What if we lived during a time
when God is silent; He is not speaking through any means. Use your imagination
and try to envision living when there was a drought of God’s word. In this case
silence is not golden – that only applies to kids!
It was not hard for Samuel to
visualize life like that because he was living that nightmare.
“Now the boy Samuel was ministering to the LORD in the presence of Eli.
And the word of the LORD was rare in those days; there was no frequent vision.”
(1 Samuel 3:1)
Samuel was the son born to
Elkanah and Hannah. He was born out of a vow; they promised to give their
firstborn to the Lord for service. Samuel eventually was taken to the Temple
and given to Eli the priest. He was to live there and serve the Lord his entire
life however God saw fit to call and gift him. Samuel would become the last
judge and first prophet of Israel. What we know about the times of the judges
is that the Israelites were doing whatever they wanted to do:
“In those days there was no king in Israel. Everyone did what was right
in his own eyes.” (Judges 21:25)
The unchecked, wholesale
wickedness of the day was in direct proportion to the absence of God’s
revelation. If there is no direct revelation from God then people will do all
sorts of wicked and unconscionable things (cf.
Proverbs 28:18 [“Where there is no
prophetic vision the people cast off restraint, but blessed is he who keeps the
law”]).
A quick read through the book of
Judges gives you a sense of the vicious cycle they were in: comfort,
complacency g disobedience g punishment g repentance g
God shows up with grace. This cycle repeats itself for about 410 years. At the
core of their decline was forgetting what God had done in the past and
compromising with sin in the present.
It’s a catch 22 – people don’t
hear from God therefore they live wickedly, and because people live wickedly
God doesn’t speak. What is the answer to the dilemma? The answer is found in
hearing from God.
This is where our responsibility
comes into play. We must put ourselves in the position of hearing from God. We
need to beg God to speak to us through His Word, but we cannot expect God to
speak if we neglect the Bible. The answer is not avoidance, the answer is
engaging. We need to be engaging ourselves in God’s Word. This means we will
not be content with having someone else read and explain it for us; this means
that we will open the sacred pages of God’s inspired Word and read it for
ourselves.
Maybe we don’t hear from God
because we’ve grown spiritually fat in our culture and are content to let sin
continue. Disobedience only brings punishment. God cannot, and will not, allow
sin to be left unchecked even if we do. We must repent of our sin of a
lethargic attitude toward the Bible and go in a new direction. We must get back
into the Bible in order to get our lives back on track. Or, are we content with
God’s silence?
Grace & Peace,
Scott