Day #49
Scripture Reading: Deuteronomy 23 - 25 ...
Israel, the descendants of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob
... a people called to be "holy" to the LORD their God, a people set
apart to be different. They had been slaves in Egypt, and God had
delivered them with a mighty hand. For forty years they had wandered in
the wilderness because of their refusal to trust God and enter the land He had
promised their forefathers. Now they were about to enter the land and
Moses was preparing them by giving them instructions from God on how to live
with each other. Have you ever thought about why all these rules were
necessary?
We live in a broken world. People don't know
what is good for them; how to get along with each other or why they should
worship and serve the one true God, their Creator. These were people just
like you and me, and God was presenting to the world for all time a picture of
mankind's brokenness and our need for redemption. The details given in
these chapters include extremely personal aspects of life. When God
created us, everything was good, everything worked together, everything
glorified our Creator. But then came sin and all of creation was deeply
affected. What you read in these chapters is God speaking to a particular
people about every part of their lives because their sin was destroying them.
They were about to go into the "Promised
Land," but it would not be without many trials and struggles. It
would be clear from the beginning that only by the grace of God would they
defeat their enemies ... those outside and those inside. Ultimately, THEY
would fail, but God would be faithful in keeping His promise to send a Savior.
Meanwhile, they needed rules. There were rules for
"cleanness" and "uncleanness." Those who were "unclean"
were not allowed in the assembly of God's people. He gave them sacrifices
and offerings to bring to the tabernacle to receive His cleansing, His
forgiveness. Yet these were only a symbol, pointing to the perfect
cleansing that would happen only through the perfect sacrifice ... Jesus.
Here in Deuteronomy is a picture of human depravity
and the amazing grace of God. Some have said that there is little or no
grace in the Old Testament, but God reveals His patience and faithfulness
through one people, one nation ... Israel. Even though He eventually
brings His promised judgment on them, He spares those who believe in Him and
who trust in His love and mercy. When God tells them not to charge
interest to a brother (23:19) and to keep their vows to the LORD their God
(23:21-23), along with other instructions to help them live as a people
"holy" to God, set apart for Him, this is grace. Like the
nations around them Israel continually revealed that they, too, deserved God's
judgment. The fact that God spared them as long as He did, and that He
kept His promise to bring the Savior from the line of Judah is a testimony to
His grace and mercy.
In Chapters 24-25, God gives a number of examples
of how they are to treat other people. In Leviticus 19:18, the people
were told to love their neighbor as they loved themselves. This command
is expanded in the New Testament and becomes a fundamental part of what it
means to be a disciple of Jesus. Here in Deuteronomy God was telling them
to be merciful by reminding them that they had been slaves in Egypt, in essence
asking, "How did it feel to be slaves?" God told them
not to take advantage of other people, especially those who were poor and needy
(24:14). He told them not to deprive "the alien or the fatherless
of justice ..." (24:17), and then He tells them why: "Remember
that you were slaves in Egypt and the LORD your God redeemed you from there.
That is why I command you to do this" (24:18).
God then gives instructions about leaving behind
some of the harvest for the alien, the fatherless and the widow, and again
explains why: "Remember that you were slaves in Egypt. That
is why I command you to do this" (24:22). One of the most common
sins of people who receive grace and mercy seems to be pride. When God
delivers us from our own problems and trials, it is meant to show us His love
and grace and to move us, to inspire us to pass it on. In His parable of
the unmerciful servant in Matthew 18, Jesus points out that the one who has
received mercy but who then refuses to show mercy to his brother will face
God's just judgment and wrath. There will be no escape. Many within Israel discovered that truth the
hard way. God had watched over them and given them all they needed, yet
they rebelled against Him and even worshiped idols.
People are no different today. We live in a broken world so deeply affected
by sin and yet so blind to our need for a Savior, a Redeemer ... only the grace
of God can save us! As Moses goes on in
Chapter 25, God reveals more principles of living life in a broken world and
the importance of mercy and honesty and integrity. Those nations who had
been opposed to Israel and who had treated them harshly would face His
judgment. They would pay for their lack of mercy, for "they had
no fear of God" (25:18). They would be "forgotten" by
God. It is a picture of the final judgment, described in Revelation
20:11-14. Most people today know nothing about what God says is coming on
the world. A "day of judgment" is the last thing
people are thinking about, but it will come, as God says it will, and only
those who have received His grace and mercy in Christ Jesus will be spared.
Someday soon, God WILL "fix" this broken
world, but only through the fire of judgment. Evil will be overcome once
and for all and God will establish His kingdom in a new world, "the
home of righteousness" (II Peter 3:13). Until then there will be
rules, and people will break them. What do you do with a broken world?
But God will keep His promises and in Jesus Christ there is a sure and
certain hope for all who believe. This world and everything in it is
temporary, but those who do the will of God, who put their trust in Jesus, will
be saved and will enter into the assembly of the saints, those made holy in Christ,
to worship and serve our God and King forever and ever!
"LORD God Almighty, in Your amazing grace You
have pointed out our sin and called us to repentance and faith in Jesus.
In Your abundant mercy we find hope and in Your love we find joy
unspeakable! Help me, Father, to understand the blessing of hearing Your
commands and in humility to treat those around me with the same love and grace
that You have shown to me. In Jesus' name, Amen"
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