Tuesday, May 17, 2011

What Does God Require? part 1

And now, Israel, what does the LORD your God require of you, but to fear the LORD your God, to walk in all his ways, to love him, to serve the LORD your God with all your heart and with all your soul, and to keep the commandments and statutes of the LORD, which I am commanding you today for your good. - Deuteronomy 10:12-13

I have an iPhone app called "Fighter Verses." The app was put together as a way to help people memorize certain key verses from the Bible, these 52 "Fighter Verses." The app is really well done and I highly recommend it, but that's beside the point. This week's verse comes from Deuteronomy 10, and it really struck me as valuable. Maybe I liked this verse so much because it comes in the form of a numbered list, my favorite information delivery technique. I thought I would take a couple of blog posts and go through this verse with a fine tooth comb. The more I have meditated on these words, the more densely packed I see them to be. This post will only cover the first 12 words.

And now, Israel, what does the LORD your God require of you?

This verse records Moses speaking to the people of Israel after God gave Moses the second set of the 10 Commandments. In Deuteronomy 5, Moses gathers together all the people of Israel and launches into a lengthy speech to the people, instructing them in the ways that the Lord has set before them. Moses is asking this question as a way to teach the people of God, clearly and succinctly, how God desires us to be in relationship to Him.

Many people in today's culture live their lives in some form of deism. Deism is the general belief or understanding that there is a God who somehow made the world, but that God is very distant and uninvolved. In the deistic view, what God really wants and requires of us is to figure out life on our own. God started this whole universe project, but has now abandoned it and left us in charge of everything. Many enlightenment thinkers, including the majority of America's founding fathers, were deists; this is why our cultural awareness is steeped in do-it-yourself-ism. It's as thick as the air that we breath. This worldview certainly encourages hard work but certainly fails to take into account the God to whom we are actually responsible.

Right from the beginning of this verse, we are confronted with the idea that God requires something from us. This is not a particularly popular message to speak today, but it is truth. We were created by God and for God. Everything that was created was made by Him. Our next breath, our next heartbeat is dependent on God. When God speaks and lets us know what is required of us, we had better pay attention.

I find great comfort in knowing that God requires something from me. I find it comforting because it means that God is not distant and uninvolved. It means that God is a good God, a good Father who cares about us, our lives, our actions, and our treatment of other people. It means that God loves us enough to not leave us alone. The ultimate form of hate is indifference, and God is clearly not indifferent.

Rather than recoil in "American-do-it-myself-self-sufficient" horror at the thought of God's requirement, I encourage you to find comfort in these verses. God is treating you as His child. Embrace Him. Submit yourself to Him. He is good and He has your ultimate good in mind.

In the next post, we will explore what it means to "fear God."

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