The Experience We Call "Conviction" - Ezra 9-10
If I ask you, "Have you ever been convicted," your thoughts immediately go to a courtroom scenario. "Pastor, I was arrested and accused, but never actually convicted." That is not the kind of conviction I am speaking about.
Have you ever had the nagging experience of feeling like something you are doing is wrong? Maybe someone pointed out something. Maybe you had fallen into a lifestyle, habit, or pattern, and a voice-- internal of external -- questioned it. "Should you be doing this?"
How did you respond? Did you ignore it, get defensive, or excuse yourself and your decision? I think we have all done that many times.
Ezra 9 and 10 are powerful chapters that tell the story of compromise, deep conviction, and real change by the Jews who were living back in Israel. There was one main issue that just breaks Ezra's heart and troubles him very deeply. I think there was a day when people cared more about their lives and their decisions --relative to God-- than they do today. I believe there is a general American apathy about sin. Do you agree?
How does Ezra handle this as a spiritual leader? How do the people respond? What does it take for real revival to occur? These are both powerful and challenging chapters, and you should take the time to...
...VIEW AND SEE!
Steve