DAY 40
DON’T GET TWISTED UP
Leviticus 6 & 7 and Matthew 25: 1 - 30
Yesterday I
talked about the five offerings. I also highlighted that a portion of chapter
six would finish up the directions for the last offering. Then in verse 8 of
chapter six and in chapter seven specific directions are given to the priests
with regard to what they are to do for each offering.
Lots of
details: I am getting use to them after all the details on how to build
everything. I am an Episcopalian Priest. Many people say that our worship services
are very formal and full of details; they are right. As a priest today much of
my life is different than the Old Testament, but there are similarities. I am
to be very reverent as I serve at the Altar. Reverence requires a sense of
intentionality, a sense of knowing why you are doing what you are doing, and
trying as best you can to not let the routine become rote. It is easy to get
this all twisted; to get all twisted up in the details. It takes paying
attention and working at it.
Isn’t that what
Jesus is talking about. Picture the scene: it is a cool night, your boss has
just taken on the religious of the day (those whom Jesus has accused of getting
it all twisted) you follow him out to his favorite spot, he sits down, so do
you and your other close companions, and He begins to talk. That is the scene we have entered. Jesus is on
the Mount of Olives, close to the day of the Cross, and He is teaching.
His teaching
in this setting began at the beginning of chapter 24. His disciples came up to
him “and drew his attention to the buildings” – the Temple. Jesus tells them
not to put their faith in it, he tells them it is all going to be destroyed,
and he tells them not to worry about when it is going to happen. He then moves
on to what they should be focused on.
Today we read
two of his teachings – where one says stay awake and the other says use what
God has given you for His Kingdom (not yours). The key in all of this (and
there is a huge key that if we forget we get all twisted up) is the same key
needed for Leviticus.
For Leviticus
I have pointed out that the people are already chosen. They are not trying to convince God to love them. They are
trying to become the people God has created by fulfilling the Law. They cannot,
nor can we. Jesus fulfills it.
We are staying
awake, we are working for the kingdom not to earn God’s love, but rather in
response to Him. Don’t get that twisted. Most religions do. Most religions say
you have to perform, and if you perform well enough God will love you and you
will spend eternity with him. Think of an old fashion balance scale: you sins
on one side having to be balanced by your good works on the other. That is not
what Jesus is talking about.
Why, because
we won’t be perfect. We will fall short. We will never get the scale balanced. If
we think we have to earn God’s love, or earn our place in heaven all by
ourselves, then we have gotten it somehow twisted. The Good News is that Jesus
has fulfilled the burnt and sin offering – we are to offer ourselves, in some
way, as the peace offering, but know that you are already chosen and when you
turn to Christ, you become united with him in his death – and all the debt is
paid.
What remains?
Quite simply living as redeemed resurrected people, untwisted, and showing the
way for others.
Matthew KJV commentary says that the man who hid his one talent - was not truly converted and denied soul-winning, personal evangelism and church growth. Those who hide their treasure (probably, the life changing message of the gospel), because of a harsh view of the master's sovereignty) over them reveal that they do not really love people and therefore, their own salvation is questionable.
ReplyDeleteBut... - fear is another reason in my thinking (in fact in my case) - it is waking up one morning and making a decision to follow Christ - no matter the cost.
One of the first things I thought of when you used the suggestion of not getting all twist up, was the challenges of the unknown direction of the Episcopal Church. I am not saying I don’t care or I don’t have an opinion, but for TODAY I am just enthusiastic about worshiping Sunday with my granddaughter on the altar and try to teach her to serve with respect.
ReplyDelete