Day #75
Scripture Reading: I Kings 5 - 9 …
For most people today "religion" is a
matter of what you DO. Spirituality is
viewed as a smorgasbord from which you may choose that which appeals to YOU.
It is YOUR choice and no one can or should make it for you. It is
an individual preference. So most people today believe … but it has never
been so from the beginning. God created mankind to worship HIM and any
other worship is idolatry and will be punished with everlasting judgment. "Religion"
is a matter of the heart and it is only when your heart has been moved by God
Himself to believe in Him, to trust Him, to live for Him, that you will find
that devotion to the One true God, our Creator, trumps everything else in
importance in your life.
As you read through the record of the kings of
Israel, you will find over and over again the contrast between those whose
hearts are committed to God and those whose hearts were committed to other
things, and even other gods. David had been "a man after God's
own heart," yet he, too, had at times strayed from God's Word.
Now Solomon, the son of David and Bathsheba, became King of Israel and
set his heart to building God's temple. For seven years the people worked
on the temple. Solomon considered the temple site a holy place so "no
hammer, chisel or any other iron tool was heard at the temple site while it was
being built" (I Kings 6:7).
When the temple and all the interior was finished,
Solomon brought the Ark of the Covenant and the priests took it into the Most
Holy Place. Then, once again, as He had done with the tabernacle, God
showed that He was present as a cloud covered the temple. With all of
Israel in assembly, Solomon blessed the people and then offered the prayer of
dedication that is recorded for us in Chapter 8. Notice that the focus of
the prayer is on God … that this is HIS temple, that it existed for HIS glory
and that HIS presence was needed in order to receive His forgiveness and His
blessing. Many then and now get all caught up in religious rituals and
exercises, and God certainly outlined the sacrifices and ceremonies and
everything connected to the temple … but all of that was to point them to their
NEED for forgiveness and their NEED for a Savior!!
Listen to some of the testimony of Solomon as he
prays: "O LORD, God of Israel, there is no God like You in heaven
above or on earth below … with Your mouth You have promised and with Your
hand You have fulfilled it - as it is today" (8:23-24). "But
will God really dwell on earth? The heavens, even the highest heaven,
cannot contain You. How much less this temple I have built! Yet
give attention to Your servant's prayer and his plea for mercy, O LORD my
God" (8:27-28).
Solomon was perhaps the greatest king ever with
respect to his reign over Israel, yet here he was pleading for mercy and
forgiveness for himself and the people he was governing. He prayed, "May
Your eyes be open toward this temple night and day" (8:29). He
knew that God in all of His glory and fullness was not contained in the temple.
Like his father, David, Solomon spoke of heaven as the dwelling-place of
God, so he prays repeatedly: "Hear from heaven, Your
dwelling-place, and when You hear, forgive!" (8:30 and other
verses). Forgiveness was required to draw near to God and Solomon
apparently knew and believed that it was only God's mercy that would move Him
to forgive, for no one is worthy to stand before HIM!
Such humility seems rare today, and yet God has His
people all over the world who humbly bow before Him and seek His forgiveness
through faith in His Son Jesus Christ. The uniqueness of true biblical
Christianity is found in the cross and in God's willingness to forgive those
who draw near to Him through faith in Jesus, trusting not in our own goodness,
but in the perfect sacrifice and righteousness of Christ. Solomon
believed that God had chosen Israel as a people and that in spite of their sin
and failures, God would keep His promises: "For You singled them
out from all the nations of the world to be Your own inheritance" (8:53).
Then, like Joshua before him, Solomon testified,
"Not one word has failed of all the good promises He gave through His
servant Moses. May the LORD our God be with us as He was with our
fathers; may He never leave us nor forsake us. May He turn our hearts to
Him …" (8:56-58). Solomon's desire was that "all
the peoples of the earth may know that the LORD is God and that there is no
other!" (8:60). And for that to happen, he said to the people, "Your
hearts must be fully committed to the LORD our God!" (8:61).
God appeared to Solomon again and warned him about
worshiping other gods and what would happen if he or the people of Israel
turned away from Him … if their hearts were not fully committed to the LORD,
their God. These things eventually happened to the nation and they were
ruled by foreign nations for several hundred years before Jesus, the Messiah,
was born. All of this was part of God's plan to send the Gospel of Jesus
Christ into all the world and this mission is nearing its completion.
The Old Testament forms the foundation for all that
comes after it and all God was saying and doing then teaches us today that we,
too, need God's mercy and that it is only by grace through faith in Jesus, the
"Seed of Abraham," the "Son of David" that we can approach
God in His temple, seeking His forgiveness and knowing that our sins have been
removed from us as far as the east is from the west. We, too, want all the world to know that HE
alone is God, and that one day He WILL dwell on a new earth with all who know
Him and worship Him!
Pray continually that God would guide you by His
Spirit to set your heart fully on Him, that we may live our lives today to the
glory of OUR God!!
"My Father in heaven, You have shown mercy to
me and have chosen me to be one of Your children. By Your Spirit You have
given me a new heart so that I may now love You and serve You with joy and
peace all my days in this life, and then spend eternity with You in that place
where YOU are the light and Your people give You what You alone are worthy
of … true and endless praise and worship. May I begin that even now,
in this life, as I set my heart and mind on things above, where Jesus is seated
at Your right hand! In Jesus' name, Amen"
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