THRU THE BIBLE
EXPOSITION
The Books Of The Chronicles:
God's Preservation Of His Davidic And Levitical Covenants
XXXVI. God's Justice
Versus Man's Injustice
(2 Chronicles 24:17-27)
Introduction: (To show the need . . . )
A lot of injustices are being
committed today even by progressives who promote "social justice"
causes:
(1) It occurs in a number of
"social justice" demonstrations:
" . . .(P)rotesters in Madison, Wis., pulled down a statue of Hans
Christian Heg, an abolitionist immigrant who died fighting for the union. For good measure, they also toppled a statue
commemorating women's suffrage and beat up a 60-year-old Democratic state
senator. It seems that, in the battle
against white supremacy, attacking any white person will do . . ." (Sean
Collins, Spiked Magazine, June 26, "Who's behind the war on statues?"
as cited in "Quotable," Republican-American, July 2, 2020, p.
8A)
(2) It happens with the issue of gay
marriage: Megan added, "If you had told me 10 years ago that same-sex
marriage meant Christian bakers being legally required to bake cakes for
same-sex weddings, I, or any supporter of marriage equality, would have
dismissed this as conservative propaganda . . . Then, shortly after the U. S.
Supreme Court ruled, activists began declaring that of course those bakers had
to bake those cakes. Privately . . . a lot of same-sex-marriage advocates . . .
thought this went too far. But,
publicly, they found other things to talk about," Ibid.
(3) It takes place with the issue of
religious liberty: "A federal judge . . . blocked New York state from
enforcing . . . restrictions limiting indoor religious . . . gatherings to 25%
capacity when other types of gatherings are limited to 50% . . . Judge Gary
Sharpe . . . noted that both [Governor] Cuomo and [New York City Mayor] de
Blasio have expressed approval for protests against racism and police brutality
. . . while continuing to support restrictions on religious gatherings."
(Ibid., "Judge blocks 25% capacity rule for religious gatherings," June
27, 2020, p. 9A)
(4) It even transpires in the matter
of valuing black lives: "Black people constitute about 13% of the U. S.
population," but "in 2014, 36% of all abortions were performed on
black women." (Cynthia M. Allen, "Unborn black lives matter,
too," Ibid., July 1, 2020, p. 11A)
"(T)he statistics hold up even when controlling for income. Black unborn of all socioeconomic backgrounds
are disproportionately erased from existence," and "(e)ven for
abortion-rights advocates, those numbers should be appalling," Ibid. Yet, we never hear about it from "social
justice" warriors!
Need: So we
ask, "In view of great wrongs by even promoters of 'social justice,' what
should we do, and why?!"
I.
After the high priest Jehoiada died, king Joash
and Judah's leaders turned to idolatry, and as Jehoiada's son Zechariah announced
God's punishment against them for their sin, they killed him, 2 Chr. 24:17-21:
A.
With the
vacuum of influence on king Joash left by the death of his father-figure, the
high priest Jehoiada, Judah's officials led Joash to abandon the Lord and
follow after false pagan gods, 2 Chronicles 24:17-18a.
B.
This
apostasy angered the Lord, so He sent prophets to warn them to repent, 2 Chronicles
24:18b-19a.
C.
The king
and men of Judah did not repent, so the Holy Spirit came upon Zechariah,
Jehoiada's descendant, and he told the people at the temple that since they had
forsaken God, He had forsaken them, 2 Chron. 27:19b-20.
D.
Joash,
his officials and the people reacted by stoning Zechariah to death in the temple
court, 2 Chr. 27:21-22a.
II.
When Zechariah lay dying, he entrusted the wrong
that was being committed against him to the Lord, saying, "May the Lord
see and avenge!" (2 Chronicles 24:22b ESV)
III.
God indeed avenged this wrong with fitting
punishment for Zechariah's killers, 2 Chronicles 24:23-27:
A.
Within a
year, God applied His 2 Samuel 7:14 Davidic Covenant promise to punish wayward
Davidic kings with the rod of men by bringing the Gentile Arameans against
Judah, and they killed all the officials who had influenced Joash to abandon the
Lord and delivered the spoil to the Aramean king, 2 Chronicles 24:23.
B.
In fulfillment
of Deuteronomy 28:15, 25, God let a small Aramean army defeat Judah's larger force,
v. 24.
C.
The
Arameans also badly wounded Joash, so God used two of his servants, sons of Gentile
women, to kill Joash on his bed, 2 Chronicles 24:25a, 26a,b. For Joash's forgetting that Jehoiada's wife had
saved him as an infant, hiding him in a storage room for mattresses and couches
(2 Chronicles 22:11; Ryrie Study Bible, KJV, 1978, ftn. to 2 Kings 11:2),
God fittingly let foreigners fulfill 2 Samuel 7:14 in killing Joash on his mattress!
D.
Unlike Jehoiada's
honorable burial with Judah's kings, Joash was not buried with them, 2 Chr.
24:25b; 24:15.
IV.
In addition, Church History reveals SEVERAL reasons
WHY God let Zechariah's martyrdom OCCUR:
A.
In Luke
11:51 [and Matthew 23:35], Jesus said God would avenge the prophets who had
been martyred beginning with Abel and going down through history to Zechariah
who was slain in the temple court.
B.
In view
of Church History, this statement by Jesus is extremely important to us Christian believers:
1.
Though
the Jews had long possessed the Apocrypha, they never made it canonical. Then, in the Protestant Reformation, the
Catholic Church sought a defense against Protestant critics for its belief in purgatory,
and came to think 2 Maccabees 12:40-45 in the Apocrypha offered such a defense. There, Judas Maccabeus paid for a sacrifice
for men who had died while guilty of the sin of idolatry, so the Catholic Church
used this passage to support prayers for the dead and purgatory. (L. Boettner, Roman
Catholicism, 1978, p. 83)
2.
This was
a stretch even for the Roman Catholic Church, for "idolatry is a mortal
sin, and according to Roman Catholic doctrine those dying in mortal sin go
directly to hell. Only those who are
guilty of venial sin go to purgatory and so only they can be helped by masses
and prayers," Ibid., p. 83-84!
3.
Nevertheless,
the Roman Catholic Church's Council of Trent, even against objections from some
of its own members, made the Apocrypha canonical, Ibid., p. 83.
4.
This issue
creates another great crisis of faith: belief in purgatory contradicts the
claim in 2 Corinthians 5:5 that for the believer's soul to be absent from his
body in physical death is for his soul to be present with the Lord in heaven, not
in purgatory! If the Apocrypha is canonical and purgatory exists,
2 Corinthians 5:5 errs in opposing belief in purgatory, leaving us with an errant
Bible and undermining the Christian faith!
5.
However,
Jesus' words about Zechariah in Luke 11:51 [and Matthew 23:35] solves all of these
problems:
a.
The
Hebrew Old Testament canon consists of the 39-book canon of Scripture held by
Protestants, but in a different order of books: the Protestant Old Testament
starts with Genesis and ends with Malachi where the Hebrew Old Testament starts
with Genesis and ends with 2 Chronicles. (Kittel, Bib. Heb., p. 1-1434)
b.
Had
Jesus held the Apocrypha to be canonical, instead of naming Zechariah as the
last martyr, He would have named a martyr from the Apocrypha since a number of
its martyrs died long after Zechariah lived.
c.
Thus, by
naming Zechariah who was slain in 2 Chronicles 24:21-22 as the last of the
martyred prophets, Jesus denied
the canonicity of the Apocrypha and supported the canonicity of the
Hebrew Old Testament 39 books!
(Ryrie Study Bible, KJV, 1978, ftns. to Luke 11:51 and Matthew 23:35)
d.
In
settling this issue of canonicity, Jesus also removed the threat to the divine inspiration and authority of 2 Corinthians 5:5, meaning
if a believer is absent from the body, he is truly present with God in heaven!
C.
So,
God's letting Zechariah's martyrdom occur, as bad as it was, worked the greater good of equipping Jesus to claim Zechariah was the last
Old Testament martyr, thus clarifying the true Old Testament canon, leading us
to avoid believing in prayers for the dead and purgatory and affirming the
divine inspiration of Scripture!
Lesson: Though Judah's officials and Joash wickedly
slew Zechariah, when Zechariah relied on God to avenge his death, the Lord both
avenged it and used his martyrdom to guard the truth for future believers in
the Church on not offering prayers for the dead and not believing in purgatory while
holding to God's inspiration of Scripture!
Application: (1) May we trust in Christ to be
saved, John 3:16. (2) If we see or face injustice,
(a) may we entrust the matter to God (Romans 12:19-20) and (b) recall from
God's USE of Zechariah's martyrdom that He will nevertheless work through the injustice
involved to produce a far greater good for His glory!
Conclusion: (To illustrate the message . . . )
Just as God mightily
used Zechariah's martyrdom, so He used Stephen's martyrdom in Acts 6:8-7:60:
(1) Stephen's Acts
7:2-53 message before the Jewish Sanhedrin is the longest message recorded in
the book of Acts, for it prepared the way "for the gospel to reach outside
the pale of Judaism," Bible Know. Com., N. T., p. 369.
(2) Stephen's speech
and martyrdom also affected Saul of Tarsus, the lead witness at Stephen's
execution (Acts 7:58). It led to Saul's
conscience being sorely pricked until Jesus appeared to him and mentioned this
pricking of his conscience, what in turn led to Paul's conversion and becoming
the greatest missionary in the Church, Acts 26:14b.
(3) Also, as we
explain in our work, "Making Sense of God's Election" on our Church
web site, in the section, "The New Testament Greek Word, Tasso,"
Stephen's Acts 7 message to the Sanhedrin includes his potent uses of the verbs
apotheo and strepho that appear together elsewhere
in the New Testament only in Paul's Acts 13:46 climax of his message to
Pisidian Antioch Jews. Paul's use of those
verbs there implies his verb tasso in Acts 13:48 should not
be seen as a passive to read "as many were ordained
to eternal life believed," a Calvinistic translation, but that tasso
is to be seen in the middle voice to read, "as many as had
marshaled themselves on the side of eternal life believed"! God so used Stephen's message and martyrdom
to affect Paul's vocabulary in Acts 13:46 that we can see from it all our need
to correct a long-time mishandling of the Acts 13:48 verb tasso
and so correct centuries of errant doctrine!
May we trust in
Christ for salvation. May we entrust
injustices we face to God, knowing He allows them to occur for a much greater
good to the glory of God!