Friday, May 9, 2014

God's Inheritance


What do you get the person who has everything?  If you have a wealthy friend or family member, this is a dilemma you face every Christmas and birthday.  If that wealthy friend or family member is insecure and capricious, the dilemma becomes a game.  The gift becomes an emblem of your love and loyalty, and every special event becomes a pass/fail proposition. 

Throughout history people have thought of the gods as insecure and capricious.  Relating to the divine has been a pass/fail proposition, as human beings have tried to figure out what offering or sacrifice might win the favor of those who have everything.  The one true God constantly encounters people who are enslaved to this way of thinking.  People who believe that God is insecure and capricious, and demands sacrifice and offering as a way of appeasing his wrath; boosting his ego; earning his love.  What the one true God communicates again and again is that he doesn’t need anything from us.  In Psalm 50 God tells his people,
I bring no charges against you concerning your sacrifices or concerning your burnt offerings, which are ever before me. I have no need of a bull from your stall or of goats from your pens, for every animal of the forest is mine, and the cattle on a thousand hills. I know every bird in the mountains, and the insects in the fields are mine. If I were hungry I would not tell you, for the world is mine, and all that is in it.

We can’t offer God anything that isn’t already his. 
So what does God want?
In Ephesians 1, Paul refers repeatedly to “God’s inheritance.”  Paul is clearly talking about the gifts and blessings God offers us.  Through Jesus Christ, Paul says, God has claimed us as children and full heirs of the riches of heaven.  The inheritance comes in installments.  We get to enjoy some of it now, via the Holy Spirit, who assures us of God’s love and begins to make us new.  We’ll experience it fully when Jesus comes back.  God’s inheritance is God’s gift to us.

And yet God’s inheritance is also something God receives.  Paradoxically it’s an inheritance that flows two ways.  But what could God possibly be waiting to receive?  What do you give the one who has everything?  The one thing no one else can give.  Yourself.  Mother’s Day is coming up. This week countless kids will go shopping with their parents’ cash or credit cards.  They’ll give their moms gifts their moms have essentially paid for themselves.  And yet countless moms will be deeply moved and gratified by these gifts.  Why?  Because the gifts are symbolic of what the parent wants most: the love of their child.  Symbolic of the reality that this child, who has occupied the deepest part of your heart since their birth, has a place in their heart for you, too. 


God owns everything.  He owns you.  He owns the money you donate and the time you volunteer.  God doesn’t need that stuff.  But God can’t take your love.  He can’t own it unless you give it to him.  God has given himself in love to all humanity.  What God awaits is the moment we reciprocate.  Do not doubt that God loves you.  He knew you before you were born and reached out to you in love even then.  He poured out his life for you; and continues to pour his life into you.  The question is whether you will love God back.  The love God has shown you until now is a deposit on an incomparable inheritance.  Your love is the inheritance God is waiting for.  

Tuesday, May 6, 2014

Fear and Salvation

Passage: Numbers 13

The Lord said to Moses, “Send some men to explore the land of Canaan, which I am giving to the Israelites. From each ancestral tribe send one of its leaders.”
This is how Numbers 13 begins.  After rescuing the Israelites from slavery in Egypt, God has led them on a circuitous journey through a barren wilderness.  The only thing keeping them going is that they’re on their way home.  Their journey will end in the lush and fertile land where they can start living the dream.  In Numbers 13 the Israelites have reached the border of their promised paradise.  God tells Moses to organize a reconnaissance mission – “Send some men to explore the land I’m giving the Israelites.”
Moses does so.  We’re given a list of names.  You may have skimmed over the list – after all, the only way you get through Numbers is skimming over the seemingly endless lists of items and names.  It’s as though the author knew you were going to do this.  Because he adds, parenthetically, at the end of the list, “(Moses gave Hoshea son of Nun the name Joshua.)”

Why is this important?  First, because this Hoshea is the Joshua who becomes Moses’ successor.  The leader who ultimately brings the Israelites into the Promised Land. 
But second, because Joshua’s names are a sermon in themselves.  His given name – Hoshea – means “salvation”, or “he saves”.  This is the name of one of Israel’s great prophets who,  more than 500 years after the Exodus, declares that his fallen people’s only hope is the love of a God who has never given up on them.  Joshua means, “The Lord saves”; as God’s appointed leader Joshua becomes an emblem of the God who relentlessly delivers exactly what he has promised: freedom from slavery; a life of abundance; rescue from death itself. 
Joshua is only one of two spies who, when the rest of the spies and the entirety of Israel give up for fear of “giants in the land”, insists, “The LORD is with us.  Do not be afraid!”  Later, God repeats this word when he commissions Joshua as leader:
Have I not commanded you? Be strong and courageous. Do not be afraid; do not be discouraged, for the LORD your God will be with you wherever you go. (Joshua 1:9)

The Israelites despair because they do exactly what you and I do every time we encounter trouble.  They look at their circumstances.  They look at their resources.  And they recognize – accurately – that they don’t have what it takes to overcome.  Why does God rename Joshua?  Because it’s not Joshua who saves.  It’s not the people who save themselves.  It’s not you and I who somehow find in ourselves the strength to overcome.  It’s the Lord who saves.

The names Hoshea and Joshua reverberate throughout the story of God’s people.  And finally we hear echoes of the same name as the story of the Israelites reaches its fulfillment.  Through the prophet Hosea God says,
How can I give you up…How can I hand you over, Israel? My heart is changed within me; all my compassion is aroused. I will not carry out my fierce anger, nor will I turn and devastate Ephraim. For I am God, and not man-- the Holy One among you. I will not come in wrath. (Hosea 11:9-10)


God comes to his people not in a firestorm of judgment, but in person.  In a person known as Yeshua – “The LORD saves”.  Jesus, who bears the brunt of God’s wrath so that all we experience is God’s love.  Jesus, who is “God with us” – the guarantee of God’s eternal presence and acceptance.  Jesus, the embodiment of God’s constant word to his people: Do not be afraid, do not be discouraged, for the LORD your God will be with you wherever you go.  Jesus, who saves us from all that we fear.