Topic: Fr. Macarius

Different Levels of Worship (Exodus 24)

Different Levels of Worship (Exodus 24)

By admin on October 28, 2015

Tags: Early Church Teachings | Fr. Macarius
Historical Background

In this chapter, Exodus 24, we come across the first biblical reference to the worship of the people of Israel after their exodus from Egypt and crossing the Red Sea.

They walked for 3 months until they reached Mount Sinai, Mount Horeb, where God spoke with them and gave them the Ten Commandments together with some other regulations for their new life, after their time of slavery.

However, the people trembled of this scene: the mountain quaked greatly and was covered in the smoke of a furnace because of the awesome presence of God. Thus, they wanted to be exempt from this scene requesting that it would not be repeated and asked Moses to represent them in meeting with God and then tell them what God says (Exodus 19:16–19, Deuteronomy 4:9–14, Deuteronomy 5:13–29).

After Moses received the Ten Commandments and some other statutes, God called the people to worship Him. This was before God explained to Moses the principles of His relationship with the people as God revealed this to them later and it was written in the book of Leviticus.

When God called the people to worship, we notice that there are 3 different levels of worship recorded in this important chapter, Exodus 24: 1-2:

The people should not go up the mountain but remain at its foot.
Moses, Aaron, Nadab and Abihu, and seventy of the elders of Israel should go up the mountain but remain at a certain distance; they shall worship from afar.
Moses alone goes to the top of the mountain.
Moses explained all these arrangements to the people to prepare them to worship in accordance to these arrangements. The people responded by accepting and obeying the guidance of the Lord.
At this point, God’s triad plan of worship began to be implemented. It is full of great mysteries.

The First Level: Worship From the Foot of the Mountain (Refer to Verses 4–8)

We notice the following:

+ Moses built an altar and offered burnt offerings and sacrificed peace offerings to the Lord. This is so essential for worship because after the fall the fellowship with God required an altar and an offering. Moses also read all the things related to the covenant that God had made with them and its conditions (Exodus 19: 3 – 6) and sprinkled the blood on the altar and on the people.

+ The people were responsive to Moses. Moses spoke to them and they declared their agreement through their understanding and their obedience.

It is thus clear that this was the worship of the people at the foot of the mountain before the altar of God!

+ This is the first level of worship which we start with and which is essential. Worship starts at the altar and the offering; Christ is our offering and our altar at the same time (1Corinthians 5: 7b; Hebrews 13: 10 – 12). There, we can renew our covenants with God as we remember that we were redeemed by the blood of the covenant and so should walk according to its conditions. This alone is capable of keeping us in our fellowship with God and keeping us from the evils of the world.

+ Yet, we should aspire to grow in our fellowship with God and in being separate from the world in order to ascend to another level in the mountain of worship.
(2Corinthians 6:14–7: 1)

Note that worship always requires going up the mountain! God met the people at Mount Horeb first, but after that when they entered the Land of Promise, He chose to dwell in Mount Zion amid His people in Jerusalem, the place of the temple and of worship.
(Psalm 68:16, 2Samuel 5-6)

+ In this first level, the worship according to the flesh and the worship of the spirit are probably intermingled. At this level we are still in the valley, at the foot of the mountain; the world is still near us as we have not yet been completely separated from it. If we do not pay attention to this and start to ascend upwards, we will be tempted to backslide from God. We all know that after this worship at the foot of the mountain, the people backslid and worshiped the calf –a kind of worship which they had seen in Egypt in the days of their slavery. They also started to dance, eat, drink and play; this means that they slid to uncleanness. When the flesh interferes in worship, it offers mixed reactions: enthusiasm and passion in worship that can be followed by lusts and uncleanness. (refer to Exodus 32)

The Second Level of Worship (Refer to Verses 9–11)

In order to enter into a new level of fellowship, we should ascend upwards. However, this ascent should start at the altar, the blood and the covenant.

Those who ascended further up were mainly the ones who served the people; they had a responsibility towards the people; they were priests and elders, that is, they had walked with God for some time and were set apart to serve Him. A priest is someone who is set apart. An elder is someone who carries the leadership responsibility of the tribe because he possesses divine wisdom and knowledge that qualify him to serve a nation; he is also accepted and respected by the people because he had walked in the fear of God for many years.

Here, we see another form for the fellowship with God. At this level, there is no need for our usual techniques of worship like singing, dancing, crying out, repenting, thanking, praising, etc. All these take place at the foot of the mountain and shape our worship for a period of time as a first stage in worship.

However, when we ascend upwards, we see God and we eat with Him! God reveals Himself to one’s inner being who at that time would still be ignorant of God, possessing only the intellectual knowledge, that is, knowing about God rather than knowing God. This intellectual knowledge belongs to the first levels of worship. However, this level is different. God reveals Himself to the faithful who have walked with him in fear and obedience.

This revelation allows one to enter into a different level and dimension of fellowship with God where the mystical revelations start. God reveals Himself through His word when its mysteries are uncovered and its depth is revealed. This becomes a mystical food on which the soul nourishes and hence is transformed from her fallen nature. Here, the true transformation into the image of God starts. This image had been distorted inside us by the fall.

Notice the words: ‘they saw God, and they ate and drank’ (verse 11).

The fear that results from the presence of God disappears at this level, but the soul would be filled with awe. She would realize her reality in the light of God and would desire to hide because of the awe of His presence (Isaiah 2: 10, 11).

Also cleansing the heart and exercising love for Jesus leads to a new refreshed pouring of His love into the heart (Rom. 5:5) .This has a lifting power that helps also to bring up into the next level of worship.

No words are sufficient enough to describe or teach this level of fellowship. It can only be learned through personal experience; it is a foretaste of the age to come. It draws one upwards.

After going through this stage with all its responsibilities, one starts to ascend more as God calls him to go higher.

The Third Level of Worship (Refer to Verses 12–18)

God calls Moses to go up. There were 74 persons in the previous level, yet only one was prepared for more ascension!

Doesn’t this cause us to wonder?! Doesn’t it also cause us to long for the levels of the mountain of worship?

God does not have favoritism; yet, it is important to be sufficiently prepared for this ascension. There are dangers awaiting those who ascend! It is not only the difficulty of going up which the soul usually tries to avoid and seek to be exempt of. There are more dangers than just this. The enemy stands to guard the entrances of the mountain that lead upwards. He knows that those who ascend pose a great danger to his kingdom, the kingdom of darkness.

In the journey upwards, we meet the lions and leopards (Song of Solomon 4: 8)!

At the very top of the mountain, God starts to be revealed as the Trinity. We then see the Son, Our Saviour, in His bridal image longing so much for His bride and awaiting her: ‘Come with Me, my spouse. Come up. Do not be afraid. Your suffering will be transformed into bridal ornamentation. Your suffering will be fellowship in my suffering that will prepare you for more of the power of My resurrection.’ (Philippians 3: 10)

Then, Moses entered into the cloud and was not seen!

Here, the bride enters the bridal chamber of the Bridegroom. She passes through the cloud, the separating curtain. Behind this curtain, there are mysteries, fellowship, and bridal unity of love that no one understands or sees. There, the words stop. Love does not need words. (Zephaniah 3:17)

This love also prepares and qualifies the bride for another kind of ministry to the Bridegroom and His people; it is the most important thing that the Bridegroom desires and this is: to dwell in the midst of His people –not be a mere visitor whom we invite in the meetings and then invite again and again as though we are not ready for His constant dwelling with us. This constant dwelling requires attentiveness –which we are not used to or want to be under its yoke, though He has said: ‘My yoke is easy and My burden is light’ (Matthew 11:30)

The bride is granted the mysteries of establishing a dwelling place for the Lord. At the moment, He dwells in us as He has made us His new spiritual temple. (1Corinthians 3:16) Yet, He also desires to dwell among us. (2Corinthians 6:16b)

Moses came out of this encounter with all the mysteries of the tabernacle and declared to the people the desire of God: ‘let them make Me a sanctuary, that I may dwell among them’ (Exodus 25: 8). We notice that this has been God’s constant request from the beginning to the end. (Exodus 25:8, 1Kings 8:1–11, Ephesians 2:22, Revelation 21:3)

Not only this, but this encounter at the top of the mountain also causes one to long for more and drives one to repeatedly ask for this experience until God calls him to it another time: ‘Please, show me Your glory’ (Exodus 33:18,19). One would then be filled with the presence and glory of God. Therefore, when Moses came down from the mountain the second time, he was shining with grace and his face was shining to the extent that the children of Israel could not look at him. (Exodus 34:29,30)

We are called to the fellowship of glory with God in His Son, according to His intercession prayer on our behalf. (John 17:22)

On the Mount of transfiguration, Jesus was transfigured to show us that this is available for every redeemed person. It is the desire of God’s heart that the grace of redemption would be transfigured in us attracting others to Him. He desires that His glory may rest upon His people to shine to the world for their salvation. (Isaiah 60:1–3)

 

Mystery

Mystery

By admin on October 28, 2015

Tags: Early Church Teachings | Fr. Macarius

[All references are from NKJV]

Deuteronomy 29:29
“The secret things belong to the LORD our God, but the things that are revealed belong to us and to our children forever, that we may do all the words of this law.”

Does this verse mean that there are secrets (mysteries) that belong to God that are hidden? If that is true why God doesn’t reveal them to us; and what is the benefit of these mysteries?

Romans 16:25, 26
“Now to him who is able to strengthen you according to my gospel and the preaching of Jesus Christ, according to the revelation of the mystery that was kept secret for long ages but has now been disclosed and through the prophetic writings has been made known to all nations, according to the command of the eternal God, to bring about the obedience of faith”

Colossians 1:26
“the mystery hidden for ages and generations but now revealed to his saints”.

Here it is clear that the mysteries have certain times to be revealed for a greater benefit. The revelation of the mysteries is not only according to God’s wisdom in choosing the right time but also for other divine purposes.

1 Corinthians 2:9, 10, 12
“But, as it is written, “What no eye has seen, nor ear heard, nor the heart of man imagined, what God has prepared for those who love him”—
these things God has revealed to us through the Spirit. For the Spirit searches everything, even the depths of God.

1 Corinthians 2:12
“Now we have received not the spirit of the world, but the Spirit who is from God, that we might understand the things freely given us by God.”

In these verses, it is clear that the Holy Spirit is the one who reveals what is in God’s heart. Consequently knowing ‘these things’ reveals more of God’s heart to us, so in turn we know him more, ‘heart to heart’.

‘Mystery’ according to Apostle Paul
Christ is a mystery (Colossians 2:2; 4:3 & Ephesians 3:4)
The Church is a mystery (Ephesians 3:3, 4, 6, 9)
The Gospel is a mystery (Ephesians 6:19)
All these are the foundation of faith and they are all a mystery!

Also faith itself is a mystery (1 Timothy 3:9).
Lawlessness is a mystery (2 Thessalonians 2:7).
God’s will is a mystery (Ephesians1:9) and
godliness is a mystery (1 Timothy 3:16).

Everything is by faith and mystery
After the reformation movement, the western theology, tended to teach that everything is by faith. This is partially true because ‘faith’ according to the Bible doesn’t stop at just believing. This theology (after the spiritual darkness during the middle ages) shrunk and focused on logic and matters only understood by reason and the mind. (Some catholic ideas were a reaction to this theology).
We are used in our prayers to say ‘I believe you God’, ’I accept your promises and believe them’ ..etc.
However, faith is partly believing through our mind and partly receiving through the spirit. Galatians 5:5 ‘For we through the Spirit eagerly wait for the hope of the righteousness by faith’.
God has made man trifold: spirit, soul and body. The spirit part is the element that connects us with God. God knows that there are spiritual and theological issues that are above reasoning and logic of the mind (He gave us logic and mind). These matters can only be comprehended and realized through our spirit. (Our spirit is God given so we can know the divine matters. Also the Holy Spirit dwells in our spirit). Therefore, faith stays very limited if it is confined only to logic, reason and the mind. So from here we can complete the theological well known expression that everything is
by faith and mystery.
So mystery is a God given gift or grace to our spirit to comprehend, accept and believe divine matters. This will result in completion of our salvation and God’s purposes fulfilled in and through us.

To sum up:
This fact receiving by faith and spirit was agreed upon by the whole church until the movement of Enlightenment (18th cent.) which everything must be apprehended by mind otherwise rejected.
This movement has its historical background that explains its approach.
However, it ended in such a loss as it is already explained Spiritual things can never be contained in the small box called mind. Still we thank God for this great gift of the mind, but it is limited regarding spiritual things because it is related to Spirit of God who cannot be limited.

Therefore we are now aware that we can just receive part of the limitless truth of God and we have to apprehend it well and obey it. But knowing that the truth still has a lot that we can only approach by receiving it by faith and prayer in our spirits. In due time the Holy Spirit will continue to reveal what we have received in our spirits to our minds part by part in the proper time when we are prepared to understand it and when we are in need to it.
Thus we grow deeper in the Word of God and in understanding His Ways.

Now let us go to further focused study after this general outline

Mystery & Mystical life
‘Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places in Christ’ (Ephesians 1:3).

God has truly blessed us with every spiritual blessing.

Yet, what are these blessings, how can we receive them, and where are they deposited?

In his epistles, Apostle Paul often uses the word ‘mystery’: the mystery of Christ, the mystery of the Church, the mystery of faith, the mystery of salvation, etc.

Let us look at some examples:

Christ:
‘…to speak the mystery of Christ…’ (Colossians 4:3).
‘…by which, when you read, you may understand my knowledge in the mystery of Christ’ (Ephesians 3:4).

The Church:
‘…how that by revelation He made known to me the mystery…’ (Ephesians 3:3).
‘This is a great mystery, but I speak concerning Christ and the church’ (Ephesians 5:32).
Here, the Apostle likens the unity between Christ and the Church to the unity between a bride and a bridegroom. He is also highlighting that the Church includes both the Jews and the Gentiles.

The will of God:
‘…having made known to us the mystery of His will’ (Ephesians 1:9)

The Gospel:
‘…and for me, that utterance may be given to me, that I may open my mouth boldly to make known the mystery of the gospel.’ (Ephesians 6:19)

Salvation:
‘Now to Him who is able to establish you according to my gospel and the preaching of Jesus Christ, according to the revelation of the mystery kept secret since the world began.’ (Romans 16:25)

Faith:
‘…holding the mystery of the faith with a pure conscience.’ (1Timothy 3:9)

Lawlessness:
‘For the mystery of lawlessness is already at work…’ (2 Thessalonians 2:7)

All the above are the foundations of the Christian faith and the Christian life. We notice that the Apostle used the word ‘mystery’ before each of them. What does this signify?

The word ‘mystery’ is the translation of the original Greek word ‘mysterion’. The Greek word is used to refer to a secret that waits to be revealed; it does not refer to something hidden or unknown.

The early fathers loved this understanding and dimension in the Christian life. This matter about the mystical dimension was of great importance in their spiritual life and walk with God because they had realised that the human mind is so limited while the spiritual life is so unlimited. Therefore, it is not possible to put the unlimited in the limited. In other words, how can it be possible for us to perceive the unlimited spiritual life by our limited mind? It is written: ‘I have seen a limit to all perfection, but your commandment is exceedingly broad.’ (Psalm 119:96)

In addition to this, the human mind varies from one person to the other depending on various factors among which are:
‐ Some people are highly educated while others are illiterate
‐ Some are very bright and highly intelligent while others have average or below average intelligence
‐ The way one is brought up affects the shaping of the mind and hence one can be analytical, another argumentative, a third teachable and so on.
‐ The change and gap between generations create a huge variation in the mindset of each generation. In some generations, the Church was severely persecuted; the persecution brought dark shadows on the mind of God’s people, their way of thinking and the way they respond to things. There are other generations where the Church was shining with holiness and holy people; this brought a divine light to the minds of the people of God.

Since the mind is limited and is influenced by many variables and circumstances, it is neither appropriate nor fair to put the divine matters and God’s salvation and grace under this changeability and variations. Therefore, the only solution is that the spirit of the person would be the part in man that should receive the words of the Spirit.

For practical application, let us take the example of ‘reading the bible’. The early fathers used to advise the person to continue to regularly read the bible whether he understands or not. If a person searches for the explanation of a certain verse in the books of interpretation and commentaries, he may understand the ambiguous meaning, yet, without being aware, he would be putting the unlimited in the limited. It would be a great loss if one stops at the point of the explanation he read for the verse because by this he would be putting in his mind a specific meaning for the verse which does not allow adding to it, going deeper or entering further dimensions.

This does not mean undermining books of interpretation; they are indeed useful and important, especially in clarifying the historical and cultural backgrounds of the books of the Scriptures. This in turn aids in understanding. Besides, books of interpretation did not appear in the 19th or 20th centuries; there were those who interpret the books of the Scriptures since the early centuries of Christianity like Origen, the great theologian and thinker, and Saint John Chrysostom of the 4th/5th century.

The early desert fathers did not normally write interpretations for the books of the Scriptures –except those fathers who were specifically granted this gift by the Spirit. They mainly relied on providing answers to the questions of the brethren who in turn wrote these answers which were passed on from one generation to the other.

The great loss and danger would be if one’s mind is only focused on one interpretation of the word of God where one becomes mentally and consequently spiritually constrained in this one interpretation and fails to be open up to further meanings and revelations in the word of God. It is indeed impossible to constrain the gospel of Jesus Christ to the understanding of one person because the gospel has no boundaries!

Therefore, if we resort to books of interpretation to help us in understanding the word of God and stopped at this point, this will bring light to our minds but it will only light one room of the mind, while the others will remain dark. Yet, if we put the word of God in our spirit, it starts to illuminate all the rooms of the mind in due time. This is because the spirit is like an open room that has no limitations; it can broaden as much as we give it a chance.

Each time one comes to the Lord with an eager and sincere heart, the gifts of grace are deposited in his spirit. The mind may understand little or much, in part or in full; yet the gift of grace would be already deposited in the spirit. As a result, in due time, one will understand, be enlightened and enlighten others.

The Holy Spirit, the Person of the Trinity who vigils on man in working out his salvation and who accompanies the Church until Christ comes again, takes upon Himself the responsibility to take from what was deposited in the spirit and transmit it to the mind in a complete and amazing way and at the suitable time. As a result, nothing of it is lost, stolen or forgotten because the Spirit Himself is the One who opens the mind to understand the Scriptures: ‘Then he opened their minds to understand the Scriptures’
(Luke 24: 45).

Because of this, the early fathers gave great importance to kindling their spirits. Since the fall, man’s spirit became constricted while in its nature it is very elastic and stretchable like a balloon. Whenever kindled, it broadens and whenever neglected, it quickly shrinks. When nourished daily, it continues to widen without limits because it has no limits as explained above. Therefore, the mystery of God is first deposited in the spirit and is then revealed to one’s understanding in due time because the understanding is limited.

Therefore, Apostle Paul loved the word ‘mystery’. Similarly, the early fathers loved it. They taught, emphasised and handed on that the spiritual life is a mystery which is deposited in the spirit and is gradually revealed to the mind. This revelation extends to the feelings, emotions, and the wounded/hurting areas of the soul which have gone through difficult experiences, healing, sanctifying and lighting. All the spiritual gifts go from the spirit to the mind or from the spirit to the soul.

There are other channels to receive the mysteries of God other than the bible like the seasons of salvation during a yearly calendar and the role of sacraments applied in some churches.

What a great loss for the people of God these days because this preliminary and essential understanding regarding the spiritual life has become absent! As a result, the fellowship with God has become shallow and superficial. The way and the walk with God have rules and principles. When man understands them, he is enabled to go through the journey of his life safely no matter what he faces in the way whether hindrances, oppositions, or stumbling blocks. This is because he would have deep and
genuine foundations which the Church passed on from one generation to the other until our days.

God does not leave Himself without witness; He desires many witnesses in a generation eager to see living examples who witness to the mystery of the spiritual life: ‘you are my witnesses, declares the Lord’ (Isaiah 43:12).

The Teaching of the Early Fathers of the Church

The Teaching of the Early Fathers of the Church

By admin on October 28, 2015

Tags: Early Church Teachings | Fr. Macarius

The Early Fathers of the Church were greatly faithful and had great love to God. Besides, they had immense spiritual hunger and thirst. Because of this, they were given the treasures of darkness and the hidden riches of secret places (Isaiah 45: 3); they were entrusted with the keys and mysteries of the Kingdom of God. They were enriched by the unsearchable riches of Christ and were filled with grace after grace. As a result, they became gigantic in the spirit. They left for us this spiritual inheritance and the landmarks of the way so that Christ may be formed in us as He was formed in them.

The Holy Spirit revealed to Apostle Paul, who was entrusted with the mystery of the Church, the following mystery:‘Christ in you the hope of glory’ (Colossians 1: 27). So, Apostle Paul poured himself out in prayer so that the Church may be strengthened with might through the Spirit of God in the inner man so that Christ may dwell in her heart through faith (Ephesians 3: 14 – 17); in order that he may present every man perfect in Christ Jesus (Colossians 1: 28).

The fathers of the Church in all generations followed this same pattern. They poured themselves out as a drink offering on the sacrifice and service of our faith (Philippians 2: 17) and filled up in their flesh what is lacking in the afflictions of Christ, for the sake of His body, which is the church (Colossians 1: 24) so that Christ may be formed in their spiritual children, the believers.

Throughout the past centuries, due to the weakness of the Church and being drained for an extended period of time, the devil buried this spiritual inheritance and filled with earth the wells of the knowledge of God and the richness of the glory of His salvation which were manifested in the life and teaching of the Early Fathers of the Church. This left the Church spiritually poor, weak and thirsty for the fresh water of the Spirit. This continued until we reached the End Times. The Lord now reopens these old rich wells through those who are hungry and thirsty for righteousness, supported and strengthened by the Holy Spirit. This restores to us the teaching and life of the fathers of the Church who had gone deep in the Knowledge of God and understanding the Scriptures. This in turn paves the way one more time before those called for eternal life so that they may be made perfect as the Bride of the Bridegroom, Jesus, adorned and prepared for His second coming.

Therefore, we are in great need to go back to the teaching of the early Church so that the Holy spirit may ‘turn the hearts of the fathers to the children and the disobedient to the wisdom of the just, to make ready a people prepared for the Lord’ (Luke 1: 17).