When God appeared to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and later revealed Himself to the Hebrews on Sinai, God made a covenant with them. He made promises to make them great and prosperous, to provide for their needs, protect them from enemies and establish them in their own land as an inheritance. He chose them, not because Abraham or the Jewish people were the mightiest people, but because He is a gracious, merciful and awesome God who chose them. In the Law of Moses God gave His people statutes to keep and sins to avoid, and He did all this for their good and to enable privileged fellowship with Himself. God gave His people a covenant and precious promises He would be faithful to keep, and they were beneficiaries of His goodness and generosity.
Shishak, on the other hand, was all about taking anything he wanted from the Jewish people. He only sought to enrich himself from their labours. He was not interested in helping or giving them anything. There was absolutely no love, kindness or relationship to be enjoyed. The children of Israel found themselves impoverished and lacking with no promise of prosperity or protection. They were slaves to a cruel master who did not care about them, their children or future. Compared to God Shishak had no power at all, yet the power he had was never inclined to be used for their good. There was no satisfaction of a job well done but a fear of reprisal if Shishak was ever displeased--and it is doubtful he was ever pleased with them.
The children of Israel experienced the difference between serving to be blessed and serving because they were blessed. They could never earn the favour or approval of Shishak, for this was never an option on the table. They worked to placate an adversarial ruler, avoid punishment and grimly hang onto survival. The service of God was completely different, for the LORD loved His people as the apple of His eye. He cared for them like a good shepherd who led his flock, provided for their needs and protected them from harm. Shishak would suddenly come with demands and leave, but the LORD dwelt among His people as their God who fought their battles, was faithful to bless and gave them peace. The children of Israel had no idea how good life was under God, so God gave partial deliverance so they could compare serving God or Shishak.
To people weary and burdened by the cares of life under Roman occupation and the demands of lifeless religion, Jesus called in Matthew 11:29-30: "Take My yoke upon you and learn from Me,
for I am gentle and lowly in heart, and you will find rest for your
souls. 30 For My yoke is easy and My burden is light." How blessed we are to serve alongside Jesus Christ because of His humility, gentleness and generosity. He truly loves us like no one else would or could.
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