John’s Birth

Scripture: Luke 1:5-25 & 39-45 & 57-80

Video Link: https://youtu.be/ezvbkI-Yymk

Structure:

  • Introduction
  • John’s parents
  • John’s purpose
  • John’s power
  • Conclusion

Introduction:

Good morning everyone.

Did you know there are over 500 active undersea cables connecting the continents of the world? 98% of all international internet traffic flows through these undersea cables. Inside the protective casing there are many strands of fibre optic cable all carrying data from one country to the next. Pretty amazing.

Before the new seal was laid on the church carpark we had a trench built and laid a pipe under the carpark so we could run cabling to provide a more reliable internet connection between the church office and auditorium. Similar principle to the undersea cables, just not as far. 

The Bible, as you know, is a book of two halves. The older and bigger half, what we call the Old (or First) Testament, was written before the time of Christ. The second half, what we call the New Testament, was written shortly after Jesus walked the earth.  

Sometimes people think of the Old and New Testaments as separate, which is understandable given there is a 400-year gap between them. But actually they are connected. Both Testaments are concerned with God’s plan of salvation and both testaments point to Jesus, the Messiah of God.

Today we begin a new sermon series on the life of John the Baptist. John the Baptist was like an undersea cable, carrying valuable information, connecting the Old and New Testaments. John’s life and work demonstrate a clear continuity in God’s plan of salvation.

This morning we focus on John’s birth in Luke chapter 1. Listen for the connections with the Old Testament. From verse 5 we read…

In the time of Herod king of Judea there was a priest named Zechariah, who belonged to the priestly division of Abijah; his wife Elizabeth was also a descendant of Aaron. Both of them were righteous in the sight of God, observing all the Lord’s commands and decrees blamelessly. But they were childless because Elizabeth was not able to conceive, and they were both very old. Once when Zechariah’s division was on duty and he was serving as priest before God, he was chosen by lot, according to the custom of the priesthood, to go into the temple of the Lord and burn incense. 10 And when the time for the burning of incense came, all the assembled worshipers were praying outside. 11 Then an angel of the Lord appeared to him, standing at the right side of the altar of incense. 12 When Zechariah saw him, he was startled and was gripped with fear. 13 But the angel said to him: “Do not be afraid, Zechariah; your prayer has been heard. Your wife Elizabeth will bear you a son, and you are to call him John. 14 He will be a joy and delight to you, and many will rejoice because of his birth, 15 for he will be great in the sight of the Lord. He is never to take wine or other fermented drink, and he will be filled with the Holy Spirit even before he is born. 16 He will bring back many of the people of Israel to the Lord their God. 17 And he will go on before the Lord, in the spirit and power of Elijah, to turn the hearts of the fathers to their children and the disobedient to the wisdom of the righteous—to make ready a people prepared for the Lord.”

May the Spirit of Jesus illuminate God’s word for us.

In thinking about the birth of John the Baptist, this morning, we consider three things: John’s parents, John’s purpose and John’s power. Let’s begin with John’s parents, Zechariah and Elizabeth.

John’s parents:

When we get what we want, we call that satisfaction. But when we get something less than what we want, we call that disappointment. Disappointment is the difference (or the shortfall) between what we get and what we had hoped we would get.

The more disappointment we experience in life the more inclined we are to clip the wings of our hope; to hope less. That may be a necessary survival technique but it makes for a pretty sad life, because joy and hope are intimately related. Joy is the energy of hope. So the less you hope for the less joy you have. Risk and reward. 

The Rolling Stones have a line in one of their songs: “You can’t always get what you want but if you try sometimes you just might find you get what you need.” I’m not sure what the Stones meant by that but it sounds to me like a strategy for balancing hope and managing disappointment.

Another famous singer, Bono, has a different take on disappointment. He compares disappointment to manure. Manure smells bad and is messy. No one really likes to handle it. But despite the unpleasantness, manure acts as a fertiliser. It enriches soil to grow beautiful flowers and delicious veges.

I like that image. If we think of disappointment as manure; as something that is unpleasant now but which produces better quality of life in the future, we redeem our suffering and we preserve hope.

Zechariah and Elizabeth understood disappointment better than most. They were faithful people who did everything in their power to obey God’s law.

Verse 6 tells us: Both of them were righteous in the sight of God and yet, despite wanting children, they were childless. It doesn’t seem fair. But notice the echo with Abraham & Sarah, who were also faithful and not able to conceive. What is God about to do?  

Zechariah was quite remarkable really. Despite the disappointment of not becoming a father, he stuck to his calling as a priest. He did not ditch his faith or walk out on God because he didn’t get what he wanted. This reveals a certain purity of heart from Zechariah.

To some degree a husband’s relationship with his wife mirrors his relationship with God. In the cultural context of the time, Zechariah could have written Elizabeth a letter of divorce and sent her away for not giving him children.

But he doesn’t. Zechariah remains loyal to Elizabeth. He shows Elizabeth hesed. Zechariah loves Elizabeth with a faithfulness not dimmed by the years. It was like the manure of disappointment had enriched the soil of their marriage.

Of course, it takes more than manure to grow a good crop. Unrelenting disappointment is not helpful to the human soul. Disappointment does not have the last word though. The fruit of God’s purpose is ultimately satisfying.

There were so many Jewish priests 2000 years ago in Palestine that they were on a roster. Your average priest was only required to serve in the Jerusalem temple two weeks a year. And the chance to enter the holy place and burn incense was a once in a lifetime privilege. Some priests were never so lucky.

The smoke of the incense symbolised the prayers of the faithful rising to God. It was while burning the incense that the angel of the Lord appeared to Zechariah saying…

“Do not be afraid, Zechariah; your prayer has been heard. Your wife Elizabeth will bear you a son, and you are to call him John…”  

Now, at first glance, we might assume that Zechariah had been praying for a son. But when we think it through we realise this is unlikely. Remember, Zechariah & Elizabeth are now very old and past that stage in their life. Zechariah has long since given up on that dream. It’s simply too painful to risk more manure.

Besides, if Zechariah had been praying for a son, then we would expect a less doubtful response from him. Given the context, of the temple and the people praying outside, it is more likely that Zechariah was calling on God to redeem Israel.

After all, this is primarily God’s story. The Lord is planning to redeem humanity and indeed all creation. At the same time, God is going to redeem Zechariah and Elizabeth’s suffering by giving them a son (John) who will play a significant role in the divine plan of salvation.

You see, Zechariah and Elizabeth are representative of the faithful remnant of God’s people. They are the best of Israel in miniature, the smaller story within the larger story.

Just as Zechariah and Elizabeth have lived with disappointment and grief for many years, so too the nation of Israel has suffered for centuries. But that is all about to change. God is about to bring new life.

Zechariah questions the angel Gabriel, asking for proof and Gabriel makes Zechariah mute, unable to speak, until John is born. I don’t think this is a punishment as such. After all, Zechariah is a righteous man. Zechariah’s muteness is more of a call to listen. It’s a symbolic way of saying: ‘Just be quiet for a while and watch God work’.  

Sometimes in prayer we feel like we have to tie everything down, like we have to mansplain everything to God, as if he doesn’t know our concerns already. There is a place for words in prayer but there is also a time to be silent and watch God work.

Okay, so John’s parents were representative of the true Israel, those who remain faithful to God in the face of chronic disappointment.

John’s purpose:

What about John’s purpose? What was God wanting John to do?

Before you can paint an old surface you must first sand off the flaky bits, so the paint sticks. If we think of Israel as the old surface, then we might think of John the Baptist as the one who did the sanding to prepare the surface for Jesus to paint.

Or to use another analogy; before you sow seed it pays to plough up the hard ground. That way the seed has a better chance of taking root and growing. If Israel is the hard ground, then John is the ploughman, softening the ground for Jesus to plant the seed of God’s redemption.

Before a big tournament, the coach drills their team with a combination of fitness and skills training. That way the team are prepared when game day comes. John was like a spiritual fitness coach, getting the people ready for the coming of the Messiah and the coming of God’s kingdom.

The angel Gabriel talked about John’s purpose in God’s plan saying:

16 He will bring back many of the people of Israel to the Lord their God. 17 And he will go on before the Lord, in the spirit and power of Elijah, to turn the hearts of the fathers to their children and the disobedient to the wisdom of the righteous—to make ready a people prepared for the Lord.”

Notice the connections with the Old Testament. John will be a prophet, like Elijah, calling the people to return to God.

That phrase about turning the hearts of the fathers to their children, comes from the prophet Malachi. It’s a variation on one of the last verses in the Old Testament. Does this mean that John’s purpose was to fix broken family relationships? Well, maybe. But it’s probably more than that.

In Hebrew thought, ‘the fathers’ often refers to the Jewish patriarchs (Abraham, Isaac and Jacob); the founding fathers if you like. From their vantage point in the next world, the fathers looked at their descendants and were not pleased. However, John’s work would bring about such a positive change that the fathers would look with favour on Israel. [1]  

John was to be a catalyst for change. It was John’s job to get the people ready for the coming of the Messiah, Jesus.

We can also glean something of John’s purpose from the name he was given before birth. John means ‘Jehovah’s gift’ or said another way, ‘God is gracious’. John is the spokesman for God’s grace. But, as we will see in the coming weeks, it’s not a soft mushy grace. It is a strong gritty grace, salted with inconvenient truth. It is grace with sharp edges. It is the grace of a surgeon’s scalpel.

After John was born, Zechariah had this to say about John’s purpose…

76 And you, my child, will be called a prophet of the Most High; for you will go on before the Lord to prepare the way for him, 77 to give his people the knowledge of salvation through the forgiveness of their sins, 78 because of the tender mercy of our God…

John’s purpose is to serve as a human data cable, carrying the knowledge of salvation from heaven to earth. Notice though that the salvation in view here is not military or political. It is not won by violence or force.

It is salvation in the form of the forgiveness of our sins. In other words, God intends to save us from ourselves. Because the real enemy is not the Romans or anyone else, it’s not the political left or right; the real danger lies within.   

John’s parents were faithful to God and to each other. John’s purpose was to prepare the people for Jesus’ coming (for redemption). But how was John going to achieve this? Where did his power come from?

John’s power:

Well, the greatest source of John’s power was the Holy Spirit.

In verse 15, of Luke 1, the angel says to Zechariah that John will be filled with the Holy Spirit, even before birth.

Later, in verse 41, we read how Elizabeth (who was six months pregnant with John) was filled with the Holy Spirit when Mary (who was pregnant with Jesus) came to visit.

Elizabeth, who is decades older than Mary, puts herself in a lower social position, giving honour and respect to her younger relative, saying:

“Blessed are you among women, and blessed is the child you will bear! 43 But why am I so favoured, that the mother of my Lord should come to me?”

It’s a winsome moment. Elizabeth is genuinely happy for Mary. There is no envy, just pure joy. For love rejoices with the truth. 

You know, those undersea data cables I mentioned at the beginning of this message; they are only as good as the information passing through them. Without data being sent and received the cables are lifeless, powerless, dead. The information transferring inside is like the spirit of the cable. It is the spirit that fulfils the purpose.

It’s similar with the human spirit. Your thoughts and feelings and personality are a manifestation of the human spirit. Without thoughts and feelings and personality your body is an empty shell, with nothing to share and no way of communicating. It is the human spirit that enables us to relate with others and fulfil our purpose.

Given that we human beings are made in the image of God, we could think of the Holy Spirit (capital H, capital S) as a manifestation of God’s thoughts and feelings and personality. God relates to the human spirit through his Holy Spirit. Spirit communicates with spirit.

God’s Spirit cannot be reduced or confined by any neat formula or definition we try to wrap around him. But if you need some handles for God’s Spirit, then love and truth are a good place to start.

To be filled with the Holy Spirit is to be filled with God’s love and truth. When you are filled with the Holy Spirit (as John was), your thoughts are informed by truth and not led astray by ignorance. Likewise, feelings of fear give way to the impulse of love. And your personality, that unique finger print of your soul, is set free to be its true self, as God intended.

Sin is when the deep sea cable of the human spirit is severed, so we lose comms with God. Jesus came to repair the cable and restore the connection. The problem is, we don’t always realise the cable is severed because it is buried deep. It was John’s job to make people aware of the disconnect and point to Jesus as the one who had come to fix our relationship with God.

Conclusion:

This morning we have considered the special circumstances surrounding John’s birth. John’s parents were true Israelites; the manure of disappointment had enriched their faithfulness to God and to each other. John’s purpose was to prepare the people’s hearts, minds & spirits for Jesus’ coming. And John’s power to do this came from the Holy Spirit.

Next week we will give some thought to the substance of John’s message.

Let us pray…

Father God, we thank you for Jesus, who repairs the cable of our human spirit so we can commune with your Holy Spirit. As the busy-ness of the new year gains momentum, help us to remain connected to you. Drive out ungodly fear with your love and truth we pray, in Jesus’ name. Amen.

Questions for discussion or reflection:

What stands out for you in reading this Scripture and/or in listening to the sermon? Why do you think this stood out to you?

  • What connections can you see between John’s birth narrative (in Luke 1) and the Old Testament?
  • What noble characteristics do we observe in Zechariah and Elizabeth? Who do Elizabeth and Zechariah represent?
  • Can you think of a time in your life when the manure of disappointment enriched the soil of your life and relationships? What happened. How did God redeem the disappointment?
  • Why did the angel cause Zechariah to become temporarily mute? When might we include sacred silence in our prayer life? How might we create space for sacred silence?  
  • What was John’s purpose? Reflect on / discuss the meaning of the phrase, to turn the hearts of the fathers to their children and the disobedient to the wisdom of the righteous.
  • Where did John’s power come from? Where does your power come from?
  • How strong is your connection with God at present? Does anything need to change to improve the connection? If so, what needs to change? 

[1] Refer Leon Morris’ commentary on Luke, page 70.

Hearing from God – by Neville

Hearing from God, by Neville Gardner (22 Jan 2023)

At Christmas, I heard from a friend in England for the first time in several years. Well, when I say ‘heard from’ I mean ‘received an e-card from’ – I didn’t actually hear his voice. These days, ‘heard from’ can mean receiving a card, letter, text or other electronic message, as well as actually hearing a voice on the phone. It’s the same when we talk about hearing from God – we don’t necessarily mean hearing his voice (but we might), we just mean that we receive God’s words in some way.

When my wife Nicky and I are in different parts of our house, we’ll sometimes shout to each other with questions and comments. There’s no guarantee that we’ll hear each other, and if we do, the message can be misheard – unless I’m asking Nicky if she wants a cup of tea! The sensible thing to do is to get closer to each other and speak normally.

God understands the problems of making himself heard. Throughout the Bible, God spoke normally to those close to him, but sometimes he shouted to make himself heard. In the Garden of Eden, God walked and talked quietly with Adam and Eve; but just before the Ten Commandments were handed out, “Moses spoke, and God answered him with thunder”. (Exodus 19:19)

You’ll all know examples from the Bible of when God spoke directly to individuals (Moses, Noah, Elijah, Sarah – you can look up more later). Sometimes God sent messages by angels, visions and dreams, when that was the best way to communicate. He also used people to pass on his messages, speaking on his behalf. At the start of Hebrews, we read that “In the past, God spoke to our ancestors many times and in many ways through the prophets.”

But then God changed his methods. The verse in Hebrews continues “but in those last days he has spoken to us through his Son.” The apostles and many other people, in crowds or as individuals, all heard directly from God, in the person of Jesus. They heard first-hand of God’s promises and what he wanted of them.

That was a long time ago, but God has never stopped talking to his people. You can be confident that God values you as much as anyone in the Bible. Because of that, he wants to talk with you, and he does so depending on what’s best at particular times and in particular circumstances.

So, how do we hear from God now?

There are times when God ‘shouts’, talking to people dramatically through visions, dreams and miraculous events, but I think that he normally gets close and uses the ordinary. You may not hear God’s actual voice, but you’ll still hear from him.

In effect, you can hear God whenever you want to, through ordinary everyday actions.

By reading the Bible, you are hearing God’s words.

By praying, talking and listening to that quiet voice in your mind, you are communicating with God.

By talking with other Christians, and hearing their stories, you may hear or pass on God’s words.

Dare I say it, God can talk to you through sermons.

It is by doing these same things, frequently, that you get to know what God’s voice sounds like.

Reading the Bible and contemplating God’s word is a way of hearing God. But finding the time to do that in today’s busy world is not always easy.

“Be still, and know that I am God” says Psalm 46:10.

We know that Jesus was in the habit of spending time alone, praying, even when other people pressed their needs on him. Luke 5:15-16 tells us…

“But the news about Jesus spread all the more widely, and crowds of people came to hear him and be healed from their diseases. But he would go away to lonely places, where he prayed.”

God is always close, but I’d guess that most of you at times seek places where can you find a particular peace and closeness to God. I’d also guess that for many of you that would be outside – in a garden, in the bush, by the sea or on a mountain perhaps.

God speaks to us through his beautiful world. In these situations, you can feel surrounded by God’s creation, but more than that, you can feel being part of it. God cares for, and provides for, everything he created – that includes you and me.

In Psalm 104 verses 24 and 27 we read:

Lord, you made so many things!

How wisely you made them all!

The earth is filled with your creatures.

All of them depend on you

to give them food when they need it.

You give it to them, and they eat it;

You provide food, and they are satisfied.

We know that gardens are special to God – the Garden of Eden was where he spent close times with Adam and Eve. The Garden of Gethsemane was where Jesus found the space to pray in a time of need.

Some of you will be familiar with a poem called God’s Garden, written by Dorothy Gurney in 1882. A popular verse is

The kiss of the sun for pardon,

The song of the birds for mirth,

One is nearer God’s heart in a garden

Than anywhere else on earth.

Since the times of the New Testament, some people have gone to great lengths to find the time and space in which to get closer to God.

There is a small island off the south-west corner of Ireland called Skellig Michael. People go there now for several reasons. It is a wildlife haven, where birdwatchers go to be surrounded by thousands of circling and diving seabirds. The island is also home to strange-looking beehive huts. These stone dwellings housed a small community of monks from the 6th century onwards, in use for several hundred years. Here, away from the normal world of men, the monks would quietly strengthen their relationship with God and listen for his voice.

Each hut has a single door, through which a monk could look out at God’s creation – the sea, the sky, the birds, the storms even. But doors are two way places – to the monks they symbolised the contemplation of their own often dark interior.

Skellig Michael was the filming location for parts of a couple of Starwars movies. Appropriately enough, it stood in for the place, in a galaxy far, far away, that Luke Skywalker exiled himself to, to get away from his old life as a Jedi Knight.

In the 7th century, off the east coast of northern England, a young monk called Cuthbert became prior of Lindisfarne monastery. After ten years, he became worn out by the responsibility, so retreated to a small island nearby.

He did find peace and closeness to God there, but this was spoilt because people still came to find him and seek wisdom and healing. Cuthbert gave up and went back to the monastery for a few more years as abbot, but felt the need for peace and solitude again. He moved back to his island, where he built a small stone house and chapel, and spent the rest of his life there, praying and listening to God. But, tide permitting, people still managed to get to him!

Cuthbert of Lindisfarne and the monks of Skellig Michael went to great lengths to be able to concentrate on listening to God. But these were not the most extreme attempts.

In the late 1300s, in the east of England, Julian of Norwich became an anchorite. An anchorite was someone sealed into a small room, called an ‘anchorhold’, attached to a church – some still survive.

There was not normally a door, but three small windows. The first window let in light. The second window looked out on the outside world – it was used by people seeing to the anchorite’s physical needs, and by visitors seeking spiritual advice and wisdom. A third window, called a squint, had a narrow view of the altar, so the anchorite could see and hear services.

Julian had a severe illness, but after a ‘near-death experience’ she recovered and went on to receive religious visions from God for much of her life. These were compiled into a book called Revelations of Divine Love, which is the earliest surviving English-language book written by a woman.

Many people still appreciate the wisdom in these revelations – God still speaks to them through Julian of Norwich. She experienced two episodes of plague that swept her country, and people have been finding comfort in her words during the time of Covid.

I’m not suggesting that we all need to go to such lengths to find the peace and quiet in which to hear God’s voice. Turning phones off is a good start! Or spending time in the garden, or setting aside a daily quiet time at home, whatever makes you comfortable. These are all good practices, but in a way they are all aimed at putting us in control of when we hear from God. We mustn’t forget that God speaks to us when it suits him. That could be when we are not expecting it, even not wanting it. It may be at time of busyness, or when we are in an uncomfortable situation.

Jonah knew all about that. “One day, the Lord spoke to Jonah son of Amittai. He said, “Go to Nineveh, that great city, and speak out against it.” Jonah heard directly from God, yet he chose to leg it in the opposite direction. Jonah’s ship was caught in a storm and the sailors threw him overboard because he was running from the Lord. Finally, after being swallowed by a large fish, Jonah prayed to God and changed his tune. Back on shore, in a much more comfortable position, God spoke directly to Jonah again, repeating the first message. This time Jonah obeyed.

Think about the first Christmas, when God spoke several times through angels and dreams. An angel told Mary her first child would be God’s, not Joseph’s, her husband-to-be. She could have run away, but instead said “I am the Lord’s servant, may it happen to me as you have said.” An angel spoke to Joseph in a dream and told him about Mary, but he still married her. An angel told some shepherds, who were at work at the time, that they should leave their sheep and go to find the baby Jesus. Which they did.

Later an angel spoke to Joseph in a dream, warning him of Herod’s murderous intentions and telling him to become a refugee. He did, and saved Jesus’s life. In each situation, God took people from comfort to discomfort, but under his watchful eye, they all came out stronger.

Some years ago, I used to help run the children’s programmes at annual New Wine family camps, at El Rancho in Waikanae. This was far from a comfortable environment for me – working with the children was fine, but the whole thing of close living with hundreds of other people for a week was a huge struggle. I am not a gregarious person, and frankly, I hated that aspect of it. Yet that is where God wanted me.

One particular evening, I went to an adult’s session in the main hall, about the Holy Spirit and prayer. It was a hot summer evening, hundreds of people crammed together indoors – this was discomfort piled on top of discomfort. My unease grew as I listened to the words – something didn’t feel right, though I couldn’t put my finger on what. In the end, I just had to leave.

When I left the building I spotted an ice cream van, on the other side of the car park, which drew me like a magnet!

As I approached, the van seemed empty, but I could hear muttering and swearing coming from inside. I soon learnt that the . . . ice cream dispensing machine wasn’t working. I also learnt that the ice cream man thought he was wasting his time anyway, there were no customers in sight – apart from me, and I was out of luck. “Where is everyone?” he asked. I pointed to the hall across the car park. “What are they in there for?” “Learning about prayer” I said, without thinking. There was a pause. “Well, they could . . . pray for me then” the frustrated ice cream man said.

Now, another thing that makes me uncomfortable is praying out loud for complete strangers, but a quiet voice in my head said “Do it”. And I did.

At that moment, three things happened.

The ice cream machine started up

The doors to the hall opened and several hundred people headed towards us

The ice cream man’s mouth dropped open, without swearing.

Whether God was giving a lesson to the ice cream man or me, I don’t know.

But I did enjoy a free ice cream!

The circumstances of hearing from God are going to be different for everyone, and they are personal. I’ve shared something that happened to me because God can speak to us through the experiences of others. If this encourages you to tell someone you know about your experiences hearing from God, that’s great, but I’m not setting you a challenge.

If you are in a comfortable situation, thank God for that gift. But also expect him to turn your comfort to discomfort, to encourage you to ask him for strength and guidance. Treat discomfort as a learning experience!

I’ve only touched on a few aspects of hearing from God. Perhaps you’d like to reflect on:

Why you want to hear from God.

How do you recognise God’s voice?

Are you open to whatever God has to say?

Are you ready to carry out what God tells you to do?

Choose Life

Scripture: Deuteronomy 30:15-20

Video Link: https://youtu.be/U7W0WavoDT4

Structure:

  • Introduction
  • What is life?
  • Choose life
  • Conclusion

Introduction:

Good morning everyone.

In the 1970’s there was a game show on TV called “It’s in the Bag”. Can anyone remember the name of the host? [Wait] That’s right, Selwyn Toogood, not to be confused with Jon Toogood, the lead singer of Shihad.

It’s in the Bag contestants got to choose between the money or the bag. They knew how much money they would get but they didn’t know what was in the bag. The bag might contain a TV or a pencil, a trip to Fiji or a paper clip, so it was a bit of a risk. The audience loved it when a contestant chose the bag.

Today we conclude our series in Deuteronomy by focusing on chapter 30, verses 15-20. We haven’t covered everything in Deuteronomy but given we started this series in May and Christmas is now upon us, it seems like a good time to finish.

In today’s reading, Moses asks the people of Israel to make a choice. Not the money or the bag, but rather life or death. Unlike the contestants in the game show, the Israelites knew exactly what they would get with either choice. From verse 15 of Deuteronomy 30 we read… 

15 See, I set before you today life and prosperity, death and destruction. 16 For I command you today to love the Lord your God, to walk in obedience to him, and to keep his commands, decrees and laws; then you will live and increase, and the Lord your God will bless you in the land you are entering to possess.

17 But if your heart turns away and you are not obedient, and if you are drawn away to bow down to other gods and worship them, 18 I declare to you this day that you will certainly be destroyed. You will not live long in the land you are crossing the Jordan to enter and possess. 19 This day I call the heavens and the earth as witnesses against you that I have set before you life and death, blessings and curses. Now choose life, so that you and your children may live 20 and that you may love the Lord your God, listen to his voice, and hold fast to him. For the Lord is your life, and he will give you many years in the land he swore to give to your fathers, Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.

May the Spirit of Jesus illuminate God’s word for us.

What is life?

In this reading Moses encourages the people to choose life. But what does Moses mean by life? Many people think of life in physical or material terms. So if you still have a pulse, if you are still breathing, then you have life. And while physical vitality is one aspect of life, there is more to it than that.

In verse 20 of Deuteronomy 30, Moses says: For the Lord God is your life. This tells us that life is more than just breathing and having a pulse. Life is essentially about our connection with God. In other words, the essence of life is right relationship with God, who is the one true source and giver of life.

We might think of it like this. The life of a light bulb is its connection to a power source. If we are the light bulb, then God is our power source. Our breath and our pulse, our hope and our joy, depend on God.

Or, if you think of a lake, then the life of a lake is its connection to the river which feeds the lake. If we are the lake, then God is one who provides rivers of grace and tributaries of truth to fill up our soul.

Or take a car as another example. The life of a car is its connection to the road. Without a road to drive on, the car is stuck and can’t fulfil its purpose.

If we are the car, then God enables us to fulfil our purpose. He provides the right road for us to take, as well as places to recharge or refuel along the way. For ancient Israel, the Law of Moses (summed up in the ten commandments) was the right road. For us today, Jesus is the way, the truth and the life.    

The life of a tree is its connection to the soil. The tree gets the water and nutrients it needs from the soil. If we are the tree, then God is the ground of our being, providing stability and all that our soul needs to grow and be fruitful.

The life of planet earth is its connection to the sun. The sun provides a centre of gravity around which the earth can orbit with regularity. The sun also provides just the right amount of light and warmth to sustain physical life on earth. If we are the earth, then Jesus is the sun whom our life revolves around and on whom our life depends. 

The life of a marriage is the couple’s connection to one another. The better the quality of the connection (the better the intimacy) between husband and wife, the healthier their marriage will be. The community of God’s people is the bride of Christ.    

The life of a baby is their connection with parents. A baby is completely dependent on their parents for survival. If we are the baby, then God is our Father and Mother, feeding, protecting and loving us. The Lord meets all our needs; physical, emotional and spiritual.   

This idea that life is connection with God is found right at the beginning of the Bible. In Genesis 2, the Lord God says to Adam & Eve: You are free to eat from any tree in the garden; but you must not eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, for when you eat it you will surely die.

Adam and Eve did eat the forbidden fruit but they did not die physically until many years later. Their heart kept beating for a long time. This shows us that life and death is not just a matter of breathing.

The death Adam & Eve experienced, after eating the fruit, was separation from God. They were cast out of the garden and survival became much harder. After losing their close connection to God, relationships suffered and before long the children of Adam & Eve were killing each other.

In John 15, Jesus tells the parable of the vine saying: I am the vine, you are the branches. Whoever remains in me will bear much fruit; for you can do nothing without me. This parable tells us quite plainly that life is connection with Jesus. We need Jesus like a branch needs the trunk of a tree.

You get the point. Life isn’t just about breathing or having a pulse. Life is connection with God. And this is good news because it means that life is not necessarily over when we stop breathing and our heart fails. If we are connected to God, through Jesus, then we will be raised to eternal life.

Eternal life is not primarily measured in units of time. Eternal life is more like a quality connection with God, intimacy with God, a relationship which sustains joy and vitality and abundant life forever.

Choosing Life:

Okay, given that life is connection with God, how do we choose life?

Sometimes we understand what something is by its opposite. In verses 17-18 of Deuteronomy 30, Moses paints a picture of what it looks like to choose death and destruction. He gives this warning…

17 But if your heart turns away and you are not obedient, and if you are drawn away to bow down to other gods and worship them, 18 I declare to you this day that you will certainly be destroyed. You will not live long in the land you are crossing the Jordan to enter and possess.

If idolatry and disobedience leads to death and destruction, then choosing life equates to keeping the Law of Moses. That is, following the ten commandments, the greatest of which is the command to love the Lord your God and stay loyal to him. 

When you are driving a car, you make choices all the time. How fast to drive, when to slow down and give way, when to pass, which lane you will drive in and so on. The road rules are there to help people make good choices so we can drive safely and reach our destination without incident.

If you think of your soul as a car, then the heart of your soul is like the driver of the car. The heart is where choices are made; how fast you will drive yourself, whether you will keep to your lane or take a wrong turn and come off the road.

God’s law is like the road rules. It is there to help us make good choices and keep our soul on the right path so we (and our neighbours) all reach our destination safely.

When we become a Christian we talk about giving our heart to Jesus. What we mean is asking Jesus to sit in the driver’s seat of our soul, letting Jesus have the wheel. Inviting his Spirit to guide our decisions so that we choose life.

Sadly, the Israelites disobeyed the rules God put in place to protect them. Their hearts turned away. They made choices to run after other gods and got off track. Eventually, after many centuries of Israel’s unfaithfulness, God allowed the Babylonians to destroy Jerusalem and carry the survivors into exile.  

Looking at it more positively, Moses offers three things that go hand in hand with choosing life and a connection with God. From verses 19 & 20 we read…

…Now choose life, so that you and your children may live 20 and that you may love the Lord your God, listen to his voice, and hold fast to him. For the Lord is your life…

Love, listen and hold fast to God; this is how we choose life. Not that these are three separate things. More like three different ways of saying the same thing.

Love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul and with all your strength. This is first and greatest commandment. Much of Deuteronomy is an exposition on this theme.

Listening to the Lord’s voice means paying attention to His word by obeying his Law and heeding his prophets. If you love God, you will listen to his voice and do what he says.

Love and obedience are two sides of the same coin, where God is concerned. In verse 16, Moses highlights the close relationship between love and obedience when he says: Love the Lord your God, walk in his ways and keep his commands, decrees and laws.

In his letter to the Romans, the apostle Paul talks about the obedience of faith. We are saved (we choose life) by putting our faith in Christ. And the fruit of faith, in Paul’s thinking, is obedience to the teachings of Jesus.       

Hold fast is about loyal commitment to Yahweh, in good times and bad. It’s about cleaving to God like a husband and wife cleave to each other.

As William Shakespeare famously wrote: Love is not love which alters when it alteration finds or bends with the remover to remove. O no! It is an ever-fixed mark that looks on tempests and is never shaken… Love alters not with his brief hours and weeks, but bears it out even to the edge of doom.

In other words, love holds fast, it does not change when the going gets tough. Love is loyal or it is not really love at all (like in Nicholas Sparks’ movie, The Notebook).  

One of my favourite parts of the Christmas story is when Joseph finds out that his fiancé Mary is pregnant with someone else’s baby. The law of Moses allowed Joseph to publicly humiliate Mary and even have her stoned.

But Joseph loved Mary and his love was true; it did not alter when it alteration finds. In other words, Joseph’s love for Mary did not change when he discovered Mary did not appear to love him. Joseph went beyond the letter of the law to find its spirit. In Matthew 1, verse 19 we read…

Because Joseph was a righteous man and did not want to expose Mary to public disgrace, he had in mind to divorce her quietly. 

By choosing this path of action, Joseph chose life for Mary. Little did Joseph realise that Mary was pregnant by the Holy Spirit. Once the angel told Joseph this in a dream, Joseph had the faith to believe and take Mary as his wife. Love believes all things.

Love, listen and hold fast to the Lord your God; this is how we choose life for ourselves and for others. Joseph loved God and Mary. He listened to God’s message through the angel and he obeyed, holding fast to Mary. 

Joseph’s loyal love for Mary stands as a pattern for us and illustrates what Jesus meant when he said: Whoever finds his life will lose it and whoever loses his life for my sake will find it.  

Sometimes choosing life requires us to make a difficult choice. Obedience to God is not always pleasant or easy. This is where faith is tested. For Jesus, choosing life (paradoxically) meant submitting to death on a cross. But God honoured Jesus’ loving obedience by raising his Son from the dead.

Conclusion:

What difficult choices are you facing this Christmas? What does choosing life look like for you?

Let us pray…

Father God, we thank you for Jesus, through whom we can choose life with you. Give us the grace to love, listen and hold fast to Jesus, in good times and bad. Help us to go the distance in your will and for your glory. Amen.   

Questions for discussion or reflection:

What stands out for you in reading this Scripture and/or in listening to the sermon? Why do you think this stood out to you?

  • Imagine yourself on the TV show “It’s in the Bag”. What would you choose, the money or the bag? At what point do you take the money?
  •  What is life?
  • In Deuteronomy 30:20 Moses says: “The Lord is your life”. What implications does this have for when our physical bodies die?
  • What three (related) things go hand in hand with choosing life? How might we apply these three things in our daily lives?
  • What difficult choices are you facing this Christmas? What does choosing life look like for you?

Release

Scripture: Deuteronomy 15:1-11

Video Link: https://youtu.be/-uhaEZAldG0

Structure:

  • Introduction
  • Release for relationship
  • Release for peace
  • Conclusion

Introduction:

Good morning everyone.

What do you think the average mortgage is for a first home buyer in New Zealand today? $200,000? $300,000? $500,000 or maybe $600,000? [Wait]

If you guessed between $500,000 and $600,000, then you were spot on. The average mortgage for a first home buyer in New Zealand is around $578,000. That equates to a monthly repayment of more than $3,700 over 25 years, the better part of $45,000 per annum.

Today we continue our series in Deuteronomy, focusing on chapter 15. In this passage Moses talks about debt and the relationship between borrowers and lenders in ancient Israel. From Deuteronomy 15, verses 1-11 we read… 

At the end of every seven years you must cancel debts. This is how it is to be done: Every creditor shall cancel the loan he has made to his fellow Israelite. He shall not require payment from his fellow Israelite or brother, because the Lord’s time for cancelling debts has been proclaimed. You may require payment from a foreigner, but you must cancel any debt your brother owes you. However, there need be no poor among you, for in the land the Lord your God is giving you to possess as your inheritance, he will richly bless you, if only you fully obey the Lord your God and are careful to follow all these commands I am giving you today. For the Lord your God will bless you as he has promised, and you will lend to many nations but will borrow from none. You will rule over many nations but none will rule over you. If there is a poor man among your brothers in any of the towns of the land the Lord your God is giving you, do not be hard-hearted or tight-fisted toward your poor brother.  Rather, be open-handed and freely lend him whatever he needs. Be careful not to harbour this wicked thought: “The seventh year, the year for cancelling debts, is near,” so that you do not show ill will toward your needy brother and give him nothing. He may then appeal to the Lord against you, and you will be found guilty of sin. 10 Give generously to him and do so without a grudging heart; then because of this the Lord your God will bless you in all your work and in everything you put your hand to. 11 There will always be poor people in the land. Therefore, I command you to be open-handed toward your brothers and towards the poor and needy in your land.

May the Spirit of Jesus illuminate God’s word for us.

In this Scripture passage Moses instructs the people to release each other from financial debts every seven years. Cancelling debts is at the heart of loving your neighbour as you love yourself. The people are to release for relationship and release for peace.   

Release for relationship:

Do you think of time as linear, going in a straight line? Or do you think of time as cyclical, going in cycles?

Time can be thought of either way I guess. The seasons of the year: spring, summer, autumn and winter are a classic example of cyclical time. The earth revolving around the sun also illustrates cyclical time.

But we are not left untouched by each orbit of the sun. We come from a past that we cannot change. We are affected by the present moment and we are moving towards a future which is unknown. Linear time.

Perhaps time is both cyclical and linear, moving forward in a cyclical way.

Ancient Israel had a very definite cycle to restore and support their life together. Every seven days they stopped work and rested, everyone on the same day. Every seven years they took a Sabbatical, when they let the land lie fallow, not growing any crops. And every 50 years they celebrated a Jubilee, when ancestral lands were returned to their tribal owners.

The Sabbath cycles provided release. Release from work. Release from debt and release both from the trap of wealth and the trap of poverty. In verse 1 of Deuteronomy 15 we read…

At the end of every seven years you must cancel debts.

Ancient Israel didn’t have a banking system like we do today. They didn’t get a $600,000 mortgage to buy their first home and then pay it off over 25 years. They didn’t need to. They simply built a house on family land using natural building materials close by.

Nevertheless, there would inevitably be times when something went wrong. Perhaps the main bread winner in the family got sick and couldn’t work. Or maybe your crop failed or your ox died and had to be replaced.

When misfortune struck, and you needed to find a way to feed your family, you might approach a fellow Israelite for a personal loan. No interest was charged on this micro loan, although some form of security might be offered. You simply paid back the loan when you could afford it.

The difficulty is that when you paid back the loan you might still be short and so you would have to borrow more money from someone else. Being stuck in poverty is like treading water in the open sea. It takes all your energy just to keep your head above the waves. What you need is someone to lift you out of the water and give you a boat so you can make it back to dry land.

Giving someone an interest free loan saved them from treading water. Cancelling that debt put their feet on dry land.  

Now obviously there was greater risk in lending to someone in the sixth year, when the seven-year cycle was coming to an end. So the temptation was to avoid lending money to anyone at that point, in case they ran out of time to repay you. Moses has this to say…

Be careful not to harbour this wicked thought: “The seventh year, the year for cancelling debts, is near,” so that you do not show ill will toward your needy brother and give him nothing.

That phrase, ill will, is literally, evil eye. So the meaning is something like, ‘do not give your needy brother the evil eye’. In other words, do not resent your needy brother for asking for help or being an inconvenience. Do not avoid him when you see him coming.

The other thing we notice here is the word brother. Moses keeps referring to the poor who borrow money as brothers. We hear the word brother about six times in as many verses. This is not to exclude women. We could say brother or sister.

The point is, your creditors are not just a number in your ledger. They are fellow human beings. They are family and they are of special concern to Yahweh. You release people from their debts for the sake of the relationship.   

The economy must give way to the neighbourhood. Relationship capital is more valuable than cash in the bank.

Israel’s inter-personal relationships are not to be defined by debt or money. Their relationships are to be defined by their covenant loyalty to Yahweh, by their shared history and by God’s blessing in the land. 

God released Israel from slavery in Egypt and gave them a fresh start in the land of plenty. Likewise, the people of Israel should release their brothers and sisters from debt and give them a fresh start so they don’t spend the rest of their life treading water.  

Forgiveness is another word for release. When we release someone from the debt they owe us, we are forgiving that debt. We are letting the matter go and not pursuing it further. The opposite of forgiveness is resentment. Resentment is when we hold on to the debt in anger and self-righteousness.  

Jesus does not want us to suffer in that way. Nor does he want us to be defined by debt or money. He wants the community of his followers to be defined by their love for one another. And forgiveness (releasing others from what they owe) is the true test of love.    

In Matthew 18, Peter asks Jesus, how many times should I forgive my brother when he sins against me? Up to seven times? Peter thinks he is being generous. But Jesus lets the air out his balloon saying, not seven times but seventy times seven. Forgive without limit in other words.

Then Jesus tells the parable of the unforgiving servant. The one about the man who owed his master millions and was forgiven his enormous debt simply because he asked, but who then refused to forgive the debt of a fellow servant who owed him far less by comparison.

Needless to say the story did not end well for the unforgiving servant. Not only did the unforgiving man ruin his relationships with his fellow servants, he also ruined his relationship with the king, his master.

It’s like that with us. If we don’t forgive others, if we don’t release them from the debts they owe us, then we end up ruining our relationships with everyone, including God our master. Forgiveness can be a painful and costly process, but at the end of the day it always costs more not to forgive.

We release others for the sake of relationship and for our own mental well-being (our own peace). As the saying goes, ‘to refuse to forgive someone is to let that person live rent free in your head’. That is its own kind of torture.

The good news is you don’t have to wait seven years to forgive. You can release others whenever you want. We release for relationship and we release for peace.

Release for peace:

Take a moment now to clench your fists, like this. Now imagine trying to tie your shoe laces with your hands clenched. Or imagine trying to eat your dinner or catch a ball or give someone a hug or a helping hand. Not sure you could do any of that particularly well. About the only thing you can do with clenched fists is punch someone.   

The longer and tighter you keep your fists clenched the stiffer your fingers become. Okay, now you can release your hands. Don’t want you to hurt yourself or anyone else.

From verse 7 of Deuteronomy 15, Moses says…

If there is a poor man among your brothers in any of the towns of the land the Lord your God is giving you, do not be hard-hearted or tight-fisted toward your poor brother. Rather, be open-handed and freely lend him whatever he needs…

Now it should be noted that Moses is talking about giving according to your means. If you are scraping by on the bones of your backside, then you don’t need to go beyond your means or get into debt to help someone else. Giving, in Deuteronomy, is in accordance with what you have received from God. You are not expected to give what you don’t have.

What we notice, in these verses, is that we give with our heart and our hands. In other words, we need the right attitude in how we think and feel about the poor (that’s the heart part) and we need the right action in how we treat the poor (that’s the hand part).

Listening is key to having the right heart attitude and therefore the right action. Moses is telling the people to help the poor in their own neighbourhood, who they have probably known for years. In that context you could plainly see your neighbour’s need and you would know they were not playing you.  

The equivalent today would be helping a friend, family member, work colleague or fellow Christian who is in need. Maybe their hot water cylinder has to be replaced or they need new tyres for their car, but they can’t afford it, so you lend them the money to get it fixed.

That being said, our context today is a bit different from the context Moses had in mind. We don’t always know our neighbours that well and we have even less relationship with the poor and homeless. So when someone does approach us for money they are usually a stranger and we may have no way of knowing whether they are scamming us or not. 

Most of us here are middle class Christians who probably feel some degree of guilt when we see someone begging on the street, like we are not doing enough. Acting out of guilt to make ourselves feel better is not ideal and may not lead to a good outcome.  

Verse 8 talks about lending what the poor need. So two good questions to ask are: what is needed here and is it in my power to lend what is needed? We don’t want to assume to know what is best for the other person.

Yes, you may have wisdom and knowledge to offer but the people you wish to help also have a few clues. The poor generally know what they need better than anyone else. So those who are able to lend a hand should do so with humility and a listening heart.

Of course, listening to the poor, getting to know them, takes time; time we don’t always have. Often it’s just easier to blindly give some money.

 Jesus had this to say about giving to the poor…

“So when you give to the needy, do not announce it with trumpets, as the hypocrites do in the synagogues and on the streets, to be honoured by others… But when you give to the needy, do not let your left hand know what your right hand is doing, so that your giving may be in secret. Then your Father, who sees what is done in secret, will reward you.

Jesus is warning against using the poor to make ourselves look good. That just humiliates the poor. God delights in undercover good deeds, done with a pure heart and without an ego trip.   

In verse 10, of Deuteronomy 15, Moses goes on to say…

10 Give generously to him [your brother in need] and do so without a grudging heart; then because of this the Lord your God will bless you in all your work and in everything you put your hand to.

These words need a bit of understanding. Some people have used this verse (and others like it) to preach a kind of prosperity doctrine or cargo cult. They might interpret it as a get rich scheme, along the lines of the more you give the more wealth and health God will bless you with personally.

But I don’t think it works like that. The main motivation here is not to benefit yourself. The main motivation is to help those in need, trusting that God will take care of you.

Besides, we can never put God under obligation. God won’t allow himself to be manipulated. God acts freely.

This is how it works. When debts are not forgiven, the rich grow richer and the poor grow more desperate. A dangerous divide develops between rich and poor and both sides become fearful of each other, unable to relate in a right way. Decent people are reduced to despair or violence. Crime goes up, anger and hurt boil over. The fabric of the neighbourhood disintegrates. Peace is lost and what you have worked for is undone.

But when debts are forgiven, right relationship is strengthened through acts of kindness. The gap between rich and poor is closed. Bridges of communication and understanding are built. Those who have forgiven debts have nothing to fear from the poor, while those who have had their debts cancelled have no cause for despair or rage. The fabric of the neighbourhood is enriched. Peace is restored and what you have worked for is blessed, it prospers.

Now, when we talk about peace, we don’t just mean the absence of conflict. Peace (or shalom), in a Jewish understanding, is the presence of abundant life, wholeness and wellbeing. Peace in your heart and mind, yes, but also peace in your relationships. A community in which everyone has more than enough. A life giving culture in your neighbourhood that money can’t buy.       

So the blessing God gives, when people forgive each other, is the blessing of a better world in which to raise your kids and grow old. It makes sense to release people from their debts because release allows relationships to breath and it fosters peace. We release for relationship and we release for peace.

In many ways I’m preaching to the choir. I imagine most of you here are open-hearted and open-handed in your giving and forgiving, so I don’t want to labour the point.

Conclusion:

But I do want to point to Jesus, because it is through faith in Jesus that we experience the peace of release. In Luke 4, Jesus said of himself and his mission:

The Spirit of the Lord is on me, because he has anointed me to proclaim good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim release for the prisoners and recovery of sight for the blind, to set the oppressed free…

Jesus came to release us from a spiritual debt we could never repay by ourselves. Jesus came to set us free from the power of sin and death, so that we can enjoy peace in our relationship with God and peace with each other.

What is it that binds you? What is it that taxes your peace? Do you have someone living rent free in your head? What release do you need?

May the Lord set us free to be a blessing to others. Amen.

Questions for discussion or reflection:

What stands out for you in reading this Scripture and/or in listening to the sermon? Why do you think this stood out to you?

  • Do you think of time as linear or cyclical? What cycles did ancient Israel have to support and restore their life together? What cycles do we (today) have to support and restore our life together?
  • Have you ever been oppressed by poverty or debt? How did you feel? What did you do? In what ways did God help you?
  • Why did Moses instruct the Israelites to cancel debts every seven years? Why do we need to forgive?
  • How are the relationships of God’s people to be defined? What should not define our relationships?   
  • Giving to the poor needs to be done with a right heart and hands. What is a right attitude (way to think / feel) towards the poor? What is a right action to take with the poor? 
  • Discuss / reflect on Deuteronomy 15:10. How is this verse best understood?
  • What is it that binds you? What is it that taxes your peace? Do you have someone living rent free in your head? What release do you need?

The Prophet

Scripture: Deuteronomy 18:9-22

Video Link: https://youtu.be/auVnpWoDedM

Structure:

  • Introduction
  • Choose a future with hope
  • Listen to God’s prophet
  • Conclusion

Introduction:

Good morning everyone.

What would you give to know the future?

If you knew exactly when an earthquake or fire was going to destroy your property, you would get insurance cover for that period, but you wouldn’t bother getting cover for the rest of the time.

Likewise, if you knew someone was going to be involved in a car accident tomorrow, you would hide their keys and keep them home for a day. 

What would you give to know the future?

Today we continue our series in Deuteronomy, focusing on chapter 18. In this passage Moses deals with the question of how God’s people are to manage themselves in the face of an unknown future. From Deuteronomy 18, verses 9-22 we read… 

When you enter the land the Lord your God is giving you, do not learn to imitate the detestable ways of the nations there. 10 Let no one be found among you who sacrifices their son or daughter in the fire, who practices divination or sorcery, interprets omens, engages in witchcraft, 11 or casts spells, or who is a medium or spiritist or who consults the dead. 12 Anyone who does these things is detestable to the Lord; because of these same detestable practices the Lord your God will drive out those nations before you. 13 You must remain completely loyal to the Lord your God.  14 The nations you will dispossess listen to those who practice sorcery or divination. But as for you, the Lord your God has not permitted you to do so. 15 The Lord your God will raise up for you a prophet like me from among you, from your fellow Israelites. You must listen to him. 16 For this is what you asked of the Lord your God at Horeb on the day of the assembly when you said, “Let us not hear the voice of the Lord our God nor see this great fire anymore, or we will die.” 17 The Lord said to me: “What they say is good. 18 I will raise up for them a prophet like you from among their fellow Israelites, and I will put my words in his mouth. He will tell them everything I command him. 19 I myself will call to account anyone who does not listen to my words that the prophet speaks in my name. 20 But a prophet who presumes to speak in my name anything I have not commanded, or a prophet who speaks in the name of other gods, is to be put to death.” 21 You may say to yourselves, “How can we know when a message has not been spoken by the Lord?” 22 If what a prophet proclaims in the name of the Lord does not take place or come true, that is a message the Lord has not spoken. That prophet has spoken presumptuously, so do not be alarmed.

May the Spirit of Jesus illuminate God’s word for us.

There are two halves to today’s message: The first half is about choosing a future with hope. And the second half is about listening to God’s prophet. Let’s start by choosing a future with hope. 

Choose a future with hope:

Another question for you to consider: Is the future fixed?

There are some who believe the future is fixed and there’s nothing we can do to change it. These people think the future is up to fate.

Believing the future is set in stone comes with a number of problems. For one thing, it undermines hope and creates a sense of apathy or despair in the person who thinks this way.

If you really believe the future is pre-determined and there’s nothing you can do about it, then you will be inclined to care less. A fixed future is devoid of any ethical considerations. If I can’t change the future, then my actions in the present don’t matter. I may as well do whatever makes me feel good. You become reckless and lose your sense of responsibility. A rebel without a cause.

At the other extreme, there are those who don’t believe the future is fixed at all. They think we create our own future. These people have a strong belief in themselves and their own abilities. They tend to be quite driven or intense.

If you really believe the future depends entirely on you, then that’s a lot of pressure. That comes with heaps of worry and not much peace. Human beings need some freedom but total freedom is a terrifying thing. If you go sky diving you don’t want to be free of your parachute, that would be disastrous.  

The person who believes the future is totally on them tends to take on too much responsibility. They don’t leave room for God to do something unexpected.

Just as there is no hope in thinking it is all up to fate, there is no real hope in thinking it is all up to you either. Because when you fail yourself, and everyone does fail eventually, you have no safety net.  

We are asking the question: is the future fixed? Somewhere in the middle of the spectrum are those who answer both ‘yes’ and ‘no’. Some things are fixed but not everything. We can have some influence over the future, but there are other things we have no control over and simply have to accept.

Hope is the capacity to imagine a better future, a good future, the best is yet to come. If you believe the choices you make matter in shaping the future, but that it doesn’t depend entirely on you, that ultimately God will work it all for good, then you have hope.

There are of course those who might say, I don’t know whether the future is fixed or not. That might be because they are too lazy to wrestle with the hard questions. Or it might be because the future has ambushed them and they are not sure of anything at the moment.    

Deuteronomy believes that ultimately God is in control of the meta-narrative of human history, but the choices human beings make still influence the course the future takes. God uses our choices in shaping the future. To obey God, in faith, is to choose abundant life. To receive Christ, in faith, is to choose a heavenly future, beyond this life.  

In verses 10-11 of Deuteronomy 18, Moses lists several things the Israelites are not to do. No divination, no magic, no witchcraft, no child sacrifice, no consulting the dead and so on. This list illustrates the sorts of things people sometimes do in order to try and know the future or even control the future.

There are still people today, in New Zealand, who do this kind of stuff. People who try to predict the future by reading tarot cards or tea leaves or the stars. Or, maybe they try to control the future by casting spells or sacrificing the wellbeing of their children in order to pursue a love affair or some other fantasy.

These people either believe the future is fixed and cannot change or they believe they create their own future. Either way, their hope is not in God. The Lord hates all this witchy poo stuff because it is based on a lie and it destroys people’s capacity for hope. It’s takes away people’s freedom. It is not good for the human soul.

There may be some here who have dabbled in this sort of thing, or maybe you’ve got in over your head. Perhaps you were at a fair ground one day and out of curiosity you got your palm read by Madam Zelda. Or maybe you were grieving for a loved one and went to a medium to try and contact them. Or perhaps you and your friends had too much to drink one night and tried a séance. Or maybe you’ve done worse.   

Does this mean you are excluded from God’s people forever? Is there no hope for you? Well, not necessarily.

Your future is not yet set in concrete. You have some influence over your future. You can choose not to do that sort of thing anymore. You can choose life and trust your future to Jesus. God, who loves you very much, has the power to deliver you from your past.  

The message of Deuteronomy is summed up in verse 13, which reads…

You must remain completely loyal to the Lord your God.

We must not divide our loyalty between God and anything else. We can’t say, in God we trust, and then rely on horoscopes or gazing into a crystal ball. 

Verse 13 is another way of saying, Love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul and with all your strength. This is how we choose life and a future with hope for ourselves.

Okay, that’s first part of our message, choose a future with hope. The second part is about listening to God’s prophet. God, in his grace, provides an alternative to airy fairy magic. God is willing to reveal the future through his chosen spokesperson.  

Listen to God’s prophet:

In verse 15 of Deuteronomy 18, Moses says: The Lord your God will raise up for you a prophet like me from among you, from your fellow Israelites. You must listen to him.                                                          

Israel did not need to go to a medium or a spiritist to find out the future. God sent his own messenger. In fact, God raised up a series of prophets throughout the Old Testament who spoke His messages to the people as they needed it. Men and women like Samuel, Deborah, Nathan, Isaiah, Huldah, Micah, Jeremiah, Amos, Ezekiel, Daniel and so on. These prophets had a special role in keeping the nation accountable to the Law and their covenant with Yahweh.

In a healthy democracy the government’s powers are not concentrated in one person or one institution. Rather, power is separated, so the people who make the law are not the same as the people who enforce the law or decide disputes.

Traditionally, a democracy has three official institutions:

There is the legislature, which is the people who make the laws (for example, our Members of Parliament).

Then there is the judiciary, which are the people who adjudicate disputes (the courts and the judges).

And thirdly, there is the executive, which are the people who enforce the law (that would be the police).

There is another (unofficial) institution known as the fourth estate. We call it the news media; that is, journalists or the press. It is the job of the news media to report the facts concerning parliamentary, police and court proceedings, in a balanced and unbiased way, keeping the governing authorities accountable

In some ways our modern democracy, with its four estates, has its roots in the structure of government Moses prescribed for Israel. Yahweh (and Moses) recommended a separation of power in government.

Yahweh gave the Law through Moses. Judges were appointed in a democratic way to adjudicate disputes between people. And the Levites and priests had a role in enforcing the law.

The king (as we heard last week) was an optional extra. It wasn’t his job to make the law. His main job was to be a good example in keeping the law. He might also support the judges and the priests in making sure justice was done.

But it was the role of the prophets to be the fourth estate. The prophets were like credible investigative journalists who reported the facts in order to keep the king, the judges and the priests accountable to God’s law. Staying loyal to Yahweh was the key to life and a future with hope.

Now, in using this analogy, I do not mean to imply that journalists today are the contemporary prophets of our world. God can choose whoever he wants to be his spokesperson.

We might also think of God’s prophet as a doctor, diagnosing illness in the nation. If you have diabetes, you don’t want the doctor fudging your results and saying you will be fine. You need to understand clearly what the problem is and how best to manage your health going forward, so you have a future with hope.

Likewise, if God’s people are losing their saltiness and conforming to the pattern of this world, then they need God’s prophet to diagnose their spiritual illness and prescribe the right treatment to restore them.

Asking the prophet for advice was sort of like phoning a friend. If something was amiss and the king or the priests or the judges were unsure what to do next, they could inquire of God through his chosen prophet.

Of course, the prophet also passed on messages from God when no one had asked for his input. Like when the prophet Nathan confronted David after the king had murdered Uriah and committed adultery with Bathsheba. 

God’s prophet was a friend to Israel, but he (or she) was not in the king’s pocket. The prophet was a step removed, operating outside official government channels, able to give an unpopular minority report.

In verse 18 of Deuteronomy 18, the Lord says concerning his prophet, I will put my words in his mouth. This naturally raises questions for us: how did God do that? How did the Lord communicate with the prophets?

Reading through the Old Testament we notice the Lord spoke to the prophets in a variety of ways. It appears that God spoke to Moses and Samuel in a clear, audible voice. Other prophets, like Daniel & Ezekiel, received dreams or visions. Some may have interacted with angels. Elijah heard God not in earthquake, wind or fire but in a still small voice, like a whisper.

I’m not a prophet. I can’t tell you what the future holds specifically. I don’t know when the war in Ukraine will end. Nevertheless, there are times when I sense the word of the Lord has come to me. Not in an audible voice as such. More like a thought planted in my mind.

I know the thought is not my own because it is a better quality thought than the usual rubbish that flows through my brain and it is not a thought I’ve had before. It hasn’t come from any book I’ve read or any TV show I’ve watched.

It is new to me and it feels whole. It fits for the circumstances I’m in. Like the missing piece of a jigsaw puzzle, it creates connections and makes sense of other things. God’s word brings order to my thinking.

When the word of the Lord comes, I have to take myself off somewhere quiet and write, because writing helps me to listen to the virgin thought. 

There are times when I’m preaching in church and a stillness comes over the congregation. A kind of holy hush. (I’m sure it happens for other preachers too.) The traffic noise dies down, the rustling of lolly wrappers ceases and people stop coughing or whispering among themselves. I love those moments. In that stillness it seems to me the word of God is at work among us, in our hearts.

I believe the word of the Lord can come to any Christian believer, just not always in the same way. God made us with the capacity to receive his word, to sense his presence touching our spirit.

We cannot control when or how the word of the Lord comes but when it does come we need to pause and listen. Receive it into ourselves.

I wonder how the word of the Lord comes to you.

As God’s spokesperson, the Lord’s chosen prophet held quite a bit of influence in Israel. So there would inevitably be a few pretenders for the role, despite the severe punishment for taking the Lord’s name in vain. How then could you tell who was a bona fide, God authorised prophet and who was a fake? Well, there were three main tests…

Firstly, a true prophet of God speaks in the name of Yahweh and not in the name of some other god. Secondly, the message they preach comes true. And thirdly, they don’t say anything that contradicts the Law of Moses.

The first test, speaking in the name of Yahweh, is the test of clarity. Reading tea leaves or interpreting the entrails of a bird are pretty ambiguous and unclear signs. In contrast to this, the Lord’s prophets are clear about who they represent and what their message is.

Although the poetry and signs of the prophets of old may seem strange to us, their metaphors were not difficult for the people of that time to decipher, even if the prophet’s message was difficult to accept.

John the Baptist, the last of the Old Testament prophets, was very clear in his message of repentance, calling the religious leaders of his day a brood of vipers. Despite this clarity, many religious leaders hardened their hearts and chose not to believe John’s testimony concerning Jesus.

The second test, proclaiming a message that comes true, indicates the prophet’s words are verifiable. God’s messages are ‘evidenced based’, in other words. The truth of God’s word is worked out in human history.

We know Jeremiah was legit because his message came true in history. While other self-proclaimed prophets at the time were saying, “Don’t be afraid of Babylon, God will save Jerusalem”, Jeremiah was giving the very unpopular message of, “Don’t resist Babylon, you can’t win”. God upheld Jeremiah’s words because Jeremiah’s words were actually God’s words.     

Centuries later, Jesus (like Jeremiah) wept over Jerusalem when he could see history about to repeat itself. In Luke 19, Jesus predicted the Romans laying siege to the holy city and destroying it. This happened, as Jesus said, in AD 70.

There is a small catch with the verifiable test though. Sometimes true prophets are killed before their predictions can be verified.

The third test of a true prophet, that their message does not contradict the Law of Moses, is the test of consistency. God’s word is consistent. God does not contradict himself.

Jesus criticised the religious leaders for making their man made rules more important than God’s Law. The Pharisees had become so bogged down in the details they couldn’t see the wood for the trees. They were more loyal to their own tradition than they were to God himself and so, like the true prophet he is, Jesus called them out on their blindness.

As you have probably deduced by now, Jesus is the ultimate prophet to succeed Moses. Jesus fulfils the Law and the prophets. Through faith in Jesus, we can know the truth from God and we can choose a future with hope.

Does that mean then, that we have no further need for prophets? Well, no. In his letters to various churches the apostle Paul writes about the gift of prophecy. For Paul it was one of the more important spiritual gifts.

Of course, if someone claims to bring a word of prophecy, we (the church) still need to test that word and discern together if it is legitimate. The threefold test is similar. A true prophet speaks clearly in the name of Jesus. Their message is verifiable and it is consistent with the teachings of Jesus.

The Spirit of Jesus is a Spirit of grace & truth, so we would expect the prophets of Jesus to embody the same Spirit of grace & truth.

Conclusion:

At the beginning of this message I asked the question: What would you give to know the future?

A better question to ask is: What would you give to know Jesus?

I say that’s a better question because Jesus is the future, the eternal future. Jesus is the goal of humanity. He is our hope. If you want to know the future, get to know Jesus. Most of us know Jesus to some degree but none of us knows him completely or fully yet. May we grow deeper in our knowledge of and trust in Christ.

Let us pray… 

Father God, we thank you for not leaving us in the dark. We thank you for revealing your will to us through Jesus. We thank you too for offering us a future with hope. May you empower us by your Spirit to be completely loyal to Christ, for your glory and our own salvation. Amen.         

Questions for discussion or reflection:

What stands out for you in reading this Scripture and/or in listening to the sermon? Why do you think this stood out to you?

  • What would you give to know the future? What is it you would want to know and why?
  • Where would you place yourself on the spectrum between a fixed future and a fluid future? What are the implications of thinking the future is fixed? What are the implications of thinking we create our own future?
  • How do we choose life and foster a future with hope?
  • Why does Moses outlaw discerning the future through magic, reading omens, consulting the dead, etc.?
  • Has the word of the Lord ever come to you? What happened? What did the Lord say? How did you respond?
  • How might we test / know whether a prophecy is true or not?   

Servant King

Scripture: Deuteronomy 17:14-20

Video Link: https://youtu.be/nCG_TxxcEk0

Structure:

  • Introduction
  • Optional
  • Secure
  • Exemplary
  • Conclusion

Introduction:

Good morning everyone.

Did you know there are currently 29 monarchs in the world today? That is, 29 kings or queens who rule over 44 countries.

Only three of these monarchs have absolute power over their country. The Sultan of Oman, the King of Saudi Arabia and the Pope who is king of the city state of the Vatican.

Most of the monarchies are constitutional, which means the king or queen has their power restrained by law. So, for example, King Charles III can’t do whatever he wants.   

Today we continue our series in Deuteronomy. In chapter 17, Moses outlines some requirements for Israel’s king. These are like constitutional rules to moderate the powers of the king. The kings, in ancient Israel, had more power than the King of England does today but they did not have absolute power.  From Deuteronomy 17, verses 14-20 we read…

14 When you enter the land the Lord your God is giving you and have taken possession of it and settled in it, and you say, “Let us set a king over us like all the nations around us,” 15 be sure to appoint over you a king the Lord your God chooses. He must be from among your fellow Israelites. Do not place a foreigner over you, one who is not an Israelite. 16 The king, moreover, must not acquire great numbers of horses for himself or make the people return to Egypt to get more of them, for the Lord has told you, “You are not to go back that way again.” 17 He must not take many wives, or his heart will be led astray. He must not accumulate large amounts of silver and gold. 18 When he takes the throne of his kingdom, he is to write for himself on a scroll a copy of this law, taken from that of the Levitical priests. 19 It is to be with him, and he is to read it all the days of his life so that he may learn to revere the Lord his God and follow carefully all the words of this law and these decrees 20 and not consider himself better than his fellow Israelites and turn from the law to the right or to the left. Then he and his descendants will reign a long time over his kingdom in Israel.

May the Spirit of Jesus illuminate God’s word for us.

Three words to organise our thoughts on this passage: optional, secure and exemplary. Israel’s human king is optional, not compulsory. He is to be secure in the Lord, not anxious. And he is to be exemplary, not a law unto himself. Let’s start with this idea that the king is optional not compulsory.  

Optional:

I’m guessing almost everyone listening to this has a TV or some other device for watching TV in their home. TV’s are an optional extra. They may feel like a necessity but in actual fact they are optional.

You can go through your whole life without watching TV and be quite okay. Human beings survived without TV’s for thousands of years. In fact, TV’s weren’t invented until the 1930’s and they didn’t become common place in people’s homes until the 1950’s and 60’s.  

If you have young children living with you, then you probably want to delay TV watching for them as long as you can. Eventually though, they will go to school or to a friend’s house, become aware that TV’s exist and not want to miss out.

When that day comes, and you are no longer able to withhold the flat screen, as parents you will want to decide how much TV your kids watch and what programmes they view.

The king in ancient Israel was a bit like a TV. The king was optional, not compulsory. Israel did not actually need a human king. The Lord God, Yahweh, was their King and he had provided all the infrastructure the nation needed to function without a human monarch.

The Lord had given the law. He had prescribed a justice system with judges to sort out people’s disputes. And he had appointed priests to teach the law and facilitate worship. The Lord’s leadership structure was flat and power was democratised, spread among the people, not concentrated in one person.      

God and Moses wanted to delay the introduction of a human king as long as possible, especially while the nation was young. But the Lord and Moses knew the day would come when the people would insist on a king like the other nations around them.  

When that day came the Lord, in his grace, would accommodate Israel’s wishes but God wanted to choose the king and moderate his behaviour. Much like a responsible parent wants to manage their child’s TV watching.

Where it says, the king must be a fellow Israelite and not a foreigner, this is a safe guard against outside religious forces that might introduce foreign gods or foreign ways of worshipping. Sort of like a parent wouldn’t let their six year-old watch an R16 movie.

Moving forward in Israel’s history, we read in 1st Samuel chapter 8 that once the people were settled in the land, they did in fact ask for a king like the other nations around them. The prophet Samuel was displeased with this request so he prayed to the Lord and God said to him…

“Listen to everything the people say to you. You are not the one they have rejected; I am the one they have rejected as their king. Ever since I brought them out of Egypt, they have turned away from me and worshiped other gods; and now they are doing to you what they have always done to me. So then, listen to them, but give them strict warnings and explain how their kings will treat them.”

God appointed Saul to be Israel’s king and when that didn’t work out the Lord appointed David. David was a king after God’s own heart but most of the human kings were rat bags and made life more difficult for the people.

The human king in ancient Israel was optional, not compulsory. But once Israel got on that roller coaster, there was no getting off for several centuries.

Ideally, Israel’s king was to be secure in the Lord and not anxious.

Secure:

Imagine you are taking a walk in the wilderness. This particular tramp will likely take all day and you don’t know if there will be any streams or watering holes along the way. So you need to take some water with you.

Do you carry the water cupped in your hands or do you take it in a bottle? [Wait] That’s right, you put the water in a bottle. If you try to carry the water in your hands it will soon spill out, plus you won’t have your hands free.

If the water in this little parable represents your security, then putting your security in God is like putting the water in the bottle, it’s a far better option. The king needs to put his security in God and not try to handle it all by himself. 

Another question you might ask yourself, before you go on this walk, is how much water will you carry? Two or three litres should be enough for the day. But a hundred litres wouldn’t make any sense. Not only do you not need a hundred litres, it would be too heavy to carry. You wouldn’t make it very far.

Sometimes we try to make ourselves more secure by accumulating more stuff. And while some stuff is helpful and necessary, too much stuff tends to make us less secure and less effective.

In verses 16-17 of Deuteronomy 17, we learn how the king needs to put his security in the Lord and not try to secure the future through his own efforts or by accumulating power, influence and wealth for himself. In other words, the king must not acquire too many horses, too many wives or too much gold & silver.

Horses, in the context, were essentially weapons of war. Horses and chariots were symbols of military power, like tanks and fighter jets. The king is allowed to have some military equipment but not at the expense of relying on Yahweh to fight for Israel.

King David, one of Israel’s most successful military commanders, did not rely on horses and chariots. He relied on the Lord, famously defeating the Philistine Goliath with a stone and a sling shot. 

The danger with too many royal wives isn’t so much to do with sex. It’s more to do with idolatry. Kings don’t always marry for love. They often marry to secure political alliances with other nations. If the king’s harem is stacked with women who worship foreign gods, then he will be tempted to start worshipping other gods alongside Yahweh.

Just as too many wives will alienate the king from God, too much wealth will alienate the king from the people he is there to serve. Money is not evil in itself. We need some financial resources to get by in this world. The problem is, that too much money (or too little) can distort our perspective.

If you own a huge mansion, seven rental houses, four cars, two boats and a helicopter, with plenty of spare cash in the bank, then it is easy to lose touch with the reality faced by someone who is renting one of your houses and taking the bus to a minimum wage job every day.

So the king should put his security in God, not in the accumulation of weapons, wives and wealth.

There is a reference in verse 16 to not going back to Egypt. Egypt was a land of slavery for the people of Israel. The inference seems to be that if the king makes it his business to expand his military power, his harem and his portfolio of assets, then that will result in a heavy burden of taxation on the people, essentially making the nation slaves to the king’s ambition.

Deuteronomy 17 provides a critique of king Solomon. In 1st Kings 10 & 11 we read of Solomon’s many wives, weapons and wealth and how he turned away from the Lord. Solomon may have been wise and successful but he was not always faithful.

The financial burden his household placed on the people of Israel became intolerable. Solomon broke all the rules for Israelite kings and the people suffered for it.

Returning to our water metaphor, it was like Solomon forced the nation to carry a hundred litres of water for a day’s walk, when he only needed two or three litres. As his reign extended, Solomon’s security was not in the Lord.  

In Matthew 6, in the context of talking about wealth and worry, Jesus says this:

28 “And why do you worry about clothes? See how the flowers of the field grow. They do not labour or spin. 29 Yet I tell you that not even Solomon in all his splendour was dressed like one of these. 30 If that is how God clothes the grass of the field, which is here today and gone tomorrow…, won’t he be all the more sure to clothe you?

It is interesting that Jesus talks about king Solomon alongside worry and anxiety. Is Jesus suggesting that, despite all his wealth and splendour, Solomon was actually quite anxious and insecure? [1]  

Ironically, the more stuff a person accumulates, the more worry they create for themselves. Not that poverty is the answer. Being poor creates anxiety too. Better to aim for moderation. Give us this day our daily bread.

King David had his head on straight. As we read in David’s psalm, The Lord is my shepherd… In other words, the Lord God is my security.

The point is, Israel’s king needs to find his security in the Lord and not be anxious. If the king puts his security in military power or political marriage alliances or material wealth, then he will always be wanting more.

But when the king puts his security in God, he sets the right kind of example for his people and the nation is better off.

Exemplary:

After her coronation Oath, Queen Elizabeth was presented with a Bible and these words: ‘Our gracious Queen: to keep your majesty ever mindful of the law and the Gospel of God as the Rule for the whole life and government of Christian Princes, we present you with this Book, the most valuable thing that this world affords.’

This idea of giving Queen Elizabeth a copy of the Bible to read, came from Deuteronomy 17. In verses 18-19 Moses instructs the king to copy out the law himself and to keep that copy handy, reading from it daily throughout his reign.

The point of copying and reading the law like this is to shape the king’s thinking in the ways of the Lord, so the king will make decisions that keep Israel’s covenant with God. The Lord wants the king to be exemplary, to set a good example for the nation.

Kings of other nations made laws to protect their own interests and to regulate the conduct of their subjects. But Israel’s king was to be different. Israel’s king was to regulate himself in accordance with God’s law.

In verse 20 we read how the king is not to consider himself better than his fellow Israelites. This means the king is not above the law. He is first among equals. He is not to change the law or make new laws to suit himself. The king is to be exemplary in keeping the law. The king is to lead by example, in other words.   

Looking a bit deeper we see one of the character traits a king needs is humility. The king needs to keep his feet on the ground and maintain a right understanding of himself in relation to others. Being king does not automatically make him a better person than anyone else. It is important the king does not believe the hype surrounding himself.

The instruction to not accumulate too many weapons, wives or wealth (in verses 16-17) makes sense in light of verse 20. Because it is hard to remain humble, it’s hard to keep your feet on the ground, when your ego is constantly being inflated by the trappings of status and worldly success.

Not many of Israel’s kings managed to follow Moses’ instructions in Deuteronomy 17. King Hezekiah and king Josiah were given special mention as good kings, better than most, but none of the kings really nailed it.

Most of Israel and Judah’s kings led the people astray by their example and as a consequence Jerusalem was conquered by the Babylonians and the survivors were sent into exile.

We might wonder how Deuteronomy 17 applies today. Can we, for example, use these verses as a guide when voting for our political leaders? Well, maybe, but we would be hard pressed to find any politician today who measured up to the ideal leader in Scripture.

Having said that, if a political leader is super rich or a philanderer or arrogant or a poor example of a human being, then that raises some red flags and we probably shouldn’t support them with our vote.

We do better to apply the principles outlined in Deuteronomy 17 to ourselves, whether we are in a leadership position or not. We could, for example, ask ourselves questions like…

Where is my security placed? Is my security in God or is it in my own strength or my own ability? Is my security based on my career or my bank balance or my reputation or my youthful good looks?

Can I honestly say with David; The Lord is shepherd (my security)? Or am I compensating for my insecurity with a flash car or by criticising others or with some other self-promoting strategy? 

Humility (keeping your feet on the ground) is a key indicator that your security is well placed in the Lord.

Thinking of how today’s passage applies to us personally, another question we might ask ourselves is, how often do I read my Bible? And, by extension, do I make life decisions with reference to God’s moral law in the Bible? For example, do I consider what God might want when buying and selling stuff or making career decisions or taking care of my family?

Is the lifestyle I lead a good example to others or is it a stumbling block? Children are always learning. They are always on. And their main teacher is the example of the adults around them.

Conclusion:

Of course, Deuteronomy 17 is not primarily about us or our political leaders. These verses are first and foremost about Jesus. Deuteronomy 17 describes what God’s true Messiah looks like and Jesus fits the bill perfectly.

Jesus had no horses or chariots. He did not care for military power. Jesus walked the path of non-violence, making himself vulnerable instead.

Jesus had no wife and was not at all interested in creating political alliances. He said, ‘My kingdom is not of this world’.

Likewise, Jesus did not accumulate gold and silver for himself. He is humble in heart, near to the poor and broken hearted. Jesus understands how hard life can be and he cares for you.

Jesus is 100% secure in God his Father, willing to wash his disciples’ feet and able to say: the greatest among you is the servant of all.  

Not only did Jesus know the law, he also fulfilled the law in a way that no one before him or after him has ever been able to do.   

Jesus is the ideal King, the prime example of what it means to remain faithful and obedient to God, even unto death on a cross. Jesus is our servant King.

Let us pray…

Father God, you are sovereign over all the earth. You are our security. We pray for the earthly leaders you have appointed to govern in this world. Give them wisdom and courage to serve your purpose. We pray for ourselves. Help us to follow the example of Jesus, our eternal King, for your glory. Amen.   

Questions for discussion or reflection:

What stands out for you in reading this Scripture and/or in listening to the sermon? Why do you think this stood out to you?

  • Why does Moses discourage the king from accumulating too many weapons, wives and wealth?
  • Where is your security placed? How do you know where your security is placed?
  • How often do you read the Bible? In what ways do you (or can you) make life decisions with reference to God’s moral law in the Bible? (E.g. when buying or selling something, how you spend your time, how you treat your family, career decisions, etc.)
  • Discuss / reflect on the ways Jesus meets God’s requirements of a king, as detailed in Deuteronomy 17.   
  • Who has set a good example for you in life? What in particular was helpful about the example they set? What kind of example do you set for others?

[1] As Walter Brueggemann observes, it is not an accident that Solomon is cited by Jesus as the quintessential anxious one who, in all his power and wealth, turned out to be second rate. C.f. Walter Brueggemann, Deuteronomy, page 187.

Food for Thought

Scriptures: Deuteronomy 14:2-21 and Mark 7:14-23

Video Link: https://youtu.be/iBoegaDmB8s

Structure:

  • Introduction
  • Relationship first
  • Choose life
  • Follow Jesus
  • Conclusion

Introduction:

Good morning everyone.

For several years I attended a school with a fairly strict dress code. Everyone had to wear the correct uniform in the right way. You couldn’t be found with your shirt hanging out or your socks down.

What’s more you couldn’t start the day with dirty shoes. Every morning, during winter, we lined up for an inspection and if your shoes were not clean enough you had to polish them before you were allowed to go to assembly or class.

Having dirty shoes is not a moral offense, like lying or stealing. It is more of a ceremonial offense making one unfit to participate in school life. It wasn’t that moral concerns were irrelevant. You still got in trouble for lying or stealing. But being well presented was part of the brand of the school. Muddy shoes and untucked shirts went against that brand.      

Today we continue our series in Deuteronomy. Much of what we have looked at in Deuteronomy so far has been to do with moral concerns, like the ten commandments. In today’s passage the concern is less moral and more ceremonial. From Deuteronomy 14, verse 1 we read…

You are the children of the Lord your God. Do not cut yourselves or shave the front of your heads for the dead, for you are a people holy to the Lord your God. Out of all the peoples on the face of the earth, the Lord has chosen you to be his treasured possession. Do not eat any detestable thing. These are the animals you may eat: the ox, the sheep, the goat, the deer, the gazelle, the roe deer, the wild goat, the ibex, the antelope and the mountain sheep.  You may eat any animal that has a divided hoof and that chews the cud. However, of those that chew the cud or that have a divided hoof you may not eat the camel, the rabbit or the hyrax. Although they chew the cud, they do not have a divided hoof; they are ceremonially unclean for you. The pig is also unclean; although it has a divided hoof, it does not chew the cud. You are not to eat their meat or touch their carcasses. Of all the creatures living in the water, you may eat any that has fins and scales. 10 But anything that does not have fins and scales you may not eat; for you it is unclean. 11 You may eat any clean bird. 12 But these you may not eat: the eagle, the vulture, the black vulture, 13 the red kite, the black kite, any kind of falcon, 14 any kind of raven, 15 the horned owl, the screech owl, the gull, any kind of hawk, 16 the little owl, the great owl, the white owl, 17 the desert owl, the osprey, the cormorant, 18 the stork, any kind of heron, the hoopoe and the bat. 19 All flying insects are unclean to you; do not eat them. 20 But any winged creature that is clean you may eat. 21 Do not eat anything you find already dead. You may give it to the foreigner residing in any of your towns, and they may eat it, or you may sell it to any other foreigner. But you are a people holy to the Lord your God. Do not cook a young goat in its mother’s milk.

May the Spirit of Jesus illuminate God’s word for us.

The Old Testament contains some weird and wonderful stuff and the verses I just read fall into the weird category. Weird from our point of view at least. Before we go any further let me say straight off the bat, these rules about what you can and can’t eat do not apply to us today.

They are not moral laws for all people at all times. They are ceremonial rules intended specifically for ancient Israel. Why then are we bothering with these verses? Well, if you look beyond the letter of the law you find its spirit. It’s not primarily about diet. First and foremost, it’s about Israel’s relationship with God.

Relationship first:

If you are invited to someone’s house for a meal, out of respect for your host, you might take off your shoes before entering their home.

There is nothing morally wrong with wearing shoes inside, it’s simply a polite protocol that shows respect for the host. You don’t want to transfer any dirt from outside onto their carpet. You take off your shoes to take care of the relationship.

Likewise, if your host offers you a range of food choices, buffet style, you choose something you like from the buffet and eat that. You don’t turn your nose up at what is offered and order in some Uber Eats KFC instead. That would be rude. It’s not about the food, it’s about your relationship with the host.

In the context of Deuteronomy, the Lord God (Yahweh) is the host and the nation of Israel is his special guest. Deuteronomy 14 spells out what’s on the menu and what’s not. As Yahweh’s guests, Israel is to respond to the Lord’s gracious invitation by sticking to the things on the menu.

This idea that Israel’s relationship with God comes first is clearly shown in verses 1-3. These verses (among others) describe Israel’s relationship with the Lord God. The people of Israel are God’s children. They are a holy people, set apart for Yahweh. They are a chosen people. God invited Israel into relationship with himself. And Israel are the Lord’s treasured possession, a special toanga.

Here’s the thing. Israel are accepted by Yahweh before they obey any of the laws. Yahweh’s acceptance of and relationship with Israel comes first. If the law of Moses is the cart, then Israel’s relationship with Yahweh is the horse that pulls the cart. 

Following the dietary requirements of Deuteronomy 14 was part of Israel’s right response to Yahweh’s gracious invitation. By following the Lord’s rules about what they could and could not eat, Israel was behaving like a respectful guest and receiving Yahweh’s hospitality in an appropriate way.

So, every time an Israelite household sat down to share a kosher meal, they were reaffirming their close and special relationship with Yahweh.

Through the death and resurrection of Jesus, we too are able to participate in the family of God. In and through Christ we too are God’s treasured possession. Whenever we share communion we affirm our close and special relationship with the Lord (and with each other).

Not only is Deuteronomy 14 about Israel’s special relationship with Yahweh, it’s also about choosing life, not death. 

Choose life:

Although it was before my time, people who lived in the 1950’s and 60’s tell me that Christians in general (and Baptists in particular) were not allowed to do certain things. For example, you could not drink alcohol, you could not play cards, you could not go to the movies and above all you could never dance.

Most Christians these days don’t have a problem with those sorts of activities, provided the drinking is in moderation, the card playing is for fun, the movie isn’t R18 and the dancers have some rhythm (or at least don’t twerk).

When we read through the first 21 verses of Deuteronomy 14 we see this list of things the Israelites were not allowed to eat (in red). But we might overlook the list of the things they can eat (in green).

Moses gets quite specific about all the varieties of birds that cannot be eaten, then takes a broad brush strokes approach with the birds that can be eaten. Basically, there were far more birds the Israelites could eat. The smorgasbord of food options available to the Israelites was pretty wide and varied. God is generous.

In all of this we need to remember that ceremonially unclean does not mean morally bad, it means something like common or taboo. The hawk is not an evil creature. It is part of God’s good creation. We need the bio-diversity that hawks bring. Likewise, an owl is not intrinsically bad. Without owls we might be overrun with rats and mice. Owl’s serve God’s creative purpose too.

Experts have offered a variety of reasons why a particular animal was deemed unfit for eating. Was it because some of the taboo foods were associated with Canaanite religion? Maybe, but then some of the kosher foods were also associated with Canaanite religion.

Perhaps some of the animals carried disease and were not good for people’s health? Then again, the other nations seemed to be okay eating pork.

The Bible doesn’t explicitly state why God forbade the consumption of some animals but allowed others to be eaten. So any conclusions we draw need to be held loosely. The will of God is inscrutable.

That being said, we can infer from the text that the most likely reason an animal was forbidden for Jewish consumption is because of its association with death. One of the overarching messages of Deuteronomy is ‘choose life’.

Lloyd Jones wrote a novel called Mr Pip, which was made into a film. The story is set in 1989 during the Bougainville civil war in Papua New Guinea. Mr Pip stays behind in PNG, the only white man left, and becomes a school teacher to the local children.

Long story short, Mr Pip is captured by some soldiers, killed and fed to the village pigs. After the soldiers leave, the local people kill the pigs and bury them. They can’t eat the pigs because the pigs have eaten their beloved Mr Pip.

Most of the creatures designated as unclean, in Deuteronomy 14, are carnivores or scavengers that feed on dead carrion or they are ground creatures in constant contact with unclean matter, and so they are associated with death. Israel could not eat vultures because who knows what the vulture may have eaten.

At the same time, most of the animals that are designated as clean are in fact the same sort of creatures the Israelites used as sacrifices to Yahweh. So they were associated with redemption and life (or right relationship) with God.

Some of you may be curious as to the meaning of verse 21, where it says:

…Do not cook a young goat in its mother’s milk.

We can’t be sure exactly how to interpret this but, if the context is about choosing life, then it has something to do with giving new life a chance and not being wasteful with food.

Don’t kill a baby animal just to satisfy your appetite. Let the mother and its new born simply enjoy each other for a while. To cook a young goat in its mother’s milk is unnecessary, self-indulgent and a bit cruel really.

Perhaps the message here is that, when it comes to food and what you eat, exercise some self-control and show some care for the other creatures God has made. Thinking of the welfare of animals these days might mean buying free range eggs, for example. Or it might mean eating more plant based meals.

In keeping with this theme of ‘choosing life’ and not associating with death, we read in verse 1: You are the children of the Lord your God. Do not cut yourselves or shave the front of your heads for the dead,  

People in the ancient world could be quite superstitious. Some cultures believed the dead had a kind of power over the living. The Canaanites, for example, lacerated themselves or shaved the hair off the front of their heads as a way of gaining favourable influence with their departed ancestors. [1]

Moses is laying that superstition to rest. Moses is saying, you are God’s children. You are set apart for life. The dead cannot touch you. Do not be afraid. Do not harm yourselves to appease the dead and do not try to contact them.

‘Shaving the front of your heads’ sounds a bit like getting a mullet haircut. Business up front, party out the back. Most people these days don’t get a mullet haircut for the dead. It is simply a fashion choice. So, you don’t need to feel guilty if you ever had a mullet.

Likewise, Deuteronomy’s understanding of self-harm is quite different from our contemporary understanding. It’s not the same thing. These days, people don’t usually cut themselves to make peace with the dead. They are driven by other compulsions and need compassionate, skilled help. They don’t need judgment.

Okay, so Deuteronomy 14 isn’t just about food. It’s first and foremost about Israel’s special relationship with Yahweh and it is about choosing life, not associating with death. But we are not ancient Israelites. We are Christians. We follow Jesus. What then did Jesus have to say on this subject?

Follow Jesus:

From Mark 7, verse 18, we read…

…“Don’t you see that nothing that enters a person from the outside can defile them? 19 For it doesn’t go into their heart but into their stomach, and then out of the body.” (In saying this, Jesus declared all foods clean.) 20 He went on: “What comes out of a person is what defiles them. 21 For it is from within, out of a person’s heart, that evil thoughts come—sexual immorality, theft, murder, 22 adultery, greed, malice, deceit, lewdness, envy, slander, arrogance and folly. 23 All these evils come from inside and defile a person.”

Clearly, Jesus was more concerned with morality than he was ceremony.   

The radicalness of Jesus’ teaching here is lost on us to a large degree. We can’t really appreciate how important the kosher food regulations were for Jews. Deuteronomy 14 wasn’t just a menu for them. It was a matter of cultural identity, not to mention religious integrity.

The prophet Daniel and his friends refused to eat any meat while they were in exile in Babylon. They became vegetarians so they wouldn’t unwittingly break the Lord’s ceremonial food law.

Not eating bacon was part and parcel of what it meant to be Jewish. So when Jesus comes along and says, you can eat whatever you want, he must have sounded like a heretic to his Jewish audience or at least unpatriotic.

It appears Jesus’ words didn’t really penetrate straight away. In Acts 10, some years after Jesus’ death & resurrection, the apostle Peter needed some convincing (in the form of a threefold vision) before he would accept the fact that it was okay to eat non-kosher food.

Why the change? Well, the Jewish food laws were a barrier for Gentiles coming to Christ. The first Christians were Jews and if they couldn’t eat with Gentiles then the gospel wouldn’t spread. It had always been God’s intention that people of all nations be saved and included in his household, through Christ.    

This means the people of God are no longer defined by the food they eat. We find our identity in Christ. The Jesus’ way (of grace & truth, love & morality) is our brand.

Does this mean then, that the whole of the Old Testament can be set aside? No. The moral aspects of the law (like the ten commandments) still apply. But much of the ceremonial aspects, like food laws and animal sacrifice, no longer apply because they have been fulfilled by Jesus.

Think of it like this: when you pour concrete the cement is runny so you need boxing to contain the slurry. Boxing is the wooden frame around the edges which holds the wet cement in place. Once the concrete has set, you can take the boxing away because it has served its purpose and is no longer needed.   

If the moral law (the ten commandments) is like the cement foundation, then the ceremonial food laws are sort of like the boxing. A necessary framework, for a time, while the moral law sets.

But, with the coming of Christ, the boxing of the ceremonial law has served its purpose and can be removed. However, the foundation of the moral law still remains.

Or take our church car park as another example. There is currently a barrier at the entrance of the carpark, restricting access. This is because the asphalt hasn’t been laid yet. The barrier might seem a bit inconvenient or even unwelcoming, but it is necessary to protect the base course. Once the tar seal is firmly in place we can remove the barrier.

The ceremonial food laws were sort of like a barrier. Necessary for a time but with the coming of Christ, a new seal was laid and the purpose of the food law barrier was fulfilled.

In saying the ceremonial law can be removed, we need to be careful not to throw the baby out with the bathwater. The baby in this metaphor is the moral law and the bathwater is the ceremonial law. The kosher food laws may no longer apply but what Jesus says does still apply. We follow Jesus.  

What we see, when we look at Jesus’ words in Mark 7, is a continuity between the Old & New Testaments. Jesus goes beyond the letter of the law to find its spirit. When it comes to questions of clean and unclean, kosher and common, it is the state of a person’s heart that matters, more than the food they eat.

The heart in this context is a metaphor for a person’s inner life. Not the blood pump in your chest but rather your mind & emotions, your thoughts & desires.

The Old Testament often talks about the importance of your heart. God looks at the heart while human beings judge by outward appearances.

As Moses says in Deuteronomy 10: Circumcise your heart, which is a graphic way of saying dedicate your heart to God. Don’t fake your worship. Love God genuinely, from the inside out.

Jesus’ words also line with up Deuteronomy’s message to choose life. Theft, murder, greed, envy, arrogance and all the other evils Jesus mentions, represent death and dysfunctional relationships. We choose life not so much by avoiding bacon but rather by avoiding evil thoughts and wrong doing.

It’s not that the food we eat is unimportant. A healthy balanced diet helps to support a healthy functioning mind. The point is, we need to guard our heart from even the thought of evil.

Two things you can do to guard your heart. Firstly, watch what you feed your mind on. If your diet of TV and internet is heavy in violence and sex, then you make a pure thought life more difficult for yourself.

Secondly, watch who you spend your time with? If you hang out a lot with people who only care about money and reputation, then your heart is at greater risk of greed and envy.

Conclusion:

Choose life. Choose that which will lift your mind to higher things. As the apostle Paul says: …whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable—if anything is excellent or praiseworthy—think about such things. 

Let us pray…

Father God, we thank you for Jesus, in whom we become your special people. Guard our hearts and minds we ask. Help us to choose life, that we would walk in freedom and righteousness. Amen.

Questions for discussion or reflection:

What stands out for you in reading these Scriptures and/or in listening to the sermon? Why do you think this stood out to you?

  • What is the difference between the moral law and the ceremonial law? How does the ceremonial law support the moral law?
  • What is the spirit (or purpose) of the food laws?
  • Why does our relationship with God need to come first (before attempting to follow his law / way)?
  • What does it mean for us today to choose life? What kinds of death related activities should we avoid?
  • Discuss / reflect on the continuity between Jesus’ teaching in Mark 7 and Moses’ teaching in Deuteronomy.
  • Why do the ancient food laws no longer apply? What does still apply?
  • What specific things can you do to guard your heart?

[1] Refer Daniel Block, NIVAC, page 344.

Discipleship – by Becca

Scripture: Deuteronomy 6:5-9

Good morning everyone!

When Will asked me to speak, I planned to talk about the passages where Jesus invites the children to come to him. As I read and planned, it kept changing and eventually I ended up focusing on verses from Deuteronomy which fits in perfectly for our current sermon series. Will actually covered these verses as part of one of his sermons back in July, so they should be familiar to you all.

Deuteronomy 6:5-9 reads, “Love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your strength. Never forget these commands that I am giving you today. Teach them to your children. Repeat them when you are at home and when you are away, when you are resting and when you are working. Tie them on your arms and wear them on your foreheads as a reminder. Write them on the doorposts of your houses and on your gates.”

These verses are really about discipleship. The Greek word used in the Bible for discipleship, mathēteuō has two definitions, to be a disciple of someone, and to make a disciple of someone, and both meanings are included in these verses. 

To be a disciple means being a student, someone who adheres to and follows a particular doctrine.  It’s not about being the best Christian. Being a disciple of Jesus isn’t some status level that we can attain, like Gold status for flying a certain number of times with Air New Zealand. We often hear of the 12 disciples, Jesus’ closest friends and students, but in Acts, anybody who comes to know and believe in Jesus as God’s Son is called a disciple. 

Jesus’ 12 disciples stayed with him, they learnt and studied and lived life together. Disciples study and remember a teacher’s words, but more than that, they learn by imitating the teacher’s entire way of life. 

For Christians, being a disciple is about loving God with all of our being and constantly striving to imitate Jesus. We are told by Moses in Deuteronomy, and by Jesus in the Gospels, to love God with everything we have. With all our energies, and with all our efforts, and with all our understanding. That is a big ask, especially when we are trying to manage everything else going on in our lives – our work, families, children, homes, friendships, volunteering roles and so on. Putting God first, above all of that is hard!

Reflection question – I have a few of these questions throughout, they are things that have challenged me and may be a challenge to you as well. Where are your energies going? What are your priorities? Are you loving God with all of your heart, soul, and strength?

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The next part of our passage in Deuteronomy goes on to say, “Never forget these commands.” This is another aspect of being a disciple. Later on in the chapter, Moses warns the Israelites not to forget God when they are rich and don’t have to rely on him anymore. 

“When the Lord your God brings you into the land he swore to your fathers, to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, to give you a land with large, flourishing cities you did not build, houses filled with all kinds of good things you did not provide, wells you did not dig, and vineyards and olive groves you did not plant – then when you eat and are satisfied, be careful that you do not forget the Lord, who brought you out of Egypt, out of the land of slavery.”

How often do we call out to God when we need him, but kind of ignore him through the good times? Or maybe we find it easy to have faith when life is going well, but feel abandoned or alone when things get tough? It can be challenging to be a follower of Christ in all situations, in all aspects of our lives, particularly in a society which often looks down on Christians. But these verses remind us that being a disciple is a full-time job and requires us to commit to following God all of the time, never forgetting his commands.

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In the next verses, Moses gives the Israelites, and us, ideas for how we can ensure we don’t forget or put aside God and his commands. “Repeat them when you are at home and when you are away, when you are resting and when you are working. Tie them on your arms and wear them on your foreheads as a reminder. Write them on the doorposts of your houses and on your gates.” 

Some Orthodox Jews put tefllins, these prayer boxes, on their heads and wrists when they pray, to acknowledge these verses. However, you’ll be pleased to know that most commentaries on these passages agree that the instructions to tie God’s commands on our arms and foreheads are not meant to be literal, but rather an example of what we can do to remember God’s Word.

Before we can remember God’s Word though, we need to make sure we are reading it! My Nana is one of those people who can recall a Bible verse or story for just about any situation. You could be stuck up a tree and she’d tell you the story of Zaccheus, or you could be talking about a friend, and she would recite a verse from Proverbs or Ecclesiastes about the importance of friendships, or you hit a pothole as you’re driving, and she’d tell you about the part in Numbers where the earth opened up and swallowed a whole bunch of people. 

As long as I can remember, she’s had amazing habits for reading her Bible and doing studies – every day she sets aside time to read, pray, and learn about God. I’m not sure what she did when she was younger and had a busy family, but when we’ve stayed with her, it’s pretty common to wake up and come out to the kitchen and see her sitting in her dressing gown, with her Bible and study open, while she drinks her morning cup of tea. I am still working on building those habits myself, but I’m so inspired by people like her, and Will and Daryl and I’m sure many others here, who have so much Scripture committed to heart.

Reflection – We need to think about our own Bible reading, and what our own personal, modern version of these verses could be. Do you set aside a time to spend with God and his Word each day? What’s your version of tying God’s Word to your arms or writing it on your doorpost? Is it wearing a cross necklace, or a bracelet engraved with a special verse? Is it having a Bible verse as the screensaver on your phone or a Bible app on your homescreen? Is it a meaningful poster/photo/verse on your wall at home? What can we do to remind ourselves to follow God all throughout the day?


—————

Jesus’ last words on earth are known as the Great Commission. “Therefore, go and make disciples of all nations, baptising them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.”

Discipling others largely refers to teaching or mentoring, both in word and by example. 

In our Deuteronomy passage, we come back to the “Teach them to your children” instruction. That is the one sentence in this passage which gives explicit instruction on discipling others. It’s as if making disciples is actually a part of being a disciple. 

The Bible makes it clear that teaching our children about God and his Word is an important part of our role as parents.

  • Ephesians 6:4 says, Fathers, do not exasperate your children; instead, bring them up in the training and instruction of the Lord.  (I love the part about not exasperating your children – every time I read it I see myself as a teenager, rolling my eyes at my Dad’s lame jokes!)
  • Proverbs 22:6 – Train up a child in the way he should go, and when he is old he will not depart from it. 
  • And in 2 Timothy 1:5, where Paul is writing to Timothy, he says: I am reminded of your sincere faith, which first lived in your grandmother Lois and in your mother Eunice and, I am persuaded, now lives in you also. 

This last verse shows us the importance of grandparents and wider whanau in teaching children. 

The Barna group, a well-regarded research group in the US, found that 95% of children’s ministry workers believed that the primary, that is the main source of children’s discipling should be their home (i.e. their parents and families), while only 49% of parents with children at church believed that they were the primary source, with 51% saying that church should be the primary source of discipling for their kids. 

The same study found that only 50% of church parents said their children pray at least once a week at home, and 42% said their children hear the gospel at least once a week. If we are to believe that parents have the primary role of discipling their children, since they have the most time with them and know their child the best, then church needs to be there as a support for the parents, discipling the parents as they disciple their children.

Discipling children isn’t just the role of parents, however. In the book of Mark, Jesus tells off the people who try to keep the children away and welcomes the children to come to him. He didn’t say, “nope those kids aren’t my problem, it’s up to their parents to sort them out”, but rather brought them in to be blessed and be part of the group. I know there are many, many people in our church who are like Jesus in the way they treat children at Tawa Baptist, and I have always felt like my own two girls are welcomed and loved here. 

Going back to our Deuteronomy verses once more, and the sentence, “Teach them to obey my commands.” Many of the same tools suggested for parents and churches to disciple children are also useful for discipling other adults. Discipling other adults may mean teaching unbelievers or very new believers; it might mean mentoring someone in our church or working with other Christians. Jesus did all of those things as part of his discipleship, and we can too. Here are three key things we can all do to disciple others, whether they are our own children or someone else.

First, knowing our Bibles. We’ve already covered this but if you are trying to teach someone about God’s Word, it’s really handy to know what you are talking about. Little kids are especially good at asking the hard questions, like “Who made God?” and “How did God make the world if he doesn’t have hands?” When Tillie was two, we were heading to her first dentist appointment. On the way, we were talking about how God is everywhere. She asked, “will God even be at the dentist’s office?” and, trying to be a good mum and reassure her, I said “of course!” We walked into the dentist office, and she took one look at the female receptionist and in a very loud voice, as Tillie generally uses, asked, “Is that God?!” When I told her no, she persisted, “But how do you know that’s not God?” I have to admit, that was a time I didn’t have a great answer.


Another example of how knowing our Bibles is important can be seen in the story of Apollos, Priscilla and Aquila, in Acts 18:24-26. “At that time a Jew named Apollos came to Ephesus. He was an educated man from Alexandria. He knew the Scriptures very well. Apollos had been taught the way of the Lord. He spoke with great power. He taught the truth about Jesus. But he only knew about John’s baptism. He began to speak boldly in the synagogue. Priscilla and Aquila heard him. So they invited him to their home. There they gave him a better understanding of the way of God.” – Priscilla and Aquila were able to help Apollos because they had good scripture knowledge themselves, and they discipled Apollos, who was then able to go and preach widely to others.

A second tool for discipling others is building relationships. 

One of the special things about our church logo is the different people represented. There’s a family with children, single people, an elderly couple, and so on. Having good relationships is a key tool in discipleship. Children who have meaningful relationships with adults in the church stay around at church, and in their faith, at a far higher rate than those who don’t have those relationships. This is also true for adults as well – would you be more likely to keep coming to a new church if you were seeing strangers who only talk to each other, or people who you were starting to build friendships and relationships with? 

Intergenerational relationships are important as well. Children need to hear about Jesus from people outside their own families. Titus 2 calls for older women and men to teach and train the younger generation, while 1 Timothy 4:12 calls on young people to “be an example for the believers in speech, in conduct, in love, in faith and in purity.” 

Hebrews 10:24-25 talks about all the church members coming together: “And let us consider how we may spur one another on toward love and good deeds, not giving up meeting together, as some are in the habit of doing, but encouraging one another.”

The third and final tool for discipling others is sharing about Jesus. Obvious, right? While explicit formal teaching of God’s Word is important when discipling our children and other people, it’s just as important to include God in our everyday conversations. 

One of the ways we learn is by watching other people and then having a go ourselves. The Parenting for Faith course talks about using “windows” or little moments for children to get glimpses into our relationship with Jesus. It’s about going about our everyday lives and showing our children how we include God as a part of that. For example, letting your children see you study your Bible, or pray in a difficult moment, or thank God for a rainbow and the promise of hope. 

The book Sticky Faith: Everyday Ideas to Build Lasting Faith in Your Kids highlights an important truth: “The greatest gift you can give your children is to let them see you struggle and wrestle with how to live a lifetime of trust in God.” This doesn’t happen once a week or overnight. Showing children your relationship with Jesus, imperfect, messy, and difficult as it may be, is one of the best ways to help them develop their own relationships. And as our own relationships with God deepen, sharing these moments with our children becomes more natural.

For people who have grown up children, the Parenting for Faith course suggests that even though your children aren’t living at home with you, they are still learning from you what older, wiser life looks like with God. Even if they seem uninterested, they will still be watching you and learning from you whenever they see you – even if they don’t say so. The same goes for discipling others, Christian or not, – just living our lives and being open about our relationship with God can make a big difference. 

Reflection questions… Who in our lives are you or could you be discipling? What is your role in discipleship within the church?

————

This morning we’ve talked about being a disciple and discipling others. Let’s finish off by re-reading Deuteronomy 6:5-9 one more time: “Love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your strength. Never forget these commands that I am giving you today. Teach them to your children. Repeat them when you are at home and when you are away, when you are resting and when you are working. Tie them on your arms and wear them on your foreheads as a reminder. Write them on the doorposts of your houses and on your gates.”

Reflection questions:

  • Deuteronomy 6:5 says “Love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your strength.” Where are your energies going? What are your priorities? Are you loving God with all of your heart, soul, and strength?
  • Verses 7-9 tell us to remember God’s commands. How much time do you spend with God and His Word? What can you do to remind yourself throughout the day?
  • Verse 7 encourages us to teach God’s commands to our children, and Jesus’ last words were telling us to make disciples of all the nations. Who in your life are you or could you be discipling? What is your role in discipleship within the church?

Worship

Scripture: Deuteronomy 12:1-7

Video Link: https://youtu.be/PRaDm5F3LH8

Structure:

  • Introduction
  • Distinctive worship
  • Tangible worship
  • Joyful worship
  • Conclusion

Introduction:

Good morning everyone.

Preaching is a bit like serving tea. In any sermon you will normally have three ingredients. The text of Scripture, an explanation of the text and then hopefully application of the text. Text, Explanation, Application. T.E.A. spells tea.

Application is the practical part which connects the message to everyday life. The preacher usually gives some examples of how the text applies but ultimately it is up to the listeners to put God’s word into practice.     

The book of Deuteronomy, as a whole, can be thought of as three speeches by Moses to the people of Israel as they stood poised at the edge of the wilderness, about to enter the Promised Land.

Moses’ second (and largest) speech, in chapters 5-26, is shaped very much like a sermon with a text, an explanation and some application. The text Moses is preaching from is the ten commandments of Yahweh, found in chapter five.

In chapters 6-11 Moses explains or unpacks the meaning of Yahweh’s ten words. In a nutshell, the most important thing is love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul and with all your strength. That’s the main point of the sermon, the lens through which the law is to be understood and life is to be lived.

Then, in chapters 12-26 of Deuteronomy, Moses outlines various ways in which loving God applies in everyday life. In other words, here are some laws and decrees (some practical things) you can do to demonstrate your love for God.   

Over the past three months I have been explaining the meaning of each of the ten commandments and how these apply for us today, in the light of Jesus’ teaching. This morning we continue our series in Deuteronomy by focusing on chapter 12, part of the application of Moses’ sermon.

In chapter 12 Moses gives some practical instructions about how the Israelites are to worship God once they enter the Promised Land. When it comes to worship, this is what loving God looks like. From Deuteronomy 12, verses 1-7 we read our text

These are the decrees and laws you must be careful to follow in the land that the Lord, the God of your ancestors, has given you to possess—as long as you live in the land. Destroy completely all the places on the high mountains, on the hills and under every spreading tree, where the nations you are dispossessing worship their gods. Break down their altars, smash their sacred stones and burn their Asherah poles in the fire; cut down the idols of their gods and wipe out their names from those places. You must not worship the Lord your God in their way.  But you are to seek the place the Lord your God will choose from among all your tribes to put his Name there for his dwelling. To that place you must go; there bring your burnt offerings and sacrifices, your tithes and special gifts, what you have vowed to give and your freewill offerings, and the firstborn of your herds and flocks. There, in the presence of the Lord your God, you and your families shall eat and shall rejoice in everything you have put your hand to, because the Lord your God has blessed you.

May the Spirit of Jesus illuminate God’s word for us.

As I mentioned before, Deuteronomy 12 is mainly concerned with how loving God applies to worship.  Three things to keep in mind. Worship of Yahweh is to be distinctive, tangible and joyful. First, let’s consider the distinctive nature of Israel’s worship.

Distinctive worship:

After a war is finished, the land is often littered with unexploded mines, live artillery shells and booby traps. The retreating army leave a trail of destruction behind them. Before the civilian population can return and rebuild, the army engineers need to clear the ground of dangerous ordinances. 

If the image of cleaning up after a war seems a bit far removed from life in New Zealand, then imagine you have a wasps’ nest in your garden at home. You don’t tolerate the wasps. You get someone in to destroy their nest.

Likewise, if you have rats running around in your ceiling, you don’t fold your hands and do nothing. You exterminate the rats. And, if you have a poisonous plant (maybe a stinging nettle) growing in your garden, then you don’t leave it there. You kill the plant and remove it.

In verses 2-3 of Deuteronomy 12, Moses instructs the Israelites to destroy all the paraphernalia associated with Canaanite religion. God Almighty is completely different from the fake gods of the Canaanites. Yahweh does not want people thinking that he is in any way like these false gods. Therefore, the Israelites are to worship the Lord Almighty in a distinctive way.  

Although the gods of the Canaanites were not real, the way the Canaanites practiced their religion had very real and destructive consequences. In verse 31 of Deuteronomy 12 we read…

31 You must not worship the Lord your God in their way, because in worshiping their gods, they do all kinds of detestable things the Lord hates. They even burn their sons and daughters in the fire as sacrifices to their gods.

Destroying any visual reminders of Canaanite religion was like extracting unexploded land mines or getting rid of a wasps’ nest or exterminating rats or removing a stinging nettle. It was a basic health & safety requirement.

Rather than worshiping Yahweh anywhere they felt like, the Israelites were to gather at one central place for their rituals of worship. That place would be decided by God.

The Canaanites had many gods that they worshipped in many places. Israel had one God whom they worshipped in one place. Israel’s worship of Yahweh was distinctive in its oneness.

The place God chose for people to come and offer their ritual sacrifices moved. At one time the Tabernacle and the ark of the covenant was located in Shechem, then Bethel, then Shiloh and eventually a temple was built in Jerusalem.

Not that God’s presence was limited to that one place. Rather, the central place of worship acted like the hub of a wheel, holding the nation together.   

As Patrick Miller explains, the emphasis is upon the Lord’s choice. The central activity of Israel’s life, which is the worship of the Lord, is fully shaped and determined by the Lord. [1]   

The point is, for Israel’s worship to be distinctive it needs to be pleasing to God, first and foremost. We don’t worship to please ourselves. We worship to please God. We don’t act like Canaanites and do whatever we think is right in our own eyes. We do what is right and good in the eyes of the Lord.

If someone invites you to their birthday party, you come at the time they say, to the place they are celebrating at and you bring a gift, something you know they will enjoy or at least find useful.

You don’t come too late or decide you are going to celebrate at a different venue. And you don’t come empty handed or with a gift you know they won’t enjoy. It’s their party, not yours. It’s about them, it’s not about you.  

How does this apply to us today? Well, a worship gathering is like God’s party. He is the host and we are his guests. Yes, we hope to have a good time at the party. But really it’s not about us. It’s about God and what he wants.

So, if there are some songs in the Sunday service you don’t like, you don’t get upset, because it’s not about your entertainment. You sing to the best of your ability. Or, if the prayers (and speeches) seem too long, you remember, it’s not about my convenience. We are here to celebrate God. Likewise, you don’t ignore the other guests at the party. You talk with them and you get along with each other for the honour and pleasure of the host.

Church is not a shopping mall. We don’t worship God for our own gratification or self-fulfillment. We worship God because he alone is worthy. If God meets us and makes us feel good while we are praising him, then that’s a bonus, a gift to treasure. It’s not an entitlement.

Earlier in the service we heard a reading from John 4, where Jesus has a conversation with a Samaritan woman about worship. The woman says…

19 “Sir, …. 20 Our ancestors worshiped on this mountain, but you Jews claim that the place where we must worship is in Jerusalem.”

21 Jesus replied, “…a time is coming when you will worship the Father neither on this mountain nor in Jerusalem…  22 the true worshipers will worship the Father in the Spirit and in truth, for they are the kind of worshipers the Father seeks…”

What Jesus is getting at here is that the one centre for true worship is no longer a place but a person. And Jesus, the Messiah, is that person. Jesus the Christ has made a new covenant with God for us. Therefore, Jesus is the one through whom we worship God.

As Jesus said, ‘where two or three gather in my name, there I am with them’. This means we worship best when we gather with other Christian believers. And the thing that is meant to make our worship distinctive is our love for one another in Christ.

Okay, so that’s the first thing; Israel’s worship was to be distinctive from the nations around them. They were not to conform to the pattern of this world. The second thing is that Israel’s worship was to be tangible

Tangible worship:

Virtual reality is a term we have become familiar with in recent years. Virtual reality is a computer generated simulation of a three dimensional image that can be interacted with in a seemingly real way.

Virtual reality is an oxymoron though, because it is not physically real, it is intangible. You can’t eat and be nourished by a virtual sandwich. And, if you hit your thumb with a virtual hammer, you won’t do any damage nor feel any pain.

Israel’s worship was not virtual reality; it was tangible reality, worship with real substance and real consequences. It was physical as well as mental and emotional. From verse 6 we read…

there bring your burnt offerings and sacrifices, your tithes and special gifts, what you have vowed to give and your freewill offerings, and the firstborn of your herds and flocks.  

The sacrifices and offerings listed in verse 6 are real tangible physical things. They mainly include animals and crops, produce of the land, things you could eat and drink. Israel’s worship was not virtual, it was tangible.  

Burnt offerings refer to sacrifices that were burnt whole as an offering to the Lord. The ancient Hebrew word for a whole burnt offering is holocaust, which took on a new meaning after world war two. 

Most of the other sacrifices and offerings listed in verse 6 could be shared with the Levites, the priests and the poor. So, it wasn’t like the lamb or the cow was completely destroyed every time. Often the meat or the grain or the wine was put to good use in feeding people.

The tithe was meant for sharing with those in need. A tithe is 10 percent of the year’s produce or harvest. In today’s terms it is 10% of your income. In ancient Hebrew thought, the tithe was like rent paid to God for use of the land. Sort of like a share-milker pays a percentage of their income to the farm owner.

The distinctive thing about the tithe though is that God (who is effectively the King and land owner) charges a relatively low rent. By comparison, a share-milker pays around 50% of their income to the land owner. The Lord only asks 10%

In fact, God is so generous he doesn’t keep the 10% rent for himself. He doesn’t need it. Instead the Lord God directs that the tithe owing to him be given to the poor and marginalized, including the Levites (who did not own any land because they were devoted to the Lord’s service).

These days we don’t sacrifice animals as part of our worship of God. Jesus’ sacrificial death on the cross to atone for our sins fulfills the law and ends the need for animal sacrifice. Actually, Israel’s animal sacrifice in the context of worship, pointed to Jesus’ sacrifice.   

However, the end of animal sacrifice does not mean the end of tangible worship. As Christian believers, we still offer real, tangible, substantial sacrifices to God. Only the sacrifices we bring are not to atone for sin. They are an expression of our love for God.

When we come to church on a Sunday morning, we might be sacrificing a sleep in or time at the beach. That is tangible worship. When we sing songs in church we are offering a sacrifice of praise. That too is tangible worship, particularly if we don’t feel much like singing.

When we make automatic payments into the church’s bank account or put money in the offering bag; when we buy treats at the bake sale; when we give cash to World Vision or to mission work or the local food bank; we are sacrificing money and worshipping God in a tangible way.

When we volunteer to serve in the life of the church or to help a neighbour in need, we are offering our time, our talents and our energy (very real and tangible things) as an act of worship to God.

One of the most tangible ways we worship God is with our bodies. In Romans 12, Paul says: Therefore, I urge you, brothers and sisters, in view of God’s mercy, to offer your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and pleasing to God—this is your true and proper worship.  

We have a tendency to think of our bodies as our own to do with as we wish. But in Christian thought, one’s body is an instrument for God’s purpose.

When we take care of our bodies by maintaining good rhythms of sleeping, eating and exercise, then we are honouring God for the gift of our body in a very real and tangible way.

When we put our body to work in service to God; when we use our hands to help people and not harm them; when we use our tongues for kind words, not gossip; when we use our ears to listen with care; then we are offering our bodies in real tangible worship to the Lord.

Worshipping God with our bodies also means abstaining from those things that are harmful to us, like illegal drugs or too much alcohol or sleeping around. And for some that may feel like a real sacrifice.

The point is, worship is not just something we do on Sundays or on special occasions like Easter and Christmas. Tangible worship of God is a whole of life thing. As the prophet Micah famously said…

And what does the Lord require of you? To act justly and to love mercy and to walk humblywith your God.

Justice, mercy and humility are not abstract or ethereal things. They are real, tangible, down to earth actions which lend integrity to our profession of faith. 

Worship of the living God is to be distinctive, tangible and joyful.

Joyful worship:

Joy is not exactly the same as happiness. Happiness is a pleasant feeling that happens to you, almost at random. Like when a butterfly lands near you, or a baby smiles at you or your sports team has a win. Happiness is a quick energy that picks you up, then dumps you soon after. We can’t really manufacture or control the circumstances that precipitate happiness. 

But joy is more intentional than that, more purposeful, less random. Joy is low GI. Joy is a sustained, slow release kind of energy that comes from hope.    

Joy is the fruit of hope. If your hope is to be reunited with loved ones, then joy isn’t just the good feeling you get when that reunion happens. It is also the positive energy that comes from anticipating that reunion before it happens.

If your hope is to live in peace, with justice, then joy isn’t just the good feeling you get when the war ends. It is also the energy that enables you to keep pressing forward in battle and win the war.

If your hope is to reap a good harvest (and get a good return), then joy isn’t just seeing the crop in the barn (or the money in the bank). It is also the energy to do the mahi (the work), to plough the soil, sow the seed and water the crop.

If your hope is to be raised in glory with Jesus, then joy isn’t just seeing Christ return. It is also the energy to endure and be faithful in this life.

Joy is the fruit of hope.

In Deuteronomy 12, verse 7, we read: There, in the presence of the Lord your God, you and your families shall eat and shall rejoice in everything you have put your hand to, because the Lord your God has blessed you. 

For ancient Israel, worship wasn’t just singing songs, saying prayers and listening to the sermon. It also involved staying for the shared lunch. Worship of Yahweh is meant to be a joyful celebration, a party which includes everyone.

Now, it would be fair to say that we don’t always feel like rejoicing when we come to church. The circumstances of our life may be difficult and putting on a happy face feels wrong. We just can’t fake it.

Well, you don’t have to fake it. You don’t have to pretend to be happy when something bad happens to you. You are allowed to grieve. If you can’t be honest with God, then it’s not a right relationship, much less a joyful one.

Joy is the fruit of hope and we only begin to hope when life is difficult. Usually the journey to joy requires us to pass through the valley of lament.

But even when you are in the valley, you can still look forward in hope to a time when God will wipe away every tear. You can rejoice in faith that life won’t always suck. Jesus is making all things new and he will redeem your loss in his way and his time.    

The joyful worship celebration envisioned by Moses, in Deuteronomy 12, is like a sign post pointing forward to the Messianic Banquet at the end of time, when those who love Jesus will be reunited with him in the greatest party the world has ever known.

Conclusion:

Many centuries after Moses, William Temple offered his vision of worship, which illuminates something of what Jesus meant when he talked about worshipping God in Spirit and in truth. William Temple writes…

Worship is the submission of all our nature to God. It is the quickening of conscience by His holiness; the nourishment of mind with His truth; the purifying of imagination by His beauty; the opening of the heart to His love; the surrender of will to His purpose – and all of this gathered up in adoration, the most selfless emotion of which our nature is capable.                     

Father God, help us to worship you in Spirit and in truth, we pray. Amen.

Questions for discussion or reflection:

What stands out for you in reading this Scripture and/or in listening to the sermon? Why do you think this stood out to you?

  • Why does Moses insist that Israel worship the Lord their God in a distinctive way? In what ways was Israel’s worship meant to differ from Canaanite worship? In what ways is Christian worship today (meant to be) distinctive from the prevailing culture?
  • What do you think Jesus meant when he talked about worshipping in the Spirit and in truth (in John 4)?  What might this mean for us today?
  • Why do we no longer need to sacrifice animals as part of our worship of God? What tangible things do you do to worship God? How do you worship God with your body?
  • How does the ancient practice of tithing reveal the generosity of God?
  • Discuss / reflect on the difference between joy and happiness. Where does your joy come from? What is it you hope for?
  • Make some time this week to reflect on William Temple’s vision of worship, then spend time in adoration of God.   

[1] Patrick Miller, Interpretation commentary on Deuteronomy, pages 131-132. 

Prevention

Scripture: Deuteronomy 5:20; 7:25; Exodus 20:17; Matthew 6:19-24

Video Link: https://youtu.be/CtbHmRzQrW0

Structure:

  • Introduction
  • Do not covet – it’s about prevention
  • Taking care of yourself
  • Conclusion

Introduction:

Good morning everyone.

Have you ever stood on the edge of a cliff and been tempted to take a peak over the side? It’s a pretty risky thing to do. You could slip and fall. You could be caught by a gust of wind and lose your balance. Or the ground on which you are standing may give way and take you with it. The smart thing to do is stay well away from the edge, then you eliminate the risk of falling.  

Today we continue our series in Deuteronomy. We are up to that part (in chapter 5) where Moses reiterates the ten commandments of Yahweh. This morning our focus is the last command, in verse 21, which can be summarised as you shall not covet.

The word covet means to desire strongly, yearn for or set your heart on something that belongs to someone else. Coveting, therefore, is about one’s inner life. It is not so much an action, but rather the thought and feeling (or the

motivation) that precedes the action.

Do not covet – it’s about prevention:

The command to not covet is like a fence at the top of the cliff which prevents you going anywhere near the edge. If you can keep the command to not covet, then you won’t come close to breaking any of the other commandments. Do not covet is that stitch in time that saves nine. It is that ounce of prevention that is better than a pound of cure.

The command to not covet requires us to take care of our heart; to pay attention to the workings of our inner life, our thoughts and feelings and desires. But before we get into taking care of our inner life, let’s look more closely at the actual wording that goes with the command to not covet.

In Deuteronomy 5, we read…   

21 “You shall not covet your neighbour’s wife.

You shall not set your desire on your neighbour’s house or land, his male or female servant, his ox or donkey, or anything that belongs to your neighbour.”

As you know by now, the ten commandments were given twice in the Bible. Firstly, in Exodus 20, at Mount Sinai near the beginning of Israel’s time in the wilderness and then a second time, in Deuteronomy 5, nearly 40 years later when the people of Israel were preparing to enter the Promised Land.

Both versions are written from a patriarchal perspective and so they probably make us cringe a little bit today. But the wording reflects the reality of that time. Three to four thousand years ago men tended to be the ones in charge and women were generally subservient to men.

I don’t think God (or Moses) was meaning to exclude women with this commandment. Nor is this an endorsement of patriarchal culture.

To the contrary, the law was given to protect women and other vulnerable people, from abuse by those in power (and men held most of the power). If a man decided he wanted someone else’s wife or house or servant, it was usually the women and children who suffered the most.

So women are not excluded from this commandment. Translating this for our own contemporary context we would say that no one should covet.

We need to avoid a literalistic interpretation. The examples given in this commandment are not exhaustive, they are by way of illustration. Not many people own an ox or a donkey these days but if you are a farmer then you probably own a tractor (which is equivalent to an ox) and most of us own a car (which is equivalent to a donkey).    

When we put the Exodus version alongside the Deuteronomy version we notice, they are not exactly the same. In the Exodus version, wives are lumped together with houses and donkeys. But in Deuteronomy 5, wives come first and are treated separately from houses and livestock.

It appears like something happened those 40 years in the wilderness that changed the way men think.  

In Christian tradition, the Catholics and Lutherans have followed Deuteronomy and treated the injunction to not covet as two separate commandments. That is: you shall not covet your neighbour’s wife is the ninth commandment and you shall not set your desire on your neighbour’s stuff is the tenth commandment.  

The Protestant tradition has followed Exodus and lumped everything together, which lends itself to being misunderstood.

I prefer the Deuteronomy version and am treating wives separately from chattels. We dealt with the command to not covet your neighbour’s spouse a few weeks ago, when we talked about adultery and doing the Wordle on the train, so there is no need to cover that again today.

This morning’s message focuses more on the second part of Deuteronomy 5, verse 21, about not coveting your neighbour’s house and contents. If you don’t set your heart on your neighbour’s stuff you will avoid falling off the cliff edge of murder, adultery, theft and lying.

Although there is a direct connection between coveting and the other commandments, coveting is unique in that it is a secret sin. No one can witness you coveting, like they might see you stealing or hear you lying. Which means you can’t face legal proceedings or go to jail for coveting.

Yet this does not make coveting any less dangerous. If anything, the internal, hidden nature of coveting makes it more dangerous. With coveting the poison is inside you. It’s not like dirt on your hands which you can wash off. Coveting is more like sugar in your petrol tank; it wrecks your engine.

Coveting is insidious in that it undermines the foundation of our relationships, not just our relationship with our neighbour but also our relationship with God. Coveting can lead to idolatry, the worship of things God has made.

In Deuteronomy 7 we read:  25 The images of their gods you are to burn in the fire. Do not covet the silver and gold on them, and do not take it for yourselves, or you will be ensnared by it…  

In the context of Deuteronomy 7, Moses is instructing the Israelites to destroy Canaanite religion because it is like acid to the human soul and therefore detestable to God.

Jesus was well aware of the danger of coveting. He saw the connection between coveting and idolatry. In Matthew 6, Jesus warned against the dangers of setting your heart on earthly wealth. From verse 19 we read…

19 “Do not store up riches for yourselves here on earth, where moths and rust destroy, and robbers break in and steal. 20 Instead, store up riches for yourselves in heaven, where moths and rust cannot destroy, and robbers cannot break in and steal. 21 For your heart will always be where your riches are.

22 “The eyes are like a lamp for the body. If your eyes are sound, your whole body will be full of light; 23 but if your eyes are no good, your body will be in darkness. So if the light in you is darkness, how terribly dark it will be!

 24 “You cannot be a slave of two masters; you will hate one and love the other; you will be loyal to one and despise the other. You cannot serve both God and money.

Jesus is warning against the dangers of greed and material wealth here. Although he doesn’t explicitly use the word ‘covet’ in these verses, it is implied by the little parable about the eyes being a lamp for the body. We tend to covet things with our eyes. We see it, we want it.

Jesus is speaking metaphorically. A person’s eyes, in this context, refer to that person’s perception of others. So the phrase, ‘if your eyes are sound’, means if your perception or your way of looking at others is generous, warm and open hearted, then your body will be full of light. You will have a right perspective and generally be happier, in other words.

But if your eyes are no good, that is: if you look at others with meanness of spirit or if you look at others with greedy or coveting eyes, thinking how can I take advantage of this person for my own ends, then you will be filled with darkness. You will lose perspective and become cynical, cold and suspicious of others.

Greed, coveting, love of money, all goes hand in hand with idolatry, with the worship of things God has made, things that are beneath us. And when we worship the things God has made (rather than God himself) we tend to devalue our neighbour who is made in God’s image.

Okay, so we have talked about what coveting is and how dangerous it is as a gateway to all sorts of evil. The purpose with the command to not covet is to prevent us from breaking any of the other commandments. How then can we avoid coveting?

Taking care of ourselves:

Well, four things you can do to take care of yourself and guard against coveting: Renew, Reflect, Remember and Relax. Renew your mind. Reflect on your true desires. Remember who you serve. Relax and enjoy what you have.

In Romans 12, Paul says: Do not conform to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what God’s will is—his good, pleasing and perfect will.

Renewing your mind is about thinking well. It’s about replacing the lies we tell ourselves with the truth.

For example, if the pattern of this world is, I must make lots of money and be rich in order to be secure, then renewing your mind means changing the script and replacing the lie with the truth, namely: Security comes through right relationships with others. Therefore, taking care of my relationships needs to be the priority.       

Or, if the pattern of this world is, I must be successful in the eyes of others in order to be accepted, then renewing your mind means changing the script and replacing the lie with the truth, namely: God accepts me in Christ. I need to be faithful. What other people think of me is none of my business. 

The trouble with the pattern of this world is that we don’t usually recognise it at first, because it is all we know. We often believe the lie to be true. What lies do you believe in? What truth do you need to replace these lies with?

Reflecting on your true desires is the second thing you can do to guard against coveting.  

Augustine wrote in his Confessions: “You have made us for yourself, O Lord, and our hearts are restless until they rest in you.”

Or, as Bono puts it, ‘I still haven’t found what I’m looking for’.

Sometimes we think we know what we want but when we get it, we are still dissatisfied, still hungry for more. Which tells us we didn’t really understand our true desire in the first place. Our desires are like an onion or a Russian doll, they have layers. 

For example, we might think we want a fourth and fifth glass of wine when what we really want is someone to love us. While the wine does numb the pain temporarily, no amount of alcohol can take away loneliness.

Rather than reacting to every desire that raises it head (like a game of whack a mole) we do better to press pause and reflect on what our true desire is, the deeper underlying desire.

Most of our desires are perfectly legitimate in themselves. The desire for intimacy, the desire for identity and belonging. The desire for our lives to have lasting significance. Nothing wrong with these. The problem is the way we might try to satisfy those desires.  

Take the desire for affection. Nothing wrong with wanting affection. But if we try to satisfy our desire for affection by pursuing someone else’s spouse, then people get hurt. Likewise, there is nothing wrong with wanting to be accepted. But if we try to satisfy our desire for acceptance by harming someone else’s reputation, then our belonging is based on a lie.

The point is, sometimes bad behaviour is driven by legitimate desires. Before we react to every little craving, we need to reflect on what it is we really want and find a better strategy for meeting those desires.    

For example: If you want to belong, build trust. If you want intimacy, find the right person to be vulnerable with. If you want your life to have meaning, love God and love your neighbour. If you want to be wise, listen more than you talk. If you want to be great, become the servant of all. If you want to be righteous, look to Jesus to justify you.        

Augustine believed the deepest desire of all, the hunger that drives every other hunger, is our desire to be reunited with God. Our heart (our inner life) is restless until it finds its rest in God. Jesus came to give us that rest. He came to reunite us with God.

For most of us that reunion with God is a slow train coming. Becoming a Christian doesn’t automatically mean the end of all wanting. God is faithful and gives us what we need to be sure. But he doesn’t always give us what we want. We have to wait for Jesus’ return before we can fully realise true rest from desire.

In the meantime, we do well to ask ourselves: what are the deeper desires driving my behaviour? What is it I really want? And, do I need better strategies for managing those desires?

The third thing you can do to avoid coveting is to remember who you serve

In Deuteronomy 5, as part of the Sabbath commandment, we read…        

15 Remember that you were slaves in Egypt and that the Lord your God brought you out of there with a mighty hand and an outstretched arm. 

This verse (along with much of Deuteronomy) is an instruction to the people of Israel to remember who they serve. The Israelites no longer serve a tyrant like Pharaoh. Nor do they serve themselves. They serve the Lord God Almighty, who is both powerful and kind.

Yahweh set Israel free from Egypt in order to be his holy people. Likewise, Jesus has set us free from sin and death so that we can be God’s holy people too. We are not set free to do whatever we want. We are set free to serve God’s purpose.

Remembering who you serve is closely related to remembering who you are. In the gospels of Matthew & Luke we read how Satan tempted Jesus in the wilderness.

The evil one did not tempt Jesus with obvious sins like murder or adultery. Satan appealed to Jesus’ desires by trying to entice Jesus to covet. ‘If you are the Son of God, satisfy your hunger by turning these stones into bread. Make a name for yourself by jumping off the temple. Get power for yourself by worshipping me.’

But Jesus wasn’t buying any of it. Jesus remembered who he was and who he served. Interestingly, the Scriptures Jesus used to resist Satan come from Deuteronomy chapters 6-8.

Where Israel failed in the wilderness, Jesus made good on their behalf. Where we fail in our times of testing, Jesus makes good on our behalf. And so we belong to Christ, we serve Jesus.

We remember who we are and who we serve by maintaining simple rhythms like daily Bible reading, giving thanks to God before every meal, spending quality time with other believers, and not letting ourselves become too busy but making space to be still.        

So the question is, what rhythms (or spiritual disciplines) do you maintain to remind yourself that you serve Jesus?

We are talking about how we take care of ourselves in order to avoid coveting. Renew your mind. Reflect on your true desires. Remember who you serve, and fourthly, relax, enjoy what you have.

God didn’t give us the ten commandments to make our lives more stressful or difficult. When applied properly, God’s Law supports human flourishing and indeed the flourishing of all creation.  

Distress is one of the hidden costs of coveting. Wanting what we can’t have creates a pressure in us. It puts us on edge. It robs us of our peace and joy. We are generally happier when we relax and enjoy what we already have, rather than chasing after something we can’t have.

In Mark 2, Jesus says: The Sabbath was made for man, not man for the Sabbath. We are not machines. God did not make us to stay ‘on’ all the time. The Lord provides one day off in seven for us to relax and enjoy what we have.

When we practice Sabbath, when we take time off to relax, we find that many of those desires which are unhelpful, evaporate, like the morning mist after sunrise. God’s law supports the flourishing of his creation.  

I wonder then, how do you relax? Do you practice Sabbath, taking one day off in seven. What is it you do for enjoyment?

Conclusion:

In Psalm 37 we read…

Delight yourself in the Lord and he will give you the desires of your heart.

Much of what we set our heart on in this life doesn’t last. Houses, cars, career, status, reputation. These sorts of things are here today, gone tomorrow. But the Lord is forever.

Delighting yourself in the Lord is about taking pleasure in God himself. It’s about loving the giver more than his gifts. It’s about being mindful of God’s grace in the present and not longing for the past or worrying about the future.

Delighting in the Lord is the fence at the top of the cliff, preventing us from coveting. Delighting in the Lord renews our mind and puts us in touch with our true desires, most of all the desire to be close to God. Delighting in the Lord reminds us of who we serve and who we are. What’s more, delighting in the Lord enables us to relax and enjoy what we have.

Let us pray…

Father God, your ways are life to us. Forgive us for the times we pursue things we shouldn’t. Help us to think well and find our contentment in you. Through Jesus we pray. Amen.  

Questions for discussion or reflection:

What stands out for you in reading these Scriptures and/or in listening to the sermon? Why do you think this stood out to you?

  • In what sense is the command to not covet like a fence at the top of the cliff?
  • How does coveting affect our relationship with God? How does coveting affect our relationship with our neighbour? How does coveting affect us personally (internally)?
  • What does it mean to ‘renew your mind’? How do we go about renewing our mind? What lies do you believe in? What truth do you need to replace these lies?
  • How might we identify our true desires? What underlying desires are driving your behaviour at present? What strategies do you have for managing those desires?  Do you need some better strategies? 
  • Why did Jesus set us free? What rhythms (or spiritual disciplines) do you maintain to remind yourself that you serve Jesus? Are these rhythms an effective reminder? If not, what needs to change?
  • How do you relax? What do you enjoy? Make a list of the good things in your life. How might you best enjoy / celebrate these good things?

In Exodus 20 we read…

17 “You shall not covet your neighbour’s house. You shall not covet your neighbour’s wife, or his male or female servant, his ox or donkey, or anything that belongs to your neighbour.”