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Friday, October 18, 2013

Brown's Daily Word 10-18-13

    The Lord blessed us with a wonderful Wednesday Evening Supper, Fellowship, and Bible Study.  The fellowship was sweet and the study was provoking and challenging.  Last Sunday I preached on the theme, "We are not in Kansas anymore".  Symbolically speaking we live in Babylon, a foreign place which is not our true home.

    Most of you must know that I love to travel.  The Book of Daniel is a divine travel guide for pilgrims who are passing through Babylon.  Daniel is a great theological book, whose primary subject is not Daniel, nor is it Nebuchadnezzar the king. The proper subject of the Book of Daniel is God.  The people of God had been taken captive and were in exile in Babylon.  It was the place of exile, the place of loneliness, and the place of testing

    In the Bible, Babylon is not only that place where Nimrod sought to build a tower to reach to heaven; it is not only the place where God dispersed mankind by dividing them into different languages; it is not only the capitol of the Chaldean Empire in ancient Mesopotamia (modern day Iraq); nor is Babylon only a real place for Daniel.  In the Bible, Babylon is a metaphor for every group and every condition that threatens faith in the hearts of God's people.  For this reason Peter would speak of writing from Babylon in 1 Peter 5:13, though presumably he was really writing from Rome.  In Revelation, the Lord speaks of the final enemies of Christ as Babylon.  The place where our faith is under attack, the place of antagonism for the gospel, the place to which we are led that seems alien to our faith—that is Babylon.

    The good news of the Book of Daniel is that God is also in Babylon.  God is with us in the hard places of life.  God is in the prison with us.  God is in the antagonistic classroom with us.  God is in the wicked workplace.  He is in the unbelieving home. Furthermore, in Daniel God doesn't minimize the pain of Babylon; He reveals it as it truly is.

    Discipleship is not always as clean as we would like it to be, but if our goal is to grow in the grace and knowledge of Christ, and if God is in control, then we can trust Him that He knows what He is doing.  We can believe that even when we have been encircled by Babylonians, God is there.  If we are His, then we can trust Him. We can know that He intends for us to follow Him through it all.

    We are called and sent to be be the living testimonies for God, whatever our situation or station.  In the very hard places of life where we are led, the mysterious places where we don't understand why the innocent suffer or why we suffer, small decisions are made to trust Christ regardless.  Thus, it is in those places that we become living testimonies for others.  Babylon, an evil place, a place of paganism, became for one tried and true young man a place where other disciples were made.  Daniel was a great evangelist although he was in a foreign land.  Daniel was a great theologian who taught others about God although he was a slave.  Daniel was a leader while he was just a lad.  In Babylon Daniel stirred up the faith of his friends who would later need strong faith themselves.  Ultimately Daniel witnessed to a pagan king.

    This reminds me of Paul who, as he was in prison in Rome, wrote to the Philippians to encourage them about his situation: "I want you to know, brothers, that what has happened to me has really served to advance the gospel, so that it has become known throughout the whole imperial guard and to all the rest that my imprisonment is for Christ" (Philippians 1:12-13).

    Through faith in Christ, the hard places of life become sacred places.

 In Christ,

  Brown

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