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Tuesday, July 24, 2018

WHEN HATE OUTWEIGHS LOVE




We say, “If you’re nice to people, people will be nice to you.”
God says, “No. Not necessarily.” 
It’s like what the Lord told Moses in Exodus 3:18 – 19: And you shall say to [Pharaoh], ‘The Lord God of the Hebrews has met with us; and now, please, let us go three days’ journey into the wilderness, that we may sacrifice to the Lord our God.’
But I am sure that the king of Egypt will not let you go, no, not even by a mighty hand.

God warned Moses and Aaron that when they approached Pharaoh humbly and respectfully and in an unthreatening tone very nicely asked him to allow the Hebrew slaves just a few days off for worship, Pharaoh would NOT give the same respect he was given.
And he didn’t.  Instead, Pharaoh accused Moses and Aaron of being outside agitators stirring up trouble among his ni--- umm.  Among his Hebrews.

Then the king of Egypt said to them, “Moses and Aaron, why do you take the people from their work? Get back to your labor”  (Exodus 5: 4).

As individual Christians, we identify with Moses, the believer, the humble underdog making a simple request.  We identify the American church with the children of Israel, God’s people oppressed and persecuted by a wicked dominant culture.
No.  Not necessarily.

What if you, I, we are Pharaoh? 

Here’s how we can tell:  the bad guy in the story is the one who’s hate outweighs his love.  

Let’s run some tests.

Do you justify your hatred like Pharaoh did?
Pharaoh said, “Look, the people of the land are many now, and you make them rest from their labor!” (Exodus 5: 5)  
Pharaoh’s refused to give the Hebrew slaves time off because there were too many Hebrew workers.   Yeah, but would Pharaoh have given them time off if there had been fewer Hebrew slaves?  No.
And what in the world did the number of slaves have to do with whether or not enslaving them was right?  Nothing.

It’s like in the pre-Civil War South when Confederates states said, “We can’t free the Negroes.  There are too many of them.”
It’s like during World War II when the United States locked up Japanese-Americans in internment camps because, “There are so many of them, some of them might be spies.”  Of course, there were a whole lot more German-Americans at the time, so why didn’t we lock up German-Americans?  (Hint, it’s because they’re White.)
It’s like when people say we can’t allow Mexicans, or Muslims into the country because there are too many Mexicans and Muslims. 
Those people don’t really care how many there are.  They’d hate “those people” if there were only six of them on the planet. 

Do you apply blame like Pharaoh?
Pharaoh’s racist foolishness followed the same game- plan that racist foolishness always follows:     
Say the minority is a threat.  Say that oppression is necessary for national security  or to protect the economy .  Keep them dependent and geographically contained.  Ignore everything  God says condemning your actions.  And, when they ask for reasonable relief, call them lazy.


So the same day Pharaoh commanded the taskmasters of the people and their officers, saying,  “You shall no longer give the people straw to make brick as before. Let them go and gather straw for themselves.And you shall lay on them the quota of bricks which they made before. You shall not reduce it. For they are idle; therefore they cry out, saying, ‘Let us go and sacrifice to our God.’
Let more work be laid on the men, that they may labor in it, and let them not regard false words” (Exodus 5:6-9).

You enslave these people to do your work so your people don’t have to do the work, and the slaves are the lazy ones?

People are walking thousands of miles through deserts and mountains to enter this country and WORK.   You’re seeking them out to fill positions Americans won’t take and paying them illegally low wages Americans won’t accept  to labor under conditions Americans would never endure.    
And then you accuse them of being lazy welfare recipients.  How is the guy who traversed a desert to get a job the lazy one? 

If  they can’t get a job if they fail a drug test, and there aren’t enough slots in rehab centers; if they can’t get a job without a permanent address, and there is no housing for the homeless; if they can’t get a job if they have EVER been convicted of ANY felony ---- if you’ve literally made it illegal to hire addicts, the homeless, and the formerly incarcerated ------ how can you scream at them “Get a job!”?

Is your heart devoid of compassion like Pharaoh?

There were no plagues after Moses’ and Aaron’s first meeting with Pharaoh.  The Lord gave Pharaoh space to take a small step toward easing his oppression of the Hebrews. That’s GRACE.
Pharaoh chose to double-down on his hateful rhetoric and policies.
So, the Lord withdrew grace from Pharaoh.  God let Pharaoh run uninterrupted in the direction of hate and anger and narcissism all the way to its self-destructive end.  That’s why Scripture says God hardened his heart.  
When you see people struggling under burdens you can’t even imagine and, without knowing their story you unilaterally decide, “They’re lazy; I need to make their lives harder,”  that’s hard-hearted.
When people approach you or me graciously and respectfully, asking for help and we respond with insults and threats (and it doesn’t matter whether you give them the money or not), that’s hard-hearted.
That’s some Pharaoh foolishness. 
When we see suffering in other parts of the country or the world and we say, “Well, if they’d pulled their pants up, if they hadn’t talked back to the officer, if they’d been at home instead of at that club, if they hadn’t been living in a country full of terrorists ----- then they wouldn’t have anything to complain about” --- that’s hard-hearted.
That’s some Pharaoh foolishness.
When we hear the Word of God spoken to us and we open our own Bibles and see point blank that the Bible says  You shall neither mistreat a stranger nor oppress him, for you were strangers in the land of Egypt (Exodus 22:21), but you don’t like those people so you decide to mistreat them anyway, that’s not patriotism.
That’s some Pharaohish foolishness.

Pharaoh became so hardened in his heart, so hostile to God’s offer of grace that he ordered his people to make life harder on the people they were oppressing  ----- and to blame them for it. 

Do you, like Pharaoh, hate the others more than you love your own?
A sign of a Pharaoh hard heart is when you hurt your own people just so you can hurt “those people.”

Prior to Exodus 5, the Egyptians had supplied the Hebrew brick-making teams with the straw they needed to do massuh’s work.  To pay them back for having the audacity to send some liberal Midianite looking shepherd and his brother to beg for a minor improvement in working conditions, Pharaoh changed the labor laws.  Now the Hebrews had to get their own straw and still meet their daily brick-making quotas. 
The straw had been supplied by Egyptian farmers, who would have been paid for supplying straw.  The Hebrews couldn’t afford to buy straw from Egyptian farmers, so Exodus 5: 12 says the slaves collected stubble instead of straw. The stubble was scraps and tips and pieces leftover from hand cutting the grass into straw. 
The quality of the bricks used in construction diminished because they were using inferior raw material, and all the native Egyptian straw providers were out of business. 
Pharaoh degraded his country’s infrastructure and bankrupted an entire sector of his nation’s economy ----- cause he didn’t like Jews. 



Warlords burn villages in their own territories because it MIGHT hurt their rivals.   Dictators starve their own citizens because some of them MIGHT supporter their political opponents. 
What about us?
America guts the Clean Water Act, the Clean Air Act, internet privacy rules, and fair wage protection for women because ---- liberals. We hurt everybody cause we’re still mad about that uppity Obama guy.
That’s some Pharaoh foolishness.

What about you?

Who you mad at?

Which person or people do you despise for their very existence?  Whom do you hate SO MUCH that everything they say is wrong?  That everything is wrong because they said it?
Are you willing to sin to hurt them?  Do you want to destroy anybody who even thinks about mitigating their suffering?  Do you find joy in the thought of their pain?

Do you think like Pharaoh?

Scripture warns us:  Do NOT rejoice when your enemy falls, And do NOT let your heart be glad when he stumbles (Proverbs 24: 17).

The Hebrews were already enslaved when Moses met with Pharaoh, but those negotiations didn’t begin with Moses calling down a plague.  Technically, God didn’t plague Egypt for having slaves; He plagued Egypt because Pharaoh refused to extend grace to those slaves, grace that would have been a path to freedom.
God plagued Pharaoh for refusing to let his hard-heart be softened by the Word of God delivered by Moses and Aaron.

The plagues are coming.  The question is, when the plagues come, will we be on the side of the grace-filled Word of God, safe under the Blood? 
Or are we Pharaoh?






 --Anderson T. Graves II   is a writer, community organizer and consultant for education, ministry, and rural leadership development.

Rev. Anderson T. Graves II is pastor of Bailey Tabernacle CME Church in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. He writes the popular blog: A Word to the Wise at www.andersontgraves.blogspot.com

Follow me on twitter @AndersonTGraves 

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