Showing posts with label Obedience. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Obedience. Show all posts

Monday, September 28, 2015

Prelude to Revival

In 2 Kings 23 we read of all the good that Josiah di: so much evil overthrown, so many false gods and idols destroyed and purged.  Even some that had been there since the time of Solomon more than 300 years before.  It's interesting to note that there had already been several kings of whom it was said they "did what was right in the eyes of the Lord," yet Solomon's idol-worshiping place stayed.  How tradition and history becomes a part of everyday life so that we can't see how sinful it really is—until God brings revival.

Note, this was a time that was prophesied about during the early years of Jeroboam I, almost 300 years earlier.  God's word and promises are always true.  But why did it happen in Josiah's 18th year of reign?

There were steps leading up to this.

Josiah became king at age 8.  The summary statement about him was that:
 “He did what was right in the eyes of the Lord and followed completely the ways of his father David, not turning aside to the right or to the left.”
 2 Kings 22:2

So he did a little in the limited knowledge he had and God worked in his heart to seek Him more:
 “In the eighth year of his reign, while he was still young, he began to seek the God of his father David.”
 2 Chr. 34:3

Thus when he was sixteen years old, he followed God more.  God blessed that and gave Josiah a heart to start purging the land of all sorts of idols by the time he was almost twenty:
 “In his twelfth year he began to purge Judah and Jerusalem of high places, Asherah poles and idols.”
 2 Chr. 34:3

God further blessed this further obedience by sending a prophet, Jeremiah, who began preaching, teaching and exhorting the people when Josiah was 20 or 21 years old.
 “For twenty-three years—from the thirteenth year of Josiah son of Amon king of Judah until this very day—the word of the Lord has come to me and I have spoken to you again and again...”
 Jer. 25:3

It's obvious that Josiah took the words to heart because he started purifying the land and the temple in his 18th years (when he was 26 years old):
  “In the eighteenth year of Josiah’s reign, to purify the land and the temple, he sent [people] to repair the temple of the Lord his God.”
  2 Chr. 34:8

That's when the Book of the Law was discovered.  Notice that obedience is rewarded with further revelation of God and His will.  The proper response is humility and zealous obedience.  In view of the Law being found and read, Josiah is humble and wants to hear from the Lord.  In view of the Lord's response, he goes out and obeys with great joy and zeal.  Suddenly things that had been accepted as normal and tradition for hundreds of years were understood to be detestable in God's sight so they no longer wanted those things around.

The only way to have real revival is to obey the revealed truth that you already know, then humbly ask for more revelation and then obey the new understanding with great humility, joy and fervor.

That is why Josiah served God all his days and had a revival in his time.

Wednesday, July 22, 2015

All Things Means All Things!

"And we know that all things work together for good to them that love God, to them who are the called according to his purpose."
                          Rom. 8:28

Most of us know that verse and even pull it out from time to time either to comfort someone who is going through a trial or to find comfort in the midst of our own personal trial.  But how many of us stop and think about this verse—this all-encompassing verse—as applicable in every area of our life?

(I should include the disclaimer here that I am not nor have I been suffering from worry over things that happened to me as a child.  I merely happened to remember a specific occasion where my parents had said "No" and I had no understanding of why.)

Nevertheless I was recently reflecting on how I was raised.  There are things that my parents decided—for one reason or another—that we children should not do.  Why?  Some I don't know.  Others I have a small understanding why.  But what about the result?  Am I deprived because I didn't go to a certain party with friends? or didn't get to go to a certain amusement park? or a whole host of other "what-ifs"?

No, I had to come to the conclusion that God is sovereign and that He orchestrates all things for my good.  If this verse is true (with many others throughout Scriptures that teach the same thing) then even my parents' choices for me that I didn't like still worked out for my good—if I really love God and am one of His children.

This really is a freeing thought.  No more angst over why I didn't get to go to the amusement park.  No more anger over a confrontation where my parents exerted their prerogative and mine was defeated.  No!  It has all worked and is working for my good.

How?  I don't know all the ways.  But here are at least two:

1) I learned to obey and to submit to authorities.  That's good.  That is exactly what the Bible tells children to do.  (Eph. 6:1 - 3)  And God's command includes a promise that it will go well with the child that obeys.

2) I Cor. 6:12  "All things are lawful for me, but all things are not helpful. All things are lawful for me, but I will not be brought under the power of any."  Just because something is technically not wrong doesn't mean that it's best.  Even things that are very good should sometimes be avoided.  (For example, exercise is good, but I shouldn't miss work to do it.)  I'm sure my parents had some over-arching ideal in their mind that saw what I was asking to do did not fit in with the way that my character needed to be developed.  Of course, it probably didn't parse out neatly like that, but God is behind it and still brings good out of it in my life.  (No, I'm not sanctioning blindly obeying even if it's a sin.)

This understanding should translate to all of our relationships where we are under some other authority: at work, in terms of being a citizen, relating with a pastor or elder.  Can we look at what our authority has said then, seeing it is not sin, trust God to work the situation out for His glory and our good if we but submit and obey?

But it also made me think of the incredible responsibility that is placed upon me as a husband and father.  I know that I've messed up many times.  I've made poor choices, reacted either passively or inappropriately.  I've sinned in thought, word and deed.  That is a heavy load to think about—especially in view how it can and does affect those around me and those under me.

Yet, God's promises, like his gifts and his calling, are irrevocable.  (Rom. 11:29)

This promise still stands.  If my family is called by His love according to His purpose and if they truly love Him, then all things (even my mistakes) are being used for their ultimate good and God's ultimate glory.

Someone once said: "You want to see all the good parenting that you can do by yourself?  Look at the character flaws and sins of your children.  You want to see what God can do through you and in spite of you?  Look at the good things that your children are doing."

To God alone be the glory!