After Pentecost Devotional - Day 11

If any of your people become poor and unable to support themselves, you must help them, just as you are supposed to help foreigners who live among you. Don’t take advantage of them by charging any kind of interest or selling them food for profit. Instead, honor me by letting them stay where they now live.” Leviticus 25:35-37

We have seen that Leviticus points to economic justice for all parties in Israel from the priests and Levites to widows and orphans. What we may not have caught is that the laws in Leviticus were to apply equally to economic justice for foreigners as for the people of Israel. In fact, the verse above assumes that foreigners were to be dealt with in equity and addresses an expectation that the people would more likely mistreat the poor than the foreigners in the land.

Though we may commonly quote 2nd Thessalonians 3:10, that those who do not work should not eat. That concept is completely foreign to this text in Leviticus. While Paul was speaking of people who were wanting to live on the charity of others in expectation of the imminent return of Jesus, the point here is that those who are without resources depend upon the generosity of those who control the economic resources of a nation.

Leviticus specifically forbids taking advantage of the plight of the poor as leverage to increase one's wealth. Rather than making use of the leveraging of one's resources for personal gain, Leviticus instructs us to make meeting the needs of the underserved a greater priority than increasing personal wealth.

The principles here undercut so many of the economic strategies of our society that it makes it really difficult to figure out how to apply these principles to life in the larger marketplace. Our whole economic system is engineered to leverage our assets for personal advantage over those whose perceived needs grant us leeway to profit from them. We prioritize the leveraging of capital above the needs of people, while Leviticus would stand that on its head.

Instead of allowing people to be evicted from a house due to financial constraints, Leviticus instructs us to be generous with the poor so as to keep them in their houses. If they are not able to support themselves, it becomes our responsibility to do so. We are to deal with them according to the manner in which Yahweh dealt with the nation by rescuing them from slavery in Egypt. Allowing a subsection of the nation to become destitute was the equivalent of reversing Yahweh's redemption of the people, something Israel was not to allow for by any means.

This generosity was to be inclusive. It was to apply to the Israelites, but also the to foreigners living among them, the immigrants in their midst. As far as Yahweh was concerned, there was no issue of us versus them. There was no reason to worry about there being enough to go around. The land belonged to Yahweh, and Yahweh was willing to see that is produced abundantly for all. The question was whether the people were willing to serve as stewards of God's abundant provision for all people.

Determine how God would want to shift your economic priorities and attitudes.


"Lord, mold me into the steward you created me to become, willing to provide from your bounty without discrimination."

—©Copyright 2016, Christopher B. Harbin
http://www.sermonsearch.com/contributors/104427/
 
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