Editor’s Note: The AMI QT Devotionals from August 24-30 are provided by Kate Moon who serves as a missionary in E. Asia.
Devotional Thoughts for Today
2 Kings 11:2-3: “But Jehosheba . . . took Joash son of Ahaziah and stole him away from among the royal princes, who were about to be murdered. She put him and his nurse in a bedroom to hide him from Athaliah; so he was not killed. He remained hidden with his nurse at the temple of the LORD for six years while Athaliah ruled the land.”
My mom became a grandmother last year, and the new addition to our family is the joy of her life. There are pictures of baby Ziggy (his parents started calling him that while he was still just a zygote and the name stuck) all over the house, and though she’s tiring of traveling as she grows older, she’s already gone the length of the country twice to see him.
Grandmothers are usually known to dote on their grandchildren, but not so Queen Athaliah. Because of her ambition to rule, once her son, the king of Judah, was dead, “she proceeded to destroy the whole royal family” (v.1) by trying to kill off all of the royal princes, among whom was her own grandson, baby Joash. What kind of ungodly influence could be so strong that it could trump a woman’s basic instinct to nurture and protect the young? It’s hard to imagine, yet as the country was falling more deeply into the sin of worshipping gods other than the one true God, this is the kind of event that resulted.
In contrast, however, we also see Jehosheba, his aunt, bravely rescuing Joash, believing for a better time to come. Though the six years of rule by an evil queen may have been bleak, all the while, hope was hidden away and growing, preparing to be revealed when the time was right. Sometimes when we look at humanity or the lack thereof in this world, at the distortion of all that was meant to be good, we wonder where the hope has gone. But throughout history, God has always reserved hope, and in due course, the dark times do come to an end.
Is there a situation you are looking at where you are wondering where the humanity has gone? Appalled at the lack of common decency? Take heart, for God has a plan, and he will not wait a moment longer than is necessary. Even if it seems premature (Joash became king at age seven), he will bring that hope to the light as soon as the moment is right.
Prayer
Dear Lord, when times look dark, help me to place my hope in you. In Jesus’ name I pray, Amen.
Bible Reading for Today: Obadiah 1
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Lunch Break Study
Read 2 Kings 10:25-27: “In the twelfth year of Joram son of Ahab king of Israel, Ahaziah son of Jehoram king of Judah began to reign . . . His mother’s name was Athaliah, a granddaughter of Omri king of Israel. He walked in the ways of the house of Ahab and did evil in the eyes of the LORD, as the house of Ahab had done, for he was related by marriage to Ahab’s family.”
Questions to Consider
- At this time, the nation that was originally Israel was split into two kingdoms, “Israel” and “Judah.” Jerusalem and the temple were located in Judah, so it was supposed to be the kingdom that was truer to God, yet what do we notice here?
- Omri led the nation into further idolatry and was the father of Ahab, one of the most wicked kings in the history of Israel. How does Athaliah’s family background help us understand her later actions?
- What warning can we take to heart regarding the sin of idolatry and the influence it can have? Is there idolatry in our lives that we are not dealing with because we don’t take it as seriously as we should?
Notes
- There seemed to be no difference between Israel (ruled by the house of Ahab, described as doing evil in God’s sight) and Judah.
- Athaliah came from a family that practiced evil and idolatry; her later slaughter of all the royal princes can be seen as the fruit of this kind of spiritual influence she had received.
- Worshipping other gods puts us under an evil spiritual influence that can cause us to act in less than human ways. If there is even a hint of worship of other gods in our hearts, we need to deal with it swiftly and decisively.
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Evening Reflection
Rather than adding to the darkness, was I part of the hope in the world today? Was I decent human being? Was God my one and only true God today? Did I seek to be ruled and influenced by him and him alone?
I am ashamed of this reference on so many fronts, but if you are about my age, you’ll get it. At the end of the 1990 classic Pretty Woman, Edward Lewis (Richard Gere) and Philip Stuckey (Jason Alexander) get into a fist fight. After the fight, Edward fires Stuckey from his position as his lawyer and C.E.O. of gobbling up other businesses. Stuckey, upon being fired and beaten up, begs, “What is wrong with you? Come on, Edward! I gave you ten years! I devoted my whole life to you!” And Edward responds (edited for language): “[That’s a lie!] It’s the kill you love, not me! I made you a very rich man doing exactly what you loved.” The “kill” referred to acquiring and consuming other companies—which Stuckey seemed to have a thirst for.
The one phrase that stuck out at me in today’s passage is when Jehu says to his assistant Bidkar in v. 25, “For remember, when you and I rode side by side behind Ahab his father…” I wonder how Jehu felt about overthrowing Joram, Ahab’s son. Put it this way: imagine if you rode behind the king for many years, being his faithful army commander, supporting him in many battles, then leading a rebellion against his son. How would you have felt? I know that Jehu was no choir boy, but even he had to feel some remorse over what the Lord had called him to do. The truth is, obeying the Lord is sometimes hard, and it can drive a wedge between you and your loved ones.
Here is what I find insightful about human nature. When it comes to good news or flattery, we don’t care who the source is, do we? If your worst enemy gave you a compliment, you’d be happy. Why is it that when we are struggling with an issue, we tend to only ask advice from the people who will tell us what we want to hear? On the flip side, when it comes to criticism, we are often quick to disregard the critic as hypocritical or unknowledgeable. As people of God, we must understand that God has spoken truth through seemingly crazy, uneducated and even wicked people, and on at least one occasion, a donkey. Our job is to humbly accept truth whatever the source, even if it hurts. We should also be careful not to run on everything our itching ears want to hear.
When I was a kid, I hated when my parents would tell me to stop hanging out with a such and such friend because they perceived him to be a bad influence on me. Of course, as a kid, I didn’t believe that people were that easily influenced (certainly not me). And besides, I was probably the worst influence in the neighborhood.
Do you have friends who fit the description, “He has no shame?” (I hope you aren’t one of them.) Let me describe this type of person: a friend with no shame will consistently come over for dinner unannounced; he is generally looking for freebies; he does not filter his conversation topics; and he can generally be counted on to do uncouth things in social settings. Sometimes shameless people are so because they are socially clueless, but others are this way because they simply don’t care what others think. Sometimes, I wish I were like the latter group.
How do you view coincidences? Do you see them as good or bad fortune, or do you see them as God intervening in your life? Several years back, I had a very small incident in my life that got me thinking about this question. I was in seminary and on one night I was finishing up a paper. The paper was due the next day around 6:00 pm, and I was done around midnight the night before, so I had plenty of time. I decided to submit it that evening, but for whatever reason the school’s system for uploading documents electronically was down. The next morning when I woke up, I decided to look over my work one more time before submitting it. It was a good thing I did that because not only I hadn’t proofread it but I forgot to finish my last paragraph. Needless to say, I was glad that I was not able to submit my paper the night before. I later found out that my school’s system for electronic submissions shuts down for several hours each night; that is why I was unable to make my original submission. In the grand scheme of life, the grade I got on a paper in seminary is not that important, but at the same time, I still felt the Lord’s incredible care in this whole incident. The truth is that it would have annoyed me to no end to have gotten a “B” on a paper simply because I forgot to proofread. Through these little coincidences, I realized that our God is not “so big” and “too” important to bless his children in even little ways. Some of us think that God is in only willing to act in huge life events, but I think we need to learn to see his care in everyday moments. We also have to choose to see him working in big and small “coincidences”.
On the converse side, there are people for whom this is not the case. The king’s royal officer (as an extension of the king himself) was not given the privilege of enjoying the blessing of God’s promise fulfilled for Israel (bread in the midst of famine). Because of doubt in God’s promises and in God Himself, the official missed out on partaking in God’s blessing. This is not the first time we see this happening in scripture. When God’s people lose heart and lose hope, we can sometimes cut ourselves off from experiencing the fullness of the work that God is doing in, through, and around us.
The title heading chosen by translators for the section of the text above is “The Promised Fulfilled.” Those are some of the sweetest words in scripture. How glorious is the day when we see God’s promises come to fruition right before our eyes. One of the most difficult aspects of keeping the faith and continuing to hope when the going gets tough is how heavily it requires us to depend on God’s promises and believe in things not yet seen. And the longer the difficulty and opposition persists, the more room we have to doubt that God’s promises will ever come to pass. And sometime after a while we forget what His promises are all together.