Haggai 1:5-6
This is what the Lord of Heaven’s Armies says:
"Consider what’s happening to you!
You have planted much but harvest little.
You eat but are not satisfied.
You drink but are still thirsty.
You put on clothes but cannot keep warm.
Your wages disappear as though you were putting them in pockets filled with holes!"
We are living in a time like this now. We have so much going for us. We no longer have the nightly news, now we have information overload. But something is different. Everything is shallow, snippets of news. Everyone knows a little something about everything. At your fingertips you hold the knowledge of all mankind, but the attention span of a kindergarten student. And so our brains are filled with clues but little discernible skills to fathom the mysteries. As the prophet Haggai says, "Your wages disappear as though you were putting them in pockets filled with holes!" The people's hands are unclean, mixed up with unclean things and thoughts. They have everything and everything they touch is made unclean.
"You drink but are still thirsty".
The people looked at their economic and social problems and determined it was best to concentrate on taking care of their own business before trying to focus on spiritual matters. They felt like it was prudent to delay their spiritual work in light of the circumstances.
When I read this in Haggai I can't help but think about the pandemic overreaction by the State and the destruction of many of the religious communities that resulted. I cannot forget the times when the church doors closed and some were forced to close. I cannot forget the people falling away and the explosion of worshipping through the false promises of the media and internet communities. While the spiritual world stayed home, commerce went out and the rich got richer. As the churches shrank, the greedy people built empires.
While the people of faith, "planted much", their work was focused completely within, their outreach had completely disappeared, and so by virtue of their inaction "harvest little."
And the people remained thirsty, unsatisfied, they "put on clothes but cannot keep warm."
Food for thought:
I think in the end, it was mostly good that the shallow western churches went through the pandemic test. I think the people today are like the Israeli exiles who returned to rebuild after generations of oppression and captivity. They've lost sight of the glory of the temple. They don't understand cleanliness anymore, they've been so polluted by the gentile pagans. All they do, all they think, all they say, are all reflections of their Babylonian masters. They've lost sight of the Holy One because they're focused on the sound bites. In all our technological prowess we've forgotten how to communicate with the Holy One.
Jesus spoke to this as well.
Matthew 6:31-32
“So don’t worry about these things, saying, ‘What will we eat? What will we drink? What will we wear?’ These things dominate the thoughts of the gentile unbelievers, but your heavenly Father already knows all your needs."
I suppose these people think God needs a TikTok video or something, because frankly social media has become Satan's proxy and distraction. Spirituality is being reduced to thirty second videos and memes. There is no word, only impressions. There are no professions of faith, only likes. And the gospel and its impact upon the soul of the person isn't so much shared as it is reposted and then scrolled past.
"What you will eat or what you will drink… what you will put on" is all that really matters anymore. The whole attention of those who are living without God in the world. The stomach and the entertainments of the body are the compound gods of these worldlings. An untrusting godless fear masquerading as responsibility.
What should we do?
Jesus said "Is not life more than food?"
We are meant to live in Christ. Christ now in the surrounding lost glory, and that same Christ destined in glory. We must NOT exchange the glory of God for idolatry.
Birds don’t just sit around with mouths open wide, expecting God to fill them. They are the gardeners of the world. They fly out and reach out. They harmonize with God in his earthly provisions by doing what the were meant to do. God has provided the means, but the Wren must fly to it, and pick it out, and pick it up, and carry it to its nest. The bird must harvest the blessings.
I think people worry over the material things of this life because their spirit is rooted in a shallow understanding of their value before God. It's not that they don't believe "in God", they simply don’t believe He loves and cares for them. He hasn't met a need that was crucial in a moment, they missed an opportunity to succeed at something, and therefore he must be indifferent to their situation. A what comes from this experience is "little faith".
The thing about "little faith", is from God's perspective it's not a "little fault". This shallow faith grieves God in great ways. He sees his beautiful creation is left naked and covered in its shameful sin. And it grieves him to see this. He's clothed his creation in beauty and bountiful provisions, and his image-bearers are polluting it with shameful little faith. They chop up the cross they bear to lighten the load. And they haven't saved enough of it to save them.
Jesus is covered in his glory and he looks upon his people covered in shame and he weeps for them. And he dies for them. And in his resurrection he returns for them to bring them home again with him, in him, glorified like him.
No more shame, only pardon.
Called to testify to his victory over death.
Now they cry out, "He is risen!"
Suddenly they are converted.
And the rebuilding begins again.
Now it's your time. Time to show everyone what that rebuilding looks like. Time to dig down deep and build a firm foundation. Time to hang the new doors on the new door posts, and throw them open and shout outside to all the world...come!
You all of little faith, come.
And now God will be all in all.
Come and see!