WHY SIT HERE TILL WE DIE?
"Behold, the days come, saith the Lord GOD, that I will send a famine in the land, not a famine of bread, nor a thirst for water, but of hearing the words of the LORD: and they shall wander from sea to sea, and from the north even to the east, they shall run to and fro to seek the word of the LORD, and shall not find it." (Amos 8:11, 12).
In a day when there are more churches in most cities
than there are gas stations and pizza places, and the Word of God has gone out
over the air waves of radio and television to every corner of the world, it is
difficult to imagine that the prophet Amos could have been describing this
present time when he spoke of a famine of hearing the words of the Lord. The key to understanding this prophecy,
however, is in the wording. God was
speaking of a time when there would be, not an absence of the Word itself, but
of hearing the Word.
We are told in Romans 10, "So then faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the
word of God. But I say, Have
they not heard? Yes verily, their sound went into all the earth, and their
words unto the ends of the world." (Romans 10:17, 18). The Gospel message has certainly been
preached, published, and broadcast throughout the earth, but it can only
transform those who will hear it, believe it, and receive it. It’s not just exposure to the Word of God
that changes us, but it’s in really hearing
what God is saying to us, and letting the Word change us from the inside
out. It is like telling our kids to do
something and, when they don't follow through, asking them, "Didn't you
hear what I told you?" We speak the
words to them and make it plain what we expect; but they are just not hearing
us, or worse, deliberately ignoring what we say. This must be how God often feels when dealing
with His children. Faith is the victory
that overcomes the world, but there can be no faith where there is no
hearing. Until we really listen to what
the Lord is saying to us, and are willing to follow what He tells us, we are
going to continue to live lost and defeated lives. As Paul admonishes us in Hebrews, "Let us therefore fear, lest, a promise
being left us of entering into
his rest, any of you should seem to come short of it. For unto us was the gospel preached, as well
as unto them: but the word preached
did not profit them, not being mixed with faith in them that heard it." (Hebrews 4:1, 20).
In the days of Elisha the prophet, the king of Syria
besieged the city of Samaria, and there was a terrible famine that resulted
because the city could not get supplies through the enemy lines. It became so desperate that mothers
considered eating their own babies.
Elisha, however, prophesied on a certain day that on the next day there
would be food in abundance. Of course,
he was mocked for his words, for one of the king's lords said, "Behold, if the Lord would make windows
in heaven, might this thing be?" (2 Kings 7:2). Elisha's words were to prove true, though.
There were four leprous men sitting at the gate of the
city, discussing their plight. They reasoned
that if they went into the city, they would die of hunger; and if they sat
still, they would also starve to death.
So, they agreed that if they went to the Syrian camp, the worse that
could happen is that the Syrians would kill them - which, under the
circumstances, seemed to be their lot regardless. On the other hand, maybe the Syrians would
feed them and keep them alive. It was a
slim hope to be sure, but a hope just the same.
As the lepers approached the Syrian camp, surprisingly,
they were met with no resistance. When they came into the enemy camp, they
found no one there, but the unattended tents, along with their contents, had been
left behind and were still intact! As it
turned out, God had sent the sound of a great army in the ears of the Syrians
and they had become so afraid of being slaughtered that they dropped everything
and fled across the desert. Overjoyed,
the lepers entered the first tent that they encountered and ate and drank. Then they hauled away valuables from the tent
and hid them, and returned to sack another tent. At this point, they realized that they were
doing wrong by gorging themselves while their countrymen were starving to death
in the city. So, they hurried back to
the city of Samaria and told the king the news.
God's words were then fulfilled which He had spoken through His servant
Elisha, for the people of Samaria plundered the tents of the Syrians and found
an overabundance of food to satisfy their hunger.
In a time when it is so difficult for many to discern
the will of God, and to really hear
what the Lord is speaking to this generation, God truly has promised to open
the windows of heaven, and give us spiritual riches and nourishment beyond our
wildest dreams. We are often like the
leprous men, however, sitting in the gate of the city until we starve to
death. We struggle with our selfishness,
our pride, our lusts and our covetousness; but we do not obey God when He
speaks to us, and shows us the way to overcome.
God speaks to us in His still, small voice, asking us to give and to forgive, to give up and to give in to
His plan for our lives. Every time we
ignore Him, it becomes harder and harder to hear Him until we find ourselves
destitute of the truth. We would sooner
sit still and die than to stand up and face our enemies, and allow God's
promises to be fulfilled.
I have often struggled with things in my life that God
knew I would be better off without, but I thought I couldn't live without
having. The longer that I tried to
ignore God and deny that it was He Who was speaking the harder it became to
hear from Him at all. When I would go
before the Lord, it was the only thing He had to talk about, and it was the
last thing I wanted to hear! Eventually,
it affected every area of my spiritual life - my prayer, my reading, my ministry. I was truly experiencing a famine of hearing
the Words of the Lord. I still had the
Bible close at hand with all the written Word of God, but it wasn't nourishing
my soul because I would not apply it, I would not hear it.
Usually, there is some action required of us - some
letting go of the thing that is destroying us.
Like the lepers, we've got to realize that we're going to die
spiritually if we just sit still. God's
people are a desperate lot, and they continually face extraordinary situations
in their lives. However, extraordinary challenges
provide extraordinary opportunities for God to work extraordinary faith. We find that when we face the giants in our
lives, they really do become bread for us; and we are nourished because our
faith is increased when we trust in God’s deliverance. Every great and miraculous story in the Bible
started with someone who thought they were too weak, too insignificant, too
unworthy to be used by God. These same
ones, however, were willing to really hear
what God could do and believe that He could do it through them despite their “shortcomings”. God has said, “My strength is made perfect through weakness.” Isn’t it time that
we open our ears, along with our hearts, to what God is speaking to us, and
believe in the saving grace that is in Jesus Christ, our Redeemer and Messiah?
"Thus
saith the LORD, thy Redeemer, the Holy One of Israel; I am the LORD thy God which teacheth thee to profit, which leadeth
thee by the way that thou
shouldest go. O that thou hadst hearkened to My commandments! then had thy peace
been as a river, and thy righteousness as the waves of the sea." (Isaiah 48:17, 18).
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