PRIESTS "But
you are a chosen race, a royal priest..
"To him who loves us and has freed us from our sins by
his blood and made us a kingdom, priests
to his God and Father....." All of us
who are called to follow Jesus are called to the office
of the priest. It doesn’t matter whether we are male or
female, young or old, we are called to the priesthood. Every
error in the history of the Body of Christ has somehow
been related to our pushing our priesthood off on
someone else or to our willingness to let another man
take our priesthood from us.
Priesthood? Who wants to be a priest? We picture
sissified men in funny skirts tiptoeing around in some
gloomy cathedral fussing over some religious dishes and
pans. But when
the Spirit says of the Messiah in Psalm 110,
"The Lord hath sworn and will not repent,
thou art a priest forever after the order of
Melchizedek", Or when
the Spirit tells us
that we are a royal priesthood,
that Jesus has made us priests to His God and
Father, He’s not talking about little men in
funny robes, but about the most awesome
responsibility that can ever be placed in
human hands. The first
glimpse we have of this priesthood comes long before
Aaron was ever born. Abraham is coming back from the
Battle of the Kings and is met by a mysterious man who
seems to walk out of nowhere. His name is Melchizedek,
"King of Righteousness", and he is king over the city
of Salem, (Shalom, Peace). He has neither beginning of
days nor end of life. Melchizedek blesses Abraham and
serves him bread and wine. Without being asked, Abraham
gives Melchizedek one-tenth of all he has. Two
thousand years later, in the same city over which
Melchizedek was king, (Salem, now called Jerusalem),
Jeshua gathers His disciples in an upper room, blesses
them, gives them bread and wine. Jesus then goes out
and offers His own body and blood to atone for their
sins, and as He dies, His departing Spirit tears the
veil of the Temple from top to bottom, opening the way
back to God. Neither
Melchizedek nor Jesus, (if you can separate them at
all), was ever an official priest in the Aaronic line,
but as we look at them we can see what a priest really
is: A priest
is two things: 1. A
person who has been brought into the blazing
presence of God, and who brings his fellow men in
with him by prayer. 2. A
person who goes out from the presence of God and
brings God’s Spirit with him wherever he (or she)
goes to bless those around him. Granted,
those who claim to be priests have not always attended
to these functions and have at times allowed their
priesthood to degenerate into a thing of the flesh. The best
contrast between the death-dealing priesthood of flesh
and the life-giving priesthood of Spirit can be seen in
a certain episode in the lives of two brothers who were
called of God, and we shall see them both in the
Kingdom. But there was a day when Aaron descended into
the kind of priesthood we all need to avoid like the
plague...and when Moses rose into a burning expression
of the priesthood to which every disciple has been
called. Moses
was up on Sinai with the Lord. Aaron was down below
observing that the people were becoming restless.
"Where has Moses gone? How long do we have to
wait?" If Aaron had been standing before the Lord,
as the priest he was called to be, he would have
known what to do. Since Aaron was not standing
before the Lord, he was exposed to the pressure of
the people. The
people and the priest began to manipulate each
other:
"Make us gods !"
"Give me your gold!"
Aaron produces the golden calf with
announcement, "Here are your gods!"
One can almost hear the "Hurrah!" as Aaron
tells them to prepare the burnt offerings to
this ridiculous idol.
Aaron
doubtless experiences a thrill as he sees the
people responding to his commands in a new way. But
the power he has tasted is the power of Satan. Meanwhile,
on Sinai, Moses has been absorbed in waiting on the
Lord, consumed with awe and worship. Then God tells
Moses about the apostasy going on below and says, "Out
of my way! I will consume them and make of you, Moses,
a great nation." And
Moses, to God’s extreme delight, you can be sure,
begins his work as a priest.....
"No, Lord! Have mercy on your people,
Lord! Remember your promises to Abraham, Isaac
and Jacob!" And
God yields to Moses and sends him down to the
people with power to cut the cancer from the body
of Israel. Notice
that Aaron had all the outward trappings of a priest.
He was considered a priest by men. But Aaron was not
coming in before God on behalf of men. Nor was he going
out before men on behalf of God. In this instance he
was a priest of flesh, and he ministered death. Moses, on
the other hand, did not have the outward trappings of a
priest, but he was a priest. He was going in before God
on behalf of the people....he took his time and did it
right, and when he came out to the people, God was with
him, shining in his very face. It is
essential for us to keep in mind that we have been
brought together as we are now only for a season. Soon
many of us, if not all of us, will be scattered to
other parts of the city, the land, the earth. And those
of us who fail to make the most of the opportunity we
now have will regret it. The
opportunity we have, The
reason for our being brought together, is to
learn to function as priests of Messiah’s God. "To
him who loves us and has freed us from our sins
by his blood and made us a
kingdom, priests to his God the Father....
." We are
here to learn two things: (And
to learn, not just by reading books, but by doing,
doing day after day until these two things have
become our life.)
First, we
are to learn to come into the presence of God daily.... until
God’s presence literally becomes our home our
dwelling place our
rock and our fortress so
much so that we are able to bring our
brothers, sisters, friends, enemies into that
presence too by prayer. It might
seem that Moses’ finest hour was when he led the people
of Israel through the Red Sea. But for all the miracles
that were wrought by Moses’ hand, all the fearful and
wonderful things that happened at his command before
the eyes of Israel, By
far the most awesome thing Moses ever did, the
most crucial victory he ever won,
was done, not before the eyes of Israel
but hidden beneath the cloud, where no eye
saw Moses at all but the eye of God....
when Moses prayed for the people,
wept for the people,
threw his life down at
God’s feet for the people.
No
ministry that you and I will ever perform among men
will be one whit better than the ministry we first
perform alone before the eye of the living God. We
want to be able to speak with power. We
want to be able to touch people with healing. We
want to be able to call men to repentance. We
want to bring cleansing to the Body.
Beautiful.
But we won’t begin to scratch the surface of
these things until we first learn to come
before God and worship Him and lift men,
women, and children into His presence by our
prayers. That son
or daughter you’re worried about. You pray some and
fret much. Now come before God like a priest after the
order of Melchizedek....in the line of Jeshua the slain
and risen Lamb. Minister to that loved one...or that
enemy before God. Are you a priest before God to your
child
your mate your friend your enemy?
Second, we
need to learn to go out from the Holy of Holies and
bring God with us wherever we go. We don’t
leave God behind in our prayer room. He goes with us
into the supermarket,
the school,
the shop, foundry, office, store, and
when we engage in the routine
relationships of daily life,
we are there as priests. We are there
to bless
to touch them somehow with God’s mercy. NOT
TO MANIPULATE BUT TO BLESS. Every
human being your eye sees is to be illumined by the God
light the
Christ light the
Mercy light that now burns in your own soul.
You are the extension of Jesus into
the presence of that man or woman.
You are a fountainhead of
forgiveness. Your
life is the window through which those who hunger
and thirst for the living God will see Calvary. Some of us
seem to be looking forward to the day when we can
"really begin to minister." As if a change in our
circumstances will make it possible. A different job.
A different place. If you
are coming in and going out before God, if you are
seeking His face, if God is in you as you go forth
into your daily life,
you are ministering,
you are a priest in the order of Melchizedek. Week
by week our Melchizedek gives us bread and wine,
blesses us, saturates us with divine mercy, sends
us forth. May we
remember that he never sends us forth as anything less
than priests in His priesthood,
priests to His God and Father, that the
poor in spirit, the mourners, the meek, the hungry and
thirsty for righteousness may be blessed in His name,
through us.
To him who loves us and has freed us from our sins
by his blood,
and made us a kingdom, priests to his God and
Father, to him be Glory
and dominion for ever and ever. Amen.
|
|