Once again, apologies for the hiatus. When I get really far ahead in my reading I'm further discouraged from posting, so I've started just rereading the part I'm supposed to blog about until I get to blogging. Smart, eh? We'll see.
So this is the part where we learn a little bit about Jeremiah's life. And it's not a very fun life. Some priest named Pashhur puts Jeremiah in the stocks in chapter 20, and in chapter 26 people actually try to kill him. Between those events, he apparently has to take his message of impending doom to other nations besides Israel and Judah, and I can only imagine that he wasn't entirely well received. All in all, I think Jeremiah got a pretty raw deal as far as career satisfaction goes, and he knew it. In chapter 20 he gives this long complaint to God, and it actually starts by claiming that God deceived him. It talks about all the crap he has to endure from all the people who won't listen to him, and just about the terrible nature of the prophecies he's been commanded to speak. But somehow in all that, Jeremiah finds the courage or faith or perseverance or something to say this:
"But the LORD is with me like a dread champion; Therefore my persecutors will stumble and not prevail. . . . Sing to the LORD, praise the LORD! For He has delivered the soul of the needy one From the hand of the evildoers." From there he goes on to wish that he'd never been born and stuff like that, but still, that he can somehow praise God in the midst of what he's been going through, is pretty amazing to me.
The other main thing that stuck out to me in this passage was that after all God has said about destruction and punishment and judgment and wrath, we get a very clear message that He is willing - wanting - to relent. First all we see is that God promises to spare the people if they will flee Jerusalem and give themselves over to Nebuchadnezzar. I can understand how the Israelites would not have taken that message well; it kind of sounds like treason, really. I think that God wanted to cleanse not just the people but the land of Israel. If you remember way back to the Law, the people were supposed to let the land lie fallow every seven years to rest, and apparently Israel did that about . . . zero times . . . which, if you know anything about agriculture, isn't actually good for the soil. Part of the reason (not the main reason) Israel went into exile was to give the earth a chance to replenish itself.
But then if you flip over to chapter 26, God tells the people that if they repent and turn away from evil, he will not cause all the destruction He is planning. Jeremiah tells this to the people again when they've seized him and want to kill him. This message reminds me of 2 Chronicles 7:14, which states that if the people do evil and reap all the curses God promised in the covenant, then if they will just repent, God will hear and forgive them and heal the land. They could have avoided the 70 years in exile, not to mention all the horrific things that happened during the conquest of Judah, if only they had repented and started following God's laws. Why did they need to follow God's laws so much, you ask? Because they made a covenant with Him to do so. And this covenant was binding to all generations, not just the people who stood before Mt. Sinai. The people fully expected God to keep up His end of the bargain - they went to the temple to ask Him to save them from Nebuchadnezzar and so forth - but they didn't have any intention of keeping their end of the covenant, which was service to God. I think this is very applicable to the way we treat God today. We ask Him for stuff, we ask for His help, we ask for His blessing, but we do it sometimes without any intention of changing the things in our lives that we know He doesn't like. How is that fair?
Now, since Israel has not listened to God, God is going to send them into exile, but that doesn't mean their lives have to be miserable there. This is something I find weird and interesting: God tells the people to pray for the welfare of the city where they are living in exile, because "in its welfare you will have welfare." I think that for those of us who are trying to understand the place of patriotism or nationalism in light of being citizens of the kingdom of heaven, this is really relevant. This world is not our home, and the country and city we're living in isn't our home either (at least not permanently), but God has placed us here for a time, for a reason, and while we're here we are to desire the good of the place we're living.
There are a few Messianic prophesies in this passage. The first (chapter 23) uses a shepherd metaphor, and I love the language that is used in verse 4. In contrast to the current leaders of Israel who are destroying the flock (the people) and causing them harm, God promises one day to raise up shepherds who will care for the flock and watch over them so they won't be afraid anymore, and none of them will be missing. I don't know if this specifically is a Messianic reference or not, because it uses a plural for "shepherds," but I just love that idea of sheep - who are one of the most paranoid animals ever (like, they're afraid of running water) - not being afraid anymore. And also how sheep have this tendency to wander off, but none of them will be missing. But right after this it talks about raising up a righteous Branch who will reign as king over Israel and whose name will be "The LORD our righteousness." I love that name (without looking it up, I think that it is Jehovah Tsikendu.) And later in chapter 24, it says that God will give the people a heart to know Him, and that they will be His people and He will be their God. This is important because God has done just about everything conceivable to make Himself known to Israel, but so far nothing has worked, at least not for long. The problem is that we need a new heart, a heart that seeks God.
I have to mention chapter 29 because it has one of the most famous verses in Jeremiah, Jeremiah 29:11 - "For I know the plans I have for you . . . plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future." Now He's talking specifically to Judah here, and even more specifically, He's referring to what will happen after their 70 years of exile are over. But I'm sure that this verse still has bearing to all of God's people anyway. But what I love even more are the verses that come immediately after verse 11. Starting in verse 12 it says, "'Then you will call upon Me and come and pray to Me, and I will listen to you. You will seek Me and find Me when you search for Me with all your heart. I will be found by you,' declares the LORD." Right now, the people do not seek God, although they do seek His blessing, and they don't serve Him with their hearts, although they do with their mouths. God promises that the exile, this punishment for sin He is brining, will cause them to turn around and become a people who seek God wholeheartedly. I think that sometimes God causes unpleasant and even bad things to happen to us to get our attention, but even more than that, to change us inside, to make us more into the kind of people we need to be to have a relationship with Him. We have to seek Him and call on Him and pray to Him and search for Him, not just say we belong to Him and expect Him to show up like a genie whenever we're in trouble. So maybe when bad things happen to us, instead of necessarily praying for the bad stuff to end, we should pray for God to teach us or change us or do to us whatever He's trying to accomplish through the bad stuff.
Finally, I want to mention one other thing that is underlined in my Bible. And incidentally, they all have something to do with knowing God. The first is 22:15-16, which states: "'Did not your father eat and drink And do justice and righteousness? Then it was well with him. He pled the cause of the afflicted and needy; Then it was well. Is not that what it means to know Me?' Declares the LORD." This reminds me of a verse in Micah that we'll get to eventually. It sounds like in God's perspective, knowing Him is as simple as doing the right thing (do justice and righteousness, plead the cause of the afflicted and needy) as you live your life (eat and drink). Sometimes we over-complicate matters, I think. We think that God's will is this abstract, really obtuse thing that we have to be super spiritual to understand. Maybe sometimes things can be simple. Just do the right thing, and that will bring you closer to God. I like that.
Sunday, August 8, 2010
Jeremiah 20-29: Jeremiah in Danger
thoughts by
Zoe
0
additional thoughts
posted 7:38:00 PM
topics: 13 Jeremiah (book), blessing, covenant, exile, Jeremiah (man), judgment/punishment, Messiah, names of God, obedience, prayer, prophecy, prophets, relationship, repentance, rest, righteousness
Saturday, March 20, 2010
1 Kings 12-16: DIvision of the Kingdom
When Solomon dies, his son Rehoboam becomes king. The people of Israel tell him that they were pretty heavily taxed during the days of Solomon (probably to pay for the temple and the palace), and if the new king will just lighten the load a little, they'll faithfully serve him forever. Rehoboam initially responds well to this request; he calls the elders who had been on Solomon's advisory panel and ask them what they think. But when they tell him to listen to the people, he doesn't seem too impressed. So then he calls in his friends, the young spoiled rich kids who grew up with young spoiled Rehoboam. They tell him, no way man! You should tax them even harder, and make a wisecrack about your dad to boot! Oh yeah, that comment about "my little finger is thicker than my father's loins"? That was probably a lewd comment intended to mock his father's masculinity, if you don't know what I mean (if you don't, know that the word translated "loins" could have been translated to mean what's between the legs).
So Rehoboam turns out to be a jerk, because this is his response to the people. A word of advice: when you're in a leadership position, try not to do something that will make the people under you quit, because they can. And they do. Ten out of Israel's twelve tribes secede and form their own country, and do you know who they make king? That's right, Jeroboam from last time. Now remember, God had told Jeroboam that he would become king of Israel, and promised him that if he followed God, he would have basically the same deal that was promised to David: a descendant on the throne forever.
Anyway, so as soon as Israel secedes, the people of Judah and Benjamin prepare to go to war - you know, your typical civil war situation. But God tells a random prophet (ever hear of Shemaiah?) that the Jews can't fight against their own people. They've never made a habit of listening to God before, but this time they do.
Let's go see how Jeroboam is doing as king. Oh look, he's commissioned two golden calves and altars on the high places, and appointed non-Levite priests, and set up holidays to honor his calves. What happened was, he was afraid that if the people continued to follow the LORD, they would be continually going to Jerusalem to sacrifice, and that would eventually reunite the kingdom - in spite of what the LORD himself promised Jeroboam. So he created an alternative religion for his people so that they would stay out of Judah, thereby securing his reign - or so he thought. See, there's a problem whenever we think that we can secure our own future. God had already offered Jeroboam as good of a deal as anybody can have, and instead of trusting God to keep his word, he sets up his own security system. But God wants to give him a second chance, so an anonymous man of God visits him and warns him that there is impending doom because of his idolatry. Jeroboam stretches out his hand to order that the man of God be seized, but God strikes his hand so that some weird affliction happens to it (my text says it "dried up" but I don't know what that would have looked like). So of course, then Jeroboam begs the prophet to pray to God so his hand would be healed. Now, if I were the man of God, I would say, no way! You just tried to kill me, and you aren't going to listen to God. Why should I help you, since I'm about to die anyway? But this guy is a better guy than me, apparently, so he prays to God and Jeroboam's hand is healed. Oh joy. So then Jeroboam invites the prophet to come back to his house and get a "reward." Now the prophet wises up and says no way man, there is nothing on earth that could make me go with you or eat your food. Well, it's actually because God had told him not to eat any food or drink any water until he gets home. So he goes home.
But on the way home something really weird happens. There's this old prophet in Bethel, and his sons tell him the story above about Jeroboam and the man of God, so the old prophet goes out and meets the first prophet and invites him home to dinner. The prophet at first says no way, but then the old prophet lies and tells him that God had spoken to him and told him to invite the first prophet to dinner. So he does, but because he's disobeyed God, God tells him that he won't be buried in his father's grave. And sure enough, on his way home, he's attacked by wild animals, dies, and gets picked up and buried in Bethel instead of his hometown. Remember how serious the Jews were about death? Being buried not in your family's grave, apparently, is kind of a disgraceful thing.
So basically, I think this story has a valuable lesson to teach us: that is, you can't always trust when somebody else tells you God has spoken to them. Especially if it contradicts what you know God has told you. Keep in mind, the guy who lied was also a prophet - he was a guy who spoke the words of the LORD that he heard directly from the Big Guy. But prophets are not infallible, nor are they above doing something presumptuous and stupid like this guy. You can't just rely on a person's reputation as a follower of God, a prophet, or a pastor, or on their word that God spoke to them, especially if you don't know the person very well. You have to listen to God yourself.
Now we go back to Jeroboam. Jeroboam's son has gotten sick, so he sends his wife in disguise to another prophet, named Ahijah. Is it just me, or are there an awful lot of prophets in this country? Anyway, this prophet is blind, so he wouldn't have been able to recognize Jeroboam's wife anyway, but God tells hm that she's coming so it doesn't matter. Anyway, so Ahijah tells the wife that because Jeroboam rejected God's word and caused Israel to sin by building idols and high places, God is going to cut off all the males in Jeroboam's whole family and put somebody else on the throne in his place. And moreover, as soon as the wife re-enters the city, her son will die. Now, if I were a mother, and God told me that, I would stay out of the city for the rest of my life. But this woman is none too bright; she goes straight home, and of course her son dies right away.
So later Jeroboam himself dies, and his son reigns in his place. But we don't find out about him yet because now the text switches over to Rehoboam.
Now, as much bad as Jeroboam did to keep Israel away from God, Rehoboam and Judah do just as much and even worse. They build up the high places and put Asherim on every big hill and under every big tree. Asherim are a kind of idol, by the way.Moreover, they have male cult prostitutes in the land. So then the king of Egypt comes against Jerusalem and makes off with all the treasures that were in the temple - remember all the riches of Solomon? They're all gone now. Rehoboam replaces Solomon's gold shields with bronze shields. And finally, we find out that there is war between Rehoboam and Jeroboam continually, in spite of what God had said. And that's all the significant stuff that happened in Rehoboam's reign. In other words, he was a flop.
So then his son Abijam becomes king, for only three years, and he's pretty much the same as his dad - idolatry, war with Israel, etc. But then when he dies, his son Asa becomes king, and Asa is as good as Rehoboam and Abijam were bad. He got rid of the cult prostitutes and removed all the idols, and he de-throned his mother because she had made an Asherah (female deity) image, and he also destroyed that. He didn't take down the high places, which I don't understand, but it says that his heart "was wholly devoted to the LORD all his days." He also put silver and gold back into the temple. Unforutnately, there was war between him and the king of Israel (who by this time is a guy named Baasha - we'll hear about him soon). Asa forms a treaty with Aram to prevent Israel from attacking him anymore, and it works.
So Jeroboam's son only lasts two years, and he does evil, and then he gets assassinated by Baasha, the guy we just heard of, who then becomes king. And Baasha not only kills Nadab, but he also kills every male related to Jeroboam, just like God has said. And Baasha is just as bad as Nadab and Jeroboam, so God sends the same prophecy (by another new prophet named Jehu) to Baasha that he gave to Jeroboam's wife:
every male in Baasha's family is going to be cut off. And that's what happens. Baasha gets murdered by one of his army commanders named Zimri, who kills everybody in Baasha's family. But he only lasts for seven days - then a guy named Omri is set up as king, and he beseiges Tirzah, which is where Zimri was living, so Zimri actually sets his own house on fire so that he won't be killed by somebody else. Omri reigns for twelve years, and dies, and his son Ahab becomes king. Does that name ring a bell? It should. We're going to hear a lot about him next time. For now, just know that he is just as bad and even worse than all the kings who have been before him, and it says that "he did more to provoke the LORD God of Israel than all the kings of Israel who were before him." This guy sets the new record for bad. So it's time for God to send in the big guns - no more little prophets who speak up once and then disappear forever (well, that's probably not true; it just seems that way). God's about to raise up the biggest prophet since Moses. Tune in next time to see how that plays out.
thoughts by
Zoe
0
additional thoughts
posted 1:53:00 PM
topics: 10 1Kings, death, disobedience, idolatry, Israel, Judah, judgment/punishment, kings of Israel, kings of Judah, priests, prophecy, prophets, righteousness, sin, Solomon
Sunday, February 10, 2008
Leviticus 16-22: Atonement and Holiness
I'm covering a lot of ground in one post here, and if you look at the chapters you might think, that's a lot of different subjects, but the more I've been reading and thinking, the more I see a very strong connection between them. I apologize if this is a little disjointed; unfortunately, it seems that I have the most difficulty articulating the most profound concepts.
In a nutshell, chapters 16-17 talk about Atonement Day, when once a year the high priest would enter the Most Holy Place and make a sacrifice to cover the sins of all the people, as well as sacrifices the people had to offer to the Lord. Chapter 18 lays boundaries for sexuality. Chapter 19 starts off talking about idolatry and then goes into a bunch of miscellaneous laws. Chapter 20 goes back to the immoral relations and then introduces the idea of clean and unclean animals. Chapter 21 is about how priests are supposed to be clean and the things they have to abstain from, and chapter 22 goes into more rules for priests and what they're supposed to do with certain offerings.
Some of the little things that stuck out to me:
God makes a connection between certain sins - human sacrifices and sexual immorality, namely - and the land. He says that the land became defiled when the pagan people did all these things, so it "spewed them out" - kind of like in Genesis 3 when God said that the ground was cursed because of Adam and Eve's sin. Paul says somewhere that the whole world is groaning, as if waiting for the day when it too will be redeemed.
There's a debate I've had on the Circle a few times over whether it is moral to lie in order to protect someone's life (think about Jew-smugglers during the Holocaust, or members of the Underground Railroad). The Bible says not to bear false witness or lie, but in Leviticus 19:16 it says "you are not to act against the life of your neighbor." That's kind of like "you shall not murder" expanded - even if you're not the one killing somebody, anything you do that acts against the life of your neighbor is sin. Regardless of your position on this particular argument I mentioned, I think this verse really shows that morality isn't always as clear-cut as we wish it were. And I think that points to the fact that really, it's about your heart even more than it's about your actions. If your heart follows God, then your actions will be right. So in that sense, it's really more simple than we think it is. Sort of a paradox I guess.
Certain sexual sins got the death penalty, whereas with others it says something like "he will bear his guilt" or "They will die childless" or "they will be cut off from among their people." The latter two are a little more self-explanatory, but I wonder what it means by simply "he will bear his guilt." And I do think it's interesting that we like to say sin is sin, it's all equal - and in a sense that is true - but the Bible also implies otherwise, that some sins deserve to be punished more than others.
Now, the thing that struck me the most while reading this whole passage, and later when I read through Matthew 4 and 5, is just the sheer complexity of this whole law system. Some of the rules seem a little weird, like don't cut your sideburns and don't mix two different kind of cloth. The priests especially had to stay away from a lot of things - they couldn't even touch a dead person unless it was an immediate family member.
A guy at my small group said once that the ceremonial law was really about making a distinction between the Jews and the Gentiles, a way of showing what holiness is. I think he had a point. The word "holy" means literally "cut off" or "separate." And when God brought Israel out of Egypt, He had to show them that they were no longer to live like Egyptians, nor like anyone else. He wanted them to be different, different in a very noticeable way.
God seems to have a thing against mixing. Don't mix fabrics, don't mix with other nations, don't mix different species in breeding. I wonder if the point of all that was to show that righteousness and sin don't mix. There is perfection, and there is sinfulness, and the two cannot go together. A lot of these things seem to be metaphors - not that the laws weren't literally followed, but that they existed to point to a spiritual truth. In this case, maybe they were pointing to God's nature as holy and separate from the world, from sin. He was calling His people to be separate too, not just for the sake of being separate, but so that the entire world could see that God is radically different from humans, unlike the petty humanoid deities they made up. You see, as much as people say that Jews didn't proselytize, I wonder about that. I think God was trying to make a statement about Himself to the world through His dealings with the Jews. Why did God send the plagues on Egypt? So the Egyptians would know He was God. What did Moses say when God said he was going to destroy the Hebrews? The other nations would see it. I think God was globally minded, even from the beginning.
Now, when I read Matthew 5, Jesus was talking about the importance of the Law and how nothing in it would be abolished, and how the people had to surpass the righteousness of the Pharisees in order to see the kingdom of God. In light of all the rules and regulations in these chapters here, that seems pretty insurmountable. But I think that, with the New Testament, we can see the bigger picture of what was going on: all those laws were there to show us how holy God is and how different He is from us. Jesus came and He kept the law, but more than that - He made it possible for us to have access to God. Under the old covenant, only priests could come before God, and only if they were flawless. The point is that none of us is really flawless, but Jesus opened the door to us all anyway. He kept the law in our stead, because there's no way we could do it all.
That's what atonement is all about. It's about Jesus doing what we were incapable of in order to make peace with us. So chapters 16 and 17, which are all about the blood of the atonement, serve as a picture to show what would later happen, how Jesus would cover our sins with His blood in order to make us holy. You see, God called the Israelites to be holy in what they did, but Jesus makes His followers holy by His own proclamation. That was the point from the very beginning, but the Old Testament was a picture, foreshadowing what was to come. We have to know who God is, have an idea of the infinite gap that separates us from Him, and understand what it was that Jesus saved us from, what it was that He accomplished by living a sinless life.
The Law is holy because God is holy. It shows us God's character in that His perfection is so complete, so utterly impeccable, that we can't even understand all the ways in which God is unlike us (perhaps like we can't really understand all the ways God demanded the Hebrews be different from the world). It shows us that God's demands are beyond our ability to reach - it shows us that we cannot meet His demands. We need a scapegoat to take our sins on Himself, and we need a sacrificial lamb to cover us with His righteous blood. So when God says to us, "Be ye holy, for I am holy," it is not our actions which accomplish this, but His. That was just a picture; the reality is that Jesus separates us and declares us righteous by the offering of His blood which wipes away our sins.
thoughts by
Zoe
0
additional thoughts
posted 12:02:00 AM
topics: 03 Leviticus, atonement, holiness, law, righteousness, sacrifice, sin