Quick Links
Calendar
| | Sun | Mon | Tue | Wed | Thu | Fri | Sat
|
Categories
Archives
XML/RSS Feed
Statistics
Total entries in this blog:
Total entries in this category:
Published On: Mar 05, 2007 08:53 AM
|
Hosea 12 "Power, Trip"
Questions:
Why do we turn to lies? Why is God upset with our alliances? What power do we
pursue? Is that the source of our deliverance? Have we become rich? Will we be
found out? "Read More" to pursue
answers from the Prophet Hosea.
Lord, make me a Fountain
of your Love.Draw me into
your Presence, and fill me with your Holy
SpiritThat I might know you
as my Father, and manifest the image of
ChristIn this world, and the
world to come. Amen.Hosea 12:1-14But
first, let us look back at the last verse of chapter
11:Ephraim compasseth me
about with lies, and the house of Israel with deceit: but Judah yet ruleth with God, and is
faithful with the saints.since it
initiates the theme rehashed
here:Ephraim feedeth on
wind, and followeth after the east wind: he daily increaseth lies and desolation; and they do make a covenant
with the Assyrians, and oil is carried into Egypt.
Fascinating. What is the
connection between
lies
and
deceit
on one hand, and
diplomacy
and trade
on the other? I mean, besides the obvious. :-)
One possibility, I suppose, is that it
is the
obvious connection: God doesn't like the way they are becoming skilled in
deception by their desire to seek political and economic advantage. But, that
doesn't seem to be the issue here; rather, He is concerned by the very sincerity
of their efforts! So, what does God have against the "normalization" of
relations with Israel's neighbors?In
effect, God appears to instituting sanctions against them, and not wanting Israel
to seek their favor, or enter into binding agreements. Why? Surely not for the
reasons we use them today; Israel isn't powerful enough to change
those
countries behavior.Maybe
that is
why: because Israel
herself
would become changed by being bound up such relationships. God knows that those
countries swear allegiance to very different gods, and that Israel would end up
trading and politicking on their terms. Plus, the very desire to seek security
(political or economic) in external partners -- rather than trusting God to
protect and prosper Israel -- is very much "feeding on wind, and chasing the
east wind."But enough pontification --
back to the passage:The
LORD hath also a controversy with Judah, and will punish Jacob according to his
ways; according to his doings will he recompense
him.Whoops. So much for "good
sister Judah." God is placing the blame all the way back to Jacob, thus
covering all his
children:He took his
brother by the heel in the womb, and by his strength he had power with
God:That is, not satisfied to
wrest the birthright from his brother, he fought with God. Though in the end,
he only won by losing:Yea,
he had power over the angel, and prevailed: he wept, and made supplication unto him: he found him [in] Bethel,
and there he spake with us;That
is, by submitting to
God:Even the LORD God of
hosts; the LORD [is] his
memorial.It sounds like the
prophet is saying, "Look, you're all sinners just like your father Jacob, so why
not at least repent like he
did?"Therefore turn thou
to thy God: keep mercy and judgment, and wait on thy God
continually.Why not? Well, one
reason is that sin is so profitable -- at least in terms of earthly
securities:[He is] a
merchant, the balances of deceit [are] in his hand: he loveth to
oppress.After all, its not wrong
if you don't get caught,
right?And Ephraim said,
Yet I am become rich, I have found me out substance: [in] all my labours they
shall find none iniquity in me that [were]
sin.Um,
wrong:And I [that am] the
LORD thy God from the land of Egypt will yet make thee to dwell in tabernacles,
as in the days of the solemn
feast.Huh. I'm tempted to read
that as "Since you can't handle a 'modern' economy, I'll return you to your
subsistence past." Which may not be quite right, but there is a strong sense of
God taking Israel to
task:I have also spoken by
the prophets, and I have multiplied visions, and used similitudes, by the
ministry of the prophets.and Him
being dissatisfied with the status
quo:Is there] iniquity
[in] Gilead? surely they are vanity: they sacrifice
bullocks in Gilgal; yea, their altars [are] as heaps in the
furrows of the fields.I am struck
anew by the travesty of how we want to maintain religious respectability while
denying our true obligation towards God. Worse, we treat God like some whimsical
spirit wandering the universe rather than the sovereign Author of all natural
(and supernatural) order, who alone dictates (and knows) how things ultimately
work out.And Jacob fled
into the country of Syria, and Israel served for a wife, and for a wife he kept
[sheep]. And by a prophet the LORD brought Israel out of Egypt, and by a prophet
was he preserved.I read this as
contrasting his self-made failure and suffering with God's heaven-sent
deliverance. With the implication presumably being that Ephraim (the norther
kingdom) is choosing to emulate the former rather than the
latter:Ephraim provoked
[him] to anger most bitterly: therefore shall he leave his blood upon him, and
his reproach shall his Lord return unto
him.I think one of the bitterest
pills for we moderns -- okay,
me -- to
swallow is the notion that the Universe is run by Law; and that we are imperfect
reflections of
that
Law, rather than the Universe being (currently) an imperfect reflection of
my
will. It gets back to that very old saying:
I. There is a God
II. I am not
HimIn the end, my fundamental sin
comes down to the denial of one or the other of those facts. Either I act like
there is
no
meaning or purpose to the Universe, or I assume that whatever there is
must be
in line with
my
desires.But no matter how I
pontificate and preen, the blood-soaked stain of sin, and the reproach of my
unloving and prideful acts, can never be washed away -- except by the blood of
Jesus.PrayerGod,
as I read about Israel's folly, greed, deception, and sin those many centuries
ago, I am reminded my own holiness falls so short of what you've called me to.
Father, forgive me. Open my ears, that I may hear your voice. Open my eyes,
that I might see your light. Open my hands, that I would give generously to a
world in need. Open my mouth -- but only when it glorifies you. I ask this in
Jesus name, Amen.About the
Title:Today's title -- about
strength, journeys, and falling down -- mocks our desire for control.
Posted: Mon - March 5, 2007 at 06:45 AM
|