“The True Light,
which gives light to everyone, was coming into the world. He was in
the world, and the world was made through him, yet the world did not
know him” (John 1:9-10). Last Sunday, we took a tough and hard look at the darkness before the
dawn, with a big helping hand from the 'Preacher' we met in
Ecclesiastes. His crisis was born of viewing the world with
semi-secular eyes, as a cage closed off as an isolated system. And
yet he himself knew that there was a breach. “God is in
heaven, and you are on earth”
– true enough, Preacher – but still there was on earth a “house
of God” where one could “draw
near to listen” (Ecclesiastes
5:1-2). And because of that, the days we remember in Advent were not
an unmitigated darkness after all.
For
although “the world did not know him, he came to his own”
(John 1:10-11). As a ragtag bunch of tribes had surrounded a desert
mountain, suddenly the summit “was wrapped in smoke,
because the LORD
had descended on it in fire”
(Exodus 19:17). And after a covenant had been stated and sealed,
“Moses went up the mountain, and... the Glory of the LORD
dwelt on Mount Sinai.... Now the appearance of the Glory of the LORD
was like a devouring fire on the top of the mountain in the sight of
the Children of Israel. Moses entered the cloud and went up on the
mountain, and Moses was on the mountain forty days and forty nights”
(Exodus 24:15-18). Amidst fire and smoke, the True Light laid bare
to Moses his plan to extend his dwelling into our world in a
carefully regulated way – don't play with fire! – in a special
tent where he could meet with humanity: “Let them make me
a sanctuary, that I may dwell in their midst”
(Exodus 25:8).
Despite
self-corruption in Israel that put the plan in jeopardy, in the end
the project went forward. “And all the craftsmen among
the workmen made the tabernacle with ten curtains”
(Exodus 36:8), hung over a frame and surrounded by a large courtyard.
“Thus all the work of the tabernacle of the Tent of
Meeting was finished” (Exodus
39:32); and, after being assembled and furnished on New Year's Day
and consecrated with holy oil, “then the cloud covered
the Tent of Meeting, and the Glory of the LORD
filled the tabernacle; and Moses was not able to enter the Tent of
Meeting, because the cloud settled on it and the Glory of the LORD
filled the tabernacle” (Exodus
40:34-35), “and fire was in it by night”
(Exodus 40:38). As Israel recentered the community around this
roving tent wherein the Glory dwelt, they needed to be scrupulously
holy.
In
the land of promise, they anchored this Tent of Meeting at Shiloh
(Joshua 18:1), where it rested for centuries and proved, alas, that
even there, worship could be exploited by the likes of Eli's sons (1
Samuel 2:22-36). The Ark of the Covenant was foolishly abused in
battle, where it was captured by the Philistines – “the
Glory has departed from Israel!”,
went the words of woe (1 Samuel 4:21) – and even when it came back,
it was returned not to the Tent of Meeting but to the ordinary house
of Abinadab at Kiriath-jearim (1 Samuel 5-7). Only years later did
King David fetch the Ark from there – though, when a man died for
touching the Ark on the way, King David was gripped with fear: “How
can the Ark of the LORD
come to me?” (2 Samuel 6:9),
leading him to store it for three months with Obed-edom the Gittite,
whose house the LORD
blessed through its presence (2 Samuel 6:10-11). Reinvigorated with
hope, David then led the Ark to Jerusalem, where David had pitched
for it a new tent (2 Samuel 6:12-17), while the vacant original tent
found its way to Gibeon (2 Chronicles 1:3).
David
felt this wasn't a permanent solution. He lamented that “I
dwell in a house of cedar, but the Ark of God dwells in a tent”
(2 Samuel 7:2). God replied that he had never questioned his earthly
living arrangement (2 Samuel 7:6-7), but, in honor of David's desire,
he would give David a son to “build a house for my name”
(2 Samuel 7:13). In time, that son, Solomon, declared that “David
my father could not build a house for the name of the LORD
his God because of the warfare with which his enemies surrounded
him..., but now the LORD
my God has given me rest on every side..., and so I intend to build a
house for the name of the LORD
my God” (1 Kings 5:3-5). For
seven and a half years, Solomon's workers labored on a
stone-and-cedar building ninety feet long, thirty feet wide,
forty-five feet high, with a fifteen-foot vestibule in front and
surrounded by side chambers all around, embedded in a lavish court up
on the mountain height (1 Kings 6:1-10). “So Solomon
built the house and finished it,”
dividing off an inner sanctuary inside it as a Holy of Holies, “and
he overlaid the whole house with gold,”
inside and outside, “until all the house was finished”
(1 Kings 6:14-22).
Then
came the blessed moment of dedication, when “they brought
up the Ark of the LORD,
the Tent of Meeting, and all the holy vessels that were in the tent”
(1 Kings 8:3). “Then the priests brought the Ark of the
Covenant of the LORD
to its place in the inner sanctuary of the house, in the Holy of
Holies, underneath the wings of the cherubim”
(1 Kings 8:6), “and when the priests came out of the Holy
Place, a cloud filled the House of the LORD,
so that the priests could not stand to minister because of the cloud,
because the Glory of the LORD
filled the House of the LORD”
(1 Kings 8:10-11). What had been true of the Tabernacle was true now
of this new Temple: “Sinai is now in the sanctuary!”
(Psalm 68:17).
And
so the True Light dwelled secretly amidst “thick
darkness” in “an
exalted house, a place for you to dwell in forever,”
said the king (1 Kings 8:12-13). “But will God indeed
dwell on the earth?” he
wondered. After all, “heaven and the highest heaven
cannot contain you; how much less this house that I have built!”
(1 Kings 8:27). Nevertheless, hoped Solomon, God's name and glory
would fill the house, which would thus be specially linked to
“heaven, your dwelling place”
(1 Kings 8:39). “The LORD
our God be with us, as he was with our fathers,”
Solomon prayed, and “may he not leave us or forsake us”
(1 Kings 8:57).
In
response, God gave Solomon a vision, assuring him: “I
have consecrated this house that you have built by putting my name
there forever. My eyes and my heart will be there for all time”
(1 Kings 9:3). But he warned him that, if the sons of David were
faithless stewards of the kingdom, then “the house that I
have consecrated for my name, I will cast out of my sight..., and
this house will become a heap of ruins”
(1 Kings 9:7-8).
Over
the years, a few kings were faithful, but many were faithless indeed.
Solomon's own son Rehoboam led the people after “the
abominations of the nations”
all around (1 Kings 14:24), so no wonder the Egyptians invaded,
stealing “the treasures of the House of the LORD”
(1 Kings 14:25-26). But Rehoboam's grandson Asa “was
wholly true to the LORD
all his days, and he brought into the House of the LORD
the sacred gifts of his father and his own sacred gifts, silver and
gold and vessels” (1 Kings
15:14-15) – until even Asa quickly took them back to use as a bribe
to secure a military alliance with Damascus (1 Kings 15:18-19).
In
a later day of crisis, this Temple was a safe haven for Asa's infant
great-great-grandson Prince Jehoash, saved by his aunt Jehosheba,
wife of the high priest Jehoiada. The little prince was sheltered in
the Temple's side chambers for six years (2 Kings 11), and after he
came to the throne at age seven, “Jehoash did what was
right in the sight of the LORD
all his days, because Jehoiada the Priest instructed him”
(2 Kings 12:2). Jehoash had ordered a collection taken up for
repairs to the Temple, “but by the twenty-third year of
King Jehoash, the priests had made no repairs on the house”
(2 Kings 12:6), and only after a royal scolding did they “pay
it out to the carpenters and the builders... and to the masons and
the stonecutters, as well as to buy timber and quarried stone for
making repairs on the House of the LORD”
(2 Kings 12:11-12). But even Jehoash, when a military emergency
came, raided the sacred gifts and gold from “the
treasuries of the House of the LORD”
to bribe the king of Damascus to leave Judah alone (2 Kings
12:17-18).
Jehoash's
great-great-grandson Ahaz began to pollute the Temple courts, as a
sign of his service to the Assyrians (2 Kings 16:10-20), while Ahaz's
son Hezekiah, though righteous, paid off invading Assyrians with “all
the silver that was in the House of the LORD”
and even “the gold from the doors of the Temple of the
LORD”
(2 Kings 18:15-16). Only with the encouragement of the prophet
Isaiah did King Hezekiah recover courage enough to lay down the
Assyrian threat in the temple courts and pray for deliverance (2
Kings 19:14-19) – “and that night, the messenger of the
LORD went
out and struck down 185,000 in the camp of the Assyrians”
(2 Kings 19:35). Hezekiah's son Manasseh more severely defiled the
Temple when “he built altars for all the host of heaven
in the two courts of the House of the LORD,
and he burned his son as an offering..., and the carved image of
Asherah that he had made, he set in the House”
(2 Kings 21:5-7). But his grandson Josiah, like a new Jehoash,
ordered further repairs to the neglected Temple (2 Kings 22:3-7), and
when the high priest Hilkiah rediscovered Deuteronomy in the temple
archives (2 Kings 22:8-11), Josiah sought with all his might to
reform the people, purging the Temple of every implement of paganized
worship (2 Kings 23:4-14).
Alas,
it was too late; the sins of Manasseh had marked a point-of-no-return
(2 Kings 23:26-27). And following Josiah's premature death, it
didn't take long for everyone to return to their abominations. The
Babylonians laid siege to Jerusalem in the year 597 BC, and
Nebuchadnezzar “carried off all the treasuries of the
House of the LORD...
and cut in pieces all the vessels of gold in the Temple of the LORD,
which Solomon king of Israel had made, as the LORD
had foretold. He carried away all Jerusalem..., ten thousand
captives” (2 Kings 24:13-14),
among whom was a twenty-something priest-in-training named Ezekiel.
Living
in exile, Ezekiel began having visions (Ezekiel 1:1-3), where he saw
“the appearance of the likeness of the Glory of the LORD”
like “brightness all around”
(Ezekiel 1:28). Fourteen months later, in September of 592 BC, his
visions whisked him all the way back to Jerusalem, to gaze through
the north gate into the temple courts, “and behold, the
Glory of the God of Israel was there”
(Ezekiel 8:1-4). But as Ezekiel dug his way in, what he found
shocked him to his core. “There, engraved on the wall
all around, was every form of creeping things and loathsome beasts,
and all the idols of the house of Israel; and before them stood
seventy men of the elders of the house of Israel,”
burning incense in the darkness (Ezekiel 8:10-11). In an escalating
series of abominations, Ezekiel found women wailing over a pagan god
and men facing away from the Temple to worship the rising sun
(Ezekiel 8:14-16). No wonder God complained of Judah that “when
they slaughtered their children in sacrifice to their idols, on the
same day they came into my sanctuary to profane it”
(Ezekiel 23:39), as “her priests have done violence to my
law and have profaned my holy things”
(Ezekiel 22:26). And so, step by step, Ezekiel watched in his
visions as the Glory withdrew from the Holy of Holies to the
threshold (Ezekiel 9:3), then to the eastern gate of the temple
courts (Ezekiel 10:18-19), and at last flew away from the city
altogether (Ezekiel 11:23). The Temple had become an unholy house of
darkness, forsaken by its God.
There
could be but one outcome. A few years after Ezekiel's vision,
“Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon came with all his army
against Jerusalem and laid siege to it”
(2 Kings 25:1), until at last they broke through, and his commander
“burned the House of the LORD”
down to its foundations (2 Kings 25:9). “Should priest
and prophet be killed in the sanctuary of the Lord?”
Judah wondered (Lamentations 2:20). But why not? There was no Glory
in the place any more. The high priest Seraiah was executed in
Nebuchadnezzar's presence, and “so Judah was taken into
exile out of its land” (2
Kings 25:18-21).
It
would have been so easy then to give up – to say that the Glory had
disappeared for good, that the True Light had been extinguished from
our earthly realm, to say that the darkness had overcome. But when
Ezekiel heard of the great burning, then he began to hear the
promises of hope. Israel seemed as dead and gone as an army decayed
to dust in the valleys, but the Spirit of the LORD
could bring life to dry bones (Ezekiel 37:1-14). “And I
will set them in their land... and will set my sanctuary in their
midst forevermore; my dwelling place shall be with them, and I will
be their God, and they will be my people. Then the nations will know
that I am the LORD
who sanctifies Israel, when my sanctuary is in their midst
forevermore” (Ezekiel
37:26-28).
Years
passed, and in 573 BC, Ezekiel's eyes were opened once again. “In
visions of God he brought me to the land of Israel and set me down on
a very high mountain” (Ezekiel
40:2). Gazing south, his guide showed him a vast city, over
45,000,000 square feet, ringed by twelve gates named for the twelve
sons of Israel (Ezekiel 48:30-35); and there was a temple which
dwarfed the one that had burned down (Ezekiel 40-42). After a tour
of its courts, gates, and sanctuary, “then he led me to
the gate, the gate facing east; and behold, the Glory of the God of
Israel was coming from the east, and the sound of his coming was like
the sound of many waters, and the earth shone with his glory”
(Ezekiel 43:1-2). Ezekiel witnessed its entry and received a
commission to go “describe to the house of Israel the
temple, that they may be ashamed of their iniquities”
(Ezekiel 43:10).
Ezekiel
died in exile, but Babylon's darkness was overcome, as the prophets
had foretold. In the reign of the Persian conqueror Cyrus, the first
wave of exiles returned to their lost homeland. There, “the
builders laid the foundation of the Temple of the LORD,”
but “many of the priests and Levites..., old men who had
seen the first house, wept with a loud voice”
(Ezra 3:10-12). God raised up prophets like Haggai and Zechariah to
inspire Governor Zerubbabel, a great-great-grandson of King Josiah,
and the new high priest Jeshua, to “rebuild the House of
God that is in Jerusalem”
(Ezra 5:1-2), despite the people's obvious uncleanness (Haggai 2:14).
Even though the temple they were building clearly didn't match what
Ezekiel had seen (Haggai 2:3), God assured them that “the
latter glory of this house shall be greater than the former”
(Haggai 2:9). Zechariah heard God declare, “I have
returned to Zion, and... Jerusalem shall be called the faithful city”
(Zechariah 8:3). Around 515 BC, this Second Temple was completed and
dedicated (Ezra 6:14-18). But unlike in the days of Moses or
Solomon, and unlike what Ezekiel had seen, nowhere do we read of the
Glory of the LORD
filling it.
More
years began to pass, and new names creep across the page: Ezra,
Nehemiah, Malachi. To tell the truth, 'Malachi' might not even be a
name; it means 'my messenger,' and traditionally Jews have supposed
it was a pen name used by Ezra, a scribe and priest who was some
relation to Jeshua. Some modern scholars have suggested that Malachi
was a prophet who followed Ezra and Nehemiah,
but there's a better case that Malachi preached a generation after
the Second Temple opened but still a couple decades before Ezra's
arrival.
In
a day when the Persian king was sending out messengers to intimidate
the nations into submission, Malachi lifts up the awesome
responsibility of the priests in Jerusalem: “The lips of
a priest should guard knowledge, and they should seek instruction
from his mouth, for he is the messenger of the LORD
of Hosts” (Malachi 2:7). But
that was obviously not what was happening: Israel's priests “have
turned aside from the way” and
so have “caused many to stumble by your instruction”
(Malachi 2:8) – hence why God picked 'my messenger' to preach to
these failed messengers.
The messengers needed a renewal of their rightful message, else hope
would die.
Given
the failure of the priests to inspire and guide them, the people were
in an even worse shape. After such a long back-and-forth history,
with the lofty promises of prophets seeming to vanish into thin air,
they observed that, so far as they could see, “evildoers...
put God to the test and escape”
(Malachi 3:15). They struggled to believe that the LORD
actually upheld any difference between good and evil; an amoral god
seemed the most plausible explanation for the course history had
taken, and they despaired of seeing a God of Justice in the world
(Malachi 2:17). No wonder they concluded that “it is
vain to serve God” (Malachi
3:14) – empty, false.
As
a result of their despair, they grew morally and spiritually lax:
“Judah has been faithless, and abomination has been
committed in Israel and in Jerusalem”
(Malachi 2:11). Despising the LORD's
Table, the sacrificial altar in the Temple, they offered sickly
sacrifices that would never impress if sent to a Persian governor as
a gift of tribute (Malachi 1:7-8). Withholding their tithes because
of the crushing burden of Persian taxes, they were effectively
robbing God, as much as every king before them who'd raided the
temple treasuries for monies with which to pay off worldly powers
(Malachi 3:8-9). By these kinds of behaviors, “Judah has
profaned the sanctuary of the LORD,
which he loves, and has married the daughter of a foreign god”
(Malachi 2:11).
So
Malachi has a message for them – an uncomfortable renewal of hope
in darkened times. Only in the day of salvation would they actually
“see the distinction between the righteous and the
wicked” (Malachi 3:18). They
have to understand that, if they fear threats that the Persian king
will come and burn their city down unless they roll over and beg,
there's a Greater King coming, a Glory arriving. “The
Lord whom you seek will suddenly come to his temple”
(Malachi 3:1). Their fears have been misplaced onto a succession of
worldly empires, when this is what should concern them. “Who
can endure the day of his coming,”
asks the prophet, “and who can stand when he appears?
For he is like a refiner's fire and like fullers' soap”
– abrasive, agonizing, leaving behind a purity raw and scorched but
clean (Malachi 3:2). “The Light of Israel will become a
fire... and will burn and devour his thorns and briers in one day”
(Isaiah 10:17).
Suddenly
he'll arrive – but not without forewarning. “I send my
messenger, and he will prepare the way before me”
(Malachi 3:1). That echoes the earlier voice “crying:
'In the wilderness prepare the way of the LORD...,
and the Glory of the LORD
shall be revealed, and all flesh shall see it together'”
(Isaiah 40:3-5). “The messenger of the covenant in whom
you delight, behold, he is coming”
(Malachi 3:1). “Behold, I will send you Elijah the
prophet before the great and awesome Day of the LORD
comes, and he will turn the hearts of fathers to their children and
the hearts of children to their fathers, lest I come and strike the
land with a decree of utter destruction”
(Malachi 4:5-6). This messenger's advent “will signal the king's
imminent arrival.”
“For behold, the Day is coming, burning like an oven,
when all the arrogant and all evildoers will be stubble..., but for
you who fear my name, the Sun of Righteousness shall rise with
healing in its wings..., and they will be ashes under the soles of
your feet on the day when I act, says the LORD
of Hosts” (Malachi 4:1-3).
Once
the Messenger and the Lord are here, “he will sit as a
refiner and purifier of silver, and he will purify the sons of Levi
and refine them like gold and silver”
(Malachi 3:3). Thus the LORD's
“arrival and fiery purge will result in an onset of acceptable
offerings,” unlike the sickly sacrifices and taken-back tithes so
lamented. For “they will bring offerings in
righteousness to the LORD;
then the offering of Judah and Jerusalem will be pleasing to the
LORD, as in
days of old” (Malachi 3:3-4).
Worship will be made new.
And
only then will they understand the words of Ezekiel, now nearly a
century old. For he had clearly seen a temple grander than the
Second Temple which Malachi beheld so profaned. In this temple yet
unbuilt, “the Glory of the LORD
entered the Temple by the gate facing east..., and behold, the Glory
of the LORD
filled the Temple” (Ezekiel
43:4-5). This, God says, really is “where I will dwell
in the midst of the people of Israel forever”
(Ezekiel 43:7). And as for that eastern gate, “no one
shall enter by it, for the LORD,
the God of Israel, has entered by it; therefore it shall remain shut”
(Ezekiel 44:2). “And I looked,”
said Ezekiel, “and behold, the Glory of the LORD
filled the Temple of the LORD”
(Ezekiel 44:4), and from it would flow water that restores life and
replants paradise in the world (Ezekiel 47:1-12).
Centuries
elapsed, and the Second Temple was desecrated by the Greeks,
reconsecrated by the Maccabees, and expanded by the cynical whims of
Herod. It was in his days, contrary to all his desires, that
Malachi's prophecy bore its fruit. The messenger of preparation was
coming. “There was a man sent from God, whose name was
John” (John 1:6). He was son
of the priest Zechariah, who, while burning incense in the Second
Temple, saw a messenger from heaven, Gabriel, who predicted this son
to come (Luke 1:5-13). As that messenger from heaven said, John
“will be great before the Lord..., and he will be filled
with the Holy Spirit, even from his mother's womb; and he will turn
many of the children of Israel to the Lord their God, and he will go
before him in the spirit and power of Elijah, to turn the hearts of
the fathers to the children and the disobedient to the wisdom of the
righteous, to make ready for the Lord a people prepared”
(Luke 1:15-17). Zechariah, too, was moved to prophesy to his newborn
son that “you shall be called the prophet of the Most
High, for you will go before the Lord to prepare his ways, to give
knowledge of salvation to his people in the forgiveness of their
sins, because of the tender mercy of our God, whereby the Sunrise
shall visit us from on high to give light to those who sit in
darkness and in the shadow of death, to guide our feet into the way
of peace” (Luke 1:76-79). And
so John “came as a witness, to bear witness about the
Light, that all might believe through him. He was not the Light, but
came to bear witness about the Light”
which was so soon to come (John 1:7-8).
What
had happened, though it wasn't yet known, was that the prophecies not
only of Malachi but of Ezekiel and the rest were coming to pass. For
before John had even been born, that heavenly messenger Gabriel
touched earth once more in Nazareth of Galilee, meeting not a priest
but a village girl so lovingly prepared for a mission – she, more
than any other, was fully graced by the Lord (Luke 1:26-30).
Shortly, said the messenger, “the Holy Spirit will come
upon you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you”
(Luke 1:35). And no sooner did she consent than it happened: “The
Word became flesh and tabernacled among us”
(John 1:14), “using as his own body the temple that came from the
Holy Virgin” (cf. John 2:21).
For
in that moment, the Glory of the LORD
had arrived through the eastern gate, the Virgin Mary's womb – a
gate never to be opened or entered again (Ezekiel 44:2). And the
Glory of the LORD
– the Word – filled the Temple – the humanity, of tangible body
and rational soul, conceived that moment to incarnate God in our very
nature (Ezekiel 43:5). From him would flow the rivers of living
water, the Holy Spirit, which would restore life and replant paradise
(John 7:37-39). What Ezekiel had seen in his vision was nothing less
than the Incarnation taking place, the Body of Christ enshrining the
Glory of the Living God!
Once
the Word had become flesh inside her, once the Glory had filled his
Temple within her, Mary ventured to the hill country to visit her
kinswoman Elizabeth, the priest-born wife of the priest Zechariah.
And no sooner had Mary spoken a word than John, the fetal prophet not
yet seeing, leapt for joy, as David had danced before the Ark in its
procession (Luke 1:39-41; cf. 2 Samuel 6:14). Filled with the Holy
Spirit, Elizabeth reacted to Mary as David had to the Ark,
questioning, “Why is this granted to me, that the Mother
of My Lord should come to me?”
(Luke 1:43; cf. 2 Samuel 6:9). Only she spoke, not with David's fear
and trembling, but with gratitude and reverence and awe. So she
blessed Mary and “the fruit of your womb,”
the LORD
in his Holy Temple being built on uterine holy ground (Luke 1:42).
“From now on, all generations will call me blessed, for
He-Who-Is-Mighty has done great things for me, and holy is his name!”
answered Mary (Luke 1:48-49). No sooner would this Child be born,
after all, than to neighboring shepherds another heavenly messenger
would come down, “and the glory of the Lord shone around
them,” heralding the birth of
a Savior (Luke 2:6-11). And as Mary and Joseph brought the Child
Jesus to Jerusalem, to make a lawful offering out of their poverty,
so it began to be fulfilled: “the Lord whom you seek will
suddenly come to his temple”
(Malachi 3:1).
The
Lord himself said that “all the Prophets and the Law
prophesied until John, and if you are willing to accept it, he is
Elijah who is to come... to restore all things”
(Matthew 11:13-14; Mark 9:12). John, for his part, would “baptize
you with water, but He who is mightier than I is coming, the strap of
whose sandals I am not worthy to untie! He will baptize you with the
Holy Spirit and with fire! The winnowing fork is in his hand, to
clear his threshing floor...”
(Luke 3:16-17). It was the very next day that he laid eyes, maybe
for the first time, on Jesus. “I myself did not know
him, but for this purpose I came baptizing with water, that he might
be revealed to Israel” (John
1:31), and so “this joy of mine is now complete”
(John 3:29). The result was that “we have seen his
glory, glory as of the only Son of the Father, full of grace and
truth” (John 1:14).
“He came to his own,
and his own did not receive him”
(John 1:11). “The Light has come into the world, and
people loved the darkness rather than the Light, because their works
were evil” (John 3:19). “I
came to cast fire on the earth,”
he said, “and would that it were already kindled!”
(Luke 12:49). “But to all who did receive him, who
believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of God”
(John 1:12), insofar as “all who are led by the Spirit of
God are sons of God” (Romans
8:14). For if the Body of the Word is the Temple indwelt by the
Glory, what does it mean for us if receiving the Spirit makes us
cells in the Body of Christ? “You yourselves, like
living stones, are being built up as a spiritual house”
(1 Peter 2:5), which, joined together under Christ the Head, “grows
into a holy temple in the Lord..., a dwelling place for God in the
Spirit” (Ephesians 2:21-22).
Here we have a hidden glory, because the Church becomes the same
House wherein the True Light burns secretly in the darkness, raising
up “a pure offering... among the nations”
(Malachi 1:11).
Someday,
as Malachi foretold, the Lord will come again “like a
refiner's fire” (Malachi 3:2),
“when the Lord is revealed from heaven with his mighty
messengers in flaming fire, inflicting vengeance... on those who do
not obey the gospel..., when he comes on that day to be glorified in
his saints and to be marveled at among all who have believed”
(2 Thessalonians 1:7-10). But on the other side of the flames awaits
the city Ezekiel saw – but its measurements will make Ezekiel's
dreams look half-baked, it will outshine his wildest dreams, “and
I saw no temple in the city, for its temple is the Lord God Almighty
and the Lamb..., and the Glory of God gives it light”
(Revelation 21:10-23).
Then will this Advent resolve in its Perfect Christmas; then will
the Temple truth be full; then will the True Light leave no room for
shadows; then will worship be infinite. Hallelujah, what joy!