Deuteronomy 12
The worship of the Lord was the defining purpose of
Israel on earth. Could worship somehow be less important to us? All
the days that we live upon the earth, we should seek to obey the One
who is worthy of worship.
The promised land was to be a small piece of heaven. In
heaven there could be no false worship. The people of God were to
remove every other way of worship from Canaan.
The idea that Israel should imitate the devotional
practices of the Canaanites was to be abhorrent to the faithful.
The Lord would choose for them a central place for
worship in the land. They were to seek this central place for
sacrifice and festal celebration. They were to go there to obey all
the ways of worship that the Lord had revealed through Moses.
Eventually the Lord would reveal Jerusalem and Mount
Zion to Israel, and the people would build the temple of the Lord
there. But when Messiah came in person, He was revealed as the new
temple of the Lord, and in Him, the gathered church became the temple
of the Holy Spirit. The ascended Jesus is our place of worship. We
are called to worship in Him, in Spirit and in truth.
God commanded the people of Israel to make a distinction
the holy things that He told them to bring to the one central place,
and the other common gifts of blessing that they could enjoy in their
homes. Today, when we gather in Jesus as the body of Christ, we do
what He has commanded. We celebrate the presence of the Lord with
bread and the fruit of the vine which have been set apart from their
common use by the Word and prayer. We have homes to eat and drink in
every day as we choose. But we gather together in the living temple
of God to obey the word of the Lord who said, “Do this in
remembrance of me.”
If Israel adopted a compromising plan of worship,
accommodating a variety of cultural practices that came from the
Canaanites, they would be violating something very central to the
Lord, something very sacred, something at the core of their existence
as a people. This would be a trap that would ensnare them.
Worship and life are one whole.
The Canaanites had many ways of approaching their gods
that the Lord could never even remotely countenance. The even
sacrificed their own sons and daughters in the fire to their gods. It
could never be safe for Israel or honoring to God to incorporate that
kind of abomination into their religious practices.
Israel could not dream up worship from their own hearts
or discover worship from the people of the land. God had revealed
worship to them.
Now the Lord has revealed worship and life to us in His
chosen temple, the Lord Jesus Christ. We gather together on the first
day of the week and mark His death and resurrection. We are empowered
by His presence and enlivened by His truth. He is the land. He is the
temple.
2 Comments:
Wow Steve this is great! Having the ESV so readily accessable! I don't have to carry that huge one that John and I bought! LOL
Seriously though thank you for rising early to make this available to us. Have a blessed day.
The Cote's
We are reminded here that the Lord, our God, is very specific in how He wants His people whom He set aside, as His own, to live. In this world it can get cloudy when it comes to choosing right from wrong and it can be frowned upon when we, God's chosen people, choose to do what is right in the sight of the Lord. Some people just don't undertand that it "DOES" matter to choose the
" Way that is right", and it irritates them to no end to hear us say; "No I'm not going to do something that is crystal clear to me is wrong, no matter how small and insignifcant it may seem. God wants us pure and unblemished let us fear Him, not man. Thanks Steve this way of praying together as a church is going to make a difference in us as God's people. DS
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