Posted in Advent devotions

Your prayer has been heard

Zechariah was just doing his job. He burned incense in the temple, a symbol of prayers reaching God in heaven. It was an honor. A privilege. A duty.

In the cloud of smoke created by burning incense, an angel of the Lord appears and says to Zechariah, “Your prayer has been heard” (Luke 1:13).

Zechariah had been praying, too. He had been praying for his wife, for his family, and for his future. Both he and his wife Elizabeth were older and had no children. I imagine his prayer was simple. “Lord, could we just have a child?”

I’ll bet your prayer list is filled with petitions for friends, family, and those you hardly know. You got the prayer email, and now you come to the throne of God’s grace, confidently asking for his mercy for all these friends and strangers. Nice job. And of course, you slip in your own requests, too.

Zechariah, God has heard your prayers. God is going to answer your prayer. You are going to be a father! You and Elizabeth are going to have a son.

And not just any son. Their son would be John the Baptist. He was be part of God’s plan to bring a Savior to the world. His bold preaching would prepare the way for the Lord. Zechariah and Elizabeth were a part of God’s plan!

None of us ever know how we or our children will be a part of God’s plan. I read somewhere that a person’s path to the Lord was paved with many stones, that is, people who play a part in God reaching someone with his love and mercy. You never know which of those stones you are.

So just keep doing your job and saying your prayers. You never know when an angel or God himself will show up with an unexpected message or blessing.

Zechariah gets an ornament on the Jesse Tree, the father of the one whose voice would be heard in the desert, “Prepare the way of the Lord!”

Posted in Through the Bible Devotions

Injured on the job?

A “through the bible” devotion from Leviticus 10.

I paid for my room and board at my college fraternity house by washing lunch and supper dishes each weekday. It wasn’t an exciting job, but some of the brothers and I found ways to make it fun.

One fun game involved stabbing at an empty milk jug with a large chef’s knife. I know what you’re thinking. No, it never crossed our minds that this was a stupid thing to do. When my friend Bob attacked a a jug, the tip of the knife caught on the edge of the metal counter, so that his hand slid up the blade, slicing all four fingers on his hand. After a bloody trip to the emergency room later, we were all a little wiser. It’s all fun until someone gets hurt, right?

“Nadab and Abihu, the sons of Aaron, took their respective firepans, and after putting fire in them, placed incense on the fire and offered strange fire before the Lord, which He had not commanded them. And fire came out from the presence of the Lord and consumed them, and they died before the Lord” (Leviticus 10:1-2).

Ordination of the priests lasted a week (Leviticus 8:33). The job was important. But if you keep reading chapter 10, God reminds Aaron, that you didn’t drink when you were performing priestly duties. Is that what happened with Nadab and Abihu? Was their blood alcohol over the limit? Were they under the influence?

Theirs was a tough lesson to learn. The same fire that had consumed the burnt offerings (9:29) now incinerated two of Aaron’s sons. The Lord gave specific instructions for the burning of incense in the tabernacle. Here’s the first addendum: show up sober.

A friend of mine in new home construction told me that many of his crew was high or buzzed when they showed up for work each morning. Yep, those were the guys working up on the roof or on the ground brandishing nail guns and circular saws.

By the grace of God, I never had any pastoral work-related injuries. Although, I did climb a few ladders to work on a few roofs.

Posted in Through the Bible Devotions

Oil and incense

A “through the bible” devotion from Exodus 29.

It’s possible to find a copycat recipe for just about anything. I’ve made a lemon loaf just like the ones at Starbucks, Italian salad dressing just like Good Seasons, and Olive Garden’s chicken marsala.

However, you didn’t want to mix up a batch of anointing oil or incense like the blends used for the tabernacle. If you got caught, you’d be in big trouble.

“This shall be a holy anointing oil to me throughout your generations. It shall not be poured on anyone’s body, nor shall you make any like it in the same proportions; it is holy, and it shall be holy to you. Whoever mixes any like it or whoever puts any of it on a layman shall be cut off from his people” (Exodus 29:31,32).

“And the incense which you shall make, you shall not make in the same proportions for yourselves; it shall be holy to you for the Lord. Whoever makes any like it, to use as perfume, shall be cut off from his people” (Exodus 29:37,38).

Worship wasn’t a do-it-yourself endeavor. It was set up to be done a specific way at a specific time in a specific place. Unlike pagan rituals done on any and every high place to any number of different gods, there’s only one true God. We relate to him on his terms, not ours.

God is holy. Nothing about him is ordinary. So it is fitting to have oil and incense only used for worship. The fragrance of each would remind you of the uniqueness of God. Is anyone or any thing like him? Nope. Nothing even comes close.