Celebrating Thanksgiving in one of my favorite holidays. We have so much to be grateful to God. That we as a nation would mark out that date to celebrate is a good thing, a healthy thing. As we continue studying in Leviticus, looking at these Jewish offerings, I want you to be thinking, “what can I glean from God’s word that I can apply to my life.” Of course we don’t offer these gifts in exactly the same manner, but the principles undergirding these offerings are directly applicable in the New Covenant Christian life. And as you know, we Christians are to be thankful year round! So when we present our offerings that is certainly what motivates our giving. We give thankfully and cheerfully. We give because we love.
When I mention the word offerings, what’s the first thing that comes to your mind? Maybe you get a mental picture of your billfold, your purse, or checkbook. Maybe the image of an offering plate circulating around comes to mind. But I wonder if a different image comes to mind when I add the word “sacrifice.” A sacrificial offering. Maybe now the idea of animal sacrifice surfaces. We are, after all, undertaking the study of the Old Testament, and much is said on the topic of sacrifice. As we think about sacrificial offering the concepts of value and cost begin to emerge. There is a cost associated with offering and sacrifice. Ultimately sacrificial offering finds its fulfillment in the greatest and most perfect offering and sacrifice of the Lamb of God, the life of Jesus Christ. And as glorious as his sacrifice is, are we done with topics of offerings and sacrifice? Is there anything more for us to think about for the New Testament church, living under the New Covenant? When we take the Lord’s Supper together we are proclaiming the death of the Lord Jesus and He has charged us to do it in remembrance of Him. So I think the biblical understanding of sacrifice and offerings continue to be important. It is relevant for our lives today, and it is especially relevant for our worship. We do not want to worship in ignorance. As Jesus explained to the woman at the well. “You worship what you do not know; we worship what we know, for salvation is from the Jews. But the hour is coming, and is now here, when the true worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and truth, for the Father is seeking such people to worship him. God is spirit, and those who worship him must worship in spirit and truth.” (John 4:22–24) It is absolutely necessary that we get both aspects of this right for us to worship God. And recall that it didn’t take the new nation of Israel very long to mess up in worshiping a false god, going so far in fact to create the golden calf. Someone might think, “Yeah that was a pretty stupid idea.” But yet, how easily do we become distracted, giving other things in our lives more priority in our hearts, essentially worshiping some other thing, or idol, in our lives? We were created to worship. More accurately, we were created to worship our Creator! We will worship someone or something. We will adore the world, ourselves, or we can worship God and do so rightly, as He has prescribed. God chose the Levites to help his people worship properly. God created us, and He created us to worship him. He gets to say how that worship is to be conducted. And the key we must remember, is that worship does not begin with us. It is not about our felt needs, or otherwise. Worship begins with God. Once we understand our place, (He is God, we are not, He is the Creator, we are the creatures) then we will understand that we are fallen creatures and we are of unclean lips as Isaiah said. He is Holy, Holy, Holy and we are not. Worship is to be focused on God, not on man. If you come away from worship thinking what a great time you had, how funny the sermon was, how entertaining it was, then you’ve got it wrong. If you come away from worship service, with a greater appreciation for how glorious, how magnificent, how wonderful our God is, how Holy He is, then your worship has its proper focus. And if you are a child of God, then you need to pay attention to lest you worship in ignorance, and not in spirit and truth.
Why Leviticus? Did pastor spin the dial and Leviticus popped out? Well there are many reasons to think about for why we should undertake the study of the book of Leviticus. There are deep theological truths to be mined here, but not just so that we gain knowledge for our heads. There are truths here that will impact you, that will speak to how you are living, how you are conducting your lives as a child of God. And the book of Leviticus is also properly foundational to the understanding of the book of Hebrews which, Lord willing, is where in the not too terrible distant future we will be headed. So I hope that this is a book that you will not find to be boring, but instead will find to be enlightening to your heart and mind as you come to know your God more intimately through his Word.
Christmas time! The spirit of giving, singing, making joyful melody in the heart. Warm and fuzzy commercials on TV. Like I remember the Folgers commercial where the young man comes home from college and sneaks in the house and wakes everybody up with the aroma of fresh coffee. The trouble with all the sentimentality and commercialism is we lose sight of the real reason for Christmas. We run the risk of making the holiday, the holy day, an unholy day, without the true focus being on God. We the church, must never forget the real story of Christmas. It is amazing to think that God would become man so that he would die as a man in order to save the lives of man. There are two birth narratives in the gospels, one is Luke’s account, but this morning we consider Matthew’s account. This amazing news of Jesus’ birth is at first unsettling, especially to Joseph. But as God reveals his plan, Joseph not only comes to accept the news, but it becomes the best news ever, because his salvation is evidenced by his obedience.
Advent season. We are right in the middle of the advent season. Christians, this is the time of the year when we look forward to celebrating the birth of Jesus, the incarnation. But it's also a time when we remember the promise of his return, the second coming, the second advent. In a text this morning we will consider his birth and how God had fulfilled his promise to send the Messiah, his chosen one who would save his people. So as we dig into our text this morning we will find the characters of the shepherd's, the angels, and the amazing plan of God in sovereignly orchestrating the giving of the good news. I pray that as you hear this message this morning you find yourself relating to the shepherds and see that God speaks to you wherever you are.
Thanksgiving holiday is upon us. Maybe when you hear of Thanksgiving you think of a big feast, huge turkey and all the yummy sides that go with it. Maybe the Norman Rockwell painting comes to mind with everyone gathered at the table with grandma placing the big bird down as grandpa oversees with approval. Or maybe it’s the football games, sitting around the big screen, cheering on your favorite team. Or maybe it’s just enjoying the family time, getting to catch up with your relatives. Maybe someone will have the opportunity to hear a history lesson of how the observance of the holiday came to be. Maybe, and I would hope that many of us here in this room, would take the opportunity of remembrance and giving thanks to our God. And that’s why I selected this text in Nehemiah this morning. In it we will find the occasion to praise God and to celebrate.
If you’ve ever been in a life or death experience, or know someone who has, you might’ve said afterwards, “How did I survive that?” I’ve seen video footage of race car wrecks where the car is totally demolished and then the driver climbs out amazingly unscathed. Or when survivors are pulled out of destroyed buildings from earthquakes or mudslides. The question comes back, “How were you not killed?” In wartime some soldiers who survived returned sharing horrific memories of how they lived but their buddy just mere inches away was killed. And they are left wondering “why was I spared?” One of the most moving lines in the movie Saving Private Ryan is at the end when the rescued soldier, the now Older Veteran, is standing at the grave site of the platoon leader who gave his life to bring him back home, and he turns to his wife and asks her to tell him he’s led a good life, that he’s a good man. Has he wondered all these years if his escape from death was worth all those who perished getting him out from the front lines? That question of “why I am I still here” is one that also crosses our minds from time to time, especially considering the many times it seems when we should have not survived. We have one of those death defying incidents in our text this morning. But what is more significant is the meaning behind this survival.
Military Missions have curious code names: Operation Overlord, Operation Rolling Thunder, Operation Red Dawn, Operation Urgent Fury, Operation Desert Storm, Operation Desert Fox, and there was one even code named Operation Wrath of God. The methodology for naming the campaigns is fascinating, even for fake missions like “operation mincemeat.” One of the more famous ones in recent history was named Operation Enduring Freedom launched in 2001. What if your mission was named Enduring Suffering? How many would sign up for that one? Or operation Enduring Patience? These missions don’t connote quick strikes or urgency. And many of us would rather cut short any suffering or trials than have to endure them. But we endure to the end. Paul wrote to run the race in such a way as to win the prize. And you don’t win anything if you quit. You don’t win for tapping out. Let’s dig in to our text.
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