Judges 17:1-13 · Micah’s Idols
Growing Up
Judges 17:1-13
Sermon
by Michael J. Anton
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NEW YEAR’S DAY

Last night the final day of the Lord came one step closer. In assorted ways and with a mixture of feelings we watched the hands on the clock make their last revolution and inch their way into the new year.

No one really looks different, and the scenery hasn’t changed between yesterday and today, but we have that feeling of climax, knowing yesterday is last year. In the mind’s eye, there is a great, long distance between today and all that happened last year. We feel a newness, a freshness about this day and the days immediately ahead.

Yet the change of years is really just part of a longer process in which years change often. On some date last year each of us became another year older and, God willing, the same will occur this year. New Year’s reminds us of that change; it reminds us that each of us is growing up.

Recent family gatherings probably produced those sounds so familiar to the ears of youth, "My, how you’ve grown!" Sometimes youth figure they can do without all that noise, but it’s a fact nonetheless - we are growing older. Today reminds us again.

Christians grow up, too. And today should also remind us to think about how we are growing and where we are headed.

There was a time in the history of the children of Israel that, as we are told in Judges 17, "In those days there was no king in Israel. Every man did what was right in his own eyes."

It was a kingless Israel. A nation without permanent leadership. And this was its characteristic: a self-willed people - every person doing what was right in his own eyes.

What’s so bad about that? This could be good. This means freedom. This is liberty. No king! Kings can be a world of trouble. They can enslave, they can misrule, they can exploit and oppress, they can corrupt and destroy a nation. How wonderful! No king. Every man doing what was right in his own eyes.

That’s what growing up means, isn’t it? Being independent, making all your own decisions, living by your own moral code, judging your actions by whether you feel it is right, not having any boss over you to give you directions - isn’t that growing up?

It is not at all surprising, but it is disturbing, to learn this happened to be one of the most corrupt and disordered times in the history of the Hebrew people. We don’t need sensationalistic pornography to stir our glands; all we need to do is read some of the records of the Israelites in this period. We won’t read anything like it except in our daily newspapers. Then we are struck by a terrible similarity.

When there was no king in Israel there was little or no regard for God. The love and law of God were flagrantly abused and ignored. Two words that sum it up nicely are idolatry and adultery, which are really very similar in meaning. In both cases man worships himself, and the worship of self is self-indulgence. It is to do as you please. It is the total absence of self-discipline.

We can say all we like about the goodness inside every man and man’s hidden capabilities to make something great and wonderful out of himself. But it has not yet been demonstrated, at any point in the history of human habitation on this planet, that man can get along without God, without help from God, without a humble acknowledgment of responsibility to God, and without a sincere seeking of the forgiveness and strength and hope only God can offer.

It is pretty evident on this New Year’s Day, despite its tingling freshness, that a fast-rising characteristic of our world, our country, our community, and many of our homes is just this: a wandering humankind has dethroned the King of kings, and every man is doing what is right in his own eyes.

Undoubtedly we grow weary of the many recitations of today’s ills and the tirades against the evils of our times. But this has always been the message of the prophets who were called to speak up for God and often suffered for it. And this message must be sounded until man has turned back to accept the King.

We have heard the apostles of permissiveness to the point they make us sick. We hear we have been duped by the puritanism and prudery of the Christian ethic, and instead it is the sacred right and privilege of every human to live without and beyond the old-fashioned restraints of the Christian faith, in the full and free expression of sex and personality.

Right on. We have been duped if we have allowed the puritan and the prude to be the perfect illustration of the Christian. The Christian ethic is not equated with Victorian notions. It is based on a free, victorious, responsible relationship with Jesus, the Christ who removes us from the vicious slavery to ourselves and our own fancies, a slavery that can only lead to disaster.

That’s what the prophets of permissiveness overlook. In their exuberance to proclaim their way as the true way of growing up to maturity, they are blind to the lessons of history, that spiritual and moral chaos are the only results when everyone does as he pleases.

A generation or two ago it was popular to trace the degenerative influences in our country to some alien philosophy. We can always blame our ills on the Communists - they’re always a perfect scapegoat. We hear that much of our racial and campus disorders have been Communist-inspired. Perhaps there have been some rabble-rousers, but why is it so hard to admit that we could be guilty since we’re cut from the same mold as Adam?

The Communists didn’t teach white America how to discriminate against the hired man and the black man and their fellow white man. That was happening long before the Bolshevik Revolution and Chairman Mao came along. The communists didn’t teach us how to make the rich man richer and the poor man poorer. That’s the trademark of American capitalism. Nor did the communists teach us how to exploit the natural resources given us by God. These things have happened tragically because we have ignored the King and been content to do as we please.

Sounds pretty pessimistic for the new day of a new year. But our country has a lot of growing up to do in areas other than technology and space travel and defense budgets and the gross national product. And Christians have some growing up to do in this country.

Too often instead of raising the prophet’s voice against the intruding ills we have been part and parcel, if only by our silence, of the pollution of mind and body.

These words by poet Carl Sandburg offer a vision of hope for America: "I see America, not in the setting sun of a black night of despair ahead of us. I see America in the crimson light of a rising sun fresh from the burning, creative hand of God. I see great days ahead, great days possible to men and women of will and vision."

"Where there is no vision," the Scripture says, "the people perish." But the vision must be the vision of God. It must be the one Jesus held up before all the world when He said, "I, when I am lifted up, will draw all men to myself."

Growing up certainly means gaining a new sense of independence and individual judgment. But above all else, to grow up straight and tall into maturity, we need the vision of love that God has for us in Jesus. Hour by hour we need what God holds out to us in the Christ, saving, forgiveness, hope and strength. It’s there, all in the One whose birth we have just recelebrated, the One who was lifted up to draw all of us to himself.

When he is the King, we deny ourselves and follow him. We forget about doing just as we please, because doing what he pleases is so much better. "Your will, not mine, O Lord." Then it is well with us and will be well with us in every new year. Happy New Year! Amen.

CSS Publishing Co., Inc., Snoring Through Sermons, by Michael J. Anton