Ahab went home disturbed and angry. (1 Kings 21:4)
Limits are a part of life. Games work only if everyone
follows the rules. Chaos reigns in a society without laws. But how do
you view limits in your life? It’s tempting to consider them as
inconvenient impositions—as limits to our freedom that keep us from
doing what we want. But today’s reading shows what can happen if there
were no limits.
Ahab, king of Israel, wanted a vineyard that one
of his subjects, Naboth, owned. But the Law of Moses decreed that God
had given the land to the people of Israel, and it was not to be sold
out of the family. This was so that no family could be shut out of the
covenant by losing their ancestral inheritance. This was, after all, the
land that God had promised to Abraham and his descendants forever. It
was a very physical sign of their covenant with him, proof positive that
they were his chosen, beloved people. But Ahab didn’t see it that way.
All he could see was the convenience of having a vineyard located right
next to his vegetable garden.
Since Naboth wasn’t free to sell the
land, Ahab went away in a sulk. Queen Jezebel reminded Ahab that he was
king; he could do whatever he wanted. Then, to prove her point, she
took matters into her own hands and had Naboth murdered.
Two
points stand out in today’s reading: First, how easy it can be to
respond to limits the same way Ahab and Jezebel did! If we can’t get
what we want, we sulk. If we can somehow disregard the limits, we go for
it. Second, how challenging it can be to respond as Naboth did! He
could have made a lot of money out of Ahab’s offer. He might have even
suspected that his refusal to sell would have angered the queen. But he
knew what God had commanded, and he stayed true.
Naboth respected
the limits God placed on his people, and it cost him his life. We will
probably not face martyrdom for our faith, but every day brings us the
opportunity to “die” to ourselves so that Christ can live in us. Let’s
trust him. Let’s embrace his limits as the life-giving protections that
they are!
“Lord, I trust you. Draw me closer to you through the limits in my life.”
~from wau.org
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