31

Jump Start # 3156

Jump Start # 3156

1 Samuel 3:1 “Now the boy Samuel was ministering to the Lord before Eli. And word from the Lord was rare in those days, visions were infrequent.”

Our verse today is the background story to when God called Samuel. For a long, long time, Samuel would serve as God’s faithful prophet, anointing the first kings of Israel. But this is how the story began. And, in this passage, we are told that the word of the Lord was rare in those days.

Truth be told, the words from Heaven were often rare. I tend to believe that so many have the idea that God spoke nearly everyday and to everyone in Bible times. The concept some have is that God was chatty and talked and talked and talked. But have you noticed that many “heroes” of the Bible never heard directly from God. Caleb, Esther, Mordecai, Shadrach, Meshach and Abed-nego, there is no indication that God spoke directly to them.

Now, contrast that fact with examples such as the 2012 Passion Conference in Atlanta, which was attended by 40,000 people. The who’s who of modern preachers, such as John Piper, Beth Moore and Francis Chan highlighted the conference. The audience was asked “How many of you heard the voice of God speak specifically, clearly, directly and personally to you? I’d like you to share it. Can you put up a hand for a minute? Just look around; that’s people saying, ‘God Almighty, the Maker of Heaven—He spoke to me. He spoke to me. God spoke to me.” And, hundreds and hundreds held their hands high in the air. And, as shocking as that is, many among our own brethren are now saying similar things. There has been a gentle shift away from faith and towards feelings. And, with that shift, a movement away from the written word of God to what a person thinks God tells them. A divine nudge and a trusting in what one feels more than what one knows. Where this leads to is a person saying, “I know what the Bible says, yet I feel God wants me to do this.” And, with that, feelings top faith and my inner self tops what the Bible says. “I feel that God wants me to be happy,” so someone who feels trapped in a marriage, looks for the exit door. They do this believing that God approves of their decision and actions. They couldn’t put a verse on what they are doing, but they sure could put a mountain of feelings.

Some thoughts about this:

First, this ought to alarm us. Those that lead God’s people need to be watching for these things. Shifting away from the written word is a step away from God. Our faith is not based upon feelings but upon the word of God. The Bereans didn’t just know what Paul said was true, they searched the Scriptures to see. Listen to what is being said in Bible classes. See what people are posting on Facebook. The religious culture around us is influencing many, many disciples. What are people reading? Do you know? A steady diet of Beth Moore, Francis Chan and the like is nothing more than spiritual junk food.

Second, there is a place for feelings in our walk and worship with the Lord. Some have gone so far the other way that they sit like a zombie during worship. No emotions and no feelings is not the answer here. A child one day was standing in the pew smiling and waving at the people behind her. The child’s mother pulled her down, and slapped her leg. The child started to cry and the mother said, “that’s more like it.” No, it’s not. We ought to be happy, smiling and enjoying our fellowship with the Lord and His people. The Ethiopian went on his way rejoicing after he was baptized. Some would frown on that. Some would declare, “there’s no rejoicing in this place.”  And, that sour spirit and expressionless look upon our faces is why some young people run to the other extreme. How can we sing, “I’m happy today, I’m happy today,” without a smile on your face?

Third, God never uses feelings as the determination of what is right or wrong or His acceptance of us. Many a person has said, “I feel saved.” The Bible was written to establish the fact that Jesus died for our sins. The death of Jesus is told as a matter of fact. If man were writing that, we’d have pages and pages of emotions, tears and feelings. John wrote in his letter, “when you read these things” you’ll know you are saved. That’s the way God does things.

Feelings can be misleading. How many times have we driven somewhere, thinking we knew where we were, only we didn’t. A wife can watch a Hallmark Christmas movie and tear up. Her husband is so bored, he’s checking his phone. We can stand in front of a modern piece of art and the guide can tell us about the pain the artist was feeling and how this portrait shows the drama between the working class and the political power structure. You and I looking at that same painting think the artist sneezed in his paint bucket. We don’t see any of that. We don’t feel the artist pain. We think a three-year-old can draw better than that. Feelings are misleading. Feelings are not the same. Feelings can change.

God chose to communicate through words. Words have definite meaning. Words can be explained. Words can be copied. Words can be translated. Words can be understood. Words stand the test of time. God chose words.

And, when words collide with our feelings, it is the words of God that are correct. We may not feel like going to worship, but we know we should. We may not feel like forgiving someone, but we know we should. We may not feel like helping someone out, but we know we should.

  • Paul told the Ephesians, when you read what I wrote, you will not my insight into the mystery of Christ (3:4).
  • John said, “I have written to you who believe in the name of the Son of God, so that you may know that you have eternal life” (1 John 5:13).

God told His servants to preach the word.

Roger

13

Jump Start # 975

 

Jump Start # 975

 

1 Samuel 3:1 Now the boy Samuel was ministering to the Lord before Eli. And word from the Lord was rare in those days, visions were infrequent.

 

Jump Starts are back! I was delayed longer than I expected. The move, setting things up, getting the internet running, and then a few computer snafus got me off my schedule of writing. I missed it. I was thinking about our passage recently. The word from the Lord was rare and visions were infrequent. Rare and infrequent—we don’t think of those words in terms of God.

 

A very common thought today is that in the Bible days, God spoke just about every day and to just about everyone. That impression has led some to “look” for divine urges and pushes from God. Some even feel that things are not right unless there is something coming from God. Wise Bible students know better. What some classify as “divine urges” may be nothing more than what a person has been thinking about for a long time. Those urges are not divine, but human. They are not sent from Heaven down, but from the inside out of a person. There are long gaps of time between God speaking to people.

 

The Hebrew writer reminds us that in these last days, God speaks though His son, Jesus Christ. God is talking through Jesus, in a way similar to God talking to Moses. God spoke to Moses and Moses delivered the message to the nation. God has spoken through Jesus and Jesus delivered the message. This is why all things are to be done by the word of Christ, and, we will be judged by every word that Jesus spoke. The message for this age is the word of God. That Christ delivered message is the same here as it is in other places.

How did people get by when the word was rare and the visions were infrequent? They relied upon what God had already given them and they built their faith upon what they knew. Faith is not in the unknown, but the known. We can speculate and guess what God wants, but too often, we are wrong. God doesn’t think like we do. The parables are one illustration of how upside down the kingdom of God is to the way people would think. In the parable of the laborers going into the fields, no master would pay a man who worked one hour the same as those who worked all day long. That doesn’t make economic sense. In the parable of the 100 sheep, if a shepherd left the 99 sheep to go looking for the one lost sheep, he would return to find 99 missing. In the parable of the prodigal son, a father wouldn’t grant the inheritance before his death and he certainly wouldn’t celebrate the return of a reckless and irresponsible son. Those parables didn’t fit into the thinking of the first century world.

 

The audiences who first heard those parables could not anticipate nor predict how they turned out. All of this illustrates that when we try to fit our thinking, our world, our social causes into how God thinks, most often, we will be wrong. God is not politically correct today. Have you noticed those “Coexist” bumper stickers? They display the various religious symbols of: Islam, peace, Judaism, wicca, Confucianism and Christianity all together. Coexist. Accept each other. That is the flavor of the month these days. That isn’t what God says. Ephesians 4 says that there is One Lord, One God, One faith, One baptism, One Spirit, One hope, One body. Those “One” phrases toss out the coexist concept.

When we try to think for God we fail. When we get the idea that God likes what we like, we fail. Those that have redefined worship into a rock ‘n roll side show assume that because the congregation loves it, God does. Wrong. Remember Cain? God didn’t think so highly of his sacrifice. Those that want to restructure the church into a social platform fail. That’s not how God thinks.

 

The word was rare and visions were infrequent. Back then, as it is today, we must stick with what we have. Trying to update, modify or fit God into out thinking fails. It fails first because we are not satisfied with what God has given us. We want more, so we make it up. Second, it fails because it does not honor God. Third, it fails because it lacks trust in what God has said.

 

Give me the Bible, is an old hymn. It’s about time for some folks to dust that off and sing it again. It’s time we let God speak for Himself.

Roger