
Against the flow
by Shane Altmann
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So all the elders of Israel came to the king at Hebron, and King David made a covenant with them at Hebron before the Lord, and they anointed David king over Israel (2 Samuel 5:3).
Read 2 Samuel 5:1–12
And there you have it. In what was once considered a ridiculous appointment, or anointment, we have the elders of Israel and the king of Hebron making a covenant with David and anointing him king.
You might remember a few short years ago, Samuel went out to Bethlehem to anoint a son of Jesse. No, not the tall one or the oldest one or the strongest one, but the little one. The shepherd.
And you might recall that same shepherd, looking very awkward in the armour of King Saul, as he said, ‘Yeah – Nah!’ to Goliath. He went off and did it his own way, with a stone.
The list goes on. Once an unlikely hero, once an unlikely king. Still remembered as the greatest. And Jesus himself, descended from David’s line, from the root of Jesse.
Martin Luther once wrote, ‘Where Christ is, he always goes against the flow.’ It was on this day in 1517 (All Hallows’ Eve/Halloween), that Martin Luther nailed his 95 arguments against the corruption in the church to the door of the Castle Church.
Luther and his fellow reformers in the early 1500s went against the flow of power and authority for the sake of the gospel and for the sake of people. They risked their lives to rally against the authoritarian and unjust power of the Pope and, in so doing, re-energised Christianity in Europe. This, in turn, reformed not only the church but also set the platform for modern Europe and the western world as it exists today.
As Christians, as Lutherans, we proclaim boldly that we are God’s people, that our Lord of Love is at work in this world, both redeeming and serving all people. It’s a powerful message. It goes against the flow of an increasingly secular society, but it remains the truth.
‘Where Christ is, he always goes against the flow.’
Always.
A lot is going on in the world at the moment. As we remember both the anointing of King David and the birth of the Reformation, this is a pretty good lens to lay over it.
Lord Jesus, thank you for meeting us in unlikely places. Thank you for being counter-cultural, and thank you for being for us, with us, Immanuel. Thank you for raising people up to do your work in the world. Fill us with your Holy Spirit so that we may act justly, love mercy and walk humbly with you. Amen.
Shane Altmann is the principal of Faith Lutheran College Redlands in Queensland and has served in education for more than 35 years. Married to Monica and father of two children, Harry and Zoe, Shane has learnt that he is largely helpless without the love and support of the people with whom he lives and works. A pilgrim of multiple Caminos de Santiago, a Penrith Panthers tragic and a restorer of old stuff, Shane loves a project and, when he is able, fills his days tinkering with something.
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