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SOUNDING OUT:
Consider Your Ways
Haggai was a prophet who only prophesied
for about three months. He lived during the time when the people
of Israel were trying to rebuild the temple in Jerusalem. It had
been destroyed because Israel refused to listen to the prophet
Jeremiah seventy years earlier. Then Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon
came from the north and destroyed the city of Jerusalem and the
temple and took Israel captive.
Then after seventy years God freed Israel, and they returned
to rebuild the city and the temple. During the rebuilding of the
temple, Israel was threatened by outsiders. They were intimidated
and quit working on the temple. God called upon Haggai to give
Israel His Word concerning the situation.
Haggai 1:3-5:
Then came the word of the LORD by Haggai the prophet, saying,
4Is it time for you, O ye, to dwell
in your cieled [paneled] houses, and this house lie waste?
5 Now therefore thus saith the LORD
of hosts; Consider your ways.
“Consider your ways!”
means “think about what you are doing with your lives.”
If people would honestly take a look at their lives and what they
are doing, then maybe some positive changes would happen in their
lives. Most people just flow through life, like a river in its
banks.
Haggai 1:6:
Ye have sown much, and bring in little; ye eat, but ye have not
enough; ye drink, but ye are not filled with drink; ye clothe
you, but there is none warm; and he that earneth wages earneth
wages to put it into a bag with holes.
What Haggai is describing, sounds
like the broken cisterns. They never had what they needed. If
you go God’s way, you’ll always have enough. Then,
when you earn something, you will keep and enjoy its profit. Without
God in your life you can never really profit. It just will not
last.
Haggai 1:7:
Thus saith the LORD of hosts; Consider your ways.
Look at how verse six is sandwiched
in between those exhortations to “Consider your ways!”
to “take a look at what you are doing with your life.”
If you read the rest of Haggai, the people responded positively
to the Word of God given by Haggai, and they went back to work,
and finished building the Temple.
I frequently “take a checkup from the neck up.”
The church epistles give similar encouragement.
II Corinthians 13:5:
Examine yourselves, whether ye be in the faith [dokimazo];
prove your own selves. Know ye not your own selves, how that Jesus
Christ is in you, except ye be reprobates [adokimos; unfit
or unproven]?
“Prove” is the
Greek dokimazo, which means to test or prove. It is used
of checking the quality or metal for pureness. We are to prove
ourselves. One of the connotations from the Greek is that the
testing or proving is looking for a positive outcome. When we
prove ourselves we should expect we pass the test.
Another use of that word is found in I Corinthians 11:28,
which concerns holy communion. It says, “Let a man examine
[dokimazo] himself.” It is important that we keep
our hearts and motives pure recognizing what Jesus Christ has
done for us. We would certainly not pass the test had Jesus Christ
not paid the price for us. We have God’s goodness and grace
freely because of the accomplished work of His son. We want to
be strong and stay strong in the grace that is in Christ Jesus.
Our identification with him causes us to pass the test with “flying
colors.”
We have one life to live, and we are to live by the faith
of Jesus Christ who loved us and gave himself for us. (Galatians
2:20) You have probably heard it said, “That our life is
God’s gift to us, and what we do with it is our gift to
Him.” We live moment by moment, and what we do with the
“nows” in life will reveal the end product of our
life. We are born and we die. Those are the boundaries of our
earthly existence. The challenges we face and the decisions we
make will impact how we spend our “nows” in between
the boundaries.
God so loved that He gave His only begotten son, and look
at the result of this act of love: the redemption and
salvation of all mankind. Instead of having just His
only begotten Son, He has acquired sons of God upon sons of God.
Every time a man or a woman accepts Jesus as Lord and believes
in his or her heart that God has raised him from the dead–“Bang!”
God gets another son, another wonderful addition to His family.
As we learn to give our time and our life to God we’ll
soon find out that instead of losing life, we gain it. Spending
time with God in His Word is a very important use of our time,
and therefore of our lives. As we give of our lives to God, we
will receive far more than we have sacrificed. “Consider
your ways!” and expect God to bless your life as you learn
to love and give to Him.
We may have tried a lot of things in this life and sacrificed
our time and lives on things that turned out to be of no profit.
On the other hand, maybe there was still some learning or profit,
even if it didn’t turn out to be what we had anticipated.
But, with God we should never be disappointed in our expectations.
God loves us and wants to work in us to will and to do of His
good pleasure. That only happens “now,” in the present.
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