One Word

Amen. אמן. One word can mean so much. Too often we say it with little regard for what we are “amen-ing”: “preacher said, “amen,” so, “amen.”

Amen is a prayer in itself. When you look to heaven, at times, all we can say is: “Amen.” And that’s ok.

It is also an affirmation that opens our attitude. Perhaps we are down, upset, uninspired; amen opens the door of release, allowing entry into a new soul space: faith, awe, worship.

By saying it, amen, even when we are not there yet, adjusts our direction, our intention, to that which we desire: Him.

Amen is not simply the end of a prayer, it is a word of joining in, of joining together. Jewish tradition asks that “amen” be the response to every blessing we hear, and every blessing we say.

Amen, אמן, is derived from a verb root meaning to be firm, stable and trustworthy. Amen conveys: let this be so, or let it be solid.

Amen is a spiritual discipline in itself, as it is a single word that can refresh the physical, spiritual, and emotional download of the day. Refresh.

As Yeshua so often said, “Amen, amen, I say to you…” as He rebooted our crashed systems, thereby refreshing our hope.

Say it: Amen. Sing it: Amen. Live it: Amen. Pray it: Amen.

Be well. Shalom.

Mercy for Stones

In the revelation of the Ten Commandments (Ex. 20:1-17) we find no direct command for mercy, tenderness, or kindness. While commands regarding these tender, interpersonal qualities are present in the Torah (Lev. 19:18, 34, as examples), they are not revealed as apodictic law.

But the stones.

In Exodus 20:25-26, an unusual command is given regarding altars:

“If you make me an altar of stone, you shall not build it of hewn stones, for if you wield your tool on it you profane it. And you shall not go up by steps to my altar, that your nakedness be not exposed on it.”

Following the revelation of the Ten Words on Sinai, the chapter concludes with the above instruction regarding altars.

1. It is to be constructed of whole, intact stones.

2. It must have a ramp, not steps.

To build an altar was to build an avenue for approaching God. He becomes the direction, or goal of the effort. Yet the Lord is giving a caution: Be careful how you handle the stones and how you approach Me, lest I see your nakedness.

What?

The rabbis found this to be a message on compassion, tenderness and mercy. Mercy for stones. To avoid striking the stones in order to shape them to our desire was seen as a form of mercy – mercy for stones.

Rashi, one of the most important of rabbinic commentators, noted regarding the exposure of nakedness by the priests, that wearing underpants, they could not expose their nakedness. Unless, the exposure was from the step; as taking the step up revealed that mercy had been withheld.

Lesson.

1. If the Lord desires mercy, tenderness, and kindness for stones, which do not feel, how much more does He desire this towards the other created in His image?

2. In our journey to seek the Lord, let us not step over, upon, or disregard the other in a religious effort to reach the Lord.

The natural inclination of the human heart misses the Spirit, and rests on the letter. In doing so, we miss the mercy for stones, and the lesson pointing us to a higher way of relating to the other.

This exhorts us to move away from looking toward the other with a self-benefitting motivation, and to look upon the sons of God with the regenerate heart of a servant in His Kingdom, and keeps our nakedness covered in the presence of God.

Be well. Shalom.

Embraced

*Please review the previous posts Really Enter and Going Up.

Noise. With a desire to enter the presence of God in corporate worship, we are faced with noise and distraction. Wanting to climb the ladder, we get caught up in our expectation of a disruption free worship experience.

How can we have a meaningful worship experience in the midst of distraction?

Psalm 27:4 says:

אַחַת, שָׁאַלְתִּי מֵאֵת-יְהוָה–אוֹתָהּ אֲבַקֵּשׁ

שִׁבְתִּי בְּבֵית-יְהוָה, כָּל-יְמֵי חַיַּי

לַחֲזוֹת בְּנֹעַם-יְהוָה, וּלְבַקֵּר בְּהֵיכָלוֹ

“One thing I ask of the Lord, that will I seek: to dwell in the House of the Lord all the days of my life, to have a vision of the Lord’s beauty, and to break forth in His Temple.”

We want to ascend higher to experience the depth of prayer and song, to be embraced in the I and Thou; to know and be known. Worship.

We are here. They are here. He is here.

When we are present, tuned in to the life of the congregation, we begin to experience the distractions and noise differently. Rather than taking away from our worship experience, it all becomes a “hallelujah!”

As psalm 150:6 says, “Let everything that has breath praise the Lord. Hallelujah!”

The environment now looks different. The movement, the cough, the crying, the chattering becomes the commotion of praise in the courts of His temple. On the wings of song and life we drift up the ladder effortlessly, higher into the presence and embrace of the Holy Spirit.

We behold the beauty of the Lord in the face of the other, in the chorus of voices, in the melodic cacophony of the improvisation that is human assembly, as we thunder with the heavenly choir: Holy! Holy! Holy!

Worship, my friends, is not found in decorum, but in life: in the breath. It is in the midst of the ensemble of the holy that we are embraced by the dwelling of God all the days of our life, and when that which we seek is truly found.

Be well. Shalom.