Proverbs 28: 17 A
man burdened with bloodshed will flee into a pit; let no one help him. (NKJV)
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Friend Pastor Graves at www.facebook.com/rev.a.t.graves
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541 Seibles Rd.,
Montgomery, AL 36116
Proverbs 28: 17A
man tormented by the guilt of murder will be a fugitive till death; let no one
support him. (NIV)
Proverbs 28: 17. As a kid I hated
it when people changed the rules in the middle of the game. I still do.
In the world of children’s play, there was
the injustice of the kid with the ball claiming, “From now on that’s not your
endzone.” In the adult world of
theology, it’s the practice of taking every verse in a passage at face-value
until the commentator gets to a verse that he/she personally dislikes, at which
point the commentator declares, “But this doesn’t apply to our culture and was
probably inserted by a later author.”
You don’t just change the rules in the middle
of the game.
I don’t like Proverbs 28: 17. It seems to conflict with the basic workings
of New Testament forgiveness and grace.
I’m tempted to just write off the verse as “Pre-grace Old Testament
theology that no longer applies,” but I haven’t done that for any other passage
in Proverbs. So, we’ll do what we’ve
done for the other Proverbs and see what the Holy Spirit has to say.
Proverbs 28: 17 tells us that there is a time
to let go. There is a point at which you
stop defending them, quit making excuses for them, and refuse to come running
to their rescue.
You don’t hide the gun. You don’t bury the bloody knife. You don’t tell the police, “It was me” when
it was them. You don’t lie on the
stand. You don’t bribe the judge. You step back and let justice take its
course.
When the Holy Spirit spoke this Proverb to
Solomon there had to have been some dialogue.
Solomon was a king. He waged
wars. He approved executions, and he
directed assassinations. Solomon’s beloved father, David, had murdered Solomon’s
mother’s (Bathsheba’s) first husband.
War and self-defense do not carry the same
burden of blood guiltiness before God. We’re
free to defend the defender.
But murder crosses the line. And as hard and mean and heartless as it
seems, the Bible says clearly that we need to leave the murder over there alone
with God.
In 2 Samuel chapter 12, Nathan (prophet,
advisor, and friend to King David) delivered a parable of conviction against
David’s murder of Bathsheba’s husband Uriah.
The prophet didn’t offer a
sacrifice for David. He didn’t present a
defense. He didn’t tell David that it
was going to be all right. David had crossed
a line and he would suffer severe consequences for it (2 Samuel 12: 9-12).
… You have killed Uriah the Hittite with the sword; you have taken
his wife to be your wife, and
have killed him with the sword of the people of Ammon.
Now
therefore, the sword shall never depart from your house, because you have
despised Me, and have taken the wife of Uriah the Hittite to be your wife.’
Thus
says the Lord: ‘Behold, I will raise up adversity against you from your own
house; and I will take your wives before your eyes and give them to your neighbor, and he shall
lie with your wives in the sight of this sun. For you did it secretly, but I will do this
thing before all Israel, before the sun.’ ”
(Now, had I changed the rules in the middle
of the game we would missed the work of grace even among Old Testament kings.)
In 2 Samuel 2: 13 David said to Nathan, “I have sinned against the Lord.”
And
Nathan said to David, “The Lord also has put away your sin; you shall not
die.
David confessed. God forgave him, and by His
grace delivered David’s soul from eternal condemnation.
But no human being could help David. Nathan left.
Bathsheba was silent. And God worked
out His plan of justice AND grace.
2 Samuel chapter 12 contains gut-wrenching
tragedy, inspiring spiritual submission, and soul-lightening joy--- including
the birth of a son named Solomon.
Punishment.
Humbling. Submission. Redemption. Hope. Only God can bring all these in
a case of blood guiltiness. Our task is
to move out of God’s way as He does.
Stepping back to leave them in God’s hands
seems like such a cop-out, but it’s only a cop-out if you don’t believe that
God can handle it without you.
------Anderson T. Graves II
Rev. Anderson T.
Graves II is the pastor of Hall Memorial CME
Church
Call/ fax:
334-288-0577Email us at hallmemorialcme1@aol.com
Friend Pastor Graves at www.facebook.com/rev.a.t.graves
If you want to be a blessing to this ministry, contributions may be made by check or money order.
Mail all
contributions to :
Hall Memorial CME
Church541 Seibles Rd.,
Montgomery, AL 36116
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