Sunday, 24 November 2019

More Than... (2 Kings 6.8-23)



Introduction

Ben sent us a screenshot from his Bible yesterday; it was some verses from Isaiah 57 (in the New Living Translation) that he was reading on hearing about Alan’s death.

Good people pass away;
the godly often die before their time.
But no one seems to care or wonder why.
No one seems to understand
that God is protecting them from the evil to come.
For those who follow godly paths
will rest in peace when they die.

I’m still absorbing the shock of the news of Alan’s death, as I’m sure we all are, especially those of you who knew him as your pastor. Alan was more than a colleague for me; he was a guide and a wise mentor especially in our difficult first year here. He was a trusted prayer partner; I shared things with him at a very deep and personal level; things that only Kathie and I know.

He was a man of God, with a vulnerability and a fragility certainly, but all that added to the depth of his spiritual authority, I think. I will miss him so much as I know many of you will.

1 John 3.2 says, “Dear friends, now we are children of God, and what we will be has not yet been made known. But we know that when Christ appears, we shall be like him, for we shall see him as he is.”

When Alan’s earthly life disappeared, Christ appeared. To him. Alan now sees the Lord Jesus as he is - in other words, altogether glorious, stunningly majestic, totally awesome, breathtakingly holy and good.

Of course, we are all still processing this news not just because it came so out of the blue but also because it raises so many questions for us. How can this have happened? Why did the Lord not prevent his fall? Why were our prayers for his recovery not answered? As we’ve been seeing with Elisha, our God is he not a God of miracles and wonders? Why did they fall short for this man who believed in this stuff more passionately than most of us?

I don’t have the answer to any of those questions this morning - and even if I did today would not be the time to speak. This is a day for tears, for sorrow, for hugs, for comforting each other but also for thanksgiving. Because Jesus burst from the grave, death is not the end. May Alan rest in peace and rise in glory.

Today’s reading, 2 Kings 6.8-23, will close this series on Elisha which began with Elijah being taken up to heaven in a chariot of fire and ends today with angels battling in heavenly places. There are unseen spiritual mysteries all around us, all the time, that we are only faintly aware of, if at all.

Psalm 34 says, “The angel of the Lord encamps around those who fear him.” Two days after Alan’s fall, in what must have been the worst week of her life, Nicky wrote, “There is so much to be thankful for in this awful situation that I may write a book.” “Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, you are… with me.”

Prayer…

Those ‘Oh No!’ Moments

Let’s turn to God’s word then and it’s, typically for the life of Elisha, a strange and curious story.

It’s a time of conflict between Aram (which is modern day Syria) and Israel (which is modern day Israel). Raiding parties from Aram are attacking Israelite villages, looting and vandalising and taking captives. They’ve been doing that for some time; that’s how Naaman in chapter 5 has acquired an Israelite slave girl. She’s been taken from her home and now lives in servitude.

But now, each time the Aramean army launch a new attack, they’re ambushed by Israelites lying in wait – it’s eerie; it’s as if they know the Arameans are coming. So, the king of Aram smells a rat and suspects there’s an informant amongst his officers who is leaking intelligence to the king of Israel on all these planned raids; when they’re going to happen, where they’re going to happen, how many soldiers, which direction the assault will come from...

So, the Arameans conduct an inquiry to find out where the leaks are coming from and they learn that there is no mole; it’s that Elisha is getting revelation from God about these raids and he is tipping off the king of Israel before they happen.

The Bible calls this gift that Elisha has the word of knowledge. Paul talks about it in 1 Corinthians 12. It’s when you get a supernatural revelation of something that only God could know so that when it is said people ask, “How did you know that?”

Remember when Jesus knew all about the marriages and affairs of the woman at the well? That was a word of knowledge. I’ve experienced many in my lifetime.

But the king of Aram thinks he can outsmart God. “Right”, he says, “let’s work out where this Elisha is living and we can take him out.” So, they locate him in the small town of Dothan, and then surround it with armed men, and horses and chariots in the hope of eliminating him.

How would you feel if you woke up one morning and found there’s a one-thousand-strong armed mob with an order to take you dead or alive encircling the place you are staying? Elisha’s assistant sums it up in six understated words. “Oh no! What shall we do?”

Last Sunday there was another “oh no!” “Oh no! my axe head has fallen into the river and it was borrowed!” That’s a little “oh no.” It’s pretty awkward for the guy who’s lost it but look, it’s just a household tool.

This is a big “oh no!” There are mean looking guys armed to the teeth outside and they’re after us.

What’s your “oh no!” at the moment? Whether it’s a little one or a big one, there is nothing too small that it’s of no interest to God and nothing too big that it’s beyond him. Our God is able.

But Elisha is chilled. He says, “Don’t be afraid.” You’ve been told this a thousand times but it’s still true, this command “do not be afraid” occurs 366 times in God’s word, once for every day of the year even if it’s a leap year which next year it is.

And here’s why Elisha feels able to say that. He says, “Those who are with us are more than those who are with them.”

“More than” is a precious and wonderful principle in scripture.
·         Deuteronomy 7.14: You will be blessed more than any other people
·         Job 42.12: The Lord blessed the latter part of Job’s life more than the former
·         Romans 8.37: We are more than conquerors through Christ
·         Ephesians 3.20: Now to him who is able to do immeasurably more than all we ask or imagine according to the power at work among us…

The storehouses of God are never empty. There is always more to lay hold of in faith.

And here in 2 Kings 6.16: “Those who are with us are more than those who are with them.” 1 John 4.4 says the same thing really: “greater is he that is in me than the one who is in the world.”

Angels and the Unseen Realm

There is a spiritual realm that is like the air we breathe; it is real and it is invisible. Like it is occasionally possible, when it is cold enough, to see the air you breathe, so it is possible on rare occasions to see the see the spiritual realm, when heaven opens, when the veil is drawn back – and this is one of those times here.

I want to share a couple of others. Marie Monsen was a Spirit-filled Norwegian missionary for about thirty years to North and Central China, during which time she was used by God in revival, accounts of which can be read in her book A Present Help. Here’s an abbreviated testimony from that book.

Early one morning there was a fever of unrest everywhere because of rumours of a revolt among the soldiers in the city where we had our main station. If anything should happen, I knew I ought to be there, as the missionary in residence had a weak heart, his wife was expecting an addition to the family very soon and the nurse who had come to help her had bad nerves.

I heard from one who knew some of the soldiers, that the General had promised them that one night they could loot the city instead of receiving their pay. It was expected to happen that night. A couple of soldiers had called at our mission compound in the morning to calculate that they would need eighteen rifles for the night’s work.

Some claimed that they had heard that the looting was to begin at 10 o’clock. The soldiers were too impatient to wait for the signal, and began looting at 8 o’clock. We heard shooting and noise all night, until towards morning it grew quiet.

When we ran across the open courtyard, bullets whistled above our heads. The whole time the lovely words kept sounding in my heart: “You shall not be afraid for the terror by night, nor for the arrow that flies by day,” (Psalm 91:5).

The Chinese Christians immediately testified boldly to their terrified unconverted neighbours who had taken refuge with us. They saw some of their own people but who were quite different from themselves; they were at peace and showed no sign of the fear felt by everyone else.

Next day, several of our neighbours came in to see us and asked if they might come and stay with us next time there was trouble, “For you have protection,” they said. I heard that remark several times before I realized that they must mean something special. What they told me sent me calling on all the neighbors in the houses across the street, so as to hear it from other eye-witnesses.

All our neighbours kept their doors locked that night. But now and again they opened their doors to peep out and see if there was a fire anywhere near. That was that they had seen our “protectors.” Three soldiers stood on guard up on the high roof of the Gospel Hall, one at each end and one in the middle. A fourth had been seated on the porch over the main gate. These soldiers had kept watch in every direction.

I asked our neighbours, “Who did you think it was?”
They replied, “Soldiers the General had sent to protect you.”
“And did they look like the General’s soldiers?”
They replied, “They were taller than any soldiers we had seen.”
“Were they armed?”
They replied, “We didn’t see that, we only saw their silhouettes, we didn’t dare look at them carefully.”
“Could you see their faces?”
“We saw them best of all.”
“How was that?” I asked.
“They shone.”

It must have been angels on guard. The neighbours saw them, it was a testimony to them, but they were invisible to us. It came powerfully to me and showed me how little we reckon with “the Lord, the God of hosts, who sends forth His angels, mighty in strength.”

Every weekday morning here, about half a dozen or so people gather to pray from 9am to 9.30am. We usually pray for the nation, the church here, and for the church worldwide, getting information from Open Doors and The Barnabas Fellowship who work with persecuted Christians around the world.

Just last June, the Barnabas Fellowship printed a report in their newsletter about an incident in Northern Nigeria which is an exceptionally dangerous place for Christians – especially for those who have left Islam to follow Jesus. The report was of an attack by Boko Haram. 

It’s about a group of 500 or so Nigerian Christians, converts from Islam, and their children. It is not normal for these people to gather in such large numbers, but all of them had been attacked before by Boko Haram and they hoped that being in a larger group would give them a measure of security. But the terrorists were not deterred. They attacked the group, captured 76 of them, and took them back to their camp.

When they got to this camp, the Christians were beaten badly, and their four male leaders were told they must deny Christ and convert to Islam or they would be shot. All four refused and all four were shot dead, in full view of the others.

A week later, their four widows were told they must renounce their Christian faith or their children would be shot. They were given time to think about this dreadful choice. As these mothers agonised together that evening, their excited children came running up to them, saying that Jesus had appeared to them and had told them all would be well.

They weren’t sure what to make of that but Jesus then appeared to the whole group, all the remaining 72, and told them not to fear for he would protect them. He said they should not renounce him but should stay strong, and that he is the Way, the Truth and the Life.

The next day, these four mothers gave their decision to the Boko Haram gunmen. “We will never deny Christ.” So, the militants loaded their guns and prepared to shoot the children, who were already lined up against a wall. The youngest was a little girl of four. All of a sudden, the men in the firing squad began screaming and clawing at their own heads, shouting “Snakes, snakes!” They fled the scene, and some of them dropped dead.

One of the Christians reached for the gun of one of the dead men but the four-year-old put her hand on his arm to stop him. “You don’t need to do that,” she said, “Can’t you see all the men in white fighting for us?” But he couldn’t. Only the child could see them.

Hebrews 13.2 says we sometimes meet angels without knowing it. “Do not forget to show hospitality to strangers,” it says, “for by so doing some people have shown hospitality to angels unaware.” We once shared testimonies about this at midweek Communion and several of us testified to miraculous intervention in times of danger or trouble.

Ending

I’m not going to spend any real time on what happens next; just to say it’s one of the most beautiful foretastes of the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ in the Old Testament. People say the Old Testament is all judgement and doom and disaster. No, it isn’t. There is mercy and kindness to be found there too even in that dog-eat-dog world of bloodshed and revenge.

But I want to come in to land in the shadow of the cross. We’ve shared Communion today, remembering the sufferings of Christ for us. We’ve tasted of the powers of the age to come in the simplicity of sharing bread and wine. We’ve feasted on Christ.

The night before he died, in a small garden on the Mount of Olives, another army marched up with swords and clubs. They surrounded the place where he was.

And Jesus said to the twelve, “Don’t you know I could call on my Father, and he would at once put at my disposal more than twelve legions of angels?”

What they did for Elisha they could have done for Jesus. But he thought of you, he thought of me, and said, “But how then would the Scriptures be fulfilled that say it must happen in this way?”

Let’s pray…




Sermon preached at All Saints' Preston on Tees, 24 November 2019

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