Last week we heard God’s call to RETURN to the One who is Faithful even when we’ve been unfaithful because He will be Faithful Forever! This week God calls us to return to Him for Abundant blessings! Before we dig into Scripture, a prayer: Lord, strengthen us by the truth; your Word is truth. Open our eyes to see what you want us to see; our ears to hear what you want us to hear and our hearts to believe what you would have us believe. Amen.
I. A Severe Lack of Blessing? Our lesson for today comes from 2 Kings 4. Chronologically we’re going even farther back in time than the last couple of weeks; though the situation is similar: Two weeks ago, we heard God’s call to his 7th century B.C. people to leave idol worship behind and RETURN to Him. Last week we heard God’s call to 8th century B.C. people to leave idol worship behind and RETURN to Him. This week we get to hear God’s call to 9th century B.C. people to leave idol worship behind and RETURN to Him. It’s a bit like my high school Football coach. “Furious Feet! Furious Feet! Furious Feet!” He said it all the time. When we were in practice: “Furious Feet!” When we were in the 1st quarter: “Furious Feet!” When we were tied in the 4th quarter: “Furious Feet!” When we were in Pizza Hut after the game; “Furious Feet!” (OK, maybe not that last one) You get the point? We kept forgetting. He kept rebuking. The same was true with God. The people kept forgetting Him, He kept rebuking them: “RETURN to me.” In fact, in all of 1st and 2nd Kings you would hear the call of “RETURN to me,” so often that it makes you wonder if anyone ever stayed close to God. Enter 2 Kings 4. It’s an account that takes place within a small community of prophets. It was a group of people that had dedicated themselves and their families to serving the Lord. They spoke His message and stayed closed to Him. Unfortunately, for one woman who had not abandoned God, recent events had made it seem like God was the one who had abandoned her: “The wife of a man from the company of the prophets cried out to Elisha, “Your servant my husband is dead, and you know that he revered the Lord. But now his creditor is coming to take my two boys as slaves.” (2 Kings 4:1) A couple of notes as to why this woman was in such despair: (1) Recently Widowed. It doesn’t matter how tough you are – losing your spouse is hard. Your spouse is someone that you’ve known for a long time. Someone you’ve partnered with for a long time. Someone you’ve gone through ups and downs with for a long time. The Bible says in marriage that “two become one flesh.” When one of those two are removed from this world – that flesh is torn apart. (2) She’s a Widow in a Society that wasn’t Friendly to Widows. In the 9th century B.C. world, society wasn’t that friendly to women – at all. There wasn’t equal pay. There weren’t equal job opportunities. In fact, there wasn’t much for women to do besides care for the family and help tend to whatever vegetables they were growing. Now that this woman’s husband was dead, the family’s source of income was dead. She had to feed herself. She had to feed her kids. She had to pay the rent, feed the animals and pay the bills. The last of which leads to the third problem. (3) She had an Old Testament Credit Shark after Her. Yes. Even back then, in Old Testament Israel, there were bill collectors. They couldn’t call you on the phone. They couldn’t send you email after email. They couldn’t text message you or lower your credit score, so…they showed up at her front door. For some reason, I’m picture this guy with one of those curly moustaches and a maniacal laugh. Because this guy tells her that if she doesn’t pay him back, he’s going to take away both of her sons and make them into slaves. They will work for years trying to pay back what was rightfully his. And to be fair – this wasn’t illegal. In Old Testament society, it was common for: (1) families to be held responsible for other family member’s debts (2) people to be taken as slaves in order to work off debts. This was why she was in need. This was why she was turmoil. This was why she was in need of help from an Almighty, All Loving, Always Faithful, Shepherd God! But she was having a hard time reaching out to him. Because… (4) She was Struggling with Faith. Look carefully at her words to the lead prophet Elisha, “YOUR servant is dead and YOU KNOW that he revered the Lord.” It’s almost an accusation against the company of prophets, against the work that they did together, again Elisha, against…God: Where is this God guy? He’s supposed to be a shepherd? He’s supposed to have Good Ways? He’s supposed to always be faithful? My husband is dead. I have no job. I have no money. I’m going to lose my sons. Where is this God guy? All those prophets that worship Baal? They’re doing fine. Their wives wear diamonds. Their kids have Xboxes. They have fully founded 401Ks. We’ve been following God our whole lives. Even devoting our lives to him – and now we’re losing everything. I don’t think God can help. I don’t think God cares. I don’t think God is real. Can you relate? II. The Real Issue To be fair – Elisha does not get very defensive. He listens to her. He hears her complaints. He thinks. Then, he offers his response: How can I help you? (v.2) I have to confess the first couple of times that I read that I read it like this: “How can I help you?” as in “What types of things do you think I could do to be helpful?” But – the thing is Elisha follows up by asking her about what she has in her house. It becomes obvious that he knows exactly what she wants and exactly how to help her. That’s why I think we’re supposed to read this not as “What things can I do to be helpful?” but “How can I help you?” As in, I’m just a human. As in, I’m just a sinner. As in, why not go to God? Why not seek the One who is faithful? Why not reach out to the One who cares for you? Do you see the implication? She was looking for help Away from The Helper. And that’s the first WHAT NOW for you and me as well. If you’ve got problems and you’ve got issues and you’re looking for help, but you aren’t seeking the Helper…how do you expect to find help? That’s like walking into Home Depot. Not having any idea where to find the 7” Circular band saw that you’re looking for. Walking right past the Help Desk. Ignoring the Customer service counter. And when the nice gentlemen in the orange apron asks, “How can I help you?” responding with “I’m good. No help needed.” God is our Help. God is always faithful. God is always good. God is always shepherding his flock. That woman didn’t seem to recognize it. But now… Now…God as going to prove it. III. God’s Incredible Abundance Elisha asks the woman a second question, “Tell me, what do you have in your house?” (v.2) Which seems like good advice. Ransack your home for something to sell. Maybe eBay. Maybe Craigslist. Perhaps a rummage sale – or a lemonade stand. But the woman responds that she has nothing…nothing besides a one small jar of olive oil. Something she could use for a couple of meals. Something she could cook up a meal or two – if she had anything to put in the olive oil. Something that might last a day or two before it was totally gone. Elisha tells her, “Go around and ask all of your neighbors for empty jars. Don’t ask for just a few.” (v.3) If I’m that woman, I’m a bit confused. Empty jars? That’s like the ancient version of Tupperware. Everyone had a lot of empty jars. Empty, clay, worthless jars. They stored everything from water to oil to food. But you want me to get empty jars? Sure, Elisha, I’ll go ask them for empty jars and then I’ll open a business where I sell the Tupperware to people who have lids that don’t fit on any of their current Tupperware – because everyone has 20 some odd Tupperware and 20 some odd Tupperware lids that don’t’ fit any of those 20 some odd Tupperware. She might have been a bit frazzled. But she listens. She trusts. Until she gets to the next part of Elisha’s instruction: Go inside. Lock all the doors behind you and your sons. Pour oil into all of the jars and as each is filled, put it to one side. (v.4) Wait…what? My jar is little. These jars are big. My jar is one. These jars are many. Yet – you want me to pour my oil into this big jar? You want me to pour this tiny bit of oil into that gigantic jar? Done. It’ll take me about three seconds. She lifts up the little jar. Her son brings over a large jar. She takes a deep breath. And pours. And pours. And pours. And the jar is full, “Son, get another one.” And she pours And she pours some more. And she says, “Get a couple to stand by.” And she pours. And she pours. And she pours. And she fills up every jar in that room with oil. Until she gets to the last jar… And she asks her son for one more. And he says, “Mom, we don’t have anymore!” And just like that – the oil stops. She takes the oil. She sells the oil. She pays off her debts. Friends, there is no explanation for why the oil kept pouring. It wasn’t the other jars – they were empty. It wasn’t from her friends – the doors were locked. It wasn’t from Mary Poppins – this isn’t 18th century London. This was God. A miracle from God. A miracle from the abundant blessings of God. The Bible says this, “Every good and perfect gift is from above.” (James 1:17) It says this, “Test me and see if I won’t throw open the floodgates of heaven and pour open so much blessing that there will not be enough room to store my blessings.” (Malachi 3:10) It says this, “God is able to bless you abundantly, so that in all things at all times, having all that you need, you will abound in every good work.” (2 Cor. 9:8) God has an abundant number of blessings. It’s like if you take all of our needs, all of our wants, all of our desires – clothing, shoes, food, drink, money, health – and we fit them into one of those little Dixie cups with a Disney character on the side. We think about bringing that Dixie cup to God, but then for some reason we conclude: He can’t handle this. This is too much. I’ve gotta do this on my own. But the truth is that as we bring our Dixie cup sized requests to God – He begins pouring – pouring out abundant blessings. And it’s like Niagara Falls in that Dixie cup. God is able to abundantly provide for you. God does abundantly provide for you. And you might say, “But why don’t I get the million dollars that I asked God for way back in 5th grade? God must not be that abundant.” Do you remember what happened with the oil? It only stopped flowing because the family couldn’t handle anymore. It’s not like God couldn’t produce more; the family didn’t have the ability to handle more. Here’s the truth: The problem isn’t God’s abundance; it’s our ability to handle God’s abundance. God says, “You can’t handle that million dollars. You’d spend it all on Doritos and end up on the street.” God says, “You aren’t yet strong enough to handle fame. You’d trust yourself and stop trusting me.” God says, “If I bless you with that job, you’ll forget about me, disown me, and remove yourself from eternal life.” God says, “I’ll provide for you abundantly, even abundantly providing for you means barely providing for you so that you keep your eyes on me and receive the MOST abundant blessing that I have to offer. Case and point: We have our own legal indebtedness. It’s true. And now – I don’t have a hold of your Credit Card score, nor have I been compromised by the Lizard Lick Repo. The Bible says that we are legally indebted to God. We are supposed to live perfectly. We don’t. Every time we sin, we owe him the legal debt of death. “The Wages of sin is death.” (Romans 3:23) But God has an abundance. He came to earth. He lived perfectly without incurring any sin debt of his own. He died innocently to pay for your sin debt. And the payment was abundant. Because his blood began to pour from his side… It covered your first sin. His blood kept pouring from his side… Enough to cover your second. It kept pouring… 37th sin covered. It kept pouring…. Bring me the 2,708th! It kept pouring… That’s sin number 120,262 completely covered. God’s blood poured out on the cross until every last one of your sins was covered. Abundantly covered. Such that YOU are abundantly forgiven. And the blessings don’t stop there! You now peace with God. You are a part of his kingdom. You are His child. You are loved. You are in His care. You are never alone. You are empowered by His Spirit. You are given gifts of the spirit. You have the promise of heaven. You will conquer death. You will live forever with him because of His abundant blessings in Jesus! Friends, God provides abundantly. Return to Him and take part of his abundant blessings. Amen.
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