Posts Tagged ‘power and authority’

Day 118: I Samuel 8:1-22 — “Precious”

Wednesday, April 28th, 2010

It has never been easy to live in a covenant relationship with God. No matter what period of time we live in, we want to be like the world. God led Israel out of Egypt and saved them, protected them, and loved them. Israel looks around at other countries and decides they need a king. Forget the fact that they had the Almighty as their king. Things haven’t changed much in thousands of years because we in America are not much different. We need a government (“our precious”) to take care of us. There are those that stand up and talk of a worship alternative, governmental alternatives, lifestyle alternatives. We all want an alternative lifestyle. We want change (“our precious, we must have our precious!”). We don’t want to recognize God’s sovereignty, which did not require hierarchical forms of leadership in the human community or in His spiritual church. But the lure of conformity is seductive, and the pressures toward cultural accommodation are great. Is this our “precious?” “Appoint for us a king…like other nations” (1 Samuel 8:5). The people said to Samuel, in effect, “We don’t want to be different anymore. We want to be like everyone else (“our precious”). The pressures of alternative living are too great.” One of the issues raised by this episode for the community of faith in every generation is the lure and the danger of cultural accommodation (“our precious”). Isn’t this just a big slap on the face of God? Samuel raised his rejections to having a king and God settled him down and reminded him that the people were rejecting God and not Samuel (1 Samuel 8:7). Samuel tells the people what the consequences are of rejecting God as king and getting a man to become their leader (Read 1 Samuel 8:10-18). It’s funny that these are some of the same complaints we hear today about our government.

I get a kick out of us today. We think we are so much greater than the ancients. We think we are more sophisticated. We think we have evolved but we haven’t. We still make the same mistakes and most of all we reject our God and are surprised that He gets angry at us. We want our “precious”!

Questions: When does trust in human power become a rejection of divine power? To what degree have we let our trust in human authority overshadow our trust in God? Have we become like Gollum/Smeagol searching for “our precious”?

Day 74: Numbers 27:1-29:11; Mark 11:27-12:12 — Who are you?

Monday, March 15th, 2010

The daughters of Zelophehad do not have authority to take an inheritance, no male heir existed to carry on. They understand the culture, the law, but they need help. Who are they? People of God who need help for a rare circumstance, and they receive that help.

The Creator reminds Moses that he had tried to take on too much authority when he struck the rock, “Shall we bring you water?” Now Moses will have to settle for merely looking at the land from a mountain top. Who is Moses? Not as much as he thought he was in that episode. He overstepped the bounds and failed to treat God as Holy.

Joshua stands with Moses, again, as he has so often in the past forty years, but this time something different will occur. Moses will die, the people need leadership. Joshua stands before Eleazar, Moses, and the people of Israel. Moses lays hands on Joshua, and designates Joshua as leader, prophet, and judge. Who is Joshua? A trained and proven warrior, a man of holiness and of the Spirit of God, and now the leader of Israel under God’s authority.

Moses, remind Israel of Who I Am, says God Almighty: The sacrifices, daily, monthly; the festivals to commemorate your deliverance, to remind Israel Who has redeemed them. The next book collecting Moses’ final words to Israel carries the theme, “Lest you forget.” How easily Israel, and at times we ourselves, forget the Identity, the work, and the plans of The Mighty One.

“You entered Jerusalem as a monarch and received praise from the people. Just who do you think you are?” Jesus deals with people as they need, always in a way that challenges them to examine who they are, what they need to be about, what their perspective and relationship with God and themselves should be. Jesus goes back to basics. “What do you think about those who carry God’s authority, and have missions that collide with your own puffed up sense of self importance?” Well . . . He didn’t say that, but that may well be the ego pounding He gave them. Being true to their own nature, they save face and dodge the question. Jesus answers them in a way that says, “You do not really want to know who I am; I wish you did.”

Who are you? Are you in need? God will answer your true needs. Are you blessed by Him? Dedicate your life to Him, worship Him in daily living and in collective worship as the church. Are you a ready servant? God has a work and wonderful direction for your life. Are you vying with God for power and authority? Shudder to consider the implications of this! The voices of the past both encourage and warn us: Know your God first, and then He will know you, and you will know you are.