COMING IN AND GOING OUT
"When the people of the land come
before the LORD at the appointed feasts, he who enters by the north gate to
worship shall go out by the south gate, and he who enters by the south gate
shall go out by the north gate: no one shall return by way of the gate by which
he entered, but each shall go out straight ahead. When they enter, the prince shall enter with
them, and when they go out, he shall go out."
(Ezekiel 46:9,10 ESV)
For several
weeks these verses have been brought to my attention by the Holy Spirit; and
for several weeks I have pondered how they were relevant to my life in
particular, and to the church generally.
It wasn't until my wife and I took a trip to an IKEA store in our state
that I began to get the picture. Yes,
God can use even the mundane and the common things in our lives to speak
spiritual truth. We just need to be open
and sensitive to the Spirit at all times in order to hear that still, small
voice inside. We are not always as sensitive
as we should be, but we can learn to sharpen our awareness as we walk in the
Spirit and understand that the Lord is always "at hand" (Philippians
4:5).
Visiting an
IKEA retail store is not just a shopping trip - it is an event. Prepare to spend at least a few hours
there. As this was our first experience,
we had no idea what to expect. You see,
IKEA has laid out there retail spaces in a completely different way than the
typical retail store.
When you
enter a Walmart, a Meijer's, or a Kroger's you will find a similar layout in
each store. There will be a few main
aisles with other narrower aisles coming off of them in a criss-cross
pattern. If you want a particular item,
you can enter the store, go down a main aisle till you come to the aisle that
contains your item, retrieve that item, and proceed to the check out. The layout of an IKEA store, on the other hand,
is the work of a marketing genius. When
you first enter the store on the ground level you are directed up a flight of
stairs (or you may take an elevator which is as large inside as some of the
rooms of my house) which leads to the second story and the beginning of the one
aisle (pathway would describe it better) which will ultimately lead you through
the entire store and past all of the
merchandise that they offer. If you get
tired, there are benches along the way.
If you are hungry or thirsty, there is a cafeteria with a wide range of
meals that you can enjoy along with a comfortable place to eat them, and
relax. Once you have completed the upper
level, you descend to the ground level again and follow the pathway through
that entire floor until you emerge at the cash registers and the exit. Ingenious!
Of course, there are exit signs spaced periodically so that if you want
to leave without seeing everything you can, but they are by no means prominent.
The reason
that IKEA has taken this approach in store design is brilliant. They want you to be exposed to all they have
to offer in the hopes that you will see things that you didn't come in for necessarily,
and purchase them on impulse. They want
you to experience all that IKEA has to offer.
Judging from the large bags of merchandise people were walking out of
the store with, I would say their strategy is working.
So what has
all of this got to do with the scripture verses that the Holy Spirit laid on my
heart? Read them again and I will
explain.
The Prophet
Ezekiel was shown a vision of the house of God.
You can find his vision recorded in chapters 40-47 in the book of the Bible named for him. In the vision, Ezekiel was given very
specific instructions on the design and building of this temple. This temple that he saw was not the
tabernacle of Moses, Solomon's glorious temple, the temple of Ezra that was
built after the Babylonian captivity, nor the temple of Herod. The temple that Ezekiel saw has yet to be
built. Among many Bible scholars it is accepted
that this temple is to be built during the Millennial Period after the return
of Christ.
Spiritually,
there is a connection between Ezekiel's temple and New Testament teaching. This temple corresponds to God's church, the
body of Christ. New Testament writers
refer to the church as being the temple of the Holy Spirit and Jesus as the
chief cornerstone of that house of God. "Consequently, you are no longer
foreigners and aliens, but fellow-citizens with God’s people and members of
God’s household, built on the foundation of the apostles and prophets, with
Christ Jesus Himself as the chief cornerstone.
In Him the whole building is joined together and rises to become a holy
temple in the Lord. And in Him
you too are being built together to become a dwelling in which God lives by his
Spirit." (Ephesians 2:19-22
NIV) "As
you come to Him, the living Stone—rejected by men but chosen by God and
precious to Him—you also, like living stones, are being built into a
spiritual house to be a holy priesthood, offering spiritual sacrifices
acceptable to God through Jesus Christ." (1 Peter 2:4-5 NIV) "Know ye not that ye are the temple of
God, and that the Spirit of God dwelleth in you?" (1Corinthians 3:16) "Him
that overcometh will I make a pillar in the temple of my God, and he shall go
no more out: and I will write upon him the name of My God, and the name of the
city of My God, which is new Jerusalem, which cometh down out of heaven from My
God: and I will write upon him My new name." (Revelations 3:12)
God told
Ezekiel that those who come up to the feasts to worship God in His temple were
to enter only by the north or the south gates, whatever gate they choose to
enter by, they must leave by the opposite gate.
If they come in the north, they leave by the south. If they enter by the south gate, they must
leave by the north. Much like IKEA, God
wants His people to get the full experience when they come to worship Him. He wants us to commit fully to the experience
and receive all that He has for them. As
in Ezekiel's vision, when we enter the house of God to worship and seek His
will for our lives, the Prince Himself (Jesus) always enters through the
eastern gate, and when we leave, He leaves with us. When we as Christians gather to worship, it
should never be to see the pastor, hear the choir, visit with friends, or any
other superficial reason. It must always
be because we want to see Jesus and hear what He would speak to our
hearts. Yes, he may use the pastor, choir,
or a brother or sister in the Lord, but the key is to discern the voice and
presence of the Lord in all those sources.
The most important thing is this: God doesn't want us leaving His
presence the same way we came in! He
wants to transform us more and more into His image, and change our lives
perpetually for the better. When we
assemble together corporately as the body of Christ, the Lord Himself is there
among His people. By His Spirit He is
able to move through the individual members to edify - build up - each and
every one of us. If we walk away
untouched and unchanged it is either because we have hardened our hearts and come
seeking the wrong things, or that ritualism in our services has grieved the
Holy Spirit away. Oh, how we need to be
focused continually on the Lord Jesus Christ in our lives and in our coming
together. When we do this, we will see
the Lord do great things!
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