The Blessing and Burden of Chosenness: God's History

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We stand poised between the already and the not yet. Glimpsing snapshots of redemption while continuing to experience brokenness and darkness in our world and in our lives. As we remember daily that God is indeed king and as we commemorate every Shabbat and hopefully every day in our homes, his kingship in our lives by living in a state of repentance that is required in order to thrive in God's kingdom. [00:57:25]

As we watch and wait and pray for the ultimate redemption, may we wrap ourselves in the conquering love of God every day and in every way. May we learn of his ways, of his truths, and walk pleasing in full surrender to his will. Amen. [00:58:37]

The question that most determines the future of the church and how it operates will be determined by its relationship with Israel. This is the 20th century, early in the 20th century, well before Israel became a nation or became the prominent nation that it is. [00:59:16]

From God's perspective, Israel is in the center of everything of importance. All spiritual developments of global perspective are related to Israel. The God whom we serve will always be the God of Israel. We do not worship just the one and only God Almighty who is distanced from human history. We worship the God who appeared within man's history and indeed in many ways wrote man's history. [01:02:15]

Those who fail to learn from history are doomed to repeat it. Um, I happened to find this comic and I thought it was both uh funny and and not so funny. Y'all can read that, right? Says, "Those who don't study history are doomed to repeat it. Yet those who do study history are doomed to stand by helplessly while everyone else repeats it. You can't say amen, say omi. Because I see it literally every minute of every day today." [01:03:26]

When we talk to people about God and about the truth, what is our job? What is our responsibility? be a light to the nations in an individual conversation. What is our responsibility? Is it our responsibility to convince somebody to believe the way we believe? Our responsibility is to share from the heart. [01:10:00]

Our responsibility is to pray and recognize perhaps where they're at. Our responsibility is to connect with them in a way that we are being a better listener than we are a a a speaker, if you will, that we're using the two organs we have instead of the one in the middle of our face. more to recognize where they're coming from and to use our spiritual ears to hear from the Holy Spirit on how to share. [01:10:44]

But our job is never to try to convince somebody. That's the Holy Spirit's job. And there will be people who will reject what I'm saying, what you're saying, and thereby reject us. And the question is, are we okay with that? Especially if it's your son or your daughter or your mother or your father or your husband or your wife. Are you okay with that? [01:11:18]

He put him in a garden to eat of anything, any truth, any knowledge, any wisdom, any nutrient, spirit, soul, or body that he could have except the one that says that you, Adam, you, Eve, can decide what is good and what is evil. everything else. You can understand the wisdom of the universe, how I created it, everything. [01:18:32]

And so the biblical narrative, the the scriptural narrative opens with this series of incidences which depict our ancestors. These are our ancestors, right? As rebels against God. And these stories form the early points of the biblical redemptive narrative. Adam and Eve featured here establishes sort of the the backdrop, the foundation in which all their descendants would become protagonists, will become the re the rebels, the great curse has begun. [01:21:34]

And so this rebellion continues. Are you guys following me? This is the history of the world from God's perspective. Genesis 6, Adonai saw that the people on earth were very wicked. That all the imaginings of their hearts were always of evil only. So imagine we deal with these things from moment to moment, time to time. [01:23:41]

God chose somebody. There was a chosen one. He didn't just kill everybody and destroy everything and start over. Although he said it a few times, there was a chosen one. But Noak, it says, found grace in the sight of Adoni. Here is the history of Noah. In his generation, Noah was a man righteous and wholehearted. Why? Because Noah walked with God. [01:24:22]

Out of all of humanity at that time, God chose one man and his family. He was the chosen one. Can you imagine that? Can you imagine being Noah. Now, let's look at the other side of that coin. Every single person that Noah knew that his family interacted with, every animal that didn't go onto the the boat was going to be killed the blessing. [01:26:36]

So these people who were recently scattered throughout the earth, one group, the Shemmites, were still in this area that they were scattered from. And God's plan from the start was to take this one family to entrust them with his oracles, his truth, teach them his ways, and through them to restore the families of the earth. [01:35:00]

The psalmist shares the same conviction that Isaiah and all the prophets that Israel's blessing is for the turning of the nations back to God. That their blessing was not intended for their enjoyment. It was in order that the way of God would be known among the rebellious families. [01:45:46]

It is here that we find the paradox that being chosen is both a blessing and a huge burden. Those things that the other nations can get away with, Israel cannot. It turns out being in an eternal covenant and having an irrevocable calling from the God of Israel is no walk in the park. Being a holy people and stewards of the holy things compels holy behavior. [01:52:40]

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