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Three
types of obedience
---In Adam and Eve, the obedience
was nil. Adam's excuse before God was: "The woman
that you gave me gave me...". While the excuse
of the woman was: "The snake deceived me and I
ate
.". The consequences? Their deprivation
from the glory of God and the transfer of their sin and
its consequences to the whole of humanity. For that reason
God "drove man out" (Gn. 3:24).
---In king Saul, the obedience
was partial. The excuse? "The people spared the
best of the sheep and the oxen" (1 S.15:15).
"But people took from the spoil ...the
choicest of the cursed objects to offer sacrifices to
Jehovah..." (15:21). The consequences? Saul was
discarded as king. (15:23).
---In our Lord Jesus Christ,
the obedience was total and perfect. The excuse? None.
The consequences? "He came to be author of eternal
salvation to all those that obey him" (Hebrew
5:8-9). He was exalted to the highest place and received
a name that is above every name. (Philippians 2:8-9).
---Adam and Saul both failed
gravely in paying attention to the Word of God and they
conformed themselves to their own criteria, or to that
of a third party. They removed the judgment of God from
its place and chose their own judgment ahead of it. Their
desires and individual pretensions could achieve more
than the expressed will of the Lord. (did they think they
were wiser than God?). Instead of recognizing their sin,
they blamed others. Their decision brought lamentable,
terrible consequences, as much to their own lives as to
their descendants. In the case of Saul, the people and
his servants also suffered by reason of the king's madness.
---The lesson? Their disobedience
is a solemn warning and admonishment to us, "upon
whom the ends of the ages have come" (1 Corinthians
10:11). Disobedience is not only a lamentable inheritance,
but a reenforceable habit.
---Christ's Spirit that is
in us leads us to know and to obey with diligence the
will of God expressed in His Word. If even so, either
through error, weakness or ignorance, we fall into the
sin of disobedience, we should hurry to recognize our
faults and sins, humbling ourselves and sanctifying ourselves
to the Lord. May the Lord set us free from the nonsense
of blaming others.
---The contrast of Adam and
Saul with the person of the Lord Jesus Christ is more
than evident. The Lord's life of continual obedience was
not altered even by the greatest tribulation. On the contrary,
His sufferings displayed the deepest love and reverent
fear toward His Father who was looking down on Him from
heaven. "Behold I come, oh God, to do your will....".
---Nothing, nor anyone could
prevent such a purpose from being thoroughly fulfilled.
His continual communion with and dependence upon the Father
mark out for us the way to victory (in fact, He Himself
is our Way), since only in this manner will we be permanently
conscious of the Lord, of His holiness and His kingdom,
and we will be free from the continuous influences and
temptations that surround us. We won't fear men, and we
will always endeavor to please the One who enlisted us
as soldiers.
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