PRAYER AND PRIDE

THE 52 GREATEST STORIES OF THE BIBLE  •  Sermon  •  Submitted
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Wednesday night we looked at the difference that one person’s faith can make for a city; a family; a circle of friends. Hezekiah was a man who “stood in the gap” between his generation and God, and because of his faith God worked salvation in his generation.
Wednesday night we looked at the difference that one person’s faith can make for a city; a family; a circle of friends. Hezekiah was a man who “stood in the gap” between his generation and God, and because of his faith God worked salvation in his generation.
In so doing he gave us a picture of Jesus, who was the ultimate “stand in the gap” person for us… and I told you that God intends for you to be that for someone else. Your faith, your obedience becomes the means by which God pours salvation out in your community.
Why don’t we experience more outpouring of the Spirit?
Awakening happens when God’s people . . .
clean out the junk from their lives
When we harbor secret sins; things in our heart and lives we know aren’t right, we keep our community from the presence of God. Nothing grieves and drives out presence of the Holy Spirit like harbored, unconfessed sin in the church. Sin destroys our sense of, and hunger for, God’s presence.
Nothing grieves and drives out presence of the Holy Spirit like harbored, unconfessed sin in the church. Sin destroys our sense of, and hunger for, God’s presence.
recenter themselves on Scripture
Scripture is the life of the church. We put it everywhere. Remove the centrality of Scripture from the church, and we die. Remove the centrality of Scripture from your life, your marriage, your family, your job, and it will die. Cling to it; savor it; plumb its depths. So saturate yourself in it that everything that comes out of your mind and heart are Scripture.
recenter themselves on the Gospel
When we grow cold spiritually it is because we have “forgotten” that we were cleansed from our first sins. “Forgotten.” That doesn’t mean we don’t know that it happened, just that it’s not real and fresh to us. For you to experience personal awakening, you usually don’t need to learn some new precept; you need to become more intimate with how great a salvation God has given you in Jesus.
Are you cold spiritually? Ask God to open your eyes to the enormity of what you have in Christ; what manner of love the Father has bestowed on you. The gospel is like a well. You don’t find better water by widening the well, but by plunging deeper into it.
devote themselves to intercessory prayer
Prayer doesn’t bring the awakening; prayer is the awakening.
give extravagantly
Their generosity not only restored the Temple, it blessed their neighbors—foreigners, those who didn’t belong to Israel.
Eureka, we “stand in the gap.” Awakening will not happen in our city when they become less wicked, or when our politicians finally get it right, or when our party passes some policy; it will happen when we devote ourselves to these things.
The Scripture doesn’t present God as unwilling; it doesn’t present the world as too sinful; it presents us as unwilling to put ourselves in that “stand in the gap” position of faith and generosity!
Hezekiah was that in his generation. So what happened next, after Hezekiah led them in that revival? It’s really interesting, and really instructive for us.
Some of the stars went on to become great directors, like Tom Hanks and Robert Redford.
Tom Cruise became a scientologist and a type-­‐A weirdo.
Sometimes what they did was totally random… One guy, I can’t remember whom… got out of the movies and started to a dry-­‐ cleaning business. (Ralph Macchio, the Karate Kid, started a hair removal business: Wax On, Wax Off.)
Hezekiah’s life shows us the potential our lives can have—both for good and bad.
• Arnold Schwarzenegger became the governator;
• And Nicolas Cage, of course, went on to become the greatest actor of our generation
Well, what happened “next” with Hezekiah? It’s really interesting, and really instructive for us… because how Hezekiah’s life turns out after a great start, shows us the potential our lives can have—both for good and bad.
Let’s get started.
records the story of the greatest battle that never happened.
Sennacherib was the wicked king of Assyria. Assyria, which he ruled, was also really terrible place, a place so bad that, according to Veggie Tales, people slapped each other with fishes…
Sennacherib had gone on a mini world conquest and conquered over 46 city-states and kingdoms. In he brings about a quarter million troops to Jerusalem and camps outside their walls. The entire population of Jerusalem that time was about 10,000 and Hezekiah’s mounted soldiers were less than 2000. 250,000 vs. 2,000.
Sennacherib sends a smack talking letter to Hezekiah and the people of Jerusalem that said,
2 Kings 19:10–13 ESV
“Thus shall you speak to Hezekiah king of Judah: ‘Do not let your God in whom you trust deceive you by promising that Jerusalem will not be given into the hand of the king of Assyria. Behold, you have heard what the kings of Assyria have done to all lands, devoting them to destruction. And shall you be delivered? Have the gods of the nations delivered them, the nations that my fathers destroyed, Gozan, Haran, Rezeph, and the people of Eden who were in Telassar? Where is the king of Hamath, the king of Arpad, the king of the city of Sepharvaim, the king of Hena, or the king of Ivvah?’ ”
2 Kings 19:10–12 ESV
“Thus shall you speak to Hezekiah king of Judah: ‘Do not let your God in whom you trust deceive you by promising that Jerusalem will not be given into the hand of the king of Assyria. Behold, you have heard what the kings of Assyria have done to all lands, devoting them to destruction. And shall you be delivered? Have the gods of the nations delivered them, the nations that my fathers destroyed, Gozan, Haran, Rezeph, and the people of Eden who were in Telassar?
“[19:10] Do not let your God in whom you trust deceive you by promising that Jerusalem will not be given into the hand of the king of Assyria. [11] Behold, you have heard what the kings of Assyria have done to all lands, devoting them to destruction. And shall you be delivered? [12] Have the gods of the other nations delivered them?” Then he sent messengers to the people: “Don’t let Hezekiah fool you, telling you your God will deliver you. I am 46-­‐0. You’re going to be 47.”
Then he sent messengers to the people:
2 Chronicles 32:9–10 ESV
After this, Sennacherib king of Assyria, who was besieging Lachish with all his forces, sent his servants to Jerusalem to Hezekiah king of Judah and to all the people of Judah who were in Jerusalem, saying, “Thus says Sennacherib king of Assyria, ‘On what are you trusting, that you endure the siege in Jerusalem?
2 Chronicles 32:10 ESV
“Thus says Sennacherib king of Assyria, ‘On what are you trusting, that you endure the siege in Jerusalem?
2 Chronicles “Don’t let Hezekiah fool you, telling you your God will deliver you. I am 46-­‐0. You’re going to be 47.”
2 Chronicles 32: “Don’t let Hezekiah fool you, telling you your God will deliver you. I am 46-­‐0. You’re going to be 47.”
“Don’t let Hezekiah fool you, telling you your God will deliver you. I am 46-­0. You’re going to be 47.”
2 Kings 19:14–19 ESV
Hezekiah received the letter from the hand of the messengers and read it; and Hezekiah went up to the house of the Lord and spread it before the Lord. And Hezekiah prayed before the Lord and said: “O Lord, the God of Israel, enthroned above the cherubim, you are the God, you alone, of all the kingdoms of the earth; you have made heaven and earth. Incline your ear, O Lord, and hear; open your eyes, O Lord, and see; and hear the words of Sennacherib, which he has sent to mock the living God. Truly, O Lord, the kings of Assyria have laid waste the nations and their lands and have cast their gods into the fire, for they were not gods, but the work of men’s hands, wood and stone. Therefore they were destroyed. So now, O Lord our God, save us, please, from his hand, that all the kingdoms of the earth may know that you, O Lord, are God alone.”
Well, God heard his prayer, and God sent the prophet Isaiah to tell Hezekiah:
2 Kings 19:32–34 ESV
“Therefore thus says the Lord concerning the king of Assyria: He shall not come into this city or shoot an arrow there, or come before it with a shield or cast up a siege mound against it. By the way that he came, by the same he shall return, and he shall not come into this city, declares the Lord. For I will defend this city to save it, for my own sake and for the sake of my servant David.”
2 Kings 19:32–35 ESV
“Therefore thus says the Lord concerning the king of Assyria: He shall not come into this city or shoot an arrow there, or come before it with a shield or cast up a siege mound against it. By the way that he came, by the same he shall return, and he shall not come into this city, declares the Lord. For I will defend this city to save it, for my own sake and for the sake of my servant David.” And that night the angel of the Lord went out and struck down 185,000 in the camp of the Assyrians. And when people arose early in the morning, behold, these were all dead bodies.
2 Kings [32] “Thus says the LORD concerning the king of Assyria: He shall not come into this city or even shoot an arrow at it… [34] By the way that he came he shall return. [35] For I will defend this city to save it, for my own sake and for the sake of my servant David...” (19:32–34)
While Israel was sleeping; without a single casualty on their side. Sennacherib’s record dropped to 46–1 with this one being a total shut out.
[32] “Thus says the LORD concerning the king of Assyria: He shall not come into this city or even shoot an arrow at it… [34] By the way that he came he shall return. [35] For I will defend this city to save it, for my own sake and for the sake of my servant David...” (19:32–34)
[35] That night the angel of the LORD went out and struck down 185,000 in the camp of the Assyrians. While Israel was sleeping; without a single casualty on their side. Sennacherib’s record just dropped to 46–1 with this one being a total shut out. And when
2 Kings 19:35–37 ESV
And that night the angel of the Lord went out and struck down 185,000 in the camp of the Assyrians. And when people arose early in the morning, behold, these were all dead bodies. Then Sennacherib king of Assyria departed and went home and lived at Nineveh. And as he was worshiping in the house of Nisroch his god, Adrammelech and Sharezer, his sons, struck him down with the sword and escaped into the land of Ararat. And Esarhaddon his son reigned in his place.
1 See . Finkelstein, Israel; Silberman, Neil Asher (2001). The Bible Unearthed: Archaeology's New Vision of Ancient Israel and the Origin of Its Sacred Texts. Simon and Schuster.
Archaeologists have uncovered Sennacherib’s palace in Nineveh, and they found a wall where Sennacherib had inscribed all his victories. He lists out the cities he conquered and details about each conquest. When it comes to Jerusalem it says he had Hezekiah trapped like a bird in a cage. Strangely, though, he never says what happened after that, which he does with all the other cities he conquered.
You History Channel nerds will find this interesting: Archaeologists have uncovered Sennacherib’s palace in Nineveh, and they found a wall where Sennacherib had inscribed all his victories. He lists out the cities he conquered and details about each conquest. When it comes to Jerusalem all it says that he had Hezekiah trapped “like a bird in a cage.” Strangely, though, he never says what happened after that, which he does with all the other cities he conquered.
In a book called What If? military historian William McNeill called this “the most important battle that never happened.”
Had Sennacherib been victorious, McNeill says, Judah would have been destroyed, and there would have been no continuing nation; no Israel for Jesus to be born into; therefore no church; human history would have been fundamentally altered and you and I wouldn’t be sitting here today.
He called it the most fateful “might have been” in all recorded history.
And what makes it so remarkable to him, he says, was there was no natural reason for the people to defy Sennacherib.
Jerusalem was nothing in military terms; cities much bigger and more powerful than Jerusalem had just surrendered to Sennacherib. McNeill says:“The inhabitants of the small, weak, and dependent kingdom of Judah had the (audacity) to believe that their God was the only true God, whose power extended over all the earth… For me, pondering how a small company of prophets and priests in Jerusalem (inspired so many to believe), and how their views (about their God) came to prevail so widely in later times (defies) imagination. Never before or since has so much depended on so few, believing so wholly in their ‘one, true god’, and in such bold defiance of common sense.”
2 Chronicles 31:20–21 ESV
Thus Hezekiah did throughout all Judah, and he did what was good and right and faithful before the Lord his God. And every work that he undertook in the service of the house of God and in accordance with the law and the commandments, seeking his God, he did with all his heart, and prospered.
Hezekiah was acting like a king was suppose to act. Now matter the opposition Hezekiah was place in leadership to remind Israel to have confidence in God.
2 Chronicles 31:20-
2 Chronicles 32:1 ESV
After these things and these acts of faithfulness, Sennacherib king of Assyria came and invaded Judah and encamped against the fortified cities, thinking to win them for himself.
2
2 Chronicles 32:7–8 ESV
“Be strong and courageous. Do not be afraid or dismayed before the king of Assyria and all the horde that is with him, for there are more with us than with him. With him is an arm of flesh, but with us is the Lord our God, to help us and to fight our battles.” And the people took confidence from the words of Hezekiah king of Judah.
2 Chronicles 32:7-8
It was his faith that won a great victory and persevered a nation from destruction. Hezekiah’s life give us a picture of prevailing prayer.
How do we pray prevailing prayers.
In so doing, Hezekiah gives you a picture of prayer done right. 4 quick things. We’ll call this:
1. Stand in the Gap Prayer
He acknowledged God’s glory and purposes.
2 Kings 19:19 ESV
So now, O Lord our God, save us, please, from his hand, that all the kingdoms of the earth may know that you, O Lord, are God alone.”
2 Kings 19:35 ESV
And that night the angel of the Lord went out and struck down 185,000 in the camp of the Assyrians. And when people arose early in the morning, behold, these were all dead bodies.
In his prayer, he put God’s glory and purposes foremost. , “Show these people both the Israelites and the attacking Assyrians, that you are God alone.”
In his prayer, he put God’s glory and purposes foremost. Vs. 19, “Show these people (both the Israelites and the attacking Assyrians), that you are God alone.”
Hezekiah knew that was God’s purpose; Scripture told him that was God’s purpose, and when he discovered the purposes of God and prayed them back to God, he saw an outpouring of the power of God.
I told you Wednesday night that “Effective prayer is discerning what God wants and then asking him for it.”
Prayers that start in heaven are head by heaven.
If you are experiencing unanswered prayers, the 1st place I’d look is to whether my prayers are grounded in God’s revealed purposes in Scripture.
Is your prayer filled with the promises of God?
Where do I learn them? Scripture! 3000 of them. On every page.
Open your Bible, get on your knees, and pray these back to God. It’s why I say don’t read your way through the Bible; pray your way through.
Jesus said that something that confuses a lot of people: he said that if we had faith like a mustard seed we could move mountains. People say, “Well, I’ve prayed lots of times and the mountain didn’t move. Most of my requests were not even mountain-sized; they were the size of lil’ old anthills… and yet they still didn’t happen.”
So they think “Well, there must be something wrong with me… I don’t have enough faith” or “maybe this prayer thing doesn’t work,” or even “maybe God doesn’t exist.”
“Faith as a mustard seed”: In the Bible, faith, is never a just positive emotion toward God that we work up, a presumptuous optimism that God will give us what we want if we just believe it enough; ACCORDING TO THE BIBLE, faith is a response to what God has revealed.
So, in order to have faith, we have to first know what God has revealed. Faith is not just a hopeful optimism, it is a direct response to the revelation. Where there is no perception of the revelation, there can be no faith.
God reveals himself primarily through his Word and secondarily through his Spirit, and in those things he shows us what mountains he wants to move, and then we ask him to move them… and he does.
Remember, in the model prayer Jesus gave us to pray, one of the 1st things he taught us to say is “Your kingdom come, your will be done…” And we learn his will from Scripture and from his Spirit.
I’ll say it again: If you are experiencing unanswered prayers, the first place I’d look is to whether my prayers are grounded in God’s revealed purposes in Scripture.
The prayers that are heard by heaven are the ones that start in heaven.
He believed that God’s victory would come.
He knew God would establish his kingdom, no matter how bad the odds. A quarter million soldiers camped outside his walls, a letter demanding his surrender is in his hands; he is in the Temple with it spread out before God so that God can read it, because he knows that when God gets involved it doesn’t matter if it’s a quarter million or 25 million.
He was confident that prayer was the means by which God’s victory would come
His confidence in God didn’t lead him to do nothing. He did sit around and say, “Well, you know, it’s all in God’s hands.”
His belief in God’s sovereignty moved him to pray.
We know that prayer is the means by which God has sovereignly appointed to get his work done. Our confidence in God to get the victory will not lead us to complacency, but compel us to pray!
Me with eating: Does God know the day you will die? Why do you eat?
When you pray, God goes to work. What do you need to spread out before God? Do you ever feel like Hezekiah here?
What do you need to spread out before God?
Maybe a bad report… letter home from the principal about one of your kids...
Do you ever feel like Hezekiah here? Like some impossible army assails what you know to be God’s purposes for you?
I think we experience that feeling, in general sometimes, as the people of God. Our world tells us “You know, you can’t possibly maintain Christian confession in this age or the age to come. The church is declining in Western society and will continue to… If you take the Bible’s teaching on things like sexuality seriously you’ll be on the wrong side of history.” It often feels overwhelming.
When you feel like that, think of Hezekiah and the size of the army in front of him and realize that God can do more while you sleep than we can do in 10,000 lifetimes.
Let me remind us all this morning that our feeling of being crushed is not new.
The Roman Emperor Diocletian in 303 A.D. went on a rampage and tried to stamp out the church… sent out an order to burn every Bible. Fed whole families of Christians to the lions. Ten years later Constantine became a Christian and established Christianity as the religion of the Roman Empire.
There is a monument in France erected to a small group of people you’ve probably never heard of… Huguenots. They were a hated group of Christians. Government and religious leaders tried to destroy them. There was a time when it was believed they had all been killed but they survived. They not only survived but they grew. Today, there’s an old monument that stands in France commemorating them, that says: “Pound away, you evil hands; the hammer breaks, the anvil stands.”
Charles Spurgeon wrote that: "An anvil breaks a host of hammers by quietly bearing their blows."
The French atheist Voltaire said in the 18th century that within 100 years of his death no one would even remember the Bible.
Last words: I am abandoned by God and man… I’d give half my fortune for 6 more months!”
Today in his house sits a Bible printing press. GOD JUST SHOWING OFF
The Chinese Communist revolution tried to stamp out Christianity in the mid-­‐20th century from China. Today Mao Tse Tung is dead, the Communist wave has subsided, and the church is growing in China faster than at any place, at any time, in human history. And some of our people are there as a part of it. Pound away, you evil hands. The hammer breaks; the anvil stands.
God will build his church, and the gates of hell will not be able to stop it.
Habakkuk 2:14 ESV
For the earth will be filled with the knowledge of the glory of the Lord as the waters cover the sea.
Habukkuk 2:14
Revelation 5:9 ESV
And they sang a new song, saying, “Worthy are you to take the scroll and to open its seals, for you were slain, and by your blood you ransomed people for God from every tribe and language and people and nation,
God’s glory will cover the earth, Scripture tells us, like the waters cover the sea. He will redeem people from every tribe and tongue on the planet to worship around his throne.
God’s glory will cover the earth, Scripture tells us, like the waters cover the sea. He will redeem people from every tribe and tongue on the planet to worship around his throne.
God’s glory will cover the earth, Scripture tells us, like the waters cover the sea. He will redeem people from every tribe and tongue on the planet to worship around his throne.
When Martin Luther made his famous stand for the gospel at the Diet of Worms he was immediately put into hiding because people were trying to kill him. Church leadership immediately tried to gather up all Luther’s books and burn them: Luther, in hiding, wrote these words we still sing today: “A mighty fortress is our God; a bulwark never failing… our helper he amidst the flood, of mortal ills prevailing… And still our ancient foe, doth seek to work us woe! The body they may kill; God’s truth abideth still. His kingdom never faileth!
Do you have things you believe God is working in your family, through your life? Get on your face and confess your belief…
When Martin Luther made his famous stand for the gospel at the Diet of Worms he was immediately put into hiding because people were trying to kill him. Church leadership immediately tried to gather up all Luther’s books and burn them: Luther, in hiding, wrote these words we still sing today: “A mighty fortress is our God; a bulwark never failing… our helper he amidst the flood, of mortal ills prevailing… And still our ancient foe, doth seek to work us woe! The body they may kill; God’s truth abideth still. His kingdom never faileth!
THAT WAS TRUE THEN; IT’S TRUE TODAY; IT WILL BE TRUE TOMORROW; YOU ARE NOT ON THE WRONG SIDE OF HISTORY, BECAUSE HISTORY IS HIS-­‐STORY, AND IF YOU’RE WITH HIM, YOU’LL ALWAYS BE OK.
After praying faithfully, he planned fervently
If you go to Jerusalem one of the places they’ll always take you is “the Siloam tunnel.” It’s this big, underground channel that Hezekiah built. When Hezekiah found out Sennacherib was coming, he knew the first thing Sennacherib would do would be cut off the water supply (that’s how a siege works), so he dug a secret tunnel that rerouted the water into Jerusalem underground and into the city so that during the siege they’d have plenty of water. The tunnel was discovered by archaeologists in the 19th century and it matches up perfectly with the details recorded in this story.
But I only point this out to make the point: Praying does not preclude prepping or visa versa.
I’ve heard it said: “Get on your knees and pray like it’s all up to God; and then get up and work like it’s all up to you.”
WHY WE GIVE!
So, this was an awesome moment… Hezekiah did exactly what kings and leaders were supposed to do… he led the people to believe God in the face of overwhelming odds. But let’s read the rest of the story.
2. Self-­‐preserving prayer:
opens with Hezekiah getting sick with a life-­‐threatening disease.
2 Kings 20:1–5 ESV
In those days Hezekiah became sick and was at the point of death. And Isaiah the prophet the son of Amoz came to him and said to him, “Thus says the Lord, ‘Set your house in order, for you shall die; you shall not recover.’ ” Then Hezekiah turned his face to the wall and prayed to the Lord, saying, “Now, O Lord, please remember how I have walked before you in faithfulness and with a whole heart, and have done what is good in your sight.” And Hezekiah wept bitterly. And before Isaiah had gone out of the middle court, the word of the Lord came to him: “Turn back, and say to Hezekiah the leader of my people, Thus says the Lord, the God of David your father: I have heard your prayer; I have seen your tears. Behold, I will heal you. On the third day you shall go up to the house of the Lord,
2 Kings 20:1and [1] The prophet Isaiah came and said to him… “Thus says the LORD: Set your house in order, for you shall die, you shall not recover.” It says that Hezekiah then turned his face toward the wall, and wept bitterly and pled with God to take away his sickness. I read this, and, I’ll be honest… It feels a little whiny… there is nothing wrong with praying for healing… but the despondency; turning toward the wall: he’s pouting… Watch how this unfolds. God answers him, and says, [5] I have heard your prayer; I have seen your tears. Behold, I will add fifteen years to your life.
2 Kings 20:8–10 ESV
And Hezekiah said to Isaiah, “What shall be the sign that the Lord will heal me, and that I shall go up to the house of the Lord on the third day?” And Isaiah said, “This shall be the sign to you from the Lord, that the Lord will do the thing that he has promised: shall the shadow go forward ten steps, or go back ten steps?” And Hezekiah answered, “It is an easy thing for the shadow to lengthen ten steps. Rather let the shadow go back ten steps.”
2 Kings 20:8
Rather let the shadow go back ten steps.” This seems a little demanding… There is a tone that the writer is giving to Hezekiah’s life. He turns his face to the wall and pouts and cries; he gets pushy with God about signs.
[8] And Hezekiah said to Isaiah, “What shall be the sign that the LORD will heal me?” So Isaiah says, the sundial will jump forward 10 steps (which was about 20 seconds) all at once. [10] But Hezekiah answered, “It is an easy thing for the shadow to lengthen ten steps.
Rather let the shadow go back ten steps.” This seems a little demanding… There is a tone that the writer is giving to Hezekiah’s life. He turns his face to the wall and pouts and cries; he gets pushy with God about signs.
Well, God gives him his sign: he makes the shadow go back; and, just like God promised, he recovers.
We are told in verse 11 that the king of Babylon hears that Hezekiah has gotten better, so he sends some envoys with a letter and a present for him. This is a prime opportunity for Hezekiah to give glory to God; to boast to the nations about how God saved him from Sennacherib; how God delivered him from his sickness.
2 Kings 20:13 ESV
And Hezekiah welcomed them, and he showed them all his treasure house, the silver, the gold, the spices, the precious oil, his armory, all that was found in his storehouses. There was nothing in his house or in all his realm that Hezekiah did not show them.
Do you see what is missing? No glory is given to God. No explanation of how God saved him; how God did it all. Only, “look at my riches and my power. Look at how much I’ve accomplished!” He never even takes them into the Temple. The author of 2 Chronicles gives us insight into this event.
“Hezekiah welcomed them, and he showed them all his treasure house, the silver, the gold, the spices, the precious oil, his armory, all that was found in his storehouses. There was nothing in his house or in all his realm that Hezekiah did not show them.” (20:13)
2 Chronicles 32:31 ESV
And so in the matter of the envoys of the princes of Babylon, who had been sent to him to inquire about the sign that had been done in the land, God left him to himself, in order to test him and to know all that was in his heart.
2 Chronicles 32
Do you see what is missing? No glory is given to God. No explanation of how God saved him; how God did it all. Only, “look at my riches and my power. Look at how much I’ve accomplished!” He never even takes them into the Temple. The author of 2 Chronicles says that this was a manifestation of Hezekiah’s pride.
Well, after the Babylonians leave, the prophet Isaiah comes to confront Hezekiah. He and tells him,
Well, after the Babylonians leave, the prophet Isaiah comes to confront Hezekiah. He and tells him, [17] Behold, the days are coming, when all that is in your house… shall be carried to Babylon.
2 Kings 20:17–19 ESV
Behold, the days are coming, when all that is in your house, and that which your fathers have stored up till this day, shall be carried to Babylon. Nothing shall be left, says the Lord. And some of your own sons, who will come from you, whom you will father, shall be taken away, and they shall be eunuchs in the palace of the king of Babylon.” Then Hezekiah said to Isaiah, “The word of the Lord that you have spoken is good.” For he thought, “Why not, if there will be peace and security in my days?”
Do you see what’s happening? After God had richly blessed him, he’s demanding, needy, proud, and selfish. It became about him, to the point he says, “Who cares about others, as long as it is good for me.”
(While they were there the Babylonian officers made a note in their travelogue: “We have to come back some day and steal all this stuff.) Nothing shall be left, says the LORD. [18] And some of your own sons, who shall be born to you, shall be taken away, and they shall be eunuchs (which involves castration; the end of his line) in the palace of the king of Babylon.”
[19] Then Hezekiah said to Isaiah, “The word of the LORD that you have spoken is good.” For he thought, “Why not, if there will be peace and security in my days?”
2 Kings 20:20 ESV
The rest of the deeds of Hezekiah and all his might and how he made the pool and the conduit and brought water into the city, are they not written in the Book of the Chronicles of the Kings of Judah?
What? After God had richly blessed him, he’s demanding and needy and proud and selfish. It became about him, to the point he says, “Who cares about others, as long as it is good for me.”
Hezekiah’s life should serve us as a warning and a promise.
The next verse says he lived for those 15 years and then he died. How his life ends should serve as 2 things for us: a warning, and a promise:
Warning
It is so easy to receive the blessings of God and make them all about you! God blesses you with life and prosperity and family and salvation and a good church… and it just becomes about you: your comforts; your needs; your glory. You’re not worried about how well this church reaches others, but only how well it meets your needs.
Are you using your success to give glory to God?
Are you asking, “How can I use every ounce of my success to direct glory to Jesus?”
If you are a successful business man or woman who overcame all the odds to get where you are: Are you thinking more about how much people admiring you for your success, or are you using your success to direct attention to God, saying, “I am what I am because of God’s grace. I was dead in sin when God saved me.”
Hezekiah’s evil was not immorality or idolatry… it was simply not leveraging his success to give glory to God.
Are you using your success to give glory to God, and are you leveraging your health, or your resources, for the mission of God?
Have you been blessed by God—with salvation, and family, and resources—and people all around you perish… but you think, like Hezekiah (you might never say this, but) “Who cares? As long as my needs are taken care of and I die happy, it will be ok. Sure, kids right here in my own city are growing up without mothers and fathers… people all around the world are dying with no chance to hear about Jesus… but it’s ok. Me and the people I love are blessed.”
And so you spend all your money and all your time on personal comforts, personal pleasures, personal ambition. Here’s why we should never pile up luxury in our lives. We only get one shot to bring salvation to a world that is dying. Can we really look at that and say, “Who cares? I am saved. I am going to heaven.”
The warning: This is how many of God’s people end their lives. The pass the test of adversity, and fail the test of prosperity. In the moment of adversity, we turn to God; in the moment of prosperity, we turn back to ourselves.
Promise
Hezekiah’s tragic end, like the end of every king in the Bible, points us to the need for a greater king… One who would not think of his own interests, but the people’s and God’s.
King David, Israel’s greatest king, the king after God’s own heart, ended his life in failure, using his position of power for sexual conquest and murdering those who got in his way.
Solomon, the wisest Jewish king who ever lived, ended his life in failure, leveraging his great wisdom and power to please himself.
Hezekiah, arguably the most faith‐filled king who ever lived, ended his life in failure… thinking of his own welfare and no one else’s. But one day another king of Judah would come. Like Hezekiah, he would trust God in the face of impossible odds. When the armies of Satan came against him, even to the point that they put him on a cross, he never stopped trusting God.
But, unlike Hezekiah, when death came to him, he didn’t ask God to extend his life and say, “Who cares about future generations, as long as I’m ok,” he laid down his life so that future generations could live.
He said, “Father, if there be any other way, let this cup pass from me… not my will but yours be done. If this is the only way they can be saved, I’ll gladly drink this cup of death so that they don’t have to drink it.”
The irony: Hezekiah asked God to extend his life because he could care less about the death of his children; Jesus eagerly laid down his life and tasted death so his children would never have to.
Conclusion
Paul would say: We who then live by his death should no longer live for ourselves, but for the one by whose death we live. Not for a season, but for our whole lives.
We are here at the end of All-­‐In. Been about taking what we have and leveraging it not for ourselves, but for him and to reach those who died to save us.
Don’t make Hezekiah’s mistake; he had a long season of faithfulness and then started making it all about him. Don’t you do that!
So here’s my question: For whose benefit are you living? Your own, or for Jesus and his kingdom’s sake?
In
John 12:24–25 ESV
Truly, truly, I say to you, unless a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains alone; but if it dies, it bears much fruit. Whoever loves his life loses it, and whoever hates his life in this world will keep it for eternal life.
Jesus compared life to a seed…
Jesus compared life to a seed. Do you see your life and resources as seeds? What are you doing with your resources?
Are you doing that with your resources? Seeing them as seeds?
2 Corinthians 5:15 ESV
and he died for all, that those who live might no longer live for themselves but for him who for their sake died and was raised.
am convinced Paul says, that if Jesus died for us all, then we who live by his death should no longer live for ourselves but for him who died for us and rose again and by whose death we now live.
I am convinced Paul says, that if Jesus died for us all, then we who live by his death should no longer live for ourselves but for him who died for us and rose again and by whose death we now live.
2 Corinthians 8:9 ESV
For you know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that though he was rich, yet for your sake he became poor, so that you by his poverty might become rich.
And remember…
Before God asks anything from us he gave us something, Himself. Now he is asking us to give ourselves not as repayment but as a reflection of His character.
Have you trusted Christ? Before God asks anything from you, he has something for you.
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