Friday, September 13, 2019
WARNING! WARNING!
I know this will make me seem ancient to some but I’m remembering a mechanical character on an old, very
old, black and white TV program. When I was a kid there was a popular program
called “Lost in Space!” It featured the Robinson family, a syrup sweet family
with a precocious little lad called Will and Dr. Zachary Smith, a stowaway and saboteur.
It also featured a robot; I think his name was “Roby,” who was more intelligent
than them all. Roby’s main function seemed to be flailing his arms about
shouting “warning, warning!” He seemed to be the babysitter for young Will and
so more often than not he would be shouting: “Warning, warning Will Robinson!”
Oh how I wish we had Roby the robot with us today to flail his arms about,
twirl his antennae, and shout “warning!”
Jeremiah was called “the weeping prophet” and I think it was because his task seemed to him so
futile. His listeners were incorrigible and irascible sinners and Jeremiah took
his job very seriously. This was a sure formula for frustration. Listen to him
complain!
Jer
6:10
10 To whom shall I speak, and
give warning, that they may hear? behold, their ear is uncircumcised,
and they cannot hearken: behold, the word of the LORD is unto them a reproach; they
have no delight in it.
The Amplified Bible
helps our understanding somewhat by putting it this way: “their ears are
uncircumcised [never brought into covenant with God or consecrated to His
service].”
Ezekiel had a similar problem as we read: “And thou shalt speak my words unto them,
whether they will hear, or whether they will forbear: for they are most
rebellious.” Ezek 2:7
In the midst of
a highly politicized national “revival” I still observe many people who will
not heed warnings because “they have no delight in it.”
The
Winter 1991 issue of the University of Pacific Review offers a chilling description of
the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear disaster:
There were two electrical engineers in the control room that night, and
the best thing that could be said for what they were doing is they were
"playing around" with the machine. They were performing what the
Soviets later described as an unauthorized experiment. They were trying to see
how long a turbine would "free wheel" when they took the power off
it.
Now, taking the power off that kind of a nuclear reactor is a difficult,
dangerous thing to do, because these reactors are very unstable in their lower
ranges. In order to get the reactor down to that kind of power, where they
could perform the test they were interested in performing, they had to override
manually six separate computer-driven alarm systems.
One by one the computers would come up and say, "Stop! Dangerous! Go no
further!" And one by one, rather than shutting off the
experiment, they shut off the alarms and kept going. You know the results:
nuclear fallout that was recorded all around the world, from the largest
industrial accident ever to occur in the world.
The instructions and warnings in Scripture are just as clear. We ignore
them at our own peril, and tragically, at the peril of innocent others.
n Attributed to Tom Tripp in Fresh Illustrations for Preaching & Teaching (Baker), from the
editors of Leadership.
Col
1:28
28 Whom we preach, warning
every man, and teaching every man in all wisdom; that we may
present every man perfect in Christ Jesus:
Dear Lord, make me faithful to give
warnings and wise to heed them. AMEN
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