Lesson 11 Teaching Outline – Ezra 9-10

Mark Jensen – Teacher


  1. Introduction and Context
    1. Review of Ezra’s earlier ministry and return to Jerusalem with a second group bringing financial, moral, and spiritual support (Ezra 7; prior lesson review).
    2. Reminder that Ezra was a scribe skilled in the Law of Moses who set his heart to study, practice, and teach God’s Word in Israel (Ezra 7:6, Ezra 7:10).
    3. Transition from prior lesson to the difficult material in Ezra 9–10, framed by prayer for God’s illumination and dependence on the Holy Spirit.
    4. Statement of the central issue in Ezra 9–10: intermarriage with peoples God had clearly forbidden Israel to marry (Ezra 9:1–2).
  2. God’s Command for Holiness
    1. Old Testament commands against intermarriage
      1. Exodus 34:13–16 commands Israel to destroy pagan worship structures and avoid covenants with the inhabitants of the land to prevent idolatry (Exodus 34:13–16).
      2. Deuteronomy 7:1–3 reiterates that Israel must not make covenants or intermarry with the surrounding nations God would drive out before them (Deuteronomy 7:1–3).
      3. These commands are clear, direct, and not difficult to understand, emphasizing separation from pagan worship rather than ethnic exclusion.
    2. Purpose of the command: holiness
      1. God expected Israel to be holy in the land He promised to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob because He Himself is holy.
      2. To be holy is to be wholly devoted to God, sharing His values, obeying His will, trusting His promises, keeping His covenant, and living for His glory.
      3. Holiness is not neutrality but transformation and commitment to God, with Israel called to be a holy nation and God’s treasured possession (cf. Exodus 19:5–6 as cited).
    3. Israel’s mission as a holy people
      1. Israel was called to be a kingdom of priests and a holy nation, mediating God’s presence and representing Him among the nations (Exodus 19:5–6).
      2. Psalm 67 and other passages show Israel’s mission to make God’s ways and salvation known to all nations (Psalm 67:1–2).
      3. God reinforced holiness by placing Israel in a holy land, giving a holy temple, appearing in the holy of holies, and setting apart the Sabbath as a holy day.
    4. The seriousness of profaning what God has made holy
      1. The worst sin is to desecrate or profane what God has made holy, such as the land, temple, and God’s name.
      2. Intermarriage with forbidden nations profaned God’s holy name by blending Israel’s worship with idolatry and disobedience (Ezra 9:1–2).
      3. Israel’s repeated disobedience showed they had not fully learned from the exile to Babylon, even after returning to the land.
  3. Sin of Intermarriage and Ezra’s Response (Ezra 9)
    1. Report of the people’s unfaithfulness
      1. After about four months in Jerusalem, Ezra is told that people, including priests and Levites, have intermarried with surrounding peoples (Ezra 9:1–2).
      2. The report lists multiple groups and notes that the leaders and officials have been foremost in this unfaithfulness (Ezra 9:2).
      3. The phrase “holy race” (holy seed, Zerah ha-qodesh) highlights Israel as a people set apart for Yahweh, echoing “holy people” language in Deuteronomy 7:6.
    2. Nature and impact of the sin
      1. The issue is religious, not racial, since the surrounding peoples were of the same broader Semitic background.
      2. Intermarriage threatened to draw Israel into pagan worship, increase idolatry, and erode distinctiveness from other nations.
      3. This sin weakened Israel’s testimony as a light to the Gentiles and compromised their mission to make the one true God known.
    3. Difficulty of dealing with the sin
      1. Intermarriage had created families, alliances, and deep emotional bonds, making correction extremely painful and complex.
      2. Addressing the sin involved not only individuals but extended kin networks and political or social ties.
      3. The magnitude of the problem required decisive but careful spiritual leadership.
    4. Ezra’s grief and public posture
      1. Ezra tears his outer and inner garments, pulls hair from his head and beard, and sits appalled, signifying deep grief and dread of divine wrath (Ezra 9:3–4).
      2. Those who tremble at God’s Word gather around Ezra as he remains appalled until the evening sacrifice (Ezra 9:4).
      3. Ezra rises from humiliation, still in torn garments, and falls on his knees with outstretched hands to pray (Ezra 9:5).
    5. Ezra’s confessional prayer
      1. Ezra confesses the iniquities and guilt of the people, identifying with the nation’s sin even though he has not personally committed this offense (Ezra 9:6–7).
      2. He recalls past judgment—sword, captivity, plunder, and shame—while acknowledging that God has shown grace by preserving a remnant and allowing temple restoration (Ezra 9:8–9).
      3. Ezra laments that the people are again breaking God’s commands and risking further judgment by repeating the sins that led to exile (Ezra 9:10–14).
    6. The remnant and undeserved mercy
      1. Ezra refers to the returned community as an “escape remnant,” survivors of exile who have experienced mercy rather than the full measure of deserved punishment (Ezra 9:8, Ezra 9:13–15).
      2. He acknowledges that God has requited Israel less than their iniquities deserve and has granted revival, protection, and space to worship in His holy place (Ezra 9:8–9, 13).
      3. The prayer underscores that no one can stand (be acquitted) before God on their own righteousness, echoing the legal language of Psalm 1:5 and Psalm 130:3.
    7. Character of the prayer and its conclusion
      1. Ezra’s prayer is heartfelt, honest, and confessional, focusing on God’s holiness and the people’s guilt rather than self-justification.
      2. Notably, the prayer ends without explicit requests, instead throwing the community entirely on God’s mercy (Ezra 9:15).
      3. Ezra’s humble posture parallels Daniel’s intercessory prayer for exiled Jews in Daniel 9:3–23.
  4. Corporate Repentance and Difficult Obedience (Ezra 10)
    1. Mourning shared by the community
      1. As Ezra prays and weeps, a growing group of Israelites joins him in mourning over the sin of intermarriage (Ezra 10:1).
      2. Shecaniah, one of the leaders, steps forward as a spokesman expressing hope and resolve to address the problem (Ezra 10:2–4).
      3. Shecaniah assures Ezra that there is still hope for Israel if they respond in obedience (Ezra 10:2).
    2. Proposal to send away foreign wives and children
      1. Shecaniah proposes a covenant to put away the foreign women and children born of these unions in accordance with God’s law (Ezra 10:3).
      2. This solution is extremely difficult and emotionally wrenching, risking bitter division among families and friends.
      3. Shecaniah’s counsel is anchored in the Word of God, urging Ezra and the people to let Scripture govern their response.
    3. Costly allegiance to God’s Word
      1. Shecaniah’s own father and five paternal uncles are involved in the sin (Ezra 10:26), yet he still advocates wholehearted obedience, placing loyalty to God above family ties.
      2. His stance mirrors the apostolic attitude of obeying God rather than human authorities, reflected later in Acts 4.
      3. His example models courage to support righteous action even when it implicates loved ones.
    4. Procedure for examining marriages
      1. The law allowed a foreign woman to marry an Israelite if she became a convert in faith, so each marriage needed careful investigation.
      2. The likely process involved questioning each man about his marriage and giving non-proselyte wives an opportunity to embrace the faith of Israel.
      3. The scale of the issue and the complexity of individual cases required a structured, time-consuming review (Ezra 10:16–17).
    5. Assembly in Jerusalem and enforcement
      1. Ezra summons all the returned exiles to Jerusalem under threat of losing their property and being excluded from the community, using authority granted by King Artaxerxes (Ezra 10:7–8; cf. Ezra 7).
      2. The assembly occurs during the rainy season, and the people stand in the rain while facing Ezra’s confrontation about their sin (Ezra 10:9–10).
      3. Because of the large numbers and harsh weather, the people request a systematic process over time rather than resolving every case immediately (Ezra 10:12–14).
    6. Agreement, resistance, and duration of the process
      1. The majority of the people acknowledge their guilt and agree it is right to deal with the sin directly, though a few oppose the plan (Ezra 10:12, 15).
      2. From the tenth month to the first month of the next year, leaders carefully investigate each case, taking about three months to complete the work (Ezra 10:16–17).
      3. This prolonged effort underscores the seriousness with which the community approaches repentance and restoration.
    7. List of offenders and offerings
      1. Ezra concludes the account by listing offenders: 17 priests, 10 Levites (including a singer and three gatekeepers), and 84 others from Israel (Ezra 10:18–44).
      2. Guilty priests bring a ram as a guilt offering according to Leviticus 5:14–15 to make atonement for their sin.
      3. Dealing decisively with this sin is necessary for restored fellowship with God and acceptable worship in the temple.
  5. Timeless Lessons on Holiness, Testimony, and Providence
    1. God is holy and commands holiness
      1. New Testament passages such as 1 Peter 1:14–16 reaffirm that believers are to be holy in all conduct because God is holy.
      2. Holiness today includes avoiding dishonor to the church as God’s temple (1 Corinthians 3:16–17) and honoring God with our bodies as temples of the Holy Spirit (1 Corinthians 6:18–20).
      3. Believers are called to cleanse themselves from dishonorable things to be useful vessels for the Master, prepared for every good work (2 Timothy 2:21–22).
    2. Testimony and dealing with sin
      1. The church, like Israel, has a mission to be salt and light in the world, pointing people to the Savior (Matthew 5:13; broader mission theme).
      2. Our witness is tied in part to how seriously we address sin in our own lives and in the church, continually working out our salvation with fear and trembling (Philippians 2:12).
      3. Though perfection is not attainable in this life, believers are called to acknowledge sin, confess, repent, and rely on Christ’s strength for growth, following exhortations such as James’ call to confess and pray for one another.
    3. God’s providence in difficult obedience
      1. Ezra’s character—skilled in the Law, devoted to study, practice, and teaching—shows that God had prepared the right man for this crisis (Ezra 7:6, 10).
      2. God’s providence is seen in bringing Ezra and like-minded leaders to Jerusalem at the necessary time to confront and purify the community (Ezra 7–10).
      3. The same providence that guided Ezra and Israel is affirmed as active for believers today, inviting trust in God’s wise and perfect governance.
    4. God’s jealousy and seriousness about sin
      1. God is depicted as a jealous husband for His people, hating sin but loving His children, just as He was jealous for Israel (cf. Exodus 34:14; theme emphasized in the lesson).
      2. Ezra 9–10 illustrates that God is deeply serious about sin and its consequences, requiring it to be faced honestly and dealt with decisively.
      3. The account prompts self-examination about whether sin breaks our hearts as it did Ezra’s and whether it drives us to seek God’s mercy and wisdom.
    5. Application and exhortation
      1. Believers are urged to respond to sin in their own lives and in their communities by turning to God’s Word and trusting His wisdom.
      2. The example of Ezra and Shecaniah encourages men to be courageous leaders who stand for holiness even when obedience is costly (Ezra 9–10; Acts 4 allusion).
      3. The lesson closes by inviting reflection in small groups, focusing on key questions that deepen understanding and application of these truths.

Lesson 10 Outline – Ezra 7:1 – 8:36

Brett Cushing – Teacher


  1. Introduction
    1. Gathering in the name of Jesus and centering worship on Him
    2. God’s Word is ultimately about Jesus and points to His redemptive work
    3. Warning against “stealing the spotlight” by making Scripture about ourselves instead of Christ
    4. Call to “keep the spotlight on the Light” as Ezra 7–8 is studied
  2. Ezra’s Identity and God’s Sovereign Work
    1. Ezra as a Levite and scribe in the lineage established by God
      1. Priestly role tied to God’s original design
      2. Eight hundred years of spiritual heritage
    2. God initiating and shaping Ezra’s heart
    3. The significance of spiritual ancestry and divine purpose
    4. Believers as priests through Christ
      1. Jesus as our High Priest
      2. Direct access to God through Him
  3. The Trustworthiness of God’s Word
    1. Ezra’s devotion to the Word
      1. Studying the Law
      2. Doing the Word
      3. Teaching the Word
    2. Faith developed through God’s initiative, not human effort
    3. Recognition of God’s promises and unchanging character
    4. From comprehension to transformation and obedience
  4. God’s Hand and Favor
    1. Repeated emphasis on God’s favorable hand on Ezra
    2. God’s power over earthly rulers
      1. Stirring the heart of the king
      2. Directing decisions for His purposes
    3. Provision of resources, authority, and protection
    4. Ezra’s public acknowledgment of God’s work
  5. God’s Work Is All That Is Needed
    1. God supplying every need for the mission
    2. Ezra’s dependence rather than self-reliance
    3. God addressing what Ezra overlooked
      1. Provision of additional Levites
      2. Filling every gap
    4. Safe passage and successful arrival in Jerusalem
  6. Strength Through Word and Community
    1. Strength drawn from witnessing God’s activity
    2. Encouragement through God’s people and shared testimony
    3. Community as a catalyst for faith and perseverance
  7. Conclusion and Reflection
    1. Ezra as a model of dependence, discernment, and devotion
    2. Personal examination
      1. Doing for Christ versus depending on Christ
      2. Striving versus resting
    3. Peace as fruit of trust, not achievement
    4. Final call to keep the spotlight fixed solely on Jesus

Lesson 9 Outline – Ezra 5:1–6:22

Lesson 9 – Scott Neubauer

This outline follows the flow of the Lesson 9 teaching on Ezra chapters 5 and 6 and highlights how God’s sovereign plans, both large scale and personal, are carried out through His word, His prophets, kings, and ordinary people.

  1. Introduction and Opening Prayer

    1. Purpose of the lesson: viewing Ezra 5 to 6 as a narrative of God’s sovereign plan in action
    2. Prayer for understanding and focus on God’s word rather than the teacher’s words
    3. Brief recap of the last three lessons in Zechariah to reset the storyline after time away from Ezra 4
  2. Resetting the Historical Context

    1. Quick review of Ezra 4: adversaries halt the temple work through political pressure and bureaucracy
    2. The decisive pause: Ezra 4:24 and the long halt in temple construction during changing Persian administrations
    3. Why this matters: during the delay the people had drifted into self focus, which Haggai later rebukes
  3. The Storyline of Ezra 5 to 6

    1. Simple chronology of events

      1. Rebuilding begins again under the preaching of Haggai and Zechariah
      2. Bureaucratic opposition returns with Tatnai and associates
      3. Escalation to Darius and divine protection as God’s eye rests on His people
      4. Search of the archives and discovery of Cyrus’s decree in a remote Persian fortress
      5. Completion and celebration of the temple after roughly five years of labor
    2. Central lesson: God’s plans will be accomplished

      1. God’s sovereign plan over world history, nations, kings, and empires
      2. God’s sovereign plan over every believer’s life down to each numbered day
  4. God’s Sovereignty Displayed in Ezra 5

    1. Prophets as God’s instruments

      1. The ministry of Haggai and Zechariah

        1. Calling the people to consider their ways and turn from self focus
        2. Daily encouragement and presence among leaders and workers throughout the building years
      2. Transformation among the people

        1. Rapid turnaround from complacency to committed obedience within a short span of time
        2. Unified alignment to God’s purpose rather than personal priorities
    2. Opposition and God’s protection

      1. The bureaucratic challenge

        1. Tatnai’s inspection and escalation to King Darius with a formal inquiry
        2. The strategy echoes the earlier successful effort that stopped the work for many years
      2. God’s eye on His people

        1. Key meaning of Ezra 5:5: divine oversight ensures that the work does not stop
        2. The people keep building while political and legal questions are handled above them
    3. God’s purpose prevails

      1. Discovery of Cyrus’s decree in a distant archive after many years of obscurity
      2. Darius’s ruling: approval, restitution of temple vessels, and full government funding for the project
  5. Theological Reflections and Pastoral Applications

    1. Parallels to the first Exodus where Pharaoh’s opposition could not thwart God’s purposes
    2. Comfort for parents of prodigals who wait through long seasons of suffering and unanswered questions
    3. The world is broken but God is not reacting to chaos; He is executing His plan with perfect wisdom
    4. Believers must anchor themselves in Scripture when circumstances appear to be spinning out of control
  6. Completion and Celebration in Ezra 6

    1. Temple finished through God’s word delivered by the prophets and supported by pagan kings
    2. Darius’s decree invokes judgment on anyone who would alter the plan or harm the house of God
    3. Passover and the Feast of Unleavened Bread celebrated in the first month after completion
    4. Joy attributed not to human achievement but to the Lord who made them joyful and turned the king’s heart
  7. Contemporary Application: God’s Providence in Every Believer’s Life

    1. Encouragement to know Christ personally rather than chase a bare idea of “God’s plan”
    2. Reflection question from the study guide: seeing God work providentially through unlikely people and circumstances
    3. Trusting the God who numbered each day before one came to be and who holds our future in His hands
    4. Living daily in faith that God is sovereign over every detail of life, large and small
  8. Conclusion and Closing Prayer

    1. Summary: God’s plans, both big and personal, will be accomplished and He uses kings, prophets, enemies, and ordinary people to fulfill His purpose
    2. Closing prayer asking God to help His people seek Him, know Him, and walk in trust as they live out the days He has planned

Lesson 8 Outline – Zechariah 8 (God’s Plan for Israel)

Lesson 8 – Mark Jensen

  1. Introduction

    1. Opening prayer emphasizing God’s graciousness, patience, and lovingkindness.
    2. Analogy: Highway construction on I-494 illustrates trusting a plan we cannot fully see.
    3. Parallel: God’s redemptive plan for Israel is known to Him though not yet fully revealed to us.
  2. Context and Overview

    1. Zechariah 7 – A call to repentance.
    2. Zechariah 8 – A call to restoration leading to rejoicing.
    3. Structure:
      1. Verses 1–17: Message of restoration.
      2. Verses 18–23: Message of rejoicing.
    4. Key truths:
      1. God loves Israel.
      2. God is not finished with Israel.
      3. God is trustworthy.
  3. Structure of Zechariah 7–8

    1. Chiasmic form: ideas presented then mirrored in reverse order.
    2. Central verse (8:8b): “They will be My people, and I will be their God.”
    3. Phrase “Thus says the Lord of hosts” occurs seven times (vv. 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 9, 14).
    4. Each occurrence introduces an authoritative declaration from God.
  4. Message of Restoration (Verses 1–17)

    1. God’s Jealous Love (vv. 1–3)
      1. God is fiercely protective of His people.
      2. He promises to return and dwell in Jerusalem.
      3. The city will be called the City of Truth and the Holy Mountain.
    2. Transformation of Jerusalem (vv. 4–8)
      1. Peace and safety for old and young alike.
      2. Complete fulfillment will occur in the millennial reign of Christ.
      3. God will regather His people from east and west.
      4. Promise of restored relationship: “They will be My people, and I their God.”
    3. Encouragement to Rebuild (vv. 9–13)
      1. Past disobedience brought adversity and drought.
      2. Renewed obedience brings peace, fruitfulness, and blessing.
      3. Israel will become a blessing among the nations.
    4. Call to Righteous Living (vv. 14–17)
      1. God’s future blessings are as certain as His past judgments.
      2. He desires truth, justice, and peace rather than empty ritual.
      3. Command: Do what God loves and avoid what He hates.
  5. Message of Rejoicing (Verses 18–23)

    1. Transformation of Fasts into Feasts (vv. 18–19)
      1. Fasts that mourned Jerusalem’s destruction will become celebrations.
      2. Symbolizes millennial joy and restoration.
    2. Universal Worship (vv. 20–23)
      1. Nations will come to Jerusalem to seek the Lord’s favor.
      2. Israel will become a channel of blessing to the world.
      3. “Ten men from all nations will grasp the garment of a Jew,” signifying submission and recognition of God’s presence.
  6. Three Key Truths

    1. God Loves Israel
      1. His covenant love is constant and unchanging.
      2. Scriptural examples: Deuteronomy 14:2; Psalm 135:4; Romans 11:1–2.
    2. God Is Not Finished with Israel
      1. He has a continuing plan for national restoration.
      2. Supporting passages: Deuteronomy 30; Romans 8–9; Isaiah 60; Isaiah 62.
    3. God Is Trustworthy
      1. Fulfilled prophecies concerning the Messiah prove His faithfulness.
      2. Hundreds of Old Testament prophecies about Christ were fulfilled precisely.
      3. Therefore, God will also fulfill His promises to Israel.
  7. Application and Exhortation

    1. Many prophecies in Zechariah 8 await future fulfillment during Christ’s millennial reign.
    2. Believers must recognize God’s continuing plan for Israel.
    3. Anti-Semitism has no place in the church or the life of a Christian.
    4. We are called to stand with and support Israel’s right to exist.
    5. God’s purpose is to bless the world through Israel — ultimately fulfilled in Jesus Christ, the Messiah.
  8. Closing Reflection

    1. Salvation is from the Jews (John 4:22).
    2. Jesus, the Jewish Messiah, is the source of salvation for all nations.
    3. Believers should walk in gratitude, support Israel, and trust God’s redemptive plan.

Lesson 7 Outline – Zechariah 4 to 6 (Focus on Vision 5)

Lesson 7 – Jeremy Thomas

  1. God Uses Visions to Shape How We See Reality

    1. Zechariah’s reaction matches ours: “What is happening here?”
    2. God’s goal was not to give charts or tidy diagrams but to form spiritual imagination.
    3. Visions leave impressions and provoke questions, which is part of God’s intent.
    4. Of the eight visions, lesson 7 narrows in on vision 5.
  2. The Setting of Vision 5: Zechariah 4

    1. The angel returns and rouses Zechariah as one awakened from sleep.
    2. This awakening mirrors Zechariah 2:13 where God rouses Himself to act.
    3. God awakens His prophet so that he will see what God is doing among His people.
  3. What Zechariah Saw

    1. The golden lampstand/menorah with a bowl on top and seven lamps, each with seven spouts.
    2. Two olive trees, one on the right and one on the left of the lampstand.
    3. The angel presses Zechariah to admit his lack of understanding.

      1. Zechariah asks, “What are these, my lord?”
      2. The angel replies, “Do you not know what these are?” to make him feel his dependence on revelation.
      3. Zechariah humbly answers, “No, my lord.”
    4. Principle: Even God-given visions require God-given explanations.

      1. We cannot interpret reality rightly without God’s Word.
      2. Believers must practice “inquisitive humility.”
  4. The Meaning of the Lampstand

    1. The lampstand in Scripture represents God’s people as a light to the nations.
    2. The light signifies God’s presence and wisdom among His people.
    3. Contrast with the tabernacle lampstand.

      1. In Exodus the lamp had to be supplied by priests with pure oil daily.
      2. In Zechariah 4 the oil is supernaturally and continuously supplied.
      3. There are no human attendants in the vision because God Himself sustains the light.
    4. Big idea: God ensures His own ongoing presence and power among His people.

      1. He does not depend on human refill.
      2. He supplies through His Spirit.
  5. The Two Olive Trees

    1. Immediate identification.

      1. The two trees represent two anointed ones who stand by the Lord of all the earth (Zech. 4:14).
      2. In the historical setting these are Joshua the high priest and Zerubbabel the governor.
    2. Their line matters.

      1. Joshua stands in the priestly line of Aaron.
      2. Zerubbabel stands in the royal line of David.
      3. This shows that God’s covenant promises did not die in exile.
    3. Theological trajectory.

      1. Priest and king work side by side again, but not yet in their final form.
      2. This anticipates the coming of one Anointed One who unites both offices.
      3. Fulfillment is found ultimately in Jesus the priest king who pours out the Spirit.
  6. The Central Word to Zerubbabel

    1. The key sentence: “Not by might, nor by power, but by my Spirit, says the Lord of hosts.”

      1. This was God’s word to a discouraged leader.
      2. The work of rebuilding the temple had stalled.
    2. The mountain imagery.

      1. The “great mountain” represents the obstacles before Zerubbabel.
      2. Before God that mountain will become a plain.
      3. God promises divine assistance, not an easy path.
    3. The outcome.

      1. Zerubbabel will bring out the topstone and finish the temple.
      2. The people will shout, “Grace, grace to it.” The glory goes to God.
    4. Application threaded through the teaching.

      1. We distort Scripture when we make the Christian life about our strength for God rather than His strength in us.
      2. God looks for those who rely on His Spirit.
      3. Our greatest problem is not the mountain before us but the failure to see the mountain moving God above us.
  7. Grace at the Finish

    1. God will complete His work through human hands empowered by His Spirit.
    2. No monument is built to Zerubbabel. The shout is to grace.
    3. New Testament echoes.

      1. Philippians 1:6 God finishes what He starts.
      2. Psalm 127:1 God must build or labor is vain.
      3. Philippians 2:12-13 We work out what God works in.
      4. Colossians 1:29 We toil with His energy.
      5. 1 Corinthians 15:10 We work hard, yet it is grace at work.
  8. The Glove Illustration

    1. The gloves were made to be filled.
    2. They can “play” only when animated by a living person.
    3. Spiritual point.

      1. Believers were made to be filled with the Spirit.
      2. When the Spirit fills us, God’s music can be heard in our lives.
      3. A watching world needs to see Christians living not by might or power but by God’s Spirit.
  9. Closing Prayer Emphasis

    1. Request for a Spirit filled, Spirit moved people.
    2. Confession that apart from Him we can do nothing (John 15:5).
    3. Recognition that the Spirit is the anointing oil pictured in Zechariah 4.

Lesson 6 Outline — Zechariah 1–3

Lesson 6 — Brett Cushing

  1. Introduction: God’s Guarantees Amid Guilt

    1. Contrast with human guarantees

      1. Worldly guarantees are conditional and contractual.
      2. God’s guarantees meet guilty people with mercy and help, not indifference or vengeance.
    2. Big idea of Zechariah 1–3

      1. In captivity and guilt, God guarantees His guy, His grit, His guard, His gift, and His grace.
      2. These guarantees move the story from despair to hope in God’s presence and plan.
  2. Setting and Messenger

    1. Historical context

      1. Judah in exile and return era; about 70 years of captivity fulfilled.
      2. People fear God has forgotten them, yet God speaks again.
    2. Zechariah’s identity and names

      1. Zechariah born in Babylon, functions as priest and prophet.
      2. Names preach hope:
        1. Zechariah means the Lord remembers.
        2. Berechiah means the Lord blesses.
        3. Iddo means at the appointed time.
      3. Message summary: the Lord remembers and blesses at His appointed time.
    3. Canonical significance

      1. Heavily quoted in the New Testament and rich in first and second coming prophecy.
      2. Zechariah’s martyrdom noted in Matthew 23:35.
  3. God’s Guy

    1. Immediate agent and ultimate fulfillment

      1. God raises Zechariah as His spokesman to a discouraged remnant.
      2. Zechariah foreshadows God’s ultimate Guy, Jesus the Messiah.
    2. Purpose of the messenger

      1. Announce that God has not forgotten His people.
      2. Call them to hear, hope, and return.
  4. God’s Grit

    1. Divine initiative in chapter 1

      1. God comes to Zechariah, calls His people, and commands the hosts of heaven.
      2. Hope rests in God’s action for the helpless.
    2. Invitation and enablement

      1. Call to return to Me and repent from evil ways.
      2. Lessons from the fathers whose disobedience brought covenant curses.
      3. God enables the return they cannot effect by themselves.
        1. Shepherd imagery illustrates God doing the restoring work.
        2. Parallel language in Jeremiah 50:19 and Lamentations 5:21.
  5. God’s Guard

    1. The heavenly army at work

      1. The Angel of the Lord appears as commander and Word of the Lord.
      2. Patrol report shows the earth at a coerced rest, not true shalom.
    2. Christ’s intercession and the Father’s response

      1. The Angel of the Lord pleads how long for mercy on Jerusalem.
      2. God’s jealous compassion is stirred and cruel nations are rebuked.
      3. God promises to return and for His house to be rebuilt.
  6. God’s Gift

    1. Plan, presence, and protection in chapter 2

      1. Measuring line signals ownership and intentional rebuilding.
      2. God Himself a wall of fire around and the glory within.
      3. Promise to come and live among His people.
    2. Joyful summons

      1. Shout and be glad, for I am coming.
      2. Presence is the gift God gives to the guilty who return.
  7. God’s Grace

    1. Courtroom scene in chapter 3

      1. Joshua the high priest stands in filthy garments representing the people’s guilt.
      2. Satan accuses; the Lord rebukes the accuser.
      3. God removes filth, clothes Joshua in clean garments, and restores his service.
    2. Promise of the Branch and the Stone

      1. My Servant, the Branch, foretells the Messiah.
      2. Stone with seven eyes and engraved inscription signifies God’s omniscience and the wounded cornerstone.
        1. God removes the land’s iniquity in a single day.
        2. Exchange motif points to Christ giving His righteousness for our guilt.
    3. Recommissioning

      1. Joshua charged to walk in God’s ways and keep His charge.
      2. Grace restores purpose after guilt is removed.
  8. Reflection and Response

    1. Worship and trust

      1. What keeps you from worshiping this God who guarantees mercy in guilt.
      2. Believe Christ intercedes, guards, and gifts His presence to you.
    2. Ministry overflow

      1. Freely give to the guilty what you have freely received in Christ.
      2. Rely on God’s grit, not your own, as you serve others.

Lesson 5 Outline – Ezra 5:1 and Haggai 1-2

Lesson 5 – Scott Neubauer


  1. Introduction and Context

    1. Overview of Lesson and Background

      1. Focus on Ezra 5:1 and the book of Haggai.
      2. Haggai is a short prophetic book but holds equal importance as all Scripture because it is the Word of God.
      3. Paul reminds believers that all Scripture is written for instruction, endurance, and encouragement (Romans 15:4).
    2. The Role and Character of Haggai

      1. Haggai appears suddenly with no recorded background.
      2. He is fully under God’s authority, serving as His messenger to the Jews in Jerusalem and Judah.
      3. He does not alter or reinterpret God’s message but delivers it faithfully.
    3. Connection to Previous Lesson

      1. Lesson 4 (Ezra 3–4) ended with construction halted for 16 years due to opposition.
      2. The people returned to normal life while God’s temple lay unfinished.
      3. Now, God raises up Haggai and Zechariah to reignite the work.
  2. Structure and Characteristics of Haggai

    1. Literary Observations

      1. The book contains 1,144 words (ESV), with over 70% directly from God’s mouth through Haggai.
      2. Minimal human dialogue; nearly the entire book is one-way communication from God.
      3. The people respond with obedience rather than debate or resistance.
    2. Purpose and Audience

      1. Messages are directed to leaders Zerubbabel, Joshua, and the remnant of the people.
      2. Four main messages can be seen in the book, all calling the people to spiritual renewal and faithful obedience.
  3. Think — The Call to Reflection (Haggai 1:1–11)

    1. God’s Confrontation

      1. The people claim it is not yet time to rebuild the temple.
      2. They prioritize their own homes while neglecting God’s house.
      3. Sixteen years of complacency lead to misplaced priorities and fading zeal.
    2. God’s Challenge

      1. “Consider your ways” — a call to self-examination and repentance.
      2. Every area of life (food, drink, clothing, income) shows frustration and lack of fulfillment.
      3. God causes their efforts to fail to expose their spiritual neglect.
    3. Personal Reflection

      1. God’s Word serves as a mirror revealing spiritual condition.
      2. Believers must confront selfish habits and misplaced affections.
  4. Power — The Call to Obedience (Haggai 1:12–15)

    1. The People’s Response

      1. The leaders and people obey the Lord and fear Him.
      2. God’s reassuring promise follows: “I am with you.”
    2. God’s Empowering Presence

      1. God stirs the spirit of Zerubbabel, Joshua, and the remnant to rebuild.
      2. This divine stirring marks a transformation from apathy to action.
      3. The transformation occurs within 24 days — evidence of true repentance and renewal.
    3. Principle of Obedience

      1. Obedience precedes blessing and revival.
      2. Human wisdom cannot produce change like God’s power can.
  5. Blessing — The Call to Hope (Haggai 2)

    1. Future Glory and Hope (2:3–9)

      1. The future temple’s glory will surpass the former.
      2. Strength comes from doing the Lord’s work with His presence.
      3. Peace arises from nearness to God despite uncertain times.
      4. Ultimate hope is in salvation and the coming kingdom.
    2. Purity and Restoration (2:10–19)

      1. Lessons of defilement highlight spiritual uncleanness.
      2. Despite impurity, God promises, “From this day on I will bless you.”
      3. Blessing follows obedience, even after failure.
    3. Messianic Blessing on Zerubbabel (2:20–23)

      1. Earthly kingdoms will fall, but God’s kingdom endures forever.
      2. Zerubbabel receives a personal promise — part of Christ’s lineage.
      3. Matthew 1 confirms Zerubbabel in Jesus’ genealogy, 12 generations before Christ.
  6. Application and Closing Exhortation

    1. Three Responses for Today

      1. Think: Reflect on personal priorities and spiritual condition.
      2. Power: Respond in obedience and allow God’s Spirit to work through you.
      3. Blessing: Recognize and rejoice in God’s blessings in all forms, not just material ones.
    2. Encouragement to Community

      1. Stay connected in small groups for encouragement and accountability.
      2. Pray for one another and build each other up through God’s Word.
    3. Closing Prayer

      1. Thanksgiving for God’s Word and the lessons from Haggai.
      2. Request for transformation and a closer walk with Him.

LESSON 4 OUTLINE – EZRA 3:1–4:24

Lesson 4 Outline — Ezra 3–4 – Mark Jensen


  1. Context and Key Passage

    1. Setting and scope

      1. Series focus: Second Exodus; this session covers Ezra 3–4.
      2. Key verse: Ezra 3:11. “For He is good; for His lovingkindness is upon Israel forever.”
      3. Theme: God restores His people and they respond with worship amid opposition.
    2. Historical markers

      1. Altar rebuilt in 537 BC on Solomon’s altar site.
      2. Temple reconstruction begins in 536 BC.
      3. Work faces opposition and pauses; completion comes after 21 years in 515 BC.
  2. Worship First, Work Second

    1. Principle established in Ezra 3

      1. The returned exiles build the altar before the temple to reestablish proper worship.
      2. They offer morning and evening burnt offerings and keep appointed feasts.
      3. They worship despite fear of surrounding peoples.
    2. Biblical precedents

      1. Abraham builds an altar upon entering the land (Genesis 12).
      2. Joshua builds an altar after the first exodus entry (Joshua 8).
    3. What worship is

      1. Spontaneous overflow of a grateful heart under divine favor.
        1. Illustrated by “my cup overflows” and a ready tongue to praise.
      2. Restful enjoyment of God’s acceptance.
        1. Picture of delight, shade, fruit, and banner of love.
      3. Distinct from prayer and praise.
        1. Not occupied with needs or gifts but with God Himself.
        2. David’s example in 2 Samuel 7:18–22 is adoration without requests.
      4. Spirit-enabled response.
        1. Only the regenerate can worship in spirit and truth.
    4. Result

      1. Foundation laid amid trumpets and cymbals, with the refrain of God’s covenant love (ḥesed).
      2. Mixed sounds of weeping and joy mark the moment.
  3. The Unity of God’s People

    1. Unity in Ezra 3

      1. The people gather “as one man” in Jerusalem to obey God and build.
      2. Levitical oversight is appointed; roles align with Davidic directions.
    2. New Testament grounding for unity

      1. Jesus prays that believers “may all be one” to witness to the world’s belief.
      2. Exhortations to preserve the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace.
      3. Unity is spiritual and theological, not merely organizational.
    3. Implications

      1. Shared worship fuels shared work.
      2. Community unity strengthens resilience under pressure.
  4. The Unity of God’s Enemies

    1. False partnership and faithful refusal

      1. Adversaries offer to help build while claiming to seek the same God.
      2. Leaders rightly refuse compromise and maintain covenant separation.
    2. Escalating opposition

      1. Discouragement and fear tactics.
      2. Frustration through hired counselors and political pressure.
      3. Letters to Persian kings that halt the work until Darius.
    3. Why the temple matters

      1. The temple is central to covenant life, feasts, and sacrificial worship.
      2. Completion enables the people to live in alignment with God’s law.
  5. Reflection and Group Discussion

    1. Personal worship audit

      1. Is worship your first response in success, silence, suffering, and blessing
      2. Where do your time and resources reveal your true object of worth
    2. Guarding unity

      1. How shared worship fosters congregational unity.
      2. How lack of worship can contribute to disunity.
    3. Questions for the week

      1. What keeps you from worshiping God more often and more freely
      2. Why is it important to keep the unity of the faith
      3. What unifies us at Grace Church as a local body of Christ

LESSON 3 OUTLINE – Ezra 1:1–2:70

Jeremy Thomas – Teacher


  1. Introduction: The Journey and the Big Picture
    1. Personal illustration of a journey (son’s travel to Romania)
    2. Parallel: Zooming out for perspective in Bible study
    3. Purpose of previous weeks: Seeing God’s faithfulness and covenant
  2. Transition: Zooming In—From Overview to Detail
    1. Moving from broad biblical themes to the specifics of Ezra
    2. Opening Ezra: God uses both kings and commoners
  3. Ezra 1: God Rules the Rulers
    1. Cyrus’ Proclamation and Divine Fulfillment
      1. Cyrus issues decree for Jews’ return (538 BC)
      2. God’s sovereignty: “The king’s heart is a stream of water in the hand of the Lord”
    2. Historical Background and Contrast
      1. Assyrian policy: cruelty and dispersion (722 BC)
      2. Babylonian policy: deportation and assimilation (605 BC)
      3. Persian approach: restoration under Cyrus as a liberator
    3. Motivations behind Cyrus’ Actions
      1. Political strategy and religious diplomacy
      2. Cyrus as “liberator” for imperial advantage
      3. Pagan king’s motives vs. God’s ultimate purpose
    4. Theological Reflection
      1. Human reasons and divine agency (God and Cyrus both at work)
      2. Example: Who brought Hebrews into/brought them back from exile? (Nebuchadnezzar/Cyrus vs. God)
      3. Divine sovereignty and human responsibility coexist
    5. Fulfillment of Prophecy
      1. Isaiah’s prophecy of Cyrus (150 years prior)
      2. Cyrus named as God’s “shepherd” and “anointed”
      3. God’s plan: restoring Jerusalem’s temple and city
  4. Ezra 2: God Knows the Unknown
    1. God Stirs Commoners and Leaders
      1. Not just kings: Judah, Benjamin, priests, Levites, and others are moved
      2. Obedience to God’s movement—practical implications
    2. Discerning God’s Will
      1. Trusting God’s ability to reveal His will over personal discernment skills
      2. Learning God’s will through Scripture and godly counsel
    3. The List of Returnees and Temple Artifacts
      1. Importance and meaning of the long list in Ezra 2
      2. Restoration of vessels: God’s attention to detail and restoration of worship
      3. Representative counts, not exhaustive lists—lesson in trusting God’s knowledge
  5. Personal Application and Closing Illustration
    1. Following God’s Stirring: A Personal Story
      1. Speaker’s journey to seminary in Minnesota
      2. Letting God move one’s heart toward worship and service
    2. Becoming “Temple Builders” Today
      1. Restoring the worship of God in personal life, marriage, family, and community
      2. Letting God zoom out and zoom in on our lives for perspective and direction
    3. Final Encouragement and Prayer
      1. Asking God to show where we truly are and where He wants to lead us
      2. Being faithful, willing, and moved to serve God’s purpose

Lesson 2 Outline – Israel’s Covenant Failure

Brett Cushing – Teacher


Israel’s Covenant Failure – Outline

  1. Introduction and relevance
    1. Week two of “The Second Exodus” study
    2. Connection between ancient people and modern believers
      1. ancient people are “like our peeps” – our ancestors
      2. their situations mirror our own experiences
      3. times of crisis, confusion, and self-inflicted captivity
  2. Main thesis: God’s covenants comfort us in times of crisis
    1. Central theme: God’s covenants provide comfort during crisis
    2. Three key points covenants reveal
      1. God desires to dwell with us
      2. we desire not to dwell with God
      3. God still desires to give us grace
  3. Understanding covenants
    1. Definition: a binding promise between two people
    2. Historical context: often between king and subjects
    3. Two types of covenants
      1. conditional promises (require mutual agreement and fulfillment)
      2. unconditional promises (unilateral, God doing it for us)
    4. Purpose: disclose God’s overall salvation plan for the entire world
  4. Major biblical covenants demonstrating God’s desire to dwell with us
    1. Noahic covenant (Genesis 9:11)
      1. unconditional covenant
      2. God’s promise never to flood the world again
      3. comfort: God’s redemptive purpose for entire world
      4. shows God doesn’t desire to destroy but to dwell with us
    2. Abrahamic covenant (Genesis 12, ratified in Genesis 15)
      1. two promises to Abraham
        1. make him into a great nation
        2. all peoples blessed through his seed
      2. unique ratification ceremony
        1. Abraham cut animals in half
        2. only God walked through (Abraham was in deep sleep)
        3. God took penalty upon Himself for covenant failure
      3. modern relevance
        1. we are under same covenant (those with faith in Christ are Abraham’s children)
        2. foreshadows new covenant in Jesus Christ
    3. Mosaic covenant (Exodus 19-24)
      1. established 430 years after Abrahamic covenant
      2. God’s promises to Israel
        1. special nation with special role
        2. kingdom of priests (intercessors)
        3. God’s treasured possession if they obey
      3. people’s response: “We got this! We’re all in!”
      4. comfort for us: Jesus fulfilled the Mosaic law
        1. didn’t come to abolish but fulfill
        2. we get credit for everything Jesus did perfectly
        3. we become His righteousness
    4. Davidic covenant (2 Samuel 7:12-17)
      1. given after repeated disobedience by God’s people
      2. God’s promise of David’s descendant (Jesus Christ)
      3. God would build house for His name
      4. kingdom will endure forever
      5. fulfillment in Jesus
        1. angel’s announcement to Mary
        2. Jesus’ favorite teaching theme: kingdom of God
        3. gives us God’s presence, peace, and purpose
    5. New covenant (Jeremiah 31:31-34)
      1. prophesied during captivity and exile
      2. God’s promises
        1. put law within them, write on hearts
        2. “I will be their God, they shall be my people”
        3. all will know the Lord
        4. forgive iniquity, remember sins no more
      3. addresses essential problem: wrong desires
      4. fulfillment through Jesus and Holy Spirit
        1. Spirit guides, counsels, convicts
        2. sanctifies and makes us more like Jesus
        3. three aspects: justification (God’s present), sanctification (God’s process), glorification (God’s promise)
  5. We don’t desire to dwell with God
    1. Illustration: Indonesian airliner pilots
      1. pilots didn’t trust instrument panel
      2. desired to trust themselves only
      3. landed at wrong location (military base)
      4. parallel: God’s people in exile asking “How did we get here?”
    2. Root of the problem: wrong desires leading to disobedience
      1. disobedience lurks behind loud declarations
      2. problem began with Mosaic covenant
        1. initiated by God’s grace
        2. people declared “We will do everything!”
        3. immediate disobedience followed
    3. Pattern of wrong desires throughout Scripture
      1. Adam and Eve: tree of knowledge vs. tree of life
      2. Eve desired the apple (looked good and pleasing)
      3. Cain: God warned “sin’s desire is for you”
      4. David’s desire for Bathsheba
      5. Israel’s desire for control
    4. Jesus’ teaching on desire vs. behavior
      1. sermon on the mount
      2. murder begins with anger
      3. adultery begins with lust
      4. disobedience is fundamentally about desire
  6. Israel’s progressive rejection of God
    1. Initial enthusiasm but quick failure
      1. started strong in Exodus 19
      2. immediately made golden calf (God they could control)
    2. Downward spiral through Old Testament
      1. book of Joshua: started great, ended failing
      2. early Judges: God as less desirable option
      3. later Judges: God became obsolete
      4. end of Judges: God seen as enemy, everyone did what was right in own eyes
    3. Desire for worldly ways
      1. craved created things rather than creator
      2. rejected Samuel’s sons
      3. demanded a king like other nations
      4. replaced God with created things
      5. connection to Romans: worshiped created rather than creator
  7. Personal application: our similar struggles
    1. Our desires fuel our disobedience
    2. Rooted in wrongful dependence
      1. “I will determine what’s right and wrong for me”
      2. tendency to decide first, then ask God to bless it
    3. God sees wrongful dependence as obstinance
    4. Disobedience results in experiencing God’s absence
  8. God’s response: grace despite obstinance
    1. Isaiah 30 example
      1. context: Israel surrounded by enemies
      2. their desire: alliance with Egypt for strength and autonomy
      3. God’s invitation: salvation through quietness, waiting, repentance, rest
      4. opposite of “Nike slogan” – don’t just do something, wait on God
    2. God’s heart revealed
      1. God craves to give grace
      2. “I am waiting, I am yearning, I can’t wait to give you grace”
      3. God’s obstinate children don’t stop His grace
      4. God is not mad at us – He loves us through Jesus Christ
  9. Conclusion: God’s covenants provide comfort
    1. All covenants based on God’s grace
    2. God does all the work in all covenants
    3. Even Mosaic covenant included sacrifices (God knew they would fail)
    4. Our part: simply depend upon and trust in God
  10. Final application questions
    1. What keeps me from having comfort in crisis and confusion?
    2. What do I need to do?
    3. What will my life look like when I turn back to God?
    4. How can I embrace that His grace is available and He’s craving to give it?