The Lord put it on my heart that the story of King Asa of
Judah in 2 Chronicles 14-16 is a prophetic metaphor for those who put their
hope in Donald Trump for America’s future. King Asa lived righteously before
the Lord for most of his life and his nation Judah was blessed with peace.
However, in later years, Asa put his faith in man instead of God, hardened his
heart and died amidst disease and war. In this story, there is a warning to
Christians to repent and not follow Asa’s path.
The Story of King Asa
“Asa did what was good
and right in the sight of the Lord his God.” – 2 Chronicles 14:2
At the start of his reign, King Asa removed pagan altars,
pillars and Asherah poles. (Asherah was a Canaanite goddess which the
Israelites sometimes worshipped when they fell into idolatry.) Asa told the citizens
to seek the Lord God and follow His commands. Because of his faithfulness, God
blessed the whole nation:
“… and the kingdom
experienced peace under him.” – 2 Chronicles 14:5
When the Cushites (a nation from the area around the Nile
River south of Egypt) brought a million-man army against Judah, Asa turned to
the Lord for help:
“Help us, Lord our
God, for we depend on You, and in Your name we have come against this
multitude. Lord, You are our God. Do not let a mere mortal hinder You.” – 2
Chronicles 14:11
The Lord answered and routed the Cushites on behalf of Judah.
They carried off a “great supply of loot.” Afterwards, Azariah son of Obed
prophesied:
“Asa and all Judah and
Benjamin, hear me. The Lord is with you when you are with Him. If you seek Him,
He will be found by you, but if you abandon Him, He will abandon you.” – 2
Chronicles 15:2
King Asa took these words to heart. He removed idols from
the land, renovated the altar of the Lord and gathered the people in Jerusalem
to make a great offering of 700 cattle and 7,000 sheep. They entered into a
covenant to seek the Lord God with all their mind and all their heart. The
people of Judah rejoiced.
There was no war in the land until the 35th year
of Asa’s reign. Somewhere along the line, Asa’s heart turned away from fully
trusting God. When King Basha of Israel began attacking Judah, King Asa turned
to King Ben-hadad of Aram for help. He sent Ben-hadad silver and gold from the
temple treasury and royal palace and implored him to break his treaty with
Israel. Ben-hadad agreed and attacked Israel, causing King Basha to cease
attacking Judah. Asa’s plan worked, or so it seemed.
But Hanani the prophet came to King Asa and said:
“Because you depended
on the king of Aram and have not depended on the Lord your God, the army of the
king of Aram has escaped from your hand. Were not the Cushites and Libyans a
vast army with very many chariots and horsemen? When you depended on the Lord,
He handed them over to you. For the eyes of the Lord range throughout the earth
to show Himself strong for those whose hearts are completely His. You have been
foolish in this matter, for from now on, you will have war.” – 2 Chronicles
16:7b-10
Asa was chastised for depending on the king of Aram instead
of on God. It seems to have been God’s intention that Judah not only repel
Israel, but also defeat Aram – by depending on the Lord. Because Asa acted
foolishly, his kingdom would have perpetual war.
Asa became angry and threw the prophet Hanani in prison. He mistreated
some of his people as well. Asa developed a severe foot disease, but turned to
physicians instead of seeking the Lord. He died only three years later.
What can we say? Asa walked righteously before the Lord for
most of his reign, but fell at the end by no longer depending on God. His last
three years were characterized by anger, war, disease, hardness toward God and abuse
of other people.
A Warning for Today
Asa is an example of someone who began walking with God faithfully
and was blessed for it, but later turned away from trusting God and ended his
life with suffering and judgment. (Judgment refers to consequences/discipline/punishment for
rebelling against the Almighty.) I believe there is a prophetic warning in this
story: King Asa represents Christians in America and King Ben-hadad of Aram represents President
Donald Trump.
Please let me speak plainly: God does not want Christians
to depend on Donald Trump for their future, but on Him alone. I believe those
who do will receive a judgment like King Asa – turmoil and suffering in their lives
and hardness in their hearts toward God and others.
I know there are many Christians who say Trump is God’s man
and his presidency is giving us a reprieve or space for the nation to repent. Even
well-known leaders like Franklin Graham and Jonathan Cahn say it. This is a
well-orchestrated, satanic deception. I won't go into details here, but
the evidence behind Trump as a deception is overwhelming (for example, see Obamacare,
the New World Order and the Mark of the Beast
-- Part 1). Unless these leaders repent, they will be judged for it,
as will those who listen to them.
Donald Trump is an instrument of God’s judgment on America
and a test for Christians: Will they depend on God or trust in men?
America has fallen spiritually, morally and intellectually,
and God has turned the nation over to judgment for its rebellion and
wickedness. The final period of judgments began with the noontime solar eclipse
that streaked across America in August of this year (see A
Basket of Summer Fruit for the Season of the End). Immediately following
were Hurricanes Harvey, Irma and Jose, causing immense destruction in Texas,
Florida and Puerto Rico (see Hurricane
Harvey Is a Judgment from the Lord, and More Is Coming). Then came the Las
Vegas massacre, California wildfires and the recent New York City truck terror attack. And so it will
continue in waves of growing intensity, until all Bible prophecies about
America are fulfilled:
God loves us – that’s why He’s warning us. Anyone who trusts in Trump should repent now. The only protection and blessing we can have in the days ahead will come directly from the Lord by depending on Him and following his commands. The devil wants us to believe the deception and be judged for it. God wants us to trust Him and be blessed for it.
3 comments:
As always Mike you are a straight speaker and my appreciation grows steadily for you.
Great article Mike! I pray others wake up and see the deception!!!
Powerful
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