The people
of Israel waited 400 years for a word from God.
As they looked around their country and watched the Roman soldiers move
in and out of their cities they anxiously awaited the day when God would bring
judgment on the pagan nation that occupied the land of His people. With each passing year the discontent with
their situation grew and with it their desire to see God’s mighty work. More than anything in this earthly existence
they hoped to see the Messiah come and set up God’s Kingdom in Jerusalem so
that they could become the ones who occupied other nations. The people wanted the nations that had
oppressed them for so many years to bow before them and live in subjection to
their rule.
Year by
year they waited without so much as a word from God’s prophets until –
seemingly from nowhere – the most unlikely man appeared in the desert. He was clothed in animal skin and ate things
that would turn the stomach of most. But
the message he carried was the one that Israel had waited hundreds of years to
hear, “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven
is at hand (Matt. 3:2).” People left
Jerusalem and flocked to the desert to hear this man proclaim God’s
Kingdom. Many were sure this was what
they had been looking for, but was it?
When Jesus
came onto the scene, the one who John the Baptist had proclaimed and for whom
the people waited, His presence and teaching were met with excitement. God was finally going to place all the
enemies of Israel under their rule. But
Jesus came teaching a different kind of kingdom than the political reign that
they expected. He was not interested in
rewarding a nation that had lost sight of God in the midst of all their ritual
and tradition, but He came to call that very nation to repentance. The same people who waited with great
anticipation for the Messiah were confronted, not with the message they wanted
to hear, but with a call to leave their self-righteous lives behind and return
to a God whom they didn’t even realize they had left.
Have you
ever been confronted with a time when God’s instruction was not what you hoped
it would be? We all have high hopes and
great expectations regarding what we think God should do for us. We spend countless hours talking about His
mercy and compassion (and rightly so), but how often do we consider the
judgment of God? Do we ever consider the
words He has for those who may have strayed, or nations that have turned their
backs on Him?
God’s
judgment is likely to be the least popular topic in all of Christianity –
rivaled only by preaching or teaching about Hell. In a society that is focused on feeling good
about yourself and the way you live it is difficult for preachers and teachers
of the Bible to proclaim God’s words of judgment against the sinful things of
the world. Some people treat the
prophecies and passages of God’s judgment as some type of caricature, or an
idle threat made by a God who would never really punish anyone for anything,
despite the fact that Jesus said, “Those
whom I love, I reprove and discipline (Rev. 3:19)…” And the writer of Hebrews reminded us, “My son, do not regard lightly the
discipline of the Lord, nor be weary when reproved by Him. For the Lord disciplines the one He loves,
and chastises every son whom He receives (Heb. 12:5, 6).”
That the
judgment of God is clearly proclaimed throughout the entirety of Holy Scripture
is clear to see. Many refuse to
acknowledge the judgment proclaimed in Old Testament times, but it is quoted
and restated in the New Testament. Some
type of warning against straying from God is apparent in almost every book of
the New Testament, and it is difficult to read more than two or three chapters
of the Bible without seeing reminders that God is jealous for our love and
devotion and will not settle for anything less.
But if this is the case, why do we not hear more preaching and teaching
about God’s judgment? If Jesus really
“rebukes and reproves” those whom He loves, why is it not clearly proclaimed
throughout the church today? Surely
there must be things happening in the world around us – and maybe even in the
church – that are not pleasing to God.
In a day when sound doctrine (yes, some of us still consider that
important because Scripture teaches that it is) is compromised in the name of
numbers, and standards of personal holiness are all but nonexistent there must
be a word of reproof from the God who loves us.
As we
consider the fullness of the Word of God and the revelation of His character
that comes from the Bible it becomes very clear that God will not simply smile
and wink at sin among His people. In
fact, He continues to judge sin when it occurs among them. “For it
is time for judgment to begin at the household of God (1 Peter 4:17).” God told the people of Israel in Old
Testament times, “You only have I known
of all the families of the earth; therefore I will punish you for all your
iniquities (Amos 3:2).” Sadly, many
Christians today can go a lifetime without hearing a single sermon, or even a
lesson in a Bible study or small group on Scriptures like these. They seem to continually be overlooked. But why the hesitation to address these
verses and others like them? Why the
nervousness about boldly proclaiming the Word of the Lord?
The reason
we do not hear the Word of God in its entirety is because we live in a world
without prophets. In Old Testament times
God would call people to deliver His message to the masses who had forgotten
Him. When the wealth and comfort of the
people began to take their attention from God He would raise up a prophet to
proclaim, “Hear the Word of the Lord.”
Men who would carry the message fearlessly to a hostile people; who took
their lives in their hands every time they relayed what God had revealed to
them. Amos told the people of his day, “the Lord does nothing without revealing His
secret to His servants the prophets (Amos 3:7).” When the people seemed beyond hope, and
their relationship with God had faded into little more than a distant
acquaintance, God sent His prophets to warn the people of His impending
judgment – not because He no longer loved them, but because He wanted to
discipline them and give them an opportunity for a new beginning and a fresh
start. Even when God flooded the earth
it was so that Noah, who was a “righteous in his day,” could begin anew without
the corruption of sin in the world around him.
Each time a prophet cried out, each time they uttered God’s judgments
and commands the people were given a chance to repent and return to God.
Unfortunately,
the prophets were commonly met with receptions of anger and violence. Many were beaten and killed because the
people just refused to heed the Word.
Even Jesus was met with scorn and ridicule when the Word He delivered
from God was not the word that the people of His day wanted to hear. When Amos proclaimed the Word, Amaziah the
priest accused him of conspiracy and told him to leave the people and not to
continue to prophecy (Amos 7). Even
after thousands of years the reception of God’s messengers has not
changed. People expect to listen to
sermons each Sunday and go home feeling good for the week. Many even expect to feel good about – and at
times be commended for – their sinful lives.
If the preacher to whom they listen will not give them what they expect
they will go down the street and find another who will. No matter what community they live in people
can always find someone who is willing to proclaim less than the fullness of
the Word of God.
Preachers
in our day do not help matters. There
are always preachers who are willing to “tickle
the itching ears” of the people. They
have found that if they continually work to please people that they can accumulate
great numbers and build large programs and function on vast budgets. In the process of all this, the prophets who
will boldly proclaim the Word of the Lord - His love as well as justice, and
His mercy as well as judgment – have essentially disappeared. The “watchmen” that God has set over His
people have failed time and again to sound the alarm and give warning of the
impending judgment of God. Scripture
teaches us that God’s wrath will be shown from heaven against those who “by their unrighteousness suppress the truth
(Romans 1:18).” Notice, this is not
an Old Testament prophecy that many so easily right off, but a New Testament
truth. That God’s judgment is at hand
when we compromise His Word is no secret.
Yet the years go on, and the sin increases and the warnings never come. There are many who will be accountable for
the things they have taught, but also accountable for what they refused to
teach. “But if the watchman sees the sword coming and does not blow the
trumpet, so that the people are not warned, and the sword comes and takes ANY
ONE of them, that person is taken away in his iniquity, but his blood I will
require at the watchman’s hand (Ezek. 33:6).”
It is
difficult to be a watchman, given the charge of proclaiming the Word of God
whether it is pleasant or difficult for the people to hear. But God has called people to do it
nonetheless. Based on what we are taught
in the New Testament we have to believe that God is speaking to His teachers
today about the sin and depravity that are not only prominent in society, but
have become a “normal” part of life within the church. God is calling people who will preach His
Word with fear and trembling (not of the people, but fear of the one who called
them). Though the people may try to
suppress this truth it must be proclaimed.
It must be taught and shown to those who are struggling through life in
sin. God has a Word for us in our day
just as He had for the people of Israel so many years ago. Where are those who will fearlessly deliver
it? Where are those who are so consumed
by love for God, so committed to His Word, so recklessly faithful that nothing
will stop them from telling others what He is revealing to them? “The
lion has roared; who will not fear? The
Lord God has spoken; who can but prophesy (Amos 3:8).”
Scripture
makes no pretense that it is a fearful job to proclaim the Word of God. People will leave churches, and some will
mock and ridicule the prophet. A.W.
Tozer spoke to the current situation when he said, “I do not know what the
future holds. But I know one thing:
Rather than betray the sheep of God, rather than lie to them and deceive them
and keep them agitated and stirred up with all kinds of popular topics rather
than take my material from Time
magazine, I’ll preach the Word to empty seats and sigh and cry for the
abomination that is in the earth.”
Though our
times may seem difficult and even impossible, and the world speeds on at a
torrid pace to Hell, the charge given to preachers remains the same, “preach the Word; be ready in season and out
of season; reprove, rebuke, and exhort with complete patience and teaching (2
Tim. 4:2)…”
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