God’s Plea – On Christ’s Behalf Be
Reconciled to God
The word
reconciliation is a very emotionally laden word. There are millions upon millions of people in
this world of billions who have sorrow in their hearts that words cannot
express. It is a sadness that goes with
them day by day and night by night, month by month and year by year, and how can
they tell anyone about it? What can they
say? They cannot verbalize the feelings
even to themselves let alone to others.
It is a sadness, a depression, an emptiness, a
sorrow that words cannot describe.
Why such
sorrow, such longful mourning, such sense of despair? Because there is alienation
within the family. Families are
torn apart because one member or another became alienated and will no longer
have anything to do with the rest of the family or at
least with the one with whom they are alienated. The alienated one becomes angry and lives in
bitterness and hate, resentful.
Sometimes both parties involved come to feel that way but often it is a
one party matter. The individual feels
that he/she was done wrong and mistreated whether true or not; that is how they
see it.
I knew a
family once, and there are many such families, whose
only child, a son, ran away from home while alienated as a teenager and that
was the last they ever saw him or heard from him. The mother died without ever seeing her son
again or knowing what became of him. I
cannot imagine the pain that mother and dad dealt with all of their life. No doubt that mother would have rejoiced in tears
to have seen her son at her bedside, just one time, as she passed from this
world into the next. However, that was
not to be.
When I came
to know the mother and dad they were devote church members. I am sure faith in God is all that allowed
them to live all those many years from middle age on into old age. The one who suffers the least in these family
breakups is the alienated. They feel
justified, maybe a sense of getting even, I will show you, and so in their
desire to do this they emotionally kill the other party and seemingly find some
fulfillment in doing so. The Bible would
call this malice or hatred and condemn it but the alienated feels justified.
Two great
examples in the Bible of men whose sons became alienated were David with his
son Absalom and in the New Testament the case of the prodigal son. David suffered immensely over Absalom. It would take up too much space to retell the
story of David’s relationship with Absalom so let me speak here only of David’s
love for Absalom even after Absalom rebelled and had sought to overthrow David
as King and possibly take his father’s life.
Prior to
David’s army going into battle against the army of Absalom David commanded Joab, the commander of his own army, to “Deal gently for my
sake with the young man Absalom.” (2 Sam 18:5 NKJV) When word was sent back to David as to how
the battle had gone the first thing David wanted to know was, “Is the young man
Absalom safe?” (2 Sam. 18:29 NKJV) When
he was told that was not the case, that Absalom was dead, the Bible gives us
some of the most heart wrenching words ever uttered by a father.
“O
my son Absalom—my son, my son Absalom—if only I had died in your place!
O Absalom my son, my son!” (2 Sam. 18:33 NKJV) The Bible says David, “was deeply moved, and went
up to the chamber over the gate, and wept.” (2 Sam. 18:33 NKJV) You always love your child no matter how
deeply they grow to despise you. Oh,
what it would have meant to David if there could have been reconciliation before
it came to this but reconciliation requires two willing parties. One alone is not enough.
The New
Testament example of alienation did not end in tragedy as was the case with
David and Absalom but rather in great joy and happiness. The New Testament example of the prodigal son
is too well known to repeat here other than to mention the father’s
overwhelming joy when he saw his son coming down the road home. “When he was still a great way off, his
father saw him and had compassion, and ran and fell on his neck and kissed
him.” (Luke 15:20 NKJV)
Thus we
have two examples of alienation with two totally opposite endings. One wonders why people refuse to be
reconciled when reconciliation is the road to peace, joy, and happiness. Whatever the cause it begins and ends with
perverseness of heart.
The account
of the prodigal son and his father is really about you and me and God. We are God’s creatures, his people, “It is he
who has made us, and not we ourselves; we are his people and the sheep of his
pasture.” (Psalm 100:3 NKJV) “All we
like sheep have gone astray; we have turned, every one, to his
own way.” (Isa. 53:6 NKJV)
We are or
have been, depending on where we are at now in our standing with God, like the
prodigal son. We left God when we chose
sin over him. “There is none righteous,
no not one.” (Rom. 3:10 NKJV) “All have
sinned and fall short of the glory of God.” (Rom. 3:23 NKJV)
The gospel
message is God’s call for the prodigal to come home. It is the message of the father seeking the
son or daughter who has gone astray who waits patiently until their return if
only they are willing to be reconciled.
He is longsuffering and forbearing not willing that any should perish (2
Peter 3:9). He “desires all men to be
saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth.” (1 Tim. 2:4 NKJV)
The gospel
is as if God was standing and calling to us to come for as Paul said to the
Thessalonians, “He called you by our gospel.” (2 Thess. 2:14 NKJV) It is “the word of reconciliation.” (2 Cor.
5:19 NKJV) “And the Spirit and the bride
say, ‘Come!’ And let him who hears say,
‘Come!’ And let him who thirsts
come. Whoever desires,
let him take the water of life freely.” (Rev. 22:17 NKJV)
It is an
invitation but it is more than that. It
is a plea, “as though God were pleading through us: we implore you on Christ’s behalf, be
reconciled to God.” (2 Cor. 5:20 NKJV)
Reconciliation is a choice, a decision to be made. The son I told you about earlier whose father
and mother I knew made a choice, a choice to not be reconciled. It was a bad choice. It is a horrible choice, yes even a tragedy, any
time a person makes the decision that he will not be reconciled with those
against whom he is alienated. All are
losers, none winners.
We ought to
be reconciled to our fellowman if alienated.
We are to forgive one another that we might be forgiven. “For if you forgive men their trespasses,
your heavenly Father will also forgive you.” (Matt. 6:14 NKJV) We ought to grow tired of fussing and
fighting, of anger, and hatred, and bitterness.
You know if
we were to ask the question of why heaven is going to be such a grand and
joyous place we would have to talk not only about what will be there but also
about what will not be there – all of these evil things that burden the heart
and bring tears and sorrow. Heaven is a
place of love. It is not a place of
alienation, anger, and bitterness.
The Bible
says when Jesus drew near the city of Jerusalem, as he drew near to it for the
last time (from afar), that “he wept.” (Luke 19:41
NKJV) What do you think brought him to
tears? In Matthew we find his feelings
expressed when he says, “O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, the one who kills the prophets
and stones those who are sent to her!
How often I wanted to gather your children together, as a hen gathers
her chicks under her wings, but you were not willing!” (Matt. 23:37 NKJV) This was God crying for his lost alienated
children who would not come home.
God’s plea
is that we be reconciled to him. He is
the prodigal son’s father, figuratively speaking, looking down the road to see
if we will come home. Are you going to
tell him you are not willing? If so is
that where you are going to find happiness and contentment – in
alienation? We ought to come home to God with tears of rejoicing that the
alienation is over and we are home at last, that wonderful word and wonderful
place - home. Home is where you belong, where I belong, where we all belong,
home with God.