Living up to that Name
Text: Micah 2:1-10
By Ron Dunn
I want you to open your Bibles to the Book of Micah. As I mentioned last
Sunday, for the few weeks that I’m going to be preaching, part of that
time we’re going to be going through that great prophet, the Book of
Micah. Today, we’re reading from chapter 2. In the beginning, let me just
read verses 6 and 7:
| “Do not prophesy,” their
prophets say. “Do not prophesy about these things; disgrace will not overtake us. Should it be said, O house of Jacob: Is the Spirit of the Lord angry? Does He do such things? Do not my words do good to him whose ways are upright?” |
The other day, as Kaye and I were driving
up, I came up behind a semi that was carrying caskets. It was a certain
casket company that I had heard of. I sort of like what they had on the
back. They said, “Drive carefully, heaven can wait.” I sort of like that,
but when I pulled around in the front of that truck, I looked on the side
and they had their advertising slogan. Their advertising slogan was,
“Committed to the Dignity of Life.” Now, folks, it takes a mighty
imagination to put caskets and life in the same situation. What they are
committed to is not the “dignity of life”, but what they are committed to
is the “dignity of death.” Of course, you don’t want to use “death” in
your advertising slogan…that’d be the “death of your advertising slogan”
right there, because death is not one of those words we want to hear nor
one of those experiences we want to contemplate. But, as we passed by that
truck, a verse of Scripture came to mind… Jesus said, “Thou hast a name
that thou livest but are dead.”
A lot of times the name that we have contradicts what we’re about. And I
think that part of Micah’s word in this seventh verse is a word of
sarcasm, really. Now, the Hebrew language is not as precise as the Greek
language, and the Old Testament texts are much older and much rarer than
the New Testament, so you’ll find a variety of translations of these sixth
and seventh verses. For instance, the King James reads like this, “Thou
art named O house of Jacob…” He’s rebuking him because of their sin and
he’s just been rebuked because of his preaching against their sin, so he
comes back and says, “O you who are named house of Jacob…” It’s the same
thing as if you and I were to say to someone, “…and you call yourself a
Christian…” It’s a word of sarcasm. What he’s saying is, “You people are
named or called ‘the house of Jacob’, but your whole life betrays that.”
It’s a terrible thing when we claim a name and that name is no longer
appropriate…when we cling to a title or the name of something and the
thing for which that name stands no longer exists.
What Micah is saying and I think what he is saying to us, and that’s one
of the reasons I love these minor prophets…they are, I think, the most
contemporary part of the Bible you’ll find. For they spoke to their
generation. They spoke to their contemporary scene. We often when we hear
the word “prophecy” or “prophets”, we normally and most usually think of
“foretelling the future”, but actually that’s only a part of their
ministry. You have the word “foretelling”, but then you have the word
“forth-telling”. Prophetic preaching is not necessarily predicting the
future, but it is crying out against the inconsistencies of the present
life of God’s people. That is prophetic preaching.
That’s exactly what Micah is doing. In chapter 1 Micah cries out against
the sins the people are committing against God. In the chapter 2 he’s
talking about the sins they are committing against each other. I think it
would be helpful to kind of get the outline of this chapter. In the first
five verses Micah is preaching his sermon and an unpleasant sermon it is.
In verse 6 he is interrupted. I mean, somebody out there just can’t stand
that kind of preaching and so they say, “Do not prophesy!” There is a play
on words here. Literally, they’re saying, “Do not preach!” And so they
preach…they started to preaching to Micah and telling Micah not to preach.
“Do not preach about these things…Disgrace will not overtake us…We don’t
like what you’re saying…We don’t like your message,” and so they interrupt
and they tell him to stop preaching and in verse 7, we have a rejoinder
from Micah. He comes back and he says, “Should it be said O house of
Jacob? Is the Spirit of the Lord restrained? Does He do such things? Do
not my words do good to them whose ways are upright?” And then in verse 8
he takes up the message again and closes it in verse 10 and verse 11 is
sort of a “by the way” that he adds at the end.
So, as Micah preaches, he’s interrupted and they say, “Don’t preach like
this” but he comes back and he says to them, “Shouldn’t these things not
be said O house of Jacob? You who are called the people of God…you’re not
living up to that name, and because of that judgment is going to come.”
Now, I would like to talk to you this morning about living up to that
name. Just as they had been given the name “the house of Jacob”, which
stood for the promises of God, for the faithfulness of God, for the people
of God, so you and I have been given the name “Christian”. We are
supposedly followers of “the Way” and disciples of Christ, but do we live
up to that name? If we fail to live up to that name, I believe God will
judge us and disgrace will overtake us. So, let me make four
suggestions…suggestions that Micah offers on living up to that name…
I think if you and I are going to live worthy of the name “Christian”, the
first thing is that we should be willing to face the truth, whatever that
truth is, however unpleasant or pleasant it may be…of all people, we,
God’s people…we need to be able to face the truth…to hear the truth and
receive the truth.
Now, as I said, there are various readings here and some translations read
like this, “Should it be said” or one says “Should not these things be
said?” In other words, I think he is referring to the things he’s been
saying in chapter 1 and 2 and these people cry out and say, “Don’t say
these things!” and he comes back and he says, “But shouldn’t these things
be said?…Should not these things be spoken of? They’re there. They’re real
and they need to be spoken.” And of course you can understand why they
interrupt this because in verse 1 you’ll see Micah is crying out against
their sins against one another…against the way they treat each other…their
unethical behavior…their selfish ambition…their desire to gain what they
want no matter who they hurt simply because they can get by with it:
| Woe to those who plan
iniquity, to those who plot evil on their beds! (Their sin is premeditated, you see. They sit around and lie around thinking about what they can do in the morning to gain advantage, to make more money, to get my way, to fulfill my own ambition. At morning’s light they carry it out because it is in their power to do it. |
Why do they do it? They do it because they can get by with it! This is
important to remember because we’re going to be coming back to this in a
moment…As long as they can get by with it, they will do it!
| They covet fields and
seize them, and houses, and take them. They defraud a man of his home, a fellowman of his inheritance. Therefore, the LORD says: “I am planning disaster against this people, from which you cannot save yourselves. You will no longer walk proudly, for it will be a time of calamity. In that day men will ridicule you; they will taunt you with this mournful song: ‘We are utterly ruined; my people’s possession is divided up. He takes it from me! He assigns our fields to traitors.’ |
| Therefore you will have
no one in the assembly of the LORD to divide the land by lot.” |
Finally, God says, “I’m going to take away
not just your possessions, but I’m going to take away your
privileges…there’ll be no one in the congregation to watch over you and to
divide your lot.” And at this moment somebody stands up and says, “Stop
that kind of preaching! That’s upsetting to us. Now, preacher, we’re all
happy here and we’re all contented and things are just going fine and we
don’t need you coming along and upsetting everybody. Look, you’re making
some of these people kind of nervous.”
Micah was definitely not a “seeker-friendly” preacher. And that’s what
these people wanted. As a matter of fact, verse 11, as I mentioned
earlier, is sort of a little “Columbo touch”. He ends the message in verse
10 and then as he walks away, he says, “Oh, by the way…
| If a liar and deceiver
comes and says, ‘I will prophesy for you plenty of wine and beer, he would be just the prophet for this people.’” |
He says, “You attack me for preaching what
I preach, but before I leave and I’m sure this will be the last time I’m
invited to this august convention, but before I leave, just let me say
that if somebody comes along…some liar and deceiver…some blowhard full of
hot air and tells you that you’re going to have everything you want…life’s
going to be pleasant and everything’s just hunky dory…boy that is about
the job description for the kind of preacher you want. Thank you very
much. Good-bye.”
And what he’s saying is, “Should not these things be said? Shouldn’t we of
all people be willing to face the truth even though at times that truth is
hard?” When I was a pastor, and this may be why I’m no longer a pastor, I
don’t know…but when I was a pastor we had two or three occasions in our
church when there was a problem and everybody was thinking about it. I
mean, it was on the mind of everybody. But, nobody was saying anything
about it, you know…act like it’s not there…act like it hasn’t happened…
And I can’t stand that. I can’t operate under those conditions, so on two
or three occasions, when that was true and that was happening, I just
stopped in my sermon and said, “Alright, folks, none of you are listening
to what I’m saying because your mind is somewhere else. We all know we’re
all thinking about. Alright, let’s talk about it. Let’s get this thing
settled.” I believe that’s the way it ought to be done. Like I say, you
know, maybe that’s why I’m no longer a pastor. But, some of these things
should be said! We, of all people, should not be afraid of the truth.
So, the first thing if I’m going to be worthy of that name is I need to be
willing to hear the truth, whatever that truth is. The second thing is
this…I need to understand that the Spirit of the Lord is not limited nor
restricted. He says, “Is the Spirit of the Lord restricted? Has the Spirit
of the Lord boundaries over which He cannot cross? Has that power that
resides in the Holy Spirit somehow been limited?” Now, I think primarily
in Micah’s case he’s talking about a couple of things here. I think he’s
saying the Spirit of God can’t be restricted in what He inspires the
prophet to preach. Micah is saying, “You’re telling me not to prophesy
like this, assuming that this is not what God would want, but I’m telling
you that you cannot restrict the Spirit of the Lord and He inspires me.”
And in another place in this book, he talks about the fact that he is
filled with the Spirit of the Lord and that’s what motivates him to bring
this message. But he’s also talking about the judgment that’s going to
come upon the people of God, because they insist that no disgrace can
overtake them. They insist that nothing can happen to them, and so he
says, “Is the Spirit of the Lord limited in what He can do? He can inspire
certain kinds of preaching. He can bring judgment. He can empower His
people to be what they ought to be. He can give them the strength to
endure whatever they need to endure. Is the Spirit of the Lord limited?”
You know, that’s a pretty good question for our day. I do think we try to
restrict the Spirit. I want to live where the Holy Spirit can do whatever
He wants to do and not to restrict Him and not to build boundaries around
what He can say and what He can do. We do have a tendency to do that, you
know. Theologically, experientially, we have a tendency to limit Him. And
I don’t know but what one of the great needs of the church today is for us
to give the Holy Spirit freedom in our lives to do what only He can do and
that is to empower us to live Christ-like lives.
How in the world can I live up to the name Christian? “Preacher, you’re
talking about being worthy of that name!” Is the Spirit of the Lord
limited? Is He constrained? Is He boxed in? Oh, one of the dire essentials
is this: that I understand in my Christian life that the Spirit of God
holds the same promise for us today that He did on the Day of Pentecost
when He first descended and indwelt the church. And all that Jesus would
do for us, were He physically present, the Holy Spirit is doing for us and
wants to do for us because He indwells us, and we must not limit the Holy
Spirit.
There’s third thing I think that is essential: You and I must learn to
discern between what God does and what God does not do. We need
discernment to determine what is of God and what is not of God. Notice the
prophet says, “Does He do such things?” Now, the implication is that
simply because God has allowed this intolerable situation to continue for
so long doesn’t mean He approves of it. Now, see they think that He does.
They say, “No disgrace will overtake us so don’t preach like this.”
Actually, the Hebrew word can be translated “don’t prattle on and on”. The
word means “to drip.” They call his preaching “just drivel.” “You’re just
prattling on…that’s all your preaching is…no substance to it…nothing of
importance to it…nothing serious about it…you’re just prattling on and
on…you’re just like a dripping faucet…driving everybody crazy…making no
sense…why the Lord is with us. Why look how we’ve been doing. The Lord
hasn’t done anything so far. We’ve increased and we’ve grown and God
hasn’t done anything. God approves of all of this. He must! Look how
successful we are.”
Now, you know, you take success and add a dash of self-righteousness to it
and that makes a powerful argument in any situation. I mean, after all if
you’re highly successful in what you’re doing…money’s rolling in…business
is going great…it has to be God’s blessings…it has to be God. And then
you’re a little bit self-righteous…you know the Lord…you’ve been to church
lo these many years and you have the various translations…you’ve been to
the seminars and that sort of thing, and you add a touch of
self-righteousness to that and then here’s all this great success and to
you that equals God’s approval.
One of the most glaring needs of the church today is the need of
discernment…to be able to discern that which is of God and that which is
not of God. Now, if we simply say if something is successful or if it’s
allowed to continue and go on and on and on then it must be God’s will,
then we are falling into the same folly that the people did in Micah’s
day. Micah is saying, “Just because God has allowed you to prosper in your
crooked ways…don’t make the mistake of saying that God approves of that.”
We need discernment!
I read a lot. I like to read. I read across the board. I read everything
practically…everything religious, and secular and in between. I don’t read
science fiction…I don’t care for it. I love history. I love philosophy. I
like good novels…I read just a little bit of everything. I’ve noticed
something, though…that when you go into a bookstore and you’re trying to
find a good novel…and you’re looking for a novel and here’s a title that
you’re unfamiliar with and you open it and on the back it says that this
book was “critically acclaimed.” Do you know what that means? That means
it didn’t sell much. It didn’t sell well at all! It was critically
acclaimed. I mean the critics liked it…they had high praise for it. You
know, this year’s Pulitzer Prize winner…I forget the author’s name…the
book is THE STONE DIARIES. Nobody had heard of that book until she won the
Pulitzer Prize and now it’s finally on the Best Seller List, and if it had
not won the Pulitzer Prize, it would still have been as good a book as it
is, but it would never have appeared anywhere and nobody would have ever
heard of it.
Now, simply because something hits the Best Seller List, folks, doesn’t
mean that it’s great literature. Let’s face it, some of the books on the
Best Seller List are not great literature. I mean, some of these guys are
not writing “Shakespeare” you understand. And they’re usually not
critically acclaimed, either. I’ve noticed through the years if something
is critically acclaimed it usually doesn’t sell well, but if it sells well
it usually is not critically acclaimed.
Now the point, you may be wondering, do I have one…yes, I do, if I haven’t
forgotten what it was. It’s been quite awhile since I started out on this.
The point is just because something hits the top of the Best Seller List
doesn’t mean it’s great literature and worth of your reading. And just
because something in the church or something in the life “hits the top of
the Best Seller List” doesn’t mean that the great critic of all, the Word
of God, approves of it. You and I, if we’re to live worthy of the name,
must be able to discern what is of God and what is not of God.
Then finally, if we are going to live worthy of the name, we need to
receive, respect and appreciate the Word of God. He says in the latter
part of verse 7, “Do not my words do good to him whose ways are upright?”
It’s a question asked of these protesters who say, “Stop giving us that
word,” but the answer is, “If you’re right, all these words will benefit
you…those who are upright never need to fear the truth…never need to hide
from the truth. God’s Word is always beneficial to those who are upright.”
Every time we read it and every time we hear it…it does us good. It brings
benefit into our lives if we are upright.
I remember when I was a teenager and I had just shortly before come to the
Lord and I had gotten serious about this business of living for Christ. We
had a very great church and every service was just “super charged”. The
pastor was a very dynamic pastor and you know, to tell you the truth, I
was afraid to go into those services unless I knew I was clean inside and
out. And I remember on many occasions standing on the front steps of that
church and before I’d ever go in…standing there confessing every sin I
could think and guessing at a few others, you know. And then when I went
in I didn’t worry about what he was going to preach. I got a blessing and
it was beneficial to me. But there have been those times when I’ve gone in
when things were not right in my heart and I sat there and I was tense and
I was resisting and I wasn’t enjoying it because I felt maybe the next
word he speaks he’s going to look at me and point out my sin. But those
who are upright do not need to fear the truth of God…the Word of God…it
only blesses them…it only does them good. And that’s why I ought to love
and study it and devour it and to live by it. How in the world can I
expect God to bless my life and how in the world can I expect God to
approve of my bearing His name is I do not love and live His own Word?
Now Micah has a conclusion to his sermon and so do I. It’s found in the
tenth verse. He says,
| “Get up, go away! For
this is not your resting place, because it is defiled, it is ruined, beyond all remedy.” |
I want to call your attention to those
first few words… “Get up, go away! For this is not your resting place…”
Now, primarily he’s referring here to the captivity that’s going to come
and he’s saying basically that this land that you thought was going to be
your “resting place” isn’t going to be that so pack your bags and get
ready to travel. Why? Because you’ve defiled it by the way you live…not
only your sins against God, but your sins against one another…your selfish
ambition…your petty interests…your haughty spirit. This is not you resting
place.
And I think that that gives us leave to say that those of us who are not
living up to the name and we’re not willing to face the truth and not
willing to repent of our sins, not willing to let the Spirit of God bring
about conviction and purification in our lives…this is not of place of
rest for us. You’ve come to the wrong place. If that’s your kind of
religion, this is not your kind of church. If your kind of religion is the
kind of religions that says, “Well, as long as I’m prospering then that
must be God’s blessings and everything must be okay and I don’t want to
hear any of this discouraging word and as long as I can get by with what
I’m doing and the way I want to do it and if I have to hurt somebody
else…if I have to trample over somebody else to get what I need…” If this
is your kind of religion, then this is not your religion place…you’re not
going to find any rest here. You’re not going to find any peace here.
That’s what he’s saying.
Living up to the name! It seems an impossible thing to do, but He would
never have given us that name in the first place had it not been possible
by His grace and by His power to live a life worthy of that holy name.
Would you bow your heads with me now for a moment as we pray together?
I wonder if God has spoken to you today from His Word. I wonder if the
Lord hasn’t appointed out some things in your life that really contradict
the name that you bear as Christian. There’s some misuse that makes it
impossible for you to live up to that name. Perhaps some of you do not
have that name because you’ve never been saved…you’ve never come to know
Christ as your Lord and Savior. Today, we want to give you that
opportunity to open your heart to Him. Jesus says that if you come to Him
He will in no wise cast you out. That’s the marvelous thing about our
Lord. And we’ll see that as we go through the prophet of Micah. It ends on
a note of hope and deliverance…that’s how this book will end. Sometimes it
seems as though God may be harsh in His judgment upon our lives, but
that’s never the final word with God…that’s never the last word. The last
word is always mercy and grace and deliverance and peace. So, perhaps
today, you need to partake of that. Maybe there are other needs in your
life, perhaps you believe that God is leading you to place your life and
letter into the fellowship of this church…whatever it is…let’s not
restrict the Holy Spirit this morning. Rather allow Him to do whatever He
wants to do.
| Father, we pray in Jesus’
name now that the Holy Spirit will not be restricted or limited during this time, but that we will give Him full control of our hearts and lives. May Your will be done. All we ask in Jesus’ name. Amen. |
© Ron Dunn, LifeStyle Ministries, 2005