Sunday, February 24, 2019

Luke 6:27-38: Love Your Enemies

Presented to Alberni Valley Ministries, 24 February 2019 by Captain Michael Ramsay.
  
Of this passage of scripture Moffet S. Churn writes, “Commentaries often call it the Sermon on the Plain. You may prefer to think of it as ‘the sermon I don’t want to preach.’…Jesus tells them plainly, pointedly, repeatedly, ‘Love your enemies and do good to those who hate you.”[1]

I think this passage is as important to our world and our community today as much as it ever has been in the history of civilization. As you know I have been blessed to be a police, fire and EMT chaplain in the past and I am a Royal Canadian Legion chaplain now and, as such, have been honoured to preach at Remembrance Day and D-Day ceremonies in communities across this country.[2] I often give prayer-filled, prolonged thought to preparing those addresses. The Legion is never too far from my thoughts. I try to get down there for coffee once or twice a week as I am able.

I was born during the Cold War. I grew up in an era where people were horrified by the crimes even the ‘good guys’ committed in the Vietnam War. I remember peace marches and my wife remembers friends and acquaintances who were even afraid of a nuclear holocaust. Remember the Doomsday Clock?

I always went to Remembrance Day ceremonies growing up well aware of my relatives who served in the armed forces, some of whom fought overseas. I remember hearing how our soldiers fought for peace. I remember the tone of the Remembrance Day ceremonies past, as well; it was always one of thankful remembrance for our soldiers who lived and died and I remember very much the implicit message included therein: if we kill the peace they fought for by rushing off to war then they will have died in vain.

In my own preparations for addresses to veterans and those who wish to pay them their much-deserved respect, I have often clung to the old ideas of remembrance. Many times I have preached the good news from John 15 - “greater love has no man than to lay down his life for his friends.” Many times I have preached the miracle of reconciliation that arose from the Second World War: even though the world was torn apart in death and destruction, at the end of the day old foes became friends and close allies: Germany, France, and England all united in Europe. Canada and the United States – the only foreign power to ever invade us – are now each other’s closest trading partners. So many times I have preached on the glorious opportunities for reconciliation after these conflicts. Our service men and women lived, died and served for us. They sacrificed much for peace. I have a question though, in light of our text, how have we repaid them for that peace? Have we now sacrificed that peace that they sacrificed their life for?

Since the fall of the Berlin Wall the tide of military aggression has flown freely over the earth with nothing to impede its wave of innocent and other blood. Today we have many enemies in our world: Terrorists, extremists, ISIS, al-Qaeda, Muslim Brotherhood, Iraq, Lybia, Egypt, Syria, Palestine, Hamas, Venezuela, Yugoslavia, Korea, Russia, China and others have all rightfully or wrongfully been villainized and listed as our enemies in recent years. Jesus tells us to love our enemies.

When Jesus told us to love our enemies it was the first century CE. His country was an occupied territory. Many from his adoptive father’s or his legal grandfather’s generation had fought and died for political independence from one foreign occupation and now many people in his generation are dreaming and fighting and dying for political independence from another foreign occupation. Rome conquered Judea shortly before Jesus was born and many people were looking for ways to free themselves, their countrymen, their families from all the horrors of military occupation.[3]

We remember the Zealots, the Sicarii, the fourth philosophy[4]. This was a Judean terrorist movement that would use assassination, murder, and terror as a means to extricate their country from the grasp of their enemy. One of Jesus’ twelve closest disciples was identified as a zealot. Many of the common people wanted to rise up against their enemy and fight for the liberation of their homeland. Many of them were about to die doing just that (in 70 CE) and to these people who were longing for a violent fight for freedom from their enemies, Jesus says, Verse 27-31:

“But to you who are listening I say: Love your enemies, do good to those who hate you, bless those who curse you, pray for those who mistreat you. If someone [hits you in the face] slaps you on one cheek, turn to them the other also. If someone takes your coat, do not withhold your shirt from them. Give to everyone who asks you, and if anyone takes what belongs to you, do not demand it back. Do to others as you would have them do to you.”

This is how Jesus says we should treat our enemies and he says even more, Verses 37-38: “Do not judge, and you will not be judged. Do not condemn, and you will not be condemned. Forgive, and you will be forgiven. Give, and it will be given to you.”

This is hard teaching. Imagine telling this to an occupied and oppressed people today. As we said off the top, “commentaries often call it the Sermon on the Plain. You may prefer to think of it as ‘the sermon I don’t want to preach.’…Jesus tells them plainly, pointedly, repeatedly, ‘Love your enemies and do good to those who hate you.” Forgive as you want to be forgiven. Give, as you wish it to be given to you."

The longer I live, the more I realize that this is true. I spent a few years as a civilian contractor at CFB Esquimalt, working at Defence Research. I was there when Canada invaded Yugoslavia. I listened to service people who were being sent overseas. When they joined the forces, they did so as peacemakers and peacekeepers whose job was to protect civilians. Now they were being asked to do something different. This was very difficult for more than one of them.

I remember 9/11. This also was before I was an Officer. I was a businessman. I was at my Victoria office fuming because my marketing director was late. I hate it when my employees are late. I answer the phone. It is Glenn. He tells me to turn on the TV. I do and we watch the infamous events unfold before our eyes. I will never forget that moment. Glenn was an ex-pat American. He was in shock. We were all in shock.

“But to you who are listening I say: Love your enemies, do good to those who hate you;” “commentaries often call it the Sermon on the Plain. You may prefer to think of it as ‘the sermon I don’t want to preach.’…Jesus tells them plainly, pointedly, repeatedly, ‘Love your enemies and do good to those who hate you.” Forgive as you want to be forgiven. Give, as you wish it to be given to you.

This is tough teaching and believe me, I don’t think that Jesus in this text in disrespecting soldiers or service people in any regard. Like we said already, one of his closest disciples was a zealot and some of his earliest converts were members of the enemy, the occupying Roman forces. We know that a peaceful response solves problems a lot quicker and easier with less bloodshed and more success. Martin Luther King’s peaceful methods accomplished what Abraham Lincoln’s wars never could. Mandela’s forgiveness of De Klerk’s government ended Apartheid in a way that spared South Africa the horrors of civil war and unrest that their neighbours experienced during decolonization. Gandhi’s non-violent solution to occupation, based on the Christian writings of Leo Tolstoy, laid the framework for the world’s largest parliamentary democracy and unified a people who could have easily been torn apart forever. Where we extend peace, we receive peace. Do unto others and they will do unto you. Condemn and you will be condemned. Forgive and you will be forgiven. As you give so it will be given unto you. We know that violence begets violence and peace begets peace. Jesus himself could have stood up to his attackers when they came for his arrest. However, his last recorded miracle before being led to the cross was quite different: it was to tell Peter to put away his sword as Jesus healed his attacker’s severed ear.[5]

We remember five years ago the shooting on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, The men involved in neutralizing the attacker were Constable Curtis Barrett and Sergeant-at-Arms Kevin Vickers. Curtis Barrett is still suffering the serious effects of PTSD years afterwards and at the time Kevin Vickers said about the shooting of the gunman, “All I could think of was his mother.”

Even though we know all this to be true, it is hard teaching. “Commentaries often call [this passage] the Sermon on the Plain. You may prefer to think of it as ‘the sermon I don’t want to preach.’…Jesus tells them plainly, pointedly, repeatedly, ‘Love your enemies and do good to those who hate you.” Forgive as you want to be forgiven. Give, as you want it to be given to you.

Now here is the part that makes this even more difficult. It is one thing for presidents and prime ministers to forgive each other and decide not to bomb one another’s country 'back into the stone age' as one former US  president famously put it. It is a lot more difficult for you and I to forgive each other. But the truth is that that is a big part of what this pericope is speaking about.

You know what your sister did to you? You know what your father said to you? You know all of the problems with your ex or your kids? You remember your grade 5 teacher? You know how badly that person treated you at the office the other day? You remember that person who did that thing to you 25 years ago? Fifty years ago? Last month? Just the other day? You know that person who did that really horrible thing to you? N.T Wright writes, “Think of the best thing you can do for the worst person and then go ahead and do it.”[6] Jesus tells us plainly, pointedly, repeatedly, lovingly, ‘love your enemies and do good to those who hate you.” Forgive as you want to be forgiven. Give, as you want it to be given to you.

One more thing about forgiveness and this is important. When you refuse to forgive someone the only one you really hurt is yourself. A lack of forgiveness is not an act of aggression it is an act of self-condemnation. If I don’t forgive you for treating me the way you did, I become upset. I suffer the psychosomatic pains. The person I don’t forgive may never even know about my unforgiveness but I do; they may just wonder why I am acting so strange. I am the one who suffers. Unforgiveness is a self-inflicted wound.

Now I know that this is hard teaching and the scriptures say that many people left Jesus from some of his more difficult teachings but the truth is like with South Africa and India, so with each of us. As we forgive those who have harmed us, God will forgive us. As we forgive those who have harmed us and God forgives us, we will forgive ourselves. As we forgive, we will be liberated. There is no greater freedom than the freedom to love and the freedom to forgive and no one can take that from us.

And so with that in mind if there are any of us here today who are seeking forgiveness for an act or a thought against their brother or sister, someone else, themselves or even our Lord. If there is anyone here who has been suffering the pains of unforgiveness toward a friend, a neighbour, a relative, the Lord, or an enemy, there is another way. It is difficult and it is easy all at the same time, for as we cast all of our hurts and all of our burdens on Jesus, he will take them and he will heal us. As we forgive, we will be forgiven. So today I invite us all to love our enemies, to be forgiven and to forgive. Let us pray.
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[1] Moffet S. Chum, “Between Text and Sermon: Luke 6:27-36,” Interpretation: A Journal of Bible and Theology 68, no. 4 (2014): 428.
[2] Captain Michael Ramsay, 2 Kings 23:29-30: Lest We Forget. Presented on behalf of the Royal Canadian Legion Branch #56 to the Swift Current Community Remembrance Day Ceremonies, November 11, 2014.
[3] Cf. Leon Morris, Luke in Tyndale New Testament Commentary, ed. Leon Morris (Leicester, UK: IVP, 1999), 142 for a good discussion on this.
[4] Captain Michael Ramsay, Luke 2:21-39: Harold, Harold and Jesus. Presented to Swift Current Corps on October 26, 2014 and December 27, 2009 by Captain Michael Ramsay. Available on-line: http://sheepspeaks.blogspot.ca/2014/10/luke-221-39-harold-harold-and-jesus.html
[5] Cf. Moffet S. Chum, “Between Text and Sermon: Luke 6:27-36,” Interpretation: A Journal of Bible and Theology 68, no. 4 (2014): 428.
[6] N.T. Wright, Luke for Everyone (Louisville, Kentucky, USA: WJK, 2004), 73.
[7] Based on the sermon 'Luke 6:27-38: Love Your Enemies' preached to Swift Current Corps of The Salvation Army, 09 November 2014 by Captain Michael Ramsay. http://sheepspeaks.blogspot.com/2014/11/luke-627-38-love-your-enemies.html

Sunday, February 10, 2019

Joshua 24:1-24: Thanks A lot. I Trust You.

Presented to The Salvation Army's Alberni Valley Ministries, 10 February 2018 by Michael Ramsay
  
I recently read an interview with David Suzuki where he was asked –among other things- about political reform; how to give power to the people rather than politicians and their parties. He had what I thought was a very interesting answer. He said, ‘The solution to me is we need a system where politicians are drawn from a hat, the same way we need to set up our juries.' It has some merit. The word ‘democracy’ from the Greek roots ‘power’ and ‘people’ has come to mean ‘power to the people’ and way of drawing lots for political representation would give power to the people rather than the political parties. And actually, now that I remember it, that is the way that the first Greek democracies actually did operate, through the casting of lots. I thought it was very interesting that I read this while we have been studying Joshua.

 It reminded me of the way government was run in the Book and the time of Joshua in the Bible and throughout the Old Testament at least until the time of King David.

Susan, last week, spoke about the allotment of the land in Joshua. Much of that was shown by casting lots. When we read about Achan in Bible study on Tuesday and the way his tribe, clan, family, and self was revealed to have disobeyed God was through the casting of lots.

In the Bible lots aren’t cast to give power to the people as David Suzuki suggested; lots are cast to discern the will of God. In the New Testament, even God’s choice of Matthias, the disciple to replace Judas, is revealed through the casting of lots.

Probably the most famous lots in the Bible actually have names? Do we know what they are called? Urim and Thummim. These were kept in the High Priest’s ephod? We don’t know exactly how these worked but we do know that that is often how they would seek God’s direction. The people would consecrate themselves, intentionally avoid ‘bad’ or various non-holy things; pray and ask God what to do. They would then wait for His answer to be revealed through the casting of these lots. God did reserve the right not to answer them too, like was the case with King Saul before he went to a medium and other times. But when they approached the Lord in a sincere, holy and pure manner that was one way in which the Lord answered them.

As we know, there are a few basic themes in the Bible that the different authors, books, letters/epistles, etc. keep coming back to over and over again over years, decades, centuries, millennia, and varied geography, location, and situation. One of these basic themes is that we should put our trust in God rather than in ourselves or anyone or anything else.

Those of us who have been coming to Bible study have noticed quite a few similarities between what God did for Joshua and what God did with Moses. One of the most dramatic examples was probably the parting of the Red Sea (or the Sea of Reeds) and then the parting of the Jordan River. God parted to Jordan River to show that He could be trusted to take care of them in the same way He parted the Red Sea when it seemed like there was no way out. Like the people under Moses could trust God so could the people with Joshua.

This idea that we don’t need to turn to ourselves to solve our problems but that we can actually rely on God comes up again and again in both Moses’ and Joshua’s stories and even continues on as a central theme in the book of Judges, the next book in our Bible. Who do we trust? Do we trust God or do we trust ourselves? That is the choice set before us in our text today.

Again we can think of Moses at the edge of the Promised Land when the spies come back reporting on the land – the vast majority of the spies are terrified of the inhabitants of the land. There is now a choice to make. The people must decide whether to follow God into the Promised Land or whether to listen to the majority of the spies and the people not follow God. It is a very long story with many twists and turns but the Coles Notes version is this: The people choose not to follow God into the Promised Land but instead they actually try to invade it without following God and without God’s help and even eventually against His will. This did not go very well. Even if we are doing something that God wants done, if we do it without Him and against Him it will not succeed because He loves us and He wants to be with us. Christianity isn’t a set of rules or a ‘to do list’ it is a deferential relationship to and with our Lord. We can trust Him; we should trust Him, he loves us and can see us through the storms of life.

For those of us who have been reading through Joshua together, this should remind us of Ai. Susan preached on this a couple of weeks ago. That first assault on that very small foe ended in a heart-melting defeat because the people were attacking the city all on their own, without consulting (and even disobeying) God.

It is only when they consecrated themselves and came before the Lord seeking His direction and guidance that they took the city of Ai. And we see this played out over and over again in the Bible and in Joshua. And we see this played out over and over again in our world and in our lives. When we try to do things on our own, when we try to (as the refrain in the book of Judges says) ‘do what is right in our own eyes’, when we put our trust in the wisdom and ability of ourselves or anyone else but God, it does not work out well.

Conversely when we trust in the Lord, we will not be disappointed. The Lord is trustworthy. The Lord will take care of us. I handed out some verses to people in the congregation; I will ask you to read them out now:
  • ·         Psalm 20:7: Some trust in chariots and some in horses, but we trust in the name of the LORD our God.
  • ·         Psalm 31:14: But I trust in you, LORD; I say, “You are my God.”
  • ·         Psalm 56:3: When I am afraid, I put my trust in You.
  • ·         Psalm 84:12: LORD Almighty, blessed is the one who trusts in you.
  • ·         Proverbs 3:5-6: Trust in the LORD with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways submit to Him, and He will make your paths straight.
  • ·         Proverbs 28:26: Those who trust in themselves are fools, but those who walk in wisdom are kept safe.
  • ·         Proverbs 11:28: Those who trust in their riches will fall, but the righteous will thrive like a green leaf.
  • ·         Psalm 121:1-2: I lift up my eyes to the mountains— where does my help come from? My help comes from the Lord, the Maker of heaven and earth.

Ecclesiastes 9:11 “…The race is not to the swift or the battle to the strong, nor does food come to the wise or wealth to the brilliant or favor to the learned…” for, 1 Samuel 17:47, “…the Battle belongs to the Lord”, Luke 1:37, "For nothing will be impossible with God", Matthew 19:26, “…with God all things are possible.”

We can trust the Lord. He is with us in the very midst of our struggles just like He was with the Israelites in and out of Egypt and into the Promised Land and beyond.

This week, I have had the chance to pray with and anoint a friend who was being tortured with some terrible dreams. The Lord is with her and He can and is delivering her from and through this. We can trust Him.

This week, a friend of mine called me frustrated by life, closemindedness in the world and society, and looking for some escape from the struggles all around and searching for meaning. We talked about how as we seek first God all else that we actually need will be added unto us – Matthew 6:33. We talked about how life is a process not a circumstance and the act of seeking God is finding Him. The means is the end. We can trust God. Life may not be easy bur we can trust Him in and with it.

This week I spoke with a friend who told me of the many people being shut out of the safety and security they have known for a long time. I heard of extended grieving and temptation to trepidation. But the Lord will prevail. He is bringing them through. We can trust the Lord.

This week I spoke with a friend who is concerned about the safety and the life of his child; he is concerned with his health and safety and custodial issues and the much more that is tied up with all of that. We spoke very much about how even in all of this we can trust God. No matter what happens, we can trust God to bring us through. This, I think, is the central theme of Joshua, a central theme of the Bible, and this, I think, is the key to navigating all the challenges that life sends our way. We can trust the Lord.

This week, yesterday, I went to the funeral of a friend. My friend died of due to his drug addiction. He had struggled against drugs the vast majority of his life. When I knew him well, he was walking with God and seeking God and even then was being attacked by the Enemy through addiction. I have seen many people delivered from the addiction but my friend lost his life to it. My friend has passed on to eternity now but I do not believe that the Enemy has won; because death has been defeated between the cross and the empty tomb and I know my friend loved the Lord and I know that the Lord never leave us nor forsake us. The Lord is with us, even in the very midst of our struggles.

I know that there are some serious challenges that people here today are facing and I want you to know that you do not need to face them on your own. The Lord is able, He is more than able to accomplish what concerns us today; He is able, more than able to handle anything that comes our way.

Let us pray.
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Robert B. Coote, The Book of Joshua (NIB II: Nashville, Tenn.: Abingdon Press, 1998)
Leon Morris, The Expositor's Bible Commentary, Pradis CD-ROM:Hebrews/Exposition of Hebrews/VIII. Faith (11:1-40)/F. The Faith of the Exodus Generation (11:29-31), Book Version: 4.0.2 
Dale Ralph Davis, Joshua (Glascow: Christian Focus Publications, 2000)
Trent C. Butler, Joshua 13-24 (WBC 7B: Grand Rapids, Mi.: Zondervan, 2-14)

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Saturday, February 2, 2019

Joshua 9: and the Gibeonite Dilemma

Presented to Alberni Valley Ministries, 27 January 2019

A distinguished, prominent big city pastor cruised through a small town. As he did his eyes fell upon a child not more than two feet tall at the door of one of the houses. The boy was on tiptoes valiantly attempting to reach the doorbell. Amused and wanting to help, the pastor parked his car and went over to assist the boy. He reached up and pushed his finger onto the button and the chimes rang inside. Satisfied that he had done his good deed for the day, the pastor turned to the child, “Okay, what happens next­?”
With a smile the child replied, “Now we run!”

Another story: This lady goes to the doctor. She has been in serious pain for quite a while. The doctor asks her where it hurts and what is the matter. To which she replies, “It hurts when I touch my temple; it hurts when I touch my side; it hurts when I touch my arm; it even hurts when I touch my nose.”

“I think I know what the problem is”, the doctor says, “your finger is broken.”


Today we are going to talk both about being tricked and the pain associated with pulling against a covenant. The covenant we are talking about today is the one with the Gibeonites referred to in Joshua 9 and it is one of the most important in the Bible for understanding the workings of covenants.

Covenants are important and how we live in our covenant relationships have significant implications. We know what the Hebrew word for covenant means? Berit[h] literally means to be shackled together, to be bound. The Lord promised His people that He would never break His covenant with them. As such, we are not released from our covenants simply for disobeying them (Ro 7:2) and there are often significant consequences that result from trying to break an unbreakable bond (see Num 33:55; Jos 23:13).

This is important for us as Salvationists to remember because we are a covenanted people; we have the opportunity to enter into rich and strong covenant relationships with the Lord in the form of our Officers’ and Soldiers’ covenants. It is important for any of us living in the so-called ‘First World’ too where litigation, broken contracts, and divorces occur on a daily basis both inside and outside the churches and thus people miss out on the benefits of covenants. Because of this, we should all know to what we are agreeing to when we enter into a covenant with the LORD as either a partner or a witness.- be it a marriage or a Soldiership pledge or anything else. These next few weeks our focus in the Army world is Call and Commitment. This is when we ask you to consider responding to the opportunity to enter into a covenant with God as either a soldier or an Officer.

Covenants made with and before God are good things. The Lord uses covenants to give us direct access to strength, security, and blessing. The Lord made a promise to Abraham (Gen 12) that all the nations of the earth will be blessed through him and - even though Abraham and we have been unfaithful - God's promise is still fulfilled through Jesus Christ. The only reason any of us are saved is because the Lord is keeps His word. He is bound to us through His covenantal ties that will not be broken.

Even though God doesn't cancel a covenant because we disobey it there are still some serious consequences for pulling against it. In Joshua 9, Israel were disobeying an earlier covenant that they made with God to not make a treaty with the Canaanites and even to destroy them (Dt 7:1-6; 20:16-18). Also, in our passage inotice that the Canaanites lied to Joshua and the Israelite leaders: the leaders were tricked when they made the treaty with the Canaanites (Jos 9:15). They did not first discuss the matter with God and in making this covenant they disobeyed their earlier covenant with the LORD.

Betraying a promise to YHWH is not a trivial matter. In the book of Judges alone generations of people suffer as a result of this broken promise to God. For hundreds of years their children, grandchildren, great-grandchildren and even more than that experience the consequences of continuing in rebellion against this covenant and this promise. The natural results of not respecting our covenants with or before God - whether or not we are tricked into them, whether or not we consult God before we call Him as a witness (Jos 9) - can be devastating.

The Israelites were tricked into making this covenant agreement with the Gibeonites (who are Canaanites). They didn’t realize that in so doing they were defying their previous promise to God. They entered into this new agreement under false pretences. The Gibeonites lied to them but that doesn’t change the fact that Israel is now bound through the covenant her leaders made with the Gibeonites before God. The leaders themselves are well aware that they are bound to keep this covenant (9:18). When the Israelites find out that they have been tricked, they don’t nullify the agreement: they realise that it is not within their authority to do so; Israel does not attack the Gibeonites. They don’t attack the Gibeonites because –even though they have been lied to, even though they have been tricked, even though they have been deceived – they are still bound to God and the Gibeonites via this treaty. Simply disobeying a covenant does not render it void. There are consequences for disregarding a promise but disobeying a promise made before God does not render that covenant void .[1] God says, through His angel, Judges 2:1: “I will NEVER break my covenant with you.” The covenant with or the covenant before God is not nullified; the ties are not severed just because one disobeys God.

There is another interesting point about the agreement that Israel enters into here. Israel enters into a covenant with God first that says that He will give them the land and that they will not make a covenant with the Canaanites: they will instead destroy the present inhabitants of the land. Then the Israelites –without consulting God– enter into the second covenant with the Gibeonites (who are Canaanites) promising that they will not destroy them and in the process Joshua and the Israelites disobey the first covenant agreement with God.

Israel is understandably held to its original agreement with YHWH. It is understandable that Israel suffers the consequences for disobeying God by making this competing covenant. What is interesting, however, is that the Israelites are also held accountable to this new covenant made before God with the Gibeonites even though they made it contrary to the expressed command of God. The Israelites disobeyed God in making this second covenant but they are still held accountable to it. God holds them accountable to both covenants: the one that He initiated and the one that He forbade. [2]

In Judges 2 we read the consequences of breaking the first covenant with God and in 2 Samuel 21 we see the consequences the Israelites suffer for breaking the second, competing covenant with the Gibeonites many years later. God holds us to our promises. As is evidenced here, whether we are lied to, tricked, or even enter into a covenant that is against the Lord’s commands, God holds us to our covenants that are made with Him either as a witness or as one of the parties Himself.

2 Samuel 21:1-5, 13-15:

During the reign of David, there was a famine for three successive years [people die]; so David sought the face of the LORD. The LORD said, “It is on account of Saul and his blood-stained house; it is because he put the Gibeonites to death.” The king summoned the Gibeonites and spoke to them. (Now the Gibeonites were not a part of Israel but were survivors of the Amorites; the Israelites had sworn to spare them, but Saul in his zeal for Israel and Judah had tried to annihilate them.) David asked the Gibeonites,

“What shall I do for you? How shall I make amends so that you will bless the LORD's inheritance?”

The Gibeonites answered him, “We have no right to demand silver or gold from Saul or his family, nor do we have the right to put anyone in Israel to death.”

“What do you want me to do for you?” David asked.

They answered the king, “As for the man who destroyed us and plotted against us so that we have been decimated and have no place anywhere in Israel, let seven of his male descendants be given to us to be killed and exposed before the LORD at Gibeah of Saul—the Lord 's chosen one.”

So the king said, “I will give them to you.”

13-15: “David brought the bones of Saul and his son Jonathan from there, and the bones of those who had been killed and exposed were gathered up. They buried the bones of Saul and his son Jonathan in the tomb of Saul's father Kish, at Zela in Benjamin, and did everything the king commanded. After that, God answered prayer in behalf of the land.”


Even though the Israelites disobeyed God by entering into this covenant with the Gibeonites (and suffered their due consequences for disobeying the covenant with God), when they disobeyed the Gibeonite covenant - even though it was made against the expressed will of God - God did not even answer their prayers until they made it right.

There are a couple of important things we need to know about our covenants with God, be they marriage covenants, soldier covenants, or officer covenants:

1), God does not sever His covenantal ties that bind us before Him; because

2) He is faithful to His promises even if we are faithless

This is important for us to remember. Again this is Call and Commitment time in the Army: We should not enter into our covenants lightly. I don’t believe that God says we can simply declare through secular courts that we are not happy with our partner so we are no longer married. I don’t believe God says that simply because we disobey our Soldiership agreement (by having a drink or whatever else) that we can throw out our covenant. I don’t think the tie is broken. I don’t think God says that just because we are not active Officers anymore that we are no longer have the opportunity to ‘make soul-saving the first purpose of our lives.’ I think God still supports us in these covenants. I think that this covenant referred to in Genesis 15, Judges 2, 1 Samuel 21 and here is Joshua 9 points to the fact that God doesn’t break His covenants with us but on the contrary, He will still be there for us when we need him. And this is important because if it is not true than none of us are saved; because if it is not true than God's salvation in conditional and we know that it is not - anyone who calls on the Name of the Lord can be saved.

This brings me to another point: covenants are not punishments; the consequences of pulling against our covenants are the natural and logical results of our own actions. Like we said, tje origin of the Hebrew word for ‘covenant’ comes from a root word meaning, ‘to be shackled together’. The image of a covenant then is of one being tied to God through a promise. One can compare a covenant with God (be it through marriage, Soldiership, Officership) to being seat-belted into a train (or SkyTrain), with God being the train. When we are belted in the train and ride comfortably in it – following the Lord’s lead - we wind up where He is going a lot faster and a lot easier than if we walk the tracks on our own. This is the benefit of a strong covenant with the Lord. However, once we are strapped in, if we try to go our own way or try to tie ourselves to something going in a different direction, it will not be a pleasant experience. The seatbelt doesn’t break. Disobeying our covenants is like jumping out of the train and trying to run in the opposite direction while we are still belted to it. It is going to hurt but this is not God’s fault. He doesn’t throw us from the train and, because God is faithful, this covenantal tie is so strong that it won’t break but we suffer are the natural results of our own actions. This is what happens in Joshua and Judges. God, wanting the Israelites to experience the full rest of the Promised Land, entered into a covenant with Abraham and then Israel. They willing belted themselves into His train but later the Israelites also tied themselves to the Gibeonite train that was going in a different direction and they suffered the consequences of their actions. This is exactly what happens to us when we don’t respect our covenants.

But there is good news in this and that good news saved the Gibeonites - even from the zeal of the of the Israelites' king. God saved the Gibeonites and God saved the Israelites. And this is good news for us for no matter how many times we are faithless and jump off that train. No matter how many times we try to break that covenant; no matter how many times we throw ourselves onto the tracks, under the wheels of the ‘God Train,’ the Lord is faithful: the covenantal tie will not be broken; God is faithful, and Jesus himself is standing there as the eternal tie that binds us in our relationship to God; Jesus provides the eternal covenant through whom whosoever may be pulled back up onto the train of everlasting life. As this is the case, instead of rebelling against God, instead of pulling against the tie that binds, let us all give our lives over fully to the Lord, buckle up, lean back and enjoy the fully sanctified ride on this train because this train is bound for glory.

See also:

Ramsay, Michael, 'Rights and Responsibilities of Covenants: a look at Judges 2' in Praise The Lord For Covenants: Old Testament wisdom for our world today. Vancouver, BC: Credo Press, 2010. (c) The Salvation Army. Available on-line: http://www.sheepspeak.com/ptl4covenants.htm

Captain Michael Ramsay, "Rights and Responsibilities of Covenant -a look at Judges 2", Journal of Aggressive Christianity, Issue 56 , Aug.-Sept.2008, p.48-55. On-line: http://www.armybarmy.com/JAC/article10-56.html

Michael Ramsay, Judges 2:1-5: Covenant and the Gibeonite Dilemma (a look at Judges 2:1-5 through the lenses of Joshua 9 and 2 Samuel 21). Presented to Nipawin and Tisdale Corps on May 18, 2008. Available on-line: https://sheepspeaks.blogspot.com/2008/05/judges-21-5-covenant-and-gibeonite.html