Secrets to Thriving in Babylon
By Tim Paskert
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About this ebook
Discover the secrets to thriving in any workplace with Tim Paskert's riveting and eye-opening book, Secrets to Thriving in Babylon. In this book, Tim reveals God's simple and actionable ways for His children to not just survive but to thrive while living and working in a culture that doesn't follow the te
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Secrets to Thriving in Babylon - Tim Paskert
SECRETS TO THRIVING IN BABYLON
1
LIVE IN REALITY
The word Babylon comes from the Hebrew word for confused. We live in a very confusing world. This is not new. The first two chapters of the Bible reveal that God created heaven on earth, but then our ancestors decided they had a better plan, and it’s been Babylon ever since.
Sixty-nine percent of the world’s population does not believe that Jesus is the Son of God, the promised Messiah, who died on the cross, rose from the dead, and provides peace and eternal life for all who believe (Pew Research, April 5, 2017). Most people in this world are confused about God as they either worship false gods or reject religion and religious considerations altogether.
The numbers reveal, and history confirms, that Christians comprise a minority of the world’s population. This does not mean, however, that God has lost control; rather, it affirms that Jesus spoke the truth when He said, My kingdom is not of this world
(John 18:36a NIV). Jesus was born into a confused world, and He didn’t have the majority following Him when He ascended into heaven. If the Son of God didn’t get a majority, why should we expect it?
The truth is that, from the beginning, the Lord has always protected a remnant, a minority of the world’s population that believes and follows Him through this Babylonian world. The Bible reveals that only a handful of this remnant ever held powerful positions in this world. Most of them were like you and me—people living among and working for those who do not believe.
2
YOU ARE A GOOD FIG
There is not a human being on earth who can control their birth. No one has any power over where they are born or who their birth parents will be. However, the Bible tells us that our Father in heaven knows us before we were placed in our mother’s womb and knows these circumstances (Isa. 44:24, Jer. 1:5, Psa. 139:13). So, is a person born into poverty, to bad parents, in a nation that opposes the Lord, loved less by God than one born into a wealthy Christian family in a country that honors the Lord? While we know the proper answer, do we believe it?
Our earthly circumstances have no bearing on our relationship with God. I know of a young man born out of wedlock, into a low-income family, living as a detested minority in a nation that was pagan at best, atheist at worst. This man never received a formal education; he worked hard to learn his stepfather’s trade; obeyed the laws of the land, and submitted to the religious and political leaders of the day. He never traveled extensively, never achieved earthly wealth, power, or position, and unfortunately, was murdered by those he was trying to help. I call Him, Jesus the Messiah, the Son of God, my Savior, the Lord. When He rose from the dead, Jesus not only proved that He was the Son of God with the power to save all who call on His name, but also proved that our earthly circumstances are no indication of God’s love and favor for His children.
So, why do we often allow our circumstances to steal our joy or to cloud our judgment regarding others who are going through difficult times? Our time on this earth is brief compared to our eternal home in heaven where there are no tears, hunger, disease, or death—just life as God intended when He created the world. When we play each day for eternity, our circumstances lose control over our faith, and God’s love, joy, and peace rule our lives.
The Hebrew scriptures recount one of the most significant examples of how circumstances have little to do with God’s compassion for His children when the prophet Jeremiah was confused by what he saw happening in Judah. That should make you feel better. If a prophet can be baffled by earthly circumstances, we should not be discouraged when we have our lapses. Like the prophet, when we cry out in our confusion to the Lord, He will answer us, revealing great and unsearchable things we do not know (Jer. 33:3). His answers give us the peace and strength we need to keep going.
Here’s the backstory behind Jeremiah’s confusion: For hundreds of years, the Lord had been sending prophets to the nation of Judah, warning the leaders and the people to knock it off, to quit claiming to be His children as they worshipped false gods. It had gotten to the point where leaders were encouraging the practice of crazy religious ceremonies that included sexual deviancy and even child sacrifice. While God’s patience is unfathomable, the Bible reveals that He comes down hard on those who do evil and try to use His name to justify their actions (Matt. 18:6). Even though most Israelites were rebelling against the Lord, there was a remnant of believers who had never turned from Him. Instead, they continued to worship Him and did their best to follow the Lord. Jeremiah became very perplexed as he observed their circumstances.
After the Lord had sent His servant, Nebuchadnezzar, the pagan King of Babylon, to conquer Judah, Jeremiah felt great confusion and cried out to the Lord (Jer. 25:9). Did you catch that? The Lord sent a man who did not believe in Him to destroy the nation of Judah, His chosen people. The truth is that, aside from a relatively small remnant of believers, the Israelites had become as corrupt and confused as the enemy nation, so why not send a Babylonian to clean up the mess? Who was better qualified? With the conquering complete, Jeremiah’s confusion began.
The Lord knew that, ‘A Babylonian’s gonna do what a Babylonian’s gonna do,’ and King Nebuchadnezzar played his role perfectly. After defeating Judah, he systematically selected the best-of-the-best, the brightest and those with the highest character. Even a pagan king knows quality when he sees it. Taking them from their homeland to his own land in Babylon, the king trained them to serve his kingdom, even selecting some to serve on his personal staff. This caused Jeremiah great distress as he realized that Nebuchadnezzar had chosen most of those in God’s remnant—those who had never turned away from the Lord—to be taken away from the Holy Land to live in Babylon. The king had left behind the bad leaders, the false teachers, and those who worshipped false gods. The Lord knew that Nebuchadnezzar would take the best for himself and leave the rest behind.
In response to Jeremiah’s plea, the Lord gave him a vision of two baskets of figs on the steps of the Temple in Jerusalem. One basket had very good figs, and one basket had very bad figs. Then the Lord explained the meaning, This is what the Lord, the God of Israel, says: ‘Like these good figs, I regard as good the exiles from Judah, whom I sent away from this place to the land of the Babylonians. My eyes will watch over them for their good, and I will bring them back to this land. I will build them up and not tear them down; I will plant them and not uproot them. I will give them a heart to know me, that I am the Lord. They will be my people, and I will be their God, for they will return to me with all their heart’
(Jer. 24:5-7 NIV).
Now there’s a plot twist! The Lord revealed to Jeremiah that He was pleased with those He sent away to live in the land of Babylon. He wasn’t punishing them; the Lord was rewarding them, promising them that this was for their good and that they would be protected. He would build them up in Babylon, plant them in Babylon, not tear them down, and one day they would return to His Holy Land. The Lord had sent His people into Babylon for their protection.
However, there’s another basket… ‘But like the bad figs, which are so bad they cannot be eaten,’ says the Lord, ‘so will I deal with Zedekiah, king of Judah, his officials, and the survivors from Jerusalem, whether they remain in this land or live in Egypt. I will make them abhorrent and an offense to all the kingdoms of the earth, a reproach and a byword, a curse, and an object of ridicule wherever I banish them. I will send the sword, famine, and plague against them until they are destroyed from the land I gave to them and their ancestors’
(Jer. 24:8-10 NIV).
Those people that King Nebuchadnezzar permitted to stay in the Holy Land were not forced to leave their homes, family, and property. In fact, some of these bad figs