Sermon text is found in Deuteronomy
23, verses 1 to 8. And you know, I am going to read
actually through verse 14, even though the sermon is just found
in the first eight verses. So Deuteronomy 23, we'll actually
read through the end of these verses in 14 because This is
the conclusion of Moses' sermon, the section of his sermon in
Deuteronomy on the seventh word. And these two sections are bound
together. I only plan on preaching on the first verses one to eight,
but the last few verses have relevance. So let's read those
two. OK, let's attend to God's word and hopefully you have the
handout or you can just listen. Deuteronomy 23, one to eight.
He who is emasculated by crushing or mutilation shall not enter
the assembly of the Lord. One of illegitimate birth shall
not enter the assembly of the Lord, even to the 10th generation. None of his descendants shall
enter the assembly of the Lord. An Ammonite or Moabite shall
not enter the assembly of the Lord, even to the 10th generation. None of his descendants shall
enter the assembly of the Lord forever. because they did not
meet you with bread and water on the road when you came out
of Egypt, and because they hired against you Balaam, the son of
Beor, from Pethor of Mesopotamia to curse you. Nevertheless, the
Lord your God would not listen to Balaam, but the Lord your
God turned the curse into a blessing for you because the Lord your
God loves you. You shall not seek their peace
nor their prosperity all your days forever. You shall not abhor
an Edomite, for he is your brother. You shall not abhor an Egyptian,
because you are an alien in his land. The children of the third
generation born to them may enter the assembly of the Lord. When you are encamped against
your enemies, then you shall keep yourself from every evil
thing. If any man among you becomes
unclean because of a nocturnal emission, then he shall go outside
the camp. He shall not come inside the
camp. But when evening comes, he shall bathe himself in water.
And as the sun sets, he may come inside the camp. You shall have
a place outside the camp and you shall go out to it and you
shall have a trowel with your tools. And when you sit down
outside, you shall dig a hole with it and turn back and cover
up your excrement. Because the Lord your God walks
in the midst of your camp to deliver you and to give up your
enemies before you. Therefore, your camp must be
holy so that he may not see anything indecent among you and turn away
from you. Let's pray. Lord God, we thank
you for your word. Help us to understand it by your
Holy Spirit. Help us to understand its application
to our lives and to as a reflection of who you are and help us to
see our identity in this text. In Jesus name we ask. Amen. Please be seated. OK, we got
all the difficult verses out of the way in one reading. I
was joking with some folks this morning, I hope I don't die today
because preaching a sermon on crushed testicles on Super Bowl
Sunday will be the last thing you remember of me. That'll be
my legacy. You know, testosterone and all that
stuff. Well. We're in the midst of going through
a thorough revision of RCC's constitution, including the church
covenant statement, and we know we're not sure the wording, how
we're going to replace it yet, but we know we're going to replace
some of the sections of the covenant that talk about the application
of God's law to us and text like like today are good ones to help
us understand why we want to do that. Right now, I think the
language is something like any Old Testament standing law is
still abiding on us, unless it's been changed or modified in the
New Testament. And this is problematic. What's a standing law? Yet that
kind of language assumes that the scriptures, even in the portions
we're reading, for instance, in Deuteronomy, are some sort
of law statute book, but they're really not. You know, this has
to do with the whole view of how the Bible is presented to
us. You know, how do we think about texts like this? Clearly
we can't just cut and paste out of them. And so people try to
cope with categories. Well, there's moral laws, there's
judicial laws, ceremonial laws. What do we have here? Is it moral,
judicial, ceremonial? Well, like so many laws, there
seems to be aspects of all three of those things woven together.
The ceremonial aspect is because certain animals, sacrificial
animals, also could not, if they had the same physical abnormalities
described in the first verse, were inappropriate for sacrifice. So it seems like there's some
relationship here. between sacrificing animals specifically
and then these exclusions from the assembly of the Lord to understand
how to apply this first, though, we then we have to understand
what it means. And commentators are not sure about some of the
most significant terms, as we'll talk about in a couple of minutes. So, you know, God could have
written a statute book and he could have written it in terms
with a dictionary that explained all the terms. He just decided
not to do that. Now, he's most wise. He's most
sovereign, most powerful. And we have to say this is the
perfect revelation of what God wants us to know about a lot
of things about all of life. Right. So we don't complain about
these texts. So many pastors, because of these
difficult things we just read. Why would you preach to Deuteronomy
to begin with? What's that all about? Well, you know, because
it's God's inspired word and it's important for us. There
was a recent thread on the BH list about thinking Hebraically,
and I wanted to mention just a few things that were shared
by one of the fellows on the list, Michael Jones. He said
to think as a Hebrew and he listed some things. I won't read all
of them, I'll read a couple of them. One, the Hebrew Bible is full
of poetry and singing, not just logical points written in engineering
lingo. There are some engineering lingo
stuff going on, but basically the scriptures are written poetically,
particularly the Hebrew Old Testament. So what we have here is not a
blueprint diagram written in engineering lingo with all kinds
of numbered points. What we have here is a portion
of the Song of the Old Testament, and it's poetic, and we have
to understand that. Poetry doesn't mean light, by the way, in Winsome.
This is dark poetry. It's a strong, powerful poetry,
right? But it's poetic. The language is. And we'll look
at that in just a minute. Secondly, it follows a typological
theme in order to understand it. So there's certain typological
things going on here that you have to understand as well. He also says that it's Trinitarian
and so constantly allows for the one in the many for things
to be seen from different perspectives. So there are particular applications,
perspectives on these texts, and this one is one of those
things, and it's written. It's this kind of song that you
don't just hear it once and you got it. It's the sort of song.
Now, some songs are like that. Next week, we'll talk about Psalm
45 and the enthrallment of the king with the beauty of the bride.
We can sort of get that right away, what it means. This text,
we're not sure what it means. And so you have to think about
it. You've got to listen to it a number of times. You've got
to keep hitting the you've got to play the button, the repeat
button on your stereo there. Make the thing keep playing over
and over again. Meditate on it. Try to understand the poetry
of it. It's difficult. It's got various perspectives
that are going on. It also, this man said, follows
the theme of dominion, holy war and redemption instead of just
redemption. That's so important. Not just redemption, but the
Hebrew Bible follows the idea of a dominion and holy war. I
read the last few verses because this is a unit, right? This is
the seventh word. This is about adultery. And at
the conclusion of that portion of the sermon, Moses says, if
God sees these indecent things, he's going to turn away from
you, violate the seventh word and all its broad implications.
And God won't be with us. And where will he be with us
in the war camp? We're supposed to see ourselves in the war camp,
right? So the Christian Church is not, you know, just a hospital,
it is that. But the gathering on Sunday,
the assembly of the Lord today, is connected textually here in
what we just read to the war camp. And that's important. And that, you know, a lot of
theology has left that out. But if you continue to read a
lot of the Old Testament, the Hebrew Bible, you recognize this
dominion and this kind of warfare mentality is big on it. And then
you understand how a lot of things we read in the New Testament
have to be seen differently. They've got to be seen in the
same context of that. It's not two words. It's one word. So
the idea of warfare. You know, so this whole section
here began with a reference to men who have been emasculated. And then it talks about the war
camp and success in the war camp. Now, you know, right there, we
could stop without doing any exegesis of the text, looking
at any of the structures and talk for a long time about effeminacy
in the in the American church in the 21st century. Couldn't
we? How many pastors stand up and
they appear to be That's my perception. That's
my observation. It's an important text that these
pastors never preach about. But it's important for the congregation
to recognize that our identity as a people in the assembly of
the Lord has to do with going out and into battle in the week. And it identifies us all, men
and women, as strong, courageous, powerful warriors. Now we've
done just the opposite and we've turned men into a supposed effeminate
imagery, but it really isn't effeminate either because in
the Bible, the great women of the Bible are strong women doing
all kinds of cool things and powerful things. So somehow we've
ended up with the worst of all worlds here in trying to avoid
the macho man thing that we'll see on display this afternoon.
In trying to avoid that, we've turned up with a vision of feminism
that's just wacky. That really has nothing to do
with what the Bible says. The Bible says we all can see
the application of this to ourselves. We all should have a strong,
you know, virile assessment of who we are as part of the body
of Christ. We're all head crushers. And when we come to worship,
we should sing like that. We should sing songs that reinforce
that in us. We should be manly in terms of
what we do in worship as a corporation, as a congregation, rather. OK.
So we can talk about those things, and it's so important to remember
when we force ourselves to do the Lectio Continua, to preach
through a text of scripture, Deuteronomy, the ten words, we're
going to come across texts that are difficult. We wouldn't choose
them ever. I'd never choose twenty three one to preach on, but there
it is. And it's for our well-being. We take it thankfully from God
and it transforms us. It gives us an identity of who
we are. We're not some emasculated church
that's always giving way, and a yes, a yes, a yes. No. We're
the Dominion Church of Jesus Christ. So that's a theme here,
and that's a theme in this text. Another thing that Mr. Jones
said is he said it attaches great significance to numbers and the
structure of passages. I know some of you don't like
me talking about this. Well, in order to understand
what's here, you have to sort of look at it. Is there a handout
today? OK, if you look at that handout,
you have these repetitions of terms, the Assembly of the Lord,
the Assembly of the Lord, the Assembly of the Lord. That's
important. And then right in the middle of the of a section
that has two groups, either side, right? The Ammonites, the Moabites,
and then you got the Edomites and the Egyptians. Right in the
middle of that is a threefold repetition of the word, your
God. And it's the only place in the
text that it is. That's significant. This is a poem. This is a powerful
poem, but it's a poem nonetheless, and to understand it properly,
to understand the Hebrew Bible, you don't look at it just linearly,
one little thing after another. You know, it's not a logical
presentation in that sense. It is more like poetic imagery
that you have to meditate on. And what a glory to meditate
on these things. It's delightful. So this is why
I do it. It's not just a hobby of mine.
It's because I think the Bible is written that way. And in order
to understand it, as he says, you have to pay attention to
structure. It's rich in storytelling. This is sort of story like, right?
But it's storytelling to a purpose. Postmodern churches, missional
churches, they're into big storytelling things now. But at the end of
the day, after all the cool stories are over, it's still always about
redemption and never about dominion and conquest. That's odd. Because
the stories aren't really like that. So story, I'm glad, praise
God, that stories are getting emphasis again in the Church
of Jesus Christ. But let's keep them in the right context. Let's
not just take a feminine, dispensational, Arminian theology and layer onto
it storytelling to make it cool. No, if we look at the stories
of the Bible and the stories that are told and reminded of
in this text, right? We look at the story of the Ammonites
and Moabites and what happened. If we know that story, and if
we know the story of the Edomites and the Egyptians, then we're
going to understand this text better. We're going to understand
the text. And finally, he said it never
goes backwards. It acknowledges that history
moves forward. Here it is right in our texts.
You end up the seventh word with war camp imagery. You're out
there. You're on the offensive, OK?
That's the whole point of, you know, keeping away from adulterating
your life, your community, your nation, your ruling officers,
as we'll see today. You know, if you keep from adulterating
that, then you move forward in history and you're that successful,
powerful group of people that will change the world. And if
God sees indecency, adulteration, we can say. And we've talked
about a lot of implications of that over the last four or five
sermons. If God sees that, see, he turns
away from us. He's sovereign. And so it's bad
for us. So we don't look at this as a
presentation of a law code that has abiding validity for us unless
it's been altered. You know, we don't do that. We
couldn't do it, number one, because it's hard to understand some
parts of it. And number two, it was never intended to be that
you have to take what the Westminster Confession refers to as the general
equity of the mosaic judicials, right? The equity of them, they
have them inform us. There's two ditches. Some of
us used to be in the dispensational ditch. Who cares what it says?
It's not for us anymore. It was just something to kind
of make people I still guilty. And we don't feel guilty because
we're safe. And the other ditch is saying, oh no, that's our
law code now, and that's going to be the law we're going to
use to build the Oregon legislature, to say that nobody who's been
castrated or has been mutilated, he can't be a citizen of the
United States. See, it may be where you end
up at, but you don't do it that way. You've got to understand
the law and then apply it in this part of redemptive history.
Another problem is, as I mentioned, ceremonial laws, sacrificial
laws. You have to look at the change that's happened with the
coming of Jesus Christ. Jew and Gentile kept separate
by the Mosaic law are now united in the person of Jesus Christ.
And so this text has to be understood in that way. We know that Isaiah
56 talks about what a great thing the eunuchs to keep my sadness
and covenant. They have a great name in the house of God. And
we know that the Ethiopian eunuch is one of the earliest converts
recorded in the book of Acts. So, you know, all that stuff
has to come into this in some way and help us to be informed
so we don't apply it wouldn't we? On the other hand, we do
look at it as law. Here's another quote. This is from a great guy,
Tim Keller. I hope he just misspoke or something,
but a quote came across again on the BH list. He said, A Christian
says, though I have often failed to obey the law, the deeper problem
is why I was ever trying to obey it. Even my effort to obey it
is just a way of seeking to be my own savior. We want to distance
ourselves from that. Hopefully he missed ball, or
he's taken out of context or something. But as an illustration,
that's the other ditch you can fall into. Oh, well, we don't
understand Deuteronomy 23, and we don't know how to apply this.
Forget it. Because if we even try to apply God's law to our
lives, we're being legalistic. We're trying to work our own
salvation through law and not grace. And this is what a lot
of people think. But the law is not given to affect
salvation. Right? The Mosaic law. It's given
to save people. It's given to tell them how to
live their lives. And so, of course, we want to understand
the truths in this law so that we can obey them. OK, so let's
do that. Let's turn to this text and try
to understand a little bit. A couple of verses real quickly
before we get there. Leviticus 22, 24. In case you're wondering,
this is the text that says you shall not offer to the Lord what
is bruised or crushed, maimed or torn or cut. And it implies
in the genitals here. Nor should you make any offering
of them in your land. And it's interesting, because verse 25
of Leviticus 22 says this, the very next verse, Nor from a foreigner's
hand shall you offer any of these as the bread of your God, because
their corruption is in them. So what does it do? It uses the
crushed stuff about sacrificial animals, and then it talks about
foreigners. And what does our text do in Deuteronomy? It talks
about the crushed thing, and then it talks about foreigners,
right? Edomites and Moabites. Ammonites
and Egyptians. So there is a relationship of
our text to the sacrificial language. And we have to take that into
account as we think, try to figure out what are some of the underlying
principles we can apply in the context of our lives. So let's
try to do that. Let's look first at the text
before us and Try to glean some, help you
to understand what it's saying in the particular emphases. And
then I have four short comments after we overlook the text. Okay. And, you know, we see, first
of all, there is this, if you look at the handout that I provided,
there is this structure. And I don't, again, I don't know
that I've got it right. I'm not, you know, paid full
time to analyze the structures of the Old Testament. I am paid
and I joyfully delight in studying the scriptures, studying what
other people have written about it. This happens to be my own
outline again. Most of the times it is because
you just don't see that much analysis of this. But it seems
kind of obvious to me that that we have this kind of movement.
There's a general statement, first of all, of the need of
the exemption from the assembly of the Lord for those who are
unable to procreate. So people that are unable to
procreate males, specifically not females, are excluded from
whatever this assembly of the Lord is. And then the whole rest
of it seems to be various kinds of ill-begotten procreation.
Or at least the next section is. So the next exemption is,
well, anything that's misbegotten and the King James, I think,
says bastard. I don't know. But, you know,
illegitimate birth. Again, it's a weird word. It's
only used twice in the Old Testament. It's hard to understand what
it means, but it certainly means the product of conception somehow.
So the opening two verses say, you know, you have to be able
to. To have a future orientation and procreation, and then you
have to go about doing that correctly, all this is seventh word stuff.
And then it gives, I think, a specific example of misbegotten offspring. Because then we move in an application
that's parallel to that, 10th generation, 10th generation,
misbegotten, and then the ammonites and the moabites. So they're
parallel, okay? They're linked up with that.
And the ammonites and the moabites are the product of incestuous
relationships. It's lots, two daughters. He
leaves Sodom and Gomorrah, his wife is turned to a pillar of
salt. And in that story, his daughters then, and we don't
know why, maybe they thought it was the end of the world. I don't
know. But they, you know, he get him drunk or he's drunk.
And so they have these kids, his two daughters do. And the
Moabites and the Ammonites are the direct descendants of an
incestuous, a misbegotten offspring, the two fathers, Ammon and Moab.
So what we have, then, is this movement from a specific case,
we could say, about warning against the kind of children that were
produced and its relationship to the assembly of the Lord by
way of specific story, a story he calls upon in the Old Testament.
And then at the center of that story or as that story develops,
there's this discussion, these reasons given. Now, you know,
the reasons given are two more reasons. It doesn't the word
how it's translated. Sometimes it says because we
think that's the reason. But I think he's already given
us one reason of the incestuous relationship. And now he adds
on a couple of more reasons. And again, he refers back to
a story we're supposed to know. And we're supposed to know that,
you know, when they came through the wilderness, that the Moabites
and the Ammonites weren't kind to Israel. There was an omission,
a sin of omission. They didn't give them bread and
water. And then he wants us to know that the other part of the
story is they then hired, covenantally hired, Balaam. And Balaam was
supposed to curse God's people. But at the center of that discussion,
so there's the overall story is, Nobody who's been castrated. And then no ill-begotten birth.
And then the illustration of that of these two tribes, these
two peoples, Ammonites and Moabites. And they've been matched up.
So you've got this structuring going on to Edomites and Egyptians. Two more groups. Comparison and
contrast. They're also excluded, but only
to the third generation. So there's a comparison and contrast
going on that link those together at the very center of that structure.
is that God turns the curse into a blessing because he loves us,
because he loves us. So, you know, the center of the
thing, the way it's laid out, is this threefold repetition
of the Lord your God. So at the middle of all of this,
in addition to looking at the laws involved in the sacrificial
stuff and trying to glean some moral lessons from what we read,
the focal point where God wants us to focus is his sovereign
love and care for us in opposition to men who think they can determine
the future. Right? So we're going to hire
a guy to curse Israel, the Moabites and Ammonites say. They're going
to hire Balaam. And so, you know, they think
that history moves according to the decisions of people. They
think that God can be manipulated by their actions to change history. Now think about that. Just meditate
about that a little bit. They believe that. They paid
this guy. He was supposed to be good at
this. He's supposed to be able to do certain things. And those
things have an impact on God, who will then change what He
wants to do in terms of a particular people. They're not atheists. They're theists. But they believe
that God can be manipulated by men's actions. That's kind of,
you know, that's what God turns around the center of the text
is a reminder that that's ridiculous. Now, we say, well, we all know
that's ridiculous. We don't all know that's ridiculous.
R.G. Rushduty makes an application
to our Minionism in this text, because our Minionism says ultimately
what happens in the affairs of men is the result of what men
do, not leaving God out of the equation, but what men do to
change God. That God is this thing, this
power, this person who can be changed by what we do, what we
decide, our actions, we choose. He hasn't sovereignly chosen
us. So there is this, I know it seems like a stretch and you
don't want to tell your dispensational friends or Arminian friends rather
that they're like Balaam. You know, you don't want to do
that because it isn't really true. But people who are really devoted,
who have thought through that theology and think that God is
subject to the whims of the people of the earth. You see, that's
what these people were. And God wants us to know. You
know, that's what we all think, in a way, in our sinful state.
And God, at the center of this text, wants us to know that he
loves us. And because of his love for us,
and because he is sovereign, he can turn that kind of ridiculous
thing into not just having no effect, the curse not alighting,
as Proverbs says, but he turns it into a blessing. So at the
center of this text that, you know, we'd probably want to steer
away from because of the mixed company and all that stuff. You
know, I'm uncomfortable for guys. You know, we would lose the great
message at the heart of this thing of the sovereign God who
turns cursings into blessings. Now, that's sort of a theme,
I think. I don't know this, but. You know, maybe that's part of
what we see emanating from the center of this text. And maybe
this is why we have texts like Isaiah 56 that says the eunuch
has a better name in the house than sons and why the Ethiopian
eunuch is presented as a model of conversion and salvation. And why Ruth, a Moabitess, Right. Excluded forever to the 10th
generation, whatever it is, why she becomes part of the lineage
of of our savior or why David, the. 10th generation, as it turns
out, I'm not sure that's significant, but 10th generation down from
another incestuous kind of thing, an ill-begotten son that we talked
about a few weeks ago, Perez Perez. daughter of Tamar by Judah,
specifically prohibited in the laws. And the way it was conceived
is bad. So maybe in all these things,
part of the message is that we're all under the curse because of
our actions. But the Lord God sovereignly
moves things to bring us into relationship with himself. And
he turns the curse His judgments against us into blessing. And
of course, that's true. I mean, that statement is true. That's what Jesus came to do
to take upon himself. You know, the full force of the
curse is due to us, cursed, hanging on a tree and becomes the sin
bearer for us. So surely the beating heart of
this strange, obscure text from Deuteronomy is a repetition of
what the gospel message is all about. But it's not just that. If that truth emanates out from
that center of the love of God and reversing the courses of
people that are under the curse, all of us are all misbegotten
in a sense, right? We're all born in sin, as David
confesses in the Psalter. If that redemption message emanates
into the rest of the text, surely we can see that that message,
since it's not just redemption, it's about conquest and dominion.
It's about the positive preaching and proclamation of the gospel.
It's about exercising stewardship over the earth and beyond that,
the created order. Then surely we can see that there's
more here than just the message of redemption. And let's talk
a little bit about what that more is. Well, we have to deal
with this term, the assembly of the Lord. What is it? I don't
know. Commentators are not sure of
what it means. It's used only 13 times in all
the Hebrew Bible, all the Bible, and the majority of those occurrences
are right here in the text before us. And it doesn't explain what
it is. Now, we know what it isn't. We
know that all kinds of, you know, Moabites, Edomites, Egyptians,
Ammonites, Eunuchs, you know, incestuous products of incestuous. We know that all kinds of people
can come to saving faith and did in Yahweh in the Old Testament. That's not what's going on here.
I mean, David was the 10th generation, but his dad wasn't. And his dad
was apparently a successful businessman and all that stuff. So this isn't
about exclusion from relationship with God or this is not salvation.
The Assembly of the Lord does not refer to all people that
are saved in this particular period of time. You can't mean
that because we have too many examples where it just isn't
true. It seems like the Assembly of
the Lord probably has to do with official convocations for legislative
purposes, for war councils, and that's an attractive option because
that's immediately what goes on to be talked about is the
camp of the Lord. And so the camp, the host gathered has been
sent out by the legislative assembly into warfare. And so there is
this relationship just because the texts are next to each other
in the conclusion of the sermon on adultery. You know, that's
an attractive option. Or it could mean, you know, the
governors of the sacrificial system, right? So priests are
excluded. Israel is a priestly nation.
And so as a priestly nation, you know, you might be part linked
to Israel's God, but not be part of the priestly sacrificing nation
because of these defects or because of lineage. So I think the best
association of the assembly of the Lord would be to office holders
in the civil government or in church government. And in fact,
the early church councils dealt with this in two different councils.
They dealt with what happens because the opponents of the
church knew Deuteronomy 23. One was here before you did before. You know, they used to know what
this stuff was. And so what the opponents of
the church did for a while in early church history was they
would take priests and just crush the testicles, make them unfit
for office. And it was a way of controlling
the priesthood. And so after all that had settled
down, the church councils had to deal with what do we do with
these pastors who don't meet the requirements of Deuteronomy
23.1. And they said, well, if it's self-mutilation, they're
demoted. They can't be pastors anymore.
But if it was forced upon them, it's not their fault. And they
actually can still continue to be pastors. So the church took
these texts seriously, not in terms of who could be a Christian
or not, but in terms of who could be a ruling authority in the
church or in the state. So it seems like that's going
on here. These are exemptions from ruling
authority. And if we take it in that light,
you know, it seems like the general equity of these mosaic judicials
have something to say to us. The early church thought it did.
They took church councils to decide actions of involving Deuteronomy
23-1. And it seems like this may be
the origins, for instance, of the great controversy, one of
the many controversies surrounding our present president, the birther
controversy. In America, you can be a citizen,
you know, you can do what you want to do, but you know what? Not everybody can be president.
That's a big fat lie they told you in school. You've got to
be, what is it, 35? And you have to be a natural
born citizen. You have to have been born to
a citizen of the United States. You can't just be somebody who
was born here and granted citizenship because of your birth if your
parents weren't citizens, okay? Why? Well, because they understood
that rulers of nations and governments and stuff, you know, they have
to have kind of a proven loyalty to the country that they're serving.
They understood the relationship between the past and the future. They thought more than just what
are our rights today and what can we do today and let's give
everybody all the rights in the world. Democracy is certainly
excluded by the text before us. I mean, if we think of democracy
as everybody having the same rights as everybody else, then
we might be tempted to think that. Well, the poor guy, you
know, he was born weird, or he's having a nice small life. That
was a long time ago that Lot had that relationship with his
two daughters, and they're down here. Now, what's the deal with
excluding those folks? And Egyptians and Edomites to
the third generation, well, they get in, but it takes three generations. How fair is that? That's not
fair at all. Well, what we have to do is understand
that our system of justice is based on the scriptures. The
scriptures aren't there to, you know, either inform or to placate
our view of what's fair. It's interesting that in none
of these circumstances, unless you take the first case as a
man who had done it to himself, which I don't think is the meaning,
just like the animal, sacrificial animal who was wounded in the
genitalia. It's not their doing. No animal
does that to themselves. So in each of these exemptions,
God is telling us something about something we had no choice over. I didn't ask to be born this
way. I didn't ask to be born to this
particular family. I didn't asked to be born into
the Edomite people, who were even worse than the Ammonites
and the Moabites, to God's people in the wilderness. They made
war on them. And I didn't ask to be born an Egyptian who, while
at first welcoming Israel with hospitality, eventually turns
against Israel and persecutes them. But God says, well, you
know, in spite of all of that, when you're talking about ruling,
when you're talking about the assembly of the Lord ruling in
church and state, you have to go beyond just are you a good
Christian? You have to look at somebody's
lineage that's required in our Constitution because it's a Christian
Constitution. And this is required of early
church councils as a relationship to it. It's odd, by the way,
now how One of the largest churches in the world, you can't be married
and have marital relationships and you can't even be a priest
anymore after that. So that's strange in light of
the text before us. But, you know, that's that's
an important point. And I don't know, you know, about
our current president. But, you know, I do know that
I do know a couple of things. One, I know that most people
in the United States are pretty confident of this. If it was
proved that he wasn't a natural born citizen, but was just a
citizen, they'd say, so what? Change the Constitution or ignore
the Constitution. It doesn't make any difference.
We just jettison it. This text tells us not to do
that. This text says, wait a minute, think about it a little bit.
God says there's value to excluding people for a period of time until
you sort of know more about them. Proverbs warns us about when
fools becomes rulers and the sort of damage that is done.
And so what it's telling us is there isn't necessarily anything
bad with a ruling class of people who come from and have been educated
for rule and authority. Now, there's nothing necessarily
that says you have to do that, but it means this text leans
that way a little bit. It says there are certain exemptions
from ruling in the assembly of the Lord based upon lineage.
Most Americans would not see any point to that constitutional
requirement anymore. And I'd also know this pretty
well. Most Americans would say if a person is misbegotten, if
they're illegitimate birth, if his parents weren't married,
why would that be an exclusion? Forty percent of kids, as I understand
it, are born outside of marriage now. So the whole culture is
in violation of Deuteronomy 23.2 as a whole. Because we don't
longer see the relationship, the importance of a child's roots,
where he came from. Was there marriage or was he
illegitimate? Was the marriage good or was
it incestuous? You see, we don't even let ourselves
think that way because we've swallowed this idea of the demos,
the people of the voice of God. Right. And everybody's got all
these rights. It's interesting. You know, the
medieval kings thought they were divinely placed where they were.
And because of that, they thought all this stuff in Deuteronomy
about sexual relations wasn't abiding on them. It wasn't to
be obeyed by them because they were divinely appointed. They
were like, God, they could do whatever they wanted to do. So
incest is common, etc. And then as things changed and
monarchs receive less power in the academy, receive more power
in history. That kind of lifestyle was now
taken up by the artists and by the intellectuals and now artists
and intellectuals. Well, yeah, we know for the common
people, you know, they shouldn't sleep with their sister and stuff,
but we're going to. And we don't care about all those
regulations because we're the voice of God. And now where we're
at is in America, people are God. The voice of the people
is the voice of God. And we're all divinely, you know,
kind of connected to God. And so the rules don't apply
to any of us anymore. Marriage, who cares? It doesn't
make any difference. Now, praise God that there's
Christians involved in trying to bring out statistics and help
people to think about that. But this text has to do with
why that is such a departure from Christendom, from Christendom.
And we should take these things seriously. One last thing about this text,
because this is true, what I just said, there are things that happen
to these people in Deuteronomy 23, 1 to 8, that was completely
out of their control. And yet it affected their ability,
the kind of function they could have in the Commonwealth of Israel. Now, that is a truth. This isn't
just law saying this is the way it should be. It's a truth. And we have been given particular
things sovereignly by God, we have a particular station, OK? And if you're an Egyptian, a
second generation Egyptian, fully sold out for Yahweh, right? You
went to all the music stuff and you were out there, you know,
preaching in the streets and stuff. You still couldn't be
a ruler. And you know what? You were fine with that. You
were down with that because you understood because of these laws
that there's certain stations in life that I can attain to
and other ones that I can't. Maybe my grandkids can attain
to those stations. I can't. Each one of you has
been given certain limitations, restrictions that mean you can't
do this, that or the other thing. I'm never going to play pro.
I won't be in the Super Bowl ever. And there was never a chance
that I could have been. Right. And there's all kinds
of things like that in our lives. In fact, most of the things in
our lives we have very little control of. God says, that's
okay, trust me. Because at the center of this
text he turns curses into blessings. Why? Because he loves you. And
he's made you a second generation Egyptian sold out for Jesus,
not able to be a pastor. Okay? In that world back then.
And so he said, you know what? Don't just, you know, be OK with
that. Rejoice in the station that I've
given you. I am most wise, he says. I'm
most powerful. I'm most, you know, sovereign. And this is the important part.
I am most loving. And in my love, I've given you
a particular station to fill. Don't think about what you can't
do. Think about the station God has
called you to do and man that station. Man that station. And when we man our stations,
and when we eschew indecency in our lives, then we're the
conquering assembly of the Lord. We're the army of God. We're
going forth to exercise dominion, to bring people to faith in Jesus
Christ, to announce, yes, His curses on some people as well.
That's another point here. He tells them, don't ever seek
the prosperity or peace of particular people here. Now, we're told
in Jeremiah to seek the peace of the city. Well, you know,
we sort of take the verse like that and we ultimatize it and
say, well, we're supposed to seek the peace of everybody in
the world. This text says explicitly, don't seek the peace or prosperity
of certain people that hired Balaam against you ever. Now,
I don't know who those people are today. But what I do know
is, is the word of God tells me that manning my station doesn't
mean I'm necessarily going to seek the peace and prosperity
of every last person in this country. There are people absolutely
committed to bringing a curse upon your head. And God does
not command you to seek their peace and prosperity. In fact,
he says to seek the peace and prosperity of avowed God haters,
is a violation of the truths of Deuteronomy 23, and it will
be ineffectual in the army of the Lord. God tells us to man
our station. Don't have unrealistic expectations
of who you are in your identity, nor in what your calling is to
do. Understand your station and that
your station involves, yes, seeking peace and prosperity for a lot
of people, but not everybody. Don't give yourself an unrealistic
task. Don't take off, take an unrealistic
task upon yourself that you're not really called or qualified
to do. How do you figure that out? Well,
I don't know. That's a wisdom thing. That's what each of you
has to do. You know, I certainly don't want to have anything.
I said, encourage laziness or slop. I think it was not my calling
to do this or that. Have a calling. Man your station
as a Christian. Know what it is. Discern what
it is. Get advice and counsel from others. Do it well. And
understand that that is what God will use to bring blessing
upon the people of God and upon his world. Let's pray. Father,
we thank you for this text. We thank you, Lord God, that
at first blush, it seems intimidating to us and uncomfortable. But thank you that there's so
much riches hidden in it, Lord God. Help us, Father, this week
to man our station. Help us as we some of us watch
those football players to think of ourselves as, you know, manly
people, Lord God, filled by your Holy Spirit, a head crushing
bride of yours. And may we sing, Father, as if
we believe that is our identity in Jesus Christ. Help us to point
to the future and to see our station in accomplishing that
future. In Jesus name we ask it. Amen.