Categories
Acts Devotionals

Being God’s intersection point

But Peter said, “I don’t have silver or gold, but what I do have, I give you: In the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, get up and walk!” (Acts 3:6)

Last Sunday, my pastor was talking about how Eden was God’s first intersection point between heaven and earth: a place where Adam and Eve could encounter God.

Then the tabernacle and the temple became God’s intersection point where his people could encounter him.

Then Jesus came, and he became the intersection point between God and and humanity. When people met Jesus, they literally encountered God face to face.

But now the Holy Spirit dwells in us, and we are God’s intersection point.

At least we should be.

Peter and John were for that lame man. Through them, that man encountered God and so did thousands more after hearing Peter speak.

In the same way, I want to be God’s intersection point for those around me. I want to be like Peter and John, noticing the people God brings to me and touching them with God’s love.

It may be praying for their healing.

Or giving them a word of encouragement.

Or sharing my faith in Jesus.

But that’s my prayer: “Father, make me your intersection point so that others may encounter you in me.”

Categories
Acts Devotionals

What’s important to God

You stiff-necked people with uncircumcised hearts and ears! You are always resisting the Holy Spirit. As your ancestors did, you do also. (Acts 7:51)

The Jewish leaders had made serious accusations against Stephen, charging him with speaking against the temple and God’s law (6:13-14).

But in Stephen’s words above, we see it was the Jewish leaders who were in rebellion against God.

Just as the Israelites had rejected previous saviors in Joseph (Genesis 37:8, 26-28; 45:5-7) and Moses (Acts 7:27, 39), they had now rejected Jesus.

And though the Jewish leaders claimed to value the law, like their ancestors who persecuted the prophets, they broke the law multiple times in having Jesus murdered.

Moreover, though they valued the temple, it was for the wrong reasons. The building itself wasn’t so important to God. No man-made structure could ever contain God. Rather, it was a symbol of his presence among his people. (Acts 7:47-50)

As John points out in his gospel, Jesus is the true temple (John 2:19-21).

In Jesus, God took on human flesh and dwelt (literally, “set up his tabernacle”, John 1:14) among us. And yet, the Jewish leaders didn’t value the true temple. Rather, they crucified him.

What is important to God? It’s that we honor his Son. It’s that we obey him. As the Father himself said,

This is my beloved Son; listen to him! (Mark 9:7)

Lord, you are the one that law pointed to. You are the one that the tabernacle and the temple pointed to.

Forgive me for the times I’ve resisted your Spirit. Forgive me for the times I’ve stubbornly closed my heart and ears to you.

You sacrificed your life for me on the cross. I have no desire to crucify you again in my heart (Hebrews 6:6).

You are worthy of my love, my honor, and obedience. Help me to give that to you every day.

I do love you, Lord. It’s so incredible to me that you loved me first, giving your life for me. Thank you. In your name I pray, amen.

Categories
Genesis Devotions

Our stairway. Our gate. Our temple. Our God.

A stairway was set on the ground with its top reaching the sky, and God’s angels were going up and down on it. The Lord was standing there beside him, saying, “I am the Lord”…

[Jacob] said, “Surely the Lord is in this place, and I did not know it.”

He was afraid and said, “What an awesome place this is! This is none other than the house of God. This is the gate of heaven.” (12-13, 16-17)

Think about this scene. Jacob, because of his sin, was on the run from his brother Esau.

And yet God reached down in his grace and revealed himself to him. Not only did he reveal himself to Jacob, he blessed him.

Around 2000 years after this event, another man named Nathanael stood in front of Jesus.

I believe that like Jacob, he was somewhat afraid because Jesus had revealed things about Nathanael that only God could have known.

Nathanael named him Messiah that day. But he didn’t yet realize that Jesus was much more.

Jesus told him,

You will see greater things than this…

Truly I tell you, you will see heaven opened and the angels of God ascending and descending on the Son of Man.(John 1:50-51)

In the story of Jacob, the angels descended from heaven on the stairway. Here in John, Jesus says, “I am the stairway. But I am not telling you to come up to me. I have come down to you.”

More than that, Jesus is the new house of God, the new temple where God’s glory is revealed, and people can draw close to him because of his death on the cross (John 2:20, 12:32).

And now, he is the gate to heaven. If anyone enters by him, he will be saved. (John 10:9)

That’s the meaning of Christmas. Jesus is our stairway, our temple, our gate, and most importantly, our Lord and God.

And whether we know it or not, he is in this place.

He is Immanuel, God with us.

So together with Jacob and Nathanael, let us stand in awe in his presence.

Categories
2 Chronicles Devotionals

What’s in your temple?

Sometimes people wonder why we need both Chronicles and Kings in our Bible, considering the fact that they cover much of the same material in Israel’s history.

Just as the putting the gospels together gives us a fuller picture of Jesus’ story, putting together Kings and Chronicles helps us to get the fuller picture of Israel’s history.

And while there is overlap in the stories, we do get more details by putting the accounts together.

In this passage, for example, you see the repentance of Manasseh. You don’t see that in the Kings’ account.  (2 Kings 21)

Beyond that, there are two key differences between Kings and Chronicles.

After Solomon died, the kingdom of Israel split into two kingdoms, the northern kingdom of Israel, and the southern kingdom of Judah.

The kings of Israel were all bad, following idols.

The kings of Judah had many bad kings, but they also had a few good kings who served the Lord.

Kings gives us information about both kingdoms.

Chronicles primarily focuses on Judah.

The other thing about Chronicles is it tends to put more emphasis on the temple and worship at the temple.

You see this in today’s story. Manasseh had wrecked worship at the temple.

It’s absolutely amazing to think that he would put idols of other gods in God’s temple.

Can you imagine setting up a statue of Buddha in your church and worshiping it?

That’s essentially what Manasseh did.

But think about this:  We are called temples of God (1Corinthians 6:18-20).

What do you put into your temple?

What kind of music do you listen to?

What kind of things do you watch on TV or on the internet?

What kind of books and magazines do you read?

Are these things pleasing to God?

Is your whole life an expression of worship to God?

Categories
John John 2

Jesus’ zeal for his temple

Well, for those who have been praying for my computer, thank you. It’s finally back up and running after hours of futile troubleshooting. All of it actually sparked a thought for today’s blog.

In this passage, Jesus comes to the temple and finds that it’s invaded by a bunch of merchants and money changers.

They had set up their business in the temple courts, namely, the court of the Gentiles. People who were not Jews and wanted to come to worship God were only allowed in up to that point.

But when Jesus arrived at that outer courtyard, he saw utter chaos. Sheep, cattle, and birds were all making a ruckus, hardly conducive to an atmosphere of worship.

And if that weren’t bad enough, many people who had to change their money to pay for their temple taxes were getting horrific exchange rates.

Others, meanwhile, were being told that the animals they had brought to sacrifice weren’t good enough and were being forced to buy new ones at premium prices.

Little wonder that Jesus was a bit, shall we say, perturbed?

So for one of the few times in the gospels, we see Jesus go on a rampage, driving all the money changers and animals out of the courtyard, and bellowing out,

Get these out of here! How dare you turn my Father’s house into a market! (John 2:16)

The Jewish leaders then demanded him to show what right he had to do such a thing; what miraculous sign he could do to show that he was truly doing God’s will, to which Jesus replied,

Destroy this temple, and I will raise it again in three days. (John 2:19)

The Jews thought he meant Herod’s temple, that was still not fully completed even after 46 years. (It was finally completed in 63 A.D).

But John tells us that Jesus was talking about his body. That though they may destroy it on the cross, yet he would raise it up in three days.

By the way, this totally destroys the idea that Jesus rose from the dead as a spirit as some, like the Jehovah’s Witnesses, like to claim. Here Jesus specifically tells us that he would raise his actual body.

But just as Jesus referred to his body as a temple, so Paul refers to our bodies as the temple of the Holy Spirit (1 Corinthians 6:19).

And just as Jesus was zealous for the temple in Jerusalem, and keeping it pure for the worship of God, so he is zealous for the temple of our bodies, that we keep it holy and set apart for God.

Yet so often, we clutter it up not only with sin, but with other things as well that would keep us from a pure worship of God.

Which brings me back to my computer. When it went down, my hardware was fine, I just had my Windows software go down, such that it would not boot up. As a result, I still had access to all my files. I just had to go through DOS (does anyone still remember DOS) to get at it.

I tried desperately to find a way to not have to reinstall everything. But in the end, I simply had to back everything up, format the disk (in other words, wipe everything out), and then reinstall everything.

I had a lot of things on the disk that were not bad at all. There were many good things there. But because of the corruption that was there, it made it impossible for the system to go.

How about you? Is there anything in your heart that is distracting you from your worship of God?

Or is there anything in your heart that is keeping others from seeing God in you, just as all the sheep, goats, and money-changers kept the Gentiles from seeing God in the temple?

There may be sin. Or there may be things that are not bad in themselves, but are still causing harm in your temple.

Let Jesus purge it from your life and make you the temple he desires you to be.

What’s in your temple?

Categories
Ezra

Opposition

Things are about to become messy concerning the chronology of Ezra.

I think I’ve got a handle on it now, but as we go through the next several blogs, keep in mind that there is quite a bit of dispute on scholars, not only on the chronology of events, but on who is who.

For the time being, I’m holding to the idea that Xerxes and Artaxerxes in chapter 4 of Ezra are the Persian kings who reigned between 486-423 B.C.

Some hold that they were actually Cambysses and Smerdis who reigned before Darius, which would make sense chronologically, but I’m not sure there’s enough evidence from history to say that they also held the names of Xerxes and Artaxerxes.

At any rate, speaking of things getting messy, things quickly got messy for the Jews who were rebuilding the temple.

As they were doing so, some enemies, apparently Samaritans, offered to help them in the rebuilding of the temple.

These Samaritans were the descendants of the remnant of northern kingdom Jews left in Samaria after the majority of the Jews were exiled to Assyria.

This remnant had then intermarried with the people who the Assyrians imported from Mesopotamia and Syria.

These Samaritans still worshiped the true God, but not him alone.  They mixed their worship of God with other gods.

As a result, the Jews that came with Ezra rejected their help.

When this happened, they started to oppose the Jews, not only in the building of the temple, but in the restoration of the walls and the city, as we will see throughout Ezra and Nehemiah.

I think we can learn a lesson from this in our own lives.

When we start to follow God, to build up and sanctify the temple of our body to Christ, and to build up our spiritual strength, there will be opposition.

Sometimes the people around us will be happy to see the positive changes in our lives and will even support us.

But when they start to see that what we believe is in conflict with what they believe, they try to get us to compromise our faith.

In Japan, for example, there’s much pressure on the Christians here to offer incense at Buddhist ceremonies.

But people will try to get us to compromise in other ways as well.  They try to get us to compromise our ethics at work or in our personal lives.  And if we don’t do so, they then start to become hostile.

Jesus never promised that if we followed him, everyone would like us.  Jesus was perfect, and people still hated him.  Jesus said,

If the world hates you, keep in mind that it hated me first.  (John 15:18)

So the question we need to ask ourselves is, “Who are we trying to please?”  Are we trying to please God or people?

Let us be people who seek the praise of God over all others.  No matter the opposition, no matter the cost.