I don’t want to!! Someone gives me a command (or even just a
suggestion) and I instantly fall into thinking, “Don’t tell me what to do!”
Today as my Bible study partner and I reviewed our notes and the commentator’s
notes for 2 Kings 1, I saw that I am not the only one who thinks like that.
Maybe you also fall into that line of thinking when someone “tells” you what to
do.
As part of the introduction to the book of 2 Kings, the
commentator reviewed the history of Israel, starting with Moses on Mount Sinai
getting the Ten Commandments. He actually cited two other commentators:
In a new book produced by
Walter C. Kaiser, Jr. called Recovering
the Unity of the Bible, he calls upon [David Noel] Freedman’s astute
observation that essentially all the Biblical books occurring after Mt. Sinai
and leading up to 2
Kings record Israel’s breaking all of the 10 Commandments
that are essentially the founding principles that forms the basis for Israel’s
existence as a Kingdom of God.
He goes on to
assert that as a nation, Israel, sequentially, and in the order on the tablets
Moses received, broke every one of the commandments by the time they got to the
point in history of 2 Kings. The first two commandments were actually broken at
the very moment the commands were given. Exodus 20 gives a list of the Ten
Commandments starting in verse 3. Verses 3-4 say,
You shall have no other gods
before Me. You shall not make for yourself an idol, or any likeness of what is
in heaven above or on the earth beneath or in the water under the earth.
The whole story
of how they broke the first two commands is in Exodus 32:1-10. The people
became impatient waiting for Moses to end his private conference with God, so
they took things into their own hands. They formed the molten calf (Exodus 32:4),
thus placing another god before Jehovah God and having an image/likeness of
something on the earth as their god.
My thoughts: this
is human nature then and now. Remember my opening paragraph? For the most part,
we don’t like to be told what to do. Even though I profess to be a follower of
Christ and diligently try to apply the commands I get from the Holy Spirit, I
often fail. In order to truly be a follower of Christ I need to make specific
applications that, little by little, lead me to be changed into the character
of Jesus. Yet, I often rebel and disobey God of the exact commands He’s giving
me.
For instance, for
over a year now, I’ve frequently come across in my Bible reading, studying, and
highlighting the command to pray – specific and consistent prayer. Yet, each
day as I set about my activities for the day, I do not put on my schedule
specific and devoted time to pray. I am praying short and pointed prayers
throughout each day, but there are some long-term, ongoing requests I tend to
forget about. (They are written down in a notebook, which I should also be
regularly adding to.)
It’s just too
easy to rebel and say to myself either, “Don’t tell me what to do!” or “I don’t
want to do that!” Fortunately, even though God’s desire is for us to obey every
command in the Bible (Old and New Testaments), He forgives those who fail when
they confess to Him and try again. Unfortunately, the nation of Israel was led
by men who did not make following the Ten Commandments (or any of God’s
commandments except when convenient) a priority for them or their nations. So,
one by one (and repeatedly) they broke all Ten Commandments, which we will see
in 2 Kings led to God’s judgment. We will begin to look at some of that
judgment next week.
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