For the eyes of the Lord
run to and fro throughout the whole earth, to show Himself strong on behalf of those whose heart is loyal to Him. In this you have done foolishly; therefore
from now on you shall have wars.”- 2 Chronicles 16:9
The national holiday of
Thanksgiving is always met with mixed feelings. For some it is a welcomed time
of thanksgiving to God. For others, not so much. It’s a time of family
gatherings with loved ones who live far away.
For others it is a tough pill to swallow. Maybe your family gathering
for this holiday will involve having to rub shoulders with a family member
whose hurt or offended you in some way. Maybe the family gathering this year
will be tense and uncomfortable. Maybe you’re the cause of that. Maybe you’re
not. Either way, maybe you’re at the point where gathering together to thank
God is the last thing you want to do and your bitter because you feel this
discomfort is being forced upon you.
Maybe you’ve been caught up in
the political conflict going on in our country today. There is a fierce
political struggle going on. There is a fight for the soul of our nation. The
sides are pretty evenly divided. Maybe you’ve gotten to the point where you
bitterly say, “I just can’t stand those other guys.” Political involvement can
be frustrating and it can lead to bitterness. Perhaps your side of the
political debate is advancing its agenda and you’re elated. Or perhaps, though
your political side is winning and advancing its agenda, the partial progressive
main stream media is ignoring the advances and accentuating the blockages. Maybe
you’re envious of your political foes position of influence. Maybe you feel
politically cheated, disenfranchised, left out or ignored and you resent it.
Maybe you feel an injustice is being perpetrated. Maybe you feel you are part
of correcting injustices.
It’s easier to be thankful when
our candidate wins and your agenda is being advanced. It’s difficult to be
thankful when our candidate loses and we watch as a previously installed agenda
is dismantled. It’s easier to be thankful when things go our way. It’s harder
to be thankful when things aren’t going our way. In such circumstances we have
a choice; we can become bitter or we can become better in the Lord.
Better
Not Bitter
If we are not thankful then we can become bitter. If we are not thankful,
then it becomes too easy to sit around and ponder the question: why me?
Dr. Jim Moore, pastor of St. Luke’s UMC in Houston wrote a book entitled
"You Can Grow Bitter or You Can Grow Better". He writes that he got the
idea for the title from a young woman who once came to him in a most tragic
moment in her life. She had tears in her eyes and her knuckles were white
as she twisted a handkerchief. She had just received word that her
twenty-six-year-old husband had been killed in a farming accident, leaving
her alone with three pre-school age children. One moment he was alive and
vibrant, the next moment gone. "I don't know how I am going to be able to
get along without him," she sobbed. "But I do know one thing. I can either
get bitter or I can get better."
One way that we can get better rather than bitter is to develop a thankful
heart. We must learn to be grateful to the Lord with whom we shall spend
eternity. Our morning prayer should always begin: O Thou who has given me
so much, I pray that you give me yet one more thing--a grateful heart.[1]
If we are not thankful then we can become bitter. If we are not thankful,
then it becomes too easy to sit around and ponder the question: why me?
Dr. Jim Moore, pastor of St. Luke’s UMC in Houston wrote a book entitled
"You Can Grow Bitter or You Can Grow Better". He writes that he got the
idea for the title from a young woman who once came to him in a most tragic
moment in her life. She had tears in her eyes and her knuckles were white
as she twisted a handkerchief. She had just received word that her
twenty-six-year-old husband had been killed in a farming accident, leaving
her alone with three pre-school age children. One moment he was alive and
vibrant, the next moment gone. "I don't know how I am going to be able to
get along without him," she sobbed. "But I do know one thing. I can either
get bitter or I can get better."
One way that we can get better rather than bitter is to develop a thankful
heart. We must learn to be grateful to the Lord with whom we shall spend
eternity. Our morning prayer should always begin: O Thou who has given me
so much, I pray that you give me yet one more thing--a grateful heart.[1]
There’s an Old Testament king by the name of Asa whose
life sheds light on the two sides of this coin of Bitter or Better. There is
truth in the history of this king that can unify us and bring us back together
as a nation. There is truth in Asa’s story that can give us reason to be
thankful in spite of life’s circumstances. The meaning of the name
"Asa" itself is unclear but it is associated with the idea of healer and injurious. I pray his life
story will bring healing and hopeful instructions to all of us for this
Thanksgiving.
Who was Asa? Asa ruled 41 years over the
southern kingdom of Judah. He was the great grandson of Solomon, the grandson
of Rehoboam, son of Abijah, and the father of Jehoshaphat. Unlike his father,
he is said to have done what was pleasing in the eyes of the Lord. [2] But he is not one of whom
it could be said "he finished well."
We can divide
Asa's life into three telling parts:
I. The Blessed Truths learned by Asa - 2 Chronicles 14-15
II. The Bitter Root of Asa - 2 Chronicles 16:1-6
III. The Broken End of Asa - 2 Chronicles 16:7-14
and we will add in the end:
IV. The Better Way - Cure for Bitterness - 2 Chronicles
16:9; Exodus 15:22-27
I. The Blessed Truths Learned by Asa –
King Asa had a
good start. We are introduced to this king with the following words:
2 Chronicles 14 (NKJV) - So Abijah rested with his fathers, and they buried him in the City of David. Then Asa his son reigned in his place. In his days the land was quiet for ten years.
King Abijah of
the Southern Kingdom of Judah was able to defeat King Jeroboam of the Northern
Kingdom of Israel. He was used by God to put a halt to apostate Jeroboam's
advances against the Southern Kingdom. What Abijah started his son Asa would
continue.
We should be
thankful for good fathers who produce godly sons. Every father should desire to leave a godly
heritage in their children. Today there are too much absentee fathers. Even
fathers who live under the same roof as their children are often absent either
in their thoughts toward their children or actual time spent with their
children. We should be thankful for fathers who invested time with their
children. Fathers who were absent in our lives in one way or the other are
often the source of much bitterness. Are you thankful or bitter regarding your
father?
When we look at
Asa we find some blessed truths in the first part of his life.
Blessed Truth #1 - Do what's good
and right.
2 Asa did what was
good and right in the eyes of the Lord
his God, 3 for he removed the altars of the foreign gods
and the high places, and broke down the sacred pillars and cut down the
wooden images.
One commentary
states:
You
can do that which is good, but it will not necessarily be right. You can pray,
and that’s good, but if you’re like the Pharisees who prayed simply to be
heard by men or to fulfill some
obligation, it’s not right if your motives are wrong. Giving is good, but if
you give like the Pharisees,
simply to receive the applause and approval of men, you’re missing the mark entirely. Witnessing is
good, but if you’re witnessing simply to add another
notch to your Bible, that’s not right. Asa did that which was both good and
right, and the result was
quietness in the land.[3]
How do we do what’s good and right? We walk the narrow path by following the leading of the
Holy Spirit and living out God’s word in the enabling power of the Holy Spirit.
Doing what is good and right is important because it affects those around us to create
either bitterness or a better feeling. Are you the source of bitterness or
betterment?
Blessed Truth #2 - Encourage others to seek
the LORD and follow His word.
4 He
commanded Judah to seek the Lord
God of their fathers, and to observe the law and the commandment.
In encouraging
others to seek the Lord and follow His Word Asa was creating and environment of
revival and rest conducive to enjoying the blessings of the Lord. The more we
seek the Lord the more thankful we will be. The closer we are to the Lord the
more thankful we will be. The less thankful we are the further away from the
Lord we will be. Thankfulness is an indicator of where we are with the Lord.
How thankful are you? How close to the Lord are you?
Blessed Truth #3 - Clean out those things
detrimental to following the LORD and enjoy God's peace.
5 He
also removed the high places and the incense altars from all the cities of
Judah, and the kingdom was quiet under him.
Jesus spoke of
heart soil in which weeds choked off the fruitfulness of the seed of His word
(Matthew 13). It's always best to simplify life so that distractions and
potential temptations are kept to a minimum. The apostle John closed his first
epistle with the exhortative warning, “Little children, keep yourselves from
idols” (1 John 5:21). Idols offend God. Idols are objects of spiritual
adultery. An idol is an object of worship. We should worship God as our Lord.
Your “Lord” is your master passion. Idols are objects of “master passion” other
than God. We owe everything to God; our life; our gifts and possessions;
family; everything. He alone should be our Master passion. We should be so
thankful that we remove anything or anyone that threatens to take away from God
as our Master passion. Do you have anything or anyone in your life that is a
“Master passion” other than God? Maybe that’s why you’ve lost your sense of
thankfulness.
Blessed Truth #4 - Use times of peace to
prepare for future battles.
6 And he built fortified
cities in Judah, for the land had rest; he had no war in those years, because
the Lord had given him rest. 7 Therefore
he said to Judah, “Let us build these cities and make walls around them,
and towers, gates, and bars, while the land is yet before us,
because we have sought the Lord
our God; we have sought Him, and He has given us rest on every side.” So
they built and prospered. 8 And Asa had an army of three
hundred thousand from Judah who carried shields and spears, and from Benjamin
two hundred and eighty thousand men who carried shields and drew bows; all
these were mighty men of valor.
Asa didn't
lounge around and do nothing when things were going well. He used his time of
rest and peace to prepare for the future battles and challenges that he knew
were a part of life and would inevitably come.
Even though King
Asa started well and was doing the right thing to get the people back on track
with God, it didn't mean he wouldn't face opposition or a trial. God allows trials and difficulties into our
lives because trials are what test and build our faith (cf. James 1:2-5; 1
Peter 1:6-9). Understanding this helps us to be thankful in all circumstances (1 Thess. 5:18) as
well as for all circumstances (Eph.
5:20).
Blessed Truth #5 - Cry out to
God in times of trial and understand that great
obstacles are opportunities for our great God to work.
9 Then
Zerah the Ethiopian came out against them with an army of a million men and
three hundred chariots, and he came to Mareshah. 10 So Asa went
out against him, and they set the troops in battle array in the Valley of
Zephathah at Mareshah. 11 And Asa cried out to the Lord his God, and said, “Lord, it is nothing for You to
help, whether with many or with those who have no power; help us, O Lord our God, for we rest on You, and in
Your name we go against this multitude. O Lord,
You are our God; do not let man prevail against You!”
Asa passes this test with flying colors. When opposed by overwhelming
enemy odds he cries out to the Lord. That's what we should do in every
difficulty. Cry out to God for help and direction.
I like the note on these verses from Pastor Chuck Smith on verse 11
from the Word for Today Study Bible:
"Asa
cried, 'LORD, it is nothing for You to help.' Difficulty must always be measured by the
capacity of the agent that is doing the work. If God helps us that's all we
need. Nothing is too hard for God.
That's encouraging! That’s reason to be thankful even when faced with
obstacles in life.
Blessed Truth #6 - Understand
that God is faithful and He will bless and wants to bless beyond our
expectations.
12 So
the Lord struck the Ethiopians
before Asa and Judah, and the Ethiopians fled. 13 And Asa and
the people who were with him pursued them to Gerar. So the Ethiopians
were overthrown, and they could not recover, for they were broken before the Lord and His army. And they carried away
very much spoil. 14 Then they defeated all the cities around
Gerar, for the fear of the Lord
came upon them; and they plundered all the cities, for there was exceedingly
much spoil in them. 15 They also attacked the livestock
enclosures, and carried off sheep and camels in abundance, and returned to
Jerusalem.
God is faithful! Be thankful for God's faithfulness. In the New
Testament Paul is inspired to record a prayer for the church in Ephesus. At the
end of the prayer he burst forth with a blessed truth of God's ability and
willingness to bless us:
·
Ephesians
3:20–21 (NKJV) - 20 Now to Him who is able to do exceedingly
abundantly above all that we ask or think, according to the power that works in
us, 21 to Him be glory in the church by Christ Jesus to
all generations, forever and ever. Amen.
Aren’t you glad that God doesn’t limit His answers to our prayers according
to what we have prayed? No, God goes beyond our requests in prayer. God loves
to bless us above and beyond what we ask. God is benevolent; He just loves to
shower blessings on His children. God can and wants to do "exceedingly
abundantly above all that we ask or think" in prayer. For that we should
be exceedingly thankful.
I love the inspired words of scripture that declare, “What shall we say
to these things? If God is for us, who can be against us? He who did not spare
His Own Son, but delivered Him up for us all, how shall He not with Him also
freely give us all things?” (Romans 8:31-32). “God is for us.” Do you believe
that? You don’t have to persuade God to bless you. God is looking for ways to
bless you! Just give God an excuse to bless you. Step out in faith for Him and
He will bless. That fact that God is for us should elate us and fill us to
overflowing with thankfulness.
Our problem is that we often get in the way of God’s blessing. Like we
will see with Asa, we forget about God, we don’t seek Him out for help, we rely
on our own devices. That short circuits God’s blessing. We may be able to
achieve some degree of victory and blessing on our own, but we will always be
settling for less than God’s best when we do that.
Blessed Truth #7 - "If you seek Him, He will be found by you; but if you forsake Him,
He will forsake you."
2 Chronicles 15 - Now the Spirit of God came upon Azariah
the son of Oded. 2 And he went out to meet Asa, and said to
him: “Hear me, Asa, and all Judah and Benjamin. The Lord is with you while you are with Him. If you seek
Him, He will be found by you; but if you forsake Him, He will forsake you. 3 For
a long time Israel has been without the true God, without a teaching
priest, and without law; 4 but when in their trouble they
turned to the Lord God of Israel,
and sought Him, He was found by them. 5 And in those times there
was no peace to the one who went out, nor to the one who came in, but great
turmoil was on all the inhabitants of the lands. 6 So
nation was destroyed by nation, and city by city, for God troubled them with
every adversity. 7 But you, be strong and do not let your hands
be weak, for your work shall be rewarded!”
Here God lays
out a promise. “The Spirit of God” came upon the prophet Azariah to relay this
principle. This principle is bound up in the statement, “If you seek Him, He
will be found by you; but if you forsake Him, He will forsake you.” This is
something that is true. This is something you can depend on happening. If you
turn your back on God you are headed for turmoil. If you turn to the Lord, you
may still experience trials, but God will strengthen us and bring us through.
Now you may
recoil at this principle or you may receive it. Your response will determine not
only your thankfulness, but indeed the quality of your life with God. Asa
thankfully chose to seek the LORD.
8 And
when Asa heard these words and the prophecy of Oded the prophet, he took
courage, and removed the abominable idols from all the land of Judah and
Benjamin and from the cities which he had taken in the mountains of Ephraim;
and he restored the altar of the Lord
that was before the vestibule of the Lord.
9 Then he gathered all Judah and Benjamin, and those who dwelt
with them from Ephraim, Manasseh, and Simeon, for they came over to him in
great numbers from Israel when they saw that the Lord his God was with him.
When you seek the LORD, He will be with you. When the LORD is with
someone, there is a Presence, a Power evidenced in that person’s life. That is
what we see here. We see that Israel “saw that the LORD his God was with” Asa.
What do people see when they look at you? Do they see your team affiliation? Do
they see a brand? Do they simply see you? Or do they see and sense God’s
presence in your life?
10 So
they gathered together at Jerusalem in the third month, in the fifteenth year
of the reign of Asa. 11 And they offered to the Lord at that time seven hundred bulls
and seven thousand sheep from the spoil they had brought. 12 Then
they entered into a covenant to seek the Lord
God of their fathers with all their heart and with all their soul; 13 and
whoever would not seek the Lord
God of Israel was to be put to death, whether small or great, whether man or
woman. 14 Then they took an oath before the Lord with a loud voice, with shouting
and trumpets and rams’ horns. 15 And all Judah rejoiced at the
oath, for they had sworn with all their heart and sought Him with all their
soul; and He was found by them, and the Lord
gave them rest all around.
16 Also
he removed Maachah, the mother of Asa the king, from being queen mother,
because she had made an obscene image of Asherah; and Asa cut down her obscene
image, then crushed and burned it by the Brook Kidron.
When we seek the LORD and His presence is upon us it inspires others to
seek the LORD. What we see here is a national revival spurred on by the
presence of God in Asa’s life. So deep was Asa's commitment to the Lord that he
did what was right in the sight of the Lord even
when it meant going against his grandmother. In other words, Asa put God
first in every regard. That is what we need folks. That is what we need to do,
each of us. Seeking God with all our heart and living for Him in every way is
what will usher in the national revival we so dearly need. And that seeking of
God can be exhibited in our expressions of thanksgiving.
Thanksgiving is one of the few national holidays that hasn’t been
commandeered by secular sales departments. Thanksgiving is still a time of
family get togethers. Yes, public schools try to usurp God’s place in this holy
day by teaching that the pilgrims were thankful to the native Americans for
helping provide food for a famished colony of settlers. But Who moved the
native Americans to be so generous? When you do a little investigation, you
find that the pilgrims welcomed the help from the native Americans and brought
them together to celebrate and give thanks for Gods mercy and bounty. The first
Thanksgiving was a time of worship to the LORD!
Let’s renew that spirit of thanks in our homes and communities. Invite
those around you to join you in celebrating our bounty in America and giving
thanks to the One to Whom we owe everything. Doing that just may lead to a nation-wide
revival.
17 But
the high places were not removed from Israel. Nevertheless the heart of Asa was
loyal all his days.
Asa's heart was loyal to God but the people's heart was not completely
loyal to God. The “high places” were places of idol worship. “High places” were
also areas where the God of Israel was worshipped but with pagan practices. God ahs given very clear instructions in
His word about how He should be worshipped (e.g. Exodus 20; Leviticus; John
4:23-24). God doesn’t appreciate attempts to worship Him in worldly ways. When
we attempt to move the ark of God’s Presence with “new” Philistine carts from
this world, it always leads to calamity, confusion and chaos and culminates in
being cut off from God’s Presence (e.g. 1 Samuel 5-6 and 2 Samuel 6). We need
to seek God and worship Him in His prescribed ways.
A leader can walk a holy life, but there is a responsibility for the
people to follow his lead. We are only responsible for our attitude and our
actions. We can only do our best in the Spirit and trust God for the rest. We
plant a seed. We water a seed. But the increase comes from God (1 Cor. 3:7).
Asa sought the LORD and the LORD blessed his reign. But the people
followed only partially. That is unfortunately often the case. We need to pray
for people to seek the LORD wholeheartedly. And even though there was still
work to be done, God spoke of Asa's heart as loyal.
Blessed Truth #8 - Worship is
the right environment to express the thanks God deserves and to enjoy the
presence of the Lord together.
18 He
also brought into the house of God the things that his father had dedicated and
that he himself had dedicated: silver and gold and utensils. 19 And
there was no war until the thirty-fifth year of the reign of Asa.
Asa brought the Temple utensils out of storage and put them back where
they belonged. He was getting the house of God in order. And God gave him rest "until
the thirty-fifth year of the reign of Asa."
It's good to
gather together to thank the Lord. It's good when a leader leads his people in
restoration of a relationship with God. It's good to gather to worship the Lord
and rejoice in His presence; to give thanks to the Lord. That's what Asa does
here. But times of thanks need to be maintained.
We can lose sight of God’s place and His provisions. When that happens, it
leads to complacency and complacency leads to self-concocted calamitous crises.
II. The Bitter
Root of Asa - King Asa’s
Problems begin with Politics
In the New Testament book of Hebrews, it states:
·
Hebrews
12:14–15 (NKJV) - 14 Pursue peace with all people, and
holiness, without which no one will see the Lord: 15 looking
carefully lest anyone fall short of the grace of God; lest any root of
bitterness springing up cause trouble, and by this many become defiled;
King Asa was living a blessed
life and walking strong with the Lord. This was true until he took his eyes off the Lord. Then everything went downhill
fast. We should take this as a word of warning.
2 Chronicles 16 - In the thirty-sixth year of the reign of
Asa, Baasha king of Israel came up against Judah and built Ramah, that he might
let none go out or come in to Asa king of Judah.
Everything was
going along smoothly until Judah’s carnal sister nation to the north, led by
king Baasha, came against Judah. Baasha set up a blockade against Judah. This
blocked trade routes. The economy of the southern kingdom was stifled. Commerce
was cut off. The product flow was choked. I’m sure people began to complain.
And Asa as king came to a national crisis.
The armies of
Israel led by king Baasha were a less formidable problem than the million-man
army of the Ethiopians. But they were still a problem that needed to be
addressed. When we are confronted by an obstacle that is obviously beyond us to
handle, our response is more immediate in turning to the LORD for help. But
when a problem appears on the surface to be more manageable, we are tempted to
rely on our own strength rather than take it to God.
Asa apparently
reacted to the intrusion of Israel as a problem not big enough to warrant God’s involvement. Or perhaps he had
drifted from God and unlike before when it was second nature for him to turn
immediately to God for help with the Ethiopians, here he turns to his own
devices in the form of a political option.
Right here we
need to realize that - No problem is too
big AND NO PROBLEM IS TOO SMALL to seek God's direction and help. Any
problem (big or small), that we fail to seek God's direction and help with,
inevitably becomes a BIG problem.
What would king
Asa do? Last time, when the Ethiopians came out against him and were a million
strong, Asa cried out to the Lord. What did he do now?
2 Then Asa brought silver
and gold from the treasuries of the house of the Lord and of the king’s house, and sent to Ben-Hadad king of
Syria, who dwelt in Damascus, saying, 3 “Let there be a
treaty between you and me, as there was between my father and your father. See,
I have sent you silver and gold; come, break your treaty with Baasha king of
Israel, so that he will withdraw from me.”
Asa relied on his own resources. Asa had
experienced a period of prosperity. He had some extra cash on hand. So, what
did he do in response to Baasha's blockade? He didn't seek the Lord, he paid
his Syrian neighbor Ben-Hadad to go up against Baasha and do his dirty work for
him. Asa acted lazily. He acted in his flesh. He took the easy way out.
Asa relied on men. It shouldn’t be lost
on us that Asa was tempted to turn to a political alliance to solve his problem
instead of seeking God’s help. How much are we depending on political alliances
in our day to solve our national problems? I for one think it’s important to be
engaged in the public square, and that would include the political arena. Jesus
instructed us to be salt and light, to bring a holy flavor to the distasteful
world we live in, to bring purity where there is putrefying decadence and
immorality. We are to infiltrate and influence this dark world with the light
of Jesus and His Word (Matthew 5:13-16). But having said that, we need to
understand that politics is not the
answer – Jesus is the Answer. Politics is not the solution – Jesus is the Solution.
Nothing is going to save this nation or this world apart from the Gospel of
Jesus Christ. And when we invest disproportionately in the politics or other
alternatives to God in Christ and the power of His Word, we offend God and set
ourselves up for a disappointing loss. Remember that. We need a heaven-sent
revival!
It's not that
human resources and money are necessarily bad, sinful or always the wrong
instrument to deal with our problems. The problem is that we should never rely
on such things, on anything or anyone instead
of God and His Word. The words of Calvary Chapel Pastor Skip Heitzig apply
here. He said, “Sometimes a good thing can become a bad thing if it keeps you
from God’s best thing.” This is the lesson of king Asa here.
4 So
Ben-Hadad heeded King Asa, and sent the captains of his armies against the
cities of Israel. They attacked Ijon, Dan, Abel Maim, and all the storage
cities of Naphtali. 5 Now it happened, when Baasha heard it,
that he stopped building Ramah and ceased his work. 6 Then King
Asa took all Judah, and they carried away the stones and timber of Ramah, which
Baasha had used for building; and with them he built Geba and Mizpah.
I’m not saying that when we use alternatives to seeking God and relying
on Him that we will always fail. Indeed, we can experience a measure of success
in our own strength and through resources other than God’s ways. What Asa did
worked! But whether or not something “works” is not the determining factor in
whether or not it is right in the eyes of the LORD. And how God views
something, pleasing Him, should be our goal in all things. “Therefore, whether
you eat or drink, or whatever you do, do all to the glory of God” (1 Cor.
10:31). “And whatever you do in word or
deed, do all in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father
through Him” (Colossians 3:17). To do something “in the name of the Lord Jesus”
means to do it in a Christlike way. “And whatever you do, do it heartily, as to
the Lord and not to men, knowing that from the Lord you will receive the reward
of the inheritance; for you serve the Lord Christ” (Colossians 3:23-24). We
should never do what we do merely for
people. We serve the Lord by serving others, but make sure you don’t lose
sight of serving the Lord in that
process. When we serve only people, our “reward” is only very temporary
(Matthew 6: 1-4, 19-21). That’s also important because when we do what we do
merely for people, we cease being servants of God. “For do I now persuade men,
or God? Or do I seek to please men? For if I still pleased men, I would not be
a bondservant of Christ” (Galatians 1:10).
The important lesson to learn here is: JUST BECAUSE SOMETHING WORKS DOESN'T NECESSARILY MEAN IT IS GOD'S WILL.
Just because you steal something and don't get caught doesn't mean it's
God's will or that He approves. Just because you have an affair and aren't
getting caught doesn't mean it's God's will or that He approves. Just because
you indulge your flesh in some way and don't get caught doesn't mean it's God's
will or that He approves. Just because your political party is succeeding,
doesn’t necessarily mean God is on your side. Abraham Lincoln was once asked
whether or not he believed God was on his side. His response was telling of His
faith. He said, “My greater concern is whether or not we are on His side.”
How do we know if we are proceeding properly? Notice Asa was prayerless in his decision.
Prayerless practices are powered
by the flesh; no matter the outcome. And when we act prayerlessly or without
seeking God, we always settle for less than God's best.
I admit that being politically involved is important for us as
Christians. That is my personal belief. It is part of God’s instruction to
cooperate in the political government He sovereignly places us (i.e. Romans
13). I think its important to be
politically informed and be politically engaged. I’m patriotic. I stand for the
flag and kneel at the cross. But having said that, I want to further say that, politics alone are not the answer. If we
are going to be successful politically, or in any other way or any other
effort, we need to be prayerfully engaged toward God. Politics without prayer
is powerless to enact lasting change. Anything without prayer is eternally
fruitless. That’s because without God what we do has no eternal significance.
Prayer is a declaration of reliance on and submission to God. Our nation has a
Declaration of Independence upon which it stands. But as a Christian we need to
stand on our Declaration of Dependence on God which is prayer. This nation is
not going to survive without God. This nation needs to seek God in prayer if it is to last and be
preserved. The proper sequence of action is: Pray; receive God’s Power; act in
His Providence.
III. The Bitter End of Asa - The loss of what might have been
7 And at that time Hanani
the seer came to Asa king of Judah, and said to him: “Because you have relied
on the king of Syria, and have not relied on the Lord your God, therefore the army of the king of Syria has
escaped from your hand.
Here is another
important lesson to learn: WHEN WE ACT
APART FROM GOD WE ALWAYS SETTLE FOR LESS THAN GOD'S BEST. The Lord had
intended to give Asa a mighty victory, far more
than he imagined. Not only did God want to bless Asa with a victory against
Baasha, but against Ben-Hadad too! Asa's Godless action led to half of what he
might have experienced. Yes, he was successful to a degree by relying on his
own carnal strategy. But he missed out on a windfall of God's blessing.
8 Were the Ethiopians and
the Lubim not a huge army with very many chariots and horsemen? Yet, because
you relied on the Lord, He
delivered them into your hand. 9 For the eyes of the Lord run to and fro throughout the whole
earth, to show Himself strong on behalf of those whose heart is
loyal to Him. In this you have done foolishly; therefore from now on you shall
have wars.”
And here is
another important lesson to learn: GOD IS
LOOKING THROUGHOUT THE EARTH FOR THOSE WHOSE HEART IS LOYAL TO HIM SO THAT HE
CAN SHOW HIMSELF STRONG ON THEIR BEHALF. GOD IS JUST WAITING FOR THAT PRAYER,
THAT EXPRESSION OF THANKS, THAT STEP OF FAITH, THAT LOYAL HEARTED STEP TO SHOW
HIMSELF STRONG ON OUR BEHALF. When God’s scan comes to you what does He
see, a loyal seeking heart, or a distant uninterested heart?
What we see when we look further in this passage is that king Asa's self-centered bitterness cut off
further blessing from God. Asa had become distant from God in his
self-reliance. This at its root is pride.
When you’re proud you aren’t usually open to constructive criticism. The
proud are not given to repentance. The proud are not open to God’s instruction.
The proud think they don’t need God’s instruction. The proud even get angry
when God does not recognize their self-reliant successes and instead speaks of the
relative losses of what might have been.
10 Then
Asa was angry with the seer, and put him in prison, for he was enraged
at him because of this. And Asa oppressed some of the people at that
time.
11 Note that the acts of
Asa, first and last, are indeed written in the book of the kings of Judah and
Israel. 12 And in the thirty-ninth year of his reign, Asa
became diseased in his feet, and his malady was severe; yet in his disease he
did not seek the Lord, but the
physicians.
13 So
Asa rested with his fathers; he died in the forty-first year of his reign. 14 They
buried him in his own tomb, which he had made for himself in the City of David;
and they laid him in the bed which was filled with spices and various
ingredients prepared in a mixture of ointments. They made a very great burning
for him.
So, what do we learn from this
historic account about bitterness or being better? An unknown author has
written: “Every test in our life makes us bitter or better. Every
problem comes to break us or make us. The choice is ours whether we become
victim or victor.” Asa
spent his last days of life willfully aloof from God. And because of that his channel to Gods' blessing was broken. But
it didn't have to end that way. There is a solution.
IV. The Better Way - Cure
for Bitterness
What is the solution to turning bitter into sweet; for
dealing with bitterness in life that robs us of blessing, joy and a thankful
heart? It starts with understanding the issue is in the heart. The Lord told
Asa through the prophet:
2 Chronicles 16:9 (NKJV) - 9 For
the eyes of the Lord run to and
fro throughout the whole
earth, to show Himself strong on behalf of those whose heart is
loyal to Him. In this you have done
foolishly; therefore from now on you shall have wars.”
The issue is - Is
your heart more loyal to yourself or to God? Are you willing to let go of your
feelings of bitterness based on thinking you know better than God? Will you
trust God in your life no matter what happens?
One last Old Testament passage holds the key:
Exodus 15:22–27 (NKJV)
22 So
Moses brought Israel from the Red Sea; then they went out into the Wilderness of Shur. And they went three days in the
wilderness and found no water. 23 Now when they came to Marah,
they could not drink the waters of Marah, for they were bitter.
Therefore the name of it was called Marah. 24 And the people
complained against Moses, saying, “What shall we drink?” 25 So
he cried out to the Lord, and the Lord showed him a tree. When he cast it
into the waters, the waters were made sweet. There
He made a statute and an ordinance for them, and there He tested them, 26 and said, “If you
diligently heed the voice of the Lord
your God and do what is right in His sight, give ear to His commandments and
keep all His statutes, I will put none of the diseases on you which I have
brought on the Egyptians. For I am the Lord
who heals you.” 27 Then they came to Elim, where there were
twelve wells of water and seventy palm trees; so they camped there by the
waters.
The Bible is filled with what are called types or symbols
of God's truth. In this record of Moses and the people of Israel they come upon
the bitter waters of Marah. So bitter were the waters that they were
undrinkable. The water was useless to quench thirst and refresh a soul. When
Moses cried out to the LORD, "the LORD showed him a tree. When he cast it
into the waters, the waters were made sweet." That "tree" is a
symbol of the cross of Christ (e.g. Galatians 3:10-13; 1 Peter 2:24). Bible
Teacher Jon Courson comments:
It is the Cross of
Calvary which still transforms bitter experiences, bitter people, bitter circumstances. How? By realizing
that the wrongs done to us, the offenses against us, the disappointments registered by us
have all been paid for, dealt with, washed clean by the blood of Calvary.[4]
We need to put the cross of Christ in our bitter waters. We need to nail
our bitterness, resentments, unforgiveness, unthankfulness, to the cross of
Jesus. If we are going to be broken, let
our pride and bitterness be broken at the cross. Only when we humble
ourselves before God in brokenness will the channel to God's blessing be opened
for us again. That there is such a solution should cause us to be very
thankful.
We need to let the bitterness go. If we don't we will miss out on God's
best like King Asa did. He found good but he missed God's best. He lost his
joy. He lost his perspective on life and the Lord's workings. He got all caught
up in a political agenda. He stopped being thankful. Don't let that happen to
you! Look to the cross and be thankful. Look to the cross and thank God that
all your bitterness, regrets, indignation, resentments, negativity, pride,
prejudice, and all the stuff swimming around in your bitter waters, have a
solution in the cross of Christ. Put all your bitter ballast that is sinking
your spirit down, put it on the cross and turn it over to Jesus. Ask Jesus for
a thankful heart. Tell Him you are through settling for less than His best. Purpose
by faith and in the power of the Spirit to walk from this point on in the
shadow of the cross of Jesus.
There is pride and settling for second best. There is prayer and finding
God’s best. There is self-centeredness and there is the cross. There is revival
and there is wreckage. There is bitterness that leads to brokenness. There is blessing
that leads to thanksgiving. There is bitterness and there is a better way. What
will the LORD see when His scan comes upon you?
[1]
Staff, www.eSermons.com, November
2001
[2]
Complete Biblical Library Hebrew-English Dictionary - The Complete Biblical
Library Hebrew-English Dictionary – Aleph-Beth.
[3]
Courson, J. (2005). Jon Courson’s
application commentary: Volume one: Genesis–Job (p. 1178). Nashville, TN:
Thomas Nelson.
[4]
Courson, J. (2005). Jon Courson’s
application commentary: Volume one: Genesis–Job (p. 280). Nashville, TN:
Thomas Nelson.