King Asa, Solomon’s great-grandson, started out well and pleased the Lord for most of his reign. He had a surrendered heart. “Asa did what was good and right in the eyes of the Lord his God” (2 Chron. 14:2). When trouble came his way and a mighty army came against him, he prepared to defend Judah with his army. But his hope was not in his army. Asa got on his knees before God and asked Him to do what he couldn’t do. Asa didn’t tell God what to do; He simply worshiped Him as Almighty God and asked Him for help. Because Asa turned to the Lord, God intervened and delivered them.
Asa had a good heart. He got rid of anything that would hurt his or his people’s relationship with God. “He removed the foreign altars and the high places” (14:3), anything that seduced them away from being fully devoted to God. He deposed the queen mother, who was influencing the people to idolatry.
Sadly, somewhere along the way, and ever so gradually, Asa began to drift from his devotion to the Lord. He did NOT remove the high places from Israel. In other words, he began to overlook and justify sin. He was totally committed and obedient to the Lord EXCEPT he didn’t remove the high places. All the devil needs to get a foothold in our lives is a little compromise.
Asa’s slow drift from the Lord came to a head in 2 Chronicles 16. When the security of Judah was threatened by King Baasha of the Northern Kingdom, instead of turning to God, as he had done so often before, Asa looked for a human solution. He paid the King of Syria to attack Baasha’s northern kingdom. And his plan worked! Baasha withdrew. But from God’s perspective all was not well.
God sent the prophet Hanani to Asa to say essentially: Because you turned to human solutions rather than putting your trust in the Lord, from now on you will be at war constantly.
There will always be a cost when we do things our way. IF at this point Asa had repented of his unbelief and partial commitment to God, he would still have had to face the consequences of his actions, but God would have used discipline to accomplish ultimate good in Asa’s life. But Asa never did repent. When the prophet Hanani confronted him about his sin, Asa became angry and put Hanani in prison. God, in His grace, tried to give Asa a wake-up call by afflicting his feet with a disease. “Though his disease was severe, … he did not seek help from the Lord, but only from the physicians” (v.12).
God wants us to know that He wants to strengthen, support, empower and guide those whose hearts are fully devoted to Him. King Asa was a good king, but his life went downhill because he was only partially devoted to God. God is not pleased with partial devotion. He longs to see a heart that is fully committed to Him.
Unless we remain sensitive to God and His voice and, like David, give the Holy Spirit permission to examine our hearts on a regular basis, we risk the very real possibility of drifting and cooling in our love and devotion to the Lord.
God is looking for the fully devoted heart—those who turn FIRST to the Lord rather than to human solutions, those who trust God and are obedient to His Word.