Month: March 2022
WHEN GOD IS THE ENEMY
When God is your enemy, it is pointless to fight, because you will never win. In such conflicts, the mighty God could hire such ordinary fighters as frogs; such little fellows as locusts and lice, or fiercer regiments as hailstones and heathenish brutish Babylonians. His army could be deceptively fragile as flies and little as lice, yet, even with the backing of super-power Egypt, you will never win.
THE FAILED INTERCESSOR
1. Unanswered Situations
We are called to the watchtower, to avert danger from our land and our lives. Sometimes, sadly, terrible things still happen around us, causing intercessors sometimes to blame themselves for the misfortune, as though it might never have been if they had prayed more ‘properly’ or prayed ‘enough.’ There are certain swords that the watchman might see coming, of which he can raise an alarm, to which the people might or might not respond (Ezekiel 33:7-9).
HERODIAS
- Herodias the Opportunist
Sages from the ages have often told that the look of a book does not always convey its accurate contents. A once-fooled wise man once warned wailfully that beauty was “vain” if in content it lacked the fear of the Lord; that, in the end, the good heart, more than the good face, earned true praise (Proverbs 31:30). Pretty packages sometimes come with a pomp that belies their content of woes. Hasty eyes often miss the codes of caution concealed on the charming face. That resembles the old story I wish to tell today about Herodias, the bloody Queen of Galilee.
Peace-making
- Possible Peace
There are multiple Biblical approaches to peacemaking, and peace is qualified. Sometimes, people have worsened the relational friction by attempting to impose on others their own conception of peace or peacemaking. Peace does not mean the naïve ‘Christly’ posture of forcing friendship with a manifest enemy, or lowering one’s guards in their presence as a fond show of ‘Christian’ trust renewed. Godliness is not stupidity. The Bible says to “put on THE WHOLE armour of God,” but tells us nowhere to put it off at any time because we feel safe (Ephesians 6:11).
God’s Regrets
- Aborted Suicide
I was at a church service a few days ago to be with a beloved preacher visiting town. During the service, a young woman told her touching story of a narrow rescue from the edge of an ignominious grave. She had felt so frustrated with life that she was going to kill herself. She considered several suicide options and settled for what she thought was the least painful exit out of her regretted world. She was ready with the potent poison for her dispatch that evening, then she heard music from the church. She pondered that she could, at least, go and confess to God before she took the fatal step, so she headed for the church.
Deliverance and Escape
Deliver me in thy righteousness, and cause ME to escape: incline thine ear unto me, and save me.
Psalm 71:2.
Two modes of preservation are highlighted in our text: deliverance and escape, both being types of salvation. God is involved in all, but to different degrees. ‘In His righteousness,’ that is, usually without reference to my rightlessness or any significant input from me, God can deliver me. At other times, however, He merely opens the door and lets me use my legs to complete the salvation process. That is, He causes ‘ME’ to consciously get myself out of the obvious danger. That is escape. Either way, God has ‘saved’ me.
Brother Hosea
- Shattered Dreams
Imagine that you were Prophet Hosea, a young man in church, loving God with all your heart, hardworking, in the choir and prayer departments of the house of God, with lofty dreams of your wedding day and that pretty girl in the choir that you have been eyeing, whom you would soon marry after her graduation from the university next summer, and thereafter move to your new apartment in that quiet section of town. Then it happens.
LESSONS FROM RAHAB THE HARLOT
And the city shall be cursed, even it, and all that therein, to the LORD: only Rahab the harlot shall live, she and all that are with her in the house: because she hid the messengers that we sent.
Joshua 6:17.
- Treasures in a Stained Vessel
Rahab was a harlot; even the Bible identified her by that appalling trade, but she was a good person at heart, and very hospitable too. She had probably been forced into the sex trade by the difficulties of life. She hid the men that came her way, and would not deliver them to harm. Every harlot is not a devil; some of them are great souls merely stained by the constraints of a hard life.
PRINCE CHARMING
And when Shechem the son of Hamor the Hivite, prince of the country, saw her, he took her, and lay with her, and defiled her.
Genesis 34:2.
- Eyes that Shouldn’t See You
That is the story of Dinah, the only known daughter of Jacob (although Genesis 34:16 speaks of “daughters”). During the 600-mile journey from Mesopotamia (where Jacob had been on exile for about twenty years) back to Canaan (as instructed by the Lord), the family passed through Shechem, a city (or “country”) that bore the same name as its iconic prince.