Passage: Jeremiah 29:4-7
I’m
reading Mohsin Hamid’s, How to Get
Filthy Rich in Rising Asia. It’s a
novel disguised as a self-help book, with each chapter devoted to a different
step of the process of dragging oneself out of poverty in a developing
country. I just finished a chapter
entitled “Work for Yourself”. In it the
author points out that a successful entrepreneur must realize that he or she is
not in business for his or her clients.
If you really want to be successful, he says, you work for yourself.
This
week our church began the series “Gospel in Life”, by Timothy Keller. The first lesson opens with a study of
Jeremiah’s “Letter to the Exiles”. In
this prophetic word, God tells his displaced people to make a hostile foreign city
their new home. And God adds this
imperative:
…seek the peace and prosperity of the
city to which I have carried you into exile. Pray to the Lord for
it, because if it prospers, you too will prosper.
God
gives his people the exact opposite instruction of that of Mohsin Hamid’s
fictional narrator: “If you want to prosper, work for others.”
God’s
command is radical – as radical for us as it was for the exiles. God’s purposes for us – to “prosper us and
not to harm us” – are integrally linked to God’s purposes through us – to restore peace and prosperity and so reveal himself
to an unbelieving world. As God’s people
we have to fight the instinct to look after ourselves first. And instead devote ourselves – in service and
in prayer – to a world that is foreign; hostile; and in desperate need of
restoration.
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