Don’t grab your Bible and search for Second Exodus. You will not find it any more than you can read from the book of Second Hezekiah regardless of how often people “quote” from it. By pretending Second Exodus exists I am referring to the record in Ezra and Nehemiah that tells of the return of the Israelites to Jerusalem after their captivity. There are some interesting parallels between the first and second exodus of God’s people.
Second Chronicles closes with a list of the people who
returned when King Cyrus fulfilled prophecy by releasing them from captivity. Just
as God allowed Moses to lead His people from captivity in Egypt, Zerubbabel and
Joshua led God’s remnant from captivity in Babylon. The conditions in Judah
were not vastly different from what the Israelites faced when Joshua led them
into the Promised Land. Just as the Canaanites had opposed Joshua’s incursion,
the people who lived around Jerusalem in Zerubbabel’s time vehemently opposed
the returnees’ rebuilding of the city and the temple.
The opposition was successful at first: the king of Persia
being convinced that the Jews were rebellious; the returning Jews stopped
building for sixteen years. Two kings came and went in Persia (formerly
Babylon) before the Jews asked king Darius for permission finish the temple.
Once Darius made a search of the records, he gave them permission to build. He
also told the local residents to leave the Jews alone. They were able to
complete the temple.
Almost one hundred years later, under king Artaxerxes, Ezra
gathered several thousand Jews and led a second group to Jerusalem to teach the
law. It was during this time that Nehemiah was inspired by God to go to
Jerusalem to complete the wall which remained a pile of rubble around the city.
With the king’s blessing and provision, Nehemiah and a large number of former
captives made the trek across the desert to Jerusalem. The locals rose up
against Nehemiah’s building project just as they had before, but things were
different this time. The locals tried petitioning the king, but this time the
king told them to stop hindering the work. They tried physical attacks, but
Nehemiah convinced the Jews to stand strong against them. They succeeded: the
walls and the temple were eventually completed.
Here the history lesson ends and the application for us
begins. I suppose the main thing we might draw from this historical account is
that God is without doubt a god of second chances. In reality, letting the Jews
return from their seventy-year sentence in Babylon was not their second chance;
it was more like their two hundredth chance – or two thousandth chance to prove
faithful. God’s second chance nature was first revealed in the Garden of Eden
when He did not execute Adam and Eve for their disobedience. He instead gave
them the chance to live a few hundred years with the results of their
rebellion. Their relationships with God, each other, themselves, and nature
were all damaged by the fall from grace.
But God’s grace remained. As He promised Adam, He worked a
plan to bring His wayward people back to Himself. Throughout the historical record,
from Noah to Abraham to Moses to Joshua to David and finally to His One-and-only
Son, God gave His people whatever chances they needed to accomplish His will.
Then through Paul He exposed the mystery of His plan: all people, not just the
Jews, would be offered grace unto salvation. “Not of works lest any man should
boast,” Paul
counsels. By grace through faith in the risen Savior, every living person
has the chance to embrace God’s plan and gain adoption into His family.
The New Testament clearly teaches that God’s grace unto
salvation is a one-time decision to get on board; however, the effort to stay
on board is a daily struggle. That is not to say that a believer’s failures
cause the loss of grace; that is assured by the sincere acceptance of the grace
displayed on the cross of Calvary. However, believers can and will slip into
times of trial and discipline when they feel far from grace. Stubborn
disobedience cannot erase the promise of a sincere profession of faith, but it
can and will hinder the close fellowship with God and fellow believers.
That is when we experience another “second chance.” My wife
and I spent several years working with recovering addicts and returning felons;
they knew the meaning of a second chance, and they lived daily in the wonder
and glory of that knowledge. Sometimes they slipped, as we will also, but the
beauty of God’s grace is that the opportunity of a “second exodus” from sin’s
captivity into God’s grace and forgiveness always exists.
We must continually examine our lives as
Paul says to be sure, “That [we] are in the faith.” The forgiveness bought
on Christ’s cross is always available if we follow John’s
advice and confess our sin. The people in the first Exodus proved so
faithless that they died in the desert. The people in the second exodus from
Babylon were not much better. But God soldiered on to fulfill His plan even
though His people did not deserve it. And isn’t that the definition of grace:
undeserved favor. We will never deserve grace, but let us at least try to live
worthy of it. If we don’t let sin take us captive, we won’t need a second
exodus.
Related posts: God of Demonstrations; For God’s Sake; The Knowledge of Good and Evil
good one
ReplyDeleteVery good indeed
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