Well, friends, we’re at the end of another long and
exciting week at the Institute. We began the week with Ministry Mondays, where
we host of speaker who specializes in a specific area of ministry and comes to
share their knowledge and experience with us. This week, Mike Haley came to
speak to us about homosexuality. It was an incredibly eye-opening and
interesting morning! Mike has an incredible testimony of having been a part of
the homosexual community for over ten years and then being loved out of it and
brought to where he is now. The Lord has done an incredible work in his life
and he is now able to minister to those who are struggling with homosexuality
and those who are working in ministry and may encounter that. In reality,
though, as my boss at the YMCA reminded me of yesterday, we are all in ministry
as believers, no matter what our occupation may be. After learning from Mike, I
now have an understanding of a Biblical worldview of homosexuality and feel
more equipped to deal with the issue as I encounter it.
For the rest of the week, our topic of focus was the
Kingdom Era, as taught by Charles Stolfus from Denton Bible Church. After
coming off of two weeks of teaching on a general Bible overview, it was
interesting to focus on just one era. We basically spent three days plowing our
way through the Samuels and the Kings. It was so interesting to look at the
progression of it all, but also overwhelming, especially when you realize that
all of what you’re reading took place over 520 years of history, 120 years of
the United Kingdom and then 400 years of the Divided Kingdom.
Looking back on the week, there were a couple things
that stood out to me. I really enjoyed studying the specific kings. It was
interesting to see what the Bible said about each of them and how they were
described. Typically, there was similar information that was given for each
king. The Bible records how old they were when they assumed the throne, who
they succeeded (or who was king in the other Kingdom if it was in the Divided
era), how long they reigned, whether or not they had a heart for the Lord, and
certain things that they accomplished during their reign, such as whether or
not they maintained alternate places of worship or if they removed the idols
form their kingdom.
Manasseh was one king that I had never heard of before.
He was the son of King Hezekiah, a good king who made some stupid mistakes
towards the end of his life. Even though he was the son of a so-called “good”
king who followed the Lord, Manasseh actually became one of the most evil kings
the Kingdom of Judah ever had. He assumed the throne when he was twelve years
old and reigned for fifty-five years in Jerusalem. The Bible says that “He did
evil in the sight of the Lord, according to the abominations of the nations whom
the Lord dispossessed before the sons of Israel.” (2 Kings 21:2)
Among the evil things that he did, “he rebuilt the
high places which Hezekiah his father had destroyed…” This means that he
reinstated alternate places of worship in the kingdom that were not honoring to
the Lord. He also built altars to Baal, made an Asherah pole, worshipped the
powers of heaven, sacrificed his child in the fire, built altars in the house
of the Lord, practiced witchcraft, used divination, and “consulted with mediums
and psychics.” (2 Kings 21:6) Manasseh convinced the people to “do evil more
that the nations whom the Lord destroyed before the sons of Israel.” (2 Kings 21:9) Because of the evil that was
done in the land while Manasseh reigned, the Lord sent prophets to warn them of
the judgment that was to come. The people did not listen, though, and the Lord
brought Assyria against them.
When Manasseh was in captivity in Babylon, though, he
returned to the Lord and humbled himself before Him. “When he prayed to Him, He
was moved by his entreaty and heard his supplication, and brought him again to
Jerusalem to his kingdom. Then Manasseh knew that the Lord was God.” (2
Chronicles 33:13) The Lord brought him back to Jerusalem and he rebuilt the
outer wall, removed the foreign gods and the idol from the house of the Lord,
threw the altars out of the city, and instead set up an altar of the Lord.
Although Manasseh is described as a king who did evil
in the sight of the Lord, it is so cool to see how Lord worked in his life to
bring him back to Himself. Manasseh was the epitome of evil and the Lord
brought judgment upon Him out of love, to discipline his and remind him of the
Lord’s goodness. How often do we do the same thing? We forget how good the Lord
is and the evil of the world look so enticing, so we begin to stray away. But,
because He loves us, God disciplines us to bring us back. He is a good Father,
who loves despite our tendency to run towards the world.
One of
my favorite kings that we studied was Josiah. Josiah was the grandson of
Manasseh. His father, Amon, was even more corrupt than his father, Manasseh,
and Amon’s servants conspired against him and killed him. After his father
died, Josiah became king at eight years old and he reigned thirty-one years in
Jerusalem. Unlike his father, “he did right in the sight of the Lord, and
walked in the ways of his father David and did not turn aside to the right or
to the left.” (2 Chronicles 34:2) When he was sixteen, he began to seek God
and, when he was twenty, he began to get rid of the high places in Jerusalem
and Judah, as well as the Asherim, idols, and the altars to Baal. He went
throughout the entire land, purging it of these things.
During
Josiah’s reign, he directed Hilkiah the high priest to repair the temple. While
they were repairing the temple, Hilkiah found the Book of the Law in the house
of the Lord. After reading it, Josiah realized that the people had violated God’s
law a led the people back to the worship of God. Even though Josiah worked to
bring the people back to the Lord, they were still taken into exile shortly
after. As Jeremiah 3:10 tells us, the people did not truly return to the Lord “with
all her heart, but rather in deception.”
Josiah
is so inspiring to me because he had the courage and wisdom to return to the Lord
once the light had been shed on the Truth. Even though his father and
grandfather were evil, he did not let that define him or determine his future.
Instead, he was determined to follow the Lord wholeheartedly, to pursue
righteousness. He fought for that purity and cleanliness despite what others
may have thought about him.
As we
were studying the era of the kings, it was so cool to see the character of God
in it. Even though Israel and Judah went through a time of great
unrighteousness under the majority of their kings, God still loved them and
called them His people. There was nothing that they could do to change that.
They were His chosen ones, despite their ignorance, their rebellion, their
complete disregard. He loved them enough to discipline them and judge them, in
order to bring them back to Himself. He had a purpose through everything.
Throughout time, what mattered to Him the most was that His people loved Him
and sought to glorify Him. He is a jealous God who wants to keep His people for
Himself. They are to worship no other gods before Him. They are to do exactly
as He commands. Even though we as people are imperfect and prone to mistake, He
loves us anyway, and there is nothing that we can do to remove us from His
hand.
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