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God delivered them

The Bulletin Board is for gratitude for Christian Science and the Church, as well as timely excerpts from the Bible, the works of Mrs. Eddy, and the early workers that help and encourage. We are very grateful for all posts that conform to these guidelines, but will edit or remove anything that the Practitioners feel is not in complete accord with pure Christian Science or in any way disrespectful of it.

We also ask that you keep your postings as concise as possible. If you quote the Bible, please use The King James Version, as this is what Mrs. Eddy used. Thank you!


  • This topic has 1 reply, 2 voices, and was last updated 9 years ago by Gary.
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  • #2886
    spencel
    Participant

    “14 And when Judah looked back, behold, the battle was before and behind: and they cried unto the LORD, and the priests sounded with the trumpets.
    15 Then the men of Judah gave a shout: and as the men of Judah shouted, it came to pass, that God smote Jeroboam and all Israel before Abijah and Judah.
    16 And the children of Israel fled before Judah: and God delivered them into their hand.”

    From Matthew Henry Commentary
    “Abidjan overcomes Jeroboam. – Jeroboam and his people, by apostacy and idolatry, merited the severe punishment…In their(Judah) distress, when danger was on every side, which way should they look for deliverance unless upward? They cried unto the Lord. Earnest prayer is crying. To the cry of prayer they added the shout of faith, and became more than conquerors.” -and-
    “…Abijah undertakes to make out,…That he had right on his side, -a divine right: ‘You know, or ought to know, that God gave the kingdom to David and his sons for ever’ (v. 5), not by common providence, but by a lasting covenant, a covenant made by sacrifice…David was a king of God’s making; so that Jeroboam’s taking the crown of Israel at first was not justifiable: yet it is not certain that Abijah referred chiefly to that, for he knew that Jeroboam had a grant from God of the ten tribes. His attempt, however, to disturb the peace and possession of the king of Judah was by no means excusable; for when the ten tribes were given to him two were reserved for the house of David. Abijah shows, (1.) That there was a great deal of dishonesty and disingenuousness in Jeroboam’s first setting himself up: He rebelled against his lord (v. 6). Those that supported him are here called vain men, men that did not act from any steady principle, but were given to change, and men of Belial, that were for shaking off the yoke of government and setting those over them that would do just as they would have them do. (2.) That there was a great deal of impiety in his present attempt; for, in fighting against the house of David, he fought against the kingdom of the Lord.”

    This story beautifully fit into the tapestry of the lesson. The message was a good reminder both individually and collectively. For me it spoke to many levels- even if you are hemmed in by challenges turn to God, the importance of obedience to God, might does not rule the right, God can help your nation even if it is not perfect from unrighteousness for Judah had many pious people and that worship of idols eventually catches up with you.

    “..honesty always defeats dishonesty.” Misc. p. 126

    #2887
    Gary
    Participant

    Thank you. Yes, this story has many lessons in it. Abijah was as true as he could be to the highest sense of right at the time. He had compassion for his Israelite cousins/brethren who were attacking him. He even warned them about attacking him, that they were attacking the Lord God, and that they would not prosper. But they did not heed the warning.

    Jeroboam, on the other hand, was rebellious. He rebelled against God’s plan for the Israelites. He gained power through deception. And the fact that the Israelites accepted him as their king showed where their thought was. Not a good place.

    I couldn’t help but think of the parallel for us today. We prosper when we elect representatives who write laws that are consistent with God’s plan for us, and who will enforce those laws. We fail when we elect representatives who write oppressive laws and/or fail to enforce God-ordained laws. And it requires clear spiritual sense to see the difference. Apparently there was enough spiritual sense in Judah for them to prevail against the materialism, deception, and corruption that was prevalent in Israel at that time.

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Love is the liberator.