Tuesday, October 26, 2010

2 Kings 24

4 comments:

Berry Girl said...

man, Jerusalem as a city has had such a violent history of being beautiful and then destroyed and then rebuilt and then overtaken and destroyed...amazes me that it still exists today. How many historical cities can say that?

Unknown said...

Two things struck me from this chapter. The first one was the fact that there are a number of times in these stories of the kings that it records "his mother was... so and so." This is noteworthy. Who a person's mother was has bearing on how they turn out, just as who their father was does (which we see so clearly in these books). What example are we setting and what legacy are we leaving? Will our children be spiritually rooted and grounded or will they be tossed about on the waves of worldly (selfish) pursuits and ambitions?

Secondly, how God got fed up in the end. We picture the Lord as eternally patient. He gets fed up like any parent with spoiled brat children who refuse to listen to grace and reason. (this happened to me the other week with one of my kids, I tried every means of grace to sway their hearts for a LONG time and finally had to absolutely bring down the rod and say enough was enough and I wasn't going to stand by and watch that kind of behavior destroy my child's character. When my wrath showed up, well then I sure had that child's attention).

My bible says "All this happened in Jerusale and Judah because the Lord was angry with them. Finally, he threw them out of His presence." The Lord is patient and longsuffering but we better believe that He is a parent who believes in discipline and justice and will do whatever it takes to try to redeem us from our own folly.

Joan said...

"did what was evil in the sight of the Lord just as his father had done". This struck me as well - our kids learn from the examples that they see at home. However, let's remember that they grow up and make their own choices.

Unknown said...

I always remember a sermon I heard as a child. "God doesn't have grandchildren." It was all about how we set the tone for our family but our children then grow up to choose how they then will live. Influence plays a huge role though and for us it has always been important to recognize that just being a good influence to our kids, say, 10 or even 20% of the time (our culture doesn't allow much more time than that to parents, the way it is set up) would still present great challenges if they 80-90% of their influence is coming from other sources. It's very sobering and challenging. But thankfully, it is God's spirit who calls, equips and annoints our kids and the when we aren't able to be there by example, we can still be covering them in prayer and trusting them to God's spirit. They are His workmanship. I love that.