2 – The Years of Silence

(In my book, The Lamb of God, sought to provide an accurate background of his world during first century B.C. To do that you must know what had come before. Who and what the influencers were. This meditation is meant to give a snapshot of that reality.)

“Behold, the days are coming,” says the Lord God,
“That I will send a famine on the land,
Not a famine of bread,
Nor a thirst for water,
But of hearing the words of the Lord. – Amos 8:11 NIV

When the prophets of old ceased to speak there was a famine in the land of God’s word. For four hundred and forty-four years the people waited for God to save them from their oppressors, but there was nary a word or whisper. They hungered, they thirsted, they grew weak for their lack of knowledge. It was as if Yahweh had said all he could say and he had turned his head away from them, unable to watch all that would transpire in the onslaught of the Gentile nations that would trample Jerusalem. Had his people angered him so abhorrently that even the heavens had turned to bronze? It seemed that every prayer they uttered simply fell back to earth like arrows repelled by a shield. 

During those years they had barely endured the campaigns of Alexander, the Ptolemy’s, the Seleucids, Antiochus III and IV, and even the Hasmonean Jews who lead in the unsanctioned role of both King and Priest. 

Jerusalem was renamed Acra (meaning: the stronghold of foreign powers). The temple was profaned by the statues of foreign gods. People forgot that their temple had once been designated as Yahweh’s footstool, and Jerusalem was to be the City of Peace. Their Hebrew culture had been effectively canceled, conquered and sacred documents had been taken to the safety of hidden caves. As the first century AD approached, only a remnant of faithful believers in the covenant remained. They fled into the wilderness areas to the north and east, and lived in bleak poverty to order to avoid the impurity of their oppressors. Those who adapted to the Hellenization processes had forgotten the former things and lost their faith identity.

Those years were very bleak indeed, brother fighting against brother, uprising after uprising, opportunists arose at every turn. It got so bad that the tyrant Alexander Jannaeus, who ruled as Hasmonean King and High Priest, put to death over 50,000 of his own people (the Jews) for protesting against him.

Dividing lines were drawn, creating the sects of Sadducees, Pharisees, Essenes, and Zealots. Each sect was based in religious and political belief and actions. Amongst them power struggle ensued, confusing things all the more. Rome entered the scene to conquer. Allied with them were the Idumean father and son, Antipater and Herod. Once the campaign had succeeded, Herod was given reign over the land as a backhanded slap to the Jews.

We have been given to think the church would be a realm of pristine peace, but the history of the Jews, the Temple, and God’s people of faith shows us a different reality. Chaos has historically taunted, threatened and sought to rule the people of God. Into this world of spiritual warfare God’s Son was to be born. Into this hostile environment, the Lord sent his forerunner equipped with the spirit of the prophet Elijah. He would prepare the way for his ministry to begin. John the Baptizer would remind the people who they were, and to Whom they belonged. He would purify them with repentance before the Christ would appear.

–Take away?

Today we look around and we see chaos. Wars, rumors of war, divided party lines, divided churches, a famine of a true word from God, we hear of unstoppable fires, tsunamis, tornado’s, hurricanes, earthquakes, floods, destruction. We see fearful signs, and know of oppressive aggressors, tyrants, and terrorist. We see world rulers with unbelievable wealth and an onslaught of incumbent poverty, we have fear provoking technology, and we experience disease and plagues. We live among unease, violence, perversions,…the list could go on and on…

But remember, it was into the hopelessness of such times that Christ made his first Advent. He first came in ‘the fullness of time”, and he will again. So no matter how frightening our prospects, we must never give up hope or surrender our belief in his power to save us through it all. We wait expectantly with our heads lifted high. We choose to remain a minority, a part of the remnant of people who earnestly wait for his feet to once more touch the Mount of Olives from where they once left. 

At his next Advent, he will set all things right. So keep oil in your lamps, don’t allow your hope to waver. Purify and dedicate yourself as his holy temple. May your lamp light miraculously never go out, so that when he comes again the first thing he will see is your joyful face, upturned, hopeful, and silently waiting for Him.

Advent 1 – From the Foundation of the World

When I wrote my novel, The Way of the Lamb, I did not begin with the birth of the infant. I wrote a prologue of God before creation. I suppose to many this might seem downright blasphemous. For who has ever peered into such a mystery? Did I allow my imagination to overreach?  

My attempt to capture it was assuredly anemic although I rewrote it many times hoping to share a vision of something so far beyond our comprehension. Yet, I believe it is so very important to our understanding about the advent – the coming of the Christ. Paul assured the Colossian congregation that Jesus is the visible expression of our invisible God, as in the Trinitarian Godhead—Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. The Nicene Creed affirms that Jesus is eternally begotten of the Father, God from God, Light from Light, true God from true God, begotten, not made, of one Being with the Father; AND through (the Christ) all things were made. 

Despite the many Old Testament theophanies, (appearances of Christ in bodily/angelic form), it was only in the fullness of time that the Christ came down from heaven to become truly human purposed for God’s mission of our salvation.

For many millennia Christ remained a secret, only to be revealed in living parables of the people of faith. Only at the appropriated time was he born of a woman to live a truly human existence. 

Yet, Christ was the very reason for all of creation. He is our Alpha and the Omega, our beginning and end. We were created for his pleasure and joy.  And as our sovereign, He was ordained in the eternal order of Melchizedek – as our righteous king and high priest, and our Ancient of Days. 

Before our inception, Christ already knew us intimately as his own. Our names were written in his Book of Life even before the first flash of light emerged or the first breath was drawn. As the Son, he was ordained to live in obedience to his Heavenly Father long before he was a babe placed in the manger, long before he was born into the flesh of humanity.

I wrote about Jesus before the foundation of creation from an informed perspective influenced by many scriptural details and descriptions that are scattered about in God’s word. 

Here are just a few of the pre-foundational scriptures to check out: Matthew 13:35, Matthew 25:34, Luke 11:50, Hebrew 4:3, Hebrew 9:26, John 17:24, Ephesians 1:4, 1 Peter 1:20, Revelation 13:8, Revelation 17:8. And don’t forget John 1:1-14. These scriptures reveal a lot about Christ’s purposes.

The take away?  The person of Jesus Christ has always been God’s plan of salvation for mankind even from before the creation/foundation of the world. Jesus is the Lamb of God. He has always been with God and is actually God. He has always been exactly who He Is. And, He has always been FOR those whom he chose as his own from before the foundation of this world. We are ‘the joy of an eternal relationship’ that he has envisioned. Don’t let anything hold you back from a relationship with him.

Lenten Meditative Reading: Victory Of The Lamb

Many Christian traditions observe a Lenten season which kicks off with the somber service of Ash Wednesday. Lent is meant to be a season of examination, personal reflection and change, the doing of good deeds, and by humbling oneself through the self-denial of unhealthy habits, or observing a fast. Of course, Lent coincides with the coming of spring which can become a distraction to our holy execution. Our Christian forefathers intentionally set the Lenten season within our Christian calendar to boost our spiritual growth and renewal.

In many ways, Lent mirrors for Christians many of the obeyances found within the Hebrew Fall Festivals found in Scripture which includes The Day of the Trumpet, the Days of Awe, and the Day of Atonement. However, the Christian calendar is most closely tied to the Passover rememberance and feast on which Christ was crucified as our Passover Lamb.

As the forty-day observance of Lent comes to a close, we will participate in Holy Week gatherings which remembers Christs procession into Jerusalem, his anointing for death, the foot-washing of his disciples and the communion of his body and blood on Maundy Thursday which leads into Good Friday services, the Holy Sabbath, and finally the Easter celebration. Each day bears grace to us. The four gospel accounts have recorded a detail of the week of Christ’s passion. Each gospel focuses on a different day, event, or aspect of those humbling events.  Victory of the Lamb brings the events together in such a way as to have the greatest insight and impact.

In this novel, as Jesus’ earthly ministry nears its end. He is a wanted man, and as the people around him grow impatient for him to establish a new earthly kingdom, his eyes have become stoically fixed on the cross. His people fail to understand his delay, his talk of his death, and even those closest to him seem to totally miss his words promising his resurrection. 

It is clear, that his last days have become his most complex and drama awaits at every turn. Yet, he does not draw back from the cross. Instead, every step presses him onward for the prize that awaits him on the other side of his crucifixion.

Victory Of The Lamb is the perfect Easter read for your meditations.

What words will speak to you this year and break your heart so as to allow the light in?

Art by: K. S. McFarland, author