Wednesday, October 5, 2022

We wait and work trusting in His power and promise to judge . . .

      We have another one of those readings that we only see once every six years.  We, of course, are fortunate at Advent, because some churches do not alternate tracts every three years.  In those places, people will not ever read from the “Prophetic” tract, as opposed to the “historical” tract.  To be fair, though, not much is known about Habakkuk.  He is the 8th of the so-called minor prophets.  Unlike the other prophets, though, we have no idea what he did before God’s calling on his life, where he is from, or even where he spent most of his time ministering.  Those details are provided by the books that bear the names of the other prophets, but Habakkuk was not moved to share those details with us.  Unlike the other prophets, we do not even know what Habakkuk means.  Heck, PhD’s have been granted arguing that the name is Semitic or Babylonian or Akkadian.  If we do not know the culture from which the name is derived, you can imagine the guesses about the meaning of the name!

     Though you may not ever have heard Habakkuk’s name, you have been influenced by at least one clergy’s wrestling with his writing.  Nearly five centuries ago, a man by the name of Martin Luther was reading Habakkuk.  Luther, for his part, was wrestling with the prophet’s declaration that the righteous live by their faith.  Out of that wrestling eventually came the slogan of early Protestantism, that we are justified by faith alone!  Good, I see nods.  Some of you stayed awake in history classes.  Yes, an argument can be made that Habakkuk serves as one of the underpinnings of the Reformation, yet how few of us pay attention to the book?

     One of the few things that we do know about Habakkuk is that he served as God’s prophet near the end of the 7th Century BC.  Many experts place the book’s authorship around 612 BC, thanks to some textual clues.  Certainly, it was written before the Babylonians rose to power and carried the northern kingdom of Israel off into Exile.  It does not take too long for us to figure out why God caused this book to be collected and studied by us, some 2600 years later and 9000 miles distant.  We have a war that has been going so long it barely gets coverage on the cable news circuit.  For some of us, the nuclear saber rattling has caused childhood anxieties to return.  Notice I said childhood, as in those stupid drills we did to hide under our desks in the event of a nuclear attack, and not childish.  There is nothing childish about taking a despot at his word.  I know the pandemic was declared over last week, but we still know people who are afflicted with the virus, and all of us are impacted in various ways by our last 2 ½ years’ experience.  Inflation is out of control.  For those of us on fixed income, that is a scary reality.  But for workers, it is worse.  Although wages have been behind now for some three decades, the gap is far more noticeable today.  But at least our public servants are working hard for us, using their wisdom and expertise to create a soft landing, solve housing and food cost issues, fix the supply chain issues, and deal with all those other pesky issues like immigration and education and whatnot, for which we elected them.  I mean, it could be worse.  We could be living in a time like Habakkuk’s, in which the rich and powerful care only for themselves and work to aggrandize themselves and their lifestyles.  Wow!  Groans and snorts?  I could go on and on.  I have not mentioned the ravages of broken bodies or other diseases and their impacts on us, nor have I discussed the number of struggling relationships in our midst.  We have not talked about shootings or other strife and contention arising among us.  The more things change, the more they seem to stay the same, right?  We should give thanks to God that we are not His chosen country, that America is not the new Israel, right?  Because then we should truly be studying Habakkuk’s words and worrying about our future and the looming judgment.

     Truly appreciating the words of Habakkuk today does require a bit of word study, though.  In particular, there are three words whose interplay in the passage that are essential, so on the weekend of the barbecue, I have a nice three-point sermon.  The first word I want us to see is mishpat.  I translators clearly understood the challenges of rendering mishpat in English.  In verse 4, they render it as justice, but then later in the same verse they went with judgment.  Mishpat is the act of deciding a case.  The closest word in English is judgment.  Of course, modern Americans do not like to use or hear the word judgment, except when we are judging others – that’s a sermon for another day – and so judgment is treated worse than a four-letter word.  If the case is not decided, neither the plaintiff nor the defendant experience mishpat.  Indeed, those who are rich and powerful often seek to delay courtroom proceedings resulting in their victims getting the very opposite of mishpat.  Mishpat, for its part, was concerned with doing those things that God commanded, and not doing those things which God commanded us not to do.  Put in English, God declares justice to us.  We, like teenagers, focus on fairness, but God loves and is justice, just as He is love and all those other predicate adjectives we adore.  To be declared just meant that one did closer or avoided more fully those things instructed by God.

     I have been here now almost eight years, so some of you will be sick of hearing this, but God called His people to study, to digest inwardly His torah.  The king was commanded to study the torah night and day, so that he could educate and disciple the people in God’s ways.  The old men who sat at the gate deciding cases were chosen by the village because they were esteemed for their knowledge of God’s torah, at least they were supposed to be, and their piety.  Fathers and mothers taught their children.  The promise of God was that if Israel kept the torah, He would bless them.  If the people of God ignored His torah, though, and ignored His subsequent warnings, He would call the Land to disgorge them.  They would become objects of scorn and derision.  In case you have not figured it out or paid attention to history, Israel does not choose wisely, nor does it listen to the warnings of the prophets.

     For his part, Habakkuk sees the perversion of justice.  The very people who should be keeping the torah the best, those who are rich and powerful and have idle time for study, are the ones who twist God’s word, who keep mishpat from those whom they oppress.  And God does not seem to care.  Were He truly concerned with mishpat, He would judge them for the twisting.

     That discussion of twisting brings us to our second word today, yatsa.  Our translators render it as prevails in the beginning of verse 4 and as perverted at the end of the same verse.  Yatsa is challenging because, while it does mean come forth or go forth, it includes purpose.  Yatsa does not have a sense of aimlessness.  Why were God’s people called to live according to His torah?  The ultimate purpose was so that the world would be blessed by His people and turn to Him and be saved, right?  Think of why we feed the food insecure in our midst, or anything that we do at Advent, why do we do it?  I hope the ministries in which you are engaged is to glorify God in our midst, that the world might turn to His saving embrace.  God’s people were not called to keep the torah because they were to demonstrate their wonderful ability to follow instructions.  In fact, we would say they proved the opposite.  They proved the need for God to save them, which He did in Christ Jesus.

     For His part, Jesus is the only One ever to keep the torah, right?  He is the only One without sin.  We all participate in Palm Sunday and Holy Week liturgies, so we know the answer: How did we treat Jesus, we who were called to esteem His faithful obedience?  We handed Him over to be crucified.  We taunted Him on the Cross.  One of the pains of those liturgies is that we should see our part in His suffering and death.  God teaches us justice, but we choose our own way.  God instructs us to trust Him, but we know in our hearts He needs our strength, our wisdom, our whatever we think God needs.  All He asks is that we trust Him, and all of us fail many times to do just that.

     Habakkuk teaches us that, when left to our own ways, we twist the purposes of yatsa.  What should be directed toward the glorification of God in our life gets changed and contorted into something else.  Maybe we glorify ourselves in the world around us.  Maybe we glorify idols in the world around us.  Whatever we choose to honor, it is not God.  Left to our own devices, we take what God intend for good and turn it to our evil.

     Such study would rightly leave us hopeless and wallowing in misery, but for the third important word in Habakkuk’s pericope today, moed.  The longer Habakkuk has walked with God, the more evil, perversion, and lack of mishpat he has seen.  Like so many of our biblical heroes, Habakkuk calls out to God, demanding mishpat.  Habakkuk knows he cannot compel God to respond.  Habakkuk vows to stand his watchpost to see what God will answer him.  Unsurprisingly, God does answer the prophet.  God reminds His prophet that there is an appointed time, a moed.

     Moed is one of those words that has several meanings, all of which are significant.  In its first sense, or at least the first way we encounter it in Genesis, it means the time of birth.  The birth of a child was a moed, an appointed and acknowledged time.  As the Hebrews grew in numbers and Messiah did not come, a moed reminded them that one of theirs would participate in God’s eventual reign.

     Later, especially after the Exodus, moed came to be associated with the festivals, the Holy Days of Obligation, to use Christian vocabulary.  The chief moed was Passover, but there were other important festivals in the individual and communal lives of the Hebrews, all of which were meant to remind them that God really was in charge.

     The last use, unsurprisingly, was that most akin to our word eschaton.  It’s actually a Greek word that means end times, Day of Judgment, and, in some circles, the Rapture.  Good, I see the nods.  All the other moeds point to the moed of God finally establishing His reign on earth.  For all our confidence in God’s power and purpose, none of us should have been surprised by the fact that the world perverts the purposes of God, that individuals reject the love of the One who created them in His image, because they think they can do better or know better or deserve better.  Heck, some probably twist God’s words because they think He is not paying attention to the hear and now.  He needs their help running the world and making sure mishpat happens at the right time!  We laugh ruefully, but it is because we all know people like that and, truth be told, sometimes we are even like that ourselves.  The prophet and we are reminded by God that the Day will come.  It may seem to us to tarry, but it WILL come.

     Unlike the prophet, you and I have seen the beginning of that moed.  When mishpat was twisted and perverted for purposes that seemed other than God intended, that is, when Jesus was crucified, died, and buried, God raised Him on that glorious morning, demonstrating to us and reminding us that nothing can thwart Him or His plans, not even death!  And now, like Habakkuk, we wait.  We stand our post at the watch tower.  As Carola reminded you during her interim period here, we faithful people of God live in that in-between time, in that tension between the already and the not yet.  As such, we notice those perversion in our midst, much like Habakkuk and all the prophets before us.  We hear the cries for mishpat from the oppressed.  And we work in the world not to merit our salvation but to point others to the One who will save and will reign that glorious Day in the future that cannot fail to come!  We serve His purposes, trusting like that prophet, that when the appointed Day comes, we will experience all the blessings that He longs to bestow upon His people, not just for a day or a season, but for all eternity!

 

In Christ’s Peace,

Brian†

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