When our daily routines are, well, routine, we may not turn to the Lord very often to seek His guidance. We may forget to ask, "What do you have to say to me today, Lord?"When it rains we remember to bring our umbrella. When a stick gets caught in the bicycle spokes, you may go for a tumble or before that happens, stop and figure out how to get it out.
Similarly, when the routine gets upset, then we call out to the Lord - hopefully - to seek His direction in time of crisis or the 'what now, Lord?" situations in life'.
This is what King Jehosphaphat of Judah did when he heard the most alarming news of a great multitude of enemies ganging up and coming in to attack.
Naturally, he was afraid. But this spurred him on in determination to seek the LORD's counsel. Scripture says,
"he set his face to seek the LORD" (vs 3).
He meant business.On top of this he fasted and
"proclaimed a fast throughout all Judah" (vs 3).
They were all in the same predicament and all assembled together to
"seek help from the LORD" (vs 4 ESV).
It was a dire situation and they desparately needed help. We too, have this avenue of help and grace whether for 'small' or 'big' circumstances. Our immediate response to trouble can be as Jehoshaphat's to seek the Lord and discern His guidance.
It's interesting to note Jehoshaphats's prayer and how he, the King of Judah, perceived himself. As a king he could command and his command would be carried out asap. He had authority and power to do that.
In his prayer though, he acknowledges that it was God who ruled over all nations and that He was the one with the power and might. He was basically saying God is the ultimate authority. In fact, he said that he and his people were
"powerless against the great horde that [was] coming against [them]."
And,
"[they did] not know what to do, but [their] eyes [were] on [Him]."
So King Jehoshaphat saw himself as powerless and in need of God's power and guidance. If this isn't humility, what is!
Every king of Judah (or Israel, for that matter), was supposed to have written out the then Scriptures and the Law as given to Moses. These were also to be regularly read aloud. There's evidence that King Jehosphaphat must have done so. He makes references in his prayer of God's past help. So he knew the history of his ancestors and people.
He gives God a mini-history rundown of how He'd helped them at other times of powerlessness, and now need His intervention once again in similar situation.
He has his say and then he waits. All Judah waits with him, expectantly.
I'm impressed that even the ...
"little ones, their wives and their children"
... all await God's guidance. It's not just a select few who were interested. No all were in earnest. Their routine had been drastically upset. So they wait ...
The answer comes flooding in as the Spirit of the LORD came upon Jahaziel a descendant of Asaph, a Levite from among the singer-songwriter worship leaders. The congregation bows down and worships, singing praise even before they take action.
We'd all love to have such swift, direct guidance, in point form direction. However, we don't always get that but there are some principles to glean here that I learned may help us in our non-routine situations.
There is, of course, acknowledging in humility, that God has all the power, authority and wisdom. There is also fasting. Knowledge of Scripture is important too. The Holy Spirit can bring to mind specific words to our minds that can give direction. So routinely read your Bible and pray every day. The more we read God's Word and meditate upon it, the more the Lord is able to guide us. We need attentive, obedient ears sensitive to hearing His guidance.
We need to remember that the battle is not ours but God's. We've sought His help so we ought to let Him. Give the reigns to Him even when taking action you discern He has shown you.
King Jehoshaphat and all Judah needed to heed the
"stand firm and hold your position"
order in order to see the Lord work His ambush upon the enemies. They had donned the armor and were in position, but they still stood firm and watched.It puts me in mind of putting on the armor of God, for us now. Often it is a spiritual warfare battle. Put all the armor on and
"having done all, to stand ..." (Ephesians 6:10-18 KJV).
We then stand and pray, holding our position and see how the Lord will guide. That is when we will see
" the salvation of the Lord on our behalf".
He is with us wherever we go.
Don't forget to worship Him and give Him your thanks. The inhabitants of Judah gave praise in a "very loud voice." They did so even BEFORE they saw the Lord's ambush. Sing praise now to our almighty God.
Sometimes we may feel God's guidance is too good to be true, or perhaps, not good enough. It just doesn't seem right. It should have been like this or like that! I like that King Jehoshaphat and his people didn't hesitate. They had sincerely asked and they accepted the LORD's guidance.
It was an unusual way for them to 'go to war' but God's answer was as it was and it was the right answer for them at that time. They confidently and with praise went forth to do as guided. They did not forget to worship, praise and to give their htanks.
What's more, was the strange battle forerunners. King Jehosphaphat commanded the group of singers to be at the forefront. They led the army! They did not have armor or weapons. They wore "holy attire"! And they sang!
Most army commanders are all into stealth and camouflage modes. Here the army moved out being led by singers as opposed to Stingers. You'd kind of think that they would be announcing their arrival and battle positions. Strange but true in God's army handbook. I wonder what Sun Tzu, the renowned ancient Chinese military army strategist who wrote the book The Art of War, would have to say about that. What a chuckle. (I haven't read it but who knows, he may have used such tactics too.) I digress.
In spiritual warfare, let's remember how to fight the enemy of our souls. Read God's handbook - the Bible - stand firm, pray, fast, obey and sing praise, in the name of Jesus. He deserves our praise for He is worthy.
There are ways to seek the Lord's guidance and apply them to our respective situations in life especially when the routine gets upset.
What's happening in your life right now? Seek His guidance. He's there for you.
~ ERC February 2025 ~
Based on 2 Chronicles 20:1-30 (ESV) and Christian Disciplines, lesson 9 - Guidance - Life Builders Bible Study, Christian Character.
Sing, Give Thanks With a Grateful Heart, along with Maranatha Singers and Holy Forever, along with CeCe Williams.