This past Sunday June 7, we sat under God's word from Numbers 31, Israel's war against Midian. I mentioned how difficult this text is for multiple reasons, but perhaps most difficult of all is the practical application of how this might (need to) strike our hearts in compassion and move our hands to action. Just a few reasons that this story is difficult:
1) The cultural and temporal distance from its mileu to ours (we are children of the new covenant of grace, fully expressed in Christ; the Israelites were children of the covenant, too, but there Mediator was Moses the Law-giver, and grace was given, but in more shadows, types, and figures)
2) The sheer complexity of interpreting, much less understanding the passage that calls Israel to not only destroy Midianite soldiers, but also the young males, and also the Midianite women who seduced Israel into sin in Numbers 25. I mentioned that one of the hardest parts of the text for me was the call to take captive the virgin women of Midian for marriage, an order given by Moses, but not contradicted by God, and actually, when God specifies how to divide the war booty, the Midianite virgins are listed with all the other spoils. It is true that entry of these young women of Midian into the Israelite community and the privilege of learning the ways of the God of Israel would be an improvement over being put to the edge of the sword or maybe even continuing in dark idolatry, but it is a difficult episode for modern Western ears to hear.
3) The difference in interpretation among Christians. Some commentators want to distance themselves from even saying (like the text does in v3 and v7) that this was Yahweh's vengeance and Yahweh's voice ordering the destruction, but rather Moses or a later editor attributing to Yahweh what vengeance and damage the Israelites did on their own initiative. I would say that is reversing the order of how we should sit under the authoritative Word of God: not reading, reacting, and rewriting it according to our theory of textual origin, but rather, reading and wrestling with the challenges as the text presents them. Not us changing the text (or its implications) but letting the text change us.
4) I opened with an illustration of Dr. George Tiller, the naionally-known late-term abortion provider, whose funeral was Saturday, and his death just a week ago in his home church by a shooter. I referred to the tragedy of such murders of abortionists being committed over the past 15 years or so in the name of religion. We are a people called to lay down our lives for our enemies, not take the lives of those with whom we disagree, even diametrically disagree. But there's the other tragedy, of the 60,000 unborn children, many as fully developed as my wife who is due for delivery in August, fetuses that Dr. Tiller personally boasts of terminating. His motto was, "The woman is the patient, the fetus is the problem."
My question of application is this: how do we respond to a text like Numbers 31 in relation to how we respond to an event like the murder of George Tiller? Are we appalled at the death of young Midianite males at the swords of Israelite warriors? That's understandable given our Western context and Christ-transformed ethics. But do we respond with equal, if not greater, horror at the death of 60,000 unborn children? Do we notice when the news articles or pundits don't mention them in the story of Tiller's death and funeral? If we do not register the same shock and disgust, why not? What's wrong with our hearts? What's wrong with our view of the world and God and Scripture and reality?
Do we react with compassion, brokenness, and a resolve to act, to reach out, to build relationships with children and families from our neighborhoods where homicide is a daily reality? Dare we judge God for his harsh response to sin without seeing the sin of our own complacency and contentment when 60,000s are voiceless victims, harldly noticed, when children all around us are looking for safety, guidance, and love in a world of danger, foolishness, and revenge? May we see the mercy of God in Christ, who took the vengeance of God's wrath on sin in His own body, who triumphed in cosmic battle on the Cross, and who offers that mercy to sinners like us, like Midianites, like Israelites, and may we rise up in merciful response to our friends, neighbors, and even enemies.
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1 comment:
hi brad, thanks for posting this. i remember when you preached about this last summer, and my own struggles with the passage, of which i continue to struggle. but i think that might be part of the point you are making... that when it comes to situations like this, with midianite civilians on one hand and a just, but angry God on the other, or with the life of a child on one hand and the free-will of a woman on the other, in these situations there is not much we can do but try to grapple with truth. we are uncomfortable because, this is a situation in which our minds cannot grasp a clear moral choice. like much of our lives, lived in the gray, there are not many easy choices.
Perhaps that was not the original intent of the post, but I appreciate it nonetheless. I hope all is well, and take care!
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