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God Is Worthy Of Praise Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Mar 18, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: Praise is a happy love song. It is a rejoicing because God is present and our relationship is one of love and enjoyment. Praise is itself a part of the enjoyment of God.
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Gilbert a Becket was a crusader who was captured and made a
slave. The tyrant who enslaved him had a daughter who took pity on
him, and that pity ripened into love. At the risk of her own life she
helped him escape. He solemnly vowed to send for her when he got
safely back to England. But when he got home he became so
absorbed in other plans that he forgot the love of the one who had set
him free. He owed his life to her, but she was far away, and what was
near dominated his life.
She was still driven by her love for him, however, and so she sold
all of her jewelry and came to England on her own. When Gilbert
saw her and embraced her he repented of his neglect. In her presence
he could no longer go the way of rejecting her love. He reversed his
plans to marry a wealthy English woman, and he took her to be his
wife instead. It never would have happened in her absence. Only her
presence rekindled his love and restored their relationship.
"Absence makes the heart grow founder for somebody else," is a
true saying, and it is true not only in the romantic realm, but in the
religious realm as well. The sense of God's absence is the cause for all
of the falls, failures, and follies of man. but the sense of God's
presence is the cause for all of man's virtues, values, and victories.
When man is aware of God's presence there is adoration, and all
rivals are abhorred, but when man loses that awareness God is
ignored and other values are explored.
When Israel lost its awareness of the presence of God, the
presence of God was actually removed, and the temple was destroyed
where they could meet with God. When God entered history in the
presence of His Son, the leaders of Israel were not aware that this was
the day of their visitation. God was present in their midst, but they
rejected Him and crucified Him. Jesus prayed for their forgiveness,
for He knew they were so unaware of the presence of God that they
did not know it was God they were rejecting. Nothing is more lethal
than unawareness. When man loses a sense of God's presence there is
no evil they are incapable of committing. Every sin that a child of
God has ever committed could have been prevented by the awareness
of God's presence.
The Jews have recognized the importance of God's presence all
through history, and so they have developed rituals that stress it. In
The Bar mitzvah Treasury I read of how David Hirsch believed the
Rabbi who taught him that when the congregation bowed in prayer
the Shechinah itself-the very spirit and presence of God-appeared on
the altar. If anyone looked up with one eye that eye would be blinded,
and if one looked up with both eyes God would strike him dead. No
one could look on the form of God and live. Even Moses had to look
at God's back. You can imagine the enormous tension in a young
person as they prayed. He longed so to look up and see God, but he
did not want to be blind, or to die. There was a terrific battle in his
mind, but one day he lost control and lifted one eye to look, and to his
shock there was no glory to blind him. The rest of the story is about
his loss of faith and rebellion because of the loss of even the illusion of
God's presence.
The Jews know they need the presence of God and they are
willing to deceive in order to get it, but such a presence is a fiction.
The Christian, however, who has the promise of Christ's presence can
be so unaware of it that they also develop a pretend presence with
form and rituals that becomes empty and equally powerless. The
great need of any child of God is an authentic experience of the
presence of Christ. An unknown poet wrote-
Of all the prizes
That earth can give,
This is the best:
To find thee, Lord,
A living Presence near
An in thee rest!
Friends, fortune, fame,
Or what might come to me,
I count all loss
If I find not
Companionship
With thee!
Jesus said He would send the Comforter to abide with us forever.
The name means the one called beside, and so the idea of
companionship is very appropriate. The relationship of God and man
is to be a companionship. We cannot be content with the saying,
"God's in His heaven-all is right with the world." It is not all right.
It is a world of fearful things, and we need to be able to say, "Yea,