Pastor Sherry’s message for August 25, 2024
Scriptures: 1 Kgs 8:1, 6, 10-12, 22-30, 41-43; Ps 84; Eph 6:10-20; Matt 23:27-24:2

How many of you remember a song by Tennessee Ernie Ford called “This Old House”? (Rosemary Clooney also recorded it). The lyrics go like this:
This old house once knew my children
This old house once knew my wife
This old house was home and comfort
As we fought the storms of life
This old house once rang with laughter
This old house knew many shouts
Now it trembles in the darkness
When the lightning walks about.
Chorus:
Ain’t gonna need this house no longer
Ain’t gonna need this house no more
Ain’t got time to fix the shingles
Ain’t got time to fix the floor
Ain’t got time to oil the hinges
Nor to mend the window pane
Ain’t gonna need this house no longer
I’m getting ready to meet the saints!
This old house is getting shaky
This old house is getting old
This old house lets in the rain and
This old house lets in the cold
My old knees are getting chilly
But I feel no fear or pain
‘Cause I see an angel peeping through
The broken window pane
Repeat Chorus
When I heard this song as a child, I thought the man was talking about his home, a wooden house. But, the song is not really about a structure, is it? It’s a metaphor for the singer’s body, especially as he deals with old age. In Hebrew, the word “house” is also translated “Temple” or “Tent” or “Tabernacle.” It can mean God’s special dwelling place on earth. And it can also mean our own bodies, as Paul writes in 1 Corinthians 6:19-20—Do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit, Who is in you, Whom you have received from God? You are not your own; you were bought at a price. Therefore honor God with your body.
Let’s consider together what the Scripture passages appointed for today have to say to us about the Temple.
A. Our Old Testament reading, 1 Kgs 8:1, 6, 10-12, 22-30, 41-43, focuses on King Solomon’s prayer at the dedication of the 1st Temple in Jerusalem. It had taken 7.5 years to build. 30,000 Israelites worked on it, together with 150,000 others, mostly Phoenicians. Their king had agreed with King David to supply the cedar and the workers. The Temple was made entirely of stone and richly ornamented with gold, cedar, mosaics, and beautiful embroideries. But, unlike pagan temples, it held no statue of God (The second commandment outlawed idols, including sculptures and paintings trying to depict God.) King David had devised the plans and collected the materials. King Solomon, his son, oversaw the construction.
It was meant to house the Ark of the Covenant and the other holy furnishings from the Tent of Meeting. Neither David nor Solomon viewed it as God’s dwelling place. David understood that God is omnipresent–in a sense, He cannot be contained or “housed.” People throughout the ages have tried to put Him in a box of their own understanding, but He will not be confined to a box or to a house, even one built especially for Him. Later, the prophet Isaiah would write (6:1)—I saw the Lord seated on a throne, high and exalted, and the train of His robe filled the temple. Note that just his train filled the temple. God himself in all of His immensity, in Isaiah’s vision, must have hovered over the Temple. So David rightly conceived of the Temple as God’s footstool (Psalm 99:5). It provided a space for prayer, worship, and animal sacrifices to atone for sins.
In today’s passage, King Solomon dedicates the Temple with a prayer of praise containing 7 petitions. Solomon reminds God of His promise that David’s descendants will always sit on the throne of Israel (provided they are obedient to God and maintain their covenant with Him). He asks God to hear the prayers of His people from the Temple. He asks that He will (help Solomon) render fair verdicts in cases where there are no witnesses and only the word of the defendant (another plea of Solomon for wisdom). He prays that if God brings drought due to the people’s sins, that He will forgive them and restore the land if they confess their sins and repent. He hopes that the same will hold true if there are others kinds of disasters caused by individual or corporate sins. Finally, he prays that Non-Israelites will come to know the Lord and develop a close relationship with Him.
For the Israelites, in Solomon’s time, the Temple represented a place where worshippers could approach or meet with God, individually and in large groups.
B. Psalm 84 was written by some descendants of Korah. This is important to know because Korah had led a rebellion against Moses, and was judged for it. He and his family were jealous of Moses and Aaron, enlisted help and rose up against them. God had the ground open up and swallow them…YIKES! (The message was “don’t touch God’s anointed!”) But, by God’s grace, some descendants of Korah, Levites who served in the new Temple, had been appointed as gate-keepers (bouncers). In verse 10, these doorkeepers joyfully sing—Better is one day in your courts than a thousand elsewhere; I would rather be a doorkeeper in the house of my God than dwell in the tents of the wicked.
The psalm is a song of praise sung by pilgrims walking to Jerusalem, celebrating their enthusiasm for being able to come into God’s presence in His Temple, and their deep desire to meet with and worship Him there.
Additionally, verse 9, is a reference to the coming Messiah, Jesus—Look upon our shield [earthly king], O God; look with favor on Your Anointed One [Messiah, Jesus].
C. Paul’s concern in Ephesians 6:10-20 is that we all be aware that our enemies are not humans, per se, but the demonic spiritual entities that act through them. He wants us to guard our spiritual house, our Temple, by putting on spiritual armor. The pieces of the armor are reminiscent of what Roman soldiers wore. A foundation of peace, the shoes come first. Then a belt of truth (pants aren’t mentioned, so I like to think of perhaps the lycra shorts that competitive bikers wear); a breastplate of righteousness, to protect our heart and other vital organs; the helmet of salvation (to protect our mind); the shield of faith, with which to defend us from Satan’s ideas and insinuations; and the sword of the Spirit which is the Word of God (Scripture). The Bible and prayer are our only offensive weapons. The spiritual armor guards and protects our physical and spiritual house/temple from assaults from the evil one.
D. Just before going to the Cross, Jesus lambasts the scribes and Pharisees for their hypocrisy (Matthew 12:27-24:2). He knows they are going to torture and kill Him soon, so what does He have to lose?
He publically, before crowds in the Temple, blasts them for misrepresenting God’s will and God’s heart to God’s people. This is a serious sin—of which they seem to be oblivious—and they have thus incurred God’s judgment.
In this passage, He calls them out for (1) their desire for prestige; (2) their abuse of their teaching authority; (3) their false teachings on doctrine and practice; and (4) their preoccupation with teaching the people to focus on ethical minutia while overlooking the main points of God’s love, grace, mercy, and justice. In the final episode of season four of “The Chosen” this is portrayed so well. Two Pharisees have joined Jesus at Lazarus’ home in Bethany to ask Him questions. One of them rejects Jesus when He disagrees with a human rabbi the man has quoted. The Pharisee is in the presence of God but refuses to believe in Him because he is wedded to the ideas of a human “authority.” The commentator, Dr. J. Vernon McGee, says Jesus implies that the Pharisees and Scribes are “spiritual zombies,” and that they are headed to Hell.
(Thru the Bible Commentary on Matthew, Thomas Nelson, 1991, p. 122.)
Jesus also predicts that this 2nd Temple (rebuilt through the leadership of Ezra and Nehemiah, and further spruced up and enriched by King Herod) will be destroyed, which it was by the Romans in 70AD. He takes no joy in that; in fact He weeps over Jerusalem. He knows because the religious leaders of Israel have rejected Him and the warnings of the prophets sent before Him, that all of Jerusalem will also be demolished.
But He will raise this Temple—meaning His body–in 3 days. This means that no human or spiritual force can annihilate Jesus. Nor can any human or spiritual force eradicate His Church. (Matthew 16:18—And I tell you that you are Peter, and on this rock I will build My Church, and the gates of Hades will not overcome it.) Both Jesus’ physical body and the Church, His spiritual body, are eternal temples.
So, please remember that you are not just “an ole house,” but you are a Temple of the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit lives within each of us who love Jesus and who claim Him as our Savior. We may need sprucing up and repair from time to time, but we are loved and we are saved. We bring our individual temples to this house to worship God each Sunday. And, hopefully, we meet with God daily through prayer and Bible reading. We want to armor-up our personal temples (our body) daily also. And we want to be humble but alive followers of our Lord Jesus Christ. Amen! May it be so!
©️2024 Rev. Dr. Sherry Adams