Deep in my meditations some time ago, I heard the words
“vacant thrones”, as the picture of some kings played on the screen of my
spirit and other words began to come. I jumped out at once like a bee-stung
child to start to write. Every throne is not necessarily occupied by the one
who sits on it.
If a child should run into the father's office, for example,
and jump into the Manager's executive seat, does that make that child the
Executive Manager? No. Therefore, even in spite of the accolades of office that
a person might get from people who honour the throne, every throne is not
necessarily occupied by the one we see on it. Being 'in office' does not always
mean being in charge; and not being 'in office' does not always mean not being
in the picture. What we see, and seem to see so well, might not always be real.
Visions could be illusions and images a mirage. It used to be said that photos
never lie. Not true. Even pictures sometimes lie. In some quarters, it is
called “photo trick.” I shall later tell a little praying girl's significant
throne-room encounter with an angel; a little girl who sometimes followed her
mother to our weekly prayer meetings for the land.
Case 1: A Figurehead
'Absolute Ruler'
Pharaoh the king of Egypt once had a huge personal crisis
that had the signs of something bigger, something national. It was a repeated
ominous dream to which he had no answer. His advisers found him a gifted
prison-boy to solve the prized puzzle. That done,hear Pharaoh's 'Thank you'
speech to the dreams-decoding young man, and notice the speaker's careful
clause about the throne:
“You shall be over my
house, and ALL my people shall be ruled according to your word; only in regard
to the throne will I be greater than you.”
And Pharaoh said to Joseph, “See, I have set you over all the land of
Egypt” (Genesis 41:40-41, NKJV).
My little problem with that thankful speech is this: if
someone had rule over “ALL the land"
meaning the entire territory or geographical space; if “all” the people – which means entire ethnic nationalities and all
population groupings in spite of geographical location – were to be ruled
according to that person's orders; if that person's “word” had suddenly become
law and could determine death or life for any or “all” the “people,” would we
not say that such a person had already become the absolute ruler? Logically,
Yes, but not according to Pharaoh. He ensured that there was this clause in the
'swearing in' provisions: “only in
regard to the throne will I be greater than you.”
Joseph was going to be 'in office' with powers over “all the land” and “all my people,” but he still would not have the final say. Joseph's
position was therefore not as powerful as it had seemed, or as the 'press' might
have reported it. Miracle or mirage? I leave that to you, but is the
Joseph-module a possible contemporary political scenario? I hear your answer..
You might say, however, that this case does not exactly match the preliminary
proposition I had raised about vacant thrones. In that case, let's see the next
slide.
Case 2: Thrones in
Custody
Sometimes someone is on a throne merely as a custodian,
until another person should come for whom that person had been 'holding brief.'
One day, God announced thus to Prophet Samuel the verdict of Heaven about the
king incumbent of his nation: “I have
rejected him from reigning over Israel” (1 Samuel 16:1). Note the finality
in the simple present tense: “I have…,”
not “I will….” In spite of that very
clear notice of sack, Saul remained 'in office' for many more years, continuing
to savour the respected title of “the
LORD'S anointed” (1 Samuel 24:10; 26:9, 11, 16, 23), and also 'righteously'
chasing witches in the name of the God that had already declared his throne
vacant, of which he probably remained willingly unaware (1 Samuel 28:9). If
that announcement from Heaven is to be believed, then Saul ceased at once to be
king, or became merely a keeper of the throne on which he still sat, the title
of “King” then being only a decoration.
Did Saul's 'kingly' functions cease with the announcement
from Heaven? No. He still wore the crown and the robes; he still fought
'national' battles, and he instituted a holy decree against evil witches.
However, while he publicly chased witches, he secretly consulted them – very
like some politicians of our day who are the greatest secret patrons of the
vices they publicly condemn (1 Samuel 28:7-10).
How long did the 'custody' tenure of Saul last? It lasted
well over three decades. How did I arrive at that? This is how: It is told in 1
Samuel 13:1-2 that in Saul's second year on the throne, he chose 3,000
soldiers. The same chapter, which puts the date of those and subsequent events
at about his second or third year, “when
he had reigned TWO YEARS,” says in verse 14 that he was in that same season
rejected by God: “But NOW [which
means 'immediately,' not in the far future] thy kingdom shall not continue…” In case that did not make
sufficient sense, the 'electoral' prophet was instructed, three chapters later,
to 'swear in' the replacement that had been found. In my country, that prophet
would have been called or acronymed INEC.
…I have rejected him
from reigning over Israel? fill thine horn with oil, and go, I will send thee
to Jesse the Bethlehemite: for I have provided me a king [note: a king, not
a 'representative' or an 'acting' regent] among his sons (1 Samuel 16:1).
The irony: David was a king not yet on the throne; Saul was
a no-king still on the throne. Not all kings are yet on their throne, and not
everyone on a throne is the king there. In other words, the seat does not
always define the occupant, neither the vacancy.
In Acts 13:21, we read that Saul reigned 40 years over
Israel. Here is my simple maths: If Saul reigned 40 years altogether, and if
God rejected him in his second (or third) year, it would mean that for 40 minus
2 years, which is 38 years, Saul had merely been keeping custody of the throne,
until David would come on the scene and grow to be thirty years, then 'constitutionally'
became mature enough to take up the office. Note that Saul was already a
God-rejected, demons-possessed man in need of potent musical therapy even
before David showed up in the palace with his exorcist-harp and on the
battlefield with his anti-Goliath surface-to-air granite missile with its
launching pad of sling (1 Samuel 16:1-2, 15-16).
If my maths is correct, it would mean that, for all those
decades, God did not see Saul on the throne, even though men saw him there,
hailed him as king, and gave him all the protocols of the seat he was guarding
by sitting on. I ask, “Is it possible to have lost the noble mandate and still
be wearing the carcass title? Is it possible to be so long without God yet be
hailed by blind men with the prestigious designation of the very vacancy that
God has already announced? Can Earth be sometimes grossly out of touch with
'breaking news' from Heaven?”
Two other regal characters appear to fit into this category:
Lady Athaliah the daughter of Jezebel, and Ishbosheth the son of Saul.
Athaliah violently took the throne of Judah by killing
scores of her heir-apparent grandchildren after the premature deaths of her
husband and then her son his successor. Jezebelic witchcraft? Six years later,
a proper son took the throne after she had been sent off by the same violent
route she had come. Today, her name is not mentioned when kings of Israel are
listed. She had only been a custodian of the throne, albeit a very wicked and
bloody one (2 Kings 11:1-21). Also, Ishbosheth the son of Saul was installed on
the throne by selfish and ambitious powerful political opportunists after his father's
death, but who today remembers to mention that name in a list of kings between
Saul and David (2 Samuel 3:10)? He was a succeeding or secondary custodian to a
vacant throne of which his father was the first faded keeper.
Case 3: Occupied
Vacancies
A few months back this year, the following Scripture had hit
me with a newness I had never known. I find it an applicable next file to open.
Again, it is an announcement from Heaven, about an incumbent king; a verdict of
which the majority were ignorant, or chose to be vehemently, brutally so, even
the man at the centre of the saga (1 Kings 22: 24, 27). The notice from Heaven
came in the discriminated minority voice of a very disliked prophet.
And he said, I saw
all Israel scattered upon the hills, as sheep that have not a shepherd: and the
LORD said, These have no master: let them return every man to his house in
peace (1 Kings 22:17).
That was a great indictment. How could Heaven announce of a
nation that still had a king 'in office' that God sees them as being without a
shepherd (in Hebrew, ra`ah – a
carer, a friend, a pastor), and without a master (in Hebrew, 'adown – a sovereign, a ruler, a
leader)? In other words, according to that news from Headquarters, their throne
was vacant, in spite of the very powerful Ahab in office, with Queen Jezebel
his very newsy wife. God no more saw that man's many achievements that the
'press' daily reported. As far as God was concerned, therefore, all the
glamorous photos that filled the front pages of newspapers and announced him as
king of Israel, were a lie; a decorated branded lie that only the coming days
would reveal. Photo lies.
As God saw no king over the citizens of that country over
which Ahab sat, they were described as “scattered”
(in Hebrews, puwts, meaning
dispersed, broken or dashed into pieces, cast abroad, scattered, etc.). The
press, certainly, did not share that view, and never published it.
As Ahab was not, after Heaven's announcement, filling the
place in wait for another specific prophetic comer, I shall describe his case
as occupied vacancy. All the same, it is another case of a vacant throne – even
if men did not see it so.
Case 4: Protected
Vacancies
Whereas a throne may have an occupant whom Heaven does not
see in that capacity, the reverse is also possible, that a throne could appear
vacant while it is not actually empty. That was the case with the throne of
Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon. Heaven pronounced on that king a sentence of seven
years of isolation in the wild; a Peace Corps mission with beasts; a wild term
of practical orientation in humility. While the king was thus dispatched from
the throne, God ensured that it was protected from usurpers; that it was kept
preserved for him until he should return a changed person after his seven years
of compulsory service. The throne was apparently vacant, but it was not free –
at least as far as the supervising spiritual realm was concerned (Daniel 4:26,
36).
Case 5: An Angel's
Message to a Praying Girl
About three years ago, a little nine-year old girl who
sometimes came with her mother to our Monday prayer meetings in the gap for our
land, had a rare experience. There had been an election the outcome of which
had made many very sad. That night after the announcement of the electoral
results, she and her sisters went to bed weeping that her 'friend' had been
dishonestly denied the outcome of the elections. Her mother
had also contracted the tears and everyone had cried. That night, she had a
rare dream, as she sometimes does. (About a year ago, I shared her unique dream
about the divinely retributive death – and why – of a gory gubernatorial
candidate in a Middle Belt state whose name she had not previously known. She
had woken up announcing, to the disquiet of her mother, that that state
governor was dead. A few days later, the nation woke up to the shocking news
that he had died overnight in the process of the counts of an election in
which, it is claimed, he was leading.)
In her dream, she was taken to a Palace that they say is a
Rock, and was shown a vacant throne. She wondered why the sick and dying man in
the other room was not sitting in the empty throne into which they had just
announced him elected. The soldier-angel that was guarding the throne from
attempting Ishamaelitish sitters informed her that the vacant seat was awaiting
the coming David… and on and on. The angel did not say when the David was
coming; whether in two days or two years or twenty or fifty years. That was
probably left to the 'decision' of that land's intercessors.
While she watched, while the throne remained vacant, there
was an invasion of strange flying stinging creatures, particularly guarding the
empty throne. She woke up with a scar on her hand where one of the flying creatures,
in the dream, had stung her as she had tried to approach the throne in spite of
the cautions by the guarding angel. That scar on the hand was a significant
connection between the dream realm and actual world. Meanwhile, the dying man
eventually died, while his wife kept lamenting how she had warned him against
this.
While Israel's throne awaited David, Saul went on a killing
spree that did not respect even the priests of the Lord, and that was not just
for a decade or two. While Athaliah kept the throne that awaited Joash, the
land groaned under that daughter of Jezebel and Ahab; that, too, was not just
for one year or two.
Vacant thrones are not always pleasant announcements,
especially as the enemy will use the season to try his worst, scheming to steal
that throne or fill it with his own.
Case 6: A Message
from the Master
About a year ago, a lady from that same prayer altar had a
rare dream where two strange men took her aside from her busy spot and said
that they had a message for her from the Master. The Master had told them to
say to her that He has heard our cries but did not see whom to put in the
palace seat. She quickly reminded Him that the game seemed simple, according to
a previous script: Remove A and automatically constitutionally replace with B.
Strangely, the Messenger told her that they didn't see it that way. She then
replied, in surrender, “Ok then, please go back to the Master and tell Him to
help us urgently any way He knows best, because the suffering is getting
unbearable.” She woke up.
Pharaoh in the Old Testament was not throwing Christmas
parties for the Jews while they awaited Moses. Herod in the New Testament got
murderous when he learned that a Messiah was coming. In the devilish
pre-emptive hope of collaterally liquidating that Messiah, Herod genocidally
targeted the defenceless little 'tribe' from where it had been prophesied that
the Messiah was coming.
The promise of a David is not an announcement for retiring
thankfully into bed. It is a call to beseech the Master, “Make haste, O God, to deliver me; *make haste* to help me, O LORD”
(Psalm 69:17). Amen.
*From The Preacher's diary,
August 7, 2017.*
To contact The
Preacher:
info@thepreacher.info
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