Write On, Scribes!

by Julie Lavender @JLavenderWrites
Last week, while Lori Hatcher penned the words for her September 27 post on The Write Conversation, I spoke at a gathering of the Jolly Christians, the senior ministry of a small church about twenty minutes from my home. Interestingly, Lori and I shared common Bible characters in our thought process. Lori’s delightful post about “Barry” and “Jerry” can be found here on An Unlikely Publishing Story.To summarize very briefly the passage of scripture related to our similar discussions, found in Jeremiah 36, Jeremiah dictated God’s words to Baruch, the scribe, who wrote on a scroll the words that God spoke about the fate of King Jehoiakim. The words on the scroll eventually made it to the king, but not until it had been heard by and passed through the hands of several important officials, including a man named Elishama who was described as a scribe, or secretary, to the king.
Well, the king not only didn’t heed the words, but he cut the scroll into pieces and burned it in the fire. God later removed the throne from him because of his actions.
Three times, the words “Elishama the secretary” are mentioned in this passage: in verse twelve, showing his presence during the reading of the scroll, and verses twenty and twenty-one when it was mentioned that the scroll was taken to Elishama’s room.
That’s it—that’s all the Bible says about Elishama. That’s the end of the story God wrote about Elishama as recorded in the bible.
However—here’s the cool part. In 1975, an archaeological discovery about forty-four miles southwest of Jerusalem unearthed small lumps of clay that were impressed with a seal, which, as you know in ancient times were used to represent an official signature for someone. The clay seals were stuck to a document to identify the sealer and to make sure the document hadn’t been opened or altered from the time it was written.
One of those seals belonged to Elishama, and read “Elishama servant of the king,” proving that he was indeed a scribe in the exact time frame and with the exact position that scripture describes.
From this obscure Bible character who is just the tiniest blip on God’s timeline, seemingly from the three times he’s mentioned in scripture, years and years later, God used Elishama’s story to once again prove the historical reliability of scripture. Just more evidence to validate 2 Timothy 3:16—“All Scripture is God-breathed and is useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting, and training in righteousness.”
God used the tiniest detail of Elishama’s role as scribe, or secretary, an obscure person mentioned in the Bible only three times—he used that very minor detail to validate the words recorded in scripture to archaeologists hundreds and hundreds of years later.
When we think the plot of our life is small or insignificant, I think it will benefit us to know that when God writes our story, no matter how small a role it seems like we play, in God’s kingdom, it’s all part of his masterpiece and every stroke is vitally important on God’s timeline. That thought should be a reminder to us to consistently live out one of my favorite verses: Colossians 3:23—“Whatever you do, do it enthusiastically, as something done for the Lord and not for men.”
Elishama did his job enthusiastically for the Lord, but it certainly blessed a lot of men and women in his day and a whole crew of archaeologists years later. As writers, the very words we put on paper or screen, done enthusiastically for the Lord, just might be the same words that prove the reliability of scripture and God’s faithfulness for generations to come.
Write on, scribes!
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Write on, Scribes! Encouragement from @JLavenderWrites on @EdieMelson (Click to Tweet)

Published on October 09, 2019 22:00
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