Sunday, September 15, 2013

GOD IN A BOX

I used to hear people talk about how religion puts “God in box,” that is, how religious people put restrictions on God: God can't, God won't, God doesn't do certain things, or He doesn't do things in a certain way.   In reality, they just put restrictions on what they believe God will do, and thus restrict what they can receive from Him.

Now, I am sure that the Scriptures are clear that God doesn't lie, that He cannot lie, He doesn't change His Word, and He never does anything contrary to His Word.  How can someone who is Truth lie?

But sadly, many people do pass up God's blessings because of these restrictions they put on God.  Another name for these restrictions is 'unbelief.'

Now where did this 'God in a box' concept come from in the first place?

Surprisingly, the answer is: GOD!

Ever hear of the Ark of the Covenant?   Ever wonder what that was all about?

The short answer is that God wanted a way to be with His people, the Israelites.  He couldn't manifest His presence all the time among them, for no man at that time could stand to be around such a holy being.  So, he gave them a plan for a tabernacle (tent) that would house the Ark of the Covenant, a special gold-plated box that would represent God's presence.   Along with the Tabernacle and the Ark, God instituted a priesthood and a sacrificial system to allow people to come before Him, and He could then dwell among them. [Exodus 25 - 30]

[A preacher name Judson Cornwall wrote a book years ago about the construction of the Tabernacle of Moses and the Ark of the Covenant, and all the symbolism involved that points to Jesus and the New Covenant.   The title of the book is Let Us Draw Near. If you want to know more about the Tabernacle and the Ark, I highly recommend that book.]

Now, God is not limited by space or distance.   You do not have to be geographically close to a special box or structure for God to hear and answer your prayers.  Even after the construction of the Ark and the Tabernacle, the Old Testament contains many stories of God working miracles in places not close to the Ark.

By the time Jesus appeared, three things dominated Jewish thought: the Law of Moses, the Jerusalem Temple, and the coming Messiah.

They focused on the Law because they saw their neglect of, and disobedience to, the Law as the cause of the Babylonian Captivity and the destruction of Jerusalem and the Temple.

They focused on the Temple because it was the successor to the Tabernacle of Moses, the Law spoke so much about the Tabernacle and the priesthood, and they had fought so hard to maintain the sanctity of the Temple.

They focused on the Messiah because they wanted a Deliverer to rise up and lead them out from under the Roman Empire.

Because of their focus on these things, when the true Messiah, Jesus, arrived, they could not see that God was manifesting Himself through this carpenter's son, this itinerant rabbi, Who did astounding miracles, and said things that were even more astounding than His miracles.   They could not see that He was God in the flesh. [John 1:14; Matthew 1:23]

So, now the “box” that held God's presence was the body of Jesus of Nazareth!

After the Death and Resurrection of Jesus, the New Birth became possible.   Anyone who now believes in Jesus is born again into God's Kingdom. [John 3:1 – 8, 13 - 17]

Jesus also promised he would never leave us or forsake us, that He would not leave us as orphans.  He is in US! [Matthew 28:20; John 14:18; Colossians 1:26 - 27]

Now, God is not just in one “box,” He is in many “boxes!” [2 Corinthians 4:7; 1 Corinthians 6:19 -20]

So, the “God in a box” concept is not a bad thing, as long as each born again believer sees himself as a “box” where God dwells.

Now, I see many believers trapped by the Old Testament style “God in a box” mentality – that God dwells in church buildings, that you can only experience His Presence in a church building, etc.

How did this mentality enter into the Church?

A little study on the English word, “church” gives us a clue.   That word comes from a Greek word, “kyriakos.”  That word comes from two other Greek words that mean “lord” and “house.”   It literally means “Lord's house.”

Is this the same word used in the Greek New Testament? No. As far as I know, it never appears in the GNT.

Greek was the predominate language of the Early Church for the first several centuries.   However, the Church never owned any buildings for the first 200 years or so.   Christians would meet in homes, schools, amphitheaters, lecture halls, or anywhere they found a place that was suitable.   When the Church began to buy or erect their own buildings, they called them "kyriakos", the Lord's Houses.

Over time, because of the origin of the word, “church” became associated more with buildings than with people.   Church leaders began to teach that God dwelt only in those buildings.   So, that's how the OT style “God in a box” mentality came into the Church.  After all, isn't a house or building just a big box?

But this association of “church” with buildings does not line up with what the New Testament really teaches.

The Greek word that is translated as “church” in English is “ekklesia.”   It means “a called out assembly.”   An assembly of what?   Building materials?   After all, aren't buildings assembled out of boards, bricks, blocks, pipe, wire, etc.  But these materials are not called out.   You would question the competence of a carpenter who called out, “Here boards! Come here so I can cut you into the right length, and nail you into place.”

So, what is being assembled?   People!

In Acts 19, Luke uses the word “ekklesia” to refer to the crowd in Ephesus that demonstrated against Paul's ministry.   This word occurs in verses 32, 39 and 41. In verses 30 and 33, Luke uses the word “demos” to refer to the same group.   This word means “people.”   We use it in the prefix of the words “demographic” and “democracy.”

Why would Luke use the word “ekklesia” to refer to this crowd of people?   They were called out by the guild of coppersmiths that made household shrines to Diana (or Artemis), the goddess worshiped by the Ephesians.  The coppersmiths called out this assembly of people to protest the preaching of Paul, because he was leading people away from Diana to Jesus.  As people turned from Diana to Jesus, they stopped buying shrines, and that hurt the coppersmiths' business.   They wanted to let it be known they didn't like this, and they wanted help in expressing their displeasure, so they called out an assembly of those still faithful to Diana.

I could say more about the “ekklesia” of Jesus, but that is for another time.  My point in bringing this up now is that when the New Testament uses the word “church,” it is not talking about a building.  The NT never, never, never, never, and I mean not ever, not at any time whatsoever, and I am absolutely, positively certain that the NT never uses the word “church” to refer to a building.  It ALWAYS refers to people!

Now, like I said earlier, the “God in a box” concept is not necessarily bad as long as we change the concept. We hear a lot today about thinking outside the box.   I say, “Let's rethink the box!”

Not only is each born again believer a “God-box,” but we collectively, as the Church, are the “God-box!” [2 Corinthians 6:14 – 18; Ephesians 2: 19 – 22; Revelation 21:1 - 3]