1.

Prayer will relieve your stresses. It gives you strength.

We are to be humble before the Lord, confessing our sins without excuses, and realizing we need God to do it.

Nehemiah quoted from both Leviticus 26 and Deuteronomy 30.

Nehemiah wanted to do something, but he would need God to do so. God, use me!

END NOTES SUMMARIZED

The Report and Reaction (Verses 1–4)

The Scene: Nehemiah is in the citadel of Susa, serving the Persian King, enjoying comfort and prestige. The Crisis: His brother arrives with news that the Jewish remnant in Jerusalem is in “great trouble and shame.” The walls are broken, and the gates burned—meaning the city is defenseless and a laughingstock. The Response: Nehemiah does not offer pity from a distance; he internalizes the pain. He sits, weeps, mourns, and fasts. His broken heart immediately leads him to prayer rather than political maneuvering.

The Prayer of Preparation (Verses 5–11)

Nehemiah’s prayer establishes a model for crisis management:

  1. Adoration: He begins by acknowledging God as “great and awesome” and faithful to His covenant.

  2. Confession: He does not blame the Babylonians or his ancestors alone. He uses the word “we”—including himself and his father’s house in the nation’s sin.

  3. Remembrance: He quotes Deuteronomy back to God, reminding Him of His promise: if the people return to Him, God will gather them from the farthest skies.

  4. Petition: He asks for success, specifically requesting favor “in the sight of this man” (King Artaxerxes).

Conclusion

Nehemiah 1 teaches that effective leadership begins with empathy and intercession.

Before Nehemiah laid a single stone, he laid a foundation of prayer. He demonstrates that when we face a crisis, we must first look upward (to God’s character) and inward (confessing sin) before we look outward (to fix the problem).

The takeaway is that true burden-bearing bridges the gap between our personal comfort and the brokenness of God’s people.

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BSF Study Questions Revelation: The Hope Lesson 23, Day 2: Revelation 18:1-3

Summary of Revelation 18:1-3

John saw an angel who shouted that Babylon had fallen. She had become a dwelling for evil.

BSF Study Questions Revelation: The Hope Lesson 23, Day 2: Revelation 18:1-3

3a) John saw an angel who shouted that Babylon had fallen. She had become a dwelling for evil.

b) He mentioned that Babylon had become a place for demons and everything impure, unclean, and sinful. She was about to be judged.

4a) The future for Babylon is destruction because of her sins.

b) God should be the top priority. The consequences of putting anything above God (including riches and luxuries) are that they can be taken away, you can live an empty, unfulfilled life, and you risk falling away from Jesus. The list of consequences truly is endless.

5) Our hearts and minds should be set on the things above us in heaven — God, Jesus, and His ways and light. Honestly, things of the world occupy my thoughts most of the time. I work every day to reverse this, but the challenges of life can be forceful. But, I pray and each day, I try to spend one extra minute with Jesus! That will add up eventually!

Conclusions BSF Study Questions Revelation: The Hope Lesson 23, Day 2: Revelation 18:1-3

Question 5 was very convicting for me. I do need to spend more time contemplating God than things of the world.

End Notes BSF Study Questions Revelation: The Hope Lesson 23, Day 2: Revelation 18:1-3

Do note that some Bible scholars see this Babylon as different from the Babylon in Revelation 17.

Most Bible scholars agree that Babylon here is symbolic and not referring to the actual city of Babylon in ancient times.

The angel glows because he was just in God’s presence.

Babylon was guilty of many sins, including idolatry, pride, greed, and the selfish pursuit of worldly things, such as wealth and luxuries.

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BSF Study Questions People of the Promise: Kingdom Divided Lesson 23, Day 2: Micah 1-2

SUMMARY OF MICAH 1-2

Micah 1

We learn when Micah prophesized in verse 1: during the reigns of Jotham, Ahaz, and Hezekiah, kings of Judah—the vision he saw concerning Samaria and Jerusalem. The Lord will come down and punish His people for their sins. Micah will mourn because of the people’s sins, weeping and wailing.

Micah 2

Micah says that there is woe to those who plot evil, who covet, steal, defraud, and rob others. As consequences, the Lord will plan disasters upon His people. There will be false prophets. Yet, God will redeem a remnant of Israel.

BSF Study Questions People of the Promise: Kingdom Divided Lesson 23, Day 2: Micah 1-2

3) During the reigns of Jotham, Ahaz, and Hezekiah, kings of Judah—the vision he saw concerning Samaria and Jerusalem.

4a)

Micah 1:1-7: because of Jacob’s transgression, because of the sins of the people of Israel. They worshipped idols.

Micah 2:1-5: Planning sin and plotting evil. Covet fields and houses and seize them. They defraud people of their homes and rob them of their inheritance

Micah 2:6-11: They steal and drive people from their homes. There are false prophets.

b) Because our hearts and nature are evil. We are tempted, and we sin.

c) Sin is easy to do, which is why so everyone does it. Sometimes, following God’s ways are harder. It’s a choice to not sin just as much as it’s a choice to sin. It’s important to be cognizant of your choices.

5) God would gather a remnant and the One (Jesus) would go before them.

Conclusions BSF Study Questions People of the Promise: Kingdom Divided Lesson 23, Day 2: Micah 1-2

See here the consequences of sin clearly for God’s people.

End Notes BSF Study Questions People of the Promise: Kingdom Divided Lesson 23, Day 2: Micah 1-2

Micah 1

Moresheth (also called Moresheth Gath in Micah 1:14) was about 25 miles (40 kilometers) southwest of Jerusalem. Micah was from the country and he preached somewhere around 739 BC and 686 BC, the same time as Isaiah, Amos, and Hosea. His name means “Who is like the Lord.”

Micah tells the people to listen to what he has to say. Idolatry was everywhere, and it was time to put God first again.

God will come to judge Israel and Judah. Samaria will be left desolate because of it.

Micah announces the judgement on Judah howling and wailing, very sad to do so.

The nations will know of God’s judgment, and it will bring shame on the people.

Micah 2

Sin is bad, but planned sin is even worse. God will bring His people low because of their planned sins.

God would take away what He had given them.

Still, God will restore His people even if they embrace false prophets.

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