While doing my devotion a few days
ago, I came across the premise that while there is an innate desire to worship
God in every man, we will not be able to truly praise or worship him with our
lives or in word, song and dance like the fathers of the faith unless we get a
true understanding of who he is. According to the writer, if we think God is
some faraway being who is not too concerned about our lives but just wants
obedience from us, we will never be able to truly worship God. I agree.
Moses grew up realizing that there
was something special about him. His real father was a prophet while his mother
came from a family of prophets. He grew up in Pharaoh’s palace where he learned
governance and administration but he always knew where he was from. He felt the
desire stir in heart to deliver his people but he missed God’s leading and
timing. In the end he ran away from Pharaoh’s wrath and ended up tending sheep,
a far cry from being a prince of Egypt. Moses must have been traumatised by his
experience. However, when Moses met God his life changed. From an insipid
cowering shepherd, he became a god to the most powerful monarch in the then
known world. He led millions of Israelites from Egypt in one while ruining the
economy of Egypt. He spoke with God face to face. The Bible says God showed his
acts to the children of Israel but to Moses he showed his ways. God later
described Moses as the meekest man that ever lived.
One of my favourites in the Old
Testament was Elijah. Elijah definitely knew God and had a right perception of
God. Whenever Elijah spoke to a king in his days, you would usually find the
expression “the God before whom I stand” as part of his comments to that king. He
was always conscious of the fact that he stood before God whether in the palace
or pit. He famously called down fire not only on a sacrifice to God but on two
different battalions of soldiers that came to arrest him. Even though somewhere
along the line Elijah got afraid of Jezebel, from the Bible we know that along
with Enoch, Elijah was not allowed to taste of physical death.
Peter and ten of the Apostles
walked with Christ for three and a half years. By the time he died, resurrected
and went to be with the Father, those who met them realised that these men had
changed. Before meeting Christ, quite a few of them were uneducated. However by
the time the three and a half years were over, something had changed. Paul
never met Christ physically but by revelation. From being a zealous persecutor
of the church, he became the pre-eminent teacher of the Gospel of the Kingdom. From
their letters that we read in the Bible, we know that all of them were
worshipful, thankful men. Their lives and the things they did by obedience were
acts of worship. All these men had something in common. They either met God
physically or by revelation. And their lives never remained the same. According
to Dr. Mike Murdock, you cannot meet with God and remain the same, unless you
met with an impostor. I believe they were able to do the things they did
because they had a right perspective of God which led them to worship and
obedience.
The book of Revelation shows us a
picture of everything in heaven, from the elders to the four living creatures,
from the innumerable company of angels to the saints in heaven; we see a
picture of never ending worship. However, we haven’t yet reached that zenith
were we know God totally and we are known totally. While on earth, the Bible
tells us that we see darkly as if in a mirror. However, that is not an excuse
to press on to know more of God, to have a right perspective him. Paul, as
great as he was still pressed on to know more of God. The Holy Spirit has been
sent to us to show us Christ and the father. The thought of whether I have the
right perspective of the father is one that has continually engrossed my mind
these last few days. Like Paul, I want to know him, even as I am known that I
might worship him like Michael W. Smith said with my love, my life, my all.
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