Choosing Truth Over Fiction (Micah 2:11)

Micah 2:11 – If a man should go about and utter wind and lies, saying, “I will preach to you of wine and strong drink,” he would be the preacher for this people!
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In the middle of Micah’s rebuke of Israel, he exposes something in the hearts of the people that is a valuable lesson for us all. He describes how the people would eagerly follow anyone who preaches to them prosperity, happiness, and freedom to sin before God. They would willingly sacrifice following God and hearing truth for pleasant lies.

The question that we ought to ask ourselves is whether we would prefer a hard truth to an easy fiction. Would you rather hear what is really happening to your soul, or would you prefer to be told that everything is OK? No one who is intelligent would want their physician to lie to them, telling them everything is ok if it was not. Instead, when we go to the doctor, we want him to tell us the truth, painful as it may be, so that we can then respond to it with action.

Micah’s indictment of the people of Israel is not lost on our generation. Many churches are filled with people who would prefer not to hear hard truth, but would rather gather for themselves teachers to say what they want to hear. Paul also wrote to Timothy about such people in . . .

2 Timothy 4:3-4 For the time is coming when people will not endure sound teaching, but having itching ears they will accumulate for themselves teachers to suit their own passions, and will turn away from listening to the truth and wander off into myths.

So, clearly, the Lord has always known that there will be people who pretend to his worship, but who only desire to hear from him the things that are easy. They will gladly hear about grace, mercy, and love; but they want to hear nothing about holiness, the glory of God, justice, wrath, or sin.

If you catch yourself hearing messages from God’s word, and wanting to skip them to something easier, watch out. Beware being the person who complains that the Bible sounds too negative. It could be that you have fallen prey to the sickness of the people of both Micah’s and Paul’s days. It could be that you are preferring a friendly fiction to the truth about your own soul.

Let us devote ourselves to hearing the word of God in all truth. Let us never settle for the easy when the hard truth is there too. Let us learn as much about God’s wrath as about his love. Let us be open to hear both where we have done well and where we have failed. Let us make it a point to hear the whole counsel of God as given in his holy word, and let us receive nothing less than the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.

Dear Lord, I recognize that the human heart tends to shy away from hearing what is true in your word. I know that it is easy to hear compliments, and it is very difficult to hear criticism. However, I pray that you will lead me to your truth in your word, whether it be easy or hard. Help me to speak your truth to others, in love, for the glory of your name. Help me to hear your truth in your word and from others who have studied your word so that I might better honor you. I do not want my ears to be tickled. I do not want to follow any teacher preaching a false and deadly prosperity gospel. Instead, I want to hear your revealed truth, which is far better than any fanciful fiction.

The Mercy of a Threat from God (Jonah 3:4-5, 10)

Jonah 3:4-5, 10 – Jonah began to go into the city, going a day’s journey. And he called out, “Yet forty days, and Nineveh shall be overthrown!”

And the people of Nineveh believed God. They called for a fast and put on sackcloth, from the greatest of them to the least of them. . . . When God saw what they did, how they turned from their evil way, God relented of the disaster that he had said he would do to them, and he did not do it.
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Here in chapter 3, Jonah goes to Nineveh and obeys the command of God. He cries out in the midst of the city that Nineveh only has 40 more days until the Lord will destroy it. The people of the city hear Jonah’s word, believe God, and repent. God then relents of the destruction.

We need not shrink back from declaring the word of the Lord to people. Unlike Jonah, we will not receive that word as direct, person-to-person, revelation from God. Instead, we receive God’s word in its written form, holy scripture. The word of God contains a similar call to the lost and dying world that, in a very short time, they will stand under the wrath of God if they do not repent and turn to Jesus for salvation. If, like the people of Nineveh, they hear our words and believe God, they will be saved.

Some people do not want to say such things to the world, because they do not want to sound overly negative. But let me tell you that the call to repentance is extremely good news. The call to repentance and the threat of destruction is a very hopeful call. When God plans to destroy something or someone without any remedy or hope for them, he no longer calls them to repentance. God will not call you to do something that will not help. If the Lord calls you to repent, there is hope that, if you repent, you can be saved and avoid his wrath.

So, the next time you have the chance, be bold to declare to someone the truth of the word of God. Call them to repentance. And let them know that this call to repent is a great and merciful blessing from God containing the hope of forgiveness. And when you hear the call from God to repent of your own sin, receive it as his mercy; because he could have simply judged you, but he chose to call you to turn from your sin and receive his grace.

Dear Lord, I thank you for the call to repentance. I recognize that along with your call to repent of sin and threat of wrath also comes your promise of grace for the one who hears and obeys your word. I pray that you will always continue to speak your call for me to change in your word in order that I would repent and turn to you in every area of life. I pray that you will give me the opportunity to speak your word, your call to repentance, to others, and to show them how great a mercy it is that they can hear that warning. I pray that you will use me as one who speaks your word to others who will hear it and turn to you.

Love, the Ultimate Test (1 Corinthians 13:1-3)

1 Corinthians 13:1-3 – If I speak in the tongues of men and of angels, but have not love, I am a noisy gong or a clanging cymbal. And if I have prophetic powers, and understand all mysteries and all knowledge, and if I have all faith, so as to remove mountains, but have not love, I am nothing. If I give away all I have, and if I deliver up my body to be burned, but have not love, I gain nothing.
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In Paul’s discussion of the spiritual gifts that were being practiced and sought in the Corinthian church, he interjects the chapter we simply call the “love” chapter. It is often read at weddings, especially emphasizing the things beginning at verse 4. However, there is a far more important use for this chapter in the body of Christ.

Notice that, in verses 1-3 above, Paul describes many things that he might have or do which are honorable. He might have the most fabulous and amazing spiritual gifts. He might be able to do incredible things. He might be so incredibly self-sacrificial that he gives away all his possessions to the poor and is martyred for the faith. However, he adds with each statement that if he does these things without love, he has done nothing and gains nothing.

Love as a motivator trumps all our actions. No deed, regardless of how righteous or sacrificial, that is not done with true, biblical, God-glorifying love will matter. Whether it be dropping money in the offering basket, singing a song at church, or selling your home and becoming a foreign missionary, if you do it without love, you gain nothing before God. So you will find that in all forms of Christian service, there is a higher test than simply your behavior; that test is the test of your heart.

God is far more interested in your heart than in your behavior. If you behave properly, but without a heart that is right before him, your behavior is simple hypocrisy. However, if your heart is right before God, loving and focused on his glory, your behavior will be right, because right behavior will be your heart’s desire. The battleground for the souls and actions of men is not fought in mere behavioral alteration, it is fought for and won or lost in the hearts of men. The battle is not for the behavior of men, it is for the hearts of men.

No, do not get me wrong. This is not some way to excuse behavior that God forbids. You can not sin out of love and therefore justify your sin. If God forbids a behavior, you must not do it. But, let me also add that your not doing it only counts if you refrain from the behavior out of love for God. Similarly, if God commands a behavior, you can not avoid doing it because you don’t feel the proper love. God commands you to do the right things, and to do them in love. Your call is not to avoid doing right until your heart changes; your call is to change your heart and do what is right. And, again, the right behavior is only worthwhile when it is done out of love.

In a preaching class at my seminary, my professor, Dr. Hershael York, told us a story about a young man he once taught who was a fabulous preacher, but who was not kind or outgoing. Dr. York told this young man that he needed to become more kind and more outgoing if he was going to become a successful pastor. The man objected to Dr. York’s challenge, asking, “Are you saying that you want me to pretend to be something I’m not?” Dr. York countered, “No, I want you to change.”

God is not calling you, in 1 Corinthians 13, to pretend to be something you are not. However, he is also not allowing you to stand still. God is calling you to change. That change is not to be merely external. God wants you to change from the heart. Then, your outer behavior will change because your heart has led you in a different direction. This is a battle of epic proportions. You fight, every day, to change your heart. You do so with the word of God, with spiritual disciplines, and only in the power of God’s Holy Spirit. You work with all your might, and when all is said and done, it will still be God who changes you. You may not righteously sit back and wait for God to change you. God commands you to work, to fight, to battle, and to love. So, today, work on subduing your own heart with the word of God led by the Spirit of God. Fight the battle to love, because without love, you have nothing.

Dear Lord, I recognize that anything I do that is not led by and motivated by love is worthless. I pray that you will empower me to subdue my heart. I pray that you will empower me to become a more loving person. Let all that I do be motivated by love for you and for your glory. I acknowledge my role in this battle. I can not sit idly by and wait for you to change me. You command I work, and so I ask that you will give your Spirit’s power and leading to my work.

God Calls Us To Obedience (Jonah 1:1-2)

*** The following is taken from a sermon I preached on Jonah 1 in the summer of 2003. (Notice that I no longer use the NIV translation for teaching, but have left it here as I originally wrote it.) ***

Jonah 1:1-2 (NIV)

1. The word of the LORD came to Jonah son of Amittai:
2. “Go to the great city of Nineveh and preach against it, because its wickedness has come up before me.”
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In this opening call of the book of Jonah, we see that the LORD calls Jonah to speak out in the same way that he calls all of his prophets. The language is very much the same. The word of God is given to a particular man. That man is called to go and preach a particular message of God to a particular people.

God calls Jonah to perform a simple task: get up and go preach. We know that God tells Jonah to get up and preach against Nineveh. We know that Nineveh is the capital city of Assyria, a brutal foreign empire that will eventually become the Bain of the Northern Kingdom. We know that God wants Jonah to preach against Nineveh because of the greatness of the wickedness of that city. However, in reality, this is not a great deal of detail.

The major point here is that God calls, and Jonah should obey. It is a simple and unmistakable call. Jonah ought to listen. This truth is as true for us as it is for Jonah. When God calls us to do something, he expects our obedience. For those of us who are his children, we have no right to do anything other than obey. Why is that? It is because he is our God, and if we are saved, we have been purchased by Christ for him. Paul says it this way in1 Corinthians 6:19-20, “Do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit, who is in you, whom you have received from God? You are not your own; you were bought at a price. Therefore honor God with your body.”

Obedience is the appropriate response of the people of God to the commands of God. I understand that at times the commands of God appear difficult or unsavory to us. In this instance, we will discover that the command of God was unpalatable for Jonah. However, our opinion about the commands of God is irrelevant. What is relevant is that obedience is a primary tenant of being in relationship with God. Let us look at a few verses of scripture that will spell this out for us:

1 Samuel 15:22 But Samuel replied: “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.”

Psalm 103:17-18 But from everlasting to everlasting the LORD’s love is with those who fear him, and his righteousness with their children’s children–with those who keep his covenant and remember to obey his precepts.

Matthew 28:19-20 “Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.”

John 14:15 “If you love me, you will obey what I command.”

I think that this short list of verses makes it clear to us that when God commands, his followers obey. Obedience is a critical element to a relationship with God. Without it, there is no relationship. God calls Jonah. Jonah should obey. When God calls us, we too should obey.

Can This Be Enough? (2 Kings 5:10-12)

2 Kings 5:10-12 – And Elisha sent a messenger to him, saying, “Go and wash in the Jordan seven times, and your flesh shall be restored, and you shall be clean.” But Naaman was angry and went away, saying, “Behold, I thought that he would surely come out to me and stand and call upon the name of the Lord his God, and wave his hand over the place and cure the leper. Are not Abana and Pharpar, the rivers of Damascus, better than all the waters of Israel? Could I not wash in them and be clean?” So he turned and went away in a rage.
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Naaman, a Syrian military commander, had leprosy. After hearing about Elisha, the prophet in Israel, Naaman came seeking healing for his disease. When he arrived at Elisha’s door, Elisha, as we read above, sent a simple message to him about how he would be healed. But Naaman was very angry, because the prophet simply sent word for him to wash in the Jordan instead of coming out to perform some sort of ritual over his diseased skin. Later in the chapter, Naaman’s servants do convince him to follow the prophet’s instruction, and Naaman is healed.

But something interesting strikes me about Naaman’s anger. He is upset, because he could not imagine that the gracious healing of God could come by such a simple. Means. Naaman just knew in his heart that, if he were to be healed, it must require some sort of spectacular ceremony, incantation, potion, or sacrifice. Surely healing could not come by such a simple means. Surely the Jordan River is not the best source of water. Surely there must be more.

Naaman almost stumbled over the stumbling block of faith. In the New Testament, the cross of Christ is called a stumbling block to the Jews (1 Corinthians 1:23). Why was the cross a stumbling block? It was for the same reason that Naaman almost turned and left Israel in a huff. The Jews, and very many others, will not believe that salvation from sins can come by such a seemingly simple means as faith. Throughout the New Testament, the authors argued time and time again against people who could not believe that salvation would come via such a simple means. They called people to faith, with no religious rituals, fancy ceremonies, or outward deeds of penance. The New Testament authors preached a salvation by grace alone through faith alone in Christ alone, and such a preaching actually caught many of their hearers as too good to be true.

Today, we still live in a world where people can not receive the grace of God because they refuse to believe that it is that simple. They can not imagine that God would truly forgive anyone simply based on whether or not that person has placed their trust in Jesus Christ. Some turn away from Jesus completely because of their trouble with this. Other groups attempt to add the necessity of certain rituals, sacraments, or good works to one’s faith in order for it to be saving faith (this is the Roman Catholic error). But the fact remains that the only means that God has ever given whereby the souls of men might be saved is by his grace through a simple faith in the finished work of Jesus Christ.

Now, let me make one more application of the Naaman story to our modern age that is a little different. It is not merely the lost who fall into Naaman’s error. There is a way in which Christians look like Naaman too. God has given us his holy scriptures, fully sufficient and inspired—breathed out by God with no possibility of error. God’s holy word contains in it everything that we need to know and do his will. His word contains in itself either explicitly or implicitly, everything we need to make every moral decision. It contains everything we need for life and godliness (2 Peter 1:3) so that the people of God can be equipped for every good work (2 Timothy 3:17). But very many who claim Christ reject the sufficiency of the Bible. These people are out there looking for a mystical experience where God will reveal to them some new portion of his will that he did not record in scripture, because, like Naaman, they think that things just can’t be that easy. They think there should be some magical feeling, some spiritual experience, some secret formula to discerning the will of God. They think that the more flashy looking tools of secular psychology or psychiatry are what we need to use to solve our problems instead of God’s word. They turn to the opinions of men, lost men, to determine ethics regarding sexual morality or the sanctity of human life, because they think that the Bible is outdated. But all such errors look just like Naaman, rejecting God’s way for one that is more flashy, more modern, or more of the way they want things to be done.

So, how do you fall into Naaman’s error? What part of Christianity is too good to be true in your mind? Is faith in Christ not enough to save your soul? That is what God says will save you. Is the word of God not a sufficient means for you to learn his will, solve your problems, or determine what is moral? God said it is enough. Is God not enough to satisfy your soul? He claims to be enough. Today, turn from seeking something extra flashy, and follow what god has said that you need for salvation and for godly living.

Dear Lord, I thank you that following you is not all bound up in mystical experiences and ostentatious ceremonies. I recognize and acknowledge that salvation is your gift that comes to me by your grace through faith in Jesus Christ. I know that I can add nothing to faith for my salvation, and that faith is a gift from you. I pray that you will make me aware of any way in which I try to add something to faith and so dishonor Christ. I also pray that you will help me to live, as a Christian, by your all-sufficient word. Let me not turn to things outside of your revelation to determine how to live or to help others with problems. I trust that you have given me, in your word, everything I need. I do not need some extra mystical experience, because such an experience will not give me anything more than what is already recorded in your holy word. I pray that you will guide me to your truth as you have revealed it in your word, and keep me from seeking something extra like Naaman nearly did.

Knowledge or Love in Christian Freedom (1 Corinthians 8:1, 11-13)

1 Corinthians 8:1, 11-13 – Now concerning food offered to idols: we know that all of us possess knowledge. This knowledge puffs up, but love builds up.. . . And so by your knowledge this weak person is destroyed, the brother for whom Christ died. Thus, sinning against your brothers and wounding their conscience when it is weak, you sin against Christ. Therefore, if food makes my brother stumble, I will never eat meat, lest I make my brother stumble.
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There are numerous difficult topics of debatable “freedoms” over which Christians disagree. The use of alcohol, watching certain movies, or shopping at particular stores are all examples of such issues. In 1 Corinthians 8, Paul addresses an issue of a similar ilk from the first century. His handling of that issue back then speaks volumes to how we should handle such issues today.

In Corinth, many in the culture had come out of an idol worshiping background. Part of worshiping an idol involved “offering” food to your false god. The food would be taken and set before the statue. The idol worshiper believed that the god received sustenance and pleasure from the food, though the actual piece of meat did not disappear (a belief that can still be found in many cultures today who offer food to idols or to ancestors). The meat that had been “offered” was then sold—presumably at a reduced cost—to be eaten by those who were willing to do so.

Now, it is interesting that Paul begins his argument with the issue of knowledge. He points out that we all have knowledge, but warns that there is a danger to that knowledge that we will address later. For most of the chapter, he then explains how there is nothing wrong with meat that had been offered to a statue. He declares without hesitation that there are no gods; there is only one God. Thus, the meat that is supposedly offered to a statue or to dead relatives is simply meat that has been set out. Nothing has changed about the meat. Since the false gods are nothing and since dead ancestors can not receive nourishment from food from this world, Paul argues that there is nothing wrong with eating that meat. Thus, he declares that, by knowledge, Christians have the right to eat such meat.

This type of “right” is what many Christians cling to who demand to be allowed to indulge in their freedoms. They argue, and often quite strongly, that the Bible does not forbid a particular activity. They point out that, while the Bible forbids drunkenness and sexual immorality, that standard does not preclude responsible drinking or movies that do not explicitly portray sexual immorality. So, these Christians, from their knowledge, declare themselves free to responsibly partake of these pleasures. (And let me honestly admit that I have most certainly been in this camp in times past, even writing a lengthy paper on the topic in my seminary ethics class.)

However, let us look again at the warning that Paul makes about this knowledge. Paul never denies that the knowledge is true. In fact, he affirms the truth of the statement that meat sacrificed to idols is no different than any other meat. However, he also points out that this knowledge can puff us up, make us arrogant, instead of building us up in love. Paul acknowledged the rightness of the argument of certain groups, but then said that it is more loving for them, in their particular setting, to avoid indulging their freedom for the sake of Christian love and unity. Because the exercise of freedoms by one person can have a devastating impact on the life and conscience of another believer—one whose conscience may be admittedly weaker—, Paul declares that he will willingly give up his rights and freedoms in order to build up the body in love.

The question about alcohol, movies, and certain other “freedoms” actually ought not be a question of knowledge. Instead, the question needs to be one of Christian love. If you consider yourself to be a mature believer, you need to recognize that no simple pleasure here on earth is worth doing harm to another believer, even one who might have an overly strict view of a topic in your opinion. How could you ever argue that you are behaving in a way that honors God is you, for the sake of earthly pleasure, do something that tears down the fellowship of the local church or hurts another believer? The fact is, Christian love and kindness is far more important than food, drink, entertainment, or clothing. We ought not hesitate to give up things that might be OK in our opinion in order to make sure that we can be as loving as possible toward others in the church with whom we disagree.

Let me also add that the solution to this problem is not to simply choose to indulge your freedom when you think others are not looking. This leads to a life of sneaking down the aisles in your local grocery or video rental store, hoping that no other believer with a weaker conscience happens to see you. I’m sorry, but there is no way that you can do that out of Christian love.

As my parenthetical statement above indicates, I have not always taken the position here spelled out about issues of Christian liberty. I admit that freely, and I honestly have since had to repent of my attitude. My former position was one of selfishness rather than community, of knowledge instead of love. I Argued on behalf of pleasures and perceived rights instead of on behalf of unity in the body of Christ. Part of that argument came from a deep and right desire to call people away from legalism and to a biblically informed standard of living. I still make such a call. But I also make a call for Christians to live out of love, even when that love forces you to give up what your knowledge tells you may be OK. I am sure of this: no person will ever give up a freedom here on earth for the glory of God and the sake of his church who will not be rewarded with an infinitely higher pleasure in the kingdom of God that is coming.

So, ask yourself if you allow your knowledge to do harm to the body. Are you so smart that you hurt people? Do you swing your education or scriptural understanding around as a club, desiring to bash in bad beliefs? Do you indulge in freedoms that you actually have to hide in order to not offend others? Is your driving force for how you live knowledge or is it love and the glory of God? It is time to live for God’s glory, guarding with all your might the church, the bride of Christ. If that means that you or I get rid of things which give us temporal pleasure in order to better love others, let us do so with joy, looking forward to a far greater reward from our God.

Dear Lord, I confess to you that my attitude has not always been love before knowledge. I pray that you will forgive me for any moment in my past where I have flaunted freedoms or damaged others through what I would approve. I recognize that such living is not out of love. I thank you for showing me this in your word, and I ask that you will help me to always live for your glory and for the betterment of your church. Help me to willingly give up unnecessary freedoms if that will better help me to love others in your name. Also, please help the rest of your church to learn to live out of a God first and others next before self mentality. Help us to live lives of openness, feeling the need to hide nothing from one another because all we do is loving and glorifying to you.

The Affliction of Success (Amos 6:4-6)

Amos 6:4-6 – Woe to those who lie on beds of ivory and stretch themselves out on their couches, and eat lambs from the flock and calves from the midst of the stall, who sing idle songs to the sound of the harp and like David invent for themselves instruments of music, who drink wine in bowls and anoint themselves with the finest oils, but are not grieved over the ruin of Joseph!

Proverbs 30:8-9

Remove far from me falsehood and lying;
give me neither poverty nor riches;
feed me with the food that is needful for me,
lest I be full and deny you
and say, “Who is the LORD?”
or lest I be poor and steal
and profane the name of my God.

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Amos here describes a people who are filthy rich. They have beds of ivory, all they can eat and drink, and all the pleasure they could want. According to many in our world, these are the blessed ones. But Amos pronounces woe upon them, because they are under God’s judgment. Why? Not for having wealth, but because they have their wealth while not caring about the downfall of the nation or the glory of God. They focused on themselves and their pleasures, and cared nothing for the poor and needy around them. They looked to their entertainment, and cared nothing for the worship of God. They built up their own houses, and failed to call for the destruction of the places of idol worship in their land.

Little is more blinding in our world than success and ease. If you read the accounts of Christians in foreign lands, you will be amazed at the courage and self-sacrifice of such people. Why is it, then, that many in our own cultures show no sign of that same courage, passion, and fire for God and his glory? Perhaps the reason we are so devastatingly complacent is the fact that we have been lulled to sleep by our comforts. Our great scourge is not persecution, but prosperity. Satan’s great trick for us is not to afflict us as he did Job with sickness and loss. Instead, he has come up with a much more clever scheme, giving us all we could ever want so we then turn and no longer care about or think we need God.

Are you successful? Good. Are your needs adequately met? Fine. But be careful. Is your success causing you to forget that you still need God every day? Are your possessions and little pleasures worth so much to you that you will not risk losing them in order to help out a needy person? Do the things that you own actually own you? Would you give up your property to preach the gospel in a foreign land? What kind of hold do your possessions have over you? What kind of grip do your pleasures have on your heart?

Today, ask God to help you to let go of an earthly model of success, to live for him instead of worldly pleasures, and to value his kingdom and his glory above all. Turn your heart away from the little comforts and petty pleasures that would take your heart captive, and lead you to destruction. See the pleasures and the toys of this life as simply things, nothing more and nothing less. They are creation, not the Creator. Follow hard after the Creator, and he will set in proper perspective all that he has made that is good and enjoyable.

Dear Lord, you are all that I want. No pleasure, no possession is worthy of my attention above you. I pray that you will give me enough that I might live for your glory, neither dishonoring you by stealing nor forgetting you in my comfort. Let me view all possessions and comforts as tools that I might use for your glory, and let me give all my life to you.

Acceptable Worship (Amos 5:21-24)

Amos 5:21-24 – I hate, I despise your feasts, and I take no delight in your solemn assemblies. Even though you offer me your burnt offerings and grain offerings, I will not accept them; and the peace offerings of your fattened animals, I will not look upon them. Take away from me the noise of your songs; to the melody of your harps I will not listen. But let justice roll down like waters, and righteousness like an ever-flowing stream.
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The scripture above is an incredibly frightening section of scripture. The Lord is speaking out against the northern kingdom of Israel, and he has very little good to say to them. God expresses his feelings about their ceremonial religious behavior, and those feelings are not gentle. He says that he hates and despises there ceremonies and feasts. He says that he will not accept or even look upon their offerings. He will not even listen to their songs of worship.

Why is God so upset with Israel? There are many reasons, but the main things in Amos have to do with the evil way that the people of Israel live before him. They oppress the poor, stealing from them and taking advantage of them. They worship false Gods. And they do all these things while arrogantly believing that they can also offer their religious leftovers to the Lord. This is why God is saying that he rejects their offerings, ceremonies, and songs.

Imagine a wife who is unfaithful to her husband. She steals from the family’s bank account to go out, party, and have affairs with several men in her community. She publicly says all sorts of slanderous and degrading things about her husband, and shows no sign of wanting to turn away from her many lovers. Would you expect her husband, knowing all of this, to be happy if this adulteress woman gave him a little birthday gift? Of course not. The gift, even if accompanied by a party with nice food and decorations would by no means make up for her unrepentant adultery and her overall unfaithfulness to the husband and the family.

In much the same way, we ought never expect God to be impressed with our outward religious actions if our lives and our hearts do not match. God will not be impressed with your church attendance on Sunday if you are living like a pagan from Monday through Saturday. He will not love your songs of praise to him if you are worshiping possessions, entertainment, or simply yourself on every other day. He will not be impressed with your dropping a little money in the offering basket on Sunday if you are abusive to your spouse, cruel to the needy, stealing from your employer, or embracing sexual immorality. God hates empty and false religion. He would not accept it from Israel, and he will not accept it from you.

There is, however, another side of the coin. Let me illustrate with another picture of a marriage. I have a loving, kind, generous, and faithful wife. Mitzi is a loving mate and a fabulous mother to my child. I have no fear that she will say or do anything to bring me harm. Unlike the husband in my earlier illustration, I appreciate even the smallest gift from my wife. She does not have to plan a party or decorate a room for me to be completely joyful about a gift she gives me. She does not even have to give me a gift, but simply can say something kind to me to bring me happiness. I can enjoy and appreciate all her gestures of kindness, because I know that she loves me and is faithful to me as her husband. I do not reject her attempts to show me love, because I know them to be genuine, sincere, and pure.

In much the same way, the final call from God in verse 24 gives hope to the people of Israel if they will receive it. He calls them to turn from their evil ways, and turn to justice and righteousness. He calls them to start living in kindness and compassion toward the needy. He calls them to make their lives match their confession of faith. He calls them to live in righteousness, obeying his commands and putting away their false gods. And the understood promise here is, if they will turn from evil to righteousness and justice, the Lord will receive their worship.

If God’s call to turn to him in true worship backed up by a sincere life of obedience to his commands is a good thing for Israel, it is a fabulous thing for us as well. While God does not accept worship that is given to him out of false and empty hearts, he most certainly hears the cries of his children who are broken and penitent. If you confess your sin to him from a genuine heart, he will forgive you in Christ. If you worship him by bringing him songs, prayers, and offerings that match a life of heartfelt obedience, he will be pleased with you and receive your gifts. Let me be very clear here, this can only happen in Christ. We are all guilty before God, and we must receive his gracious forgiveness in Jesus before anything about our worship will ever be acceptable to him. But, if we are in Christ, let us also live in authentic obedience to our Lord in order that our worship might be acceptable in his sight.

Dear Lord, I pray that you will make my worship genuine and acceptable to you. I desire to honor you with my life. Please root out any inconsistencies in my words and actions. I pray that you will help me to be kind to the poor and needy. I pray that you will empower me to obey your commands. I pray that you will show me anywhere in my life that I am living for self or worldly idols instead of your glory. Help me to put away all such evil, that my worship before you might be truly good in your sight. Allow my life to please you, to match what I say I believe about you. I am yours, O Lord, and I long to worship you from a heart of genuine righteousness in Christ.

Destroying False Boundaries (1 Kings 20:23, 28)

1 Kings 20:23, 28 – And the servants of the king of Syria said to him, “Their gods are gods of the hills, and so they were stronger than we. But let us fight against them in the plain, and surely we shall be stronger than they.”

And a man of God came near and said to the king of Israel, “Thus says the Lord, ‘Because the Syrians have said, “The Lord is a god of the hills but he is not a god of the valleys,” therefore I will give all this great multitude into your hand, and you shall know that I am the Lord.’”
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King Ahab of the northern kingdom was at war with the king of Syria. God chose, for his own reasons, to rescue Israel from the Syrians, even though the Israelites were unfaithful to him. After the first victory that Israel won over Syria, the Syrian army returned home and made plans to return the next year.

It is very interesting to note why the Syrians thought they would be able to defeat Israel. As we read above, the Syrian army commanders believed that Israel served some sort of deity over the hill country. They believed that they could defeat Israel in a battle if they could simply lure them out into the plains. This view, which was a common belief of the nations surrounding Israel, basically stated that all gods are limited to specific areas. If the link between the god and the land was broken, the people of that land would be defeated. (By the way, this is very likely the false belief that Jonah had when he fled from God in Jonah 1).

The Lord, however, is not like the false gods of the nations. He is truly God, and God over all the heavens and earth, mountains and valleys, land and sea, heights and depths. He is by no means limited by any limitations that we can imagine. God is also jealous for the glory of his name. Thus, as we read in verse 28, God would not allow the Syrians to have a victory in the plains, because such a victory would allow them to believe that God was not God over the plains too. Consequently, as the chapter closes, God gives a great victory to Israel over the Syrian army in the plains, proving that the Lord truly is God over all.

While it is not common for us to believe that God is limited by national or geographic boundaries, we do often allow our minds to falsely separate things as God’s domain and not his domain. For example, many people live as though God is very important on Sunday morning at church, but then live as though he has no authority over them at their place of business. Many people are willing to trust God to save their souls from damnation, but are unwilling to trust him to provide for their needs in daily life. Many people are willing to say that God’s word is authoritative in matters of religion, but are unwilling to believe that God’s word is authoritative on issues of human sexuality, gender roles, counseling, parenting, or 21st century ethics. Many are willing to say that we should obey God in our lives, but not if that obedience might cost you a job, a raise, a potential future mate, or your life. All such views are very similar to the pagan notion that limits a nation’s god to its geography, and all such positions do not describe the true God.

It is time to be certain that you are not thinking about God like the Syrians of 1 Kings 20. Today, ask God to reveal to you any area in your life that you have not surrendered to his lordship. Ask him to show you where you have tried to put up a boundary that he is not allowed to cross. Ask him if there is ay place in which you are living as a practical atheist instead of as a disciple of Christ. Then, when you see such an area, be it personal or public, confess that sin to God, seek his forgiveness, and repent. Only when we live out our belief that God is God over all the world and over all our lives will we honor him rightly.

Dear Lord, I confess today that you are God over all things. You are Lord of every area of my life. Please make known to me any place in which I have not fully surrendered my will to yours. I do not want to live like an atheist in any part of my life. I surrender to you as Lord. Please help me to no longer live in any sort of rebellion or behind any false boundaries. You are God over all areas of my life, and my life is yours to command. Help me, I pray, to live for you in every area, so that I might better give honor and glory to your name in all things.

A Clean Break (1 Kings 19:19-21)

1 Kings 19:19-21 – So he departed from there and found Elisha the son of Shaphat, who was plowing with twelve yoke of oxen in front of him, and he was with the twelfth. Elijah passed by him and cast his cloak upon him. And he left the oxen and ran after Elijah and said, “Let me kiss my father and my mother, and then I will follow you.” And he said to him, “Go back again, for what have I done to you?” And he returned from following him and took the yoke of oxen and sacrificed them and boiled their flesh with the yokes of the oxen and gave it to the people, and they ate. Then he arose and went after Elijah and assisted him.
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God told Elijah to appoint Elisha as his successor as prophet in Israel, and so Elijah went and did just that. Elijah’s placing his cloak on Elisha’s shoulders is a symbol, the mantle is passed, and Elisha is next. Elisha asks permission to go and close up shop at his home, and Elijah basically tells him to do whatever he wants. Elisha realizes that now is the time to go, and so he does so.

What grabs my attention about Elisha’s calling is what Elisha does when he realizes that this is a right here and right now call of God on his life. He sacrifices the oxen with which he had been plowing the field. He boils the meat by burning the ox yokes. Then he gets up and goes.

Elisha made a clean break from one life to another. Burning the yokes and sacrificing the oxen is a no-turning-back kind of decision. He cuts off all ties to his former life, and he follows God by serving Elijah. And, as we will read in later chapters, this is the life that Elisha will live for all the rest of his days.

What we can learn from this, I think, is the call to burn the yokes. Like the legendary command of Hernando Cortez to burn the ships upon which his conquistadores had sailed to Mexico, we need to give the order to sever ties to our old life. To the follower of God in Christ, there is no other option. There is no turning back. There must be no embracing again of habits, life patterns, or sinful worldly thinking. Everything in us Is supposed to be new. All of our lives are to be changed.

Where do you need to burn the yokes of your past? Do you still do some of the things that you did before your conversion to Christianity that keeps your life tied to non-Christian thinking or behavior? Do you still make decisions in the same way that you did before? Do you still think the same about politics, entertainment, or morality? Is there an area of your life that you have not surrendered to the scriptures to be conformed into God’s image? If so, it is time to burn the yokes. It is time to cut the ties. You are a new creation in Christ (1 Corinthians 5:17), and you can not allow yourself to think or behave as you did before Jesus. Sure, if you loved baseball or lasagna before your conversion, you can still enjoy them; but they will never have the same meaning in or hold upon your life as before.

Dear Lord, I pray that you will help me to burn the yokes that tie me to my old manner of life. Help me to sever ties to worldly thinking. Help me to no longer feel, think, or behave in the same way that I did when I did not know you. Please reveal to me an area of my life where the change needs to be made. Then, please speak to me through your word to challenge me to make a clean and permanent break from it. I am yours, and you are my Lord. I desire to obey your will in my life. I do not want to look anything like I did before I knew you, so help me to make any adjustments necessary to live as a new creation in Christ.