Monday, July 8, 2013

Carrying Some Dirt (part 2 of 2)

What can be learned from this story of Namaan in relation to the covenant bearing Gospel message that Jesus is the crucified and resurrected Messiah and Lord of all?  One of the most significant parts of this story, upon which can be seized to make an important analogy in relation to the plans and purposes of the Creator God and the effects of Jesus’ Resurrection, is Namaan’s request for some of the dirt of the land.  As has been said, and can be appropriately extrapolated, Namaan expressed a desire to return to Syria with a small part of the land of Israel. 

He intended to return to his nation with a very small part of that which had been promised to the Creator God’s covenant people.  The land---the very ground of Israel, as was and would be understood by all members of the covenant people that would be exposed to this portion of Israel’s narrative, was that which served to mark out the Creator God’s power to perform His promises and prove His faithfulness to those that are called by His Name. 

Effectively, Namaan, with what could appear to be a nod to a knowledge and understanding of the significance of the land to Israel and of what it said about its relationship with their God.  Whether or not he was fully apprised of the situation would not necessarily be relevant to an outside-covenant observer, as the story indicates that Namaan wanted to make his way back home with a measure of the very ground to be found in the land of promise that the Creator God had promised to Abraham and his descendants as the first-to-be-redeemed component of a once-good creation that would eventually fully redeem through the messiah by the death-defeating power of the Resurrection.  Presumably, he did this so that even though he was physically walking in one world---that being the land of Syria, he would be able to possess a portion of the land of promise.  Through that, he could count himself as one of the Creator God’s covenant people, enjoying the Lord’s faithfulness in a way that extended beyond his military prowess. 

This can certainly apply to believers in this day, for as one is in union with Christ, believing in His Gospel by the faith that is said to be exercised by those that hear and respond to the Gospel message which mysteriously contains the very power of God, the believers finds himself in a position similar to that of Namaan.  Though he or she walks in this world in which they still find death and corruption, and though their allegiances appear to be divided and their feet become dirty as they walk the dusty paths of this world, through the mysterious gift of the Spirit which somehow fosters a trusting allegiance in Jesus as the powerful ruler of this world through the kingdom of God that was inaugurated at His Resurrection, they carry the power of kingdom of heaven into this world as vessels for God’s glory, being used to carry and exercise their God’s transformative power, through compassionate acts of love and self-sacrifice, into a still-fallen and groaning creation that awaits the final putting-down of an already defeated foe named death. 


As the Gospel is proclaimed in both word and deed, and as those that make that proclamation and live according to its demands embody the Creator God’s covenant faithfulness, as the new creation that is the kingdom of heaven on earth breaks in upon this present age, they figuratively carry two mule-loads of the dirt of the fully restored creation---the consummated kingdom of God to which we look in hopeful and trusting expectation---into this very world. 

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