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Excerpt
from "The Happiness of Finding Wisdom"
Suddenly we realize our purpose
we’ve been building a new house within ourselves. The book of Hebrews progressively
discusses our Godly house, Therefore, holy brethren (believers),
partakers of the heavenly calling (heirs of salvation), consider
the Apostle and High Priest of our confession, Christ Jesus, who was faithful
to Him who appointed Him, as Moses also was faithful in all His house.
(Heb. 3:2, NKJ) The readers knew that Moses was found faithful-- now, consider
that Jesus was faithful.
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A key to understanding this portion
of Scripture is right here. "Consider" or fix your thoughts, mark with
attention this thought. What thought? That Christ faithfully endured and
still endures. His building did not end, but still continues. He helps
all of us build. He completes each building in loving perfection.
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Moses built a dwelling in the
wilderness, while Christ is the Great Builder of God’s house.
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Jesus is the Apostle and High
Priest over that which we profess and acknowledge – making certain that
our confession builds our lives.
Heb. 3:3 For this One has
been counted worthy of more glory than Moses, inasmuch as He who built
the house has more honor than the house. (NKJ) Moses contributed great
effort to build a glorious house for God. But, we see a parallelism between
Moses and Jesus begin to develop here to add to our understanding. As we
interpret the word house for this purpose, we note that the Hebrew
author uses the illustration of construction. Heb. 3:4 For every house
is built by someone, but He who built all things is God.
(NKJ) Let’s continue for our purposes, to realize that the house represents
our lives. We may do the building, but God built all things. Whatever you
become, God has greater honor than the house (your life) itself. The beauty
of our structure must give all tribute to the architect. Our house can't
grow like a plant – it doesn’t evolve on its own. The analogy here says
that God is the architect overseeing all building. We can’t take the credit!
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God works through the Son (Heb.
1:2, 2:10). Because Jesus builds God's house (tabernacling in us), He is
of greater honor than Moses (who built the earthly Tabernacle).
Heb 3:5 And Moses indeed was
faithful in all His house as a servant, for a testimony of those
things which would be spoken afterward,
(NKJ) This is a quote from Numbers 12:7. The Greek word usually used for
servant is dulos, which means "bondservant." Dulos is not
the word used in this text. Moses was not called a bondslave, slave, or
attendant. Instead, the word used here is therapon, which means
a "noble servant." This word occurs often in the Old Testament, but only
once in the original Greek... it represents the unusual relationship that
Moses was a servant of superior and noble position.But even as great as
Moses was, being a servant in the house of God was the best he could ever
accomplish. By contrast we see Jesus (Heb 3:6), Christ as a Son over
His own house, whose house we are if we hold fast the confidence and the
rejoicing of the hope firm to the end. (NKJ) Christ was faithful OVER
His own house because He was not a servant, but the Son. Here was see a
differentiation between Moses (living under the law) and the believer who’s
incorporated into the Sonship Company of Jesus. The New Testament house
represents His body, His flesh (flesh of His flesh), and His bones (bone
of His bone, Eph. 5:30). This text verse continues by saying, "whose
house we are." Jesus was the Father’s house – and we are the many mansions
(abiding places) housed in Him (Jn. 14:2). We belong within His house…
where He rules. Both individually and collectively, we constitute His house."Whose
house we are" can also be translated, "We are God's house."
The metaphor continues to describe us as a house. We are that house if...
If what? If we hold fast. This passage presents the possibility
of an unfulfilled condition. IF And the criterion necessary to be His house?
If we "hold fast." The Jews of that time had to hold fast through great
persecution. They were not to return to the old systems, to old traditions,
to predefined religious ways, to cultural expectations. They had to be
"possessors" of God’s Word and not merely "professors." Therefore, the
mark of a well-built HOUSE is perseverance. And that holds true today.
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"Hold fast" is also a
nautical term. This same word is used in Acts 27:40 where it speaks of
heading directly toward shore. "Whose house we are" only if we don't deviate
or drift from where we're going.
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If we hold fast to correct concepts
and don’t drift into false ideologies.
They were to confidently hold
steady. "Hold fast" to what? Confidence. Confidence (courage)
in Christ Jesus proves whether or not you're a true possessor of salvation.
We cannot BE A HOUSE unless we have confidence (courage). "With confidence"
means that they must maintain consistent words and actions that demonstrate
and establish the fact that they are true possessors of The Truth. We who
are His house display our faith by walking in steady confidence -- no matter
what the circumstance. Plus, these believers had another assignment in
addition to holding fast to confident courage. They had to hold fast
to something else: "And the rejoicing of the hope firm to the end."
"Rejoicing in hope" establishes and verifies a living witness as one who
consistently trusts in the Almighty God. Rejoicing (the boasting of His
glory) unto the end – until hope becomes a reality (Rom. 5:2-3, Phil. 3:3).
Heb. 10:23 reminds us again, "Let us hold unswervingly to the hope we
profess, for he who promised is faithful.By now the building of our
spiritual "house" should have moved past having to continuously "repent
from dead works." No longer should we be re-learning the "elementary principles
of Christ" -- over and over. There’s more to Christianity than milk (Heb.
5:11). There’s more to learn than we know now. There’s more growth for
the mature to experience, more expanded concepts to realize, and more capabilities
to apprehend. Heb. 6:1 urges us, "...let us go on unto perfection
(teleiotes)..."
The Amplified version explains it further,
"Therefore let us go on...advancing
steadily toward the completeness and perfection that belongs to spiritual
maturity." That idea of perfection (teleiotes) means
completion or finished work, or being grown up. The author of Hebrews
urges us to move on past our childhood into the fullness of maturity and
completeness – into present truth – into a further building of The House.
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Perfection is the process
of aggregating wisdom. Jesus went through that process. Luke 2:39-40 says,
And
the child grew and became strong; he was filled with wisdom… Luke 2:52
And Jesus grew (progressively increased) in wisdom…NIV
The struggle toward perfection
is an integral part of the overall restoration process. Eph. 4:11-13 expands
this concept by telling us that the purpose of the five-fold ministries
is the PERFECTING of the saints... unto a PERFECT (grown up teleios)
man..." Those adult individuals are BUILT UP to form a PERMANENT
DWELLING PLACE for God in the Spirit..."(Eph 2:21-22), a mature church
that walks in unmistakable completeness -- a body that actualizes total
redemption.
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Thayer’s Lexicon adds that "TELEIOS"
means "brought to its end, finished; wanting nothing necessary to completeness;
consummate human integrity and virtue; used of men, full grown, adult,
of full age, mature." Its root word is "TELOS," which means, "a definite
point or goal; properly, the point aimed at as a limit, i.e. (by implication)
the conclusion of an act or state; the end to which all things relate,
the aim, purpose." This forceful word defines our coming to full MATURITY
in Christ.
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This full-grown wholeness manifests
itself in clear communications with God, absolute discernment, vivacity
for life, equality, unconditional relationships, readiness to subdue difficulty,
and an ease in yielding to Spiritual purposes. God can only have a mature
relationship with mature sons.
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Each believer must apprehend
wholeness (sozo) before he/she is capable of connecting with another.
We must grow up before we can discern the singular, consistent, divine,
and global plan for the church/HIS HOUSE. Paul eloquently explains, "In
him the whole building is joined together and rises to become a
holy temple in the Lord" (Eph. 2:21). Here we see our individual houses
joined to become one temple. But hear this… it isn’t a cute thought for
the sweet by and by. "It is joined together" – it is already done! It is
a finished work that we must apprehend – connecting one to another. It’s
the valley of dry bones already fused, upright, and walking.
The time has come that the LORD’S
house should be completed (Haggai 1:2-5). Permanent charges are eminent.
God no longer abides in the temple made with hands. His ultimate purpose
is to infuse His nature into the temple of our circumcised heart. This
new inundated personality (the PERFECTED TELEIOS PERSON) boldly
grasps the new concepts received from heaven and resolutely transmits them
on wave-lengths never before imagined. There’s a grand collective truth
just beyond our own individual agenda – that’s "US" together creating God’s
house. NOW.

Email:
Jubilee
Pastor
Kluane Simonds Spake Ph. D.
P.O. Box 941933
Atlanta, GA 31141
Copyright © DCS and KJS, 1997-2001
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