Tuesday, June 30, 2020

Habakkuk 3:1-19 HABAKKUK’S ‘AHA’ EXPERIENCE


The response to God’s revelation  to Habakkuk concerning  God’s judgement on Israel, and   also on the Babylonians  is prayer - and  prayer may sometimes begin with a stunned silence! 

As God made known His plans and purposes  to Habakkuk concerning the nation of Israel – namely that He would send the  ruthless Babylonians to punish them,   the prophet fell silent.  In fact, at this  moment  he  was overtaken  by   the awesome holiness of God, and  he felt that the whole  earth should keep quiet:  
The LORD is in His holy temple ; let all the earth  keep silence before Him” (2:20) .

Chapter  3  is written  in the form of a prayer  and reads  like a Psalm. At the end of this chapter we note that (like in  the Psalms) this  final  piece of  Habakkuk's prophecy is written   to be sung (see 3:19). And so we see  that  something  that began as an individual’s response to God,  has now moved into public domain. Habakkuk speaks for us. These words are  an appropriate response of every believer facing  perplexing  times. 

The prayer of Habakkuk is introduced in these words:  [3:1] A prayer of Habakkuk the prophet, according to Shigionoth
My Hebrew translation[1] says “according to erring ones”; The commentator Homer Hailey translates, “to reel or stagger like drunken ones[2]. Habakkuk had been mistaken about God’s ways in the world and now he  is  staggering and reeling  as a result of this revelation  like a drunken man. This emotion  is  strongly reflected  in  his prayer and response   which can be divided into three parts:
1.        Habakkuk’s statement of  faith (3:2)
2.        Habakkuk remembrance of  God’s past dealings   (3:3-15 )
3.        Habakkuk’s personal confession  (3:16-19)

1.       Habakkuk’s statement of  faith (3:2)

Here  we see how Habakkuk  moves from  man centered  fear   to  God centered, God fearing  faith:
[2] O LORD, I have heard the report of you, and your work, O LORD, do I fear.  In the midst of the years revive it; in the midst of the years make it known; in wrath remember mercy.  

Habakkuk is awestruck  by the  word and work of God.  He says , Oh YAHWEH!”  This is reverent fear  – in fact , it is the fear that he longs to see  known  in the nation.  Israel had lost her  awe of God, and as Habakkuk now hears and sees   the plan of God, and while he now endorses  it, he is pleading  with God to be  merciful:  
“...in  wrath remember mercy.”   (3:2

This is similar to Abraham’s pleading with  God over Sodom and Gomorrah (Genesis 18). Of course God  does not have to be  reminded  to be merciful. He knows how to be merciful. He is merciful, but in this case  (as in the case of Sodom)  the nation's wickedness  has reached saturation point. 
A great difference is now seen in Habakkuk’s attitude. He is humbled. He  is submitted  to the Word of God. Compare  his  attitude here with the first two chapters! 

How was Habakkuk brought to this position? 
The big change  in Habakkuk came about as he stopped thinking primarily about his own nation or of the Babylonians and  started thinking  about the holiness and the justice of God.   

2.       Habakkuk remembers  God’s past dealings with Israel (3:3-15)

One of the most  effective ways of dealing with  the fear of  future  events  is  to remember God’s faithful dealings  with us in the past. This is  what  Habakkuk is doing here.  In 3:3-15  Habakkuk remembers the LORD (Yahweh) coming  in two ways: 
(i)  to save His people  
(ii) to destroy His enemies

[3] God came from Teman, and the Holy One from Mount Paran. Selah His splendor covered the heavens, and the earth was full of his praise.  
Remembering God’s past dealings with Israel gives Habakkuk perspective for the future. He sees the God of history as He delivered His people  from Egypt through Sinai to the present day. Teman[3] is found in Edom and Mt. Paran in the Sinai Peninsula  (Deut. 3:2); Cushan and Midian  are places-  all  mentioned in the Exodus, where God manifested Himself in mighty ways to Israel   and the surrounding nations. 
3:5 speaks  of the plagues of Egypt. 
3:8  refers to the parting of the Red sea and later the river Jordan. 
3:11 probably refers to the events mentioned  in  Joshua  10:12,13 when the sun stood still  and when God gave  Israel  a great victory. 
3: 12 - 15  speak about the conquest  of Canaan.

But here all this needs to be applied  to  Babylon.  The current enemies were not the Egyptians or the Edomites or the Midianites. They were the Babylonians.  They were currently  God’s  instrument  to punish and humble  Israel. And Habakkuk needed to remember that  while these were real enemies, these enemies too would be dealt with by God.  Soon this ruthless Babylon would be at the receiving end  of the wrath of God. Look at the language. God is at the center: 
[4] His brightness was like the light; rays flashed from his hand; and there he veiled his power. [5] Before him went pestilence, and plague followed at his heels. 6] He stood and measured the earth; he looked and shook the nations; then the eternal mountains were scattered; the everlasting hills sank low. His were the everlasting ways. [7] I saw the tents of  Cushan in affliction;  the curtains of the land of Midian did tremble.
Notice the repetition of the singular forms, ‘he’ and ‘him’ and ‘his’.  God is at work. He is in charge, and the nations had better tremble!  
We know that   many other prophets reveal  God’s use of pestilence and plagues. We  see these  used by God in Egypt, in  the  Sinai wilderness and in  Canaan. 

We have  every reason to believe that God works in the same manner now. Covid- 19 is not  a random event. You may believe that this is a tool in the hand of God to bring us to our senses in the midst of this present madness.

God’s mighty acts in history exist to give us  perspective and therefore  courage and hope for the future.  God  has not promised his people  that He will ignore their sin. But He has promised  to save His people, and therefore He will save them. The God  who  makes promises stands by His promises[4]. The whole world is in the hands of this  mighty Creator, and one day "every knee will bow in heaven and on earth, and every  tongue will confess that Jesus Christ is Lord  to the glory of God the Father.” (Phil 2:10,11)

Selah – used three times (only here and in the Psalms) – thought to indicate a pause in the singing – after which Habakkuk (like John in the Revelation)   is given to see  the  awesome splendor of God.

And now  notice  a grammatical change in 3:8.  Instead of Habakkuk telling us  about the Lord’s power,  he now   speaks  directly  to the LORD  himself. See how Habakkuk describes  the world  and the universe   as it reacts  to the  coming wrath  of God:  
[8] Was your wrath against the rivers, O LORD? Was your anger against the rivers, or your indignation against the sea, when you rode on your horses, on your chariot of salvation? [9] You stripped the sheath from your bow, calling for many arrows. Selah You split the earth with rivers. [10] The mountains saw you and writhed; the raging waters swept on; the deep gave forth its voice; it lifted its hands on high. [11] The sun and moon stood still in their place at the light of your arrows as they sped, at the flash of your glittering spear. [12] You marched through the earth in fury; you threshed the nations in anger. [13] You went out for the salvation of your people, for the salvation of your anointed. You crushed the head of the house of the wicked, laying him bare from thigh to neck. Selah  [14] You pierced with his own arrows the heads of his warriors, who came like a whirlwind to scatter me, rejoicing as if to devour the poor in secret. [15] You trampled the sea with your horses, the surging of mighty waters.

Habakkuk rejoices as he sees the coming  justice of God,  but don’t get this  wrong. Habakkuk did not have a perverse desire to see his people annihilated.  He is after all the prophet who prayed to God  in the first place, “in wrath remember mercy” (3:2).  He is the prophet  who has come to  terms with God's righteous  working  in  stubborn Israel. Despite the fact that  God’s people  had become idol-worshippers and  despite the fact that they  had rejected Jeremiah’s  faithful prophetic ministry  and preaching for forty years (Habakkuk was Jermiah's contemporary), and  despite the fact that Habakkuk knew that  nothing would hold God back now in terms of the  punishment,   he prophesied  with a heavy  and a broken heart.
  • In this he was   just like  the Lord Jesus, who when He saw the wicked city of Jerusalem, He wept over it. He  longed to have gathered  her  as a hen gathers her chicks under her wings – but the people of Jerusalem would not!   
  • In this he was  like  the apostle  Paul,  so  horribly abused by the Jews, and  who yet maintained that his heart’s desire and prayer to God for Israel was that they should be saved (Rom. 10:1).  He  wished  himself accursed that they might be blessed (Rom. 9:2,3).  But of course he could not do that, for God’s will and work, and God’s perfect justice  had to be completed among the Jews. 
  • This is also   Habakkuk’s attitude.  Notice  what he says as he finished describing the mighty judgments of God? [16] I hear, and my body trembles; my lips quiver at the sound; rottenness enters into my bones; my legs tremble beneath me. Yet I will quietly wait for the day of trouble to come upon people who invade us.”
Oh brothers and sisters – in the face of eternity, and of  the judgment to come, I beg you to consider  not to look at  the plight of this world  with indifference. May our bodies never cease to tremble; our lips never cease  to quiver as we think  of the future of this evil world that has done us so much damage  in the present.
You must think of  our Babylonians as real people. Our enemies are people with real souls. They  are facing a real judgment by a real God.  
Do your  bodies tremble at the thought of  so very many facing the prospects of eternal hell?    
Tell  your  world! Preach the gospel to your world. Tell them of the coming wrath and of the mercy of God.   "Knowing therefore the terrors of the Lord let us persuade men".  Cry to God, “O Lord, in  your  wrath remember mercy.” Abraham prayed like that over Sodom, and Habakkuk prayed it over Israel, and Jesus over Jerusalem, and Paul over his fellow-countrymen, and shouldn’t we pray it over  Windhoek and Namibia?

3.       Habakkuk’s  Personal Confession (3:16-19)

The best way to conclude is simply read Habakkuk’s confession"
[17] Though the fig tree should not blossom, nor fruit be on the vines, the produce of the olive fail and the fields yield no food, the  flock be cut off from the fold and there be no herd in the stalls, [18] yet I will rejoice in the LORD; I will take joy in the God of my salvation. [19] GOD, the Lord, is my strength; he makes my feet like the deer's; he makes me tread on my high places. To the choirmaster: with stringed instruments.

Practical Lessons  from Habakkuk

The  Habakkuk so  filled with fear at the beginning   now has a new understanding of the character of God. These are some of the  lessons he learned:
1.        God does not despise a sincere  questioner.
2.        The  short term view  is often the false  view.
3.        The believer can trust God in every crisis.
4.        Evil has within itself the germs of death.
5.        We may see  and understand  God and His ways  only  by faith alone.
6.       We cannot expect  to have  all doubts solved but  we must  be sure of God.
7.        In dealing with doubt  God invites us to  turn to Him  and wait for the answer.
8.        Trusting God ultimately  brings  joy.



[1] Pocket Interlinear Old Testament, Vol 3 . p. 2144
[2] Homer Hailey : A commentary on the  Minor Prophets , p.289
[3] Teman:  the name of Esau’s grandson – represents the lands of Edom ( Amos 1:12)
[4] see the promises of Matt 6:25-33 ; John  14:1-3 ; 25-27; Matt 28:18-20

Monday, June 29, 2020

Genesis 35 “Back to the Original Plan”



OUTLINE
1.     35:1-8 Back to Bethel
2.     35:9-15 God’s Covenantal Blessing Reaffirmed
3.     35:16-29  Sin and Sadness  in the Family
4.     35:27-26 Back home with Isaac  

Nearly thirty years have passed since Jacob vowed to return to Bethel, where God had revealed Himself to him during his escape from Esau to Paddan-aram (Gen.28) where his uncle Laban lived. 

Now  it had been approximately ten years since Jacob had left his uncle to return to Canaan. We saw that he had built a house in Succoth (33:17) and then in Shechem (33:18ff) where he had also built an altar (33:20).  You see, the original plan was for Jacob to return to Bethel, the place he had vowed to God that he would return to (28:20-22). Bethel was only 45 km’s from Shechem, but somehow Jacob never got back to this place of oath and promise.

You cannot break an oath, or a vow made before God with impunity, and so we are not surprised to see what happened  in  Chapter  34  where we read  of  his daughter Dinah’s rape, and the terrible revenge  killing  of the Shechemites, undertaken  by the sons of Jacob. 
All this  was  the  result of settling in the wrong neighbourhood.   

Not only was this a spiritually cold and disappointing season for Jacob and his covenant family (God is never mentioned in that 34th  chapter), but the testimony of his family was seriously damaged at this time.  Somewhere along the way Jacob had lost the vision of God as he became preoccupied with settling at any old place that pleased the natural eye.  We can say that his faith had grown lukewarm[1]. He had backslidden. He is near Bethel but not near to the God of Bethel. This experience is unfortunately all too common to all Christians.  We may be near God and near His means of grace but in our hearts we may be far from God. 
Thank God then for Genesis 35 where we shall find that Jacob is helped by the grace of God to find his way back to the original plan.

1.     Back to Bethel (35:1-8)

God said to Jacob, “Arise, go  up to Bethel and dwell there. Make an altar there to the God who appeared to you when you fled from your brother Esau” (35:1) 
Why did God wait so long to tell Jacob  to  get back  to  Bethel? The answer is simple. The matter was actually settled in Genesis 28.  God does not have to send out daily reminders. He has spoken once and that is enough!  Jacob would have done well with what we preach to our children – insisting on first time obedience!  Jacob clearly had neither obeyed nor listened to God. But now the pain caused in Chapter 34 becomes God’s megaphone to get Jacob’s attention – to  speak  once more into Jacob’s  life.  We saw that Jacob and his family had now become a stench in the land (34:30). It was only at this point that Jacob listened to the voice of God reminding him of his oath and duty to return to Bethel.

Now here is a useful teaching moment with respect to the interplay between God’s will and man’s will, particularly as this applies to God’s covenant children.  We do have a free will in the sense of being able to choose whether or not we will obey that which God has commanded. BUT,while we can resist the  will of God  we  will not  hinder God’s ultimate purposes. 
God allows his covenant children to choose their own way, but it is clear that in doing so they will reap the consequences of their disobedience. Nevertheless, in the final analysis, God will bring his covenant people back to His will and purpose. And when  they have been hurt  and when they  are left bruised and bleeding as a result of their  sinful choices, our gracious covenant God  picks them up and sends them in the right direction.

But another thing was needed before Jacob could move to Bethel, where God’s presence was formerly made manifest. Jacob  needed to purge  his covenant family from  the presence of foreign gods  and  their influences. Isn’t it strange that until now he had done nothing about these? These foreign gods (i.e. visible images -35:2,4),  and also the earrings (35:4) are probably  a reference to the household gods that Rachel had stolen from her dad  in 31:19, when they had fled from Laban. In addition, this  culture and practise of keeping  household gods probably had spread among the clan.  This this idolatry had to be decisively dealt with before moving on into the presence of a holy God. 
Again we are struck by the spiritual coldness and indifference of Jacob concerning these things (which he knew to be wrong) whilst he lived in Shechem.  And now, all of a sudden when God called him to return to Bethel, he was greatly concerned about these things.  It took a crisis to confront his lukewarm idolatrous heart.

And so, as  soon as they left for Bethel, back on the right road, we learn  that no one pursued the covenant family, for “a terror from God[2]  fell upon the cities … so that they did not pursue the sons of Jacob” (35:5). When you are back on the right road again, the Lord of that road will keep you safely from all harm. We also learn from this that our protection and safety is not to be found in our own strength or in alliances with pagans, but in the fear of God.  Arriving at  Bethel Jacob, in keeping with the command of God, built an altar, calling it El-Bethel (lit. God of the House of God).  It was here we read that that Deborah, his mother Rebekah’s maid, died. 

2.     God’s Covenantal Blessing Reaffirmed (35:9-15)

God appeared to Jacob again, when he came from Paddan-aram, and blessed him (35:9). God first appeared to Jacob at Bethel, 30 years earlier. And now  God appears to him ‘again’  here  at Bethel  30 years later, and  He blesses him.  The promises given 30 years ago (28:13-15)  are  reaffirmed. And the promise of  32:28  (Jacob  renamed  Israel)  is reaffirmed. From now on Jacob would be called Israel. He would be fruitful and would become a nation and a company of nations, and the land promised to Abraham and Isaac would be his and his descendants (35:10-12).  
We are told that the presence of God at that  time  was visible,  and  that God went up from him in the place where he had spoken with him (35:13). Now in response,  Jacob set up a pillar of stone there and poured a drink offering and oil upon it (35:14).  Jacob renamed that place, originally known as Luz, as Bethel (35:6 cf. 35:15). It was absolutely essential that Jacob came here and did this. He should have done it in the first place. He was back in sync with God.

3.     35:16-29 Further  Sin and Sadness  in the Family

Then they journeyed from Bethel…. Having fulfilled  his  oath and promise to God to worship Him at Bethel, the place of his first encounter with God, he needs to complete the journey  to  see his aged father, Isaac.  Now we read that somewhere between Bethel and Bethlehem, Rachel went into hard labour (35:16). Her life was at stake. The midwife tried to encourage Rachel by informing her that it was another son she wanted so badly. But the labour was so hard that Rachel   was now dying,  and  in this process she named this second son Ben-oni, (son of my sorrow).  Jacob however changed it to Benjamin (son of my right hand). Rachel who was Jacob’s first love, was buried on the way to Bethlehem, the later birthplace of the Lord Jesus Christ our Saviour.

Sorrow is never far from this family. While Jacob was camping with his covenant family beyond the tower of Eder (35:25), another painful thing happened. Reuben, Jacob’s firstborn son, had a sexual affair with Bilhah, Rachel’s maid, who was also Jacob’s concubine. “And Israel heard of it” (35:22). Later, we read that Jacob will take the rights of the firstborn away  from Reuben (cf. 49:34). 
There is more to this story than meets the eye. Bilhah was not a young woman. She probably could have been Reuben’s mother.  So what was this all about? An incident later in the history of Israel,  in  I Kings 2:13-25 helps us to  understand  what might have been behind this.  Adonijah one of David’s sons wanted to inherit the throne of his father David very badly. He asked  Bathsheba, David’s  wife  to ask king David for Abishag the Shunammite (one of David’s consorts)  as a wife. Adonijah of course  knew that to claim the king’s harem was to possess the kingdom. That was the basis for his request. Solomon (Batheba’s son and king designate) knew it also and  therefore  he had him put to death for treason.
This may explain the action of Reuben. He, like Adonijah, was the older brother, who would have been expected to assume the rights of the firstborn. He, like Adonijah, could, by this act of “possessing  Jacob’s  harem”, assume the headship  of the tribe of Israel. In this we can see  that the  battle for Jacob’s succession was beginning.  Previous to this time, God had chosen to fulfil His covenant to Abraham through one son to the exclusion of others. Now God’s people would  be begotten through all the sons of Jacob.

4.      35:27-26 Back Home with Isaac  

The final event of the chapter records the meeting of Jacob with his father Isaac, and his brother Esau. Perhaps this was most difficult thing for Jacob -  to stand before his father, whom he had deceived in order to obtain the blessing.  One might conclude that Jacob had scarcely arrived when Isaac died, but there is evidence  to believe  that  there might have been a few years  until his father’s death. The burial of Isaac was a cooperative effort of both Jacob and Esau. There is no indication  at this point that Esau still intended to carry out his threat from years past that he would get even with Jacob once his father died (cf. 27:41).

Conclusion: What we can learn from the Chapter

1.     The importance of spiritual renewal. The goal of the  believer’s life is to stay  close to God. However, it is in the nature of a fallen being to drift. At such times it is important to go back to the place of our first love and  recommit ourselves there  to our God.  

2.     Renewal  means repentance.
a.      Jacob needed  to stop  going his own sinful way. He needed  to  do the will of God.  There cannot be renewal without repentance and renewed obedience.
b.     Jacob needed  to  put away those foreign gods which he had so long tolerated and which were so offensive to God.
c.      Jacob’s renewal involved reconciliation with those who had been injured and offended by his sins. We cannot be reconciled to God without being reconciled with men (cf. Matthew 5:23-24).

3.       We need to learn  that  even when  we  renew our relationship with God, all things will not go smoothly for us. Life in this fallen world will be challenging  until we get to our heavenly Canaan.  In this  we must learn  that our afflictions are the very things which often draw us nearer to God and strengthen our faith. Had the tragedy regarding Dinah not occurred, Jacob would have been content to remain amongst the Canaanites.

4.       We learn again  that we reap  what we sow (cf. Galatians 6:7). Much of the heartache which Jacob experienced in this chapter was the result of his previous sins.

5.      Thank God for His persevering grace with us. Let us not conclude, however that it matters little what we do. It matters a great deal. There was much needless heartache and sorrow in Jacob’s life because of his waywardness. Sin is never worth the price. But thank God that at the end  His grace IS greater than all our sin. Amen


[1] Revelation 3:14-22 – the church at Laodicea
[2] cf. Exodus 15:16; 23:27; Deuteronomy 2:25

Romans 3: 9-20 Total Depravity - THE WHOLE WORLD HELD ACCOUNTABLE TO GOD

The biblical teaching on man's Total Depravity, meaning that every person is inherently a sinner in the eyes of God conflicts with t...