Thus says the Lord of hosts, “Consider your ways!”
—Haggai 1:7
Several years
ago, I had the opportunity to consider my life in an unexpected time and place.
I went elk hunting with a friend who had successfully hunted on Colorado state
game lands the year before. We hired no guide and camped on public land. Our trip
only cost us money for gas, food, and license. Colorado was advertising an
abundance of elk so I anticipated the hunt of a lifetime with elk behind every
tree.
We began
hunting each day with a pre-dawn breakfast before hiking up a mile high
mountain. We mistakenly hunted the elk much like we hunt white tail deer or
rabbits in Pennsylvania. My friend kept saying to his dad and brother, “We
didn’t hunt this hard last year.” On my dream hunt for elk, I was thoroughly
disgusted that we were seeing no elk, and I was exhausted.
On those long
days hiking up and down steep mountains, I began to consider my life. I
determined I was not a true hunter; I was a shooter, a killer. Back home in
Pennsylvania, I seldom spent much time in the woods during the late summer and the
beautiful, peaceful autumn scouting for turkey and deer. I would merely go out
during hunting season and look for some game to shoot and kill. Now, as I
considered my life on this dream hunt in the beautiful mountains of Colorado, I
became disgusted at myself for being frustrated with the
lack of opportunity to shoot an elk. I became so disgusted with myself that I
didn’t go hunting in Pennsylvania after that for two full years.
Haggai
prophesied to the Jews who returned from the 70-year Babylonian Captivity. King
Cyrus had issued a degree sixteen years earlier that the Jews could return to
Jerusalem and rebuild the Temple. The returning Jews began to rebuild the
Temple, but amid difficult economic times, soon turned their attention to their
own lives and comfort. Haggai received a Word from the Lord calling the Jews to
consider their ways and the reason for their economic distress. “You have sown much, but harvest little; you eat, but there is not enough to be satisfied” (1:6a).
The Word of the Lord through His prophet, Haggai, reveals
to the Jews that the reason for their economic distress is that they did not
seek to rebuild the Temple and glorify God; rather, they sought personal pleasure and
comfort. A second call to “Consider your ways,” was followed by the call to “‘Go
up to the mountains, bring wood and rebuild the temple, that I may be pleased with it and be glorified,’ says the Lord” (1:7).
Israel heeds God’s call and resumes the Temple
renovations within the month.
Haggai chapter 2 again calls upon
the Jews to consider their ways and how the economy had improved. “Is the seed still in the barn? Even
including the vine, the fig tree, the pomegranate and the olive tree, it has
not borne fruit. Yet from
this day on I will bless you.’” (2:19). It might be difficult to put ourselves in the exact
situation of the Jews of Haggai’s time, but if we seek
to follow the Lord, God can bring all the resources of the universe to meet our
needs. Jesus said, “But seek first His
kingdom and His righteousness, and all
these things will be added to
you.”