Into the Sanctuary
This article was published in the
Presbyterian Standard, Issue No. 7, July-September 1997.
T
HE Bible and Christian experience combine to tell us that all is not
well with the world and why it is so: sin has entered in and is the
plague of every human heart. The fall and degeneration of mankind,
God's supreme handiwork, was complete. Total depravity with its fruits
is not some abstract theological notion but a fearful day-to-day
reality. Yet even the Lord's people can sometimes be taken aback and
stumbled when they realise just how perverse the current order of
things is.
Twisted
One of the Hebrew words for sin which is used to express the
crookedness of the heart also describes a body that is bent double when
bowed down with pain (Psa. 38:6). Such disorder illustrates the
unnatural chaos of this present evil world: everything seems to be
twisted, inverted. We see sin, even daring sin, approved and praised,
while righteousness is ridiculed; wicked men flourish and increase in
goods, while the godly are not rewarded in kind. This is a great trial
and may be a casting down to many believing souls.
It was said
scornfully of the first disciples that they had "turned the world
upside down" (Acts 17:6) — whereas in fact they were simply
helping to turn it the right way up again! The leaven of the gospel is
indeed accomplishing this blessed work, but unnoticed by the natural
eye: precious seed is daily being sown by preaching and watered by
prayer but the fruit of harvest must wait until the end of the world
(Matt. 13:39). Only then will the books be balanced and righteousness
reign unopposed in the earth.
Friend, which view
of the world do you have? do you judge it according to your senses - or
do you see it in the glass of God's revelation? is it true of you that
you "walk by faith, not by sight" (2 Cor. 5:7)? This is all the
difference between confidence and doubt, triumph and despair!
Remedy
Faith is certainly being tried in our day, and oh, how wanting I am
found! Despite some effort my soul cannot get the grip on God which it
needs. Because my grasp is weak my walk in the world is faltering: I
wonder whether my cross-bearing and following in Christ's steps is
worthwhile after all. But then I learn that there is a sovereign remedy
which Scripture encourages me to employ: one which a wise and heavenly
Physician prescribes to sober my giddy mind and steady my unstable
soul; I must enter the sanctuary of God.
Door of Hope
Asaph knew this painful trial: a man perplexed at the unequal state of
things, he then found himself serving in the place of worship —
and became a different man (Psa. 73:17). There his conscience was stung
and and his folly exposed. Comfort was restored and lamentation was
converted to the voice of joy and praise.
We go into God's
sanctuary not by passing through the door of any building but by
approaching the Father in the name of the Son with the enabling of His
Spirit. Through our great High Priest we enter the tabernacle not made
with hands (Heb. 9:11) and hold communion with the Eternal. An audience
is granted with the Majesty on high! This is a tremendous privilege.
Worship
Every act of worship ought to be a transforming one. Outside the
sanctuary dark storms are raging but inside all is calm and light. We
are face to face with the unseen realities of eternity and the things
of time and sense assume their proper place and fade away into the
background.
Whether it is the
sanctuary of prayer, preaching or praise, whether it is in the public
or the private place, it is always the sanctuary of the Word of God.
The mediation of Christ provides the basis and the Scriptures the
medium for this exalted fellowship.
Remembrance
What did the psalmist find in the house of God? what produced the
change within himself? It was no mere emotional or aesthetic effect, a
being dazzled by the sights and sounds, for he says, "I understood."
There was a powerful revelation of truth to his mind. We are told that
when the ark of God was finally brought back to Jerusalem and set in
the tent David had pitched for it, Asaph was appointed chief musician
and leader of song to minister before the ark (1 Chron. 16:1, 4, 5).
His great task was "to record, and to thank and praise the Lord God of
Israel." To "bring to remembrance" the things of God — in his own
mind and in the people's — a blessed duty! This was to be his
continual work in the sanctuary as a leader of praise (v.37); it must
be a great part of ministerial work today, for too easily we let even
the most precious truths slip out of our minds.
In the first psalm
delivered to him to conduct, the inspired words exhort Israel to seek
out the works of the Lord: "Remember his marvellous works that he hath
done, his wonders, and the judgments of his mouth." (v.12). How much of
the church's strength consists in recounting the mighty acts of her
God!
Covenant
One truth was especially sealed to Asaph in the worship of the
sanctuary, giving strength to his needy soul: "Be ye mindful always of
his covenant.....Even of the covenant which he made with Abraham.....an
everlasting covenant" (1 Chron. 16:15-17). In God's covenant the land
of Canaan is the promised inheritance of His people: not, we
understand, the earthly territory of that name but "a better country,
that is an heavenly" (Heb. 11:16). There is new Jerusalem, where the
triune God dwells with His redeemed in perfect fellowship for evermore:
Christ the King is seen by unsinning eyes in all His glory and beauty;
unfailing charity forms a sweet bond between all the saints. Here are
rich rewards indeed.
How often we
encounter this theme of God's covenant salvation when we open our
Bibles! In the sanctuary then we are reminded of God's great purpose
for His own: we begin to see things once again not only in their parts
but in their whole. What believer in whose heart this truth dwells
richly could long be jealous of the wicked and their fleeting fame and
fortune?
Holiness
Israel was reminded to "worship the Lord in the beauty of holiness" (1
Chron. 16:29). God's covenant is grace to sinners but it is a holy
covenant (Luke 1:72). The terms in which it is drawn up do not sully
God's holiness by suffering sin to abound in His own. Grace teaches men
to deny ungodliness and worldly lusts (Tit. 2:11, 12). Beware then, any
professors of religion who rest in their sins! "But unto the wicked God
saith, What hast thou to do to declare my statutes, or that thou
shouldest take my covenant in thy mouth?" (Psa. 50:16).
In the gospel the
Holy One brings near His righteousness, enabling His elect to embrace
it as their own. A righteousness which both secures our salvation and
seals the wicked's doom; they have a "latter end" too, which shall see
them swept trembling before Christ's judgment seat, naked and scarlet
in their sins.
Glory
Whenever we enter the sanctuary of God we should glimpse something of
His glory - and then declare it ourselves. In Israel it was bound up
with the ark of the covenant (1 Sam. 4:21, 22); for us it is seen in
Christ crucified for our sins.
Like our Lord such
truths may be crucified, buried, and kept out of sight, even by men of
religion; but they too will surely rise again and ascend back to their
rightful place in believers' hearts and the church's life. May we too
affirm: "it is good for me to draw near to God." |