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Sunday, April 3, 2016

How to Treat an Enemy

COMMENTS

I didn’t feel well this morning and was unable to attend church.  After watching a couple of church services on TV (Charles Stanley and his son Andy, who comes on immediately after Charles in my area), I found myself strongly desiring to just spend some time with the Lord studying His Word.  I’m in Community Bible Study so I’m in the Bible regularly; but today I wanted a just me-and-God, unstructured, God-inspired time with Him.  I started in Isaiah (because that’s what we’ll be studying in CBS next year) but then felt the Lord calling me to read the book of Daniel.  When I follow the Lord’s prompting, He ALWAYS speaks.  AWESOME!


NOTES

My Bible has an “Introduction” at the beginning of each book, so I decided to start by reading that.  It reminded me that Daniel and his friends had been taken hostage when Nebuchadnezzar captured Jerusalem in 605 B.C.  You may not be interested in the history, but I found that an important point as I read.  Daniel wasn’t in Babylon on vacation, and he wasn’t there because he had accepted a “wonderful employment opportunity”.  He was taken there against his will.  And look what God did with a willing heart in undesirable circumstances!

The first thing I noted was that the king wanted “young men without any physical defect, handsome, showing aptitude for every kind of learning, well informed, quick to understand, and qualified to serve in the king’s palace” (Daniel 1:4).  The Lord had made Daniel so that he fit King Nebuchadnezzar’s physical qualifications, but Daniel had also taken care of the body the Lord gave him.  He was, also, intelligent, knowledgeable about what was going on around him, had common sense and wisdom, and had the qualifications needed to serve the king (whatever those were).  God had given Daniel exactly what was needed to put him in the position where God could use him.

Secondly, I see in Daniel 1:9, that God caused the guy in charge of Daniel to really like him!  So the official was inclined to favorably listen to Daniel’s request for a different diet.  Daniel did not take advantage of this, however.  He recognized the genuine fear the man had about the king “having his head” if Daniel started looking “poorly” in comparison with the other young men in training.  So Daniel just asked for a trial period, submitting the outcome to the official and knowing that God had his back.  Of course, at the end of the test Daniel and his companions were healthier than the others so the guard changed the diet for everyone!

The third thing I noticed was that Daniel always spoke to those in authority “with wisdom and tact” (Daniel 2:14).  That was how he spoke to the official in the second point above; that is how he spoke to the guard who had come to kill him and his friends (Daniel 2:14-15); that is how he spoke to the king when he went to tell him his dream (about the statue) and its interpretation (Daniel 2:29-45), and that is how he spoke to the king when he interpreted his second dream (about the tree) (Daniel 4:19-27).  He even addressed him as “my lord the king” (Daniel 4:24), showing appropriate respect for his position.

The final thing I will mention is that, in spite of the fact that Daniel was taken against his will and, in human terms, had every right to resent and hate the Babylonians, Daniel cared for and was deeply concerned for his captors.  In fact, the interpretation of the second dream was a bad one for King Nebuchadnezzar.  Daniel could have been cheering inside; but instead, he started the interpretation with these words:  “My lord, if only the dream applied to your enemies and its meaning to your adversaries!” (Daniel 4:19).  He was genuinely concerned and had great compassion for what was about to befall the king!  His desire was that he would change and perhaps avoid the punishment that had been foretold.  Read Daniel’s words in Daniel 4:27:  “Therefore, O king, be pleased to accept my advice:  Renounce your sins by doing what is right, and your wickedness by being kind to the oppressed.  It may be that then your prosperity will continue.” 

I pray that I—that we all—will be like Daniel when we face those who do us wrong:  respectful, loving and concerned, and—above all—recognizing that God has given us everything we need to be His voice to those who would harm us.  Who knows, it might be that they “will renounce their sins...and wickedness…that their prosperity will continue”!

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