Going, Going, Gone
Opening Prayer
God, I long to be a temple that Your Holy Spirit is free to fill completely. Let my heart be grieved with anything that grieves You.
Read Ezekiel 10:1-22
For additional translations of the passage, use this link to Bible Gateway.
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Scripture taken from the THE HOLY BIBLE, NEW INTERNATIONAL VERSION, NIV Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by Biblica, Inc.® Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide.
Reflect
“Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways submit to him, and he will make your paths straight” (Prov. 3:5,6).
There is a fine balance in any relationship between trusting the other person so much that there is complete security in the ongoing nature of the relationship and taking them for granted in such a way that we actually forfeit the relationship. On the one hand we can be sure that this friendship, marriage, business partnership or other relationship will always be there because we have complete trust in our partner. On the other hand once we start taking them for granted, not playing our part, not in our turn being trustworthy, then we stop treating them like people and make ourselves incapable of relationship. The unthinkable can then happen and we lose what we had.
Ezekiel, like many other prophets, describes ways in which this happened to the nation of Judah. Yahweh was their God, so it was his responsibility to look after them no matter what they did. They were the people who had “the temple of the Lord [Yahweh]” where he lived, so they could never be defeated. But as Jeremiah warned them, if they didn’t live in a way that honored God then the Temple itself would be destroyed (Jer. 7:4-15). They were deceiving themselves if they thought it was the Temple itself that gave them security rather than the two-way covenant relationship between themselves and their God. If they let the relationship lapse, then the Temple was an irrelevance. They had taken their almighty, righteous, glorious God for granted. They had ignored completely their own covenant responsibilities and Ezekiel, again using some of the dynamic imagery we saw in chapter 1, describes his vision of Yahweh’s glory actually leaving the Temple. They had, in virtually every sense, rejected Yahweh as their God. The consequence was that the security they trusted could no longer be there.
Apply
Do you fear God or, or on the other hand, do you ever take for granted the access you have to God through Christ?
Closing prayer
Lord, thank You that Christ Jesus has made a way for complete security and permanence in our relationship with You. I put my whole faith in You.
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