Last week I tried to teach Adam to play the game Candy Land. He’s new to games. There weren’t many games where he came from. I told him to pick a player. He picked the blue one. For my part, I picked the red one. So far so good. Then I put both players on Start. Adam, however, did not want his player to be on Start. He had a point. Start was not a particularly glamorous place to be. So he moved his player to the Lollipop Palace. “No,” I said, “you can’t start there.” He was agreeable enough. He moved his player to Peppermint Forest. “You can’t start there either,” I said. Unperturbed, he moved his player to the Frosted Palace. “Adam!” I said. He began to grow perturbed. So I tried to explain it to him. “You know how at school you have rules? Safe hands? No running in the halls? Raise your hand? Well there are rules to Candy Land too. I am trying to teach you the rules. Just wait a bit. You’ll catch on.” He did catch on. And he learned that toys you can play with however you like, but games have rules you that you must accept. Games have rules that you must accept.
The game of life has rules too, rules that you must accept. Now I am not talking about blindly following rules that perpetuate discrimination or oppression or corruption or injustice. That’s another story. But generally speaking, the game of life does have rules, and they are rules that you must accept. For those of you of a rebellious or nonconforming bent who may be bristling, I maintain my position. If you don’t agree, try anarchy for a week. Try it for an hour, for that matter.
The Bible takes this for granted, that the game of life has rules, rules that you must accept. You can glean them all over the Bible. Here’s one rule: God tests his people. This one’s not all that hard to glean. You can’t get away from it:
From Exodus. Moses said to the people, “Do not fear, for God has come to test you, that the fear of him maybe before you, that you may not sin.”
From Deuteronomy. “For the Lord your God is testing you, to know whether you love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul.”
From Chronicles. “I know, my God, that you test the heart and have pleasure in uprightness.”
From Psalms. “The Lord tests the righteous, but his soul hates the wicked and the one who loves violence.”
From Jeremiah. “Behold, I will refine them and test them, for what else can I do, because of my people?”
I could go on. God tests his people.
And here’s a second rule: His people can’t test him back. It’s not a two way street. God is sovereign. His people are subjects. You can’t have the subjects testing the sovereign -- or in more familiar parlance, the children testing the parents, the students testing the teachers, the athletes testing the coaches, the privates testing the generals, the clueless testing the clued in. It just doesn’t work that way. This rule exists though because human nature harbors the impulse to try. “If you’re God, prove it. Show yourself. Fix my problems. Exempt me from the conditions of existence. Prosper me. Grant me a miracle.” This one is not that hard to glean either. It too is all over the place.
And there’s a third and final rule about testing. The greater the faith the harder the test. It might seem at first glance that places a heavier burden upon the righteous, but it has to be that way. You can’t give someone a test that is way too hard or way too easy. You test to the level.
Consider this morning’s Old Testament Lesson. The greater the faith the harder the test. No one in all history had greater faith than Abraham, no one, that is, except Jesus Christ. Abraham started out in life a random nobody. That’s amazing if you think of it. The founding father of the Abrahamic faiths --Judaism, Christianity, and Islam -- more than half the world population today -- started out a random nobody. He was a pagan to boot. This means he deified the forces of nature. But God filled his head with heady promises – the promise of a son and heir, though he was old, if not to say ancient, and his wife barren. The promise that through that heir a multitudinous people would arise. The promise that through those multitudinous people a nation would arise, a nation that would bless all the nations. And Abraham, the random nobody pagan, believed all those promises. His faith was that great. And in time his faith proved justified. The heir was born. Abraham named him Isaac.
But the greater the faith the harder the test. God demanded the sacrifice of Isaac -- an unbearable demand, an unfathomable demand, an impossible demand --the death of your child, and at your own hand? And too it meant that God’s promises were null and void. An heir? A people? A nation? Abraham was now a hundred years old. There would be no conceivable way for them to come true. Nonetheless, as hard as the test was, Abraham’s faith was equal to it.
It’s been pointed out by a mind no greater than Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s that Isaac was safe all along. If Abraham refused to make the sacrifice, he failed the test. He would have gone his own way, but not as the founding father of the Abrahamic Faiths. But if he passed the test, if he showed a willingness to sacrifice Isaac, then the sacrifice was not necessary, and so the angel of the Lord intervened.
The Bible of course is for all generations. This means that these rules apply to us as well. This means that God tests us. This means we don’t test God. This means the greater the faith the harder the test. And it’s a safe bet that God tests us more often than we think. In fact we could and should think that any matter of any import greater than picking a red or blue player is a test. The test can come in the form of a decision we make or we don’t make. It can come in the form of something we should see but won’t. The test can come in the form of whether we say yes, or whether we say no. It can come in the form of a truth we need to sound. It can come in the form of an injustice we need to challenge. It can come in the form of a wrong we need to right. It can come in the form of a mess we need to clean up. It can come in the form of forgiveness we need to seek. It can come in the form of a change we need to make. It can come in any form really.
And we will either pass the test, or we will fail it. If we fail the test we get to go our own way. But God will not leave himself without witnesses in this world. God will indeed have his witnesses, but they won’t be us. But if we pass the test they will be us. And this is what life is about. It is not about playing it safe and running from risk. It’s not about conventionality and conformity. It’s not about mundanity and triviality. It is not about wealth and acquisition. It is about bearing witness to God.
The people of Jesus’ day broke the rules of life. They tested Jesus. They demanded of Jesus a sign to prove that he was the Son of God. But Jesus of course would have none of it. He demanded instead that they witness God’s test of him -- the test of Jonah -- three days dead in the belly of the earth. Because it was there they would see that he passed God’s test of his faith when he arose victorious on Easter morning. Amen.