“And it shall come to pass, when all these things are come upon thee, the blessing and the curse, which I have set before thee, and thou shalt call [them] to mind among all the nations, whither the LORD thy God hath driven thee,” (De 30:1 AV)
I’ve always thought the transparency above was a bit odd. It is true. But odd. Israel will have times of obedience and faith. They will also have many more times of disobedience and doubt. Today’s overly positive world would criticize God for being so honest. They would see the phrase above as setting Israel up for failure. The world wants us to build each other up as though failure isn’t part of life. All we want is good news. All we want is to hear that we are supernatural and will never do anything wrong. To inform someone that they cannot be perfect and that they will fail is believed to be a detriment to their improvement. Yet, the LORD has no problem telling Israel that there will be times of blessing and cursing. There will be good times and bad times. They will struggle with temptation and fall into it. This is not a foregone conclusion or self-fulfilling prophecy. Just a statement on the nature of people. How refreshing to hear the truth, even if it isn’t the encouragement we think we need.
No matter what skill I tried to learn, there was always a learning curve associated with it. How many of us have scars to prove the lessons learned along the road of life? I remember when I was promoted to the pizza making side of the restaurant. I started out cutting the pizzas and sending them out to the front cashier. My job was to mark the boxes according to the order. The name went on the left and the type of pizza when on the right. Then, as they came out, I sliced them, closed the box, and sent the box with the receipt to the front. From there, I graduated to pulling. That was the person who pulled the pizzas out of the oven and put them in the box. When the head chef instructed us in the procedure, he warned us that we would suffer burns along the way. Sure enough, I suffered a bit of pain. From there, I moved along to a pizza maker. More burns. Most of the serious burns came from making pizzas and not pulling them. Again, I was warned of the inevitability of burns and why they occur. I was glad they told me. Even though I relaxed my focus and suffered the consequences, at least I knew burns were coming and why they happened.
I would rather have an instructor or coach who would tell me that I probably won’t get it right the first few times I tried and show me why I failed than someone who told me I will be an immediate success and never fail. Failure means improvement. Failure means learning and growing. Failure is a reality check on just who and what we are. Failure is uncomfortable but necessary. Failure produces results that can be fixed. Failure reveals the why and not just the how. Failure means there is greater insight into the nature of things. Honesty, as it regards failure is refreshing. When the LORD tells me that I will fall into temptation, it is not perceived as an insult. The saint shouldn’t take it as a parent who doesn’t believe in their child. Rather, knowing our propensity to fail, we are more aware of it and may even avoid it. No, I would rather have a heavenly Father who knows the wisdom of full transparency than a God who wants to protect me from the truth. Praise the LORD for the bad news! The bad news helps us to overcome and enjoy more blessings than cursings.