"So Micah
consecrated the Levite, and the young man became his priest, and lived in the
house of Micah. 13 Then Micah said,
"Now I know that the LORD will be
good to me, since I have a Levite as priest!"
Judges 17:12-13
The season of the judges in Israel is well-described as a time when everyone did what was right in their own eyes. Without a godly king to govern people in the ways of God, the children of Israel plunged into idolatry. Micah was a Hebrew whose house was full of idols, and at one stage even consecrated one of his own sons to be his priest. When a wandering Levite came looking for a place, Micah was pleased to offer him the position in his home. He was convinced God would certainly be good to him since he installed a "real" Levite as priest. Micah hoped to score points with God when his shrines and idolatrous devotion were completely abominable according to God's word.
The mentality of Micah is a surprisingly common perspective today. People work to please God motivated by the hope of receiving blessing for themselves or to avoid divine retribution. Years ago I found a man in front of my house picking through flowers to find three specimens of the preferred shape and colour to offer to his deity, Brahma. Why? So Brahma would do him good. I recall the moment well when a person selling their house buried a statue of St. Joseph in the yard, believing it would help the sale be profitable and smooth. Like Micah's idols which were blind, deaf, dumb and lifeless, that statue would have been better suited as a paperweight, doorstop or a decoration than to place any hope of blessing from it.
There are people who do not believe in God who are willing to receive good from Him should He exist, yet the disciple of Jesus has a different view of God from Micah altogether. We do not try to please God so He will be good to us, but seek to please Him because He is good. The motive to obey God of those born again by faith in Jesus Christ begins with who God is and our relationship to Him as His beloved children. Our actions to do good are in light of and in response to what God has already done in demonstrating His love for us. It is the love of Christ that compels us to reciprocate with thanksgiving and gratitude for choosing us, suffering for us and adopting us as His own. It is never in doubt God will do us good because He is good.
The relationship of a child of God to our Father in heaven is far greater than seeking good from Him but viewing Him as the greatest good who was, is and will ever be. John 1:16 says of Jesus, "And of His
fullness we have all received, and grace for grace." God graciously created us and gave us life, and through Jesus Christ we have been born again by faith and received eternal life. God's love for us is not based upon our good performance: it springs from His goodness and grace. Those who do things in the hope God will do them good do not understand who God is as revealed in His word. God is good and of His fullness we have received, and grace for grace.
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