Thursday, October 2, 2008

The Miracle of Twilight

And there were four leprous men at the entering in of the gate: and they said one to another, Why sit we here until we die? (2 Kings 7:3)

Why sit we here until we die? Before this question was uttered, these fellows were in a hopeless situation. They are leprous men, at the gate of a famished city, surrounded by a conquering army. In other words, there was death in the city, death surrounding them, and death within them. What ray of sunshine can penetrate the dark clouds of this dreary day? What glimmer of hope can be found in this midnight situation to prompt the question, "Why sit we here until we die?"

The asking of this question begs other questions. First, why the question? Then secondly, Why the question now? They had been sitting there, sick, dying, degenerating. And we have been there, sitting. We had heard message after message, invitation after invitation, and call after call. But we sat, sick, leprous, dying, decaying, degenerate, unable to respond, unable to see the point in responding. Paul says, That at that time ye were without Christ, being aliens from the commonwealth of Israel, and strangers from the covenants of promise, having no hope, and without God in the world. "Why the question?" and "Why the question now?"

Another way to put it is, "What can make a dead man seek life?" One may look at the text at a glance and consider these fellows simply applying prudential judgment; that is, they simply came up with a good idea. I may be inclined to such a view myself were it not for there being at least three miracles in the text. The miracle of revelation, the miracle of salvation, and the one we are most interested in at this point the miracle of regeneration.

Revelation: That the man of God had already spoken to the king and prophetically announcing the end of the famine on the morrow precludes the notion of co-incidence. Salvation: the empty Syrian camp that the four men are prompted to move to and therein find a great store of victuals is evidence that a divine way had been prepared. But what good are a promise and a provision without a prompting? And therein is the answer to our question, a third miracle, but yet the primary miracle, the miracle of regeneration. The same God that promised and provided prompted them to God's promised provision. Dead men don't move of themselves, by themselves, to save themselves. Dead men don't hear preaching. Preaching does not prepare a person for the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit prepares a person for preaching. Only the Holy Spirit regenerates and enables one to seek life. Preaching is not nor has it ever been for the dead, but for the living.

Like these men we all sat there until foreknowledge sent predestination and predestination sent calling. We sat there until God blew again the breath of life in us. We sat there until we slid through the womb of a new birth. We sat until an east wind blew and the red sea parted. We sat there until degeneration gave way to regeneration and we could no longer hold our peace. Like these leprous men, we cried out "Why sit we here until we die? It doesn't make sense anymore as it once did when we saw no way to affect our salvation. But we can now see a glimmer of hope, the miracle of twilight in the night. No longer can we sit and die: got to get up now and seek life. Because life came in us and life began to live. Life began to seek life more abundantly. Paul exclaims, Even when we were dead in sins, [the Spirit] hath quickened us together with Christ, (by grace ye are saved.)

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