
Scripture Reference: Isaiah 11:1-9; Ephesians 3:1-13
It’s rather flattering, isn’t it, to be in some group which seems to receive God’s special favor? Correct or not, many people imagine that this is true of them. Some people say our nation is so favored. They measure “divine favor” by material prosperity and progress. We are a wealthy nation. We are a free nation. We are a strong nation in many respects. We call ourselves a “Christian nation” which is problematic, since a large number of our citizens are, by conviction, non-Christian and, technically, only individuals and not institutions can be Christian. Nonetheless, we claim to be a Christian nation. In our pledge of allegiance, we refer to ourselves as “one nation under God.” Our currency testifies that: “In God we trust.” This should be adequate proof, shouldn’t it, that God surely favors us over all the rest?
Some families who have a rather “smooth” life think God is bestowing special favor on them. They have money and jobs and believe that God helps those who help themselves. The children have never given their parents any real trouble, and the parents have never embarrassed the children through irresponsible behavior. Everyone gets along. They’ve experienced no tragedies, and they think, We know how to please God.
Some individuals think they have the corner on God’s favor. Not long ago, an entertainer who sang songs about adultery received an award for her singing. As she tearfully accepted, she said, “God is so good.” A Christian woman who believed that faith healing and the right kind of prayers were just the things said to an acquaintance who was dying from cancer, “The reason you can’t get well is because there is unforgiven sin in your life which you ought to confess to God.” To top it off, many believe if you aren’t as favored, it is because you have little to know faith.
Now, who really is “in good” with God? Who are God’s “special children”? Americans? Families for whom life is smooth? People who receive widely publicized honors and awards? Christians who are physically healthy? What about non-Americans? What about families with tons of pressures and problems and people who never get any fame, honor, or even a pat on the back? Aren’t people who suffer illness and disease tenderly loved by God, too?
The earliest people with whom God had a “special relationship” were the Israelites. They were the “chosen” people of God. But, they misunderstood their “chosen-ness.” Their status wasn’t a position of favoritism. It was a position of service. The Jews didn’t have exclusive rights to God. They were to take the benefits of their relationship with God and become a light to the nations. They were to point others to God. But, most often, it didn’t work that way. Generally, as is true of most groups who have become proud of their chosen-ness, they became possessive and imagined that God was interested in them alone, working for them and not for other groups of people. In fact, the circle of who is regarded as “chosen ones” becomes smaller and smaller over time.
To Be Continued
























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