Reflecting God’s Character

Shortly after God brought the people of Israel out of the land of Egypt, he promised them that he would reward their obedience and punish their disobedience. Sadly, their story was filled with much more of the latter than the former. God, being slow to anger, put up with their sinfulness for hundreds of years. He repeatedly sent them prophets to warn them of the coming punishment and to implore them to return to the Lord. Nevertheless, they did not listen. In the 7th century BC God used the Babylonians to take Judah and Jerusalem captive and exile many of the people for seventy years.

God was faithful to his word and brought the people back to their land after the seventy years were over. But the exile had not cured the people of their sinful ways. After the return to Jerusalem, the people of God continued to harden their hearts and continued in their sinful ways. Once again, God sent prophets to his people to teach them the right way to live in a covenant relationship with God so that they would receive his blessing and not his disfavor. One of those prophets God sent was Zechariah. This was the message God gave to Zechariah to speak to his people: “Thus says the LORD of hosts, Render true judgments, show kindness and mercy to one another, do not oppress the widow, the fatherless, the sojourner, or the poor, and let none of you devise evil against another in your heart” (Zech. 7:8-10). God had sent the same message through earlier prophets to his people but they had failed to listen. The people in Zechariah’s day, like their ancestors before them, “…refused to pay attention… They made their hearts diamond-hard lest they should hear the law and the words that the LORD of hosts had sent by his Spirit through the former prophets” (7:12).

Zechariah’s prophetic message is reiterated in the next chapter. The command of the Lord was to “Speak the truth to one another; render in your gates judgments that are true and make for peace; do not devise evil in your hearts against one another, and love no false oath, for all these things I hate, declares the LORD” (Zech. 8:16-17).

God’s expectation for his people has always been that they conform their lives to his moral standards and character. God’s goodness, justice, love, and mercy are supposed to overflow into our lives and be worked out in everything we say and do, from our speech to our performance on the job and in school to our dealings with our neighbors and those that society rejects. But God’s expectation that our lives reflect his character is not a burdensome expectation. In fact, we are most truly human and most fully what God intends us to be when we mirror his character. What’s holding you back from displaying the character of God in your life?