| Free to be faithful: some themes from the bible |
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James McPolin looks at some biblical that arise for the Hebrews experience of their Exodus - liberation, community, covenant, fidelity, remembering, land, justice and sharing.
When we speak of liberation or freedom we always have to keep in mind two realities. For example, when as Christians we work for justice in society we try to free people from all forms of sinful oppression and injustice so that they become free to lead a full human life. The Exodus is a story about freedom and liberation. The people of Israel believed that God was responsible for liberating them from a life of oppression in Egypt so that they would be free to serve God as a people of faith in a new land. They were to be freed from slavery in order to become free to be faithful to their God.
From Crowd to Community The liberation of the Hebrews includes these two elements. God had been 'carrying' his people just as an eagle lifts its young on its wings towards Mount Sinai in the desert.
His people were not meant to be just a crowd but a community bound to him and to one another by a bond of special friendship. They became his people, called to respond to and serve him. They believed that his calling is grounded on the Exodus which manifested God's action in delivering Israel from bondage: 'You have seen what I did to the Egyptians and how I bore you on eagles' wings and brought you to myself.'
Covenant Whether in fact these people would become the people of God depended on one condition: 'if you will obey my voice and keep my covenant.' Then they would be his personal 'possession' a community that belongs to him in a special sense and whose call was to order its entire life according to his word and his commandments. (Exod. 19:3-6)
Therefore, this people was liberated from a state of oppression (such oppression was evil, even sinful) and for a particular purpose (to be a people who respond to and serve God and one another).
As we have seen, this friendship between God and the people of Israel is described by a word which belonged to the ancient culture of the Near East, that is, 'covenant'.
It was an alliance made between individuals (e.g. marriage), tribes or nations; an agreement made before human witnesses and before gods. In the Bible this covenant-friendship is described with solemnity as made before God on a mountain (Sinai) in the presence of human witnesses, with Moses presented as interpreting and communicating God's will for the people in the form of commandments (Exod. 20). This means that Israel becomes God's people and God becomes their God.
Love and Fidelity The covenant-friendship emphasizes God's love for and fidelity to the people and their fidelity to him by keeping his word, expressed in the commandments.
These commandments are not to be seen as mere obligations imposed by God; they are to be understood in terms of the mutual love that defines the special relationship between God and the people. For Israel believed that in the extraordinary events of the Exodus God had taken the initiative. Gratitude for their deliverance was the main motive for the people's response in faith and love. Faith and love take the form of obedience to his word and of living by the promise that he would be with them in the future.
Remembering Hence, 'remembering' was always a crucial element in the faith of the people. Whatever difficulty, even disaster, may befall them in the future, they were to believe that God delivered them in the past; he would also deliver them in the future. In the tragedies of their later history, the people always drew much energy from their faith by recalling how God had liberated them in the past and enabled them to overcome great obstacles to gain their freedom so that they were able to face great difficulties in their history in a spirit of faith and confidence in God, just as we ourselves become more confident in God in times of difficulty when we remember how God has helped us in the past. Remembering is a key element of faith.
Gift of Land The story of Exodus is incomplete without taking into account the journey to the land which they could possess and where they would live as a nation. The biblical writers see their possession of the land of Canaan (Israel) as guided by God and this land as God's gift to them. Therefore, the land has not only a material aspect (that is, something possessed, lived in and developed) but also a religious aspect or divine dimension in so far as it is related to God.
This is described in the books of Joshua and Deuteronomy: 'Therefore, keep the commandments of the Lord your God by walking in his ways... For the Lord your God is bringing you into a good land. You shall eat your fill and bless the Lord your God for the good land he has given you' (Deut 8).
Land of Plenty Land is not just a physical space. It is a place for living. It is not just the soil but includes all its resources natural resources, mineral resources, water, forests and even the air.
'The Lord your God is bringing you into a good land, a land with flowing streams, with springs and with underground waters welling up in valleys and hills, a land of wheat and barley, of vines and fig trees... a land of olive trees and honey, a land where you may eat bread without scarcity, where you will lack nothing, a land whose stones are iron and from whose hills you may mine copper.You shall eat your fill and bless the Lord your God for the good land that he has given you.' (Deut. 8)
Thus the land is regarded as 'good' because it manifests the blessings of God in a very special way.
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