King Hezekiah was a good man, but a man who made a terrible error in judgment. When the king of Babylon sent messengers to congratulate Hezekiah on his recovery from a near-death illness, Hezekiah treated them like honored guests. He welcomed them into his house and showed them all the treasures which had been accumulated over the centuries by the kings of Judah (2 Kings 20:13).
Hearing of this, the prophet Isaiah came to Hezekiah with this mind penetrating question: "What
have they seen in your house?" (2 Kings 20:15).
Hezekiah was warned that the day would come when the Babylonians' lust for the treasure they had seen, would bring them back. Judah would be overthrown, and all the king's treasures would be carried away into Babylon. Hezekiah's own children and grandchildren would become captives in chains (2 Kings 20:16-18; cf. 2 Chronicles 33:11). By a prideful display of his possessions, Hezekiah had down the seeds which would eventually bring down his house.
The question, "What have they seen in your house?" is one that many father might ponder today. Like Hezekiah, they are allowing things to be seen which will eventually lead to eternal tragedy, and the treasures they are in danger of losing are spiritual ones of eternal value.
Let us consider the following three thoughts:
1) The friends and neighbors we invite into our homes, know what we deem valuable by what we have on display. It is vital that they see evidence of Christ's influence. Christian principles must be given priority in our home. The apostle Peter encourages to have this mindset (1 Peter 2:11-12 ESV).
2) Young children in our homes see much and forget little. The things they witness in our homes may mark them for all eternity. What do they see? Do they see ungodly magazines or videos? Do they see alcohol or drug abuse? Do they see violence taking place? We need to remember that all too soon, our children will leave home to make their way in the world. They will either be spiritually equipped to successfully face life and its multitude of problems, or be victimized, vulnerable to the temptations that will assail them.
3) Every day of our life is lived in the presence of God (Psalm 139:7-12). We may hide what goes on in our house from the eyes of our friends, neighbors, and to some extent, from our children. But we cannot hide them from our omniscient God (Hebrews 4:12-13).
Beloved, what about God, our friends, our neighbors, and our children? "What have they seen in our house?" The answer we give on Judgment Day, will matter for all eternity (Revelation 20:11-15).
—Mike Riley, Gospel Snippets
Hearing of this, the prophet Isaiah came to Hezekiah with this mind penetrating question: "What
Hezekiah was warned that the day would come when the Babylonians' lust for the treasure they had seen, would bring them back. Judah would be overthrown, and all the king's treasures would be carried away into Babylon. Hezekiah's own children and grandchildren would become captives in chains (2 Kings 20:16-18; cf. 2 Chronicles 33:11). By a prideful display of his possessions, Hezekiah had down the seeds which would eventually bring down his house.
The question, "What have they seen in your house?" is one that many father might ponder today. Like Hezekiah, they are allowing things to be seen which will eventually lead to eternal tragedy, and the treasures they are in danger of losing are spiritual ones of eternal value.Let us consider the following three thoughts:
1) The friends and neighbors we invite into our homes, know what we deem valuable by what we have on display. It is vital that they see evidence of Christ's influence. Christian principles must be given priority in our home. The apostle Peter encourages to have this mindset (1 Peter 2:11-12 ESV).
2) Young children in our homes see much and forget little. The things they witness in our homes may mark them for all eternity. What do they see? Do they see ungodly magazines or videos? Do they see alcohol or drug abuse? Do they see violence taking place? We need to remember that all too soon, our children will leave home to make their way in the world. They will either be spiritually equipped to successfully face life and its multitude of problems, or be victimized, vulnerable to the temptations that will assail them.
3) Every day of our life is lived in the presence of God (Psalm 139:7-12). We may hide what goes on in our house from the eyes of our friends, neighbors, and to some extent, from our children. But we cannot hide them from our omniscient God (Hebrews 4:12-13).
Beloved, what about God, our friends, our neighbors, and our children? "What have they seen in our house?" The answer we give on Judgment Day, will matter for all eternity (Revelation 20:11-15).
—Mike Riley, Gospel Snippets
Comments
Post a Comment