Wednesday, October 8, 2014

SEASONS - REMEMBERING THE FEAST OF TABERNACLES A FEW YEARS BACK

(Writing and Photography by Sheila Gail Landgraf)
Here is a little article that I wrote several years ago as we approached the first day of Sukkot/The Feast Of Tabernacles.  It was a period of time when my husband had been unemployed for quite awhile, I was cut back to 32 hours a week on my job and we were struggling quite a bit.  These thoughts give me great comfort now, as I look back and realize how God always looks after His children, no matter what their circumstances.  This temporary time taught me to learn how to better live out my life’s verse.

The time has arrived for The Feast of Tabernacles!
                  On the fifteenth day of this seventh month is the Festival of Sukkot, seven days
                                                                                      for the L-RD 
                                                                                  (Leviticus 23:34)


I LOVE Sukkot!!!!! 
It is a sweet, sweet time before the Lord that I treasure every year.  Of course, I can’t be in Jerusalem this year, and I am not a member at a Jewish congregation, but I am one of those born again, believing Christians who has come to understand the great significance of The Feast of Tabernacles, and celebrating this time before the Lord is always a big HUGE thing in my year. 

This season I’ve had to literally claw my way through the trappings of the world in order to get to God’s way of celebration.   It should be easy, not hard; but it hasn’t happened that way this year. Arriving in the proper place has not been at all easy.

I had dreamed all year of gathering the whole family together into a little mountain resort town, worshipping together every day and celebrating the joy of The Lord together all during the feast week, and just spending family time and relaxing in the evenings.  Things gradually, one by one, fell apart.  Everyone has made some other plans, money was tight, etc., etc.  Well, yes, that was my perfect plan, but alas, God has allowed a situation where I have unexpectedly had to forfeit this plan for something much simpler. 
My first prayer was one of frustration.  Nothing should stop the joy of the feast, so I just begin to passionately hold that up to God.  He answers me that I am absolutely right.  Hmmmm…..so I say but Lord; my budget will not allow a trip with the family this time.  I’ve done everything that I can, but it just isn’t happening.  
“Yes, I know” is what I hear. 

But Lord, why has it worked out this way?  And the answer is the most surprising thing, but I do hear it.

“Because I have called you to be content in all circumstances.”


I suddenly remembered the verse I long ago chose for my life verse,
Philippians 4:11-13.

The words screamed out to me:   Not that I speak in respect of want: for I have learned, in whatsoever state I am, therewith to be content. I know both how to be abased, and I know how to abound: every where and in all things I am instructed both to be full and to be hungry, both to abound and to suffer need.  I can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me.
 
  I had no idea that keeping this wonderful season that I have previously kept with such ease was going to be so hard and complicated this year.  You know what?  Sometimes God REALLY calls on you to live out those life verses. 

Now, that word  “contentment” isn’t exactly what pops into my mind when I think of


celebrating a weeklong festival before the Lord.  I envision feasting, dancing, singing in crowds of joyful people with great fanfare!  So finally I gather my courage and  I ask The Lord what He has planned for me this week, knowing that asking Him was the very first thing I should have considered all along.  He says back to me those hard to digest words I often hear:
“I will show you.  Trust me.”
I am sure it is wrong to complain, but those words didn’t give me much direction. 

Next thing I know, my work calls to tell me they have a great need for me to be in the office on Monday and they want me to postpone my vacation time I’ve set aside at least one day, maybe more.  I had been trying to regroup and at least make a not so extravagant plan for something special to do at home with the family during this feast, but now I can’t even get the first day off from work, and will possibly even have more time than that tied up at work.  

The Ox is in the ditch. 






Some people would say it is a sin for me to work, and I should just take the time off 


anyway.   I had to confess to these zealots that I was in a bondage that I had created for myself – I had a mortgage and needed to keep my job in order to pay my bills.  We were going through tough financial times out there in the business world.  If you were employed you were one of the blessed, and you should not take that for granted in today’s economy.  My heart was already hurting for those that I worked with that had recently been let go for no fault of their own.  I did have to remember that  God said we should be responsible stewards.  I needed to  keep my word and pay my bills.  I needed my job, although at the time I  actually did have on my mind that maybe I no longer needed a mortgage, but God would have to led me through that decision and process over time.  I couldn't change anything overnight.   This was something out of my control.  I stood in the midst  of making tough decisions, of turning one way and then the other until I finally just ended up saying:
 “Okay, Lord, I trust You.” 

I’m was looking out my bedroom window, feeling sorry for myself, thinking sadly that I had not even built a sukkah!. I felt like a failure before God actually, because of not living up to my own testimony about keeping God’s feasts and festivals.  I knew in my heart He wanted us to keep them!   Then, almost as if someone was standing behind me and tapping ne on the shoulder, God reminds me that my back deck is a three sided structure that you can see the stars through.


Hmmm……………

He has provided what I was not prepared for.  I think of this simple little miracle and my heart becomes happier.  I go about planning an outdoor dinner on the deck for tonight.   We may not be starting the feast in a fancy place, but our home is a good place.  The view from our deck will be great! l  There will be lots of stars shining through the shelter.  This is good.


I consider the food.  My planning has been bad.  My budget has been so tight that the menu will probably need to be very limited.  I look in my pantry and find some great selections that I had overlooked.  God always provides what you need.  I had the physical things all along without even knowing it, now I just had to bring my mind and my spirit to the right place.  That was the thing that was most needed.  I confessed my sins of worry and anxiety to God.  I felt His forgiveness flood over me.  I thanked God for his awesome provision, and asked Him to keep my eyes wide open to all the daily blessings He brings from now on.  I had everything that we needed right here under our own roof to offer a joyful feast of thanksgiving to God on the first night of the festival. 
I thought of the people of God throughout history who had to celebrate their feast days under truly hard circumstances.  There were those who celebrated under  the rule of captivity.  I thought of those Jewish heroes that had to celebrate their feast days in concentration camps.  I remembered Corrie Ten Boom and her messages of how she found hope when there was no hope.  I thought of Joseph worshipping God in the pagan life he was forced to live in Egypt.  I began to see that my problems were all in my head. 
I resolved that after work tomorrow, I can do the same again.  We could have our feast on our provided sukkah on the deck and look at the stars and thank The God of Heaven and Earth every night during this week. 

Suddenly I felt very rested and not at all stressed.    

Maybe I was just anxious for nothing? 

I apologized to God for being so stressed over the details.  I am usually such a “Mary,” always worshipping at The Master’s feel; but this week I have been caught acting and behaving just like a “Martha” getting all bogged down in the details and the work and so much so that I almost missed the whole point of setting aside the time to listen, worship, rest and just be thankful and joyful in  the Lord. 

I  have been reminded this week that God simply wants me to sit at His feet and worship.  It doesn’t have to be elaborate, it can be as simple as a dinner on my back deck with my husband.  We will feast with the things that He has provided and offer thanksgiving prayers, ever grateful that we have food and shelter for this day, for this moment and for this season. 

It is enough to bask in God’s presence right where we are, right in the moment that we are living in, in the temples of our temporary bodies that He has given us and with our spirits that will never be destroyed or pass away. 

When the stars come out in the night sky, we will look up to see God’s story written in them. 

Is it not a great miracle? 

Is it not a wonderful thing just to sit after a full meal and look up at the night sky and be ever thankful that God is in control and we are not?  

The God who thinks way beyond anything that I could ever imagine reminded me that we own a telescope that is not even being used.  I had not thought of it in years.  I hasten to go out to the storage area and clean it up and place it next to our table on the deck.  Yes, we have everything that we need, and even more!


Happy Feast of Tabernacles Everyone! 
May you be able to see God’s blessing unfold before you as you worship and sit at His feet this week.
I pray that the world will not be able to keep you from all the good that God has blessed you with.

May we all live in eager anticipation for the time when Messiah returns to set up His Kingdom and rule and reign, for a thousand years of peace.

He will graciously provide everything that we need, and it could just be that  the simple things are actually the richest things after all.

Thursday, October 2, 2014

COME AS A CHLD - LESSON 37 - LOOKING BACK AFTER THE BATTLE IS OVER


(Written by Sheila Gail Landgraf)

We have spoken previously about the fact that Abram went to war against a confederation of kings.

He won the war (against all odds) and brought his nephew, Lot, as well as all of the other captives back home to their land in The Jordanian Valley along with their possessions that had been taken as spoil.  

The king that had been defeated and  lost his city, the King of Sodom, came out to greet Abram after the battle.  Possibly he came out to thank him; even though he was publicly thanking Abram, it is also very possible he was just there to have the people and goods of his lands returned to him.  He was a selfish rotten king and somehow he had managed to escape the slime pits where he had been driven and Abram had successfully brought the people of his city out of captivity and recovered all of his goods while he was fighting his way through the quicksand and slime of the asphalt pits.  Some of his men who had escaped had informed him and he goes out to The Valley of The Kings to meet Abram who has rescued the people.  

All of this rescue had happened simply because Lot, Abram’s nephew, was
among the people of Sodom taken into captivity.  There was really nothing about Sodom or it’s people that Abram thought worth saving.  He had simply come after his family, and as he did the other people involved benefited from his actions.  This is so often the case.  A whole community will be blessed and receive goodness if even only one godly person lives among them.
 
We can look at this whole scenario and see typology of The Last Days and End times and The Battle of Armageddon and the end of the kingdoms of this world and the beginning of the millennial reign of Christ. 

Abram was living peacefully and happily in a world where he had established a godly kingdom.  Most all of those he loved were safe and well cared for, except for Lot who had struck out on his own because He had to do things his own way.  In this story, Abram is much like Christ before the incarnation.  Christ was living a blessed life in heaven before he looked down and saw the state of mankind and had pity on them
 and quickly came to their rescue.


 The three allies of Abram who helped him in battle, Eschol, Aner and Mamre are comparable to archangels who  come and go on the earth and inform God in heaven of the things of the earth.  Perhaps  Mamre had become  Abram’s closest friend in a foreign land.  It was one of these three men who came to Abram with the news of Lot’s captivity.  This person was a messenger, and would be comparable to Gabriel in many ways.  The way they were mighty in battle could be comparable to Michael.  Their complete loyalty to Abram is like the loyalty of the angels of Heaven toward God. 

 
The King of Sodom is so typical of Satan.  How many lives had he wrecked with his evil ways in the City of Sodom?  How many souls had sold out to his immorality and lack of compassion and respect for God, holiness and the sacredness of life?  He was a nothing of a man who had narrowly escaped death in a slime pit while his people had been carried off captive and lost everything because of his selfish ways of feeding his own hedonistic desires instead of tending to the job of being king to a large city.
 
Lot in this story is comparable to the weak and fallen church.  Christ loved them unconditionally, just as Abram loved Lot.  He came to save them, to bring them out of captivity and to give them back what the evil one had taken from them.  Abram did this for Lot.


 
The city of Sodom and the area where Lot was living is comparable to an end-times earth that has lost all sense of godliness.  There is nothing worth saving about it, but Christ comes for the people, just as Abram came for Lot.  He is returning for us one day!  Look up!

When you think of all the people benefiting from their association with Lot you have to consider the story of Israel.  All the world has been saved because God has loved His people, Israel.  Because He has always rescued them, we too, the whole people of the earth that have evolved from the seed of Abraham have been blessed and saved.  The Son of God who walked the earth and saved us by giving His precious life and blood, came to live with us from them.  A whole world full of sinners benefited from the righteousness of one man.
  

Genesis 14 told the story many years ago, way before anything had taken place in history.
 
We all just never looked deep enough to see it.
 
There is SO MUCH to be gleaned from these scriptures!
      
Again we see the hospitality of Abram at work in the way he conducted his business.  He did not have to rescue everyone; he could have only taken Lot and his family, but Abram was gracious and kind to all.  He rescued the whole community of captives and brought them to safety, even though he did not agree with their lives and their lifestyles.  These men would never have come for Abram.  He did not take that into consideration.  Abram lived out the meaning of grace in his rescue of Lot.
 
We are told by some that the neighborhood of Sodom was just the opposite of gracious and kind and hospitable.  They did not like outsiders.  They were a closed city and did not want to be bothered by people traveling and passing through.  They had developed a world unto themselves and did not want interference from the outside.  Lot was an exception because he had come into the city gradually, first living outside the area but close, then moving closer, then living next to the gates then finally residing inside the city itself.  By the time Lot moved inside the city he was not considered a stranger or a traveler passing through.  Those living in the city had become accustomed to having him around and considered him to be one of them, even though Lot perceived himself as being different from them.  His association with them made him appear to be one of them to someone passing through.  Lot had probably paid heavy taxes to the King of Sodom in order to live in the area.  The closer you get to evil the worse things become over time.

Abram in his love for all mankind rescued them all, including Lot.  The King of Sodom came out to speak to him after the war.  He told Abram to keep the spoils and simply return his people.  Perhaps that was his way of buying his kingdom back from Abram.  Abram was not one who considered people for sale or trade.  Like Our Heavenly Father he believed in free will.  He had made a vow to God not to take one penny from this evil king.  God had been generous and allowed Abram to rescue Lot.  Abram honored his promise by not taking the King of Sodom’s money or treasures or the spoils of the war, but returning all of them, except for what his allies had taken.

Christ came into this world, rescued us by giving his life for us and left this world taking nothing.  He would not let us be bought by the enemy of our souls.  If your soul belongs to the devil, it is because YOU chose to let it, not because Christ has not tried to save you.  God gives us all free will.  Abram let the other captives chose either to stay in another place or go back with The King of Sodom.  Unfortunately, most all of them traded their souls for the lush lifestyle in the land of Sodom.  It is said that once you taste certain evils it is hard to walk away from them.  God is always there trying to help us with this, just as Abram was there for Lot, but we must make the choice. 


We have mentioned them before, but while we are looking at so many details, think a little further about the three allies.  Who were these allies of Abram that had ridden into battle so boldly with Abram and his 318 adopted sons?  Their names were Mamre, Eschol and Aner.    Mamre was from the land where Abram had pitched his tents near the old, old tree.  He was an Ammorite who had become friends with Abram.  He knew about  Abram’s belief in The One True God and respected and admired this.  Eschol and Aner were his brothers.  Eschol lived near Hebron and he most likely grew grapes.  His name in Hebrew means “cluster.”  Later the area where he lived was named for him. Aner’s name in Hebrew means “a young man.”  All three of these allies lived in the land where Abram had settled, the land that God has promised would be his as far as his eye could see in all directions.   These three were not opposed to Abram being in the land and felt blessed by his presence.  Again, I think of the angels.  I also think of those words of Christ in Luke 9:50 where Christ tells the disciples "whoever is not against us is for us."  He states that who ever helps one of His will not lose their reward.  I am happy for Abram's helpers whom I know God will reward for their kindness towards His people.  There are many such people walking the earth today.  God will not forget them when he makes up His jewels.   
 
The 318 adopted sons are surely the saints that have gone before us when we consider the prophetic meanings of this story.  They will be resurrected and we who belong to Christ will join in with them as Christ fights for us in end times.  They are the one’s who are faithful and true, loyal to the things that Abram has taught them from his own house.  Though adopted, they are loved and sit at his table with honor and respect and reward and can also be compared to the Gentiles who know Christ today.
    
We come to the most awesome part of the story:  Then another King appeared.  This King had not fought in the battle, for He was known as The King of Peace. 

His name was Melchizedek.  He was the King of Salem, better known as Jerusalem.  He came bearing bread and wine for he was also a priest of God Most High.  Wonder of all wonders - He blessed Abram!





This was the blessing he proclaimed:

“Blessed be Abram of God Most High possessor of heaven and earth.   And blessed be God Most High who has delivered your enemies into your hand.” 




It is in Melchizedek that we see the pre-incarnate Christ.  There in the Valley of The Kings, Abram had paid tribute to no king, but to Melchizedek whom he gladly gave one tenth of his goods.  Many people think in error that Abram paid him a tenth of the spoils.  Scholars studying these passages tend to disagree.  We heard earlier that Abram did NOT take of the spoils of the battle but returned them to the King of Sodom.  How do you give a tenth from something that you did not have to start with?
 
No, many believe that Abram had been taught by this priest from God Most High, Melchizedek, how to tithe correctly.  You do not give the spoil, you give of your best.  We have heard this over and over now, all the way back to Adam and Eve and Cain and Abel.  Abram gave Melchizedek a tithe from the best of his best, of what he had already possessed even before the battle and that of which he had received because he had been blessed from God.  He kept nothing from the battle and gained nothing from the battle.

Melchizedek brought forth bread and wine from Heaven and sat at the table with Abram.  He confirmed and repeated the promise of God to Abram and Abram realized that in this battle God was saying to him, "I always keep My promises."  This is what will happen with Christ and the people who belong to Him when life's battles are over and the victory has been won and we sit with Him as the honored guests at his table in The Marriage Supper of The Lamb.   




Don’t make the mistake of thinking that this is the beautiful ending to the story.  

No; for every ending is just a new beginning in disguise.  From the blessed end of the Battle of The Nine Kings comes a Kingdom that will never end.  It is a Kingdom where the Most High King who was once a prophet and priest will reign forever.  A million new stories will be written about this kingdom and they will never, ever end.


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