TU’APULELULU ME 14, 2026
2 KALONIKALI 25-27; SAAME 119:1-8
It is right to mourn our failures, but it is also important to remember that spiritual dangers lurk in our successes.
Ko e me’a totonu ke tau mamahi ‘i he’etau ngaahi fehalaaki, ka ‘oku toe mahu’inga ke tau manatu’i ‘a e fakatu’utamaki fakalaumalie ‘oku toi mai ‘i he ngaahi tu’umalie ‘oku tau ‘inasi ai.
God wastes no words in Scripture. Every part of his word is profitable (2 Tim. 3:16). There are no needless historical accounts. There are no stories that didn't need to be told. There are no unnecessary moral observations. Every wisdom principle is important and life-shaping. There are no poetic passages that should have been edited out of the final manuscript. Every passage has been recorded and preserved by the source of all wisdom, for our benefit. There is wisdom, hope, rescue, grace, and life in every portion of God's word. We should read with enthusiasm, even when the going is tough. We should read with spiritually inquisitive hearts. We should approach God's word like spiritual archeologists, digging into every mound and looking for the artifacts of grace that God has buried there. Scripture isn't a book to be skimmed. We are to meditate upon and luxuriate in it. As we do, not only will our view of life change; we will change. Our thoughts and desires will change, our hope will deepen, and our worship will be more consistent and heartfelt. God's word will undo and rebuild us. Approach Scripture with an expectant heart; it is filled with life-altering treasures.
Second Chronicles 26 presents a contrast in the life of one man. I am deeply persuaded that it is there for our instruction and warning. Chapter 26:4-5 says this of king Uzziah: "He did what was right in the eyes of the LORD, according to all that his father Amaziah had done. He set himself to seek God in the days of Zechariah, who instructed him in the fear of God, and as long as he sought the LORD, God made him prosper." Whenever you read of a king of Judah who commits himself to fear, seek, and follow the Lord, you breathe a sigh of relief. Finally, a godly king rules over Judah. But then as you read on, you encounter another statement of the life and character of Uzziah: "But when he was strong, he grew proud, to his destruction. For he was unfaithful to the LORD his God and entered the temple of the LORD to burn incense on the altar of incense" (2 Chron. 26:16). The words but when he was strong, he grew proud should jump off the page. The success of Uzziah's reign contributed to his spiritual demise. The man who once feared the Lord feared him no longer, arrogantly going into the Holy Place to do what he had no right to do. He grew proud, to his own destruction. Strength, success, accomplishments, and acclaim have the power to change us. In terms of our relationship to God, they can make us feel less dependent and grateful. We begin to take credit for our successes, and we attempt to take our lives into our own hands. May we heed God's warning and affirm, once again, our constant dependency on his wisdom, his power, and the everflowing resources of his grace.