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The Dwelling Places
of the Dwelling Place
-David Morrison
Presence of God: Come, Creator, Holy Spirit—and in our hearts
take your rest. Come with your divine help—and fill the very hearts you created.
-An Ancient Prayer
The greatest aspect of Israel’s identity as the people of God was the fact that
God himself dwelt in the tabernacle/temple. Zion was the very dwelling place of
God. Yahweh’s presence was tangible and eminent which made the temple the apex of
the universe. Because of this truth, the apostle John, when he experienced the revelation
of God’s redemptive history, looked first and foremost for the temple dwelling place
of the Trinity in the New Jerusalem. Being a Jew, it was astounding to John that
no temple was found: “But I saw no temple in it, for the Lord God Almighty
and the Lamb are its temple” (Rev. 21:22). This is an equally mysterious paradox
for “New Testament” believers who tend to emphasize that we are (collectively and
individually) the temple of God…“in whom the whole building, being fitted together,
grows into a holy temple in the Lord, in whom you also are being built together
for a dwelling place of God in the Spirit” (Eph. 2:21). What are we to make of this
seeming contradiction? How can God and his people be the temple? The reality
is found on the night when Jesus invited us to the table of the new covenant as
he said, “In my Father’s house there are many dwelling places.” The act of Jesus’
passion, death, and resurrection causes us to be so intimately united to God that
we dwell in him, and he dwells in us. We dwell in the Father’s house and yet we
are “dwelling places” (rooms) in His house.
As Jesus looked into the
faces of the disciples at the First Supper, and said, “In my Father’s house, there
are many mansions;” his sacred heart was filled with burning, prophetic fulfillment
concerning his Father’s house: “Zeal for your house consumes me” (Ps. 69:9). This
zeal was the long awaited execution of the longing in the Father’s heart: “Heaven
is my throne, the earth is my footstool. Where is the house you could build for
me? And where is the place of my rest?” (Is. 66:1). Through the ages—from Creation,
to the Christmation, and onto the Consummation, the aching in the Triune heart of
God is that He would dwell in man, and man in Him. St. Augustine wrote, “No man
can rest until he rests in God,” but God Himself won’t rest until He rests in man.
When this restlessness in the heart of God encounters the restlessness in one’s
own heart, it is forever formed into one of the many dwelling places of God in the
Father’s house. We truly then are free to become “the meek who inherit the earth”
(Mat. 5:5)--those who live a lifestyle of resting in God’s presence in the midst
of a world of chaos. This peace and rest is noticed by all who live in turmoil and
despair, and we are empowered to invite them into a new hope in Christ. The Lord
becomes the light of the sun through us; His kingdom becomes the moon that governs
the night; and we “shine like stars in the world” (Phil. 2:15).
Prayer: Jesus, you said, “Foxes have holes, birds their
nests, but the Son of Man has no place to lay his head.” Come lay your head in our
hearts and let us be your resting place. And we will forever live in You, and You
in us, that where You are—we may also be. How lovely are your dwelling places, Oh
Lord of Hosts!
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