HYMNS OF REDEMPTION: NEAR THE CROSS


NEAR THE CROSS FANNY CROSBY-WILLIAM COWPER

Some hymns lift our eyes to heaven, and some draw our hearts back to the place where everything changed. Jesus, Keep Me Near the Cross does both. This hymn was written by Fanny Crosby. Her physical blindness sharpened her spiritual sight. It is a quiet plea for nearness, intimacy, and anchoring grace.

Crosby never treated the cross as a distant historical event. For her, it was a living place of refuge, a wellspring of mercy, and the center of Christian hope. Her words are simple, but they are not shallow. They carry the weight of a life shaped by prayer, dependence, and a deep awareness of Christ’s sustaining presence.

Cowper’s hymn cries out for cleansing. In contrast, Crosby’s hymn leans into abiding. It offers a daily, moment-by-moment nearness that keeps the believer grounded in grace. This is not a hymn of crisis; it is a hymn of posture. It teaches us to stay close to the place where love was poured out. It also urges us to stay where redemption was secured. And finally, where hope was born.

The anchor comes from Jesus’ own words in John 12:32:

“And I, when I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all people to myself.”

Crosby hears that promise and responds with a simple, lifelong prayer: Draw me. Keep me. Hold me near.

As you listen to the piano meditation, let this hymn settle your spirit. Let it remind you that the cross is not merely the beginning of your faith — it is the place you return to again and again for strength, clarity, and peace.

Hymn Lyrics: Jesus, Keep Me Near the Cross

(Public Domain)

1
Jesus, keep me near the cross,
There a precious fountain;
Free to all, a healing stream,
Flows from Calvary’s mountain.

Refrain
In the cross, in the cross,
Be my glory ever;
Till my raptured soul shall find
Rest beyond the river.

2
Near the cross, a trembling soul,
Love and mercy found me;
There the Bright and Morning Star
Sheds its beams around me.

3
Near the cross! O Lamb of God,
Bring its scenes before me;
Help me walk from day to day,
With its shadow o’er me.

4
Near the cross I’ll watch and wait,
Hoping, trusting ever;
Till I reach the golden strand,
Just beyond the river.

Audio Meditation

COPYRIGHT TEMPLE MUSIC PRODUCTIONS 2025


Let the music draw you into the nearness of Christ — the place where mercy flows, where burdens lift, and where your heart finds rest.

About the Hymnwriter

Fanny J. Crosby (1820–1915) stands as one of the most prolific hymnwriters in Christian history. Though physically blind from infancy, she possessed a spiritual clarity that shaped thousands of hymns still sung today. Her life was marked by humility, prayer, and a deep love for Christ.

Jesus, Keep Me Near the Cross reflects her lifelong theme: staying close to the heart of God. Crosby never wrote from theory — she wrote from communion. Her hymns invite believers not just to believe in Christ, but to walk with Him, lean on Him, and remain near Him.

Benedictional Prayer

May the nearness of Christ steady your heart today.
May His presence quiet your anxieties and renew your strength.
May His cross remain your refuge, your anchor, and your peace.
And may the One who draws all people to Himself draw you ever closer.
Amen.

What Foundation Are You Building On?


The Question Every Disciple Must Face

Every life is built on a foundation, whether we acknowledge it or not. Jesus made this clear when He said,

“Whoever hears these sayings of Mine and does them, I will liken him unto a wise man who built his house upon a rock”
(Matthew 7:24–25)

The storm did not reveal their intentions; it revealed their foundations. Both men heard the words of Christ, but only one obeyed them. The difference was not sincerity, emotion, or religious activity. The difference was obedience to the words of the Lord.

Paul echoes this truth when he writes,

“For no other foundation can anyone lay than that which is laid, which is Jesus Christ”
(1 Corinthians 3:11)

He warns believers to “take heed how you build” (1 Corinthians 3:10). This is because the Day will test every man’s work with fire. Wood, hay, and stubble burn quickly, but gold, silver, and precious stones endure. The question is not whether you are building, but what you are building with—and what you are building on.


Sincerity Is Not a Foundation

Many Christians today are sincere, but sincerity is not a foundation. Sincerity can be sincerely misplaced. Israel was sincere when Paul said they had “a zeal for God, but not according to knowledge” (Romans 10:2). They were passionate, but they were passionately wrong because they substituted their own righteousness for the righteousness of God.

Jesus confronted the Pharisees for the same reason:

“You make void the commandment of God by your tradition” (Mark 7:13)

They did not reject God outright; they simply elevated human teaching until it overshadowed divine instruction. This same pattern repeats in the modern church. People cling to rituals, holidays, denominational doctrines, and inherited practices, believing that by keeping these traditions they are honoring God. Yet when asked what the Lord requires of them, many have no answer, because they were never taught to ask.


When Tradition Replaces Truth

Many believers were taught to follow the church calendar, but not the voice of the Shepherd. They were taught to keep the traditions of men, but not the commandments of God. They were taught to carry out religious acts, but not to repent, believe, and be led by the Spirit.

Replacement holidays like Christmas and Easter are only the most visible examples. They are sentimental, familiar, and deeply ingrained, but they are not the foundation God laid. They are cultural observances elevated to the status of holy days. Meanwhile, the appointed times of the Lord are dismissed as “Jewish” or irrelevant. These times were written by His own hand, fulfilled by His Son, and witnessed by His Spirit.

Yet the New Testament speaks of Passover, Pentecost, Unleavened Bread, Firstfruits, and Tabernacles with reverence, not dismissal. These feasts carry God’s fingerprints. They are covered with the blood of Jesus. They need no wreaths, ornaments, or external trappings to feel holy. Their holiness is inherent because their Author is holy.

But the problem goes deeper than holidays. Churches have elevated ritual washings, denominational formulas, and man‑made requirements. They value these above the weightier matters of repentance, faith, and the leading of the Spirit. People are taught to trust in the act rather than the transformation. They believe in the ritual rather than the repentance. Their faith lies more in the formula rather than the faith.

Scripture says plainly:

“As many as are led by the Spirit of God, they are the sons of God” (Romans 8:14)

And again:

“If anyone does not have the Spirit of Christ, he is none of His” (Romans 8:9)

Yet many have been taught to trust in outward forms while neglecting the inward witness of the Spirit.


The Foundation God Requires

A true foundation begins with repentance, continues faithfully, and is sealed by the Spirit. It is shaped by obedience to the words of Jesus, not by the expectations of culture. It is strengthened by the fear of the Lord, not by the comfort of familiarity. It is aligned with the Father’s will, not with the calendar of man.

Micah asks the question plainly:

“What does the LORD require of you but to do justly, to love mercy, and to walk humbly with your God?” (Micah 6:8)

Jesus answers it even more directly:

“My sheep hear My voice, and I know them, and they follow Me” (John 10:27)

The foundation God requires is not built on tradition, ritual, or sentiment. It is built on Christ, His Word, and His Spirit. Anything else is sand.


The Coming Test

The storm is coming, the fire is coming, and the Day is coming when every man’s work will be revealed. Jesus warned that many will say to Him, “Lord, Lord… and list their religious activities, but He will answer,

“I never knew you” (Matthew 7:22–23)

Not because they were evil, but because they built on activity instead of obedience.

Only what is built on the Rock will stand. Only what is built on Christ, His Word, and His Spirit will endure. Everything else—no matter how sincere, sentimental, or traditional—will collapse when the winds rise.


How to Test Your Foundation

Scripture never leaves us without a remedy. The Lord not only commands us to build on the right foundation—He tells us how to examine it.

Paul urges believers to “examine yourselves, whether you be in the faith; prove your own selves” (2 Corinthians 13:5). This examination is not optional, because the testing of our foundation is not optional. The storm will come. The fire will come. The Day will come. Wisdom examines the foundation before the shaking arrives.

The first test is obedience to the words of Jesus.

“Why do you call Me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ and do not do the things which I say?” (Luke 6:46)

Our foundation is unstable if tradition, culture, or denominational teaching shape our lives more than the commands of Christ. This is because it is cracked.

The second test is repentance.
John the Baptist prepared the way of the Lord by crying, “Bring forth fruits worthy of repentance” (Luke 3:8). Repentance is not a ritual; it is a turning of the heart. If repentance is absent, the foundation is weak.

The third test is the witness of the Spirit.

“The Spirit Himself bears witness with our spirit that we are the children of God”
(Romans 8:16)

If the Spirit is not leading, convicting, guiding, and confirming, then the foundation is not Christ but self.

The fourth test is alignment with the Word.

“Sanctify them by Your truth; Your word is truth”
(John 17:17)

If our beliefs can’t be traced to Scripture in context, they can’t support the weight of discipleship.


Wisdom or Folly

Jesus ends His teaching on foundations with a warning and an invitation. The wise man hears and obeys. The foolish man hears and ignores. The difference is not in what they heard, but in what they did with what they heard.

Ignoring the condition of your foundation is folly. Checking it is wisdom. The storm will expose every hidden weakness, every unexamined assumption, every tradition elevated above truth. But the one who builds on Christ, His Word, and His Spirit will stand when everything else falls.

The question remains for every disciple:

What foundation are you building on—and will it stand when the testing comes?

How Easter Became A Substitute for Obedience


The whole problem with Easter begins with the very word itself. Long before the church ever attached it to the resurrection, Easter was the name of a spring goddess. She was celebrated with fertility rites, offerings, and seasonal rituals. The early church fathers knew this. The bishops at Nicaea knew this. Everyone in the ancient world knew this. The word carried unmistakable pagan overtones. As a result, the church found itself in an awkward position. They wanted a festival to celebrate the resurrection. However, they didn’t want it to fall on the same day as the pagan celebration that shared its name. So instead of abandoning the pagan term, they kept it—and simply moved the date.

But that raises a question no one seems willing to ask: If the name was pagan, the date was pagan, and the season was pagan, why use it at all? Why not simply keep the feast God established—Passover—which is older, biblical, commanded, fulfilled by Christ, and practiced by Jesus Himself? The answer is uncomfortable but historically undeniable: the early Gentile church wanted distance from anything that looked “too Jewish.” They did not embrace the feast God instituted. They adopted a pagan name. They shifted the date to avoid the pagan festival. Then, they declared the whole thing a “high holy day.” In a single action, they departed from the biblical calendar. They left behind the apostolic pattern. They disconnected from the very rhythm of redemption God Himself set in motion.

And this is where the real problem begins. Once the church is willing to replace what God established with what man invented, it becomes extremely easy. It becomes easy to call the invention “holy.” It also becomes easy to call the commandment “optional.” It becomes easy to defend tradition with passion while ignoring Scripture with ease. It becomes easy to forget that Jesus kept Passover, not Easter (Luke 22:15). The apostles preached Christ as our Passover Lamb, not the centerpiece of a spring festival (1 Corinthians 5:7). The early church remembered the resurrection every time they gathered. They did not do it once a year on a date calculated by the moon (Acts 20:7). There is so much wrong with this entire season. The modern church doesn’t need a new argument. It needs repentance. It needs cleansing. It needs to be washed from the layers of tradition, syncretism, and cultural compromise that have accumulated over centuries. The issue is not whether we celebrate the resurrection. The issue is whether we will honor God the way He commanded. Or will we continue to sanctify a festival He never asked for.


When the Created Becomes the Center and the Creator Becomes the Footnote

Strip away the two big festivals and the calendar collapses. Strip away the productions, the pageants, the pastel-colored Sundays, and the special offerings. Suddenly, the church is forced to face the emptiness it has been covering with seasonal excitement. The early church didn’t need a holiday to feel alive. They had the Holy Spirit (Acts 2:4). They had fellowship (Acts 2:42). They had the apostles’ teaching (Acts 2:42). They had the breaking of bread (Acts 2:46). They had prayer (Acts 2:42). They had mission (Acts 8:4). They had power (Acts 4:33).

We have Christmas and Easter.

When the created thing becomes the center of our worship, the Creator becomes the footnote. Paul warned us about this mistake. “They exchanged the truth of God for a lie, and worshiped and served the creature rather than the Creator.” (Romans 1:25). We read that verse and think of idols carved from wood and stone. But the modern church has its own idols—sanctified by tradition, polished by sentiment, and defended with passion. Christmas and Easter have become the emotional anchors of the Christian year. God did not command these days. Without them, the church would have to rediscover what it means to be the church. It would need to be more than just doing church.


The Author’s Argument—and the Hole Right Through the Middle of It

The article that sparked this editorial tried to defend Easter. It stated, “Easter is the axis on which the Christian year revolves.” He’s right—but not in the way he thinks. If the axis of the Christian year is a man‑made festival, then the whole thing is already off balance. The resurrection is the axis of our faith. Easter is not the resurrection. Easter is a date chosen by bishops in A.D. 325 using a formula that sounds more like astronomy than theology.

The author continues, “Without resurrection, there is no Christianity.” Amen. Scripture says the same: “If Christ has not been raised, your faith is futile.” (1 Corinthians 15:17); “He was raised for our justification.” (Romans 4:25). But then he makes the leap: therefore, Easter is necessary.

No Scripture. No command. No apostolic example. Just tradition.

This is how deception works—not by denying what God said, but by adding to it.

The New Testament church honored the resurrection every time they gathered. They met on the first day of the week (Acts 20:7). They broke bread in remembrance of Him (Luke 22:19; 1 Corinthians 11:26). They preached the resurrection continually (Acts 4:33). They lived in resurrection power daily (Philippians 3:10). They didn’t need a festival to remind them Jesus was alive. They were living proof.

So, if the resurrection is celebrated every week, why do we need Easter at all?

We don’t.

The modern church does—because without Easter, the calendar would be sterile, empty, exposed.


Passover Fulfilled Is Not Passover Abolished

Some argue, “Christ fulfilled Passover, so we don’t need it.” But Scripture never says Passover was abolished. It says Passover was fulfilled. “Christ, our Passover Lamb, has been sacrificed.” (1 Corinthians 5:7). At His final Passover meal, Jesus took bread. He said, “This is My body which is given for you. Do this in remembrance of Me.” (Luke 22:19). Paul writes that the feasts and Sabbaths “are a shadow of things to come, but the substance belongs to Christ.” (Colossians 2:17).

Passover becomes the gospel in God’s own language. The Lamb is chosen without blemish (Exodus 12:5; John 1:29). The blood is applied and judgment passes over (Exodus 12:13; John 5:24; Romans 5:9). Israel is delivered from bondage (Exodus 12:42; Romans 6:6–7). The old life is buried in the sea (Exodus 14:30; Romans 6:4). On the day of Firstfruits, the first sheaf is lifted before the Lord (Leviticus 23:10–11). Paul declares, “Christ has been raised from the dead.” Christ is the firstfruits of those who have fallen asleep.” (1 Corinthians 15:20).

Everything Easter tries to say, Passover already said—and God said it first.

Passover fulfilled does not mean Passover discarded. It means Passover understood in the light of Christ. The early believers didn’t keep Passover as a cultural relic. They saw Christ in every element. They saw the Lamb, the blood, the deliverance, the judgment passed over, the burial, the resurrection. They saw the gospel written into the calendar of God.


The Feasts of the Lord: Power, Purpose, Prophecy, and Love

Unlike Christmas and Easter, these feasts are not built on folklore, tradition, or borrowed pagan imagery. They are built on power, purpose, prophecy, and love. Each one is an exact replica of God’s dealings with man. Each one is fulfilled in Christ. Each one is a perpetual reminder of the gospel in God’s own language.

They reveal power: the power of God to save, deliver, redeem, and restore. Passover shows the power of the Lamb. Unleavened Bread shows the power of cleansing. Firstfruits shows the power of resurrection. Pentecost shows the power of the Spirit. Trumpets shows the power of awakening. Atonement shows the power of forgiveness. Tabernacles shows the power of God dwelling with His people.

They reveal purpose: God does not move randomly. The feasts show that salvation is not a moment but a story. It is not an isolated event but a carefully ordered plan. They teach us who God is and how He works.

They reveal prophecy: Christ fulfilled the spring feasts in His first coming with exact precision. He died on Passover (John 19:14; 1 Corinthians 5:7). He was in the grave during Unleavened Bread (Luke 23:54–56). He rose on Firstfruits (Leviticus 23:10–11; 1 Corinthians 15:20). He poured out the Spirit on Pentecost (Acts 2:1–4). The fall feasts point forward with the same precision. The trumpet of His return is described in 1 Thessalonians 4:16. The day of atonement and national repentance is shown in Zechariah 12:10. The tabernacle of God with men is mentioned in Revelation 21:3.

And they reveal love. The feasts are not cold rituals. They are God’s way of saying, “I want you to remember what I’ve done. Think about what I’m doing now. Consider what I will do in the future.” They are the story of Jesus written into time so that when He came, no one would miss Him. Jesus didn’t just fulfill the feasts—He lived them. He died on Passover, rested in the grave during Unleavened Bread, rose on Firstfruits, and sent the Spirit on Pentecost. He will return in the season of Trumpets, cleanse and judge at Atonement, and dwell with us at Tabernacles.

These are not Jewish traditions. They are the fingerprints of God.

When God commanded these feasts as “perpetual” (Exodus 12:14; Leviticus 23:14; Leviticus 23:21; Leviticus 23:31; Leviticus 23:41), He wasn’t preserving a cultural identity. He was preserving the gospel. He was preserving the story of His Son.


If the Church Filled Its Calendar With God’s Feasts, It Wouldn’t Need Filler Seasons to Pretend It’s Alive

But imagine if the church calendar wasn’t built around man‑made festivals at all. Imagine if it was built around the feasts of the Lord. These are the appointments God Himself established. This is the rhythm He wrote into creation. It is the story He embedded into time. If the church filled its year with the feasts of the Lord, it wouldn’t need to manufacture spiritual excitement. It wouldn’t need to create artificial seasons to feel alive. It wouldn’t need to borrow pagan imagery, rename it, and pretend it’s holy. It wouldn’t need to cling to Christmas and Easter like life support.

Because the feasts of the Lord don’t just fill a calendar—they tell the entire gospel from Genesis to Revelation. Not just the birth of Jesus. Not just the resurrection of Jesus. It includes the whole story: The Lamb was slain from the foundation of the world. The blood saves. There is deliverance from bondage. The burial of the old life happens. The resurrection of the new occurs. The Spirit is poured out. The trumpet announces His return. The day of atonement is when every wrong is made right. The tabernacle of God dwells with man forever.

A calendar built by God, not by bishops. A rhythm established by Scripture, not by councils. A story fulfilled by Christ, not by tradition.

When the church embraces the feasts of the Lord, it doesn’t need to pretend to be alive. It becomes alive. It becomes rooted. It becomes anchored. It becomes biblical. It becomes prophetic. It becomes Christ‑centered in a way Christmas and Easter never could. The feasts don’t just celebrate moments—they reveal the entire mission.


The Church Doesn’t Need Easter—It Needs to Return to What God Established

The early church didn’t need Christmas or Easter to feel alive. They had Christ. They had the Spirit. They had the mission. They had the fellowship of the saints. They had the breaking of bread. They had the apostles’ teaching. They had prayer. They had power.

We have two festivals and a lot of noise.

The modern church clings to Christmas and Easter. Without these traditions, it would have to face the truth: it has forgotten how to be the church.

Hymns of Redemption: Week 2


When I Survey the Wondrous Cross

There are hymns that lift the heart. There are hymns that teach the mind. There are hymns that quietly draw the soul into the presence of Christ. When I Survey the Wondrous Cross is one of the rare hymns that does all three at once. Isaac Watts wrote it not as a theological argument. Instead, he wrote it as an act of beholding — a slow, reverent gaze at the crucified Savior. The hymn does not rush. It does not dramatize. It simply invites the believer to stand before the cross and let its meaning settle deeply and personally.

This is a hymn of surrender. Not forced surrender, but willing surrender — the kind that rises from love rather than fear. Watts leads us through the recognition that the cross strips away pride, ambition, and self‑reliance. It reveals the immeasurable cost of grace and the immeasurable love that paid it. The hymn’s simplicity is its strength. It does not overwhelm the heart; it opens it. It does not shout; it whispers. And in that whisper, the believer hears the call to lay everything at the feet of Christ.

Galatians 6:14 gives us the anchor. It states:
“But far be it from me to boast except in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ…”
Watts presents this truth clearly. His clarity has endured for centuries. The cross is not merely the place where Christ died. It is the place where the believer’s life is redefined.

As you listen to the piano meditation, let this hymn draw your gaze back to the One who gave everything. Let the stillness of the music become a place of reflection, gratitude, and renewed devotion. Let the cross quiet your heart and steady your steps.


Hymn Lyrics: When I Survey the Wondrous Cross

(Public Domain)

  1. When I survey the wondrous cross
    On which the Prince of glory died,
    My richest gain I count but loss,
    And pour contempt on all my pride.
  2. Forbid it, Lord, that I should boast,
    Save in the death of Christ my God;
    All the vain things that charm me most,
    I sacrifice them to His blood.
  3. See, from His head, His hands, His feet,
    Sorrow and love flow mingled down;
    Did e’er such love and sorrow meet,
    Or thorns compose so rich a crown?
  4. His dying crimson, like a robe,
    Spreads o’er His body on the tree;
    Then I am dead to all the globe,
    And all the globe is dead to me.
  5. Were the whole realm of nature mine,
    That were a present far too small;
    Love so amazing, so divine,
    Demands my soul, my life, my all.

Audio Meditation



Let the music guide your heart into a quiet place of surrender and awe before the cross.

Copyright Temple Music Productions 2024:

About the Hymnwriter

Isaac Watts (1674–1748) is often called the “Father of English Hymnody,” and When I Survey the Wondrous Cross is widely considered his masterpiece. Written for a Communion service in 1707, the hymn reflects Watts’ gift for combining theological depth with personal devotion. His words are simple, but they carry a weight that has endured across centuries. The hymn’s focus on surrender and humility has made it beloved. The transforming power of Christ’s sacrifice also contributes to its enduring appeal as a Passion hymn in the Christian tradition.


Benediction Prayer

May the cross of Christ steady your heart today.
May His love quiet every anxious thought.
May His sacrifice draw you into deeper gratitude and deeper trust.
And may the One who gave Himself for you shape your steps in grace and peace.
Amen.

Elam’s Shaking and the God Who Directs the Nations


Opening Statement

The headlines are not random. They are not driven by governments. They are not controlled by human leaders. Scripture shows that God moves nations like pieces on a board. What we are seeing today is not chaos—it is alignment. Elam is shaking as Jeremiah said it would. Nations are realigning as Ezekiel said they would. God is not reacting to history. He is directing it.


The Sovereign Hand Behind the Shaking

When nations tremble, the world rushes to assign blame to leaders, policies, or political miscalculations. Yet Scripture insists that the true cause of national upheaval is not found in the halls of government. It is found in the throne room of God.

Daniel declared, “He changes times and seasons; He removes kings and sets up kings” (Daniel 2:21). Isaiah wrote that God “brings princes to nothing and makes the rulers of the earth as emptiness” (Isaiah 40:23). Proverbs reminds us that “the king’s heart is in the hand of the Lord… He turns it wherever He will” (Proverbs 21:1).

These are not poetic sentiments; they are the spiritual mechanics behind every geopolitical tremor. Nations rise because God lifts them. Nations fall because God humbles them. And when a region shakes, it is not chaos—it is choreography.

The present turmoil in the land the Bible calls Elam is not a modern accident. It is the unfolding of a prophetic pattern spoken long before the nations of today existed.


The Prophecy Spoken Over Elam

Jeremiah 49:34–39 contains a sequence that reads like a spiritual blueprint for the region:

“Thus says the Lord of hosts: Behold, I will break the bow of Elam, the mainstay of their might” (Jeremiah 49:35).

The “bow” symbolized military strength, national pride, and the ability to project power. When God breaks a nation’s bow, He breaks its confidence. Many who lived through the rise of a dark ideology in that region testify that the breaking began decades ago. It did not start with the fall of rulers. It began with the breaking of the people’s will to endure oppression. They fled. They scattered. They carried their grief into the nations.

Jeremiah continues:

“I will bring upon Elam the four winds from the four quarters of heaven, and I will scatter them to all those winds” (Jeremiah 49:36).

This is more than metaphor; it describes diaspora. It is the story of families who fled violence and deception. It is the story of a people who became exiles in every direction. And it is the story of a remnant who never stopped praying for the day when the darkness would crack.


The Diaspora Rejoices Before the Land Does

Jeremiah’s prophecy gives unusual attention to the scattered ones. They are the first to sense the shift. They are the first to rejoice. They are the first to see the collapse of the old order.

This is the biblical pattern. When Babylon fell, the exiles rejoiced before Jerusalem was rebuilt. When persecution scattered the early church, revival began in the diaspora before it returned to Judea.

Jeremiah echoes this pattern:

“I will terrify Elam before their enemies… and I will send the sword after them until I have consumed them” (Jeremiah 49:37).

Fear, instability, and internal collapse strike the land, but the scattered remnant sees hope rising. Today, Iranians across the world—those who fled the cruelty of an oppressive system—are celebrating the weakening of the old structures. Their joy is not political. It is spiritual. It is the relief of a people who have waited in exile for the day when the night would break.


The Collapse of the Old Order

Jeremiah’s prophecy moves next to the downfall of leadership:

“I will set My throne in Elam and destroy from there king and princes, declares the Lord” (Jeremiah 49:38).

This is not about individuals. It is about systems. It is about spiritual strongholds. It is about the collapse of an order built on deception, violence, and pride.

Scripture consistently shows that when rulers exalt themselves, God brings them low. Nebuchadnezzar learned an important lesson. God declared to him, “The Most High rules the kingdom of men and gives it to whom He will” (Daniel 4:32). God spoke to Pharaoh directly. He told him, “For this purpose I have raised you up, to show you My power” (Exodus 9:16). Every proud empire eventually learns it.

The present instability in Elam’s region is not random. It is the shaking of an order God has judged. Nations surrounding the region are no longer intimidated; they are alarmed, unified, and increasingly resistant. This is exactly how Jeremiah described the unraveling: a nation whose aggression provokes opposition on every side.


God Establishes His Throne in Elam

The most astonishing line in Jeremiah’s prophecy is not the judgment—it is the promise:

“I will set My throne in Elam.”

God does not say this about many places. This is not political language. It is spiritual language. It means:

  • A divine visitation
  • A spiritual awakening
  • A remnant rising
  • A new identity forming
  • A region once dark becoming a place of light

Even now, the underground church in that region is growing. Even now, the scattered remnant is awakening. Even now, the spiritual atmosphere is shifting. The throne of God is not a palace. It is a people. And God is establishing His rule in the hearts of those who once fled in sorrow.


The Restoration of Elam

Jeremiah concludes with hope:

“But in the latter days I will restore the fortunes of Elam, declares the Lord” (Jeremiah 49:39).

Restoration does not require a new government. It requires a new spiritual center. Restoration does not begin with borders. It begins with hearts. Restoration does not wait for political stability. It begins when God’s throne is established among a remnant.

This restoration may come sooner than many expect. Not decades. Not generations. But in a season of divine acceleration. The scattered ones are already rejoicing. The old order is already shaking. The spiritual soil is already softening.


The Realignment of Nations

While Elam experiences breaking and restoration, the broader region historically known as Persia moves toward the alignment Ezekiel described. Scripture often speaks of the same land under different names in different prophetic contexts. Thus it is with Elam, which was part of the larger area known as Persia.

Ezekiel 38 names Persia as part of a future coalition:

“Persia, Cush, and Put are with them” (Ezekiel 38:5).

This is not contradiction. It is two layers of prophecy unfolding at once:

  • Elam — breaking, scattering, collapse, restoration
  • Persia — alignment, coalition, confrontation, divine intervention

The present moment is the Elam moment. The future moment will be the Persia moment.

Nations are sorting themselves into patterns Scripture already revealed. Some toward hostility. Some toward blessing. Some toward restoration. God is moving the pieces. The board is His. The timing is His. The outcome is His.


The Watchman’s Charge

A watchman does not interpret events through politics. A watchman interprets events through Scripture. The message is simple:

  • God is shaking Elam.
  • God is restoring a remnant.
  • God is collapsing an old order.
  • God is realigning nations.
  • God is preparing the stage for what Ezekiel saw.
  • God is sovereign over every headline.

The nations are not in control. The governments are not in control. The alliances are not in control.

The headlines will change; alliances will shift. But the Lord reigns. The Lord directs. The Lord restores.