In his autobiography ‘Out of the
Black Shadows’, the Zimbabwean Bible teacher, Stephen Lungu, recounts the story
of how he came from being a gang member to being a Christian. He also tells the amazing account of how he
met his wife.
One day when Stephen was praying
he had what he describes as a sort of waking vision. In this vision he saw a young woman seated
before him, dressed in a loose blue outfit and holding a Bible. The Bible happened to be upside down yet in
the vision he could see what page it was opened at—Acts 26. This was hugely significant for Stephen as
the Lord had used Acts 26 previously in his life. This vision came to him two more times over
the following two years and he occasionally thought about it and wondered what
it meant.
When he was visiting another part
of the country, a friend mischievously suggested that he must meet a girl
called Rachel.
A few days later he was speaking
at a youth meeting. After he had
preached, he was talking to a man who was asking him questions about
faith. Stephen’s eye was caught by the
person seated just behind the man—a girl in a loose blue outfit, holding a
Bible, which happened to be upside-down and open at Acts 26.
The next day he decided to visit
the man he had been talking with. When he
arrived the houseboy told him that he was out.
Seeing Stephen’s disappointment the houseboy invited him in and told him
to wait a moment. Then a young woman
appeared. Stephen could not believe his
eyes. It was the young woman from the
vision again, the man’s sister, who happened to be the girl, Rachel, his friend
had said he should meet. They would end
up getting married.
Do you think that Stephen Lungu
thinks those events were simply a strange set of coincidences? That Rachel ‘just happened’ to be in that
dress, that she ‘just happened’ to holding the Bible upside down at Acts 26,
and that she ‘just happened’ to be the woman his friend suggested he meet and
the sister of the man he was visiting?
In this morning’s reading we see
that things don’t just happen. You are
not at the mercy of chance or fate, and you are not the master of your destiny
and the captain of your soul. Your life
is in the hands of the God who is in the control of all things, and he works
all things for the good of those who love him.
When
it comes to recuing God’s people things don’t ‘just happen’ (1-5)
So Haman has men building gallows
which were seventy-five feet tall for Mordecai.
In the morning he is going to ask the Xerxes to execute Mordecai. However, it ‘just happens’ that King Xerxes
can’t sleep. So what does King Xerxes do
to kill the long hours of the night? He
asks to be read chronicles of his reign.
His night time reading, ‘just happens’, to be at that point where Mordecai
foiled the plot to overthrow him. Xerxes
asks what was done to honour Mordecai.
It ‘just happens’ that nothing was done to honour Mordecai. So, on the night before Haman will come to
request Mordecai’s execution, Xerxes ‘just happens’ to be pondering how to
honour Mordecai. It ‘just happens’ that
Haman turns up at just this time with his request to have Mordecai executed. The timing is perfect!
God is not mentioned by name in
this book, but is clearly at work behind the scenes. Remember what he is up to. He is working to save his people from certain
annihilation. When God works to rescue,
things have a way of just happening!
We see this in his ultimate
rescue mission—the life, death and resurrection of Jesus. Some scholars point out that multiple
specific prophecies of the Old Testament ‘just happen’ to be fulfilled in the
gospels. For example, it ‘just happened’
that there was a census called at the time of Jesus’ birth so that he would be
born in Bethlehem (Micah 5:2). It ‘just
happened’ that his parents settled in Nazareth and he would be called a
Nazarene (Isaiah 11:1). It just happened
that soldiers would gamble for his garments (Psalm 22:18). It just happened that his hands and feet
would be pierced (Psalm 22:16), his side would be pierced (Zech. 12:10) but
that the soldiers didn’t need to break his bones (Exodus 12:46, Psalm 34:20). It just happened that Jesus was buried with the
rich (Isaiah 53:9). When it comes to
rescuing God’s people things don’t ‘just happen’!
Things
‘just happen’ so that God can take pleasure in his people (6-11)
When the king hears that Haman is
in the outer court, he thinks, ‘Oh good!
Haman will be able to tell me how to solve the problem of Mordecai not
been honoured.’ So before Haman gets the
opportunity to present his request, he is faced with Xerxes question. ‘What should be done to the man whom the king
delights in?’
‘Who could he be referring to? It must be me!,’ Haman thinks to
himself. So Haman goes for the full bells
and whistles. Imagine Haman’s face when
Xerxes says, ‘hurry, take the robes and the horse, as you have said, and do so
to Mordecai the Jew, who sits at the king’s gate.’ Haman leads Mordecai through the square of
the city proclaiming “thus shall it be done to the man whom the king delights
to honour!”’
A greater king than Xerxes takes
delight in you. We can understand why
the Father would take delight in Jesus.
It is not surprising to hear that voice from heaven saying ‘this is my
beloved Son in whom I am well pleased’ (Matthew 3:17). But God rejoices in all
his people. He delights in Mordecai, who
had been a compromiser earlier in the story.
‘The Lord takes delight in his people’ (Psalm 149:4). You are in Christ and Christ is in you. You have been washed of your sins and God is
making you like Jesus. He dresses you in
robes of righteousness and calls you his child.
For all eternity we will delight in God, but also God will delight in
us.
The
reason things don’t ‘just happen’ is because God is in control (12-14)
Haman was so consumed with hatred
for Mordecai that he could not wait until the edict would come into power, and
Mordecai would die with all the rest of his people. But his wife and friends can see that things
are not ‘just happening’. They see what
we see in these events. They warn Haman,
‘if Mordecai, before whom you have begun to fall, is of the Jewish people, you
will not overcome him but will surely fall before him’ (13). The God of the Bible, who had a special
relationship with the Jews in the Old Testament, from whom he brought the
Christ to bless the nations, is an unstoppable force.
Conclusion:
The comfort (and challenge) of the fact that things don’t ‘just happen’
The fact that things don’t ‘just
happen’ is one of the most comforting things that a Christian can be told. Sometimes we can look back and we are thankful
for the way that the invisible God has worked things out in our lives. I am so relieved that even my weaknesses,
compromises and sin don’t plunge my life into a sea of chaos. You are in the care of the God who delights
in his people.
But how can we hold on to God
when the things that ‘just happen’ result in pain? This week I went to see friends whose son
died by suicide. How do we speak of a
God who is in control in a situation like that?
What possible good could God have in mind through that young man's
death? It all seems too much!
I think of what Simon Peter said
when he was confronted with difficult teaching that had lead many people to
stop following Jesus. He said to his
Saviour, ‘Where else can we go? You have
the words of life’ (John 6:66). The idea
that the things that ‘just happen’ are in God’s control may present us with
difficult questions, but where else can we go?
Would it really be better to believe that our suffering was
pointless? Would it really be a comfort
to think that we had a weak God who looks on helplessly as our circumstances
are tossed about on the waves of chaos?
Of course not! There is mystery. There may be immense pain. I don’t expect
those of you who are suffering to be able to easily embrace the sovereign
control of God. But I know that the
thought of a God who would let things ‘just happen’ without purpose or control
is a terrifying thought.
ast week, I mentioned John
Bunyan, who spent twelve years in prison for his faith. He said that, ‘I was made to see that if ever
I would suffer rightly, I must … live upon the God that is invisible.’ May God help us to trust the God who ‘just
happened’ to give his Son so that we would be secure in his love.
1 comment:
Thanks for that Paul,found it very encouraging, glad I found your blog.
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