I’m sure we’ve all heard this one. The time-worn favorite of the armchair evangelical who exhorts us to pray for our nation in that email you are supposed to forward to 25 friends.
2 Chron. 7:14 – “If my people, which are called by my name, shall humble themselves, and pray, and seek my face, and turn from their wicked ways; then will I hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin, and will heal their land. “
We see this verse again and again when it’s time for the National Day of Prayer, “See You At The Pole,” or a variety of other times and events when people need to feel like they are DOING something.
However, like so many other things in modern day eschatology, I think we tend to skip over a lot in this verse and focus on the “easy” stuff.
Keep in mind that praying is only ONE of the things that the verse exhorts us to do.
Another is to humble ourselves, a third is to turn from our wicked ways. Understanding that “wicked” simply means “un-Godly.” We tend to think of wickedness as those “evil” things like adultery and murder and stealing. But in God’s eyes, “wickedness” is anything we do outside of His will. Anger, strife, jealousy…delusions of self-sufficiency. Even “good” things done with the best of intentions, if they are done based on our human (and thus flawed) intentions might ultimately be considered “wickedness.”
Isaiah 46:6 – “For all of us have become like one who is unclean, And all our righteous deeds are like a filthy garment; And all of us wither like a leaf, And our iniquities, like the wind, take us away.”
It is hard to truly understand “humbling” ourselves when we’ve never really lived under a King. We’ve never had to physically kneel before a throne, before a man who has the power of life and death in his hands, and whose very words become law the moment they are spoken. Humbling ourselves means giving up everything that isn’t of God; giving up the demands that we get to live life like WE think it should be lived. It means giving up being mad at God when I don’t get my way or don’t understand my circumstance, and committing myself absolutely to accepting His sovereign authority over my life. “Seeking His face” involves a lot more than invoking his name like a spell from Harry Potter that will magically fix things. It means daily, moment by moment, wanting to know more about WHO God is and what than means to my life.
It’s easy to say we will pray every day. It’s easy to say that if the rest of the country would just straighten out and clean up their act…
However, is it as easy to say that we will pray…AND seek His face AND humble ourselves AND turn from our wicked ways? It’s about more than praying for our leaders, it’s about changing the way we live our lives in a very real and personal way. ONLY THEN does this scripture promise that God will heal our land. Prayer is certainly a great place to start, but I think it’s a lot taller of an order and a lot more work than most people want to think. Myself included!!
I think it’s important to remember that the context of this verse is God speaking to Solomon just after the completion of the Temple. God is actually speaking in the past-tense here. Because the people, after they had already endured droughts, plagues and disease, humbled themselves, turned from their wicked ways and turned their face towards God, He heard their cry and restored them as a nation, complete with a fantastic new temple.
However. Comma.
God IMMEDIATELY goes on to warn Solomon that (based on Israel’s history I’m sure) their new-found providence is still very conditional (I paraphrase slightly here):
IF, and I repeat IF you walk before Me as your father David walked, even to do according to all that I have commanded you, and will keep My statutes and My ordinances, then AND ONLY THEN I will establish your royal throne as I covenanted with your father David, saying, ‘You shall not lack a man {to be} ruler in Israel.’ (vs 17-18)
And then he drops the other shoe….
“BUT! If you turn away and forsake My statutes and My commandments which I have set before you, and go and serve other gods and worship them, then I will uproot you from My land which I have given you, and this house which I have consecrated for My name I will cast out of My sight and I will make it a proverb and a byword among all peoples.
“As for this house, which was exalted, everyone who passes by it will be astonished and say, ‘Why has the LORD done thus to this land and to this house?’
“And they will say, ‘Because they forsook the LORD, the God of their fathers who brought them from the land of Egypt, and they adopted other gods and worshiped them and served them; therefore He has brought all this adversity on them.’ (vs. 19-22)
And you know what’s sad? We see in Isaiah 64:10-11 that that’s exactly what happened:
Your holy cities have become a wilderness, Zion has become a wilderness, Jerusalem a desolation. Our holy and beautiful house, Where our fathers praised You, Has been burned {by} fire; And all our precious things have become a ruin.
So what we have is a pretty clear “Either/Or” proposition. God says that either you humble yourself, acknowledge HIM and ONLY HIM as your God, or your land will be made desolate and your people scattered.
No middle ground. Not a lot of ecumenicalism or mutli-culturalism there. Doesn’t seem to support the whole, “we all worship the same god, just with different names” thing. Kind of “intolerant” and “divisive” isn’t it?
For the word of God is living and active and sharper than any two-edged sword, and piercing as far as the division of soul and spirit, of both joints and marrow, and able to judge the thoughts and intentions of the heart. (Heb 4:12 NASB)
It’s almost like God KNOWS the wickedness of our heart, the darkness of human nature, and our nearly inevitable tendency to follow our own hearts rather than His will. Almost like a theme, running throughout the Scriptures, as if some things never change.
Something to think about. And tell 25 of your friends.
I am a bit disturbed by what I see as a growing trend. Time and again in the news I am seeing stories of people flocking to catch a glimpse of the
Praying to the Mother of Jesus and asking for her help or intercession
Does this sound like the kind of God who would be content to manifest himself as a mildew stain an a basement wall, some calcification under a runoff spout, or an odd shape of
Thoughts on Malachi
My studies took me to the Italian prophet tonight.
The book of Malachi is essentially God slapping the Israelites right upside the head because of their shallow, insincere, and downright insulting attitudes towards Him. The sad/scary thing is…I saw waaaaay to much of the modern Church in these passages.
Through Malachi, God rebukes His people for the crap they are bringing Him as offerings. A harsh word? Not really. They were bringing junk, garbage, crap…and offering it to the Lord of Lords, King of Kings. To say that He was a little put off is putting it mildly.
God asks if they would ever give such poor offerings to their local governor or magistrate? The answer would be heck no! Because they’d end up in shackles or picking up garbage around the village square on trash detail if they tried. But with God? Eh, whatever I’ve got lying around ought to be good enough…
God’s chosen people were offering tarnished trinkets, their lame and blind animals, rotten fruit and stolen goods as their offerings on the altar of Jehovah in the temple. And then they seemed to be confused and surprised when God condemns them for it.
It seems a lot like the father of a clueless teenager who can’t understand why he’s in trouble when you told him to mow the yard, and then he only did half of it and quit to play X-box with his friends instead.
Then I thought about the kinds of “donations” I’ve seen people give to the churches at which I’ve been a member. Heck, let’s be honest here, the kind of donations I have given to my own churches. Stuff left over from the garage sale. Stuff I found in the back of the closet or the attic, some of which doesn’t even work. I pawn it off on the church figuring, “Maybe somebody can fix it, and anyway, it’s finally out of MY house!”
I know for a fact people have used church donation drives as a convenient way of getting out of paying the dumping fee at the county landfill.
What does that say about us? That we’ll give stuff to God that even WE don’t want anymore!?
The words of the prophet Malachi make it pretty clear that God WILL NOT BLESS YOU OR HONOR YOUR PRAYERS if you come before His altar with this attitude. As a matter of fact, these token gestures of piety really anger our Lord, and He actually promises a curse for those who continue to do it! I, for one, was very convicted about my peevish frustration that an 11:30 service “takes up half my day” on Sunday, instead of being able to get in at 9:30 and be out before noon so I can “get on with my day.”
Sound familiar to anyone? Hmmm? To think, I begrudge God two hours of worship. I can’t spare two hours out of “my” day, to go with a willing heart to lay my offering on His altar. I should be frustrated and disappointed that that’s ALL I get, wishing it were more, not less. Like I said, Malachi has been hitting a little too close to home!
Malachi also makes it clear that tithing isn’t optional. This kind of surprised me, because I’ve always heard tithing presented either in the form of a plea from the pulpit, or as a personal decision between me and God. According to the words of God in Malachi, failing to tithe is “robbing God.”
It is also clear that God views the marriage covenant between a man and a women as every bit as important, binding, and sacred as His covenant with Israel. We see here again the archetype of the marriage, and foreshadowings of the NT teachings of the “Bride of Christ.” God promises the same sort of anger and retribution for men who deal with their wives “treacherously” as those who bring corrupted offerings to His temple. Interesting.
I ‘ve also come to see Malachi as actually a pretty powerful book about…fatherhood, believe it or not.
Despite the harsh language, it’s actually a book of love. Huh? Yup. Read it, you’ll see. When I read this book of the Old Testament, I heard a frustrated father scolding his clueless children for their disobedience. I have BEEN that guy, frustrated nearly to tears, stating for the leventy-zillionth time what should be obvious, self evident truths to children who just stare at me in bemused surprised like I just told them the sky is green. He threatens them with terrible consequences, but he ALSO promises great rewards. He lays it out, in plain and simple language. He is setting boundaries, house rules, complete with punishments and rewards, in such a way that they can’t come back later and say, “Wull… I didn’t KNOW! You didn’t tellll me THAT!“