Saturday, December 20, 2008

Take Two: Haggai 1, Proverbs 20

Haggai is the next book in the Bible for us to look at. It is not the next prophet "chronologically" in Hebrew history. Nahum looked forward to the fall of the Assyrians. The Babylonians became the world power following them. The fall of the Southern Kingdom (Judah) happened and the Jews were taken into captivity in 587 BC, at which time Nebuchadnezzar destroyed the temple. The Persians came on scene while the Jews were still in captivity. In 538 BC, Cyrus the Persian ordered that the Jews be allowed to return to their homeland under Zerubbabel's leadership.

Work began in 536 BC to rebuild the temple, but was abandoned due to opposition by neighbors and due to the "indifference" of the Jews. (IOW: They did not see rebuilding the temple as a priority.) Around 520 BC, Haggai and Zechariah were commissioned by God to stir up the people to finish the task of rebuilding and to reorder their spiritual lives. (Citation: Notes from the MacArthur Study Bible, John A. MacArthur, Editor.)

Haggai 1 explains the thrust of Haggai's ministry. The PEOPLE had abandoned their task of rebuilding the temple sixteen years before stating that the time was not right to rebuild (Hag 1:2). God, through the prophet mocks that and points out the foolishness of their wisdom in the matter. Hag 1:3 is the charge from God, "You labor for your own dwellings, but it is not time for you to rebuild mine."

Five poetic statements are given about the wisdom of their decision (Hag 1:6). You plant much and harvest little. You eat and are not satisfied. You drink and cannot be satisfied. You wear clothes, but they do not satisfy. You store up money but it never accumulates.

Why are their efforts unable to accomplish their goal? Simply: because they were not doing what God had directed and He was preventing them from being satisfied with less than His will for them. Notice Hag 1:9-11. God was preventing them from accomplishing that which they wanted to do...because they forsook what God desired for them to do. They had taken up efforts that were contrary to God.

God's will was that the people would prioritize Him, rebuild the temple, that He may be glorified (Hag 1:7).

The people people heard and obeyed (Hag 1:12). At their obedience, God stated His pleasure by declaring "I am with you."

A couple of observations. First, God did not need a building to dwell in. He does not dwell in buildings or sit on thrones. The building (temple) was the place of meeting between God and His people. It is the place they went to meet with their God. In their failing to rebuild that place FIRST...they showed that God was not of first priority. We do this today. When we prioritize soccer, or football, or any other thing over God, we demonstrate that God is less than first priority. When we spend money on cars, video games, clothes, and homes that are comfortable...without being obedient to tithe our income and sacrificially give beyond that to see our neighbors and the nations reached with the gospel...we demonstrate that God is less than first priority.

God will never be satisfied being a second rate focus in our lives. Anything we try to elevate above Him...will always fail to satisfy. It will fail to meet our needs. He will cause it to fail because He is the Lord our God...a jealous God...not sharing His glory with anyone or anything else.

Some might say to me: "pastor, I am doing all I can. I can't tithe" or "can't come to that event because it takes too much gas." Listen, if you are calling me on a cell phone, or connecting to me via internet service while you sit in front of your cable television as you tell me that...you are fooling yourself. There "might" be people in the world who are so poor that they can't give God what is His...but I have never met them. I watched people scrape to give pennies to God in Africa with joy in their hearts...making only $20 per week. They had no electricity, no running water...but prioritized God.

Some of the same folks tell me they can't send their children to events designed to grow them in their relationship with God...but their children have cell phones, 20 sets of new clothes and are taking dance or drama lessons. Please. That is just a statement of priorities.

The building of the temple was not only about a priority about rebuilding a place to meet with God...it was about demonstrating His glory to the nations. God seemed so powerless to the pagan nations because Babylon had destroyed His temple and captured His people. As the temple lay in ruins...God's Name was treated as "common" or "vain." It is idolatrous to magnify our own names while we allow God's to be seen as common.

Is God your priority? Is He first in your focus with your time, your energy, and your finances. If not, you have established yourself as one opposed to God and He is working to insure that none of your efforts will ever satisfy. At the same time, He is calling to you to turn from your pursuits and seek Him as "most valuable" and "most glorious" so that He can be "with you" and not "against you."

Proverbs 20:13 is the takeaway today. God desires for us to be productive. Our hard work is the source of our sufficiency. This does not speak against our trusting in God. To the contrary. God is the provider of strength, talents, opportunity...all things. What we do with it is up to us. If you lack...and do not work...there is a correlation there you may not be seeing. (Obviously there are some exceptions...follow the principle). We are not to live for "things" but we are also not to be busybodies, lazy, or anything else like it. We are to be diligent...and thus see God's provision for us through the labors of our hands. To Him be the glory in it!

Grace,

1 comment:

kamatu said...

I agree with the focus. I've never understood not giving to God first, because He will always give it back according to your needs. If when someone says they "cannot afford to tithe", in my opinion, that is the time you can least afford NOT to tithe.

No, He is not some kind of slot machine that always pays off, but I don't worry about my needs because they are always met. Whether it be an extra check because of an accounting error, a bonus from work or, most often, a chance to get out and work for some extra, I find He always makes sure my family's needs are met.