Editor note: “And I sought for a man” is a quote from Ezekiel, but the call of God to change a generation in spiritual decline is not just to men, but to every person who chooses to rise up in faith and believe God to show mercy and do the miraculous, the impossible and the wondrous as He transform lives, cities and nations for His glory.
The Book of Ezekiel speaks of an hour of decline in Israel—a nation
that had claimed to know and walk with God. Sadly, the reality was that
they had fallen far from the standard God had set for them. It has been
the pattern throughout history that when the sin of a people reaches a
certain point, God releases His hand of protection, and the nation begins
to consume itself by virtue of its own behavior. We see this illustrated in
the following passage: “And the word of the Lord came unto me, saying, Son of man, say unto her, Thou art the land that is not cleansed, nor rained upon
in the day of indignation. There is a conspiracy of her prophets in
the midst thereof, like a roaring lion ravening the prey; they have
devoured souls; they have taken the treasure and precious things; they
have made her many widows in the midst thereof” (Ezekiel 22:23–25).
Typically when a nation is beginning to stray from righteous
living, the voice of a prophet is raised up to warn the
people of what is to come—the succession of events
that will inevitably unfold if they do not return to God. Yet in this case,
the prophets in Israel had become compromised. They were “taking the
precious things,” or in other words, robbing the people of the treasure of
God that should have been available for that generation. “Making her
many widows” means that families were beginning to break apart; the
strength of the nation was being lost.“Her priests have violated my law,
and have profaned mine holy things: they have put no difference between
the holy and profane, neither have they showed difference between the
unclean and the clean, and have hid their eyes from my sabbaths,
and I am profaned among them…And her prophets have daubed them
with untempered mortar, seeing vanity, and divining lies unto them,
saying, Thus saith the Lord God, when the Lord hath not spoken”
(Ezekiel 22:26, 28).
There was no longer a clear distinction between what was of
God and what was not. Lusting for power, the prophets began to tell
people whatever they wanted to hear, so long as they could retain
their prominent positions. They were not concerned about whether
what they spoke was truth or not,freely declaring to the people,
“Thus saith the Lord God,” when the Lord had not spoken.
“The people of the land have used oppression, and exercised robbery,
and have vexed the poor and needy:yea, they have oppressed the stranger
wrongfully” (Ezekiel 22:29).
Here we see the breakdown of a nation—its utter social, spiritual, and moral
decline—which placed it on the brink of judgment. Surely by now we must recognize the
similar state that our own country is in today. We have cast off restraint;
evil is now good, and good is rapidly becoming evil. We, too, have used
oppression and exercised robbery.The very basic unit of the family
is being destroyed right before our eyes. Anybody who has ever studied
anthropology or sociology knows that once the family structure is lost, the
society is bound to unravel.
MERCY STILL TRIUMPHS OVER JUDGMENT
Clearly the Lord is just in judging the people who claim to know
Him yet have allowed this kind of debauchery at every level in
society to govern them. However, look at His response as we continue
in the passage in Ezekiel:
“And I sought for a man among them, that should make up the hedge, and
stand in the gap before me for the land, that I should not destroy it:
but I found none. Therefore have I poured out mine indignation
upon them; I have consumed them with the fire of my wrath: their own
way have I recompensed upon their heads, saith the Lord God” (Ezekiel
22:30–31).“I sought for a man!” God had actually scoured the nation,
looking for even one person to stand in the gap—to stand between the
nation and God’s removing His hand, which would ultimately
allow society to follow the course of its own destruction.
It is amazing that God could not find anyone, especially when you
consider, for example, the temple. The temple would have been filled
with all kinds of people attending religious services and studying the
Scriptures. There were certainly people in those days who, at least
marginally, would have been trying to live upright, moral
lives. Therefore I cannot help but wonder: Is it possible that
God could not find anyone not because the people didn’t study
or know the Scriptures, but because nobody believed any
longer that He would be merciful?
You see, it is possible to get into a mind-set, particularly as the people
of God, where we become so gripped by the sense of judgment that we
forget that mercy triumphs over judgment. We look out in our streets
or watch the news and conclude, “Surely God is going to judge this.” It
becomes easy to agree with judgment when the evidence is mounting before
our eyes. And the danger of it all is that if we do not truly know the
heart of God, we can arrive at a point where we no longer believe that God
desires to show mercy.
A SPIRITUAL AWAKENING
The good news, however, is that throughout history, there have been
moments that I like to call “spiritual awakenings.” This is when somebody,
or perhaps many people, suddenly become aware of God’s willingness to
restore and to heal. They understand His willingness, in the midst of our
poverty, to release His riches once again—His willingness to take
us, not in our strength, but in our weakness. After all, the Scriptures
do not tell us to come to the throne of God when we are strong. Rather,
we are to come when we are weak to find help in our time of need
(see Hebrews 4:16).
It is almost like an auctioneer who, at unexpected moments, suddenly
pulls back the curtain and makes available an incredible treasure. In
our case, we are being offered the extraordinary treasure of God’s mercy
and power. The moment of awakening occurs when people begin to hear the
Lord speaking: “I know your land is desolate. I know your prophets
are not speaking for Me. Instead,they are leading the people into
powerlessness, having created a religious system around them
to help prop up their error. I know the people have used oppression,
exercised robbery, and vexed the poor and the needy. Nevertheless,
I am still willing, one more time, to be merciful.”
Is it possible that in Ezekiel’s day, God simply could not find anybody
who believed that He could use them for this purpose, despite all natural
odds seemingly being against them? Perhaps there were people who actually
did believe God was willing to be merciful, yet as they began to look
at their own resources, they concluded, “Well, I suppose God could be
merciful, but never through me.”
Imagine if that moment of mercy had come to Gideon and he, too,
formed a wrong conclusion. After all, when God appeared to Gideon and
called him a “mighty man of valor,” the nation was being swallowed
by 135,000 Midianites who had come in to take everything that the
Israelites were trying to harvest (see Judges 6:12). Initially, Gideon did
essentially question the messenger of God, “Are you speaking to me?
My father’s tribe is the least of the tribes of Israel. My father is the least
of his tribe, and I am the least in my father’s house. And in case you
didn’t notice, my father has an altar to a heathen god in the backyard. Are
you sure you have the right address?”
Yet God had sent His Word to Gideon, which is all we need in order
to be a mighty man or woman of God.Eventually, as Gideon followed the
Lord in a plan that made no sense to the natural mind, the Bible tells
us that God granted him and his army of a mere three hundred men
a great victory over the Midianites (see Judges 7:20–22).
It doesn’t take a hundred people to change your neighborhood;
it only takes one who believes that God is willing to
show mercy. What would have happened if that moment of mercy had somehow
passed him by? What if God had sought for a man, but He could not
find a Gideon—or a Moses, or an Esther? We don’t know what would
have happened to God’s people who were enslaved in Egypt, or what
would have been lost in the day when Esther had an opportunity
to go in and petition the king for the future of her people.
And so, in our generation, the treasure is being unlocked one
more time! It is as if the auctioneer is standing before the people, saying,
“Here stands an invaluable treasure. It is only revealed from season to
season. Who will give me a hundred dollars? Who will give me fifty?”
Silence. “Who will give me twenty-five? Ten? Five? Who will give
me a dollar for the treasure?”
Likewise, God is calling out to men and women whom He wants to use
for His glory. In fact, when you and I get to the throne of God one
day, we will finally understand the number of times throughout history
that He was speaking and searching for somebody. Remember, it doesn’t
take a multitude of people to change a nation. It doesn’t take a hundred
people to change your neighborhood; it only takes one who believes
that God is willing to show mercy. However, if nobody steps forward,
once again the treasure is forfeited and hidden until some undisclosed
future time. People who could have been spared are lost. It is such a
tragedy when God looks for somebody in a season such as the one in which
we live, yet He cannot find anyone who believes He could be merciful,
or that they might be used for this purpose. Therefore, the hand of God
is lifted, and as the Scripture says, the way of the people is recompensed
upon their own heads.
STEP FORWARD IN FAITH
It is clear that if we desire to be used of God in this hour, we must
be willing to step forward in faith, just as David did when he walked
into the Israelite camp and heard the mockery of God (see 1 Samuel
17:23). Astounded that the name of God could be brought into such
disrepute among His own people, he asked, “Why is nobody fighting
this? Why is everybody just standing still as if we don’t have God on
our side?”
Although the Israelites became offended at him, David said, “Don’t
let any man’s heart faint, I’ll go fight this giant.” One more time, somebody
believed that God was willing to be merciful. David went forward into
that valley with a sling and five stones, believing that God would
take the little he had and multiply it for His glory. That is exactly what
happened—David defeated Goliath and brought the people of God back
to faith again for that season.
Faith means we look away from the mirror. This is the essence of faith, and
this is what God is looking for in our generation! As the book of
Hebrews describes, faith is “the substance of things hoped for, the
evidence of things not seen. For by it the elders obtained a good report.
Through faith we understand that the worlds were framed by the word
of God, so that things which are seen were not made of things which do
appear” (Hebrews 11:1–3).
In other words, faith believes that the spoken Word to my heart
is all I need. If God created the universe out of nothing,
I don’t have to have something in order for God to use me. I just have
to have a heart that embraces the Word of God! Faith means we look away from the
mirror. We turn away from what we believe about ourselves, despising
every voice that has ever condemned us or said, “You can only go this far
and no farther.” The Bible tells us that David refused to listen when
Saul warned him, “Thou art not able to go against this Philistine
to fight with him: for thou art but a youth, and he a man of war
from his youth” (1 Samuel 17:33).
That is because faith says, “When God speaks, I will go forward!
I believe that He will give me the power to be everything He has
called me to be. I will not stand here in unbelief when the God of
this universe, the God who created me in His own image, is speaking
to my heart. I am going to believe Him for the miraculous to happen
through my life!”
If after all of our learning—after two thousand years of books and
testimonies—we have merely arrived at a place where we do not fully
believe that Jesus is today who He was in the Bible, then we are
to be pitied above all people. We will be left possessing knowledge
without power.
The writer of Hebrews continues:
“Without faith it is impossible to please him: for he that cometh to
God must believe that he is, and that he is a rewarder of them that
diligently seek him” (Hebrews 11:6).
We will not please God by our church attendance, Bible study
or even prayer. These things are important, but without faith, it
is impossible to please God! At some point, all of these things must
produce faith that is willing to adopt the plan of God, even if it does not
make sense to the natural mind.
WHO WILL BID?
“I sought for a man,” the Lord said. “I sought for somebody who would
believe that I wanted to be merciful.I sought for somebody who believed
that I could still use them, doing the miraculous through their lives.
I sought for somebody!”
That same call of God is resounding once again in this hour. The question
is: Will we see the history of Ezekiel’s day repeat itself? Will we be a nation
that simply goes down into judgment without a season of mercy? Or will
somebody, somewhere be willing to stand up and bid for this treasure of
Christ—His life, His mercy, His power? Perhaps you desire it but wonder,
How can I buy this treasure when I have hardly anything to give for
it? If so, consider God’s incredible invitation, spoken through the
prophet Isaiah: “Every one that thirsteth, come ye to the waters,
and he that hath no money; come ye, buy, and eat; yea, come, buy
wine and milk without money and without price” (Isaiah 55:1).
It is time for us to rise up in faith, leaving the familiar to obtain
the impossible.That is the cry of God. If you think you only have a dollar, then bid your
dollar. If you only have fifty cents, stand up and bid your fifty cents for
the treasure. God is not looking for our resources or our strength. He is
looking for the heart that simply says, “Lord, here am I; take me! Take me
with my five cents; take me with my loaf of bread. I have hardly anything
to give, but if You are unveiling the treasure, if there is an opportunity
for me to know Your power and mercy for the sake of others, then count me in!”
We must not allow the treasure of God to be hidden again; the curtain
cannot close on this generation in a season of incredible mercy. How
tragic it would be if the Lord were to say of New York City: “I searched
for a man and found no one.” No!It is time for us to rise up in faith,
leaving the familiar to obtain the impossible, trusting God for the
ability to accomplish all He has called us to do. As we bring to
the Lord what little we have, let’s believe that He will take
it and change a generation!
Carter Conlon
©2014 Times Square Church
God healed me of 29 years of devastating illness that attacked my body, mind and soul. He gave me a Holy Spirit gift of healing, then deliverence started to occur as I layed hands on people. II just came from a revival where I was told God was going to use me to change a generation. I came home thinking , :God how can I do this. So I looked up the meaning and God immediately took me to your article. At first , it sounded like judgement being pronounced. So relieved that it was about believing in God’s mercy triumphing . But God chooses to partner with humans. He chooses to respond to our prayers to release His power and mercy . Thank you so much for clarifying in your insightful and clear language. It was very encouraging.