Showing posts with label return to God. Show all posts
Showing posts with label return to God. Show all posts

Monday, April 14, 2025

RETURN UNTO ME (MALACHI 3:6-18)

 

 RETURN UNTO ME

BIBLE PASSAGE: Malachi 3:6-18;

         Lesson prepared by: krisha of Solomon FB page

       APRIL 21, 2019


       MEMORY VERSE:


    Then shall ye return, and discern between the righteous and the wicked, between 

him that serveth God and him that serveth him not.

-        Malachi 3:18 -

     

INTRODUCTION:

Do we need spiritual revival? How often do we need spiritual revival? These are 

examples of questions we need to answer in our mind. With individual believers, as with the church, the need of spiritual revival is frequently not recognized until exceedingly low 

levels of spirituality has reached. Actually, however, the need is almost continuous.

 

Physically, most of us need to be revived at least three times a day. Hunger and 

weakness soon overtake us, and we feel the need of food to renew our strength. Spiritually it is not less so, for man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceedeth 

out of the mouth of God” (Matt. 4:4). Sad to say, however, we are by nature prone to 

neglect our spiritual welfare and lapse into carelessness and sin, so that repeatedly 

the need for spiritual revival and restoration becomes acute.

 

Many feel that lack of prayer, failure to live separated lives, indifference (lack of 

interest or concern) toward the lost, etc., are the real causes of spiritual decline. These, 

however, are the effects, not the causes. The cause of spiritual decline today is always our departure from the Word of God in general and from the Word of God to us in particular. 

There lies the root of our spiritual ills, though comparatively few as yet recognize or 

acknowledge it.

 

Even from the days of people’s fathers they were already gone away from God’s ordinances. 

They have been disobedient that’s why in the last major section of Malachi contains 

God’s invitation for His people to return to Him.

 

Even from the days of your fathers ye are gone away from mine ordinances and have not

 kept them. Return unto me, and I will return unto you, saith the Lord of hosts. But ye 

said, Wherein shall we return?

 

The people said, “WHEREIN SHALL WE RETURN?” (SA ANO KAMI MANUNUMBALIK?).

The lesson has three points to consider: Wherein shall we return?

 

LESSON POINTS:

1.  IN GIVING OUR TITHES AND OFFERINGS

The Israelites were asking wherein shall they return; they didn’t realize and remember the commandments of the Lord. Based from the verses, Israelites were literally robbing 

God of what was rightfully His. It was a failure in their stewardship of His material 

property. God reminds us through these verses:

 

Will a man rob God? Yet ye have robbed me. But ye say, Wherein have we robbed thee? In tithes and offerings.

Ye are cursed with a curse: for ye have robbed me, even this whole nation.

10 Bring ye all the tithes into the storehouse, that there may be meat in mine house, and prove me now herewith, saith the Lord of hosts, if I will not open you the windows of heaven, and pour you out a blessing, that there shall not be room enough to receive it.

 

In the next verses we can see that God owns everything and He doesn’t need our money. 

Let’s understand the truths about money.

 

Deu 8:18 "But thou shall remember the LORD thy God: for it is He that giveth thee power to get wealth…

 

Hag 2:8 'The silver is Mine and the gold is Mine,' saith the LORD of hosts.

 

Psa 50:10-12 10 For every beast of the forest is mine, and the cattle upon a thousand hills.

11 I know all the fowls of the mountains: and the wild beasts of the field are mine.

12 If I were hungry, I would not tell thee: for the world is mine, and the fulness thereof.

 

God’s invitation to the people is to return unto Him in giving their tithes and offerings and there’s spiritual blessing waiting for them if they just return unto Him. If we don’t respond to God’s invitation there’s a potential that money will be your master because Bible says, “No man can serve two masters…” (Matt.6:24).

Let’s fulfill the purpose of money by using it to turn to Him.

 “Remember this—you can’t serve God and Money, but you can serve God with money.”

— Selwyn Hughes

 

 

2.  IN GIVING OUR PRAISES TO GOD

Though Malachi 3:13 has different meaning in some commentaries, we will this verse as 

an example of some attitude of Christians in speaking “harsh” words against God

 

“Your words have been stout against me, saith the Lord. Yet ye say, What have we spoken so much against thee?”

 

Ang inyong mga salita ay naging lapastangan laban sa akin, sabi ng Panginoon. Gayon ma'y 

inyong sinasabi, Sa ano kami nangagsalita ng laban sa iyo? 

 

In our own words, we can see that our view in life has been distorted by the world. 

Malachi 3:14 says,

 

“Ye have said, It is vain to serve God: and what profit is it that we have kept his ordinance, and

 that we have walked mournfully before the Lord of hosts?”

 

“Inyong sinabi, Walang kabuluhan ang maglingkod sa Dios; at anong kapakinabangan nito na 

ating iningatan ang kanyang bilin, at tayo'y nagsilakad na may pananangis sa harap ng 

Panginoon ng mga hukbo?”

 

Let’s be careful with our mouth, it should proceed blessings and praises to the Lord. 

James 3:10 says, Out of the same mouth proceedeth blessing and cursing. My brethren, these things ought not so to be.”

Wherein shall we return? Let’s return in OUR PRAISES TO OUR LORD GOD ALMIGHTY. 

Let’s ask ourselves, when was the last time you praised God?

 

3.  IN OUR SERVICE TO THE LORD

If we were asked, “Are you serving the Lord?” what would we answer? Most of us will 

say a shout “AMEN” but like what we have said in our introduction Christians need 

spiritual revival daily and to the most three times a day like spiritual food; this means 

we are weak and lazy to fulfill the mandate given to us if we are not aware of eating our spiritual food to be strong. Let’s accept the fact that we are not always spiritual therefore we need to be fed spiritually. The question is how often we use and read our Bible compare to our cellphones?

 

Like the Israelites said in Malachi 3:14:

Ye have said, IT IS VAIN TO SERVE GOD: and WHAT PROFIT IS IT THAT WE HAVE KEPT HIS 

ORDINANCE, and that WE HAVE WALKED MOURNFULLY BEFORE THE LORD OF HOSTS?”

The Israelites’ attitude toward their service to the Lord changed: vain to serve the Lord, 

what profit of keeping God’s commandments and walking His will makes you unhappy.

 

 

 

 

Discernment of what is right and wrong does not exist to those who are not returning to the Lord or those who are gone away from Him. Malachi 3:18, our memory verse today says,

Then shall ye return, and discern between the righteous and the wicked, between him that 

serveth God and him that serveth him not.

 TAGALOG: “Kung magkagayo'y manunumbalik kayo at makikilala ninyo ang matuwid at ang masama, 

yaong naglilingkod sa Dios at yaong hindi naglilingkod sa kaniya.”

 

This verse answers why Christians are sometimes can’t discern the right and wrong in 

some situations in life. This lesson point urges us to focus and be serious in serving the 

Lord. Most of us think that worship and service just happen on Sundays. This could

be possible at some point, but the question is how we can prepare ourselves in worship

 and service on Sunday if our weekdays are full of unimportant routines. For example, how

 can you share the Sunday School Lesson if you don’t do anything about your lesson 

during weekdays like reading your Bible and many things. Let’s remember we are not 

strong; we are just strong by the grace of God.

 

CONCLUSION:

One of the good lessons we can see in this lesson is the urgency of revival in our lives and like the physical food that we need three times a day, spiritual food is the same to make us 

strong and revive from spiritual declining. We need to be observant in our ways and 

thoughts so that we can see if we are starting to have a stony heart and then move away 

from spiritual atmosphere. Let’s remember that having a spiritual decline is not 

instant situation of our spirituality; it’s gradual.

When Israelites asked, “Wherein shall we return?” it’s a question which we can see that 

they don’t have the discernment of their present situation; they were already far from the Lord. Some Christians when asked about considering going back to church, they 

would answer, “I’m on that way or darating din tayo diyan” But this answer is hard to lean on; most of the times months and years would take before a Christian realize they need 

to go back. Don’t wait for the time to have miserable, full of pressures, struggles, 

entangled situations of life before we realize that we can’t live in this world without God.

 Let’s remember it’s hard to go back, the enemy would give everything to hold us not to 

serve the Lord and let our light shine.

 

FAILING TO RETURN (AMOS 4:1-13)

 


FAILING TO RETURN


BIBLE PASSAGE: Amos 4: 1-13

Lesson prepared by: krisha of Solomon FB page

APRIL 14, 2019

 

MEMORY VERSE:

If we believe not, yet he abideth faithful: he cannot deny himself.

(2 Timothy 2:13)

INTRODUCTION:

Do You believe that everything happens for a reason? These words we commonly utter to people when we want them to be comforted because of their struggles and problems in life. Have you encountered talking to people asking your ideas about a certain situation if it’s God’s will or not? Have you experienced many struggles in life and yet you still don’t have that wisdom to distinguish what is right from wrong? Sometimes people say that adults know more than younger ones in this life because of experiences in life but personally, I don’t believe that; at some point they have more experiences though. Because wisdom comes from above, we can get that as we get closer to the Lord no matter what age you have (James 1:5).

When I got saved in the year 1991, my attention was caught of a man who rendered his song for the Lord because he sang expressively. He was also friendly maybe because he was assigned to be one of the usherettes. I used to see him cleaning the chairs, arranging the songbooks and leading the congregation in singing; he was always scheduled to be a song leader that time. Years passed and suddenly noticed he was not attending the church service anymore; many visits the members did to encourage him but failed to bring him back. After many years, we heard that he faced minor road accident and after that incident, we happily saw him attending again after many years. I had an opportunity to talk to him about his coming back and he said, “Of all the things that happened to me, I believe this is the hand of God calling me to come back.” His words made me emotionally touched because he talked spiritually. I thought that was a continuous service for him, but it was not; he stopped again with unsure reasons of stopping. After that, we heard he faced many problems and struggles in life and, his family was his biggest problem too. You know what he failed to return not because he didn’t want to but because he had a severe illness that made him not to walk anymore. I can’t help but cry when we visited him. He felt sorry for all his shortcomings. He wanted to serve and sing again for the Lord, but he didn’t make it. His body surrendered and died. Let’s not wait the time of losing our strength before we realize we need to go back and serve the Lord. Our lesson for today is titled, “FAILING TO RETURN.”

 

LESSON POINTS:

1.    GOD GAVE HUNGER YET WE HAVE NOT RETURNED UNTO HIM (AMOS 4:6)

"Cleanness of teeth" in this verse, was an idiom that conveyed this idea: Their teeth were clean because they had nothing to eat!  The idea is continued in the next expression, "lack of bread," leaving no doubt that God had withheld food from their midst in memorable, recent times.  The people of Israel had entered a time and circumstance where at least sometimes they lacked the basic necessities of life.

Notice that God "gave" them hunger, and in the next verse He "withheld the rain."  Nobody wants to lack anything in life, and yet it is clear that suffering can have additional meaning, in that part of its purpose is to bring us to a deeper relationship with God.  Almighty God is absolutely sovereign.  He knows everything and can DO all things.  We were created for relationship with Him, and He will do what it takes to save us, even if our comfort zone is shaken in the process.

2.   GOD GAVE DROUGHT YET WE HAVE NOT RETURNED UNTO HIM (AMOS 4:7-8)

God, through the prophet Amos, continues to present evidence for the prosecution in determining the fate of the nation Israel.  Their lack of faith, their unbelief, was demonstrated clearly in their response to recent events.  God had allowed famine and hunger to become widespread in that land (Verse 6).  It either WAS in their land or this was a prophesy that soon would come to pass.  In either event, did they (or would they) PRAY to Him for help?  They did not pray and would not pray, and that was the problem.

Honest prayer is an expression of belief in God.  Prayer can be called "applied faith."  If you pray, it is a sign that you have some kind of belief in the Lord - otherwise you would not do it.  If a crisis comes and you do not pray, it demonstrates the presence of unbelief in your heart and life.  In this verse, God observes something interesting to them: The lack of rainfall they had recently experienced was selective in nature.  In would interestingly rain in one place, but not in another.  They should have recognized in this unusual pattern (for that region), an Intelligent Hand in what was happening to them.

 

So many times, we respond to our difficulties with intense EFFORT, which was what Israel was doing at that time.  They of the cities that had not received rain, would feverishly send wagons, buckets and whatever else they had, to areas where the rain was abundant.  Their effort was commendable, but they did not pray to God for help.  The fact that they did not pray indicates that their hearts were far from Him.

To be fair, many of them probably DID pray, but the nation had fallen deeply into idolatry, and worse than no prayer at all, they likely had been seeking help from worthless idols.  What do YOU do when trouble fills your life?  Do you "stagger" from one "solution" to another?  When troubles come, we should reach out to Him who loves us.  The problem we have may or may not personally be directed at us, but the solution will be in His hand.

 

Two or three cities, that is, the inhabitants of them, being without water, went up and down in quest of any city or place where they could find water for themselves and cattle to drink.

“But they were not satisfied”: Could not get enough for their present use and much less to carry back with them to supply them for any length of time. Such a scarcity there was of it in other parts (see 1 Kings 18:5).

“Yet have ye not returned unto me, saith the Lord”: This had no more effect upon them than the other to relinquish their former courses and return unto the Lord by humiliation and repentance.

Sometimes the drought was so bad that they had to go to another city to get water. They still did not recognize God's hand in this and did not repent.

 

3.   GOD SMOTE BLASTING AND MILDEW TO OUR GARDENS AND VINEYARDS YET WE HAVE NOT RETURNED UNTO HIM (AMOS 4:9)

Literally, "an exceeding scorching," such as the hot east wind produced and "an exceeding mildew," a blight, in which the ears turn untimely a pale yellow, and had no grain. Both words are doubly intensive. They stand together in the prophecy of Moses (Deut. 28:22), among the other scourges of disobedience.

 

The palmer worm devoured them; just when they were budding and blossoming, and bringing forth fruit; and so what the blasting and mildew did not consume, the palmer worm, a kind of locust, did. Which has its name from its biting and cutting off the leaves and branches of trees, as of those mentioned vines, olives and fig trees, with which the land of Canaan abounded, the cutting off which was a great calamity.

“Yet have ye not returned unto me, saith the Lord”: This dispensation of Providence was also without its desired fruit and effect (see Amos 4:6).

 

Even when they did make a crop, God sent mildew and ruined the fruit and vegetables. They still did not realize they were being punished for sin in their lives, and they did not repent and turn to God. Even the palmerworm (a type of locust) did not cause them to repent.

 

God's promise had been to bless them if they obeyed Him, and to curse them if they did not. If they had known His Word, they should have understood what was happening. It was within their own power to stop all of this. They just needed to repent and return to God.

4.   GOD SENT PESTILENCE YET WE HAVE NOT RETURNED UNTO HIM (AMOS 4:10)

“I have sent among you the pestilence after the manner of Egypt”: That is, after the way in which God had dealt with Egypt. God had twice promised, when the memory of the plagues which He sent on Egypt was still fresh in their minds: "if thou wilt diligently hearken to the voice of the Lord thy God, I will put none of the diseases upon thee which I have brought upon the Egyptians" (Exodus 15:26; Deut. 7:15).

“Your young men have I slain with the sword”: Of the enemy in battle; or as they were in the way to Egypt, being sent there to fetch food, but were intercepted by the enemy.

“And have taken away your horses”: On which they rode to Egypt on the above errand. Or rather which they brought up from thence, contrary to the command of God.

“And have made the stink of your camps to come up unto your nostrils”: Such numbers of their armies being slain, and these lying unburied, the smell of them was very noisome.

“Yet have ye not returned unto me saith the Lord”: Still they continued to be obstinate and impenitent (see Amos 4:6).

Each punishment that God sent on them became a little worse, but it did no good at all. They did not repent. Even the loss of their sons to the sword, did not cause them to repent. The loss of their horses did not affect them either. The stink comes from the unburied dead bodies, possibly from some battle.

 

5.   WE WERE AS A FIREBRAND PLUCKED OUT FROM THE BURNING YET WE HAVE NOT RETURNED UNTO HIM (AMOS 4:11)

A detailed account of the utter destruction of the city-states called Sodom and Gomorrah is in Genesis Chapter 19.  The concluding verses of Genesis 18 reflect Father Abraham's prayers for the people of Sodom, in which God revealed that He would spare them if even "ten" inhabitants were "righteous" (Genesis 18:26, 28 & context).  The fact that Sodom and Gomorrah were NOT spared, is a clear indication that the places had become utterly corrupt.

From the context of Genesis 19:5, many have concluded that the chief sin of Sodom was homosexuality, the "gay" lifestyle.  But actually there was much more.  God revealed their sin through the prophet Ezekiel: "Look, THIS was the iniquity of your sister Sodom. She and her daughter had pride, fullness of food, and abundance of idleness; neither did she strengthen the hand of the poor and needy..." (Ezekiel 16:49).  They were proud, and yet, like He has done for you and me, God gave them everything.  In response to what we have been given, God reasonably expects that we, in turn, will be drawn to help others!  To NOT "strengthen the hand of the poor..." is to invite destruction.

 

Israel was like a "firebrand snatched from a blaze" (verse 11).  The imagery is a wildfire that comes out of the brush and sweeps through the village, and yet, just ONE "house" is saved, and it is by the grace of God!  He had cared for them and tenderly helped the nation Israel, and when they turned their backs on Him; He allowed TROUBLE to come into their lives so they would see their need!  But STILL, they did not trust in Him!

God saw Israel as a glowing ember plucked from the fires of judgment, like the same judgment that consumed Sodom and Gomorrah. Even though God spared them, they did not respond in gratitude – they have not returned to God.

CONCLUSION:

There are so many things happened in our lives that we become blinded with the hands of the Lord. This is what happened to Pharaoh; his heart was hardened and didn’t recognize God’s hand. In Exodus chapter 8, The Lord sent Moses to Pharaoh and asked his permission to let them go out of the land of Egypt and served God. When Pharaoh refused, God sent frogs to the land of Egyptians, but Pharaoh tried to go against the plague. He asked his magicians to imitate the frogs by their enchantments; the magicians did so. Pharaoh hardened his heart and God sent lice to their land, but the magicians tried to imitate but they failed. Let’s read the verse in Exodus 8:18-19,

18 And the magicians did so with their enchantments to bring forth lice, but they could not: so there were lice upon man, and upon beast.




Wednesday, March 26, 2025

WHERE ARE THEY? (ZECHARIAH 1:1-6)

 

WHERE ARE THEY?

BIBLE PASSAGE: ZECHARIAH 1: 1-6

Picture taken from Google

Lesson Prepared by: Krisha of Solomon’s Wisdom FB page

Lesson ideas taken from: https://fbcspur.org/return-to-me-zechariah-11-6

APRIL 18, 2021

MEMORY VERSE

Therefore say thou unto them, Thus saith the Lord of hosts; Turn ye unto me, saith the Lord of hosts, and I will turn unto you, saith the Lord of hosts.

ZECHARIAH 1:3

 

LESSON BACKGROUND:

The name Zechariah means “The LORD Remembers,” and is a fitting name for a prophet of restoration. This prophet was called to encourage and mobilize God’s people to accomplish a task that they had begun yet lost the momentum for completion. He encouraged them indirectly

by telling them about God’s care for them and by keeping the presence of the Messiah very much in their minds. He worked with others, notably Haggai, Zerubbabel, and Ezra. He warned them of the consequences of neglecting God’s work and he emphasized that God wants to do a work through His people.

 

We know that Judah was conquered and taken into exile in Babylon and we know that the exile lasted for 70 years. However, God promised Israel that after this period of slavery there would be a return (Ezra 1:1-4). Nebuchadnezzar had leveled it and then burned it, and it had laid there unattended for over 70 years. Their temple was ruined during slavery.  In Ezra chapter 1 we see that there’s a decree to rebuild the temple. In Ezra 3:1-9, You’ll see that the people entered this land that had been decimated and the first thing they did was rebuild the altar so they could sacrifice to God. The 7th month was a big month of feasting for Israel. It was the feast of trumpets, the “Day of Atonement” and “The Feast of Booths.” And all they managed to build was the altar. (536BC) They were terrified in the land and so they most certainly wanted God on their side. The next year when they returned again for these feasts is when work on the temple foundation finally began under the direction of Zerubbabel. But it wouldn’t last long.

In Ezra 4:1-5, there we find that the inhabitants of the land wanted to help, but Zerubbabel wouldn’t let them, primarily because of their pluralism. This made the inhabitants angry and they began to oppose the work and the Israelites gave up and went to their homes and stopped building the temple. (534BC) But 6 years later the building project would be resumed.
WHY? In Ezra 5:1-2, it was the ministry of Haggai and Zechariah that brought about the completion of this building program. That means that Zechariah showed up to address and intimidated people. They had returned to Jerusalem.
And incidentally there weren’t many who did. Most opted to stay in
Babylon where they were comfortable
. This doesn’t happen for another 42 years. Most stayed in Babylon/Persia. And so a small remnant returned and they were scared.

·       The land was dangerous.

·       The land was unprotected.

·       The natives were restless.

·       The people had seemingly given up on building the temple do to fear.

That is when Haggai and Zechariah show up. Now let’s look Haggai’s sermons. In Haggai 1:1-15, Haggai really rebuked the people for being content to live in their own houses while letting the Lord’s house lie desolate. To Haggai it was seeking worldly comfort over seeking to please God. And he ripped the people for it.

In chapter 2 Haggai preached again. This time on the 21st of the 7th month, which would have been the tail end of the feast of booths (READ 2:1-9). Haggai there addressed the sentiment of the people:

·       Zerubbabel listened to that first sermon of Haggai and started to build.

·       At this point he had been building nearly 2 months but the GRUMBLING of the people was discouraging.

·       Haggai pointed out that some of the people thought Zerubbabel’s temple paled in comparison to Solomon’s temple.

·       You have to love sticking your neck out to serve the Lord only to have those critics who tell you that you aren’t doing a very good job.

From studies of historians, Zerubbabel must have taken a lot of flack or criticism. So in this second sermon of Haggai he encourages Zerubbabel to keep up the hard work. This temple may not be as glorious as Solomon’s temple was,
but it will house more glory than Solomon’s temple did. This is the temple that Jesus would enter. AND THAT BRINGS US UP TO SPEED.

You have a small remnant who has returned to Jerusalem to rebuild the temple and it has not been an easy assignment.
• The work crew was small…
• The new temple was less than impressive…
• The nations surrounding threatened and were hostile…

Into this situation the Lord sends a prophet named “The Lord Remembers” - Zechariah
• Israel is not forgotten
• Israel is not overlooked

God has not forgotten His people whom He foreknew.
He disciplined them, but He has not forgotten them.
AND HE WILL NOT FORGET THEM

His first sermon occurs “In the eight month of the second year of Darius”

• That means Zechariah stood to preach after Haggai’s second sermon.
• Zerubbabel has been working now for about 3 months on the temple and Haggai has made sure the people are buying in to the project.

But watching the temple go up opened the door for a very important message from the Lord to His people.

And the message is this:
Don’t just rebuild the temple, rebuild the relationship.
Don’t just return to the land, return to Me.

 INTRODUCTION:

Then let’s go to our passage; in Zechariah chapter 1 verses 2-3, there’s a call to return. We need to picture the scene. We have refugees returning from Babylon and they have begun to sift through the rubble of what was once the temple of God. Nebuchadnezzar had leveled it and then burned it, and it had laid there unattended for over 70 years. Jeremiah gave us the detailed description of the fall of Jerusalem in Lamentations 2:1-9.  You can literally hear there the lament of Jeremiah as he looks at the smoldering ashes of what used to be the temple. Now, some 70 years later, these refugees are rummaging through those same ruins. And Zechariah begins his sermon by saying: The Lord hath been sore displeased with your fathers.” In verse 5 he asks, WHERE ARE THEY? and the prophets, do they live for ever? Let’s leave for a moment the question and let’s also reminisce and we might also use this question later.

 If we would try to dig in your memory the past members of Christian Baptist Tabernacle that weren’t here anymore, could you recall some? If you remember we updated our membership in the year 2007 because the files had been destroyed by flood therefore we have no files of the past members. We have now the active members and if our secretary would try to scan some files she could see the active and inactive for the year 2021. Maybe we could remember the favorite spot of our old members used to sit on and now it’s empty or occupied by new members. Maybe some of us here could recall more members who haven’t seen for a long time. The question I would like to say is, “WHERE ARE THEY NOW”? The same question the prophet Zechariah was telling to the people of Judah.  In verse 5 says, “Your fathers, where are they? and the prophets, do they live for ever?

We don’t know for sure what happened of the past members but it might be that they are continuing in the ministry up to now but we can’t avoid the fact that we want to know where are they now. Sad to say, some have already stopped or backslid and others already died. We don’t their reasons of walking away from their home church or from the Lord but whatever reasons, stop prioritizing spiritual matters is the wrong move. Whatever the choices they had chosen, our first point should remind us.

LESSON OUTLINE:

1.  DON’T REPEAT THE MISTAKE OF THE PAST (1:4)

Be ye not as your fathers, unto whom the former prophets have cried, saying, Thus saith the Lord of hosts; Turn ye now from your evil ways, and from your evil doings: but they did not hear, nor hearken unto me, saith the Lord.

 

In verse 4 it says, “BE NOT AS YOUR FATHERS”. Why God said this? In verse 2 says, The Lord hath been sore displeased with your fathers.”

The problem of those who lived in Israel at the time of its destruction
Was that they had abandoned God.

·       No, they didn’t quit going to church…

·       No, they didn’t quit offering the sacrifices…

·       THEY ABANDONED HIM IN THEIR HEARTS

 

It was a picture of people who went through all the motions, but who in their hearts had pulled away from God. And we hear that reality all throughout the preaching of the prophets.
Isaiah 29:13 “
Wherefore the Lord said, Forasmuch as this people draw near me with their mouth, and with their lips do honour me, but have removed their heart far from me, and their fear toward me is taught by the precept of men:,”

All they did was go through the motions, but they had no heart for God. In fact, they willfully lived in sin without any concern for what God thought about it.

They assumed that so long as they maintained their religious ordinances God would be pleased with them regardless of their sinful lives. God emphatically told them over and over again that this was not so.

Who could forget that powerful sermon that Jeremiah preached right in the doorway of the temple? Jeremiah 7:9-12 “Will ye steal, murder, and commit adultery, and swear falsely, and burn incense unto Baal, and walk after other gods whom ye know not;  And come and stand before me in this house, which is called by my name, and say, We are delivered to do all these abominations? Is this house, which is called by my name, become a den of robbers in your eyes? Behold, even I have seen it, saith the Lord.  But go ye now unto my place which was in Shiloh, where I set my name at the first, and see what I did to it for the wickedness of my people Israel.”

70 + years ago Jeremiah had stood in the door way of this temple and reminded the people how God had destroyed their former place of worship because their worship was unacceptable. And Jeremiah assured them that if their worship didn’t change that God would destroy this place as well. 70 years later Zechariah is standing in the rubble of that former temple. Reminding the children of Israel that How we worship God is more than just ceremony.

 The Lord wanted the prophet to remind these people of something they most probably had forgotten. They must have forgotten that the Lord had been extremely angry with their ancestors. And they had also forgotten something else as well. They had forgotten why the Lord was very angry with their ancestors to send them into exile. These people— these returned exiles had most probably forgotten all this in the security and comfort of their newly established lives in the land of their return.

 

What did God want of them?  Actually several things. He’s reminding them of why he had been angry with their forefathers, for they had strayed from him. How had they strayed from God? Actually in many ways. Their ancestors, before the exile had become as godless as the peoples and nations around them, if not even more so. They had favored the worship of other gods, and rebelled against the Lord God desecrating his Laws, and abusing his prophets. They were stubborn and faithless, and each one did as they saw fit, while still claiming that they were Jews and the special children of God. They had abandoned God, and so God had abandoned them as he had promised he would do. In the end, the word of the Lord came true and they were carried off in misery into exile, swept away by a ruthless nation. It was then that they began to come to their senses and consider returning to God. Return to me, were God’s words to a people who had completely abandoned the God and his ways as set in the Bible. And these same words were being spoken now to the returned exiles for a very good reason. They had forgotten the sins of their forefathers, what their forefathers had become before the day of disaster came and they were carried off into exile. Not these words are being spoken to them because they seem to have inherited the sin of their ancestors.

 

The command of the Lord “Be not as your fathers” is a great reminder for every one of us that we should learn from their mistakes. That would be enough reason for us to keep on serving, be serious in the ministry and don’t ever try to stop.

 

2.  REMEMBER THE OPPORTUNITY IS NOT FOREVER (1:5)

Your fathers, where are they? and the prophets, do they live for ever?

Look at verse 1. “In the eighth month of the second year of Darius, the word of the Lord came to the prophet Zechariah son of Berekiah, the son of Iddo. John Wesley’s notes mention this Zechariah as the one Jesus was referring to when in rebuking the Pharisees, he charged them with the guilt of all the spilt blood of the righteous prophets who were murdered for speaking the truth of God’s word, among whom was our Zechariah. He must have been an incredibly righteous prophet to be slain by the very people he spoke the word of God to. Jesus said that they murdered him between the temple and the altar (Matthew 23:35), perhaps during a worship service. Let’s read, That upon you may come all the righteous blood shed upon the earth, from the blood of righteous Abel unto the blood of Zacharias son of Barachias, whom ye slew between the temple and the altar.” We can see through this verse that Zachariah had been slew. We can say that he was killed during performing the ministry and this is what the verse says, “… and the prophets, do they live for ever? Like the everyone else, prophets or pastors die also. Therefore, while there’s opportunity, do it.

 

What had all the Israelites’ stubborn rebellion brought them but disaster! They thought they knew better than God and his outdated prophets. But did that benefit them at all? What were they thinking when they deliberately closed their ears and their hearts to the old prophets’ sermons? Did they think that they were too smart to listen to such outdated words and Bible studies? Did they really think they had all the time in the world to sin today and perhaps to repent tomorrow? Were they really going to live forever? Didn’t they know that when the opportunity’s gone, It’s gone forever. Opportunity to what? The opportunity to return to the Lord and stay put! The opportunity to listen to his word! When that opportunity is gone, it’s gone! People waste their lives letting such opportunities slip by when they run after worthless opportunities that eventually perish! You will lose everything with roots and foundation in this world— because they will soon perish. One thing alone is meant to last forever. The Lord and His Words.

 

Nowadays, we can visibly see the increasing of deaths every day and our breath that we take is truly a blessing to the Lord. There are many at this moment who have difficulty in breathing. Just like James 4:14 mentioned, our life is like a vapor, it soon fades away. Don’t say you accepted Christ and you’re a Christian and you will be given a long life. We don’t know when our life ends therefore our remaining days, months, years on this earth are worth spent to the Lord or to the world? It’s our choice.

 

3.  TURN TO GOD AND HE’LL TURN TO YOU (1:3)

Therefore say thou unto them, Thus saith the Lord of hosts; Turn ye unto me, saith the Lord of hosts, and I will turn unto you, saith the Lord of hosts.

 

It was the plea of a father to his wayward children who have gone astray and who often do things in their own way, thinking that as long as they maintain a religious appearance they would be in God’s good favor. But the very fact that God said “return to me” is the sign that they had abandoned God. They had been just like their ancestors. No sooner did they return from their exile than the waywardness set in and they began to go astray almost as soon as they arrived. How so? We saw in the Book of Haggai that most of them became devoted to their own private affairs, building their own paneled houses, while the house of the Lord was abandoned and left in ruins. History such as the books of Ezra and Nehemiah the prophets attest that many of them went ahead and married foreign women contrary to the Law of God, which forbade them to marry unbelieving women or women of a different religious background. They had given in to the corruption of the flesh. Who knows, maybe just like the people of today, they thought that loving someone is more important than keeping the holiness and sanctity of God’s command! Maybe like some Christians, they revered their lustful desires above the love of God. Who knows, perhaps in their twisted faith it was easy for them to convince each other that God understands why they wished to marry exotic foreign women even against God’s wishes. They had surely gone far away from him in the span of a short time. Although God had extended his arm of grace to bring them back home, their hearts and minds already wondered. “Return to me”, “And I will return to you”. And so, each of them had so much soul searching to do to find out how they might return to the Lord.

He sees these people rebuilding the temple and is in effect saying, DON’T JUST RETURN TO THE TEMPLE, RETURN TO ME. That is to say that: You must turn from your sin, you must turn from your pride, you must turn from your idolatry, AND You must enter this place not out of a sense of tradition, but out of a sense of love for GOD. So God gives His conditions. “Return to Me…that I may return to you.” GET YOUR HEART RIGHT.

James 4:6-10 But he giveth more grace. Wherefore he saith, God resisteth the proud, but giveth grace unto the humble. Submit yourselves therefore to God. Resist the devil, and he will flee from you. Draw nigh to God, and he will draw nigh to you. Cleanse your hands, ye sinners; and purify your hearts, ye double minded.  Be afflicted, and mourn, and weep: let your laughter be turned to mourning, and your joy to heaviness. Humble yourselves in the sight of the Lord, and he shall lift you up.

It’s not about the tradition of your worship,
It’s about the posture of your heart.

CONLUSION

The Making of a Brave

One American Indian tribe had a unique practice for training young braves. On the night of his 13th birthday, a boy was blindfolded and taken into the middle of a dense forest. He was left all alone, the first time he'd been away from the security of his family and tribe. When he took off the blindfold, he was there in the dark forest. All alone. All night.  

If a twig snapped, he wondered if a wild animal was ready to pounce. If an animal howled, he imagined a wolf coming for him. The wind in the leaves brought to his mind all kinds of sinister images. 

Finally, if the boy persevered, the first rays of morning began to lighten the forest. He saw the trees, the flowers, the outline of the path. Then, to his astonishment, he saw a man standing a few feet away: his father! Standing there with bow and arrow, watching over him—where he'd been all night. 

When you're going through a dark time, remember that, when the darkness clears, you'll see your Father there with you. His love is watching over you. 

Reference: SoulSalsa, Leonard Sweet, pp. 23-24.

 



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