The Bible in a Year Podcast with Scott Purcell
What happens when warnings are ignored for too long? Today on Day 189, we reach one of the most tragic and pivotal turning points in the Old Testament storyline alongside a literal storm brewing in the New Testament. In 2 Kings, the northern kingdom of Israel hits the point of no return. After centuries of ignoring the prophets, building pagan shrines, and compromising their identity, the hammer of judgment falls. The superpower Assyria conquers Samaria, carrying the ten northern tribes away into exile and closing a dark chapter of rebellion. In the book of Acts, the apostle Paul faces a different kind of looming disaster. After his powerful defense, King Agrippa and Governor Festus admit Paul is innocent but must go to Rome because of his legal appeal. Placed on a ship as a prisoner, Paul sets sail under brutal weather conditions. Recognizing the danger ahead, Paul issues an urgent warning to the crew—but just like ancient Israel, the ship’s authorities choose to ignore the prophet, steering straight into a dangerous voyage. Today’s Scripture: 📖 2 Kings 16:1–17:41 – In Judah, wicked King Ahaz plunders the Temple to buy Syrian protection and sets up a pagan altar in Jerusalem. In the north, Hoshea becomes the final king of Israel. King Shalmaneser of Assyria discovers Hoshea's secret alliance with Egypt, besieges Samaria for three years, and carries Israel away into exile. The text explicitly states this happened because Israel sinned against the Lord, adopted foreign customs, and hardened their necks. Assyria repopulates the land with foreigners, creating a compromised, syncretistic religion. 📖 Acts 26:24–27:12 – Festus interrupts Paul, shouting that his great learning is driving him mad. Paul calmly replies that his words are true and rational, turning to King Agrippa, who remarks, "In a short time would you persuade me to be a Christian?" Agrippa notes Paul could have been freed if he hadn't appealed to Caesar. Paul is handed over to a centurion named Julius and boards a ship for Rome. Sailing becomes slow and dangerous due to contrary winds. At Fair Havens, Paul warns them that the voyage will bring injury and loss, but the centurion listens to the ship's captain instead. 📖 Psalm 81:8–16 – God pleads with His people to listen and have no foreign gods among them. He laments, "But my people did not listen to my voice... So I gave them over to their stubborn hearts." He declares that if they would only obey, He would quickly subdue their enemies and satisfy them with honey from the rock. RESOURCES & READ-ALONG 📺 Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLYKi8-_5xHGL_nFAZOthHtZhcb4CqW4ZF [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLYKi8-_5xHGL_nFAZOthHtZhcb4CqW4ZF] 📖 Follow the Text (LEB): https://biblia.com/books/leb/ [https://biblia.com/books/leb/] 🗓️ Download the Full Plan: https://www.biblica.com/resources/reading-plans/ [https://www.biblica.com/resources/reading-plans/] CONNECT & SUPPORT 📧 Questions? Scott: scott@huttobible.com [scott@huttobible.com] 🎁 Partner with Us: https://huttobible.churchcenter.com/giving/to/go-pastor-support [https://huttobible.churchcenter.com/giving/to/go-pastor-support] 📩 Ministry Updates: https://scott-purcell.epistle.org/subscribe [https://scott-purcell.epistle.org/subscribe] CREDITS & LEGAL The Lexham English Bible is used by permission. Copyright 2012 Logos Bible Software. Music: "Be The Hero" by Pumpupthemind via Free Music Archive (CC BY 4.0).
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