“Is it time for you, O ye, to dwell in your cieled
houses, and this house lie waste? Now
therefore thus saith the Lord of hosts; Consider your ways.” Haggai 1: 4-5
When
you think of a house, you think of something that provides security, serenity,
comfort, ownership, and protection. If
we so choose, around it we can build our kingdom and with it promote our
prestige. It can be a fortress or an
embassy. A commodity or a necessity. It can be what we make it.
No
doubt, many a first time home buyer walks into their house anxious to call it
their own. This moment is as much a
blessing as an opportunity for temptation.
A blessing in that one has a certain dwelling that includes all the
benefits therewith. An opportunity for
temptation in that you can do with it as you pleased. It is your space to decide what comes in and
what goes out. Whom you would let in and
whom you would keep out. Your little
corner of the world, to build what you choose to build. No doubt, the house and home is a blessing
from God, but that is just the secret; it is from God. When you begin to think that you own it, that
your house is for your benefit, your glory, and your promotion; then it becomes
something else entirely. It has become a
mentality predicted on inward focus. The doors are locked and the gates are barred, the
message is clear. This is for me. A
ceiled house was only for the wealthy, and those who strived to be so. Kings build palaces as monuments to their
glory and rich men build mansions as a testament to their achievements. Is it time for you to
dwell in you cieled houses, and this house lie waste? The prophet
posed this pointed question by direct instruction from God, it so effectively
articulates the underlying cause of degradation to God’s kingdom. A question that echoes through the ages. Do we seek to build our kingdom or His? When we seek our own will, our own wealth,
and our own way; the cause of Christ suffers.
When we separate ourselves from the need of our fellow man, from the
cries of a lost and dying world, God’s house falls into decay. God’s house and his kingdom is not built in
brick and mortar, rather with sacrifice and commitment to His Spirit and His
calling. The calling to further God’s
kingdom must be greater than the want to establish our own. The threshold that divides us from the
outside world is one we do not own, therefore it is no threshold at all. Only a gateway of servitude. Consider your ways. We only have seventy years of profit on this
earth and if by reason of strength
(the Psalmist says) we get to eighty; then
their strength is labor and sorrow.
The scriptures exhort us to consider our ways. What are we seeking for, striving for, and
building up? Are we working on our own
sealed houses of privilege, prestige, and protection? How much greater an endeavor to put our
labors to God’s house found in the hearts of sanctified men and women. His eternal kingdom that lives within the
hearts of men.
The
struggle rages on between our will and God’s will for us. If we allow it, the Word of God will hew down the timber of superfluity and direct us to spiritually profitable
labors. It will burn out the wood, hay,
and stubble; try each philosophy by fire until the truth stands before us and
proclaims “this is the way walk ye in
it.” Lord help us to consider our
ways, because the time is short and houses are built, either ours or His.