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Start Again Now: Worship, Prayer, Giving, Serving

  • rosehillfgc
  • Sep 10
  • 4 min read

Updated: Sep 11

Today we look together at Daniel 10–12, Ezra 4:24–5:1, and Haggai 1, learning about God who works beyond the visible opposition and the priorities He asks of us. On the journey of faith we all ask, “Why is the answer so slow? Why is restoration delayed?” Daniel 10 opens that door. While Daniel fasted and prayed, the answer had already been sent by God, yet it was delayed because an unseen spiritual battle was taking place. The angel speaks of conflict with “the prince of the kingdom of Persia,” and that Michael came to help. Therefore our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, the authorities, the powers of this dark world, and spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms (Eph 6:12). Even when our situation seems at a standstill, let us not rush to conclusions. We must not give up—we pray to the end. Fix your eyes not on the surface of the problem, but on God who works beyond it.

Daniel 11 shows how the stage of history moves. Empires change and kings clash. Opposition against the church and the saints grows subtler and stronger. The “abomination that causes desolation” is not merely a single tyrant, but the idolatrous, blasphemous acts and systems that defile the holy place. Today, likewise, we must not focus only on people; we must discern the culture and values that push God aside and the currents that weaken worship itself. The world loves powers that exalt themselves, but the church lifts its eyes to fear the Holy God. We must overcome the evil of the age by the Word, the work of the Spirit, and obedient lives, and so keep holiness.

Yet God does not end the message in darkness. Daniel 12 opens with hope. Even amid great tribulation there is the promise of resurrection and reward (12:2–3), and blessing for those who endure to the end. Scripture also gives a sober warning about apostasy. In the last days many who seemed to have faith will turn away. Apostasy is not born in a day. Small compromises accumulate and eat away at the core of faith until, suddenly, there is a great collapse. Therefore we must keep adding one step of obedience today. The way to keep faith to the end is not a dramatic leap, but the accumulation of daily, small acts of devotion and obedience. Those who do not practice daily obedience will not find themselves sharing in God’s surprising works.

Now turn our eyes to Jerusalem. Ezra 4:24 records plainly that the rebuilding of the temple stopped. When external opposition and inner discouragement meet, the work halts. But God does not leave that stoppage unattended. In Ezra 5:1, when the prophets Haggai and Zechariah proclaim the Word, the people take up their tools and rise again. The Word is God’s power that enables us to start again where we stopped. May that scene be repeated in our lives today. If worship and prayer have stalled, let us start again under the exhortation of the Word.

Haggai 1 strikes at the root of the stoppage: “You live in paneled houses while this house lies in ruins.” God reveals the reason for the barrenness and calls us to “consider your ways,” to reorder our priorities. We naturally invest first in ourselves, our homes, our comfort. As a result, what we offer to God is always the “leftovers.” We worship when we have time, and we commit when we feel we have margin. But Scripture says, “Seek first His kingdom and His righteousness” (Matt 6:33). God promises, “I am with you,” and raises up a people who obey. Therefore worship belongs at the center of our plans, prayer at the very front of our day, and giving begins not “after things improve,” but from what we have now. The choice to set aside a small portion of time, money, and talent for God first opens a watercourse again in a dry valley. Those who do not place God first will never offer Him their best and their utmost. Christian faith holds an eternal hope for the day we will be made perfect, but it is a faith that is offered “here and now.”

How, then, shall our church respond? First, let us devote ourselves to gathering. As Hebrews 10:25 urges, put worship at the top of the calendar. Arrive a few minutes early, quiet your heart, and prepare to worship God in spirit and in truth. Second, let us restore prayer. Hold the church’s and members’ requests and intercede steadily—even ten minutes a day. Third, plan your giving. Not only in plenty, but set a proportion now and give consistently; build up missions, mercy, and the church’s ministries together. Fourth, find a place to serve. Welcome, worship, next generation, setup and clear-down—serve with joy “in the place you ought to be.” We must worship now, pray now, give now, and serve now. This is the recovery of worship and the present-day rebuilding of the temple.

Beloved, behind the visible opposition there is spiritual warfare. Yet over every battle stands God who says, “I am with you.” Therefore, instead of discouragement and stoppage, let us “start again” in obedience to His Word. Put worship first, and with prayer, giving, and service, lay the stones of the temple once more. Those who keep the faith to the end are those who will not miss today’s small obedience. Today, in our place, let us begin that obedience.

Let us pray.“Lord, keep us from being pressed down by what is seen, and teach us to trust Your unseen hand. Renew our priorities so that worship, prayer, giving, and serving may flow again. Holding fast to Your promise, ‘I am with you,’ raise us up to stand where we had stopped. Pour out grace on our community to keep the faith to the end. In Jesus’ name we pray. Amen.”

 
 
 

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Pastor David Wonill Kim​​

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