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 13:18-19: “Then he said, ‘Take the arrows,’ and the king took them. Elisha told him, ‘Strike the ground.’ He struck it three times and stopped. The man of God was angry with him and said, ‘You should have struck the ground five or six times; then you would have defeated Aram and completely destroyed it. But now you will defeat it only three times.’”
When two people are on the same wavelength, communication doesn’t happen in so many words. It’s almost not even communication; they’re just thinking the same way. We see this happen particularly among awesome teams playing Pictionary or Guesstures: They draw one line and their team guesses “Flagpole!”, make one motion and it’s “Periscope!” We think, How do they do that?” since not much communication seemed to have taken place. But what is actually happening is a history of relationship coming into play–all the shared experiences, inside jokes –and at a critical moment, it all comes together.
In the passage above we can imagine the king saying, “Why didn’t you tell me it took five or six times?” He seems to have a point. How could Elisha expect the king to know? This wasn’t something you asked someone to do every day; there was no precedent to go by. Elisha would have had no grounds to reply, “Who strikes the ground only three times and stops?” Yet somehow he had just expected the king to know.
Earlier we see that the king probably didn’t have the greatest relationship with God (v.11) – most likely no regular communication or life experiences where he got a sense of who God was, how God spoke to him, how He worked in certain situations, and what were His ways. He had no experiential knowledge of God. Neither would Bible knowledge have helped the king to know how many times was enough. The culmination of a history of doing what was right in God’s eyes—this was what had been required at that moment. But he couldn’t sense the Spirit’s nudging, “Keep striking the ground, keep striking . . . no, not yet, don’t stop, yet,” because he hadn’t had a regular practice of listening and obeying. And in the end, he could not fully step into God’s true desire for him and the nation, which was the complete and total victory over Aram (v.17).
Directions for how to handle many things we face in life are not spelled out explicitly in the Bible, and often when God asks us to do something rather big, there are no precedents. Yet if we’ve cultivated our relationship with God, when the moment comes, we’ll find that we’ll know just what is required. It will be because we’re in tune with Him, because hearing His voice and responding to it in obedience has become a habit of ours—almost reflex. So take heart and continue to make building your relationship with God the highest priority; at a critical moment, it is what will help you make the right choice and step into all that He has for you.
Prayer: Lord, I determine to make You my highest priority in life. Even though I may be busy, help me to persevere in building my relationship with You by having a regular time of reading Your word, praying, and obeying Your voice. And give me wisdom to make the choices that honor You. In Jesus’ Name, Amen.
Bible Reading for Today: Matthew 7
Chariots of Fire is one of my favorite movies of all time. I remember first watching it on video and having to turn on the close captioning because I couldn’t understand the dialogue half the time because of their British accents. I loved the line, “When I run, I feel God’s pleasure,” and how he was handed a prophetic word before he ran that fateful race, “The man who honors me, I will honor.” I remember my cross country friends in high school putting the theme song on their running mixes and listening to it on their walkmans when they had beach workouts. It was a great movie.
Jehoahaz had been leading the nation in evil practices, and the oppression was a situation allowed by God because of their disobedience (vv. 2-3). So God had no particular reason to grant His favor when Jehoahaz sought it; they had done nothing to earn or deserve it. And yet He granted it all the same.
With all the financial scandals that abound in both secular and Christian circles today, it is natural for people to want an honest, straightforward accounting of how organizational funds are used. It seems the people of King Joash’s day were no different. From the careful reporting of what funds went where, what they were spent on and not spent on, it seems the author is addressing concerns people may have had regarding how their offerings were put to use.
Why had the priests failed to repair the temple? Was it because of corruption or faulty spirituality? Jehoiada, the leader of the priests at that time, instructed the king to do what was right in the eyes of the LORD (v. 2). Was it because of a lack of organizational ability? This was the same priest who had mobilized the nation’s leaders to execute the successful coup that put Joash on the throne. In verse 8 is a suggestion of where the problem lay: “The priests agreed . . . that they would not repair the temple themselves.” Both the priests and king had perhaps been thinking that only the priests were qualified to do this job when in actuality, it could only get done when they began involving others.
The Bible tells us that the heart is deceitful above all things, and each of us is susceptible to self-deception. Do we have someone in our lives before whom we can humble ourselves and ask whether they see anything gone awry, either in our lives or the way we see the world?
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.
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.