Sunday, January 30, 2011

Right Not to Remain Silent - 2 Kings 6:1 - 8:29

Christians have the right not to remain silent on any occasion when God has expressed his love and care for His people, especially when it is a personal experience. My experience tells me that we Baptist are reluctant to show our appreciation at times when our applause, a heart felt amen, or a personal testimony would be a profound witness for God. Our New Testament Commission is to “Go, and teach others” about God’s love for people. It is not only our right, but also our obligation to express our personal God-related experiences and individual dependency upon the Lord and Savior that we worship.

God has always expressed his individual and personal love and care, and used different ways to intervene in the lives of his people. Many times his blessings come in disguise, hidden from those who do not know Him personally, and even at times, the recipient does not realize the significance, or even the presence, of his actions. Many do not know about the promise Christ made in Romans 8: 28; and some know what it says, but are unable to relate this passage to what is happening in their own lives. Please remember that “We know that in all things God works for the good of those who love Him, who have been called according to his purpose.”

From the day Christ started his worldly ministry along the banks of the Jordan, he used a plan of intervention in the lives of people he met; he called the disciples, invited the lost to believe, healed the sick, and raised the dead. He is the same, yesterday, today and forever; therefore He is in the same business today. Some of the time when Christ intervenes in our lives today, it is not only obvious to the recipient, but also to others that are present who can recognize His intervening presence. At other times the recipient knows that God is present and working, but for him to tell others, or openly show his approval and happiness, is very difficult for fear of what others will think. Miracles still happen! And any Christian who has experienced a miracle from God not only has the right to tell others of his experience, but is obligated to speak out for the cause of Christ.

I can recall numerous times in my life when I am absolutely sure that Jesus has worked things out for my good. However, since I could not prove this to someone who may have a doubting mind, I have remained silent. This is not so any more, and I can proudly give examples of God’s intervention. In October of 1947, I sustained a back injury that required what was then a new procedure in back surgery. I was in the Kennedy Hospital, in Memphis for six months and five days in traction, surgery, re-hab, and physical therapy. I know, the skeptic will ask, ‘how could this possibly be for your good?” I now know that God called me to be a teacher and this was his way to have me give up a lucrative business and start to college, and that is why I chose education as a profession. Actually God chose my profession for me!

In our lesson today, there are what would appears to be ‘unbelievable miracles’ sent by God through Elijah and Elisha, that worked for good to the recipients of that day and as a witness to the observers. However, I truly believe that they were recorded in God’s word as lessons meant to strengthen the faith of 21st century Christians and also grow faith in unbelievers. In 2 Kings 2: 9, Elisha requested a double portion of Elijah’s faith and spiritual power; and it was granted. Elisha performed twice as many miracles during his life. Floating a steel ax head is just one of these.

The house where Elisha and his company of prophets lived was too small, and the prophets volunteered to cut the timber and build a larger one. They had to borrow the tools to work with, and while one was cutting a tree near the Jordan River, the ax head disengaged and dropped into the river. The prophet cried out “Oh my Lord, it was borrowed” for he was worried about how he could return the ax. God, through Elisha and a limb of wood caused the ax to float and it was retrieved. Unbelievable, you say? Then how can man make a ship float when it is built from hundreds of tons of steel? How can man make a submarine made of steel, both sink and float?

The real lesson behind this story lies in the fact that there was a famine in the land [they happened often] and during difficult times people borrows a cup of oil, a bag of meal or some other necessity, and it was to be returned or replaced. It was the honest and important thing to do. This prophet was very concerned in that he would not be able to return the borrowed ax. God met a great need allowing him to return the ax. I can remember during the Great Depression when my parents had to borrow, a cup of flower, meal, salt or sugar, and the same amount or a little more was always returned with gratitude. Be ware: it could happen again, if the economy does not turn around soon. If you borrow anything, make sure you return it, as soon as possible—if it is a car; be sure you fill the tank to replace his gas you used.

The army of King Ben-Hadad of Aram besieged Samaria, cut off all supplies and the people were starving to death inside the walls. Times were so bad they had started practicing cannibalism. The price of smuggled food was so high no one could afford to buy; the head of an ass, the most undesirable part of the most undesirable animal sold for 80 shekels, or about $50 dollars. The king of Israel blamed Elisha for the famine and proposed a remedy—that was that the head of Elisha be taken from his shoulders even though beheading was against Jewish law. God protected Elisha by giving him a vision of how food would come soon.

In chapter seven, verse one, Elisha announced that God would come to their rescue. “About this time tomorrow, a seah’ of flour will sell for a shekel and two seahs of barley for a shekel at the gate of Samaria.” The King and his officers doubted, and said it could not happen—but it did. How? It came through a miracle that most people do not understand. Here are my thoughts, using the Word. The fulfillment of this prediction is found in the incident of the lepers which you can read in the bible record.

Four leprous men stood at the city’s gate in a dilemma as they were facing death. They knew the people inside the city were out of food, and even if they could gain admittance they would surely die from starvation. If they stayed outside, with no help they would die. So they decided to go over to the enemy’s camp [Ben-Hadad’s soldiers] as a last resort; it was their only chance and they thought it was a slim one at that.

During the previous night, God had arranged for a mighty wind to blow. It made the sound of a rushing army that awakened the soldiers in the camp, and they were startled and ran for their lives. They left all their food, bedding, and other needs behind in the camp. When the four leprous men arrived at the camp, there were no soldiers to hinder them from walking in unharmed. They were very surprised, and began immediately to eat and take care of their other needs. After acquiring plenty for the time, they decided to loot the place and hide the stolen food and supplies for their own use in the future, just in case the army would return.

God’s spirit intervened [the leprous men realized their selfishness and that they were doing wrong] and they decided to take extra food back to the gate of Samaria and share it and the good news with the starving people inside who did not realize that the enemy army had vanished. When the starving inhabitants learned about the available food, they also went and confiscated food and the famine was broken, food sold cheap just as the prophet had predicted.

To me, this lesson of this incident is illustrative of the condition of the sinner today. Spiritually starved souls, when convicted of their sin, will ask: “Why sit we here until we die?” Their present condition and position means eternal death. They have no other choice but to go to the great provider, redeemer, and seek spiritual food.

This lesson is for the redeemed who have just found the spiritual food needed for the soul of man. They should be anxious to go and share the good news with others that are on spiritual starvation, thus obeying the Great Commission that tells us to go preach, teach and baptize the lost.

I keep repeating; you must believe God’s word to be total truth. The bible is by writers who were men, yes; but ever word was inspired by The Holy Spirit [God], and is meant for our good. God appeared, unseen by man, but most assuredly in his spiritual person, two specific times in this lesson. The steel ax head floated! And the mighty rushing wind that sounded like an army of soldiers appeared at the right time to frighten Ben-Hadad’s army causing them to leave camp and all the food and supplies that the starving people inside the city walls needed for survival.

God sent his Son, who died on the cross to pay your sin debt, the price for your sins; and all it will take for you to be saved is a little faith—the size of a mustard seed. The leprous men had only a little faith, but it saved them and the whole city that believed their good news.

Sunday, January 16, 2011

Building a Culture of Life - 2 Kings 22 & 23

I write these lessons as my labor of love for the Lord; it is published weekly in two newspapers and is sent to about two hundred e-mail addresses that I refer to as my computer Sunday School Class. I receive no compensation and so I sometimes use material written by other bible scholars. Today I want to give Dr. Wayne VanHorn credit for the introduction, since it is taken from his writings in the Explore the Bible Commentary from LifeWay, winter edition, 2010-2011. Southern Baptist have adopted the practice of dedicating one lesson each year to the sanctity of life movement, and this commentary regarding the abortion problem is one of the best I have ever read.


Dr. Vanhorn says that there is a house built of steel framing and thick glass walls in Jackson, Mississippi, about ten miles from his home. It is in a family neighborhood, but was not built for family living. Over the years the “glass house” has been filled with 50 million pennies, worth at least $500,000. It was built by the Baptist people of Mississippi, and dedicated as the “Memorial to the Missing.” The Baptist Church families, and others interested in helping, have donated the pennies “To fill the glass house as a symbolic way of remembering babies who never had the privilege of enjoying even one moment of God’s warm sun caressing their sweet cheeks.”


Dr. VanHorn says that he saw the house when it was only a few inches deep in pennies, but the pennies: “Kept rolling in and piling up. The reinforced glass bulged under the weight of the so many pennies. The weight of the memorial is equivalent to at least 150 tons or 100 automobiles [3,000 pounds each] piled on top of another…One penny for every [each] baby aborted since Roe vs. Wade legalized abortion on demand in 1973. Fifty million voices never heard; 50 million lives never lived. The pennies are an endowment for pro-life issues; their silent but effective witness represents the voices of 50 million [dead] babies.” These babies were intentionally and deliberately murdered. If the parents did not want the child, they could have been placed for adoption into a loving family who wanted and needed children.


The author says that Osama bin Laden [the terrorist] is quoted as saying, “We love death. The US loves life. That is the big difference between the two.” As I ponder this quote today—and based on the fact that Americans have killed 50 million babies since 1973; my question is “do Americans really love life?” How can 100 million parents choose to kill their child and still claim to love life? We know that an uncontrolled passion, usually out of wedlock, is the primary reason for the birth of these babies; sin breeds more sin.


The movie industry and even the prime time-day time TV programs are, more often than not, loaded with sexually-explicit scenes and even the best programs use sexually suggestive images. The popular bent in society today is toward sexual promiscuousness; sadly it is happening among the very young. I contend that we have a different culture of life to what it was prior to the Great Depression and WWII. Unwanted pregnancies were far fewer then than they are today and most of the babies were allowed to live, even during the Great Depression when parents were unable to afford the cost.


During the days following WWII and especially during the 1960’s to 1980’s America adopted a horrible culture of life, and Rowe vs. Wade made it legal by man’s law to murder. The rotten courts and heathen judges have added several other decisions that have added other unacceptable conditions. Gay rights and same-sex marriages now threaten the sanctity of the home. The legal support and promotion of homosexuality spits in God’s eyes because He said that homosexuality was an abomination in the sight of God. Evidently there is far too many who do not believe that Sodom and Gomorrah was destroyed because of this practice. The city was destroyed as a warning to all that read the record of this historical truth.


The murder of innocent children is not new. Sometime during the 7th century B.C. Manasseh, King of Judah, sacrificed his own son to the fire god, Molech, also known as Milcon. People, including the king, worshipped as their children were consumed by flames. This carnage took place in the Southern Kingdom [Judah] which was not considered to be as carnal- minded as the nation of Israel. [This story is recorded in 2 Kings 21 to 24.] Seven hundred years later, Christ came along and posed a threat to the Roman King Herod who ordered that all boy babies in the country two years and under be murdered to protect his political hold on the people. In those days Kings [government] ordered babies killed. Today government simply makes it lawful for those that do not want the child to murder it. I doubt seriously that God sees much difference; I don’t.


Chapter 21: 16 says: “Moreover, Manasseh also shed so much innocent blood that he filled Jerusalem from end to end—besides the sin that he had caused Judah to commit, so that they did evil in the eyes of the Lord.” Manasseh [one of, if not the most evil of all kings] died and his son, Amon, succeeded him. He was twenty-two years old and reigned for two years. “He did evil in the sight of the Lord, as his father Manasseh had done. He walked in all the ways of his father; he worshiped the idols his father had worshiped, and bowed down to them—he did not walk in the way of the Lord.” Amon was murdered and his son Josiah, his eight year old son, became king, and reigned in Jerusalem for thirty-one years. “He did what was right in the eyes of the Lord and walked in all the ways of his [spiritual] father David, not turning aside to the right or left.”


You must read chapters 22 and 23 to find all the things Josiah did to compensate for the evils his father and grandfather had done. God had announced his wrath and made known that there would be total destruction because of their sinful ways. Josiah was protected and the country was saved because he openly repented by tearing his robe and promising God that he would obey. He declared a personal war against all the gods, and idols that represented them. Every thing connected with the idol worship, including those who had sacrificed their children, were dealt with during his reign. Sin has a price; and the guilty will pay the penalty. God will see to it!


Rowe vs. Wade is an evil law; it has a price and someone will pay the penalty. America needs another man like Josiah, elected to be President, who will demand that God fearing judges interpret the law in favor of innocent unborn babies. Our constitution was written by the people and for the people—and babies are people! Amon was king for only two years, simply because he did not choose to correct the errors made by his predecessor. History repeats itself. Today we are witnessing the demise of many elected officials because of their approval of un-fair and some un-godly laws which they have supported, even against the will of the people. These officials should be concerned about the rejection of the people who elected them; however they should be much more concerned about the penalties that come from the hand of God.