Monday, December 17, 2018

Luke 3:7-14: In the Advent of Revolution

Presented to Alberni Valley Ministries on 16 December 2018 by Captain Michael Ramsay

John, ‘the Baptist’ as he is called, is a celebrity preacher in 1st Century Palestine. He is on a speaking tour through all the country around the Jordan (Luke 3:3). People are making an effort to see him. In order to see John in those days you can’t just drive, catch a bus, hail a cab or get a ride from someone. You have to walk, by and large, and you have to walk and long way; you probably have to take at least one day off work to get where you are going.
Picture this scenario with me. Pick some famous person you want to see; they are coming to Nanaimo and you have been given free tickets. (Who might that be?) You take time off work or cancel your plans for the day to go see them. Now imagine that they are a celebrity preacher. Major Danielle Strickland of The Salvation Army a few years ago was named one of the most influential Christian speakers. Imagine she comes to town. Big crowds come to see her and not just Salvationists but all kinds of us. Let’s say we all walk there or better yet in this day and age we get a bus full of people and we all take the day off kettles to go hear her. We are among hundreds or thousands of others who take the time and make the effort to come to see her. Now imagine that when we get there she says (cf. vv.7-9), “All of you who have come to see me… you are a bunch of snakes! Why are you here!?" "Who told you, you could be saved!? You need to start acting like Christians! And don’t tell me you’ve been a Christian since you were six or you had this life changing moment when you were eleven or your great grandmother was saved through William Booth himself on the streets of London 100 plus years ago. Don’t tell me you don’t need saving because you are already a child of God. I tell you the truth God can raise up children from these rocks here if he wants to; if you say you are His children you need to start acting like it!”[1] Can you imagine? How would you feel? What would you think?
This is what it would be like for people in our text today who have taken the whole day or two off of their lives, walked for maybe up to 100km and made this effort to go hear John in the desert; he addresses the crowds in much the same way, telling them that if they think they are children of Abraham, they’re really not unless they start acting like children of Abraham. In today’s colloquial vernacular, many who went to the desert may have ‘thought they were saved’ but John says, ‘are you so sure about that?’ This is quite a greeting!
It is effective though.[2] Luke records voices seeking salvation in the disparate crowd calling out to him, “what should we do then?!” (v.10). John tells them, in essence, if you think you are saved, and if you really are a part of the ‘Kingdom to Come’, then, Verse 11, “Anyone who has two shirts should share with the one who has none, and anyone who has food should do the same.”
How many people here have two shirts – or more? How many people in our world have none? How many people here will eat today? How many people in our world won’t? Now I know most of us here are good at sharing with our friends who need food, clothing, and other items – individually and through The Salvation Army. I know there are many people here who would give the shirt right off their own back to someone in need. John, the Baptist, says that that is because you are a part of the Kingdom of God. I love it when we study the Gospel of Luke in Advent because Luke, like the Army's spiritual grandfather John Wesley, is crystal clear in presenting the Gospel as a social justice gospel: Christians will not acquire and hoard wealth while others are in need.[3] The Baptist says, quite the opposite, “produce acts in keeping with repentance” (v.7).
But there is more to the story than just this. After John answers these cries from the crowd about what should anyone do who wants to be saved from the coming wrath (v.7), tax collectors who are part of this crowd say in essence, “yes, we all know that: everybody who is saved, who is part of God’s Kingdom, will give food and clothes to those in need. But what specifically should WE, saved tax collectors, do when we make this public confession through this baptism that we have come here to make today?”[4]
Verse 13, “Don’t collect any more than you are required to,” John tells them. Now this sounds easy but let’s take a little look at the way things ran back then. It was not all that different from the way things run today. These tax collectors were probably Jewish toll booth operators working for the Romans. Their job was to collect tolls and they made their money from surcharges applied to the tolls. The Romans used an early franchise system of sorts to collect these taxes.[5] They pseudo-privatized their toll booths. Much like well-known fast food restaurants, big chain stores, and other corporations today; they used a franchise-style system. Judean business people would buy a toll booth franchise or a number of toll booth franchises (such as in the case of Zacchaeus; Luke 19); they would collect the money to cover the fees from their clients and everything else they made after they paid their overhead was profit. This is similar to the way many or most chain stores, franchises, fundraising catalogues, contemporary manufacturers and most big businesses in general are run today. They collect what they are required to for head office or whomever and/or to cover the cost of inventory already paid for and then the rest, after expenses, goes to profit.  But John says to them, ‘don’t collect any more than you are required to [by the head office].” Don’t make a profit the laissez-faire capitalist way, charging what the market can bear in order to make a profit… Well, who would want to be a tax collector then?! Can you imagine if the Baptist told the franchise owners or others today that they are not to make a profit off their customers, can you imagine if he told the big name companies that they are only allowed to charge what they are legally or otherwise required to charge, what would they do? ... Well, just maybe John, Luke, and even Jesus IS saying just that…just take what you need.  I love looking at Luke in the Advent season. Luke is a revolutionary text. Luke's is a gospel to the poor. Luke is the social justice gospel.
Luke’s not so subtle condemnation of this 1st century expression of a market economy that made the rich richer and the poor poorer is as radical then as it would be now if we applied the gospel to our own society.[6] We just moved from Toronto this year and previously we have lived in Victoria and Vancouver. Anyone who drives regularly in these city knows that the parking meters all collect different amounts of money for an hour or an half hour: a dollar fifty here, $3 there; $8 for a parkade here, twenty dollars for a parkade there. And grocery stores owned by the same person, the same corporation, the same company – you buy the same product at a different outlet and it is a totally different price simply because they know they can get more money from you at that location. This is Adam Smith and Ayn Rand's version of capitalism; this is the free market.[7] But what John is saying to the owners of the Roman tax franchises in the first century is seemingly quite the opposite; he says, “don’t collect any more than you are required to.” And this I think is what Luke is telling us today: poor people in the Kingdom of God should have the same access to life as wealthy people, so do your part, “don’t collect any more than you are required to;” don’t make a profit at the expense of others. I love looking at Luke in Advent. Luke’s is a revolutionary text. Luke’s is a social justice gospel. Luke's Gospel, as Miranda and John Wesley remind us, is good news, gospel for the poor.[8]
Now after these tax collectors/toll booth franchise owners get their answer, the soldiers who have also come here to be baptised are eager to know what is required of them. Like the tax collectors, the soldiers know they need to give food and clothes to the poor - but they don’t own toll booths; they don’t own franchises. They aren’t rich. Quite the opposite: while the tax collectors were apt to get rich from this 1st Century inflationless microcosm of market-driven free enterprise, the Judean soldiers were likely to get poor from it; so, what should they do when they are saved from the impending wrath? What should they do as citizens of the Kingdom of God? Verse 14, John says, “Don’t extort money and don’t accuse people falsely—be content with your pay.”
This sounds easy enough doesn’t it: don’t extort money from people, don’t falsely accuse people, and be content with your pay. Easy? Maybe. These soldiers weren't Romans; they were Judeans just like the tax collectors and just like most of the rest of the crowd. These soldiers worked for the Romans just like the tax collectors but these soldiers were very poorly paid. They didn’t have the freedom of the toll booth operators to set their own wages so they resorted to other ways to make money - basically stealing. But that was okay, they convinced themselves, because ‘everyone was doing it’. But that is not okay. I love looking at Luke in Advent season. Luke is the social justice gospel. It is a revolutionary text.
I remember when we were living in Vancouver, there were many stores in our neighbourhood which would charge you less if you paid in cash because then they wouldn’t have to declare the money as income. I have met many people who are paid 'under the table', who deliberately do not claim income on their taxes – after all they don’t make very much and the government doesn't need their money. When I worked at a military base pre-9/11, one co-worker allegedly regularly used to take discarded copper home to sell for extra money, after all he only made minimum wage; the government didn't need more money. I remember as a janitor when I was a teenager, colleagues who would take food or office supplies from the buildings where they were working: they're only going to throw it out anyway. Why would they miss this food from their coffee room? They have lots of money to buy more. Luke says, “Be content with your pay.”
I remember too, we used to be able to make more money by working more hours so we would volunteer to take on extra hours cleaning extra buildings. I –like my fellow janitors – loved that. This is where you could get overtime pay without ever working one hour overtime. It was late at night and we often worked alone so some of us could do 16 hours worth of cleaning in just six hours without anyone noticing. The buildings were clean, thus no one complained so we would write 16 hours on our timesheet even though we only worked six; no one cared, everyone was doing it and that way we would not only get paid for 10 hours of work we didn’t do but we would even get time-and-a-half or double-time for some of those hours. It was an easy way to make an extra buck or two. Get paid for hours you don’t work, take food and supplies no one will miss which ‘everyone else is taking anyway’.  
I remember one security guard at a building where I worked as a janitor for a while. I would chat with him about God, among other things; one day he asked me, “If you are a Christian, why are you leaving early?”
“My work is done.”
“Are you getting paid?”
“Yes.”
“So, do more work.”
“Everyone just leaves when they are done, we’re expected to”
“Isn’t that stealing?”
The baptiser, John, says to those of his day who weren’t paid necessarily a ‘liveable wage’, “be content with your pay.” Luke says to we today who may be tempted to pad our hours, not declare our income, or manipulate our wages, “be content with your pay.” It is always interesting looking at Luke during Advent. Luke is the social justice gospel. It is a revolutionary text. Luke tells us what the impending Kingdom of God looks like. It is a place where the poor will have equal access to life and liberty as (or more than) the rich and everyone who is a part of God’s Kingdom will deal openly and honestly with each other.
And honestly, in Advent this revolution is noticeably important. We, as Christians, are called to be holy. We, as Christians, are called to be the advance guard of a just society where the poor do have the same access to life and to forgiveness as the rich. The middle class and the elite - like the tax collectors - are not to make a profit at the expense of the poor and those just barely eking out a living; we are to do it honestly. And all of us, rich or poor, are to be content with our wages for God will provide for us as He provides for the birds of the air and the lilies of the field (Luke 12:27, Mt 6:28).[9] Everyone, as we are a part of God's proleptic Kingdom, we are to love our neighbour and as they are in need we are to provide for their need just as our Heavenly Father provides for our needs.
Last Sunday we lit the Candle of Love and as we love our neighbours as ourselves in this way we will experience the joy of the Lord - I promise. This week, we lit the Candle of Joy and as we love our neighbours as ourselves in this way we will experience the joy of the Lord - I promise. This week, as we await the celebration of the penultimate arrival of our Lord as a baby laid in a manger and as we await the ultimate arrival of our Lord at the echaton, let us all seek the Lord and be a part of the joyful, peaceful revolution by honestly loving our Lord with all our heart, mind and soul and loving our neighbour as ourselves for as we do I promise God will change our world as He changes us even here –who seek him- from the inside out.
Let us pray.
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Based on Luke 3:7-14: In the Advent of Revolution. Presented to TSA Corps 614 Regent Park, Toronto, Ontario on 20 December 2015
[1] Cf. N.T. Wright, Luke for Everyone (Louisville, Kentucky, USA: WJK, 2004), 34
[2] Cf. Fred B. Craddock, Luke (Interpretation: Louisville, Kentucky, USA: John Knox Press, 1990), 48.
[3] Captain Michael Ramsay, Analysis of 'The Use of Money': Sermon 50 by John Wesley (Presented to William and Catherine Booth College, Summer 2008) http://sheepspeak.com/reviews_Michael_Ramsay.htm#Use
[4] Walter L. Leifeld, The Expositor's Bible Commentary, Pradis CD-ROM:Luke/Exposition of Luke/III. Preparation for Jesus' Ministry (3:1-4:13)/A. The Ministry of John the Baptist (3:1-20), Book Version: 4.0.2
[5] R. Alan Culpepper, Luke (NIB 8: Nashville, Tenn.: Abingdon, 1995), 84
[6] N.T. Wright, Luke for Everyone (Louisville, Kentucky, USA: WJK, 2004), 36
[7] William Hendricksen, Exposition of the Gospel According to Luke (NTC: Baker Academic: Grand Rapids Michigan, 2007), 208
[8] Cf. Jose Miranda.  Marx and the Bible: a Critique of the Philosophy of Oppression. Trans., John Eagleson. (New York: Orbis Books, 1979), 250 
[9] R. Alan Culpepper, Luke (NIB 8: Nashville, Tenn.: Abingdon, 1995), 85.

Sunday, December 16, 2018

Psalm 93 & 2 Chronicles 5:11-6:4: Cloudy Days

This is hamper registration and distribution time at the corps. Hamper time is always an interesting time in any Salvation Army across this country and we’ve been a part of few. The other day as I was readying application forms, appointment cards and Angels for the Angel Tree, I was reminded of one hamper distribution day we had in Swift Current, Saskatchewan.

Our building there was a former elementary school - like it used to be here for a bit. It was big and at Christmas time it was full of people. In the morning of the day we give out the hamper, I receive a phone call: someone is asking if he can register for a hamper that day. We REALLY try to avoid that. It is too busy and isn’t fair to anyone else; so I explain to him that not only do we not register people for hampers on hamper pick-up day but that the deadline for registering was three weeks ago. He is way too late. He is persistent though. He is bound and determined to get a hamper this day. He tells me that he was speaking to our community ministries worker earlier in the week. He tells me he has health issues. He tells me this. He tells me that. He is like the persistent widow in the parable of that name (Luke 18:1-8). He is so bound and determined to get something THAT day that eventually I do give in and tell him he can come in person later in the day – after the others have gotten their hampers and after he goes through the full registration process with our worker over the telephone, of course, which he does. This man really is bound and determined to get something today.

Later in the day, when his time comes, he arrives at The Salvation Army. He still has to wait. The person taking tickets calls me to the door. I come when I can. She rightly holds him up because he doesn’t have a ticket and his name isn’t on the list – (remember he just registered in the morning by phone, which isn’t typically allowed) but he is bound and determined to get something today. As I am speaking with the volunteer and the man, another volunteer pulls me aside and asks me to have a coffee with this same fellow while we process the others. We have our coffee while we wait; he registered late, it makes sense that he has to wait. We talk. This fellow has spent some time on Vancouver’s DTES; my wife and I were urban missionaries there years ago. We are chatting about this and that and how he is bound and determined to get something this day – well, he does get something that day: the police show up and he gets… arrested; he is bound - and it is determined that he will stay in the cells that day and over Christmas. (That was our first time that someone was arrested on hamper day at the Army.)

What happened? One of our volunteers saw him and identified him as a man whom they suspect defrauded their business. If he had not been so persistent about his hamper then he never would have got what was apparently coming to him that day. He seemed to want his hamper so much that when he was arrested, his first words as they were leading him out of The Salvation Army were, 'Can I still get my hamper?' I offered to keep it for him until he gets out after Christmas and I did go to visit him in the cells over Christmas.

The fellow and I actually got to know each other a little bit through the process. We kept in touch when he was in jail, and afterwards we helped him find a job and a place to stay when he was released and through this experience we actually developed a whole transition program in Saskatchewan where we would sit with people in court, keep in touch when they are in jail and then help them with a place to live and get employment when they are out. It was quite successful but often at Christmas Hamper time I do think of this fellow who was so bound and determined to get his hamper that he was bound and it was determined that he would be arrested at that day for stealing quite a few things from town.

Yesterday was a big day here. Thank you so much to all of you who were able to come and lend a hand and/or just partake of the day. We had pancakes served by Kiwanis. We had sausages donated by Hertel Meats. The Bulldogs were there playing with the kids. The ADSS Cheer Team was there; the ADSS band played for us; Alberni Kids Can Rock did a great job.

Todd Flaro was the MC. Chief Counsellor Cynthia Dick represented the Tseshaht First Nation. Patty Edwards spoke on behalf Scott Fraser, the Minister of Indigenous Relations and Reconciliation and our MLA. Counsellor RON PAULSON spoke from the city. The High School Principal spoke and even our Member of Parliament, Gord Johns was unexpectedly there. He had said earlier that he wouldn't be able to make it but he did and it was great. Our boss and her husband were also there - Majors Tiffany and Les Marshall. And so was Sally Ann, the Salvation Army mascot. It was a great time. Thanks to everyone who helped out. It was a lot of fun and did good to raise awareness as to what exactly God does for this community through The Salvation Army. ///

One of our Scriptures today is about another ceremony. The ceremony in the Scriptures today was very well attended - even more well attended than the community Remembrance Day Ceremonies that The Salvation Army was also blessed to lead and that we also held at the Glenwood Centre a couple of weeks ago. And Solomon’s ceremony was probably just as laden with tradition and precise ceremony. At Remembrance Day many of us had a chance to lay wreathes, we were able to read from the Bible and I was able to address the large crowds present. In 1 Kings 6, like 2 Chronicles 6, it records some of the Solomon’s ceremony at the dedication of the temple: 2 Chronicles 5:11-6:4:

The priests then withdrew from the Holy Place. All the priests who were there had consecrated themselves, regardless of their divisions. All the Levites who were musicians—Asaph, Heman, Jeduthun and their sons and relatives—stood on the east side of the altar, dressed in fine linen and playing cymbals, harps and lyres. They were accompanied by 120 priests sounding trumpets. The trumpeters and musicians joined in unison to give praise and thanks to the Lord. Accompanied by trumpets, cymbals and other instruments, the singers raised their voices in praise to the Lord and sang: “He is good; his love endures forever.”

         Then the temple of the Lord was filled with the cloud, and the priests could not perform their service because of the cloud, for the glory of the Lord filled the temple of God.
         Then Solomon said, “The Lord has said that he would dwell in a dark cloud; I have built a magnificent temple for you, a place for you to dwell forever.”
         While the whole assembly of Israel was standing there, the king turned around and blessed them. Then he said: “Praise be to the Lord, the God of Israel, who with his hands has fulfilled what he promised with his mouth to my father David.

Now our kick off was great yesterday and Remembrance Day was very good but I imagine this ceremony with the Temple dedication was over the top. There is so much going on and then at one point God Himself shows up in this dark cloud. Can you imagine that? What if yesterday (or November 11th) when we were at the Glenwood doing our thing all of a sudden God shows up inside of or in the form of a cloud? Can you imagine if God came in and filled the whole Glenwood and it became so cloudy inside that we all had to stop what we were doing and run outside? Can you imagine if in the middle of the church service here today God shows up in the form of or inside of a cloud and He fills this room so thick with the fog that we have to go outside to get away from the cloud. It says even the band had to stop playing; the priests had to stop their service. That would be quite something.

Solomon, of course, acknowledges this and maybe makes a serious mistake here too (but cf. 1 Kings 8:27, 2 Chronicles 6:18). Verse 6: Then Solomon said, “The Lord has said that he would dwell in a dark cloud; I have built a magnificent temple for you, a place for you to dwell forever.” Solomon, even though he said this, knows that God cannot be contained in this temple and Solomon acknowledges that himself and God later rebukes Solomon telling him that if Israel leaves God then they will no longer be with him - but Israel seems to forget this. Israel, Judah, and Jerusalem start to believe that God actually lives in the 'House of God'. Israel, Judah and especially the city of Jerusalem gets to the point where they figure that they can sin as much as they want and do whatever they want to each other, no longer loving one another and serving God, because they are invincible. They get to the point where many believe that God is contained in this temple, like a genie in a lamp and so as long as they hold the lamp nothing can happen to them. They don't need to care for their brothers and sisters. They don't need to love God as evidenced by loving their neighbours. They… were sadly mistaken.

The unthinkable happened, in 586 BCE, King Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon, sacked the city, destroyed the temple and wiped out the Kingdoms of Israel and Judah forever. People did not know what to do, their faith was shaken. They thought they were invincible. They thought God was contained in the Temple. They put their faith in the myth that they had God locked in the temple like a pet in a cage, like a genie in a bottle, like their captive. But He wasn't: He is a living, loving, and a free God and they were the ones led off to captivity.

My questions for us today are: Do we ever treat God as a genie who we can control to do our bidding? Are our prayers to God sometimes like Aladdin rubbing a lamp? Do we sometimes order God around like a servant or, just as bad, take him for granted? Do we drive home from here on Sundays after service and forget God? - leaving Him in Church? Do we ever ignore Him all week long and just expect that He'll be here on Sunday or come to do our bidding when we summon Him? Are we like those who have fallen prey to the prosperity heresy who tell God what to do and are bound and determined to see Him to do it at our command?

God isn't like that. He isn’t a genie, or a slave, or someone to just be taken for granted. God is here in this building but this isn't the only place He is. And God will give us not what we want always but He will always give us what is best for us - eternally speaking, not because we instruct him to do so but because He loves us. God is God. We can’t keep him in a box or a building or a theology or a tradition. We shouldn’t ignore or try to cage Him. He is the God of the universe and He is the King of the world and He is coming back and when He does He will set everything right. Do we believe that?

Psalm 93 says:
The LORD is king, he is robed in majesty; the LORD is robed, he is girded with strength. He has established the world; it shall never be moved; your throne is established from of old; you are from everlasting. The floods have lifted up, O LORD, the floods have lifted up their voice; the floods lift up their roaring. More majestic than the thunders of mighty waters, more majestic than the waves of the sea, majestic on high is the LORD! Your decrees are very sure; holiness befits your house, O LORD, forevermore.

God loves us; so today, on this last Sunday before Advent, let us leave here in the full confidence that we serve the eternal King, the wonderful counsellor, and the Mighty God and Prince of Peace who will rule forever more and whose government will never cease being peaceful. Let us go from here today and continue to serve the living God in all we do.

Let us pray
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Friday, November 9, 2018

Psalm 116:3-4, 2 Samuel 18:6-8, Isaiah 2:4: Bells of Peace

Presented to Royal Canadian Legion Alberni Valley Branch # 293, dignitaries, and members of the public on the occasion of the community Remembrance Day Ceremony marking the centennial of the end of the First World War, 11 November 2018, by Captain Michael Ramsay, RC Legion Padre.

Today at 11:00 we marked the 100th anniversary of the end of WWI. We remember the peace that soldiers and others died still longing for. We remember.
                   
We remember: at 11:00 on this day 100 years ago church bells spontaneously rang out across Europe celebrating peace after 4 horrible years of war in which 888 246 fatalities were suffered by the military of the British Empire of which Canada was an integral part. This sad number does not include our allies, our rivals, innocent civilians and others. Our family members and our countrymen lived, served, and died in this, the ‘Great War’, the ‘war to end all wars’, the ‘First World War’.
  
When World War One broke out Canada was a very small and sparsely populated country of just over 7 million people. Most were farmers, fishermen, foresters or involved in other primary industries. Many boys and young men left their family and work here to serve in the war there. I have read stories of bankers and teachers and minors and scientists and athletes and farmers and very young people from across this country and Newfoundland who put their jobs, their careers, their parents, their girlfriends, their new wives, their young children, and their whole lives on hold until they returned home from the war - only many never did return home from the war. They were never to be seen again by their wives, their children, their brothers, their sisters, their mothers, their fathers.
  
Almost 7% of the total population of our country – 619 000 Canadians served in this war and 66 976 Canadians never returned. That was almost 1% (0.92%) of our country's whole population and it was almost 1-out-of-every-5 boys aged 16-24: meaning that in a community the size of Port Alberni now, 170 people would have been killed in the war. If you lived in Canada then, you would know more than one person who did not return.

Canada contributed greatly and sacrificed much in the First World War. Our soldiers’ many achievements on the battlefield culminated in three months of victories that led to the end of the war: this was known as “Canada’s Hundred Days.”

Canada’s efforts at Vimy Ridge, Passchendaele, and elsewhere earned our army the reputation for being the best troops on the Western Front. Because of this Canadian soldiers were given the responsibility of being at the forefront of the attack. This earned faith of our allies came at a great price. In the last 100 days of the war alone, our Canadian soldiers suffered usually more than 100 casualties each day.

During the last 100 days of WWI, Canada’s 100 Days, more than 6,800 Canadians, First Nations, and Newfoundlanders were killed and approximately 39,000 wounded. And just 2 minutes before 11am on November 11th, 1918. Just 2 minutes before the world would the end ‘the war to end all wars’ and our service people would be able to come home to their families that missed them and love them, 2 minutes before 11am, Nov. 11th 1918, Canadian Private George Lawrence Price was fatally shot in the left breast. He did not return home.

Here, in the Alberni Valley, of the only 1600 people who lived here at the time 116 of them – more than 17% of our population – signed up to go overseas in just the first few months of the war alone.
We know about Cyril Woodward who was only 15 when he enlisted.

We know about the Redford boys - 3 brothers who enlisted from our area.  Edward, 29, was wounded in a non-combat incident with a shell that killed 2 of his companions. His brother William, age 19, was wounded in combat and sent home and their brother Douglas at age 20 was killed in action – never to see home again.

And then there is the poet Charles Samuel Bannell from the area. In November of 1916 he enlisted in the Canadian Expeditionary Force and less than a year later, on Oct 30th, 1917 he was killed in action.

And we know About George Bird Jr. He attended the school in the basement of the Watson home on Argyle St. He was a member of the swim club, played soccer; enjoyed hiking, fishing and hunting. He worked at his father’s mill until he got a job as a clerk at the Royal Bank of Canada in 1907. Then, November 25, 1915, at the age of 24, George Bird Jr. enlisted the military. He took part in the capture of Vimy Ridge and other significant battles of the war and a year and a half later, on June 5, 1917 he died of wounds sustained in battle.

There are many stories from the Alberni Valley and around the world of the young people who served, lived, and died as they left their families, their communities, and their lives behind to march out of their country and into the horrors of war.

Today in the Scriptures we read briefly about the horrors of a war in which there were 20 000 casualties, one of which was King David’s own son.  Lest we forget the tragedies of war. Let us not forget.

And in the Christian faith, of which I am a minister, we remember Jesus Christ, God’s own Son, who laid down his life for us all.

Today, on the centennial of the conclusion of the First World War we have shared some stories of the many young people who lived, died and served from Alberni Valley. But the First World War was sadly not the last world war.

When the second World War broke out, Canada was a country of 11 million people and we sent more than one million of our family members to serve in the military and of those more than 100 000 sustained casualties; 45 000 gave their lives. Many of us have friends and family who marched out of our community and our country to offer their lives up in service to us. My own grandmother’s brother who left the family farm to serve overseas never did speak of the day they were surrounded by the enemy in the war. We who have not served in that way can’t possibly even imagine what he and others experienced on that day.

My own grandfather returned home to Canada from California where he was working when war broke out so that he could serve God, King and country in the Second World War. He signed up with a number of his friends. I believe he was the only one of them that signed up together that day who lived to see the end of the war.

I have these cards from my family members who served in both world wars. These are some of my treasured possessions. This one from April 2, 1917 says:

Dear Sister, Just a line to let you know that I am alive yet, and hope to continue the same. Tell Albert when he gets time to drop me a line. Bye, Bye, Love from Frank.

These are some of my cherished possessions. I look at these and I remember my family. I remember all those that risked their lives for us. I remember. I hope I never forget. I hope my daughters never forget. I hope we never forget. Let us never forget their sacrifices and let us not sacrifice the peace that they won for us. Let us not forsake them and let us not forget them.

This evening at dusk across this country, Bells of Peace will be ringing. They will be ringing to remember the people who gave their lives while still hoping for peace. They will be ringing as we remember how the church bells rang out across Europe on this day 100 years ago celebrating the peace that we had been praying for.

Today we remember our brothers and sisters, our parents, our grandparents, our great-grandparents, our comrades-in-arms; all who are veterans lived and some died so that we would not have to live through the horrors of war again.

It is said that those who forget history are doomed to repeat it. This evening the bells of peace will be ringing out across this country reminding us of the terrible price of war. Today we are wearing poppies as a pledge that we will never forget our friends, our family, our loved ones, and our veterans who offered their lives in service to us. Let us not forsake them. Let us not forget. Lest we forget. Lest we forget.

Let us pray.

Saturday, October 27, 2018

1 Chronicles 13: Seeing about a House.

Presented to Alberni Valley Ministries, 28 October 2018 by Captain Michael Ramsay

This week is October 31st so I thought that it would be good to start off with an October 31st quiz today (answers at bottom):[1]

1)      What event happened in Wittenberg on October 31 in 1517?
2)      True or False: Ghosts are mentioned in the Bible.
3)      True or False: A king of Israel went to a witch to speak with the spirit of a dead person
4)      Bonus Marks name the King, the dead person, and the witch
5)      How many people can you name who the Bible records God used to raise others from the dead?
6)      The man possessed by so many demons that they called themselves Legion, where did he live?
7)      True or False: Jesus tells a parable about a haunted house?

Luke 11:24-26: “When an evil spirit comes out of a man, it goes through arid places seeking rest and does not find it. Then it says, ‘I will return to the house I left.’ When it arrives, it finds the house swept clean and put in order. Then it goes and takes seven other spirits more wicked than itself, and they go in and live there. And the final condition of that man is worse than the first.” The house is haunted by more demons than it was in the first place. This is in the Parable of the Haunted House.

One Halloween I will inevitably preach on the parable of the haunted house. Today we will look at a different passage about a house: 1 Chronicles 17: The LORD, David, and Nathan have an interesting and very important discussion about this house. J. Barton Payne says of this discussion in chapter 13 that the heart of 1 Chronicles is to be found in this chapter.[2] Nupanga Weanzana calls it one of the most important in the presentation of the history of Israel in all of Chronicles.[3] Bruce Birch writes of the sister passage to this one, 2 Samuel 7: "this chapter is the most important theological text … perhaps the entire Deuteronomistic History.'[4] So this passage is significant.

The chapter starts off with King David sitting in his house and he is talking to one of the prophets, Nathan. And, he says Verse 1&2:
 “Here I am, living in a house of cedar, while the ark of the covenant of the LORD is under a tent.”
       Nathan replied to David, “Whatever you have in mind, do it, for God is with you.”

Have you ever said something without thinking? Made a joke and regretted immediately afterward or maybe you said someone else would do something without checking with them first or maybe you agreed to something that you really weren't listening to? Or maybe you just said something and thought afterwards…'why did I say that?' Have you ever said something thoughtless and then stayed awake all night worrying or thinking about it? I think this may be Nathan's position here because the very next verse says that night, the word of the Lord came to Nathan…

And this is kind of neat too for it sort of speaks of the closeness of Nathan to the Lord, I think. For God seems to be approaching Nathan in the way a wife may approach a husband who has just invited a bunch of friends over without asking her first or said something that she didn't want him to say. It is like something has come up with work or one of the children and Nathan has not dealt with it quite right. Nathan told David, without asking God first, that David could go and build a house for God and God is not happy to not have been asked first. God says to Nathan: You, Verses 4-10.

4 “Go and tell my servant David, ‘This is what the LORD says: You are not the one to build me a house to dwell in. 5 I have not dwelt in a house from the day I brought Israel up out of Egypt to this day. I have moved from one tent site to another, from one dwelling place to another. 6 Wherever I have moved with all the Israelites, did I ever say to any of their leaders whom I commanded to shepherd my people, “Why have you not built me a house of cedar?”’
       7 “Now then, tell my servant David, ‘This is what the LORD Almighty says: I took you from the pasture, from tending the flock, and [I] appointed you ruler over my people Israel. 8 I have been with you wherever you have gone, and I have cut off all your enemies from before you. Now I will make your name like the names of the greatest men on earth. 9 And I will provide a place for my people Israel and [I] will plant them so that they can have a home of their own and no longer be disturbed. Wicked people will not oppress them anymore, as they did at the beginning 10 and have done ever since the time I appointed leaders over my people Israel. I will also subdue all your enemies.

I think that passage is quite neat. It speaks of both God's relationship to Nathan and of God's relationship to David. In this conversation here God is letting Nathan know that, yes, He is in charge and Nathan is not to forget that but God still loves Nathan enough to ask him to go and make his error right. God trusts Nathan still, even though he made the mistake of speaking without thinking or speaking for God before speaking to Him.

And the message that God gives Nathan here conveys as similar sentiment to David. God tells Nathan to tell David that He does not want anything in the way of a house from David. He has been quite fine without a house for all of this time why would He need one now? Not only that, God says in this context, why do I need you to do anything for me? Remember that it is I who has done all of these things for you; not the other way around. You need me, I don't need you.  And He doesn't stop there God says, in essence; however, I love you and will continue to do good things for both you and my people Israel and I will make your name famous, as famous as anyone's and He does.

In these short two paragraph's God has both rebuked the prophet Nathan and the king David and He has also comforted them reminding them that He loves them. (I love my kids) In this way God reminds me of a good parent. You discipline your children but you let them know that you still love them more than you even thought you could. You still want to involve them in as much of your life as they can be involved in. This is what the story is about so far but then we get to the next paragraph and the next paragraph is among the most significant in the whole old testament.

God says to David, through Nathan, Verses 10-14:
   “‘I declare to you that the LORD will build a house for you: 11 When your days are over and you go to be with your ancestors, I will raise up your offspring to succeed you, one of your own sons, and I will establish his kingdom. 12 He is the one who will build a house for me, and I will establish his throne forever. 13 I will be his father, and he will be my son. I will never take my love away from him, as I took it away from your predecessor. 14 I will set him over my house and my kingdom forever; his throne will be established forever.’”

Who is this passage speaking about? Jesus. It is even quoted in the Gospels, in the NT. Luke 1:32, this is the very passage to which the angle Gabriel refers when he tells Mary that she is going to have the baby Jesus! (As a side note - this is interesting I think anyway - when David says he wants to build a house/palace for God, the Bible uses the exact same word when God declines and says that He will build a house/dynasty for David, which of course He does through Jesus)[5]

Somewhere along the lines either by accident or intent, this promise gets a little bit muddled in people's understanding of it. People, by accident or design start to think of the promise as fulfilled through David's descendants (plural) who will sit on the throne forever as a series of people rather than as one person (as Paul points out in Galatians 3:16)[6] and people begin to think of the temple that was to be built in Jerusalem as the House of God (John 4).

Some questions for you about the Temple: There were many temples: who ordered the first temple built on that spot? King Solomon. Do we know what famous building is on that same spot today? The Dome on the Rock. Do we know how many temples have actually been built on that same spot? 3 or 4 depending on how you count them. After Solomon's Temple was destroyed, Zerubbabel, the governor, had the second temple built in 516 BCE, and then years after it was destroyed, King Herod, who we know from the Christmas story, built the a temple that was destroyed in 70 CE, not that long after Jesus' death. And apparently too there was even another temple that was built in Samaria but the Jews destroyed that one themselves in 128 BCE before Herod ever built his temple[7] and, like we said, the mosque, the Dome on the Rock, sits on that spot today. There have been a lot of temples there built by people who don't seem to understand what the Gospel writers and the early church understood - that God's temple isn't a building. And the descendent of David who is actually going to build it is Jesus because the passage says that the one who builds it will be God's Son and his throne will last forever (Cf. Luke 1:32, Galatians 3:16).

This is important. After he establishes his throne by seeing his brothers killed and before he builds this massive palace for himself, King Solomon builds a temple in Jerusalem. There is then this big ceremony where it is dedicated and God Himself, in a cloud, enters the temple (2 Chronicles 5:14). From this point on many people make the mistake of thinking that God is actually contained in the temple.

This reminds me of a story I read somewhere:
There were some people in the US a while back who thought that they had discovered the oldest place in the universe. They then figured that if it is the oldest place in the universe then that must be where God lives – as it was the first place to exist. They then spend over $20 000.00 to build the necessary equipment to transmit electronic impulses or radio waves or something like that into space; they build a website and offer people the opportunity to talk to God on-line. To this day, apparently many people have sent messages into deep space thinking that that is where God is and that that is the only or best way He will hear them. God is not confined to a star in deep space or to a temple in Jerusalem. God is omnipresent and God loves us.

But many people from the time of Solomon on actually believed that the temple was God's home that He was confined to that building much like a genie is confined to a lamp and they may have began to almost treat God like that. They seemed to believe that they were invincible and could do whatever they wanted because God was all powerful and they had Him contained in this building in their city. God would thus never let the city, much less the temple be destroyed,. God is all powerful and they have him contained like Aladdin had the genie trapped in the lamp and He and all His power would always be theirs.

Then the unthinkable happened, in 586 BCE, King Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon, after a long siege sacked the city, destroyed the temple and wiped out the Kingdom of Judah forever. People did not know what to do, their faith was shaken. They thought they were invincible. They thought God was contained in the Temple. They put their faith in this building instead of in God. When the Temple was destroyed they thought God was beaten. And then they were led off to captivity.

My question for us today is do we ever fall into the same trap? Do we put our faith in buildings - like church buildings (aren’t they called the 'House of God'?) or parliament buildings? Or do we put our faith in people - like pastors or politicians or relatives or friends or husbands or wives or church leaders or famous people? Do we put our faith in denominations or political parties? Do we put our faith in institutions or agencies? Do we ever put our faith in doctors or lawyers? Do we put our faith in our health or our strength or our good looks? Do we put our faith in systems like capitalism or democracy or our country or our province or our city? Or anything else? Or anyone else? Don't.

When we do this we are putting our faith in empty temples and deep space radio transmissions. People, systems, governments, denominations, politicians, church leaders, our friends and our family, even our good looks and our strength at some time will let us down. Our friends, our loved ones, and people we idolize will let us down. It is true and it is sad. Just like it was sad when the temple was destroyed and just like it was sad when Nathan carelessly answered David and said that yes he could go ahead and build one of these temples.

But the Good News is this. God loves Nathan and God loves David and God loves you and God loves me and He has provided for us all. And He has provided for us not an empty temple or a star in outer space but He has raised up Jesus; and God is His Father and Jesus is His Son. And Jesus sits on God's throne forever and He will never take His love away from Him.

And as we serve Jesus, we have access to that all-encompassing, everlasting love of God who will never leave us nor forsake us. So today, with that in mind - there are serious troubles in our world and serious troubles sometimes in our lives - I encourage us as this is the case, not to put our faith in systems or people or traditions or ourselves to save us for we can't. But no matter how difficult our circumstance there is one who can save us. There is one will walk with us through all of our difficulties. There is one who loves and protects us and that one is Jesus and He is able more than able to handle what concerns us today and tomorrow and for ever more for our salvation comes from Christ and Christ alone.
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[1] Answers to introductory quiz: 1) Luther nailed his 95 theses to the door of the church, 2) True, especially The Holy Ghost 3) True, see 1 Samuel 28 (the king was Saul, the dead person was Samuel, and the witch was the Witch of Endor) 4) God used Elijah to raise the son of the widow of Zarephath (1 Kings 17:17-23), God used Elisha to raise the Shunammite woman's son (2 Kings 4:32-37);There was the man they threw into Elisha’s grave (2 Kings 13:21). Jesus raised: the widow's son (Luke 7:12-15), Jairus' daughter (Luke 8:49-55), and Lazarus (John 11:43,44). God used Peter to raise Dorcas (Acts 9:37-40) and Paul to raise Eutychus (after Paul had bored him to death? Acts 20:9-12) 5) The man possessed lived among in the graveyard, among the tombs near Gerasenes (Mark 5:1,2, Luke 8:26-27) 6) True, Matthew 12:25-29, Mark 3:23-27, Luke 11:17-22.
[2] J. Barton Payne, The Expositor's Bible Commentary, Pradis CD-ROM:1 Chronicles/Exposition of First Chronicles/II. The Reign of David (10:1-29:30)/B. David's Rise (11:1-20:8)/5. Nathan's prophecy (17:1-27), Book Version: 4.0.2
[3] Nupanga Weanzana, '1 Chronicles 17:1-27 David forbidden to build the temple' in Africa Bible Commentary (Nairobi, Kenya: WordAlive, 2010), 488
[4] Bruce C. Birch, 'The First and Second Books of Samuel' in New Interpreter’s Bible, Vol. 2, ed. Leander E. Keck, et el. (Nashville, TN: Abingdon Press, 1998), 1254.
[5] Cf. J. Barton Payne, The Expositor's Bible Commentary, Pradis CD-ROM:1 Chronicles/Exposition of First Chronicles/II. The Reign of David (10:1-29:30)/B. David's Rise (11:1-20:8)/5. Nathan's prophecy (17:1-27), Book Version: 4.0.2
[6] This verse specifically refers to Jesus as a descendant of Abraham but, of course, we know that Jesus is also an heir of the promise made to David and so Paul's point stands in relation to both the Abrahamic and the Davidic covenants.
[7] Gail R. O’Day, The Gospel of John, The New Interpreter's Bible, Vol. 9, ed Leander E. Keck, et. al. (Nashville, TN: Abingdon Press, 1995),563.

Plague Pops - Salvation only comes from God (Exodus 7-12)

Presented to Maple Creek Corps of The Salvation Army, 10 August, 2014 and Swift Current Saskatchewan, 17 August 2014,by Sarah-Grace Ramsay (Junior Soldier, Swift Current Corps) and to Alberni Valley Ministries in Port Alberni BC on 21 October 2018



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Sunday, October 14, 2018

Exodus 7:8-13: EDSS Snakes Reunion!


Presented to Alberni Valley Ministries, Port Alberni BC, 14 October 2018 and Swift Current Corps of The Salvation Army, 29 June 2014 by Captain Michael Ramsay.

This is the 2018 version. To read the 2014 version, click here: http://sheepspeaks.blogspot.com/2014/06/exodus-78-13-cane-snake.html 
   
The Lord said to Moses and Aaron,  “When Pharaoh says to you, ‘Perform a miracle,’ then say to Aaron, ‘Take your staff and throw it down before Pharaoh,’ and it will become a snake.”
            So Moses and Aaron went to Pharaoh and did just as the Lord commanded. Aaron threw his staff down in front of Pharaoh and his officials, and it became a snake. Pharaoh then summoned wise men and sorcerers, and the Egyptian magicians also did the same things by their secret arts: each one threw down his staff and it became a snake. But Aaron’s staff swallowed up their staffs. Yet Pharaoh’s heart became hard and he would not listen to them, just as the Lord had said.

There are a number of items and ideas that jump out at one as we read through this sign that God performs for Pharaoh through Moses and Aaron.

1)      We notice that not only can God do this sign but so can wise men, sorcerers and even Egyptian magicians. They can all turn their staffs into snakes.
2)      Aaron’s staff snake eats and swallows the others
3)      Pharaoh’s heart became hard and he won’t let them go.

First let us get a bit of an image in our mind of the scene painted before us in Exodus 7:8-13. Aaron and Moses are coming into Pharaoh’s palace.[3] This must be like an old homecoming of sorts for Moses. It would be like a High School Reunion. Apparently our MP, Gord Johns, and I graduated from MT Doug in Victoria. I don’t recall ever meeting him before I moved here and though I may have gone to my 10th Grade 12 Grad reunion I know I didn’t go to my 20th, 25th, or 30th or any others. I do know that many people tell stories about what happens when they do go to reunions. They notice who has lost hair and they notice who has gained weight; they notice who has children and who has even grandchildren; they notice who has become rich or famous; they notice who is divorced or never married. They also notice how much the school has changed or remained the same. Anyone here every gone to a school reunion? Think of your old school and your old friends; when you see them the old stories and feelings come flooding back.

Moses in our story today is returning to a palace that he would have spent some time in and around – at least as a teenager or young adult (Exodus 2:5-10) - and a pharaoh who is probably in some way related to him: a step or foster brother or cousin, someone he may have even known as a teenager or a young man, or this pharaoh may even be the child or grandchild of someone he may have grown up with. Moses in our story today is eighty years old and his brother Aaron is eighty-three (Exodus 7:7). It has been a long time since he left the Egyptian District Secondary School (had their been one, of course!). Picture yourself as an 80 year-old returning to your high school for the first time or visiting the old family home that you haven’t seen since before you got married. This is what it may have been like for Moses as he stands before Pharaoh - who is probably a relative of his foster mom or a step-relative of some kind who he hasn’t seen since he was a young man. Now Moses is eighty, standing in the halls of this building he once knew so well, talking to types people he used to know so well and challenging these people like maybe he used to do sixty or seventy years ago in this very building. This is the scene before us today: an 80 year-old at a school and/or a family reunion.


Now this 80 year-old Moses and his 83 year-old brother throw his cane –that’s what a staff is – this octogenarian throws his cane to the ground, it turns into a snake and then – I guess – while this snake is moving along the ground, Pharaoh sends messengers out to find wise men, sorcerers, and even some magicians. I doubt they were all in the palace. They probably weren’t even all in the city. Pharaoh’s men would have had to go find them. I don’t know what they did in the interim whether Moses and Aaron picked up the snake staff and waited outside or whether they all just stood there and looked at this snake. At any rate these wise men, sorcerers and even magicians finally arrive and this brings us to our first observation for today:

1)  Not only can God, Moses and Aaron do this sign but also all these wise men, sorcerers and even the Egyptian magicians. They all turn their staffs into snakes.

Does anybody else find this interesting? I can’t turn a staff into a snake. Now some people have suggested that all of these wise men, sorcerers, and magicians somehow hypnotised some snakes so that they would stand rigid for a long time and disguised them as canes and then as soon as they throw them to the ground they snap out of it and wriggle along the floor.[4] That would be a neat trick – unlikely – but a neat trick nonetheless. Now some other people have suggested that all of these wise men, sorcerers, and magicians had somehow simply done a slight of hand merely creating the illusion of making the staff a snake but there is a problem or two with that idea as well: the main one being that the Bible doesn’t pretend that they were tricking.[5] It simply says that they could do this just like Moses and Aaron could do this. And as you read through the other sign that Moses and Aaron perform for Pharaoh at the commencement of the plagues – turning the Nile to blood – the magicians can do that too and even the subsequent plague; the Bible records that the magicians – on command - conjured up frogs to further devastate their own lands. This seems to be more than a slight of hand. At any rate,

Observation 1: this turning of an eighty year-old gentleman’s cane into a snake doesn’t seem to impress everyone and it appears that anyone in this field of work was able to do this same thing. [6]

In the end, this miracle, this sign, seems to be something that the magicians, the politicians (the officials) and Pharaoh himself can simply write off as an insignificant trick that many people can do. And this brings us to observation #2.

2) Aaron’s snake staff swallows up the others.

Again let us picture this scene together. This could possibly be a very packed room with Pharaoh, his officials and possibly a whole bunch of wise men, sorcerers and even magicians here (cf. 2 Timothy 3:8).[7] It may even be like us in this room today. Imagine that Pharaoh is sitting or standing up by me here. Imagine that these two men in their 80’s throw this staff on the ground in front of us here and it becomes a snake and then either one-by-one or all-at-once the person beside you and everyone around you - these many wise men, sorcerers and even magicians - they throw their canes on the ground and there are all of a sudden all these snakes crawling everywhere. This is what it would be like.

Now imagine that this snake up here sees all of the others down there and one-by-one goes and fights and eats those 20, 30, 40, 10 or however many other snakes there are sliding around on the ground.[8] That is the visual image of this first sign for Pharaoh. We’ve been in a snake pit or two before (they have this amazing one in Manitoba) I can’t say that I would necessarily be so eager to watch these duals.

Picture this further with me. When Pharaoh and everyone see that anyone in the room can seemingly throw her cane on the ground and have it become a snake, they are probably thinking that it is no big deal and maybe they are feeling a little bit smug too. Pharaoh probably thinks that Moses thought that he had come up with this impressive feat so he calls together this room full of people to show Moses up: “Look Moses. What’s the big deal? You thought you could convince us to do what you want by doing this? We can all do it!” Now we can imagine Pharaoh or one of his officials or a magician, a sorcerer or two start giggling or laughing to themselves that someone dares make demands of Pharaoh when he can’t do anything more special than any of the rest of the wise men, sorcerers or even magicians. How can Moses think he is so special? They are possibly enjoying the humour of the moment when someone notices – and then the next person sees – and then someone else watches as Aaron’s rod, Moses’ staff, this older gentleman’s snake cane is not only attacking but is actually eating, swallowing up all of the other snake canes. Can you picture that?

You can picture how the mood would change in a moment, right? One minute they are enjoying their illusion of victory probably laughing in celebration; the next they are shocked, embarrassed and maybe even the object of scorn themselves as their canes are eaten by Moses’ or Aaron’s staff. In one moment, they believe they have proved they are superior, in the next minute God shows them that He has defeated them. Their defeat has been swallowed up in His victory.
  
3) Pharaoh’s heart became hard and he wouldn’t let them go.

Now we can understand how Pharaoh would not be so happy, seeing defeat snatched from the jaws of victory in this way as the work of his magicians, sorcerers, and wise men is gobbled up before his very eyes. You can understand how he would be more than a little upset. Now this upsettedness is further exasperated. Have you ever seen those Egyptian headdresses? Picture King Tut – he’s a famous pharaoh. What does his headdress – his hat – what does it look like?
– A Snake, a Cobra. Pharaoh has just not only seen all these snakes eaten by the staff of this guy who was run out of the kingdom decades ago but he has also seen this powerful symbol of his family, this powerful symbol of himself, and this powerful symbol of his whole country mocked and devoured before his eyes. It would be like if we went to visit any president of the United States and suddenly chopped up and burned an American flag right in front of him; what would he do? At the very least he would have us arrested; if we did it in a very public fashion like Moses and Aaron did here, they would probably do even worse to us. Just ask Noriega, Wikileaks, or others who have spent decades without charge in an American prison or elsewhere for threatening to embarrass today’s equivalent of Pharaoh, the US President - regardless of party.[9]

Pharaoh has just been shown up and Pharaoh’s heart is hard and it is going to get hardened either again or even further many times until he finally does concede God’s victory. At this stage however Pharaoh hasn’t learned his lesson but what lessons can we learn from this first sign, the sign of the staff that turned into a snake and devoured Pharaohs’?

I think it is this: Pharaoh thought that he was master of his own destiny. Pharaoh probably didn’t care too much about the disparate religious beliefs represented before him in our pericope today. He thought anything that either God could do or that people thought that God could do, Pharaoh seemed confident that he could find someone else who could do the very same thing. He probably saw the miraculous as mundane and explainable, at least he saw them as duplicate-able. He then errs by trying to copy the work of God, instead of submitting to God.

Pharaoh tried to do in his own strength what can only really be accomplished in God’s strength. In Pharaoh’s time of trouble, the LORD wanted Pharaoh to turn to Him but he trusted in himself and turned to magicians rather than turning to God.

How many times in our own lives when we are faced with a crisis like Pharaoh was, do we act exactly the same way? Do we really believe that God is the one who can deliver us? Do we acknowledge the signs He is doing right in front of our eyes, right now, in our lives, or do we try to conjure up snakes of our own fancy? When we can’t pay the bills do we go to God in prayer and meditation and reading our Bible to see how He is transforming us like Aaron’s staff or do we try to make our own snakes and answers? Do we try to make our own miracles by trying find money on our own, or borrowing money, or gambling, or taking out a loan, or selling something, or conjuring up any other magician’s snake instead of seeking God? If something tragic happens in our lives, if something desperate happens in our lives, do we follow the signs of God’s snake cane or do we try to do the work of God all on our own?

Make no mistake my friends, if we oppose God, working against Him by trying to do things on our own instead of seeking Him, those snakes of self-reliance will be shown to be as useless as Pharaoh’s magicians’ snakes - but there is good news and the good news is this: Jesus, the Son of God Himself, provides a very real deliverance from whatever problems we face in this world. Numbers 21:4-9 records that when Moses lifted up a bronze snake in the dessert, all who cast their eyes upon him, even those who were dying were saved and John 3:14 records, “Just as Moses lifted up the snake in the wilderness, so the Son of Man must be lifted up;” Jesus is like Moses’ bronze snake in that – even today - any of us who cast our eyes upon him will be saved for now and forever,

So I encourage all of us today, to cast aside all those inferior magicians’ snakes of our text today. They can’t save us and they will not survive. Let us not miss the sign; instead let us look upon Jesus, who was lifted up, lived, died, and raised again. Let us look upon Jesus and let us live for now and forever more in his loving embrace.

Let us pray
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[1] Cf. Peter Enns, Exodus, (TNAC: Zondervan: Grand Rapids, Mi., 2000), 195.
[2] Captain Michael Ramsay, Dr. Was: Daily Rations with a Smile, (Sheepspeak: Vancouver, 2005). Available on-line at www.drwas.blogspot.ca
[3] But cf. Peter Enns, Exodus, (TNAC: Zondervan: Grand Rapids, Mi., 2000), 194.
[4] Peter Enns, Exodus, (TNAC: Zondervan: Grand Rapids, Mi., 2000),198.
[5] Brevard S. Childs, The Book of Exodus, (OTL: Westminister Jihn Knox Press: Louisville, Kentucky, 2004), 152.
[6] Cf. Expositor's Bible Commentary, The, Pradis CD-ROM:Exodus/Exposition of Exodus/I. Divine Redemption (1:1-18:27)/D. Judgment and Salvation Through the Plagues (7:6-11:10)/1. Presenting the signs of divine authority (7:6-13), Book Version: 4.0.2
[7] Cf. Donald Guthrie, Pastoral Epistles: An Introduction and Commentary. Downers Grove, IL : InterVarsity Press, 1990 (Tyndale New Testament Commentaries 14), S. 176
[8] R. Alan Cole, Exodus: An Introduction and Commentary. Downers Grove, IL : InterVarsity Press, 1973 (Tyndale Old Testament Commentaries 2), S. 95
[9] Cf. Walter Brueggemann, The Book of Exodus, (NIB I: Abingdon Press: Nashville, 1994), 740