Posted in Bible study, Devotion, From the Insideout, Journey Through The Word, LGG Study, Our God Who Pursues, Quiet Time

The House or the Heart?

based on the LGG Study, Our God Who Pursues / w4d1

Read: Haggai 1 (SOAP 1:12-13)

When God’s people were released from Babylonian captivity, they returned to Jerusalem to rebuild the temple. However, because of opposition from the Samaritans, the temple still lay in ruins while the people were living in houses they built for themselves with panels meant for the temple.

The people were misguided in thinking that the Samaritan opposition meant they should abandon their mission to rebuild the temple. Their decision to instead use what was meant for the Temple to build their own houses was an even bigger mistake, and God made sure they knew it (Haggai 1: 1-11).

 So – Is it wrong to live in nice houses?

While some may believe and teach that Haggai’s message was meant to infer that we are not to live in nice houses, I believe God’s true message wasn’t about their houses but rather about their hearts. They had misplaced their focus and lost sight of their mission and, in the long run, of their God. For, as Gotquestions.org points out, not only did the self-focus of God’s people involve neglecting God’s temple, but it also meant they were not worshiping in the temple as He desired.

The application for us today is that we must place God’s will above our own. In the case of the Jewish people, their self-focus involved neglecting God’s temple (and therefore worship in the temple) while focusing on their own homes. There is nothing wrong with living in a nice home, but there is something wrong with neglecting God’s priorities to pursue our own. First things first, and honoring God is more important than houses or any other material thing.

gotquestions.org

The Lord was not pleased, nor would He tolerate the people putting themselves first. However, the real problem wasn’t the houses; it was their hearts. As He had told them through the first commandment He gave to Moses, and Moses gave to them – He was a jealous God, and they were to put nothing (no other gods) before Him. There is nothing wrong with living in a nice home, but there is something wrong with neglecting God’s priorities to pursue our own. First things first, and honoring God is more important than houses or any other material thing.1

“You shall have no other gods before me. … for I, the Lord, your God, am a jealous God, who will not tolerate your affection for any other gods.

Exodus 20:3, 5

This was made clear to them not only through the message of Haggai but through a variety of ‘natural disasters’ that were meant to turn their focus and mission back to the true and living God. I find this to be a great reminder that the LORD does indeed pursue us and, in love, uses what it takes to get our attention. Verses twelve and thirteen reveal that the people not only listened to the message from Haggai, but they obeyed – and not as those under duress but as those who respected the Lord their God – and the Lord responded by energizing and encouraging both the leaders and the people.

Friends, we would be wise to understand that while this passage is from the Old Testament, its message still holds true for us today. We are to love the Lord with all of our heart, soul, mind, and strength and our neighbor as ourselves, which Jesus said sums up all the law and the prophets.

Food for Thought

From the LGG Journal

The Israelites return to Jerusalem was a gift of God. Their response should have been one of praise and thanksgiving by first rebuilding the temple, yet they were focused on self.

We, too, can be like the Israelites. We ask and hope for God to deliver us from a situation or make something new or better. When He does, we forget to respond rightly in praise. We can quickly move on and serve our own desires, or we start wanting the next thing. God graciously used Haggai to call the people back to obedience, and they quickly obeyed.

Think of your own life right now. Would your lifestyle and habits indicate that your first priority is serving and worshiping God? May we not become distracted and taken off course like the Israelites. May our hearts and lives be focused on God first and foremost.”

p121/Our God Who Pursues
Prayer of Response

Father, God, we can so easily become distracted by roadblocks or our own wants and desires. Thank You for the reminder that You not only love us but pursue us and draw us back to You and Your mission/desire for our lives. Help us to remember that Your desires/mission for our lives are so much better and more important than our own. May we live lives that glorify and honor You as we live obediently to Your commands. May we not neglect to praise and worship You for who You are and what You have done in our lives. – In the Name of Jesus I pray, – amen and amen!

The More We Know
Posted in Bible study, From Broken to Restored, From the Insideout, Journey Through The Word, Quiet Time

Purpose Matters

based on the LGG Study, From Broken to Restored / w6d1

Scripture: Nehemiah 13:1-14; Matthew 21:12-16 / SOAP: Matthew 21:13

Jesus entered the temple courts and drove out all who were buying and selling there. He overturned the tables of the money changers and the benches of those selling doves. 13 “It is written,” he said to them, “‘My house will be called a house of prayer,’ but you are making it ‘a den of robbers.’”

Matthew 21:12 and 13
A Look at Nehemiah

Our ongoing journey through Nehemiah is winding down this week and bears some close observation as we near the end. Today’s 14 verses deal with a time when one of the priest had repurposed a room that God had purposed for the the grain offering, the incense, and the vessels, along with the tithes of the grain, the new wine, and the olive oil. The priest didn’t just repurpose the room but made it a large storeroom for a relative to use. Nehemiah makes it clear that during this time he had gone back to serving the King and had not been in Jerusalem when the priest had taken over the storeroom. When Nehemiah found out what “evil” the priest had done he became very upset and threw everything out and gave instructions for the room to be purified. Once it was purified he restored it to its original purpose – including the “grain offering and the incense; he also made sure it would no longer be neglected. Because he did these things all of Judah once again brought the “tithe of the grain, the new wine, and the olive oil to the storerooms.”

Nehemiah’s Prayer Request

Following Nehemiah’s return and restoration project he makes a humble request of God to remember him for what he had done. At first glance this prayer may seem less than humble but he clarifies the intent of his heart’s purpose by specifically asking God to “not wipe out the kindness [Nehemiah had] done for the temple of [his] God and for its services!”

It wasn’t about what Nehemiah had done but why he had done it.

A New Testament Example

Today’s SOAP passage, Matthew 21:13, shows Jesus’ reaction to a similar situation as that of Nehemiah’s. We see Jesus, the one typically so full of love and compassion, “[driving] out all those who were selling and buying in the temple courts, and [turning] over the tables of the money changers and the chairs of those selling doves.” However, as with Nehemiah, Jesus’ words that followed his actions clarified His intent and heart’s purpose. Quoting from the Old Testament, He said to those involved, “It is written, ‘My house will be called a house of prayer,’ but you are turning it into a den of robbers!”

Jesus’ anger was clearly ‘righteous anger’ aroused because the people were misusing the House of God, His Father. Not only were they cheating the people who had come to the temple for righteous purposes they were robbing God of the joy and glory and honor He received when the people sought Him in prayer and sacrifice. This explains the statement Jesus made when He boldly identified the guilty parties as “robbers!”

Jesus’ anger wasn’t just about Him not liking what they were doing. It was about His jealousy for God and what they were taking away from Him.

Make it Personal: Reflection

Today, God’s presence indwells our hearts through His Holy Spirit. As we look at the way the temple of God was supposed to be treated, what does that mean for our hearts?

Going Further

Today’s LGG Blog Post offers more insight

Read about the House of Prayer and Den of Robbers

Posted in Bible study, From Broken to Restored, From the Insideout, Journey Through The Word, LGG Study, Quiet Time

The Proof is in the Details

based on the Love God Greatly Study, From Broken to Restored / w3d5

Scripture: Nehemiah 7:1-73; Acts 2:42-47 / SOAP Acts 2:46-47

Every day they continued to gather together by common consent in the temple courts, breaking bread from house to house, sharing their food with glad and humble hearts, 47 praising God and having the good will of all the people. And the Lord was adding to their number every day those who were being saved.

Acts 2:46-47

*Note on the Nehemiah passage: When the wall was complete and they were preparing for reentry, Nehemiah set in motion a focus on God (1-2) and followed God’s lead (5) as to who could enter. The chapter is long and filled with nearly 73 verses of names and details, details that were recorded because they would one day prove the family line between David and Jesus, the Messiah. The occupants were Jews and they were chosen according to who could “prove their lineage” You can read more about this in today’s “Going Further” section.

As for our SOAP passage, Acts 2:46-47, the who or how of the gathering of the disciples was structured a little different than the lineage based structure of Nehemiah’s day. In the disciples’ case – while they were Jewish converts – their gatherings had little to do with the fact that they were Jews and everything to do with the fact that they were Jewish Jesus followers.