Saturday, April 3, 2010

What happens when the dream turns sour? What happens when I take it upon myself to worship God according to my dream and not His dream? What happens when I don't follow the law as dictated in Leviticus 16:13, Leviticus 19:30 and Leviticus 21:12? These are specific situations for consecrating and anointing God's Holy Tabernacle, the pace where the presence of God is most preeminent. When I don't make His alter and tabernacle holy, or treat it as such, or I don't call for it's anointing, or if somehow I have defiled it by wanton error and sin (Leviticus 4:13,15) what will happen to my dream? There have been times when I have chosen to divide rather than to make peace, to add my desires onto what God truly says, rather than to be loving and accepting as God and His precious son are. (1 Corinthians 11:18; 1 Corinthians 15:9; Galatians 1:13). What happens to God's dream? God is above all things, whether good or evil. God is wonderful and our praises should continuously and constantly be centered upon Him and only for Him. (Psalms 89:7; Psalms 111:1) God's dream will not shatter, there are always more who will come to His weeding banquet and that His son will invite. My participation if I chose as in Ezekiel 23:39 to profane the worship with innocent blood and coldness will be interrupted, perhaps permanently as God will destroy at least that portion this is defiling Him. (I Corinthians 3:17). He will take me down for destroying the image of His church. By the same token, when I acknowledge His true dream, the dream of His people under Christ, as in Matthew 16:18, then He shall acknowledge that I am part of Him and that His Son is the head of the church. (Ephesians 1:22,23). My dream will become to rejoice with the LORD in that which will come regardless of suffering because I know the prize that comes at the last days. (Collosians 1:24)

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