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DEVOTED PERSONS AND HALLOWED HOUSES

Exodus 25:1 - 2, 8 - 9; Leviticus 27:1 - 8, 14 - 15, 28; 1 Chronicles 29:9; Acts 16:15.

I have in mind, dear brethren, to speak mainly upon Leviticus 27, touching on the thought of devoting and valuing as to persons, and of hallowing and redeeming as to our houses, but I want to show how these principles related to the house of God.

This chapter comes at the close of a book which begins with Jehovah dwelling among His people and calling to Moses and speaking to him out of the tent of meeting. God had come down to dwell among His people in marvellous grace and love. He had come to dwell because He loved the people. A man dwells with those he loves, and that is how God dwells. As thus dwelling He called Moses out of the tent of meeting with a view to persons being free to approach Him, for God loves us to approach. So how fitting it is that the book should close with the kind of response on our part which would lead us to devote ourselves and hallow what we have to Him. What more fit answer could there be to a God who loves us so much that He does not postpone His dwelling till a future day, but comes to dwell among us here and now while we are still in mixed conditions, in the tabernacle of testimony.

So the passage in Leviticus opens with the thought

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of a vow, "When any one devoteth anything by a vow". The principle of a vow is of great importance. In the Old Testament God secured His house on that principle. The light of the house of God was first vouchsafed to Jacob, and Jacob made a vow. He said, "If God will be with me, and keep me on this road that I go, and will give me bread to eat, and a garment to put on, and I come again to my father's house in peace -- then shall Jehovah be my God. And this stone which I have set up for a pillar, shall be God's house; and of all that thou wilt give me I will without fail give the tenth to thee". Genesis 28:20 - 22. That was Jacob's vow and God accepted it; it pleased God. The tithes were based upon it: He never forgot it. The tithes are referred to in Leviticus 27verses 30 onwards, and as you go right through the Old Testament to Malachi God is still thinking about them, "Bring the whole tithe into the treasure-house", Malachi 3:10. God never forgot Jacob's vow, and the whole economy was based upon it, for the tithes supported the Levites, and the Levites' tithes supported the priests; so that the whole economy of Israel was made to hinge upon Jacob's vow being carried out from generation to generation.

Then later, David vows. In Psalm 132 he says, "Jehovah, remember for David all his afflictions; how he swore unto Jehovah, vowed unto the Mighty One of Jacob": David never forgot Jacob's vow; he went back to it. God was to him the Mighty One of Jacob, the One who was faithful to Jacob and brought him through and brought him to what He intended to work out in him. And David, like his great predecessor,

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made a vow in relation to God's house. He said, "I will not give sleep to mine eyes, slumber to mine eyelids, until I find out a place for Jehovah, habitations for the Mighty One of Jacob ...". He went back to Jacob in his thoughts, but how completely David devoted himself! We get the thought of devoting in Leviticus 27 in connection with the vow, and how completely David devoted himself to Jehovah the Mighty One of Jacob! He would not look after his own interests or his own comfort until he had found a place for Jehovah. And what is encouraging in these vows is that God takes account of them and appreciates them, and gives the person strength to carry them out. We could not do anything in our own strength; any kind of vow based on self-confidence would utterly fail, but God looks for definite committal on our part in the full light of the outshining of His love, His grace and His power. Power belongs to God, not to the creature. The creature has only strength in so far as God is prepared to give strength. Whether you think of the animate or inanimate creation, all strength comes from God. Lawless man does not admit it, but he has to come to it in the end. Death overtakes him and he has to feel his weakness. Strength belongs to God. But in the light of God as disclosing Himself to us, the normal response is committal to Him and reliance upon Him for grace and power to carry out what we desire. "We love because he has first loved us". 1 John 4:19, and if we love, then we want to be for Him, and He loves to see this definite response.

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I am referring to a vow in the sense of our being definite in our committal, and we can afford to be definite in the light of the way God is shining out upon us. He loves to see such a movement, and He will support it. He may have to pass us through many exercises, many things that humble us, but if it is a real vow made before Him, He will hold us to it and give us grace to carry it through, and the joy of being able to carry it through without any credit to ourselves but all to Him.

That is what He did with David. David was young when he vowed, perhaps a boy in his teens. He was only a youth when he slew Goliath. Think of what that young man did! So I would encourage young brothers and sisters to think of David and what he did. And how did he do it? By the Mighty God of Jacob -- not in his own strength. His point of view was that Goliath had defied the armies of the living God and he relied upon the living God to be with him in going forth against that great enemy!

So I suppose it was in the early part of his life that he made this vow that he would not give sleep to his eyes nor slumber to his eyelids until he had found a place for Jehovah. If God has a habitation here, in a practical way, suited to Him, it is because persons have devoted themselves on the principle of a vow to God. If you feel that in your locality there are, at any rate to some extent, conditions suitable to God, you can be sure that one or more persons in that locality have made a definite committal of themselves to God, and you are getting the benefit, and we may say, God is getting the benefit too.

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So David went forward and God enabled him to carry out what he desired. Though he was not permitted to build the house, yet he was permitted to procure the site of it and the material for it. Prior to that he had put up a tent and brought the ark to Jerusalem. So you see what God will do for us if we are on this line!

At the outset as to the tabernacle, according to Exodus 25:1, it says, "And Jehovah spoke to Moses, saying, Speak unto the children of Israel, that they bring me a heave-offering: of every one whose heart prompteth him", How could God dwell in love amongst His people unless on the ground of their hearts prompting them? There is no compulsion in love. God could not dwell in love amongst His people if they were doing things from a sense of legal duty; "We love because he has first loved us", and our hearts prompt us. We are greatly touched by the thought that God desires to dwell among us. So it is the willing-hearted, those whose hearts prompt them, who bring the material. And He says, "And they shall make me a sanctuary, that I may dwell among them". What could we desire more? Let us all, dear brethren, be on this line! Let us think of the Lord Jesus, how fully committed He was, no one like Him. Coming into the world He said, "Sacrifice and offering thou willedst not; but thou hast prepared me a body ... Lo, I come ... to do, O God, thy will". Hebrews 10:5 - 9.

David is but a type of Christ. How outstanding Christ is! "And thou art holy, thou that dwellest amid the praises of Israel". Psalm 22:3. What

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lengths He would go to to secure a dwelling-place for His God! Psalm 22 is the psalm which shows how much the Lord Jesus suffered for His God. Let us not simply read it to think how much He suffered for us. The sufferings were for us, because He needed us as material for that habitation, but the great point in Psalm 22 is the sufferings He endured for His God; the lengths to which He would go for His God, and the depths into which He went for His God, to secure for Him an eternal dwelling-place amid the praises of His people. If anything would attract us into this path it is the contemplation of Christ! It is good to think of David and others, but let us think of Christ and the depths into which He has gone. Can we be on any other line in the light of that? Can we have any reserves in the light of that? Shall we not each and all commit ourselves to this great matter of providing God with conditions that are in keeping with His own specifications of His dwelling-place in our localities? We may say that we cannot come up to the perfection of them, but let us do what we can to improve conditions for God.

I read the passage in 1 Chronicles 29 bearing on this idea of devotion because in connection with the tabernacle there are the willing-hearted! Then at the end of David's life it says of the people, "And the people rejoiced because they offered willingly, for with perfect heart they offered willingly to Jehovah; and David the king also rejoiced with great joy". How we would desire to make David the king's heart rejoice! How it makes the heart of Christ rejoice when there are those on earth at the present time who

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are set definitely in this direction!

I think what we are saying shows how important Leviticus 27 is, because God's house has been founded on this principle and it is to be maintained on it. So it says in verse 3, "When any one devoteth anything by a vow, the persons shall be for Jehovah according to thy valuation". There are a good many persons in this room. According to this chapter the idea is that persons should be devoted. I am not speaking of devotion now in the ordinary way in which we use it, but as meaning wholly given up. When a thing is devoted it means that it is wholly given up for a certain purpose, and that is the meaning of it in this chapter. So God would have each one of us here fully surrendered to His will. The Lord Jesus was fully surrendered from the outset; "Thou hast prepared me a body ... Lo, I come ... to do, O God, thy will". And now God, as having come down to dwell amongst us, is looking for this kind of response in our hearts, that we should devote our bodies; give them up beyond recall. "I beseech you therefore, brethren, by the compassions of God, to present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable to God, which is your intelligent service", Romans 12:1. This principle is at the groundwork of christianity. It is a Romans idea. Chapter 6 -- "yield yourselves to God as alive from among the dead, and your members instruments of righteousness to God", and chapter 12 -- "I beseech you therefore, brethren, by the compassions of God, to present your bodies ...". We have already yielded ourselves and our members, and in result, as having learnt to value

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the Spirit, we have bodies to present. How valuable believers' bodies are as thus presented, and it is as presented they are valued! The persons shall be for Jehovah according to "thy valuation".

So the idea of valuation comes in here, which is very important, and the valuation is according to the shekel of the sanctuary. It is all a question of how the matter stands relating to God and His house. It is the value from that angle. We look round among our brethren and may say, That brother is a most capable business man! That is good so far, but that is not the valuation here! What is his value relative to God and His house? How does he stand as weighed according to the shekel of the sanctuary? So you have the perfect valuation at the different ages set out here -- Moses' valuation -- "thy valuation". The perfect standard is seen fully in Christ; seen in large measure in David; seen in greater measure in Paul. If any man of like passions with ourselves has come up to the divine valuation, Moses' valuation, that is surely Paul. We would surely say of him, There is a fifty shekel man!

But then it says in verse 8, "And if he be poorer than thy valuation, he shall present himself before the priest". That is very encouraging. Let no one here hold back because you think you are not equal to things. Who is equal to the full valuation? Who could put himself alongside Paul? And you could not even put Paul alongside Christ! Yet there is a certain valuation of every committed person. You cannot be valued until you are committed. You are of no specific value that could be estimated in relation

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to the divine system until you have committed yourself, devoted yourself, presented your body, never to be taken back. Now you can begin to be valued. Do not think you are not worth anything and hold back on that account. Every one is worth something. This is not a critical valuation. Do not let us look round upon the brethren in a critical way to see how short each one comes. That is not the point here. The priest does not look at things that way. He makes the very best of everyone. We all feel we do not come up to the divine standard, but we can present ourselves to the priest. How tender the Lord is as Priest! He would tell us what the divine standard is. He has set it out in Himself -- Moses' valuation. How tender Jesus is as the Priest, and we can present ourselves to Him, "Just as I am" as we sing sometimes. Let us present ourselves to the Lord just as we are. He will put a right valuation upon us, and then we would learn to put a right valuation on one another. There should be the priestly element in every locality, and let us see that it is there and that it puts a sympathetic and right valuation upon every one. There is no under-valuing: no criticising because of what is not there, but valuing what is there. That is the thing. Everyone committed to Christ is worth something, and the "poorer than thy valuation" (that is Moses') "shall present himself before the priest, and the priest shall value him; according to his means that vowed shall the priest value him".

In Romans 16 you see how Paul values everyone. What a valuation he put upon Phoebe! what a valuation upon Priscilla! what a valuation upon Aquila!

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He put Priscilla first, but he valued them both, and so all the way down the chapter Paul puts his valuation on all the brethren. And that is how we are to look on one another; everyone who is committed is of value; the point is to be committed. Unless you are committed you are simply an anxiety, but the moment you are really committed to divine things on this principle of a vow and devoting yourself, you come under the priestly eye for valuation.

The value can increase: young people grow spiritually. "five years ... unto twenty"; then when you get over twenty how greatly the value increases! And no one need get over "sixty" on this line of things! We have to see that we do not get over sixty -- that is decline. The idea in christianity is that however old the body gets the inward man is renewed day by day. Paul never got beyond sixty in this sense: he was always at the top of the valuation.

Now I pass on to the house. "And when any one halloweth his house, that it may be holy to Jehovah". You will notice the word is changed. It does not say 'devoted' here, but "halloweth". A devoted thing is something entirely given over; the word hallowing means 'set apart', something that is set apart for God. We are all privileged to set our houses apart for God, and all that comes under our hand here. Only a person who has devoted himself can properly hallow his house. We must begin with ourselves, "they gave themselves first to the Lord", 2 Corinthians 8:5. But if we have committed ourselves on the principle of the vow, now it is our privilege to hallow what we have, set it apart for God. There have been times when saints have been

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called upon to devote what they had. In the early part of Acts it says, "for as many as were owners of lands or houses, selling them, brought the price of what was sold and laid it at the feet of the apostles"; That illustrates the meaning of devoting a thing. It means that it passes out of your possession. You sell your house, you sell your lands and you hand the whole thing over. There are times in the testimony when we may be called upon to devote what we have; indeed, what we put in the box on the Lord's Day is devoted; it passes out of our control. This meaning to the word 'devote', the word used in this chapter, is very testing. In what I have already been saying as applied to ourselves, it means that our bodies are devoted, they are handed over: we never again claim to be our own but are entirely at the Lord's disposal. That is what is involved, and it is a very testing thing, but who would want anything less? We are not our own: we are bought with a price. Then as to what we have, while under the administration of the twelve at the beginning, space was given for devoting and selling the houses and lands, and placing the proceeds at the apostles' feet. But, generally speaking, under Paul's ministry the idea is hallowing; setting apart what you have for God, but redeeming it. So it says here, "And when any one halloweth his house, that it may be holy to Jehovah, the priest shall value it, judging between good and bad: as the priest shall value it, so shall it stand. And if he that halloweth it will redeem his house, he shall add the fifth of the money of thy valuation unto it, and it shall be his".

I want to make these two thoughts clear, dear

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brethren. Verse 28 says, "Notwithstanding, no devoted thing that a man hath devoted to Jehovah of all that he hath ... shall be sold or redeemed:" That is you cannot redeem a devoted thing; you never can have it back. Thus in the early days, believers parted with their houses and land and they could never have them back; they laid the proceeds at the apostles' feet. But, in a general way under Paul's ministry, we are not called upon to devote our houses and our means, but to hallow them and redeem them. That is we set them apart for God, but we take them back under our own control on the principle of redemption, and on God's terms of redemption -- the principal with a fifth part added.

That is the test for all of us as to our houses, and means. If we set them apart for God, the terms on which we should retain control, according to this passage, are that He should have the principal plus a fifth part added. Those are the terms on which we are allowed to retain control of what has been set apart for God, that He should get a fifth part more than if we had devoted it, if we had sold it and laid it at the apostles' feet. God gets more from our retaining them on the principle of redemption than if we had handed them over. How do we stand in this? It is a question of devoted persons, our bodies presented a living sacrifice -- devoted persons and hallowed houses. God is looking for hallowed houses which devoted persons hallow to Him but retain in their control on the principle that God should receive 20% more than if they had been handed over and completely devoted.

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This is testing, dear brethren, but it is very attractive. It is a very attractive thing that we can hallow our houses -- and I am specially thinking of houses in this address because we have been speaking of houses this afternoon. We all desire to hallow our houses, surely? It is a great thing for young persons getting married to start with this, that they are setting up a hallowed house, retaining it under their control on the principle of redemption. So it is a test and a privilege for each one to seek to hold our houses on this principle that more shall accrue to God by retaining them under our control than if they had been sold and the proceeds placed at the apostles' feet. This involves continuous exercise as to how we are holding our houses. Is God getting the principal plus the fifth part from that hallowed house?

I suppose we see many examples of this in scripture, both in the Old and New Testaments. Think of the house of Obed-Edom being available for the ark to come in! You can understand that while the ark was there everything had to be subservient to it, and that should be the principle with all of us that everything in our houses should be subservient to Christ and the testimony. As you come to the New Testament, think of the houses there!

I read about Lydia because she is a good illustration of a devoted person and a hallowed house. The Lord opened her heart to attend to the things spoken by Paul, and she places herself before the priest, like the devoted person in the early part of Leviticus who presented himself before the priest for valuation. She was prepared to be valued by Paul. She had

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committed herself to God, and she says to Paul, "If ye have judged me to be faithful to the Lord". Paul had a high valuation of Lydia as a devoted person. When he came out of prison it says in that chapter, "And having gone out of the prison, they came to Lydia"; It is remarkable that it is put that way. It does not simply say that they came to Lydia's house, showing what a high valuation Paul put upon Lydia as a devoted person, and how much she meant to him. But then she says, "If ye have judged me to be faithful to the Lord", (that was a question of her herself being valued in relation to God and His house) "come into my house and abide there". It was a hallowed house, and it says, "And she constrained us". If your house is hallowed and you have taken it back on the principle of redemption so that God is getting the fifth part more, you would not mind Paul coming in. We can test how much we are on this line in that way.

I suppose it would be a test for Paul to come into the house for a few hours and have a meal, (we are glad to have the Lord's people in for a meal) but she says to Paul, "come into my house and abide there". She was prepared for Paul to see how she went on first thing in the morning, and in the middle of the day, and last thing at night. She was prepared to be under his inspection for as long as he liked to stay. How we would love to have houses like that that would stand such a scrutiny! Paul had this in mind wherever he went -- hallowed houses on the principle of redemption; in fact in Ephesians he speaks of redeeming the time. We are to hold all that comes under

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our control on the principle of redemption; that is, the idea of God getting a fifth part added. How are we using our time? Perhaps many young people here have told the Lord that they would like to give their spare time to Him, and He says, as it were, I accept it. You set your time apart for Me, but I am handing it back to you to use on the principle of redemption. You redeem it! We have to do that. If we have hallowed our time apart for the Lord we have to redeem it, use it for Him, so that He gets the principal plus a fifth part. And so with all that we have, we are privileged to set it apart for God and then to retain it in our possession on this great principle of God getting more from it than if we had actually given it up.

Now it is on this line of things that all that relates to God's house here on earth will prosper. The next book, as we noticed this afternoon, shows how much the households of the saints are needed. The early chapters of Numbers show that our houses are to be held entirely in relation to God's dwelling. Part of Leviticus 27 (speaking of fields and so on) could only apply when they got to the land, and that enters into our experience too -- our place in the inheritance, but the parts we read apply in the wilderness and in the land. Persons were needed in the wilderness. Houses were needed in the wilderness. God speaks of houses from the outset, "a lamb, for a father's house", Exodus 12:3. God was out to secure houses: they were only tents but they were houses, "a father's house", and it speaks of heads of a father's house, and Numbers shows that God, as dwelling amongst His people,

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required all the houses to be set in relation to Him. Every house in Israel was a hallowed house; set apart for God; still left under the control of the owner, but set apart for God so that there should be a continuous revenue flowing in to God from these households set round the tabernacle in military, levitical and priestly array. How blessed this! Let us see, dear brethren, that the divine revenues are maintained!

The tithes are there: they are mentioned at the end of the chapter -- the tenth part goes on all the time. But there was also what was hallowed and redeemed. May we all, through grace, in the light of God having come to dwell amongst us, be devoted persons and may our houses be both hallowed and redeemed, for His name's sake!

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THE SCOPE OF PRAYER

Matthew 21:12 - 16; Ephesians 6:18 - 22; 1 Timothy 2:1 - 7; 1 Timothy 3:15.

The Lord may help us as we consider His words in Matthew 21, quoting from the prophet, "My house shall be called a house of prayer". According to Mark, He adds "... for all the nations". We think rightly of the house of God as a place of praise, and later in the passage the Lord says, "Out of the mouth of babes and sucklings thou hast perfected praise". But if the house of God is to be, as it should be, a place of praise -- for it says that those who dwell in God's house shall be constantly praising Him (Psalm 84:4), we must first recognise that it is a house of prayer. It may be, too, that we need to understand better what a service prayer is, not only in its results, but in its fragrance to God -- "Let my prayer be set forth before thee as incense, the lifting up of my hands as the evening oblation" (Psalm 141:2).

The passage in Ephesians would indicate the nature of prayer at the golden altar, and the passage in 1 Timothy, the character of prayer at the brazen altar. The psalmist says, "Thine altars, O Jehovah of hosts, my king and my God" (Psalm 84:3), so that we should be accustomed to both altars and to function at them, and together they provide a vast scope as to prayer. The more we develop scope in prayer, the more we shall develop scope in praise. As incidental to that,

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what is in view in prayer, according to 1 Timothy, is that men should not only be saved, but come to the knowledge (full knowledge) of the truth. That is the scope, that truth being that God is one and the mediator of God and men one. But Paul goes on to speak of his outlook as to his own service, and doubtless our scope in prayer will affect the scope of our outlook in service. He does not say 'a teacher of the saints' or 'a teacher of the assembly', but 'a teacher of the nations'.

Matthew links specially with our day, because it was the end of a dispensation, and the Lord cleanses the temple. He has brought in ministry in the last 150 years, which has exposed all that is contrary to Himself in that which professes to be the house of God here. Cleansing has gone on, but with a view to our being recovered to God's thought about His house, and the first thing is "A house of prayer". Many examples occur in scripture to show how prayer leads to praise. In Revelation 5:8, 9 we have the "golden bowls, full of incenses, which are the prayers of the saints", and then they each have a harp, so that praise is in mind, and praise breaks out immediately. So in Acts 16:25 it says, "at midnight Paul and Silas, in praying, were praising God with singing". That bears on the question of taking our harps with us wherever we go, as well as our bowls. David's psalms show that he carried his harp with him, in a spiritual sense, wherever he went, for in the most untoward circumstances his heart went out to God in prayer and it turned to praise. The very scripture quoted by the Lord says earlier, "Them will I bring to my holy mountain,

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and make them joyful in my house of prayer" (Isaiah 55:7). The vast scope of things which opens up before the soul in prayer would lead to buoyancy. Even the prayer of Habakkuk, in a time of pressure, culminates at the end of the chapter in the prophet rejoicing and finding joy in the God of his salvation, walking upon his high places, addressing his composition to the chief musician upon his stringed instruments -- his harp being there as well as his bowl! Solomon affords an outstanding example of prayer at the altar of burnt offering (2 Chronicles 6). That kind of prayer can be linked with 1 Timothy 2. The altar of burnt offering is in view -- that is, "Christ Jesus, who gave himself a ransom for all" (1 Timothy 2:6) -- and the prayer there is for all men and touches the matters of God's government -- kings and all in dignity, and also the welfare of the saints in their practical lives here. It is an outward outlook, whereas at the golden altar, you are in an environment where all is gold. You see the saints according to purpose, and your prayers take character from the environment in which your spirit is. We need to be familiar with both the altars, and to be free to move from one to the other. No doubt the inner place -- our place within -- indeed in the holiest of all -- would give character to the outer. The note to the word "intercessions" in 1 Timothy 2:1 (note 'q') says that it is "Personal and confiding intercourse with God on the part of one able to approach him". The one who can take up, in that personal and confiding intercourse, the prayer of 1 Timothy 2 would be one who was at home with God in the holiest and at the golden altar. The boards are

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there, covered with gold, typifying the saints according to divine purpose, and the coloured curtains again representing the saints, the curtains being in keeping with the veil. The veil itself is there, but no obstruction for us (Hebrews 10:20). We serve, in prayer as well as in praise, in the full light of the holiest. Christ having been set forth a mercy seat, there is no veil in the sense of anything hindering our vision, the heavens are opened through (see Acts 7:56), and all our service goes on in the light of the holiest of all. So we have God before us, and the Ark of His strength, and God shining forth from between the cherubim, and then, in the light of that, we take account of the saints according to His purpose, the boards and the shewbread on the table all being lit up by the pure light of the pure candlestick. In that light how elevated prayer would be for all saints! The cleansing of the house in Mr. Darby's day was accompanied by the recovery to the saints of all these precious things, so that we can take account of God's thoughts at the end just as they were set up at the beginning (see 2 Chronicles 29:18, 19) and in the light of that the "Song of Jehovah" (verse 27) can proceed. This is just the order in our chapter in Matthew -- the cleansing of the temple leads to the praise of verse 15 and in between we have the healing of the blind and the lame. When the Lord began the ministry of cleansing through Mr. Darby, hardly anyone in Christendom had spiritual eyesight, and there were hardly any who could "walk". Even godly souls did not know how to walk, they were under law, and knew not the power of the Spirit nor the truth of justification.

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In those who responded to the cleansing ministry there has been healing. They have received their sight, and the power to "walk".

Underlying the great matter of prayer is the individual side. In Matthew 6:7, the Lord does not say "If ..", but "when ye pray ..". implying that it is normal for the soul to be in touch with God. He warns against vain repetitions, and speaks of the secret place, stressing the personal touch -- "Enter into thy chamber, and ... pray to thy Father who is in secret ..". (verse 6). Paul himself started thus (Acts 9:11). It is doubtful if any of us give up enough time to our private devotions. We should surely get more help in them if we did, and if we waited long enough for the prayer to turn to praise. This is a service which we can take up to the very end of our days, when perhaps other services may be denied us through physical weakness. Here is a service of the highest character, open to every brother and sister, because even in our private devotions we are privileged to leave our own affairs and to pray relative to God and His house. It is like Daniel, with his window open towards Jerusalem, doubtless in spirit praying both at the golden altar and the brazen altar. The two prayers in Ephesians were the apostle's personal prayers. He knew even in private prayers how to function at the golden altar. It is important, too, to get beyond the realm of need. The holiest was where the ark was, covered in every part with gold. It is a great help, as we approach God, if we are enabled to speak to Him of Christ, and of Himself, and of His glory and majesty, as being beyond the realm of our

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need. Making room for this more in our private devotions would greatly add to the substance of the worship on Lord's Day morning. We should be worshippers characteristically, accustomed, in our private relations with God to worship Him; like David who went in and sat before Him. Help is available that we should be sustained in prayer. We have the High Priest to sustain us (Hebrews 4:14 - 16) and the Spirit "joins also its help to our weakness" (Romans 8:26), In Ephesians 6 the Spirit is stressed, ". praying at all seasons, with all prayer and supplication in the Spirit". How wonderful it would be to get really into the current of the Spirit's affections and emotions in this matter, and to be under His control in our thoughts and supplications! Furthermore, perseverance is called for, as it goes on to say, "with all perseverance and supplication for all the saints". (see also Colossians 4:2). We need in prayer first to have a knowledge of God and of His will. (Ephesians 1:17 and Colossians 1:9). In the environment of the golden altar, we are in the presence of the outshining of God, and of what speaks of the saints according to purpose -- His will. Prayer would have nothing less as its objective than that all saints might come to the full knowledge of God, and the full knowledge of His will, to fully fill out their place in the divine system. But secondly we have to recognise what is against that, because our prayers are to be against what is against the testimony, and it is no mean power against us. "Our struggle is ... against principalities, against authorities, against the universal lords of this darkness, against spiritual power of wickedness in the heavenlies".

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Our prayers in the prayer meeting rarely suggest anything like the urgency this calls for.

The tabernacle system sets out the will of God, and every saint should stand in his place as a board upright, ten cubits high, on the sockets of silver, standing in relation to the other boards; and then we should all merge together body-wise in those coloured curtains, manifesting only the features of Christ, only the new man, and nothing else. Thus we shall enjoy our place of acceptance before God as the shewbread on the pure table. All those things indicate typically what God's will is, and in that environment surely we should pray about those matters as understanding what would hinder. We should understand that personalities are behind these things that are moving in the world. Principalities and authorities are behind them, Satan and those under him, and they are called the "lords of this darkness". The instruments Satan is employing are such things as communism, Romanism, trade unionism, trade associations and the like. The powers behind them are in the heavenlies. "Spiritual power of wickedness in the heavenlies", but they are operating through men, and combinations of men, here on earth. Two sisters, one long in fellowship, and the other brought up in the meeting, have recently been caught by Rome, reminding us of its power, by which thousands upon thousands of true souls have been caught and are held in the system which in itself is marked by "the depths of Satan". Undoubtedly we should see great results if we prayed more, with reality and earnestness, that all the saints, not simply those we walk with,

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might come into the full knowledge of God and of His will, and as thus praying we shall experience something of what it is to get answers from heaven checking these great forces. We shall see that God will check them -- as hitherto, and more. So that we are not to be afraid of them, but to face them with God, as those who pray.

In 1 Timothy 2 the apostle exhorts "first of all, that supplications, prayers .. be made for all men". On the testimonial line the most important thing (more so even than good works) is that there should be prayer of this kind. If people come into our prayer meetings, or if we have visitors in our homes and they hear the head of the house praying, if this kind of prayer is absent, God is not rightly represented. In the light of Proverbs 8:31 and other scriptures, we know that God's pleasure and His eternal purpose relate to men, not angels. So it is not simply a question of praying for the salvation of their souls, important as that is, but that men should come to the full knowledge (see footnote to verse 4) of the truth, and that truth is that God is one, which involves the present revelation; it involves the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, underlying which is this great truth that God is one. Then it says, "The mediator of God and men one". It is men that God's purpose is set upon, and we need to have that in our minds and prayers, to give us right spiritual energy in it, and then flowing out of that, how do we hold our service? Are we ready to serve all men? Paul says he was "appointed a herald and apostle .. a teacher of the nations". Paul was ready to teach all men, and

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if there is one thing men need, it is teaching. Our own souls becoming enriched in the knowledge of God as the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit, we are enabled to look out on all men with a deepening understanding of the one Man, Christ Jesus, the mediator of God and men. The first thing to be done with persons affected by the testimony is to baptise them to the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, and they are given to understand that God is one. The full light of God is thus brought to bear on them, and then the truth as to man is also presented to them in perfection in the Man Christ Jesus. So that the full truth is involved in this simple statement: "God is one, and the mediator of God and men one, the man Christ Jesus".

If intelligence is needed at the golden altar, as indicated in Ephesians, it is also needed, in another way, at the brazen altar. "Kings and all that are in dignity" has not in mind that we are to think only of the ruler of the British Commonwealth, not is it an abstract prayer for the powers that be. You think sympathetically of the persons, and you weigh up the persons, as far as you can. At a time when Cyrus did not even know God, God calls him His beloved, for He was going to use him. God raises up men in the sphere of government suitable for His use, and we need to discern, so far as we can, what God is doing with these men, and to know how to pray. We need to have some understanding of the image Nebuchadnezzar saw, if we are to pray on this line. The first metal, gold, represents the general principle, that there is no authority except from God, and even

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though the character of rule deteriorates, that principle remains. The gold was still there when the Lord stood before Pilate (see John 19:11), and all the metals are there when the Lord comes, when the "stone" smites the "image", and the iron, clay, brass, silver and gold are broken in pieces together and become like the chaff of the summer threshing-floors (Daniel 2:34, 35), The silver, which came to light in the Persian Empire, is the kind of rule which acknowledges the rights of God over His people; that principle remains, thank God, and has marked the British Commonwealth for centuries. The brass, which marked the Grecian Empire was used, and will yet be used, as a disciplinary power. If God sees His people need discipline He can raise up the basest of men to discipline them. We have seen that in our day. Those who appear to be against the testimony would be in line with the brass. We have to view them in that light and wait on God about it and as to when it shall be His time to grant relief. Then the Roman power is marked by opening up the highways, as suggested in the legs of the image. Men think the highways are for other purposes, but we know they are for the testimony and that is why we are free to use them.

The prayers of 1 Timothy 2 would lead to the doxology of the last chapter. The doxologies of this epistle would indicate the note of worship that is aroused in the heart as it takes account of the magnitude and majesty of the ways of God, and the greatness of their scope, not only in grace but in government.