Kings - Have God's Favor
8 But Noah found favor
in the eyes of the LORD. This is the account of Noah.
Noah was a righteous man, blameless among the people of his
time, and he walked with God.
Gen 6:8-9
Scott Prindle
- is a pastor is Driggs, Idaho, a small community right next
to the Tetons close to some great skiing. He struggled through the
support issues of full-time vs. part-time in a small church and finally
landed on a business angle that compliments his pastoral ministry. He
found an avenue of God's favor that took him into the marketplace via
network marketing and actually expanded his contact with the community.
At the same time he became an example of Kingdom building. We're not
presenting his choice as a pattern for all pastors; it's more Kingly
than priestly. But I think you'll enjoy
Scott's
story on our interview page.
Finding Favor
- Finding God's favor is not a great mystery available only to a few.
It's for you too. Noah had three ingredients that brought the favor of
God (Gen 6:8-9)
-
He was
righteous - right standing with God. Maybe not perfect, but forgiven
-
Blameless among the people - He was honest, likable, productive... a
good citizen
-
He
walked with God - not "for God"; not "followed God"; but "with God"
Walking
"With" God - Most of us have a vague sense that God is far to
busy to go for a walk with us. We also think of "His ways as far above
our ways" so that he wouldn't be interested in any of our inputs - we're
just supposed to hear, trust, and obey. Our obedience language is
couched in the priority of "following he leading of the Holy Spirit."
Folks like Noah and Moses did serve and obey, but their relationship
went a lot farther.
Walking with God implies a knowledge
of what He's doing and engaging our initiative in co-laboring with Him
to make it happen. The reason most people miss out on this level is
because they are passive... they assume they should wait until God tells
them what to do.
I often hear the phrase, "I don't know
what God's doing?" The answer is nothing! He's waiting for you to do
something. He does have a plan and he moves to empower us as soon as we
get on board and implement the details for our area of responsibility.
Walking with God is a lot different than waiting on God. One works and
sees fruit; the other sits and wonders why God doesn't move.
Presumption
- Until recently, I've carried a large concern over getting ahead of God
and falling into presumptuous sin. The classic sermon illustration is:
Abraham and Sarah don't see the promise of Abraham's offspring
multiplying like the stars of heaven so Sarah volunteers Hagar and they
make something happen. Now I've always heard that this was one of the
onerous sins of presumption committed in scripture. But listen to what
God has to say about it. Although it was God's plan to extend the
covenant through Isaac, he also blesses Ishmael (the product of their
initiative). I'm not saying Sarah had a great idea; I'm only suggesting
that God didn't categorize it as sin. In fact, he seems to expand the
tent of covenant blessing to include Ishmael.
Then the angel of the LORD
told her, "Go back to your mistress and submit to her." 10 The angel
added, "I will so increase your descendants that they will be too
numerous to count." Gen 16:9-10 NIV
And as for Ishmael, I have heard you: I will surely bless him; I
will make him fruitful and will greatly increase his numbers. He
will be the father of twelve rulers, and I will make him into a
great nation. Gen 17:19-20 NIV
Bottom line
- God loves your initiative and willingness to co-labor with his vision
so much that a few mistakes don't really bother Him. On the other hand,
doing nothing does bother Him... he doesn't put his favor on passive
people.
Jacob's
Initiative - Jacob and his mother push initiative to ethical
outer limits in contending for the favor of God. However, God's judgment
ends up more on Esau than Jacob. Again, God loves those that cooperate
with his plan even in their imperfections.
Jacob was also the one that wrestled
all night seeking the favor of God (Genesis 32:26-30). We're a little
fuzzy on who it was, but Jacob clearly thinks it was God himself. Here's
the crux of the question, "Do you want God's favor enough to wrestle Him
for it?" The answer is what separates those that have God's favor from
those that are waiting for it.
Moses
- Moses takes this amazing initiative even farther. In Exodus 32-34 God
is so mad at the Israelites he's ready to start over again with just
Moses. However, Moses took the liberty to "seek the favor of God" and...
reasoned Him out of it. That's a pretty high level of partnership in
walking with God. It didn't happen once either; it happened several
times. Intercession can change certain aspects of God's intent.
Kings Walk
with God - Here's what people that have a significant level
of God's favor on their lives look like. They don't subscribe to "God
helps those who help themselves." What they really believe is "God helps
those that help Him build the Kingdom." Once they understand the big
picture of what God is doing, they jump in with both feet and try
everything at their disposal to make it happen.
-
Moses'
mother didn't just throw him in the river. She put him in a
water-proof basket where pharaoh's wife would find him under the
watchful eye of his sister... who recommend mom for wet nurse duty.
Hi level of initiative and it worked!
-
Joseph
didn't just wait for God's deliverance. He used every natural and
spiritual gift at his disposal to work his way up to effect the plan
of God. It wasn't an accident of God's providence; it was everything
Joseph could do plus God's anointing.
-
Hezekiah became ill and Isaiah prophesied his death in no uncertain
terms (thus saith the Lord). Amazingly, however, Hezekiah still
appeals to God for 15 more years and before Isaiah has left the
court he returns to reverse his prophecy (2Kgs 20).
-
David
prayed that Bathsheba's child would not die because he knew there
was a possibility God might extend mercy. The Lord didn't answer
David's prayer but that didn't keep a man after God's own heart from
asking.
Our initiative has far more influence
over circumstances and God than we've realized. You already know what
God is doing... building his Church, the great commission, releasing
Kings, etc. The next question is, "What are you doing?" and God is the
one asking.
Life is an adventure. People are a blessing.
God is amazing. We're winning.