Monday, February 24, 2020

Tents or Houses

     Moses had just returned with the 10 Commandments and it was time to worship. There was only one problem, there wasn't anywhere to do it. That is when God gave very detailed plans for what would become the tabernacle. Now if you want to see (technically read) the plans, you can find them in Exodus 25 and 26. If you do go and read that, you will find that everything is designed to be portable. All of the furnishings were designed to be easily carried and the tabernacle itself was really just a big tent. Why portable? They were never meant to be there very long. This was just a time of preparing them for what was to come; for a time when they could build a permanent structure to worship in.

     I think today we have a bad habit of building houses where God wants us to put up a tent. We linger too long in places where we should only be passing through; in places where we have things to learn to prepare us for what is to come. If you find yourself in a period of preparation, don't build a house there. Put up your tent, stay until it is time to move on to where you are meant to go and then move on. Don't spend your life somewhere you weren't meant to stay simply because you built a house instead of putting up a tent. Had Moses built a temple where they were they would never had moved on to the Promised Land. That time in the wilderness taught many important lessons in how to be a people, a people called by God, but it wasn't where they were destined to stay. You may be "in the wilderness" right now, but you aren't destined to stay there. Don't build a house and live there, put up a tent.

Monday, December 23, 2019

Glory to God in the Lowest

13And suddenly there was with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host praising God and saying:
14“Glory to God in the highest,
And on earth peace, goodwill[e] toward men!” Luke 2:13-14

I am sure you are all familiar with this scripture. If nothing else, you have heard Linus recite it in the Charlie Brown Christmas special. The angels were proclaiming the birth of The Savior, God made flesh, they couldn't contain themselves. This kind of news understandably would ring throughout the heavens, but I think there is more to this story. Let's look at the rest of the story. Here are the next few verses,
"15So it was, when the angels had gone away from them into heaven, that the shepherds said to one another, “Let us now go to Bethlehem and see this thing that has come to pass, which the Lord has made known to us.” 16And they came with haste and found Mary and Joseph, and the Babe lying in a manger. 17Now when they had seen Him, they made [f]widely known the saying which was told them concerning this Child. 18And all those who heard it marveled at those things which were told them by the shepherds". Luke 2:15-18
I think this is more important to us down here. The Savior was born in Bethlehem in a stable and laid in a manger. Bethlehem? Shouldn't it be Jerusalem? Or Rome? A stable and laid in a manger? It should have been a palace and a throne. Shepherds? It should have been kings and rulers. But you see, Jesus came to change everything, even the way we view power. Jesus came to reach the lowest. He came for us, the dirty, the insignificant, the lost. How do you reach the lowest? You become one of them. You go to Bethlehem, in a stable, in a manger. You become a carpenter's son in the backwaters of Judea. You spend your life among the poor and sick. You die in their place to pay the price for their sins. 
So yes, the angels had every reason to sing "Glory to God in the highest!" They recognized the eternal significance of the event they were witnessing. I think we also should sing "Glory to God in the lowest!" because that is where He went to meet us at the point of our need.


Saturday, December 14, 2019

Too Soon?

     I remember how excited I used to get when the Christmas decorations first went up on the streetlights in my town growing up. It usually happened right before Thanksgiving and it was the signal that Christmas would soon be here. Well, things have changed. Now I complain when I see Christmas decorations before Thanksgiving. I have a hard and fast rule, no Christmas until after Thanksgiving. No decorating, no music, let's not rush past Thanksgiving.

     I am starting rethink that position. I am beginning to think 5 year old me knew better than 50+ year old me. Christmas is something to look forward to, it is something to get excited about. The creator of the universe came to Earth as a child to bring salvation for a broken and fallen world, that deserves more than a few weeks of celebration, that deserves a lifetime of celebration.

     Now, I am not going to start listening to Christmas music year round, I will still wait until after Thanksgiving. I am not going to start decorating for Christmas the day after Halloween. I am going to stop complaining about those that do though. I think they may have it right, Christmas is more than just the month of December, it is the entirety of time.