What
the Church Needs: Josiah
There are
many examples in Scripture of godly men fulfilling their call and
glorifying God. They serve as models; albeit, they are imperfect
ones. However, they can teach us many truths both by their positive
and even their negative actions. We look to these men only in an
effort to project their emulative characteristics back onto us,
realizing all the time that they are mere men, and sinful men at that
(except, of course, Christ Jesus). We can learn; we must learn from
those who have gone before. We look at these men and examples of the
past in order to reform the present. Ultimately, however, we must
look to Christ. We know looking back throughout the Bible that
Christ was active within his people. As we look back on them, we are
actually focused on Christ and his work then to better our now. So,
what do we need?
Josiah
(2
Kings 22-23)
We
need a Josiah-like reformation.
Another reformation? Yes. We should always be reforming. What the
church needs is a reforming; we need a “getting back to the
basics.” There is a great need to improve and remove abuses. How
should this be done? Go to the scriptures. Return to God and his
word. There is a remarkable example of reform in the Old Testament.
We can learn much from Josiah and his reformation.
Apparently,
it was a dark time in the days of Josiah. Idolatry was rampant, the
temple was unkempt and needed repairs, the word of God was unknown
and disobeyed, men sinned willfully and remained unrepentant, the
priests were false, cult prostitution abounded, and the Passover was
not celebrated. Darkness was over the land, but Josiah sought to
obey the Lord and purify his kingdom. He eradicated the land of the
godless and false worship that prevailed. He tore down idols and
altars. The pagan priests were removed and the true worship of God
was re-instituted in their place.
A
pattern of reformation was set by Josiah thousands of years ago. We
would do well to follow it today. The word of God has lay buried for
too long. It needs to be read and obeyed. Where is the godly sorrow
that accompanies the reading and hearing of the word of God? How and
why do we remain unrepentant and untouched? Where are the pastors
who will preach and teach the whole counsel of God and not pick and
choose passages to tickle the ears of the self-absorbed pew fillers?
There
are many idols today. Who will step up and tear them down? Who will
cry out against these imposters that seek to dethrone our great and
glorious God? Will anyone break apart the altars dedicated to
sacrifice the very sheep we are called to love and serve? People
need to be warned. Most are ignorant of the dangers of false
religion and the idols they promote. They are sheep in need of a
shepherd. These sheep are blindly following wolves in shepherd’s
clothing.
Just
as Josiah introduced the Passover, we need a renewed excitement and
commitment to the penal, substitutionary atonement of Christ. When
idols and false worship rule the day, then Christ and his work is
pushed aside. We need resurgence; we need a revival of sorts. We
need the Lord to rekindle the fire inside and burn in our bones. May
he add fuel and fan the flames in order to ignite a passion within
us; may it be a white-hot passion for Christ, his work, and true
worship. Hopefully, it will burn uncontrollably and consume us, our
churches, and the world.
We
ought to be constantly reforming. There is always room for
improvement. It begins with leaders feeding on the word of God,
digesting it, and being nourished by it. Then, they must repent,
look for opportunities to reform, and feed their people. They must
expose sin, warn the people, admonish them, lead them to still
waters, and urge them to seek the Lord repentantly and
wholeheartedly. We have not arrived yet; we are all pilgrims trying
to progress. In other words, reform is necessary. Without it, we
grow cold and stagnate. With it, we are warmed and animated.
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