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Tending The Lamps
By Dr. John Conrad
The Lord
bless you and keep you, The Lord make His face shine on you
and be gracious to you, The Lord turn His countenance toward
you and give you peace (Numbers
6:24-26). In the name of Yeshua (Jesus) our Lord, Amen.
An applicable
analogy?
There lived in
India six friends who were all blind. One day as they sat
together talking they heard a great trumpeting roar.
"I believe that
is an elephant in the street," one said. "Now is our chance
to find out what kind of creature the elephant is." Being
blind none had ever seen an elephant. Eagerly, they filed
out into the street.
The first blind
man reached out and touched the elephant's ear. "Ah," he
said to himself, "the elephant is a rough, wide thing like a
rug."
The second blind
man felt the elephant's trunk. Understanding dawned upon
him. "An elephant is a long, round thing, like a snake."
The third blind
man gingerly patted the leg of the elephant. "Well, well,"
he muttered. "An elephant is large and stout like a tree."
The fourth man
walked up to the elephant's side. Fanning his hands out to
feel the vast expanse he pondered, "Mmm, an elephant is wide
and smooth, like a wall."
The fifth man
grasped the elephant's tusk. "My goodness," he thought. "An
elephant is a hard, sharp animal resembling a spear."
The sixth man
seized the elephant's tail. "Amazing," he opined. "It gives
a mighty roar but an elephant is very like a long, thin
rope."
After their
investigation they sat down to discuss the elephant.
"It is rough and
wide, like a rug," said the first.
"No, it is long
and round, like a snake," said the second.
"Don't be
silly," laughed the third. "It is large and stout, like a
tree."
"No, it is not,"
growled the fourth. "It is wide and smooth, like a wall."
"Hard and sharp,
like a spear!" shouted the fifth. "Idiots! Long and thin,
like a rope!" yelled the sixth.
Utter chaos
ensued. Each one insisted he was right. After all, each had
touched the elephant with his own hands, hadn't he?
Sadly, those of
us who believe in the Messiah and his word, reenact this
scenario when we attempt to describe the Kingdom. When it
comes to spiritual realities our eyes are blinded—we do not
accurately perceive the unseen world around us.
Kingdom
lessons
In this day God
has promised to restore everything spoken through the mouths
of his holy prophets. The history of God's people reveals
the greatest opposition to new truth comes from the
guardians of the previously revealed truth. Thus the
Sadducees and Pharisees fought the truth of the Messiah.
The established
church resisted the Reformation message of justification by
faith, the evangelicals fought the wave of the Holy Spirit
birthed by Charismatic Movement, and now many Christians and
Messianic Jews find themselves struggling with the truth of
a restored Israel.
Sadly, in much
of modem Christianity, the most coveted position is not to
be great in the kingdom, or to be the servant of all. No,
most seem intent on being least in the kingdom. Yeshua
stated clearly in Matthew 5:17-19 that anyone who breaks
the least of these commandments and teaches others to do the
same will be called least in the kingdom of heaven.
Touchstones
and signposts of Israel’s Restoration
Too many of us
have seized a single portion of the kingdom and in our
blindness we are hanging on to our position with a death
grip. As God restores Israel many truths or principles will
be restored. There are particular areas of blindness in the
modern church and even, in some measure, in Messianic
Israel. God describes these concepts or principles as being
everlasting, forever, perpetual, throughout your
generations, and eternal. Examples of these are the 7th day
Sabbath, the Law or Torah (Israel’s Constitution), the
Feasts of the Lord, and the priesthood covenant with Levi.
Even in
Messianic Israel many are hanging on to truths they have
discovered, but are neglecting the perpetual covenants to
the tribe of Levi. There can be no restoration of Israel
without a concomitant restoration of the tribe of Levi. In
Hebrews 7 the writer states that there is a change of
the Law and the priesthood. Yeshua declared I came not to
abolish the Law but to fulfill it. Change does not
equal abolition nor does the word fulfillment. God made
numerous perpetual covenants to the House of Aaron and Levi.
If He can cancel these covenants capriciously, what
confidence can we as Gentile believers and Messianic
Israelites have in the efficacy of the death and
resurrection of our Messiah?
Our trust and
confidence rests solely on God's unchanging faithfulness to
his word! As we venture forth in this day of restoration let
us send out a new call—to be great in the kingdom.
Whoever practices and teaches these commands will be called
great in the kingdom of heaven. With unflinching faith
in our Messiah and a yearning for the Holy Spirit to open
our eyes and ears we can be a part of this great restoration
of all things! May God grant us revelation to see his coming
kingdom in its fullness.
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