August 6 - 2 Corinthians 6.14-7.16, 2 Kings 19 and Nahum 1

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The Temple of the Living God

2 Corinthians 6 14Stay away from people who are not followers of the Lord! Can someone who is good get along with someone who is evil? Are light and darkness the same? 15Is Christ a friend of Satan? Can people who follow the Lord have anything in common with those who don't? 16Do idols belong in the temple of God? We are the temple of the living God, as God himself says,
"I will live with these people and walk among them.
I will be their God, and they will be my people."
17The Lord also says,
"Leave them and stay away!
Don't touch anything that isn't clean.
Then I will welcome you 18and be your Father.
You will be my sons and my daughters,
as surely as I am God, the All-Powerful."
2 Corinthians 7 My friends, God has made us these promises. So we should stay away from everything that keeps our bodies and spirits from being clean. We should honor God and try to be completely like him.

The Church Makes Paul Happy

2Make a place for us in your hearts! We haven't mistreated or hurt anyone. We haven't cheated anyone. 3I am not saying this to be hard on you. But, as I have said before, you will always be in our thoughts, whether we live or die. 4I trust you completely. I am always proud of you, and I am greatly encouraged. In all my trouble I am still very happy.
5After we came to Macedonia, we didn't have any chance to rest. We were faced with all kinds of problems. We were troubled by enemies and troubled by fears. 6But God cheers up people in need, and that is what he did when he sent Titus to us. 7Of course, we were glad to see Titus, but what really made us glad is the way you cheered him up. He told how sorry you were and how concerned you were about me. And this made me even happier.
8I don't feel bad anymore, even though my letter hurt your feelings. I did feel bad at first, but I don't now. I know that the letter hurt you for a while. 9Now I am happy, but not because I hurt your feelings. It is because God used your hurt feelings to make you turn back to him, and none of you were harmed by us. 10When God makes you feel sorry enough to turn to him and be saved, you don't have anything to feel bad about. But when this world makes you feel sorry, it can cause your death.
11Just look what God has done by making you feel sorry! You sincerely want to prove that you are innocent. You are angry. You are shocked. You are eager to see that justice is done. You have proved that you were completely right in this matter. 12When I wrote you, it wasn't to accuse the one who was wrong or to take up for the one who was hurt. I wrote, so that God would show you how much you do care for us. 13And we were greatly encouraged.
Although we were encouraged, we felt even better when we saw how happy Titus was, because you had shown that he had nothing to worry about. 14We had told him how much we thought of you, and you did not disappoint us. Just as we have always told you the truth, so everything we told him about you has also proved to be true. 15Titus loves all of you very much, especially when he remembers how you obeyed him and how you trembled with fear when you welcomed him. 16It makes me really glad to know that I can depend on you.


Hezekiah Asks Isaiah the Prophet for Advice
(Isaiah 37.1-13)

2 Kings 19 As soon as Hezekiah heard the news, he tore off his clothes in sorrow and put on sackcloth. Then he went into the temple of the LORD. 2He told Prime Minister Eliakim, Assistant Prime Minister Shebna, and the senior priests to dress in sackcloth and tell the prophet Isaiah:

3These are difficult and disgraceful times. Our nation is like a woman too weak to give birth, when it's time for her baby to be born. 4Please pray for those of us who are left alive. The king of Assyria sent his army commander to insult the living God. Perhaps the LORD heard what he said and will do something, if you will pray.


5When these leaders went to Isaiah, 6he told them that the LORD had this message for Hezekiah:

I am the LORD. Don't worry about the insulting things that have been said about me by these messengers from the king of Assyria. 7I will upset him with rumors about what's happening in his own country. He will go back, and there I will make him die a violent death.


8Meanwhile, the commander of the Assyrian forces heard that his king had left the town of Lachish and was now attacking Libnah. So he went there.
9About this same time the king of Assyria learned that King Tirhakah of Ethiopia was on his way to attack him. Then the king of Assyria sent some messengers with this note for Hezekiah:

10Don't trust your God or be fooled by his promise to defend Jerusalem against me. 11You have heard how we Assyrian kings have completely wiped out other nations. What makes you feel so safe? 12The Assyrian kings before me destroyed the towns of Gozan, Haran, Rezeph, and everyone from Eden who lived in Telassar. What good did their gods do them? 13The kings of Hamath, Arpad, Sepharvaim, Hena, and Ivvah have all disappeared.

Hezekiah Prays
(Isaiah 37.14-20)

14After Hezekiah had read the note from the king of Assyria, he took it to the temple and spread it out for the LORD to see. 15He prayed:

LORD God of Israel, your throne is above the winged creatures. You created the heavens and the earth, and you alone rule the kingdoms of this world. 16But just look how Sennacherib has insulted you, the living God.

17It is true, our LORD, that Assyrian kings have turned nations into deserts. 18They destroyed the idols of wood and stone that the people of those nations had made and worshiped. 19But you are our LORD and our God! We ask you to keep us safe from the Assyrian king. Then everyone in every kingdom on earth will know that you are the only God.

The LORD's Answer to Hezekiah
(Isaiah 37.21-35)

20Isaiah went to Hezekiah and told him that the LORD God of Israel had said:

Hezekiah, I heard your prayer about King Sennacherib of Assyria. 21Now this is what I say to that king:


The people of Jerusalem hate and make fun of you;
they laugh behind your back.

22Sennacherib, you cursed, shouted,
and sneered at me, the holy God of Israel.
23You let your officials insult me, the Lord.
And here is what you have said about yourself,
"I led my chariots to the highest heights
of Lebanon's mountains.
I went deep into its forest, cutting down
the best cedar and cypress trees.
24I dried up every stream in the land of Egypt,
and I drank water from wells I had dug."

25Sennacherib, now listen to me, the Lord.
I planned all this long ago.
And you don't even realize
that I alone am the one who decided
that you would do these things.
I let you make ruins of fortified cities.
26Their people became weak, terribly confused.
They were like wild flowers or tender young grass
growing on a flat roof,
scorched before it matures.

27I know all about you, even how fiercely angry
you are with me.
28I have seen your pride and the tremendous hatred
you have for me.
Now I will put a hook in your nose,
a bit in your mouth,
then I will send you back to where you came from.

29Hezekiah, I will tell you what's going to happen. This year you will eat crops that grow on their own, and the next year you will eat whatever springs up where those crops grew. But the third year you will plant grain and vineyards, and you will eat what you harvest. 30Those who survive in Judah will be like a vine that puts down deep roots and bears fruit. 31I, the LORD All-Powerful, will see to it that some who live in Jerusalem will survive.

32I promise that the king of Assyria won't get into Jerusalem, or shoot an arrow into the city, or even surround it and prepare to attack. 33As surely as I am the LORD, he will return by the way he came and will never enter Jerusalem. 34I will protect it for myself and for my servant David.

The Death of King Sennacherib
(Isaiah 37.36-38)

35That same night the LORD sent an angel to the camp of the Assyrians, and he killed one hundred eighty-five thousand of them. And so the next morning, the camp was full of dead bodies. 36After this King Sennacherib went back to Assyria and lived in the city of Nineveh. 37One day he was worshiping in the temple of his god Nisroch, when his sons, Adrammelech and Sharezer, killed him with their swords. They escaped to the land of Ararat, and his son Esarhaddon became king.


NAHUM

Nahum 1 I am Nahum from Elkosh. And this is the message that I wrote down about Nineveh.

The Fierce Anger of the LORD

2The LORD God demands loyalty.
In his anger, he takes revenge on his enemies.
3The LORD is powerful, yet patient;
he makes sure that the guilty are always punished.
He can be seen in storms and in whirlwinds;
clouds are the dust from his feet.

4At the LORD's command, oceans and rivers dry up.
Bashan, Mount Carmel, and Lebanon wither,
and their flowers fade.
5At the sight of the LORD,
mountains and hills tremble and melt;
the earth and its people shudder and shake.
6Who can stand the heat of his furious anger?
It flashes out like fire and shatters stones.

The Power of Assyria Will Be Broken

7The LORD is good. He protects those who trust him
in times of trouble.
8But like a roaring flood, the LORD chases his enemies
into dark places and destroys them.
9So don't plot against the LORD!
He wipes out his enemies, and they never revive.
10They are like drunkards overcome by wine,
or like dry thornbushes burning in a fire.
11Assyria, one of your rulers has made evil plans
against the LORD.

12But the LORD says,
"Assyria, no matter how strong you are,
you are doomed!
My people Judah, I have troubled you before,
but I won't do it again.
13I'll snap your chains and set you free
from the Assyrians."

14Assyria, this is what else the LORD says to you:
"Your name will be forgotten.
I will destroy every idol in your temple,
and I will send you to the grave,
because you are worthless."

15Look toward the mountains, people of Judah!
Here comes a messenger with good news of peace.
Celebrate your festivals. Keep your promises to God.
Your evil enemies are destroyed
and will never again invade your country.

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This reading is from The Holy Bible, Contemporary English Version, copyright © American Bible Society, 1995.


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