"I, the LORD, have called you in righteousness; I will take hold of your
hand. I will keep you and will make you to be a covenant for the people and
a light for the Gentiles, to open eyes that are blind, to free captives from
prison and to release from the dungeon those who sit in darkness.” Isaiah
42:6-8
I am still sitting here pondering the events of this weekend. Many opportunities to foster relationships from a six year old child to friends in their twenties, to a 16 year old girl in the worship ministry earlier today. In all this I ponder on what it truly means to be a follower of Jesus and the fine thread between self-gratification and pure unadulterated worship. To obey and act simply as Jesus did, to bring joy to the Father. If I am truly honest with myself and the Lord, not all of the “good works” done this weekend were done altruistically, infact one of the unmistakable signs was the exhaustion I felt by Sunday night. I was operating on the “I am enough” mode versus “I am bringing an offering of praise” mode.
The Lord put it on my heart to read Leviticus . . . notorious for the somewhat dry content and lack of action packed drama. It provides VERY detailed instructions on the manner of worshipping under the Old Covenant. Many Christians fail to read it under the pretense that since we are now under the New Covenant therefore everything prior, especially the Pentateuch, is obsolete. One of the revelations that the Lord is showing me is the sanctity of who He is which is reflected upon how we approach worship. The sacredness and holiness is often missing from our “worship” services or even our acts of worship. I once again am confronted with the sin of guilt. The guilt offering is when “a person commits a violation and sins unintentionally in regards to any of the Lord’s holy things” Leviticus 5:14. When I do, or as we so easily assert “doing the work of the Lord,” am I doing it for me or for Him? Am I doing it truly as an act of worship to my sacred God or am I doing it because I feel productive and purposeful. As I read this book, I am reminded that because He is holy therefore the works I do for Him are made holy as well, as were the offerings of old.
Despite the motives, I am humbled at how He chooses to use us. . . cracked, unshapely, fragile, bland jars of clay to work his purpose of freeing the captive from darkness and to heal the eyes of the blind. It has nothing to do with us and ALL to do with Him. I am saddened at what Christianity has become today, especially in a culture such as this when the self is at the forefront of all, even in our church. I am guilty of this also. In spite of this, He is choosing once again to reveal His untamable, terrifying yet loving character to me in the desert. He is indeed an AWESOME GOD worthy of our worship!
