Of course, idiot me carefully worked out how to pause the recording during the playing of the song, and then went and pressed the wrong button, so it is in two parts again! Scroll down for the recording of the second part after the first part.
there was trouble in the land.
The King, whose name was Manasseh,
had
decided to forsake worshipping the God of his ancestors,
and to
worship other, more exciting gods instead.
Not only that, but he
put up altars to them in the holy Temple at Jerusalem, and despite
all the priests could do,
and despite dire warnings from the
prophets,
he carried on like this, even sacrificing one of his
children and practising black magic.
The priests in the
Temple were scared.
They didn't know how much longer they would
be allowed to stay,
or even whether the King would have them
killed.
What if no new priests could come?
How would future
generations know how to worship God?
Their country had enemies,
and it was quite possible that it would be over-run, and God's name
might disappear altogether.
So the priests did the only
thing they could think of.
They wrote a book to tell future
generations all about God,
and how to worship,
and,
especially, how to live as God's people.
And then they hid it
away in the depths of the Temple,
and carried on as best they
could.
Roughly fifty years later, there was a new king on
the throne,
the grandson of King Manasseh, and his name was
King Josiah.
King Josiah did worship God, and one day he decided
that it was high time the Temple in Jerusalem was
refurbished:
painted, cleaned, the stonework repointed, all that
sort of thing.
And while that was happening, the priests found
this book that had been hidden away for so long –
either
that, or they decided that now was a good moment to produce it –
and
they brought it to the King.
And that book was at least
part of, and perhaps all of, the book of Deuteronomy which our
reading came from.
I'll be talking about what it actually said
in a bit,
but when Josiah read it, he was horrified and
realised that he and his people had been doing things all wrong,
and
he made them all listen to it and do what it said.
And God was
pleased.
The doom that had been prophesied did come on the land,
but not in Josiah's lifetime.
You can read all the story
in 2 Kings chapters 21 to 23, if you've got a good modern English
translation.
But don’t do it now!
Now we are going to
listen to a YouTube video where some of our reading from Deuteronomy
has been set to music.
Choose Life
The book of Deuteronomy turned out to be like nothing Josiah had ever
heard before.
The central theme of the book,
how God wants
his people to be,
is of course that famous passage that begins
"Hear, O Israel, The Lord is God, the Lord is One".
We
are to love God with all of our being,
and to keep all the
commandments, decrees and ordinances,
says the book of
Deuteronomy.
And, as the passage we heard read says, we are to
choose Life.
To choose to follow God is to choose Life.
The
rest of the book is an expansion of that theme.
You look after
your neighbour, especially if your neighbour is an
Israelite.
Refugees or "sojourners" who have settled
among you are also to be treated with kindness and compassion,
since
you were once sojourners in Egypt.
If you have slaves or
servants,
you must give them the opportunity to go free at the
end of six years,
and give them some capital to help them make
a new start.
You mustn't give it grudgingly, either,
since
you've had work from the slave for six years,
and no way could
you have got a hired servant so cheap.
If your slave runs away,
people are to assume that you were a cruel owner,
and the
slave won't be returned to you.
If your paid servants need it,
you must pay them daily,
and don't you dare cheat them!
You
don't fancy military service?
Well, you don't have to go if you
are about to get married,
or have just got married,
or if
you've just built yourself a house or planted a vineyard,
or
even if you are afraid.
Fighting is the Lord's work, and we
don't want anyone who isn't whole-hearted about it.
If you do go
to war, the camp must be kept clean and hygienic at all times -
please go right outside the perimeter when you need to "go",
and use your trowel afterwards.
And when you fight, give
your enemy every chance to surrender first.
Above all
else, the book of Deuteronomy is concerned with rooting out idolatry,
forcefully if necessary.
Because of this the whole system
of worship is being changed.
From now on, you can't sacrifice to
God where you please,
but only in the Temple in Jerusalem.
No
more popping into the local shrine;
it's too difficult to police
it and to make sure it is only God that sacrifices have been made
to.
Now, obviously, this is going to cause some upheavals,
and
the authors have made provision for this.
Firstly, you
ask, what about your dinner?
If you've been in the habit of
eating your share of the sacrifice, what do you do if you can't
sacrifice any more?
Have you really got to go hunting every
time you fancy some meat?
No.
From now on you may butcher
your own meat, or have it butchered for you, so long as it is done in
a certain way.
It doesn't have to have been sacrificed
first.
Secular meat is quite OK.
Bur what about me?
I'm a Levite, a descendent of Levi.
I've been used to
working in the shrines and keeping myself on part of the meat brought
as sacrifice.
What am I going to do now?
Well, you get
given charitable status, along with widows, orphans and
sojourners.
Henceforth it is the duty of all religious Jews to
support you.
Well, OK, that's fine, you say.
But how
am I going to worship God?
It's three days' journey to
Jerusalem;
I can't go gallivanting up and down each week.
What
am I to do?
The answer to that one has repercussions to
this day!
What they did was, they set up a system of praying
with psalms and readings that gradually developed into the synagogue
worship that persists even today.
What's more, we Christians
adapted it,
and in various forms it became the Benedictine
Daily Office, the Anglican Matins and Evensong,
and even has
echoes in a Methodist preaching service such as this one!
All
because those who wrote Deuteronomy felt it would be better,
or
that God was saying, if you prefer it said that way
to have
sacrifices made only in the Temple in Jerusalem so that an eye could
be kept on what happened.
There was too much worshipping of
other gods going on.
The other thing that shows God's hand
in all this, of course, is that the Temple was destroyed in 70
AD.
Suppose the Jews hadn't had an alternative form of worship
to fall back on?
And what would we have done without it?
Jesus
rendered Temple worship obsolete, because he was, as the old Prayer
Book has it, "a full, perfect and sufficient sacrifice, oblation
and satisfaction for the sins of the whole world."
God is
clever sometimes!
But that is all detail –
I find
it fascinating, and suggest you sit down and have a good read of the
book of Deuteronomy in a modern paraphrase sometime.
All sorts
of fascinating rules and regulations....
But that's the
point.
They could so easily become just dry rules and
regulations.
The priests were aware of this, I think, which is
why they were so emphatic about the need to choose, to choose
life:
“Now choose life, so that you and your children may live
and that you may love the LORD your God, listen to his voice, and
hold fast to him.
For the LORD is your life, and he will give
you many years in the land he swore to give to your fathers, Abraham,
Isaac and Jacob.”
But it got too easy to follow God just
by keeping the rules, and by the time Jesus came along, that, all too
often, is what was happening.
And all the rules were getting
hedged around with “Well, what if....” and “In this case, you
should...” until they had become a real burden.
Jesus
cuts through this, as we heard in our second reading.
Just
keeping the rules isn't enough.
It's not enough to not murder
someone –
you haven't to be angry with them in a way that
would destroy their self-esteem,
and when things go wrong, it's
down to you to be the first to go and put them right.
It's not
enough to not have sex with someone if the only reason you fancied
them in the first place was because they had a great body.
You
don't get divorced for trivial reasons,
no matter how
scrupulous you are about doing it legally.
You don't need to
swear by anybody or anything, as you should be so trustworthy that
just a “Yes” or “No” is enough.
Jesus is giving
this picture of what his followers would be like,
and it's
really hard to live up to.
I'm pretty sure I don't, and I'm
pretty sure you don't, either.
But then, of course, we
don't have to.
I mean, not like that.
It's not about our
trying and struggling and failing to make ourselves into better
people.
It never has been.
In our own strength, we are
always going to fail.
It's about a reciprocal relationship with
God.
It's about allowing ourselves to be transformed.
About
saying to the Holy Spirit, okay, here I am, You do it.
He
will!
Probably not in ways you'd expect,
and quite
possibly not in ways you'd like, given a choice,
but you will
be transformed, more and more,
into the kind of person God
created you to be.
Josiah could have just listened to the
book of the Law, and nodded, and said "Oh yes, how very
interesting", and let it flow over him.
But he
didn't.
Josiah really wanted to worship God properly –
his
cousin Zephaniah was a prophet, and quite possibly influenced him to
follow God –
so he rooted out all the shrines to God that were
sometimes used to worship other gods,
and he required his
subjects to worship God alone,
and to celebrate the
Passover.
The Bible tells us that that first Passover, in the
eighteenth year of Josiah's reign, so in about 621 BC by our
reckoning, was unique:
"No such Passover," it says,
"had been kept since the days of the judges who judged Israel,
or during all the days of the kings of Israel or of the kings of
Judah."
The point is that Josiah really meant it
about worshipping God, and when he was confronted with the
Scriptures, the book of the Law, he chose life.
And we are asked
to make that choice, too.
Is our religion something
formal, a matter of coming to Church on Sundays, of obeying certain
rules, going through the motions?
It would be much
easier if it was just a matter of obeying rules, wouldn't it? We
would just have to do this, do that,
not do this, not do that,
and God would accept us.
But it doesn't work like that.
Nor does the more subtle temptation:
“I believe that
Jesus died for me, so I am saved.”
And that's true, of
course –
but it's the wrong way round.
Once again,
it's making our relationship with God dependent on something we do
–
but, my friends, nothing we can do can save us!
If we
think it is our faith that saves us, we need to think again.
It
is Jesus who saves us!
We can and should believe in Him,
but
that belief shouldn't be a matter of static facts,
a matter of
just the Creeds and no more.
It should be a belief that leads
to a living, two-way relationship with him.
He has saved us;
we can do nothing to help or hinder him.
What we can and should
do is be willing to enter into that relationship with him,
so
that we can know He has saved us,
so that we can be saved to
the uttermost, as our doctrines have it.
“I
set before you life and death;” says the Lord. “Choose life.”
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