Devotional,OTJ

Day 63- Give it or loose it04 Mar

Even decide not to give to the church because you want a certain amount of money for something for yourself, only to suddenly have a car repair, dental issue, or some expense out of the blue that pretty much matches the money withheld from the Lord.  I’ve seen that in my own life, when I was less intentional in my giving patterns.  I’ve had friends who work 7 days a week and then end up flat on their back with back or heart issues, such that they are forced to rest at least as much as they should have! but now they have to suffer through their “rest.” Embedded in the list of consequences for the failure to obey the Lord is this set of statements:

Leviticus 26:34–35 (NIV) — 34 Then the land will enjoy its Sabbath years all the time that it lies desolate and you are in the country of your enemies; then the land will rest and enjoy its Sabbaths. 35 All the time that it lies desolate, the land will have the rest it did not have during the Sabbaths you lived in it.

This is an amazing concept to me that the Lord would could the years of disobedience and rest the land in proportion to their failure to rest the land. This demonstrates the Lord’s priority on the Sabbath rest for all of creation,from the people to the land in which they dwell. Add to that the agricultural significance of allowing a field to go fallow for a season, and God’s commands make all the more sense. it was for the protection of the people AND the land that they keep the Sabbath year.

This cycle of rest is very important for us to follow for our spiritual health and physical health.

Daily Rest

Weekly rest

Seasonal Rest

Sabbath Year

Mid-life Year of Jubilee instead of a mid-life crisis

Devotional,OTJ

Day 62-Happy 50th03 Mar

Feast of Jubilee, The

  • Held every fiftieth year.

    Leviticus 25:8 And thou shalt number seven sabbaths of years unto thee, seven times seven years; and the space of the seven sabbaths of years shall be unto thee forty and nine years.

    Leviticus 25:10 And ye shall hallow the fiftieth year, and proclaim liberty throughoutall the land unto all the inhabitants thereof: it shall be a jubile unto you; and ye shall return every man unto his possession, and ye shall return every man unto his family.

  • Began upon the day of atonement.

    Leviticus 25:9 Then shalt thou cause the trumpet of the jubile to sound on the tenthday of the seventh month, in the day of atonement shall ye make the trumpet sound throughout all your land.

  • CALLED THE
    • Year of liberty.

      Ezekiel 46:17 But if he give a gift of his inheritance to one of his servants, then it shall be his to the year of liberty; after it shall return to the prince: but his inheritance shall be his sons’ for them.

    • Year of the redeemed.

      Isaiah 63:4 For the day of vengeance is in mine heart, and the year of my redeemed is come.

    • Acceptable year.

      Isaiah 61:2 To proclaim the acceptable year of the LORD, and the day of vengeance of our God; to comfort all that mourn;

  • Was specially holy.

    Leviticus 25:12 For it is the jubile; it shall be holy unto you: ye shall eat the increase thereof out of the field.

  • Proclaimed by trumpets.

    Leviticus 25:9 Then shalt thou cause the trumpet of the jubile to sound on the tenth day of the seventh month, in the day of atonement shall ye make the trumpet sound throughout all your land.

    Psalms 89:15 Blessed is the people that know the joyful sound: they shall walk, O LORD, in the light of thy countenance.

  • ENACTMENTS RESPECTING;
    • Cessation of all field labor.

      Leviticus 25:11 A jubile shall that fiftieth year be unto you: ye shall not sow, neither reap that which groweth of itself in it, nor gather the grapes in it of thy vine undressed.

    • The fruits of the earth to be common property.

      Leviticus 25:12 For it is the jubile; it shall be holy unto you: ye shall eat the increase thereof out of the field.

    • Redemption of sold property.

      Leviticus 25:23-27 The land shall not be sold for ever: for the land is mine; for ye are strangers and sojourners with me. And in all the land of your possession ye shall grant a redemption for the land. If thy brother be waxen poor, and hath sold away some of his possession, and if any of his kin come to redeem it, then shall he redeem that which his brother sold. And if the man have none to redeem it, and himself be able to redeem it; Then let him count the years of the sale thereof, and restore the overplus unto the man to whom he sold it; that he may return unto his possession.

    • Restoration of all inheritances.

      Leviticus 25:10 And ye shall hallow the fiftieth year, and proclaim liberty throughout all the land unto all the inhabitants thereof: it shall be a jubile unto you; and ye shall return every man unto his possession, and ye shall return every man unto his family.

      Leviticus 25:13 In the year of this jubile ye shall return every man unto his possession.

      Leviticus 27:24 In the year of the jubile the field shall return unto him of whom it was bought, even to him to whom the possession of the land did belong.

    • Release of Hebrew servants.

      Leviticus 25:40-41 But as an hired servant, and as a sojourner, he shall be with thee, and shall serve thee unto the year of jubile: And then shall he depart from thee, both he and his children with him, and shall return unto his own family, and unto the possession of his fathers shall he return.

      Leviticus 25:54 And if he be not redeemed in these years, then he shall go out in the year of jubile, both he, and his children with him.

  • Houses in walled cities not redeemed within a year, exempted from the benefit of.

    Leviticus 25:30 And if it be not redeemed within the space of a full year, then the house that is in the walled city shall be established for ever to him that bought it throughout his generations: it shall not go out in the jubile.

  • Sale of property calculated from.

    Leviticus 25:15-16 According to the number of years after the jubile thou shalt buy of thy neighbour, and according unto the number of years of the fruits he shall sell unto thee: According to the multitude of years thou shalt increase the price thereof, and according to the fewness of years thou shalt diminish the price of it: for according to the number of the years of the fruits doth he sell unto thee.

  • Value of devoted property calculated from.

    Leviticus 27:14-23 And when a man shall sanctify his house to be holy unto the LORD, then the priest shall estimate it, whether it be good or bad: as the priest shall estimate it, so shall it stand. And if he that sanctified it will redeem his house, then he shall add the fifth part of the money of thy estimation unto it, and it shall be his. And if a man shall sanctify unto the LORD some part of a field of his possession, then thy estimation shall be according to the seed thereof: an homer of barley seed shall be valued at fifty shekels of silver. If he sanctify his field from the year of jubile, according to thy estimation it shall stand. But if he sanctify his field after the jubile, then the priest shall reckon unto him the money according to the years that remain, even unto the year of the jubile, and it shall be abated from thy estimation.

  • Illustrative of the Gospel.

    Isaiah 61:1-2 The Spirit of the Lord GOD is upon me; because the LORD hath anointed me to preach good tidings unto the meek; he hath sent me to bind up the brokenhearted, to proclaim liberty to the captives, and the opening of the prison to them that are bound; To proclaim the acceptable year of the LORD, and the day of vengeance of our God; to comfort all that mourn;

 

Entry is taken from The New Topical Textbook, edited by R. A. Torrey, published 1897.

Devotional

Day 60- Imperfections01 Mar

There are some weird commands in Leviticus and some of them make you wonder. What about the command that sacrifices must be without blemish. What a pain genetically speaking to have to offer the Lord the best, the purest of the flock. But i guess it makes sense to offer God your best and not just try to offload the sick, the weak, the dying. But then there is a tough statement about people:

16 The LORD said to Moses, 17 “Say to Aaron: ‘For the generations to come none of your descendants who has a defect may come near to offer the food of his God. 18 No man who has any defect may come near: no man who is blind or lame, disfigured or deformed; 19 no man with a crippled foot or hand, 20 or who is hunchbacked or dwarfed, or who has any eye defect, or who has festering or running sores or damaged testicles.

What is this? that the Lord would refuse certain people the opportunity to worship him. Actually, this was not a limitation on all people but on the sons of Aaron, who were to be priests in the tabernacle. In the next paragraph they are told that they can eat the sacred bread, but not participate in the work of the holy place. This does not mean that they are spiritually inferior, or disliked by the Lord.  Rather it is a limit for a purpose. Other people were loved, but if they were not of Aaron’s lineage, they could not participate either. God’s purpose in this is to further demonstrate the need for a perfect sacrifice, offered by a “perfect” person…or in this case one that fits the strict code.

Jesus was the perfect high priest:

Hebrews 7:23–28 (NIV) — 23 Now there have been many of those priests, since death prevented them from continuing in office; 24 but because Jesus lives forever, he has a permanent priesthood. 25 Therefore he is able to save completely those who come to God through him, because he always lives to intercede for them. 26 Such a high priest meets our need—one who is holy, blameless, pure, set apart from sinners, exalted above the heavens. 27 Unlike the other high priests, he does not need to offer sacrifices day after day, first for his own sins, and then for the sins of the people. He sacrificed for their sins once for all when he offered himself. 28 For the law appoints as high priests men who are weak; but the oath, which came after the law, appointed the Son, who has been made perfect forever.
Devotional,NJ

Day 55- When God Ran24 Feb

There are so many things I can write about todays passage. I want to offer a few options:

Watch this video my Phillips, Craig and Dean which puts one one Jesus’ ideas of the story into music

Buy today this incredible book by Tim Keller, called Prodigal God. Here’s the introduction:

The targets of this story are not “wayward sinners” but religious
people who do everything the Bible requires.
Jesus is pleading not so much with immoral outsiders
as with moral insiders. He wants to show them
their blindness, narrowness, and self-righteousness,
and how these things are destroying both their own
souls and the lives of the people around them. It is
a mistake, then, to think that Jesus tells this story
primarily to assure younger brothers of his unconditional
love.
No, the original listeners were not melted into
tears by this story but rather they were thunderstruck,
offended, and infuriated. Jesus’s purpose is
not to warm our hearts but to shatter our categories.
Through this parable Jesus challenges what nearly
everyone has ever thought about God, sin, and salvation.
His story reveals the destructive self-centeredness
of the younger brother, but it also condemns the elder
brother’s moralistic life in the strongest terms. Jesus is
saying that both the irreligious and the religious are
spiritually lost, both life-paths are dead ends, and that
every thought the human race has had about how to
connect to God has been wrong.
Why People Like Jesus but Not the Church
Both older brothers and younger brothers are with us
today, in the same society and often in the very same
family.
Frequently the oldest sibling in a family is the
parent-pleaser, the responsible one who obeys the
parental standards. The younger sibling tends to be
the rebel, a free spirit who prefers the company and
admiration of peers. The first child grows up, takes
a conventional job, and settles down near Mom and
Dad, while the younger sibling goes off to live in
the hip-shabby neighborhoods of New York and Los
Angeles.
These natural, temperamental differences have
been accentuated in more recent times. In the early
nineteenth century industrialization gave rise to a
new middle class—the bourgeois—which sought legitimacy
through an ethic of hard work and moral
rectitude. In response to perceived bourgeois hypocrisy
and rigidity, communities of bohemians
arose, from Henri Murger’s 1840s Paris to the
Bloomsbury Group of London, the Beats of Greenwich
Village, and the indie-rock scenes of today.
Bohemians stress freedom from convention and
personal autonomy.
To some degree the so-called culture wars are
playing out these same conflicting temperaments and
impulses in modern society. More and more people
today consider themselves non-religious or even antireligious.
They believe moral issues are highly complex
and are suspicious of any individuals or institutions
that claim moral authority over the lives of others.
Despite (or perhaps because of) the rise of this secular
spirit there has also been considerable growth in conservative,
orthodox religious movements. Alarmed by
what they perceive as an onslaught of moral relativism,
many have organized to “take back the culture,”
and take as dim a view of “younger brothers” as the
Pharisees did.
So whose side is Jesus on? In The Lord of the Rings,
when the hobbits ask the ancient Treebeard whose
side he is on, he answers: “I am not altogether on
anybody’s side, because nobody is altogether on my
side. . . . [But] there are some things, of course, whose
side I’m altogether not on.”3 Jesus’s own answer to
this question, through the parable, is similar. He is
on the side of neither the irreligious nor the religious,
but he singles out religious moralism as a particularly
deadly spiritual condition.
It is hard for us to realize this today, but when
Christianity first arose in the world it was not called a
religion. It was the non-religion. Imagine the neighbors
of early Christians asking them about their faith.
“Where’s your temple?” they’d ask. The Christians
would reply that they didn’t have a temple. “But how
could that be? Where do your priests labor?” The
Christians would have replied that they didn’t have
priests. “But . . . but,” the neighbors would have
sputtered, “where are the sacrifices made to please
your gods?” The Christians would have responded
that they did not make sacrifices anymore. Jesus himself
was the temple to end all temples, the priest to
end all priests, and the sacrifice to end all sacrifices.4
No one had ever heard anything like this. So the
Romans called them “atheists,” because what the
Christians were saying about spiritual reality was
unique and could not be classified with the other religions
of the world. This parable explains why they
were absolutely right to call them atheists.
The irony of this should not be lost on us, standing
as we do in the midst of the modern culture wars.
To most people in our society, Christianity is religion
and moralism. The only alternative to it (besides some
other world religion) is pluralistic secularism. But from
the beginning it was not so. Christianity was recognized
as a tertium quid, something else entirely.
The crucial point here is that, in general, religiously
observant people were offended by Jesus, but those
estranged from religious and moral observance were
intrigued and attracted to him. We see this throughout
the New Testament accounts of Jesus’s life. In
every case where Jesus meets a religious person and a
sexual outcast (as in Luke 7) or a religious person and
a racial outcast (as in John 3–4) or a religious person
and a political outcast (as in Luke 19), the outcast is
the one who connects with Jesus and the elder-brother
type does not. Jesus says to the respectable religious
leaders “the tax collectors and the prostitutes enter
the kingdom before you” (Matthew 21:31).
Jesus’s teaching consistently attracted the irreligious
while offending the Bible-believing, religious
people of his day. However, in the main, our churches
today do not have this effect. The kind of outsiders
Jesus attracted are not attracted to contemporary
churches, even our most avant-garde ones. We
tend to draw conservative, buttoned-down, moralistic
people. The licentious and liberated or the broken
and marginal avoid church. That can only mean
one thing. If the preaching of our ministers and the
practice of our parishioners do not have the same
effect on people that Jesus had, then we must not
be declaring the same message that Jesus did. If our
churches aren’t appealing to younger brothers, they
must be more full of elder brothers than we’d like
to think.

Devotional,OTJ

Day 54- Strange Fire23 Feb

"Strange Fire" by Michael Yosef Robinson Here is a devo by Ray C. Stedman

In this vivid picture book of the Old Testament, Leviticus, we are learning the great truth which time and again in the course of history seems to be lost and then recovered again — this marvelous truth of the priesthood of every believer in Jesus Christ. At times down through the centuries, unfortunately, the idea of priesthood has become very distorted in the Christian church. Various groups have set aside bodies of men ordained as priests and treated as different from other people, as "super saints" who have a special "in" with God. But the New Testament teaches nothing like that. It instructs us that every believer in Jesus Christ is a priest and has a ministry, and that our whole purpose for existence as believers is to fulfill our priesthood.

When this truth is recovered it always has the fantastic power to change a whole civilization. Whenever this has been taken seriously by the church in any nation it has always resulted in a tremendous awakening, a fantastic change of pace, and a vast improvement in the quality of life. Institutions and organizations which have been committed to injustice and have been causing the deterioration of society have been challenged, and much of what, in the best sense, we call "civilization" has been recovered through the impact of this truth. When Martin Luther and the reformers discovered and spread this truth, and people began to appropriate it, the Reformation swept through Europe like wildfire and completely altered the course of European history. I am grateful that once again God in these days is calling the church, a sleeping, slumbering evangelical church, which has largely forgotten this truth — it has slipped through our fingers and we have lost its impact — God is calling us back to take this truth seriously once again.

That is what this book of Leviticus centers upon. It is teaching us what it means to be a priest, to be a member of the royal priesthood {cf, 1 Pet 2:9} with which God has endowed this world and by which he intends to reach it. In our last study together, in Chapter 9, you remember that we saw the results of priesthood. When everything was done "as the LORD commanded" the result was a manifestation of the presence of God, a remarkable shining forth of the glory of the Lord. When Aaron, picturing Jesus Christ as the great high priest, and the sons of Aaron, joining with him in the priesthood, picturing us in our relationship with Christ, had done all that God had said and had fulfilled their priesthood as he had directed, then "the glory of the LORD" broke out in their midst. This is always the case. The "glory of the LORD" is the character of Jesus, the manifestation of his kind of humanity, present in our daily lives. Chapter 9, as we saw, concluded with a great scene of triumph. The Shekinah glory, a radiant cloud of light, suddenly appeared in the midst of the people of Israel and consumed the rest of the sacrifice in a flash of flame. The people, awed and amazed, shouted and fell on their faces, crying out in triumph.

But the amazing thing is that we now move immediately from that scene of triumph into a scene of tragedy. On the very day that this tremendous breakthrough occurred in the camp of Israel, tragedy strikes and a sudden and shocking manifestation of judgment occurs.

We have it recorded for us in the opening verses of Chapter 10:

Now Nadab and Abihu, the sons of Aaron, each took his censer, and put fire in it, and laid incense on it, and offered unholy fire before the LORD, such as he had not commanded them. And fire came forth from the presence of the LORD and devoured them, and they died before the LORD. {Lev 10:1-2 RSV}

The very same Shekinah which had consumed the sacrifice now flashes out again to destroy these two priests as they minister. What a shock this must have been to Aaron, to his remaining two sons, and to the whole camp of Israel.

You can imagine Aaron, watching with pride as these two boys of his carry out their duties as priests. They fill their censers with glowing coals, put incense upon them and go before the presence of the LORD as God had commanded. But then to Aaron’s sore amazement a jet of fire reaches out from the cloud of glory and in a flash the boys are gone. He sees their singed, burned, charred bodies lying there on the floor. What do you think your reaction would have been if you had been part of this scene? The people were stunned, sobered by this manifestation.

As nearly as we can determine, what these boys did was to substitute a kind of incense different from that which God had commanded. It doesn’t seem like very much of an offense, but it evoked immediate judgment from God and their lives were forfeit. I don’t know why they did it. Maybe they didn’t like the smell of the frankincense which God had specified and so they substituted some other kind of perfume — Chanel No. 5, or perhaps My Sin. But, for offering this, their lives were immediately taken.

Now, what is your reaction to that? I wish we could take a survey and ask you to reveal what you feel emotionally when you read this account. I would warrant that probably more than half of you have a sense of uneasiness about this episode and, if you were to probe deeply enough, a sense of resentment — even anger — against God for this kind of treatment. You feel that God is unfair. Why should he take the lives of these two men for such a trivial thing? I am sure that this was the reaction that Aaron and his sons felt, too, as they saw their brothers killed in this way. This is indicated in Verse 3, as we will see.

There are other stories in the Old Testament of the judgment of God in similar cases. For instance, Miriam, the sister of Aaron, indulged in a little seemingly rather trivial criticism and yet immediately God judged her with leprosy and she became white all over. A little later on is the story of Uzzah {2 Sam 6:3-8}, who, you remember, reached out to steady the ark of the covenant as David was returning it to Jerusalem. But as he touched it he dropped dead — just like that. There is also that story in the New Testament of Ananias and Sapphira {Acts 5:9-11} who, merely because they were pretending to a bit more dedication than they really possessed, died before the Lord!

Now why? What do you think about these incidents? Many of us, reading the Bible, tend to feel something — but then we pass on and never analyze it any further. This is why many people have come up with the idea that God, especially "the God of the Old Testament," is a God of vengeful judgment, that he is a fierce and harsh tyrant, and that the slightest misstep is treated with severe judgment. We tend to think of God in that way despite the hundreds of passages in the Old Testament that reveal the tenderness of his heart and the abundance of his love and compassion. But this is because we read our Bibles so superficially. God is acting here just as much as a God of love as he is in any other part of the Bible. His nature is love. And he never deviates from what he has revealed himself to be. So this action must be in line with his nature and character of love. And, if we don’t react to it as such, then there is something wrong with us. We need to stop and do some research to find out what is behind these acts which will help us to understand them as being actions of love and not harshness nor of fierceness.

There are several features in this passage which will help us: The first that ought to be clearly noted is that this sin on the part of these two priests was not a sin of ignorance but one of presumption. They knew better. It wasn’t that they were simply doing something at which they had no idea God would be offended. They had been told emphatically that he would be offended. If you look back at Exodus 30, you find in that chapter instructions for the construction of the altar of incense, where the incense was to be burned. In Verse 7 we are told,

"And Aaron shall burn fragrant incense on it; every morning when he dresses the lamps he shall burn it, and when Aaron sets up the lamps in the evening, he shall burn it, a perpetual incense before the LORD throughout your generations." {Exod 30:7-8 RSV}

And then in Verse 9,

"You shall offer no unholy incense thereon," {Exod 30:9a RSV}

That is clear, isn’t it? God had precisely said, "Be careful; do not offer the wrong kind of incense." So when these priests did so it was a violation of the direct command of God. They were doing something against which God himself had forewarned them. God never visits with judgment anybody who is struggling in ignorance to try to find him, even though they do it the wrong way.

The New Testament, in speaking about the Lord Jesus, quotes from Isaiah 42 a beautiful verse which says, "A bruised reed he will not break, and a dimly burning wick he will not quench," {Isa 42:3 RSV}. That is, God understands the heart of someone who is trying to find him, who is trying to do what is right, but doesn’t know much about it. And he never, never, in any way, discourages him. He encourages him. He is patient, longsuffering, tender, compassionate, and understanding.

But the sin of these priests, obviously, is one of willful presumption. They took it for granted that God wouldn’t care about it, even though he had said that he would. They gave no weight to his words, but insisted on their own way.

The second thing we need to note is that this sin was dealt with very severely because it distorted God’s revelation of himself. In all these priestly sacrifices and rituals God is explaining something about himself so that we might learn what kind of God he is. But by their disobedience these priests were teaching wrong concepts about the being of God. That is why God judged them.

You remember that this is what Moses did. When he was leading them through the wilderness on the way to the land of Canaan the people of Israel needed water. And in obedience to God’s word he smote the rock and water flowed forth. Later on the need arose a second time. This time God said not to smite the rock but to speak to it. But Moses, in his anger against the people, smote it. And though in grace and mercy God allowed the water to come forth to the thirsting people of Israel, he said to Moses, "You have not sanctified me in the eyes of this people. You have not taught the truth about me. Therefore you will not enter the land," {cf, Num 20:12}. God kept his word. Even though Moses was a mighty leader, and God used him greatly after that, still Moses had lost his right to enter the land.

Here we have the same sort of situation. These priests were supposed to be operating as the instruments, the functionaries, of God. And if they performed improperly they were misleading the people about God. That is the import of Verse 3. Evidently Aaron had begun to protest. Perhaps in his upset and anger at the loss of his two beloved sons he had started to cry out against God. But Moses stopped him with these words:

"This is what the LORD has said, ‘I will show myself holy among those who are near me, and before all the people I will be glorified.’" And Aaron held his peace. {Lev 10:3 RSV}

Aaron began to understand. You see, God had said that the incense to be offered was a peculiar kind — frankincense. Frankincense never yields its fragrance until it is burned. This is a very instructive lesson for us.

Incense, in the Scriptures, is always a picture of prayer. It is a beautiful picture. As the clouds of incense arose before the sanctuary in the evening air, they were a picture to all the people of how the prayers and thanksgiving of our hearts ascend before the God of glory. Incense is intended to be a picture of the prayer and commitment arising out of obedient and thankful hearts. And frankincense pictures, not merely thankfulness for the ordinary blessings of life, but, primarily, thankfulness for the hardships and the difficulties which burn us, the "fiery trials" we must pass through which Peter mentions in his first letter {1 Pet 4:12}, the ordeals of our lives. That is what God is trying to teach us — that it is a sweet, fragrant odor, a delight to him, to see a heart that is filled with praise and thanksgiving because of the trials we have passed through, a heart which has learned to rejoice in the fact that God has provided opportunity in these difficult times for us to manifest his character, and has taught us great (though oftentimes painful) lessons about ourselves through them. This is what delights the heart of God. And this is what God is trying to teach by the prescribed ritual of offering frankincense each evening and morning.

But that lesson is marred and altered and we are taught a false idea about God by the offering of some other kind of perfume. If perfume is a picture of our happiness and our thankfulness then mere perfume of some other sort would teach that God exists only to make us feel good, that he is there only to produce a modicum of human happiness. The implication of that notion is that whatever makes us temporarily happy is from God. That is the philosophy which today, as you know, is destroying thousands, millions — the philosophy of hedonism, i.e., that anything which makes you happy is the reason for life, anything which produces any sort of temporary, passing pleasure must be right, because that is what God exists for and that is why we are here. That approach to life is what is destroying so many today! It encompasses the idea of getting a temporary thrill from a shot in the arm with a needle, or of losing a sense of the ugliness of life in an alcoholic haze, or of retreating to some round of transitory pleasure which helps you to forget reality, which makes you happy for awhile. And it rests, ultimately, upon the misconception that all these things must be right because God exists to provide them.

But that is a lie, a lie about God! That isn’t what makes us happy. Happiness does not come from some momentary pleasure. It comes from a relationship of freedom, of giving oneself to the God who made us and thus being able to experience our true humanity for the very first time, really, as we learn to yield to God, to give up, to lose our lives and thus to find them again, as Jesus has said.

I don’t think there is any more graphic picture in the whole Bible of what it means to offer strange fire before the Lord than that prayer which Jesus recorded for us in the New Testament — the prayer of the proud Pharisee. Remember how he stood and prayed: "Lord, I thank you that I’m not like other people, like all these unwashed publicans. I tithe every day, and I fast twice a week…" {cf, Luke 18:9-14}. His prayer is a recital of all that he has done for God and suggests how lucky God ought to feel to have him on his side.

That is what is meant by offering strange fire before the Lord — anything which reckons upon our own self-righteousness and forgets that life is given to us as a gift. Perhaps the most basic form of sin is ingratitude, this prevalent seizing of life as though we have an inalienable right to it, instead of receiving it as a gift from a Father’s hand and giving thanks for it with that realization. What a tremendous text this is for Thanksgiving week! From it we can learn how to give thanks in such a way as will delight the heart of God. We can learn to rejoice in the fact that he has put us through trials and thus has given us an opportunity to manifest his life.

How are you ever going to show that God is the kind who returns good for evil unless somebody does evil to you? How will you ever get a chance to return good for evil unless somebody hurts you? How can you ever demonstrate the truth of the Scripture: "Blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness’ sake" {Matt 5:10a RSV}, unless somebody persecutes you? You see, the moment that happens you have a chance to manifest the life of Jesus, the character which delights the heart of God. How are you ever going to learn the disciplines of life which break down your self confidence and your trust in human resources, and which teach you to rely wholly upon a God who releases from within the strength you need, unless you are put into trials where human resources are not any longer adequate, unless you are pushed out beyond your depth? How are you ever going to learn this unless that happens? This is the great lesson that God is seeking to impart to us.

How many verses of the New Testament say the same thing to us? "Count it all joy when you fall into various trials," James tells us {cf, Jas 1:2}, because that is an opportunity to delight the heart of God by the reaction you show. And that is our priesthood. But if it is distorted, if we act as though we can give thanks to God only when things go right, if we can find it in our hearts to be grateful only when things are breaking our way, well, this is what anybody ought to do. Even non-Christians, pagans, can react that way. But God is looking for those hearts which have genuinely learned to rejoice in the trials that he has sent, and the pain we have gone through, the difficulties and disappointments, and the circumstances of hardship. Have you heard the little poem that goes:

God has not promised skies always blue,
flower-strewn pathways all our lives through.
God has not promised sun without rain,
joy without sorrow, peace without pain,
But God has promised strength for the day,
rest for the laden, light for the way,
Grace for the trials, help from above,
unfailing sympathy, undying love.

When you bow your head over your Thanksgiving table, are you going to give thanks just for the adequate supply of food and clothing, the roof over your head, the job you have, and the family around you — just for the blessings of life? Or can you also thank God from a genuinely rejoicing heart that he has taught you some deep truths through painful circumstances, for the fact that you have had to go through some hardships and some crushing disappointments but that out of them you have seen yourself in a new way, you have learned how to rest and to draw upon the resources of an abundant Savior in your life? Well, that is when God’s heart begins to swell with pride and gladness — when the frankincense goes up before him as a sweet savor in which he delights. But this is what was being twisted and distorted by the whole performance of these two careless and thoughtless priests.

The third thing we need to notice about this episode is that this judgment is exemplary, i.e. that God has made an example of them this once and that he never does this again. This is not something which happened every time a priest violated any regulation. It only happened once — at the beginning of the priesthood. Similarly, though the sin of Ananias and Sapphira was common among Christians in the early church, and has been common ever since, still God has never visited sudden physical death like that again. God is teaching a lesson by this action, and so he does it only once.

You can read that later on in the priesthood of Israel the priests did many very terrible things before the altar, but God never killed them for it. In the days of the Maccabees there was a time when they actually even offered swine’s blood on the altar, the blood of an unclean animal, which was a horrendous thing to do. And yet there is no record of God’s sudden judgment in that case.

But it is important that it happened at least this one time. For this is an example and therefore it is a manifestation of God’s love and concern. He is trying to stop this kind of thing from happening again, and he is giving fair warning of the eventual consequences to anyone presumptuous enough to sin deliberately in this way.

In reading an account of the terrible atrocities which occurred at My Lai, I was struck by a remark attributed to one veteran soldier regarding the passive attitudes of many senior officers toward cruelty to prisoners, and killing of civilians, and other atrocities committed by the armed forces. He said this:

This stuff would stop if we’d hang a couple of senior commanders. If it’s no longer condoned then it will cease. If you don’t tell a soldier what’s right, then he thinks whatever is tacitly condoned is what you want — and that’s what he does.

That is the way we human beings work. Unless an issue is vividly, dramatically, openly, symbolically made clear to us, we’ll go right on and do the wrong thing. So God is stopping that, arresting it with his judgment at this point. But he really wants us to learn to refrain for the sake of his glory, not out of fear for our lives, so he only judges in this way once.

One final thing we need to remember will help us to understand this whole affair in a different light. There is no implication here of eternal condemnation for Nadab and Abihu. This occurrence doesn’t mean they are lost. I have no doubt in my mind that these two young priests were with the Lord in glory immediately. God took them home — not because he was going to condemn them to hell, but only because they had violated their ministry. He called them home as an example to others in order that they in turn should not violate their ministries in the same way — especially in the reality of which what these priests were doing is merely the symbol.

What is the corresponding way in which you and I violate our ministries? How do we offer strange fire before God in our priesthood? We do it whenever we depart from the word of the Lord as it pertains to the advice we give others as we exercise our priesthood. These two priests did what the LORD commanded them not to do. And that is what we too often do:

For example, if somebody comes to us and asks for help and advice because they have been mistreated and personally insulted, and if you or I say, as we are so tempted to say, "Well, if I were you I’d punch him in the nose!" — that would be offering strange fire before the LORD, wouldn’t it? That isn’t what God has said. He says, "Return good for evil." Now, I don’t mean that there is never a time when it may be appropriate for us to be angry and even to exercise physical violence on behalf of someone else, but never on our own behalf. This is what God calls us to refrain from doing. What God is teaching us here is that the service we offer as a priest must be only that which is commanded of the Lord, and nothing else.

The next section of the passage reveals a very human reaction on the part of Aaron and his two remaining sons. We read,

And Moses called Mishael and Elzaphan, the sons of Uzziel, the uncle of Aaron, and said to them, "Draw near, carry your brethren from before the sanctuary out of the camp." So they drew near, and carried them in their coats out of the camp, as Moses had said. And Moses said to Aaron and to Eleazar and Ithamar, his sons, "Do not let the hair of your heads hang loose, and do not rend your clothes, lest you die, and lest wrath come upon all the congregation; but your brethren, the whole house of Israel, may bewail the burning which the LORD has kindled. And do not go out from the door of the tent of meeting, lest you die; for the anointing oil of the LORD is upon you." And they did according to the word of Moses. {Lev 10:4-7 RSV}

You can well imagine that they would! It must have been a tremendous struggle for them to stand by and watch their relatives summoned to go in and pick up these charred bodies and carry them out for burial. Naturally their hearts were torn. Their loss was sudden and shocking. These were their brothers, Aaron’s sons, and they loved them. Their natural reaction would have been to take the rest of the day off, at least, and to mourn them and weep for them. But Moses said, "No, don’t do that. You can’t do that. God won’t let you. If you do that you will die. God wants you to stick right with your priesthood despite the feelings of your own hearts." For God knew what we usually do not recognize immediately in circumstances like this — that out of the shock, out of the pain, out of the anguish of heart would come a new power, a new efficiency, and a new sense of purpose for the priesthood. So he would not let them off. Instead he led Moses to say, "Let the rest of Israel bewail them, but you stay right on the job. And don’t you quit!"

Have you ever felt like quitting? I have, lots of times. If I had been in these two remaining boys’ shoes I would have thought to myself, "How do you get out of this outfit? I never counted on anything like this. If you’re not careful to do what God says, this can happen. I’m quitting!" But God sent Moses to warn them, "You can’t quit!" Many times I have come to the place where I’ve felt like that. "I don’t want to help others anymore, Lord. It’s too great a responsibility. I want out. Just leave me alone and let me live by myself." But God says, "No." He knows that my priesthood, and your priesthood, will be all the richer because of his discipline. That is why we read in Hebrews 12, "Despise not the chastening of the Lord, nor faint when you are rebuked of him," {cf, Heb 12:5 KJV}. Don’t shrink from it or feel that it is too much for you to be expected to bear. For out of the pain of our heart will come a clearer understanding, a deeper compassion, and a stronger, more realistic word of help to someone else. God knows that, and so he won’t let us off.

God is an utter realist. He deals with life the way it is. It is we who are victims of illusions, delusions, and fantasies. We sometimes think that these matters are unimportant or trivial, that we can just toss off a word of advice according to our feelings of the moment. But God labors continually to impress upon us that the only wisdom we can count on as being realistic and genuinely helpful must be that which arises out of the principles taught in the Word of God.

I hope you take these words seriously, because God means them seriously. He is not joking when he says to us today that each believer in Jesus Christ is called to a priesthood. For some reason we have a tendency to blind our eyes and shut our ears to this idea and to say "Well, that belongs to somebody else." No! It doesn’t! It belongs to you! You have a priesthood and God has called you to it. There are no exceptions. I am no more a priest than you are. If I am in the ministry, so are you in the ministry. If I have a responsibility to help my brother, my sister, whomever I meet along the way, so have you. Your priesthood is to be exercised right where you are — in your office, in your shop, at school, at home, with your children, with your neighbors and your friends.

When God looks at you in your busy business office he isn’t noting what you often are noting. He isn’t concerned, primarily, about what you are likely to be concerned about. You are concerned about getting the work done, and doing it acceptably enough that they’ll keep handing you a check at the end of the month. God doesn’t worry about that, particularly. He wants your work done well. That’s part of your ministry. But the main thing that God cares about, and what he is really watching for, is how you react to the people you work with. What are you doing for them? How are you responding to the way they treat you? That is what God is watching for. And that is your opportunity for priesthood, for ministry.

One of these days God will call us all to account for our priesthood, and he’ll ask us, "What did you do in this situation, and that? How did you respond? Here was an opportunity for you to be a priest and what did you do?" What are you going to say? What am I going to say? God takes this very seriously. He lays this responsibility upon us, and he won’t let us off, no matter if our heart is breaking and we are going through pressures and trials and problems. He says, "You can’t quit. I’ve put you there to deepen your impact, to increase your opportunity, to broaden your ministry, and I won’t let you off." Out of this discipline will have to come a deeper, richer commitment, and a better understanding of the word of the Lord, and of what we can say to people that will help them, so that we will no longer be content just to pass along some piece of advice off the top of our head which merely reflects the philosophy of the world. That is the priesthood to which God is calling us.

We are going to reserve the rest of the chapter for our next study. In it there are some very interesting and helpful suggestions on how to carry out our priesthood, and what to avoid. And the chapter ends with a marvelous manifestation of the tenderness and the grace of God. I hope that you won’t carry away from this study any sense that God is a vengeful, strange, fearsome Being. He is to be respected. We can’t trifle with him in these spiritual matters, just as we can’t ignore the laws of nature and do whatever we feel like doing. God, of course, is sovereign in both. But, on the other hand, his every action, even this kind of action, is an action of love. It is an attempt to arrest further destruction and to stop it before it begins, and thus to keep us from hurting ourselves and harming others in the process.

Prayer:

Our Father, as we wait before you we, too, feel a sense of awe, a twinge of fear perhaps, a touch of apprehension in our hearts when we consider that you are this kind of God — an utter realist. You always deal realistically with everything. So Lord, we pray that this will help us to understand that we are not playing games in life, that being a Christian is not a game either, and that the priesthood is a very serious matter to which we are called. It involves us deeply, and there is no way out. Our responsibility then is to be what you want us to be, Lord. Help us to do so. Help us to understand that you are loving and understanding, and that you are willing to help us at any time. If in our foolishness and ignorance we blindly walk off into dead-end streets you are willing to help us back, Lord. But you will not put up with deliberate refusal to take your word seriously. By that we always cause ourselves difficulty. Help us to understand all this with proper perspective and balance. We ask in Jesus’ name, Amen.

Devotional,PsJ

Day 52-Psalm 48 in style21 Feb

And now for something entirely different:

Devotional,OTJ

Day 51- Don’t want to get involved20 Feb

Leviticus 5:1 “If anyone sins in that he hears a public adjuration to testify, and though he is a witness, whether he has seen or come to know the matter, yet does not speak, he shall bear his iniquity;

Though Leviticus may have some tough reading, there are some great verses that pop out. Keep looking for them. This verse, 5:1, is a great reminder of our responsibility to others in matters of justice. We may not want to get involved in other people’s business (and we certainly don’t want to sin by being a gossip) but when we see some injustice, we have a responsibility to get involved, lest the sin be on our head as well.

Be encouraged by the reading, and hang in there!

Devotional,NJ

Day 50- An honest look at ourselves19 Feb

The good samaritan story is pretty famous. And we’d like to think we’d be the Samaritan. Statistically it a NO. Psychologists John Darley and C. Daniel Batson wanted to test if religion has any effect on helpful behavior.

The Setup:
Their subjects were a group of seminary students. Half of the students were given the story of the Good Samaritan and asked to perform a sermon about it in another building. The other half were told to give a sermon about job opportunities in a seminary.

As an extra twist, subjects were given different times that they had to deliver the sermon so that some would be in a hurry and others not.

Then, on the way to the building, subjects would pass a person slumped in an alleyway, who looked to be in need of help. \

The Result:
The people who had been studying the Good Samaritan story did not stop any more often than the ones preparing for a speech on job opportunities. The factor that really seemed to make a difference was how much of a hurry the students were in.

In fact, if pressed for time, only 10 percent would stop to give any aid, even when they were on their way to give a sermon about how awesome it is for people to stop and give aid. Though to be fair, if you were late for a class, did your professor ever accept, "I had to stop and help a wounded traveler" as an excuse? Probably not unless you could produce the guy’s blood-stained shirt as evidence.

What This Says About You:

… the truth is us common folk are just as likely to be hypocrites as anyone else. After all, it’s much easier to talk to a room full of people about helping strangers than, say, actually touching a smelly and bleeding homeless man. So even pointing out their hypocrisy becomes a form of hypocrisy.

And in case you thought these results were just restricted to hypocritical seminary students, turn on the news.

PRAY TODAY, that you would be led by the Holy Spirit to act supernaturally…not naturally.

Devotional,NJ

Day 49- Deny Yourself, Take Up Your Cross18 Feb

Baby_Ruth-thumb-512x261-28741 Jesus is not looking for the self-willed, independent-type who will look at Jesus’ teachings and say, "Yeah,but" or "Jesus, lets tweak that idea"…his disciples did enough of that already. He not looking for the one who is really embracing Jesus for his/her own sake,though frankly, we start there…all of us. But rather, if we are to follow Jesus, there must be an embracing of all that Jesus is. There is something inherently wrong with the person who follows Jesus but remains unchanged. There is a failure to believe Jesus, to hear what he has been saying all along. This is the first, and most difficult part of the gospel, the denial of our own ability, our own wisdom, our own goodness and competence. I say most difficult part because most people who admit they need a savior, do not have much trouble recognizing Jesus as just that. And most people who reject Jesus are unwilling to come to the conclusion that they NEED him. They like Jesus only so much as they can assimilate him into their own system. That is why giving up chocolate is not denying self…there is way too much self imbedded in that. "this is what I’m going to do for Jesus. I’m going to give up something that is an extra, a luxury." For a worldly perspective to confirm this.

Let him deny himself-

Paul puts it this way, "“But whatever things were gain to me, those things I have counted as loss for the sake of Christ. More than that, I count all things to be loss in view of the surpassing value of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord, for whom I have suffered the loss of all things, and count them but rubbish so that I may gain Christ, ” (Philippians 3:7–8, NASB95)

Paul is saying that Saul is no more…the accomplishments, the trophies, the status, everything others desire so much can fly out the window. Paul wants to connect with Jesus, in knowledge and in suffering.

Bonhoeffer writes:

To deny oneself is to be aware only of Christ and no more of self, to see only Him who goes before and no more the road which is too hard for us. … All that self-denial can say is: "He leads the way, keep close to Him."
"…and take up his cross." … Only when we have become completely oblivious of self are we ready to bear the cross for His sake. If in the end we know only Him, if we have ceased to notice the pain of our own cross, we are indeed looking only unto Him. If Jesus had not so graciously prepared us for this word, we should have found it unbearable.

To endure the cross is not a tragedy; it is the suffering which is the fruit of an exclusive allegiance to Jesus Christ. When it comes, it is not an accident, but a necessity. … the suffering which is an essential part of the specifically Christian life.

It is not suffering per se but suffering-and-rejection, and not rejection for any cause of conviction of our own, but rejection for the sake of Christ. If our Christianity has ceased to be serious about discipleship, if we have watered down the gospel into emotional uplift which makes no costly demands and which fails to distinguish between natural and Christian existence, then we cannot help regarding the cross as an ordinary everyday calamity… We have then forgotten that the cross means rejection and shame as well as suffering.

The Psalmist was lamenting that he was despised and rejected of men, and that is an essential quality of the suffering of the cross. But this notion has ceased to be intelligible to a Christianity which can no longer see any difference between an ordinary human life and life committed to Christ. The cross means sharing the suffering of Christ to the last and to the fullest.

Only a man thus totally committed in discipleship can experience the meaning of the cross. The cross is there, right from he beginning, he has only got to pick it up there is no need for him to go out and look for a cross for himself… Every Christian has his own cross waiting for him, a cross destined and appointed by God. Each must endure his allotted share of suffering and rejection.

What do you need to reject about your own leadership, capability, goodness?

What will you bear as the burden of obedience to Jesus? Rejection by others, endurance of your commitments, forgiveness of those who have never asked.

What will you bear as the burden of Christ’s mission? Ridicule, work, picking up and moving to another place in the world, fewer pleasures

What will you bear as the burden of identity with Christ?

Devotional,PsJ

Day 48- When prayers hit the ceiling17 Feb

CeilingTile_1384m Psalm 44 keeps it real, and it is a tough psalm to read. Verses 1-3:You showed up in the times of our forefathers, in power and glory

Verses 4-8: I trust in You, not in myself, nor in a great army.

Verses 9-16: We are getting hammered, we are getting persecuted, but You have not shown up to deliver us from our enemies.

Verses 17-22: We are trusting You, we are remaining faithful.

Verses 23-26: Wake up, Lord, and come to our deliverance…where are you?

And the psalm ends there.

Psalms like this are a stark contrast from the psalms that we gloss over because they are too nice, too perfect, too much of a happy ending for us. This psalm asks a tough question, ”Lord, why do you not deliver sometimes, when I have been faithful and true.”

Peter C. Craigie writes: The real sense of perplexity finally emerges explicitly in vv 18–23. If the king and the nation had failed miserably in their covenant obligations to God, then at least their defeat in battle would be explicable. But they had not been unfaithful; they had maintained their integrity in the covenant relationship (v 18) and they had honestly walked in the path God set before them (v 19). They had not broken the first commandment (v 21) or kept any secrets from God (v 22). According to their understanding of the covenant theology, God should have been with them and given them victory; instead he had crushed them (v 20) and permitted them to be slaughtered (v 23). The meaning of the expression “place of jackals” (v 20) is not entirely certain, but the parallelism with “deathly darkness” suggests the devastation of defeat; the battlefield, where defeat was experienced, had become like the lonely palaces of postwar Babylon, inhabited only by the scavenging jackals and hyenas (cf. Isa 13:21–22). Word Biblical Commentary : Psalms 1-50

And there is no answer, which is exactly the feeling we get. I wonder if this psalm was the kind of thing Job thought, or David as he ran from Saul for years, or Jeremiah as he spoke the word of God faithfully without anyone listening. It is a psalm that helps us get to the bottom of our frustration with the Lord.

Thankfully, this psalm is not alone, and we continue to search for answers.

Craigie concludes:

But while the psalmist neither elaborates on the problem nor points to a resolution in theology, he points nevertheless to a more existential resolution. It is to be found in the prayer with which the psalm concludes. At the rational level, it would seem rather futile to pray and to seek God’s love, when the immediate experience suggested that God could not be relied on. Yet the prayer is rooted in a faith deeper than reason. The faith also went beyond theology, which implied that God’s actions could always be anticipated, if not predicted, strictly in terms of the covenant theology; the faith recognized a mystery in God’s ways, beyond both reason and theology, which made prayer worthwhile even in a time of crisis that was both military and theological in its proportions. And so ultimately, Ps 44 with its concluding prayer points in the same direction as the Book of Job, namely that there is an immense mystery in God and his ways, but one must continue to trust and to pray. The faith of the psalmist is not meek and acquiescent; his prayer follows a statement of downright insolence, in which he states that it was all God’s fault that so many had been killed (v 23)! But the insolence is muted by the prayer; for if God would only arise, then the life of faith could return to some kind of fragile stability.

Sacred Desert

Meeting the Lord in Dry Places:

None of us really want the Dry Spells of life. We become tired, and thirsty for something that satisfies, we are uncomfortable, we are unsure of the future. The dry places of our lives feel the most distant from the Lord. We think that the dryness is an expression of God’s removal of blessing, the absence of his presence, when in reality, it is the desert places that allow us raw and concentrated time with Him. Allow this series to challenge your thinking of that a time of blessing from the Lord looks like.

“There is in true grace an infinite circle:
a man by thirsting receives,
and receiving thirsts for more.”

- Thomas Shepard

Victorious Life

Too often Christians talk about just scraping by, lacking joy in the Lord, being defeated by temptation. When we read Deuteronomy, Joshua, Acts and Romans, we get a very different picture…celebration of victory and the gift of God’s strength to conquer evil. Over the weeks following Easter, we will find out what it means to live in the victory won  by Jesus in his resurrection.

Join the Discussion on this Series

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