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How is the word of God alive and active?

The word of God will change us. The word of God will cause us to move in new directions that we never imagined. The word of God is not just a bunch of ink on some old pieces of paper. It is alive and active and on the move, even now, even today.

But how? In what way is it alive and active? Here are a few ideas:

First, here is the scripture itself:

For the word of God is alive and active. Sharper than any double-edged sword, it penetrates even to dividing soul and spirit, joints and marrow; it judges the thoughts and attitudes of the heart. Nothing in all creation is hidden from God’s sight. Everything is uncovered and laid bare before the eyes of him to whom we must give account.

Hebrews 4:12-13

The context for these two verses is within the appeal that the writer of Hebrews makes to the Jews that he is writing to that they should enter into the rest that God offers to each of us. What does it mean that we should enter into that rest?

God himself rested from his work after his work of creation for six days. On the seventh day, God rested from his work. He himself completed the creation and set all of the systems of the universe in motion and then he rested from his work. This day, in fact, in the account from Genesis never ended. All of the other days had an evening and a next morning, marking the next day, but not the seventh day. The days of creation ended with God’s at rest.

In a similar way, God commanded the Jews to rest from their work. They were to take a Sabbath day. Each week, for one day out of the week, they were to take a day away from their work to rest. Already, therefore, we see the word of God living and moving in an active way. God applies this same idea, his rest, to even be included and codified into the law so that those things that are good for them, the Israelites will be done for centuries and millenia to come.

But now, an even greater rest has come. God has offered us forgiveness from sins through Jesus Christ’s sacrifice, his death upon the cross. And by accepting that offer, we no longer need to strive. We no longer need to work for God’s approval. We no longer need to continue to try to follow the law. We do it because he has forgiven us. We do it because we want God’s ways. We do not need a law to tell us what to do. We do it because we want to do it, not because we must do it.

And so in this first way, we see the word of God living and active. We see that God’s rest became man’s physical rest. But that same word continued on, carried on, even to Jesus, and even to today. Even today we have that same word amongst us, living and active. It is not only the word of God, it is also the Word of God. Jesus Christ himself who has offered himself so that we no longer must strive for God’s approval, but we can simply enter his rest.

These are no mere word games. These are, instead, the work of God, fulfilling his word in new and greater ways.

God had also promised the Israelites rest in other ways as well. God had promised Abraham that he would give Abraham and his descedents the land that he would show him. God led Abraham to the land of Canaan, roughly the land of Israel that we see even today. This would be the permanent land that Abraham and his descendents would inhabit and would find rest.

Centuries later, when Moses led the Israelites out of Egypt, they likely had more than a million people, and possibly more than two million people with them. They were a nation. God led them out of Egypt, across the Red Sea, and north toward Canaan. But they needed to cross the Jordan River and take possession of the Promised Land, which they didn’t do out of fear of the Canaanite people who lived in he land. They believed that they would be squashed, killed for entering into the land, even if we are to later find out in the story that the people who were in the land were deathly afraid of the Israelites because of what they heard that God had done to the Egyptians.

It wasn’t until decades later that Moses and his generation would die and Joshua would lead the Israelites to cross the Jordan River and enter the Promised Land. They would go from area to area to fight the battles necessary against the people in the land and take over the land that God had promised to them.

At the end of their fighting, and at the time that the people were established in their land, Joshua released the soldiers to return to their homes. He said that the people, the Israelites, had found the rest that had been promised to them. Within the Promised Land, God had given them their rest.

Once again, we see the word of God, living and active. The Promised Land was the place of rest for the Israelites. However, as some say, it was only a “shadow” of what was to come. Like the example of the Sabbath, that which had been done before was to be fulfilled in Christ. God had given the Promised Land to the Israelites, but God has given the promise of paradise, the possibility of living with God in heaven forever, thoughout all of the rest of eternity. But we must enter the rest that he has promised to us through Jesus, through the one way that he has offered it to us.

The word of God teaches us. The word of God is fulfilled in new ways, unimaginable ways, ways that we have never considered before. And so this living and active word acts within and upon us even today.

The word of God causes change. The word of God goes into the deepest depths within us and works in that place. It is living and active to be fulfilled not only from an ancient time into another ancient time, but it is living and active even today, fulfilled from the ancient time even into our present time. Even into you and me today. It lives. It moves. It changes things. It changes us. If we will allow it.

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