Today’s Scripture Reading (July 7,
2013): 2 Kings 25
The story is
told of the early days of Abraham Lincoln’s first term as President. In an
unusual picture of humility, a common sight in Springfield was of the President
elect making his daily trip to the local post office to pick up his mail.
Finally Lincoln arrived at the conclusion that he was in need of help – and
with that determination in mind, early in 1861, he hired a young immigrant by
the name of John Nicolay to be his private secretary – an office that Nicolay
would hold until Lincoln’s assassination four years later in 1865.
Nicolay was
alarmed as he started to read the letters that the president was receiving,
many of the letters were threats against the newly elected President. Lincoln
seemed to be unperturbed. Lincoln was unable to imagine how it could be that
political hatred could ever be transformed into an attack that would cause
physical harm. Yet, on the evening of his first inauguration, the president
elect was sneaking into Washington, while citizens who had planned the first
assassination attempt on his life waited for him in Baltimore.
The strategy
of killing the leaders of the opposition is an ancient one. And as the saga of
the Kingdom of
Judah ends, that is exactly what happens. In all fairness to
Babylon, Nebuchadnezzar had tried other avenues – but the nation had repeatedly
rebelled against his rule. And so as he closes this chapter, he expels the
people and kills the leaders, both political and religious, of the nation.
There is an
almost eerie lack of emotion as the writer of 2 Kings announces the demise of
the nation. A nation that had started with acts of dependence on God and the faith
of the people, first with the crossing of the Jordan at its flood stage when
the water of the Jordan was the deepest and the swiftest, and then with the
miraculous fall of the walled city of Jericho, over eight hundred years later
ends with consecutive acts of idolatry, a dependence on other gods, and
rebellion. The story of the nation ends. It had started as the story of a
people given the honor of reaching the world and making it a better place. It
ends as the people are scattered and driven from the land that God had promised
to them – all because of their failure to fulfill that very responsibility.
Tomorrow’s Scripture Reading: Psalm 1
& 2
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