The potential of the early years

What will you become when you get older? It is the question of every child. And then life goes by in an instant and you become older. Did we become that man and woman we longed to become? Did we fulfil the potential within us? Do we still walk with Him?

“When I found Israel, it was like finding grapes in the desert; when I saw your ancestors, it was like seeing the early fruit on the fig tree. But when they came to Baal Peor, they consecrated themselves to that shameful idol and became as vile as the thing they loved.” (Hosea 9 v 10)

God found Israel as a faithful and fruitful people. I have never found grapes in a desert though I would imagine it would be a wonderful thing. I have grown things and got excited at the early signs of the fruit or the vegetable poking up out of the ground. I know what this means. It is exciting and hopeful.

Sadly I also know that those early signs can come to nothing. I know that as a below-average gardener and I know that as a Church Pastor.

Baal Peor was a watershed moment. The reason being is that it is one of the last sinful acts of their ancestors which led to the death of that generation. It is found in Numbers 25. It is similar to the golden calf in Exodus and has the same consequences because the wages of sin is death not because God enjoys punishing but sin has its consequences.

It is never how you start but it is always if you are still running the race when you are at the end.

Consequences of sin

Hosea is the prophet that no one liked.

Did he want people to like him and align to his prophetic message? I’m sure he did.

“The days of punishment are coming, the days of reckoning are at hand. Let Israel know this.
Because your sins are so many and your hostility so great, the prophet is considered a fool, the inspired person a maniac. The prophet, along with my God, is the watchman over Ephraim, yet snares await him on all his paths, and hostility in the house of his God. They have sunk deep into corruption, as in the days of Gibeah. God will remember their wickedness and punish them for their sins.” (Hosea 9 v 7-9)

In the eyes of these people Hosea was a fool, a maniac and though he was their watchman they set traps for him because the prophetic message drew attention to their sins. They were not happy hearing that punishment was at hand for the depth of their sinfulness. Hosea draws their attention to the wickedness of the people in the time of the Judges in Gibeah. God’s people in Hosea’s day had sunk to the same all-time low as with the Judges. The sin in Gibeah is found in Judges 19.

This is a hauntingly powerful story of a woman from Bethlehem. She was a concubine. In a fit of anger she ran away from her master and owner to her father’s house in Bethlehem of Judah. The man found her and wooed her back.

 On the way back to his home in the hill country of Ephraim, it became late in the evening and they needed a place to stay. They depended on the hospitality of the people of Gibeah, but there was no hospitality forthcoming. Finally, an old man offered them a place to stay in his home.

 That night a set of townsmen knocked on the door. They demanded the body of the male visitor. In order to appease the sexual hunger of the men outside, the old man grabbed the concubine and threw her out and shut the door.

The crowd outside gang-raped her, abused her all night. When dawn broke they left her lying on the ground. When her husband came out he saw her lying dead at the door of the house with her hands on the threshold.

It is a horrible story told in Judges 19 and there is no mention of God. Does He not care? Was it too shameful to even make an appearance or speak a word?

Her memory calls out. It calls out to the psychological numbness of those around her, and it calls out to us down the centuries to amplify her silent cries.

There are people crying today because of acts that are too shameful to even mention where the presence of God seems remote. We need to speak up and out. We need to step into the shame and feel the dirt and the pain and we need to stand for justice. For the greatest shame is on those who turn away from that cry.

You may be called fool and a maniac and traps may even be set for you if you travel this path. But will we speak up for those who have been impacted by the sin of God’s people? Or do we just want people to like us?

Ghost town-believers

Recently I was walking through a railway station that was once the centre of activity. Today it has display boards with pictures showing what it used to be like. People leaning out of the windows of the trains; the platforms filled with passengers waiting to board; the ticket office with a queue of excited people. Smoke, noise, atmosphere has been replaced by an uneasy silence. It looks like a railway station but the best days are gone.

“What will you do on the day of your appointed festivals, on the feast days of the Lord?
Even if they escape from destruction, Egypt will gather them, and Memphis will bury them.
Their treasures of silver will be taken over by briers, and thorns will overrun their tents.”(Hosea 9 v 5-6)

Hosea warns them that there is coming a day when they will not be able to worship God the way they used to because they will be in exile.

They have left the silver behind but no one is there to steal it. The Festival of Booths (which celebrated their ancestor’s journey in the Wilderness) with temporary tents for the celebration period will be a distant memory. The tents will still be there but uninhabited except for thorns.

Ghost town.

I know a man who worshipped passionately; who followed God for 30 years; prayer and fasting; witnessing; but today he lives in exile, it doesn’t look like he is going to return from the place he was never called to be in; and what is left behind is a memory of the man he used to be. He is a ghost-town believer.

This word from God is as true for today as for when Hosea spoke it.

Recognise that all you have is from God. If you don’t it can be taken from you.

Every success in your life, everything you have achieved and all that you have was given by God. It was not your good works that did it. It was not your plans, goals, priorities, money and possessions. Don’t ‘rejoice’ in those things. That’s what the ‘others’ do. Rejoice in God who gave you all things. That is the heart of the message as we move into the next chapter of Hosea. He warns God’s people not to celebrate like their world does for God is the God of their harvest.

“Do not rejoice, Israel; do not be jubilant like the other nations. For you have been unfaithful to your God; you love the wages of a prostitute at every threshing floor.
Threshing floors and winepresses will not feed the people; the new wine will fail them.
They will not remain in the Lord’s land; Ephraim will return to Egypt and eat unclean food in Assyria. They will not pour out wine offerings to the Lord, nor will their sacrifices please him. Such sacrifices will be to them like the bread of mourners; all who eat them will be unclean. This food will be for themselves; it will not come into the temple of the Lord.” (Hosea 9 v 1-4)

The problem:-

  • There was not thankfulness for what God had given them.
  • They celebrated idolatry like the world around them believing their own idols brought the success. Instead of gratitude to God they engaged in sexual practices to Baal in the places where the grain was processed believing it helped their harvest.

It seems so difficult for us to relate to what God’s people did. This is why we must understand idolatry in 2023 not as some statue that we bow down to but the culture and the character of the world which we welcome into our lives.

The neglecting to thank and honour their Provider God led to:-

  • Their harvest failing. Ungratefulness will not lead to success.
  • Them returning to exile. They will lose their authority in the place they are in.
  • The rejection of them as His people. They will lose their promises that as you put God first He makes a way. There will be no early release.

9 benefits of renewal from Hosea 8.

We need a new season of renewal:-

Where we see humility, v1-3; the surrendering of man-made power, v4; where God becomes everything, v4-6; where results take place, v7; the development of purpose, v8-9; where there are seasons of increase and enlarging, v10; and the rebuilding of holy altars, v11-13; which does not cause us to walk from the Bible but submit to it, v12; and finally, when God is given the glory, v14.

“Israel has forgotten their Maker and built palaces; Judah has fortified many towns. But I will send fire on their cities that will consume their fortresses.” (Hosea 8 v 14)

There it is. The reason why it all went so badly wrong for both kingdoms. For Israel, they simply turned their back on God. They built for their own glory and not for God. Judah did the same as they built for their own security.

It is so easy to start with the Spirit and then end with the flesh (Galatians 3). Renewal reorders the glory to make sure God gets the whole of it.

Some may not like reading the Minor Prophets but we need them more than ever today as they call us back into the seasons of renewal. For if we ignore the call then there is nothing God will not do to bring His people back home. That includes ‘fire on the cities’ that we have built and being overrun by some enemy and taken into a place we were never created to be in, our exile.

We need a new season of renewal.

Renewal: never walks from the Bible but submits to it.

To those waking up to a darkness this morning hear this clarion call: open your Bible!

If you are needing to make a decision; or maybe the mountain is just too high and the valley simply too deep: get into the Word of God!

Hear the voice of God through the Word of God!

Pay attention to it for it is in this place that you will find an illumination of your heart.

The light will come into your deepest recesses of battle.

The renewal of our lives will always bring the Bible back to the centre of our lives.

“I wrote for them the many things of my law, but they regarded them as something foreign.” (Hosea 8 v 12)

 Remember how Jesus in the most excruciating unbelievable traumatic of times, hanging on the cross, quoted these words: My God, my God, why have you forsaken me? Why are you so far from saving me, so far from my cries of anguish?

Why did Jesus say what he said? It is because as he went through hell the power of the Word of God held him. Just as he had done on many occasions where he would quote one verse from an Old Testament passage and the lesson wasn’t in what he quoted but the rest of the passage that he had been silent on. He endured because of the Scriptures.

What was Jesus saying? Maybe this: “Though I feel abandoned and am going through hell, I still trust Him. And I know later in this Psalm that I am quoting, a Psalm that speaks of me, that vindication will come after the suffering.” God’s written Word is at the centre of the cross. Psalm 22, the Messianic Psalm, was in the mind of Christ. He was being held together by the Word.

Hosea’s generation were not in renewal and they ignored God’s Word at their peril. The Scriptures were unfamiliar. The Law was given to show them the way. It was given to form culture.

Renewal brings us back to the culture of God because it brings a person into submission to His Word.

Renewal: the rebuilding of holy altars.

The reason for renewal is in essence a return to the worship of God and making our hearts the altar for God.

“Though Ephraim built many altars for sin offerings, these have become altars for sinning… Though they offer sacrifices as gifts to me, and though they eat the meat, the LORD is not pleased with them. Now he will remember their wickedness and punish their sins: They will return to Egypt.” (Hosea 8 v 11, 13)

Renewal leads to the altar. Ritual becomes relationship and duty becomes devotion. The altars are not shared with other idols of our life. Renewal is pure worship. Our eyes are not on the benefits of worship (ie the meat) but the benefactor of our lives, God.

Renewal does not point to what we do for Him and the sacrifices that we make but rather it points to Him. Not everyone who gathers at the altar does so with a renewed heart. 

“The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit; a broken and a contrite heart, O God, You will not despise” (Psalm 51:17).

Renewal: a season of increase and enlarging!

Hosea 8 serves as a reminder that we need renewal but also the blessings of renewal.

Within renewal there comes the realisation that God gives the increase and He is the enlarger of our influence.

“Although they have sold themselves among the nations, I will now gather them together.
They will begin to waste away under the oppression of the mighty king.” (Hosea 8 v 10)

Although they have sold themselves among the nations

God does not want you to reach out for things or search for people to give you what only He can ultimately give. . He came to give you a thriving life, an abundant life.

In renewal we make room for Him.

In renewal we begin to prepare for the growth God is giving.

Can you begin to desire that what you think is unchangeable about you is changed?

God isn’t at work producing the circumstances you want; God is at work in bad circumstances producing the YOU HE wants!

You may have changed your plans for God but His plans are still the same and He is waiting. His plans contain promises. Promises not for your disaster but for your abundance. Plans and promises that bring a future and a hope.

They will begin to waste away under the oppression of the mighty king.

In renewal you realise that you have not been called to diminish.
God is an Enlarger, an Increaser, the Giver of life. With God we should expect more.

God is bigger than our imaginations. His plans are big plans. Right now across the world God is moving in great measures.

We hear of so much suffering and persecution and it is real and we need to pray and stand for justice but listen to this:

The number of Christians in Indonesia has grown from 1.3M forty years ago to over 20M today.  (Operation World).

The Jesus Film has been translated into nearly 1000 languages, 6 billion viewings and over 200 million people have indicated decisions for Christ as a result of the film (Campus Crusade).

No Christian was officially allowed to live in Nepal until 1960.  Now there is a church in every one of the 75 districts of Nepal with estimates of over half a million believers (Operation World).

Why even contemplate forsaking God who is our true source of blessing. Why reach for another? God’s people reached for Assyria and it would be that nation that caused them to waste away and they exiled God’s people in 722 BC.

Choose renewal today!

Renewal: breeds purpose

I was told yesterday of a Church member who attended an evangelistic training course. She was so greatly impacted that the next day she went to work and began speaking with a colleague who she had found it particularly hard to relate to over the years. The conversation resulted in her leading her colleague to Jesus.

Isn’t that amazing?! 

And it is happening in many places. God is using His people as vessels in His hand. He has called us to Himself and then sent us out into the world in partnership with His Spirit.

In every renewal the result is a release in mission to everyone in the world. 

God uses us. And it is wonderful.

“Israel is swallowed up; now she is among the nations like something no-one wants. For they have gone up to Assyria like a wild donkey wandering alone. Ephraim has sold herself to lovers.” Hosea 8:8-9

Read it again slowly.

When you are impacted by a renewal of the spirit:-

  • You become opposite to people who are not wanted. You know God wants you! “now she is among the nations like something no-one wants”
  • You have no need to go to any other place or person other than God. “For they have gone up to Assyria”
  • You don’t wander because Gods gives you purpose. “like a wild donkey wandering
  • You are not alone for He is always here. “wandering alone”
  • You live a separate life not following the cultures of those who are not walking with God. “Ephraim has sold herself to lovers.”

Renewal: where results take place

Those who read their Bibles long enough soon find out that there is a formula running throughout: what we sow we reap. It works for walking righteously and also for walking away from God.

Israel will not get away with their idolatry. They will get their results from it.

“They sow the wind and reap the whirlwind. The stalk has no head; it will produce no flour.
Were it to yield grain, foreigners would swallow it up.” (Hosea 8 v 7)

Quite simply when we turn away from God then the results are opposite to when we turn towards God. Blessings flow from relationship with Him. The kind of results that you get is determined by your walk with Him. That’s not legalistic and work-based. It is just how it is and it makes sense as we partner with the Holy Spirit. Any farmer knows this. Bad sowing produces bad reaping.

The Churches that see the good results from their mission activities are those who are pursuing Him and are walking with Him. The Churches that have “Emptied-out belief lead to empty pews” https://www.churchtimes.co.uk/articles/2023/29-september/comment/columnists/angela-tilby-emptied-out-belief-leads-to-empty-pews

God’s people had false expectations in their idolatry. They truly thought it would bring results. The sad thing is that it is still happening today. We reach out for successes, money, positions of power, anything other than Him and we have the stupidity to think we will get great results. And it leads to nothing.