Tuesday, December 15, 2009

1 Kings 6

3 comments:

Berry Girl said...

"The house, while it was being built, was built of stone prepared at the quarry, and there was neither hammer nor axe nor any iron tool heard in the house while it was being built" (v7)

My notes say that the stone was all pre-cut and pre-fitted in the quarry and then moved on rollers to the temple site. The relative quietness at the temple site would be consistent with the sacredness of the undertaking. I love that.

Also, I cannot conceive of what it would look like to have a building overlaid with GOLD. ALL OVER. Wow.

Chris said...

I noticed that too... the lack of ordinary construction noise. Cool. I'm floored that they went to such extents to honor God in his temple... how beautiful.

Unknown said...

did anyone else notice how narrow those rooms were? 7 1/2 feet, 9 feet, 10 1/2 feet? I kep thinking of how often I lament over the "tightness" of our little 10 foot wide rooms so that kind of caught my attention.

Also, looking at the dimensions of the room and then the description of the carved seraphim. Wow. Pretty amazing. Those things were huge, they took up the whole width of the room (30 feet) and were fifteen feet tall!

Okay, that said, the reason I didn't post this morning was because I wanted to type out my devotional reading from the column of this chapter and didn't have time. It moved me, the last part actually gave me goosbumps in light of what we just read about the holy of holies and God promising His presence there. Anyway, I just wanted to share.

"It's a wonderful day indeed when we stop working for God and begin working with God.

For years I viewed God as a compassionate CEO and my role as a loyal sales representative. He had His office, and I had my territory. I could contact Him as much as I wanted. He was always a phone or fax away. He encouraged me, rallied behind me, and supported me, but He didn't go with me. At least I dind't think He did.

Then I read 2 Corinthians 6:1; "We are workers together with God."

Workers with God? Co-laborers? God and I work TOGETHER? Imagine the paradigm shift this truth creates. Rather than report to God, we work WITH God. Rather than check in with Him and then leave, we check in with Him and then FOLLOW.

We are always in the presence of God. We never leave the church. There is never a nonsacred moment! His presence never diminishes. Our awareness of His presence may falther, bt the reality of His presence never changes."

From Just Like Jesus, Max Lucado