As we look forward to celebrating
Thanksgiving and Christmas, many of us will have to do lots of cleaning to
prepare our houses as places of celebration.
It’s not that our guests wouldn’t come or wouldn’t enjoy themselves if
the house was dirty, but we clean as a mark of respect and welcome.
There were two house-cleaning stories
in the Scriptures I read today. In the
time of the Maccabees, after the temple had been defiled by pagan idol worship,
it needed rebuilding, cleaning, and re-consecration to make it a fit place for
worship of the one God (1 Maccabees 4:36-59).
It’s not that God can’t be worshipped anywhere, even in the foulest
setting, but they expressed their praise and gratitude to God by making
beautiful the place of prayer, of intimate union with God.
In the time of Jesus, after the temple
had become a place of commerce, it needed the cleansing of Jesus' presence to
make it a fit place for him to teach the good news (Luke 19:45-48). It’s not that the good news can’t be
proclaimed in the midst of commerce, but that the competition and calculation
we need to conduct commerce are not the attitudes of a good hearer of the Word. In commerce we calculate what is the least we
can give up and still get the most of what we want. In hearing the Word we’re invited to
surrender our whole selves to receive more than we could possibly ask or
imagine.
We’re invited to be vigilant in
keeping our temples—i.e., our whole selves—prepared for the presence of our God
(Romans 12). God indeed can and does
find us in our messiness, but that doesn’t mean we should keep things as messy
as possible. Just as blood flows better
when the arteries aren’t clogged and oxygen when the lungs aren’t full of
smoke, so our relationship with God flows better when we remove as many
obstacles as we can. Keeping our temples
‘clean,’ like cleaning our houses, is a way of saying to God “you are always
here.”
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