![]() |
||
|
|
No Higher Calling Week 15
Landlords and Trustees: Duties and Consequences When the Israelites were about to conquer Canaan God gave them several instructions about what He expected His people's behaviour would be. God wanted His people to understand one great overriding principle -- that the land they were about to conquer wouldn't be their property, but God's. They were stewards, not owners; caretakers, not lords. When Israel conquered the land, it was distributed for the eleven tribes. Each family received a piece of land, but they knew that the land wasn't theirs. They received land to rule over it, to work on it, but the owner was the Creator of the Heavens and of the Earth. About seven centuries after the conquest and distribution of the Promised Land there was a man named Naboth. He lived under the ruling of King Ahab. In fact he was a neighbour of King Ahab, in Jezreel, where the king had his summer palace. Nowadays we would say that Naboth was the landlord of a wonderful vineyard in Jezreel, but he didn't think that way, because he knew the real landlord was God. He'd been privileged to tend it. However, King Ahab didn't think the same way. Ahab was one of those Israelites that thought he was really the owner, he was really the landlord of what he possessed. Ahab lived an illusion: HE THOUGHT WHAT HE POSSESSED, HE OWNED. He forgot that we came to this world naked, and we will leave it with nothing. King Ahab didn't think the way God wanted him to think. For Ahab, the deed of all he owned was in his own name. We might say there was no trust clause in any of Ahab's properties -- or his life for that matter. It was exclusively HIS. But Naboth had a mental trust clause in all he owned. He held it all for the rightful, true owner. Naboth was a true worshiper of the God of Israel, and every work he did in "his" vineyard he did it as an administrator, not as the landlord. Despite that, should we say, or better because of that, Naboth took care so well of "his" vineyard that King Ahab wished the vineyard was his. One day Ahab proposed a bargain to Naboth: he offered cash or if Naboth preferred a piece of better land in trade. What a wonderful opportunity to Naboth to strike a good bargain, and more than that, to strengthen a good relationship with his powerful neighbour, the King. A "wise" political strategy, wouldn't we say? Who would waste such an opportunity? Imagine Naboth as one of our clients, who asked for advice. What advice would we give him? Maybe we'd even warn that him if he didn't sell, the King might just exercise some eminent domain, a power of the sovereign, and simply seize it. But as far as we know, Naboth didn't ask for advice from anyone. He just refused the King's proposal! And the reason was he wasn't concerned about how he could please the king of Israel. His behaviour didn't depend on the king's favour or the king's wrath. On the contrary, he did depend on God's commands, on God's rules, on God's principles. Naturally Naboth paid a price for his faithfulness to the Lord, a high price: his reputation, his own life and his family's vineyard. From a secular perspective how foolish he was refusing a good proposal which, at the end, made him lose everything. But how inspiring the faith and the faithfulness of this believer is for me: his courage, his spiritual insight, his love for the Landlord, and his obedience to His law. What kind of perspective do we have about the goods God has given to us to administrate? Do we think of them as ours? Do we live in Ahab's illusion or do we have God's perspective about them? Are we willing to please the Lord or the lords of the Earth? Are we ready to pay the price it takes to be faithful to God, as Naboth did? Lord, help me to be faithful as Naboth was, to respect you as the owner of everything you have given me, and give me the wisdom to take good care of everything as a good administrator. Lord, give me the insight, the courage and the love for you that Naboth had. Make me a faithful trustee of all you have provided. Fernando Loja
|
|
|
About Us | News & Views | Lifestyle | Be
Still | Books Articles | Links | Service | What's On | Future Events |