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Thursday, October 28, 2010

Wisdom and Prudence

Solomon's life was monumental in the history of the world; never before had there been one man who gathered so many riches, possessions, and land to himself. The building of the Temple and his palace were works of art in themselves. The gold that he was given by kings and kingdoms who seemed, like Sheba, to be gawking school girls looking for emotional satisfaction would rival the stores of great countries anywhere anytime! Not to mention the wisdom he had because of his prayer for discernment. It seems the whole known world was most in awe of his metal acumen. The editor of Kings finds it so hard to communicate the grandeur of Solomon's kingdom and the man himself that he simply states that his legend is chronicled elsewhere.

Prudence, however, was apparently not within his abilities. In Solomon we have the story of a man who lost his entire empire over one indiscretion. That choice became a weakness that was revisited time and again over his life however. This repetition was what cost him the throne. God promised him that the loss would not come in his lifetime because of David's faithfulness, but it was gone none the less.

What was this lapse of judgment from the wisest man ever to live? Marrying women from countries known for idolatry and known to be enemies of Israel. The idol worship thing was pretty big with God on His do not do list! Some may point to David's harem as a precedent and ask why the kingdom was not ripped from his hands. The answer is that David married many women, but he did not follow them in worshipping other gods. David's heart stayed true to the God of Abraham. Solomon, on the other hand, began to stray from the God who placed him on the throne and gave him the wisdom so cherished by the entire known world.

On the morning I write this the leaves are falling and there is a distinct chill in the air. The seasons are changing and life continues on a cycle that only God can sustain. Our lives are full of change and newness from time to time. We often find ourselves entering a molting period, if you will. For the most part, change is good. What we must be careful of is the change that draws us away from God as Solomon was. We cannot wholeheartedly embrace all change as God directed because God will not preserve life that veers from His outline. We will continue to live. But, the life giving flow of the Spirit through us will dwindle and fade as it did for Solomon and we will lose what was so precious to us and to those around us.

To live by the Spirit we must not only strive for the things of God, we must also keep ourselves from the things of the world and the enemy. Don't allow the lure of the "beautiful women from foreign nations" to pull you away from God's design for you. It will not happen in a minute; rather, it will happen over time as you simply think you are entering another season of your life. Paul reminds us that all things are permissible for us as we live under grace, but that not all things are beneficial for us! Be wise and prudent in all you do.

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

In God's Hands

I find it hard to imagine what David must have been going through as God gave him a pick of three consequences to his sin.

In 2 Samuel 24 David has numbered the fighting men of Israel and began feeling guilty for having done so. Maybe he sensed he did not trust God to protect him and Israel. Perhaps it was because he numbered them as if they belonged to him, the king of Israel. God wanted to be Israel's King all along and this is why he chose a man “after His own heart” and not one who would build his own kingdom as Saul and Absalom had tried to do. In any case, he had sinned and God would send retribution as he was just in doing.

What is hard to imagine is being in David's shoes as he considers how it is that, not only he, but all of Israel will “finance” the sin of the king. He is given three choices of which one is a three year famine, one is to flee from their enemies for three months and one is to endure a plague for three days. How does one decide on the manner in which people will loose their lives for something they have done? We often ask our children what their punishment should be for doing something wrong, but that is only about one person. How can a man decide what to do for a whole nation because of sin and how can he do so when he knows that he is the one who sinned and not the whole of the nation?

David's answer is telling. No matter how I envision David coming to this choice, he surprises me by the way he comes to it. The selection does not come from severity, or from length of time, nor from number of people possibly affected. The weight is placed solely on the mercy of God. Literally David says, "I do not want to make the same mistake again by being the one to try and protect Israel. I cannot protect them, nor can I keep them. I will not put Israel in the hands of my enemies again. In stead, I will place all of us back in God's hands because he is merciful." Had he learned his lesson of trying to take God's place? Was he coming to a place in his life where he could truly trust in God?

I believe David had always trusted God and humbled himself before the One who saved him time and again from his enemies. What David was overcoming was the enemy that had defeated Saul and Absalom; pride. The moment David began to act like kings from the surrounding pagan nations God had to get his attention. God had to warn David that his throne would not endure if he chose the way of those before him. He was learning how much of a struggle it truly is to be a “man after God’s own heart.” Being a self-sufficient person is not what God wanted from David. He wanted a king that would show the rest of His people how to follow and depend wholly on a strength that lay in God alone, not in their military or any other human commodity.

The lie that we can handle this life all on our own is still a difficult one to tackle. We are taught from birth to be mature means to be independent. Those who seek out help or community are weak. The truth is that we need God and we need each other. We must not listen to Satan when he tells us the opposite. God created us to be dependent on Him. True maturity is allowing God to provide for and care for us.

Rest in God’s hands!

Thursday, October 7, 2010

The Good Stuff

Reading the Old Testament this week I am reminded there are good and bad sacrifices in God's mind. That said, I wonder if we still bring the wrong kind of sacrifice to God thinking we are doing the right thing.
It all started with Cain bringing a sacrifice that wasn't what God asked for and continued on through the history of Israel. One intriguing story concerns Hophni and Phinehas, the sons of Eli, taking and eating meat that was meant for sacrifice from the people of Israel. The meat was rightfully theirs as they were priest like their father. However, they were taking it with the fat still on it and before it could be boiled. Now, we all see the health implications of eating too much fat and none of us really wants to eat boiled meat when it could be grilled, but, these two sons of Eli were not concerned with anything outside of feeding their own appetites. They were so absorbed with themselves they disobeyed the regulations of God for preparing meat period; not to mention meat that was to be sacrificed to Him. The regulations of Moses dealt with discarding the blood, bowels, hooves and other non-eatable pieces outside the camp or city. Only properly prepared parts of the animal were to be brought into the Holy of holies and given to God.

I wonder how many times we bring the fat and blood to God in place of the good stuff. Do we bring him our sin as an offering and ask him to be happy with that? Have we forgotten that God wants the best of the best from us? What we should be sacrificing to Him is our happy families, our satisfying jobs, our healthy bodies, our stable finances, and our fulfilling churches. The next time you want to bring God something and lay it at the altar, make sure it has value. Giving a sacrifice implies we are relinquishing the rights to important properties or people. God doesn't take pleasure in us bringing Him things that belong outside the camp. Leave the guts and the eyeballs where they belong and offer God your best!

Monday, October 4, 2010

To Obey is Better than Sacrifice

Reading the first fifteen chapters of 1 Samuel again today I came across an important lesson. Unfortunately for Saul, it was an expensive lesson. It cost him the kingdom, his children the opportunity to succeed him and his relationship with Samuel.
The point comes as God commands Saul to take revenge on the Amalekites for their treatment of Israel when they fled Egypt. God instructs Saul to kill every living thing in the country and return home with nothing. Saul decides to disobey God and spare the king and bring home some of the best livestock. When Samuel confronts Saul he backtracks, says that the people wanted to bring God some offerings and that he feared the people. Samuel rings out in detest of this explanation leaving us with one of the most memorable quotes of the Old Testament:
            “Does the Lord delight in burnt offerings and sacrifices
as much as in obeying the voice of the Lord?
To obey is better than sacrifice,
and to heed is better than the fat of rams.
                  For rebellion is like the sin of divination,
and arrogance like the evil of idolatry.
Because you have rejected the word of the Lord,
he has rejected you as king.”

We may struggle to find meaning for our lives in this tongue lashing being that we do not offer sacrifices to God anymore. However, the point is not the sacrifice at all. I believe that Saul was full of bologna when he gave his answer to Samuel. I believe that he intended to take the prizes for himself and to appease the people. I do not suppose that he ever planned to offer them to God. Samuel’s rebuke then is not only about the proper place of sacrifice and obedience. (Although God would have asked them to bring home animals to sacrifice if that were His desire.) I feel that Samuel’s reprimand was based on an earlier insight. When Saul was impatient and offered sacrifices himself instead of waiting on Samuel as God had commanded, Samuel’s reproof was that God was rejecting Saul and “the Lord has sought out a man after his own heart and appointed him leader of his people.” (Which is what was said of David by God) Saul’s struggle was not telling the truth, nor was it fearing people instead of God, nor was it placing the value of offerings over the value of obedience. Saul’s failing was placing his own interests above God’s desires.

There is only one stumbling block when it comes to obeying God; selfish desires. Saul wanted things his way as do we. The lesson here is not only about fearing God and rejecting legalism, it is learning to put God’s requirements above our wishes. Let us keep in step with the Spirit by being David and not Saul.