Walking with God and looking back brings destruction: Lot’s Wife - 6 June 2017
Louise Gevers
“On that day no one who is on the roof of his house, with his goods inside, should go down to get them. Likewise, no one in the field should go back for anything. Remember Lot’s wife!” Luke 17:31,32
Amazingly, Jesus speaks about Lot’s wife, but His words about her are a warning to His hearers. In the next verse, He continues“Whoever tries to keep his life will lose it, and whoever loses his life will preserve it.”This statement may puzzle us until we see it demonstrated in the fate of Lot’s wife, who, in looking back, lost her life.
In the Genesis account, Lot’s wife is first mentioned when the angels are urging Lot to leave the doomed city with her and their two daughters before it is too late. Incredibly, she is plainly not hurrying, despite having heard the angels’ instructions and witnessing the dire situation when Lot had offered their daughters to appease the depraved mob; she had also seen the angels save Lot by pulling him inside and striking the mob with blindness; and she knew that Lot had gone to warn their future sons-in-law to escape with them.
Yet in spite of all this evidence and the clear warning of God’s impending judgment, she disregarded the orders of the angels in, “Flee for your lives! Don’t look back, and don’t stop anywhere on the plain! Flee to the mountains or you will be swept away!” (Genesis 19:17) But Lot’s wife turned back to look at the destruction, and was turned into a pillar of salt as the debris rained down on her. She had had a clear opportunity to escape the destruction of the city – the choice was hers – but, like Lot, she was loath to leave her comfort, luxury and prestige. Even though she may not have really accepted Lot’s beliefs and was on the periphery, as a Sodom citizen, God’s mercy was extended to her, Lot and their family because of His relationship with Abram.
God always does what He says He will do, but here we see His judgment tempered with mercy. He shows amazing patience to save fewer than ten righteous people in a wicked city; ultimately, however, He does not save the one who does not want to be saved. So we return to Jesus’ warning: “Remember Lot’s wife!”
Prayer: Holy Father, purify my heart so that I will not deceive myself, but will clearly see my condition and my need of You. Help me not to cling to the past, or long for what is destructive to me, nor be so attached to the comforts of this world that I am not aware of Your Presence even in times of need. Let me never disregard Your kindness and mercy, but help me to live to serve You humbly and consciously in my life, always. In Jesus’ Name, Amen.