JEHOVAH
NISSI: GOD’S BANNER OF LOVE
Even
while we continue to reside in places of personal rebellion and disobedience,
God shows up with amazing grace
that breathes freedom, transformation and life into our future. God’s grace is prevenient, which means it is operative (while we are yet
sinners) to form, forge and foster future faith. (Romans 5:8) Moreover, God’s grace is sufficient, which means it is more
than enough to free us forever from the power, penalty and practice of sin and
to pave our path to His eternal presence. (II Corinthians 12:9)
Such
was the case of God’s interventions with the children of Israel. After passing more than four centuries in
Egyptian bondage, they were extricated by the power of ten miraculous plagues,
dispatched from Heaven for their express deliverance and liberation. They avoided mass genocide at the Red Sea
when the armies of Egypt were in hot pursuit.
And in a divine transaction of restitution for generations of labor,
they exchanged the worthless shackles of slavery for the enormous wealth of
Egypt. Yet, they found it extremely
difficult to trust such an Awesome God
to sustain them through the challenging wilderness of Sinai. (Exodus 17)
They
murmured. They complained. They doubted.
They dishonored God and His leader, Moses.
At
Rephidim, the Israelites experienced a serious scarcity of water. God revealed an ingenious solution to their
pressing problem, utilizing a rock and a rod.
Nevertheless, as is typical whenever we succumb to fear and rebellion
against God, the enemy will appear. The
Amalekites sought to destroy the Israelites at their moment of greatest
physical and spiritual weakness. Without
divine intervention, they would likely have succeeded.
Moses
enlisted Joshua to assemble an army.
They fought while Moses stood on the hilltop, empowered solely by the
rod of God. While Moses stretched forth
his hands, the Israelites experienced military success. Whenever his arms grew tired and dropped
down, the Amalekites prevailed. Wisdom
provided a solution. A stone was put in
place; Moses sat on it; Aaron and Hur held up his arms and the Israelites
gained the victory.
Afterwards,
God instructed Moses to record the events of the day and to pass on its lessons
to Joshua and the people, who through the power of God would “utterly put out
the remembrance of Amalek from under heaven.” (Exodus 17:14) Years later, in
his final directive to Joshua, Moses reminded him to finish the job and totally
annihilate this enemy of Israel, who had attacked God’s people in such dire
circumstances.
Deuteronomy 25:19 (Moses’
Charge to Joshua)
Therefore it shall be, when the Lord thy God hath given thee
rest from all thine enemies round about, in the land which the Lord thy God
giveth thee for an inheritance to possess it, that thou shalt blot out the
remembrance of Amalek from under
heaven; thou shalt not forget
it.
At the
site of their historic victory, Moses erected an altar to the Lord and named it
“Jehovahnissi…because the Lord hath sworn that [HE] will have war against
Amalek from generation to generation.” (Exodus 17:15-16) Thereafter, “Jehovah Nissi” was revered by the
Israelites as the title or name for God which means The Lord Our Banner.
Sisters
and brothers, I stand in awe of God’s grace.
Grace is totally unmerited, yet constantly motivated by the merciful and
matchless love of God. For example,
whenever I think of King Solomon, I picture him as a brilliant sinner. That
is to say, while his wisdom far surpassed his peers, his sins did also. Yet, in the final analysis, Solomon had a
crystal-clear vision of the grace of God.
In his own words, “He [GOD] brought me to the banqueting house [in spite
of my condition], and his banner over me
was love. Undoubtedly, Solomon
remembered that the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob was, is, and always shall
be “Jehovah Nissi,” The Lord Our Banner. What a mighty, miraculous and marvelous God
we serve!
Sisters and brothers, be
continually blessed, and please (above all else) MAKE SURE YOU ARE READY TO
MEET OUR SOON COMING KING. Maranatha!
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