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Jump Start # 2426

Jump Start # 2426

Leviticus 10:3 “Then Moses said to Aaron, ‘It is what the Lord spoke, saying, ‘By those who come near Me I will be treated as holy, and before all the people I will be honored.’ So Aaron, therefore, kept silent.”

 

Our verse today follows two very tragic events. They were linked together and one lead to the other. Leviticus is a tough read and this section is likely the most known part of this book. In the previous chapter, Aaron offers sacrifice to God. There was a whole series of sacrifices, from sin offerings, peace offerings and grain offerings. The number of animals sacrificed makes this read like a slaughter house. Aaron’s sons were with him to help him. The chapter ends and Moses and Aaron leave. Our chapter opens with Aaron’s sons offering incense to God. All should have gone well. But it didn’t.

 

There wasn’t an accident. There wasn’t a malfunction. There was no equipment failure. By their own choices, Aaron’s sons decided to offer what the text calls a “strange fire” to God. This is not what God commanded. They had profaned and wasted the sacrifice to God. They made assumptions that they had no right to do. They ignored God’s way and did what they wanted to do. It was still worship, yet it wasn’t what God wanted. Immediately, that fire exploded and consumed the sons. They died.

 

Aaron tragically mourns the loss of his sons. They both died. They died instantly. They died in worship. And, these two are forever linked with Lot’s wife, Uzzah, Annais and Saphira—all who were killed instantly in disobedience to God. Great sermons about respecting God’s authority have been built around this context. We need to understand the concepts of Biblical authority.

 

Our verse lists three eternal principles that we need to see.

 

First, God will be treated as holy. God is holy. The worship and sacrifice to God must be like God is, and that is holy. What makes something holy is God. When Moses was starring at the burning bush, God told him to remove his shoes because he was standing on holy ground. Was the dirt special? No. What made it holy was that the Lord was there. What made the temple holy is that the Lord was there. Moderns have removed God from worship. It’s all about us now. Church better make me happy, fulfill me and take care of me, or I simply will not return. That selfish and spoiled attitude is void of respecting the holiness of God. The worship of God has turned into a side show carnival with comedians who pretend to be preachers, music that rivals any rock concert, food, games, fun, and a total disregard for the holiness of God. It is believed today that anything done in worship is ok with God. Unholy people, living unholy lives, offering unholy worship to God are surprised that anyone would even question what they do. They don’t open their Bibles. They don’t know the Bible. All they want is a good time in church. Taking His holy name in vain, dishonoring His holy word, and testing the patience of God by foolish and vain attitudes about Him. God is holy. His name is holy. We are to be a holy nation, not as a country, but as followers of Christ. The spirit of contemporaries filters into our worship of God. When we replace God as the central feature of our worship, then unholy things begin to happen.

 

Second, I will be honored. Honor is a concept we see in other areas of life. There is honor guard. There is honor roll. There is honoring your father and mother. There are certain dos and don’ts about the way we handle the American Flag. It shows respect and honor. New, different, never tried before, is not the way to honor God. Following what He says is the way to do this. You cannot honor God by ignoring, disrespecting and violating His word. You cannot be right with God and wrong with the Bible. Simply wearing Jesus’ name on a T-shirt is not the way to honor Him. Throwing God’s name into a rock show filled with smoke, laser lights and loud music isn’t the way God is honored.

 

For instance, it’s a guy’s birthday. His wife asks what kind of cake he’d like. Chocolate, he says. What would you like to eat, she asks. Steaks on the grill. So for dinner, she makes veggie wraps and for desert she’s made jello. Is he happy? She asked him, and then she ignored what he said. She didn’t honor him. She made what she wanted. Now, slide this into worship. God tells us how to worship. It’s in the Bible. But I want to show movies, instead of listening to sermons. I want popcorn instead of Lord’s Supper. I want secular songs rather than hymns. We can rock. We can dance. We can eat. We can have a blast. But did we do what God wanted? Is God going to be happy? So odd, that folks can’t get this.

 

Third, Aaron kept silent. He didn’t open his mouth. He didn’t say anything. His sons died. God killed them. Aaron kept silent. He did that because God was right. His sons were not holy nor did they honor God. His sons were wrong. Aaron also kept quiet because you can’t fight God and win. There was no need for yet another death that day. It was tragic enough. And, Aaron wanted to remain on the right side of God, so he kept silent.

 

We ought to learn something from this. People will say, “I probably shouldn’t say this, but…” Then don’t. Keep silent. Hold your peace. Solomon said there is a time to be silent and a time to speak. We have a hard time figuring out when those times are. Instead of complaining, keep silent. Could you do it better? Are you running your life perfectly? Instead of nit-picking, keep silent. Instead of gossiping, keep silent. Instead of trying to run everyone else’s life, keep silent. Rather than telling God how He ought to do things, keep silent.

 

Holy…honor…and, silent. That’s a great combination. It would help our worship if we practiced these three things. It would help us get along better with God if we could remember these three things. And, it would keep us from getting into so much trouble, if we could only remember, holy, honor and silence.

 

Aaron got it. His boys never did. How are you doing with these things?

 

Roger

 

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Jump Start # 1175

         

Jump Start # 1175

Leviticus 10:3 “Then Moses said to Aaron, “It is what the Lord spoke, saying, ‘By those who come near Me I will be treated as holy, and before all the people I will be honored.’ So Aaron, therefore, kept silent.”

 

This week in our Jump Starts we are looking at unique phrases in our Bible. There are layers of lessons to be seen in these wonderful expressions. Recently in different programs on TV I have heard Biblical expressions such as, “Can a leopard change it’s spots?” The shows were not religious. These great lines from the Bible are classic and they find their ways into everyday life.

 

Our verse today comes from one of the tragic pages in the Bible. It is a sad and dark story. Aaron, Moses’ brother, and first high priest of Israel, had two sons that served as priests. In a sacrifice to God they used a different fire, not one that was authorized. The text states that they used “Strange fire,” “which the Lord had not commanded.” Immediately, fire consumed them and they died. They died in punishment from God. This wasn’t a freak accident. God killed them. Their desire to change things resulted in their quick and instant death. It didn’t matter that they were Aaron’s sons. It didn’t matter that they only did this one time. They did not respect God nor His word. They did not treat God as holy. Their death was shocking.

 

Our verse follows immediately. It is the first thing uttered after their deaths. Moses speaks to his brother. Moses didn’t try to explain away what happened. He didn’t try to soften the damage or the wrong that the two sons did. He reminded Aaron what God had spoken. God will be treated as holy. The two sons didn’t do that.

 

The expression that is intriguing is “So Aaron, therefore, kept silent.” The King James states this, “And Aaron held his peace.” Aaron didn’t say anything. His sons just died. They died suddenly and very tragically. God was the reason they died. Aaron held his peace. Far too many, maybe even me in that moment, would have said something, anything to God. Some would have shouted in anger at God. Some may have even cursed God. Some may have walked away from God and never returned. Aaron held his peace.

 

There are some lessons for us.

 

First, sometimes we talk too much. There are times we ought to hold our peace. There is a time to be silent. Solomon said that in Ecclesiastes. There is a time to speak and a time to be silent. For too many of us, the only time we are silent is when we are asleep. It’s good to hold our peace when someone is pouring their heart out to us. It is important to hold your peace when someone is correcting you. You need to hear what they are saying. There are places that we would do well to hold our peace, such as the funeral home. Some feel compelled to say something and too often it’s the wrong thing. A hug goes a lot further than any of our words will. The Psalmist declared, “Be still and know that I am God.” Some translate that as “Cease striving and know that I am God.” I tend to think it’s more like, “Hush and know that I am God.” We talk so much that we don’t recognize God’s voice. We are surrounded by noise all the time. I was sitting on my deck the other night and the cicadas were preforming a delightful musical score that must have been Heaven sent. I just listened. No cars. No airplanes. No TV. No noise. Just me and God’s musicians. It was very relaxing. Aaron held his peace.

 

Second, Aaron held his peace because he knew that his sons were wrong. There was no Ferguson riots taking place here. His sons were guilty. No excuses. No justifications. Maybe Aaron felt some of the blame himself. Maybe he hadn’t taught them the way he should have. Maybe he found fault in his own heart. When we defend the guilty, we show disrespect for God and His word. We don’t help people when we stand behind them when they are wrong. No, stand with God. Stand behind God.

 

Third, Aaron held his peace because he knew you can’t fight God and win. God is right. God is holy. Those that toss the Bible out to defend wrong actions are fighting a losing cause. Sure they may win in the courts and in popular consent, but they will lose with God. You can’t fight God and win. There was nothing to be said. The boys were wrong. God was right. Aaron held his peace.

 

Fourth, Aaron held his peace because he loved the Lord. The worship of God is to be holy and reverent. It needs to be offered in the deepest respect. A causal, flippant attitude isn’t fitting for God. Aaron knew. He was the first to offer sacrifice to God. He knew how important it was to be clean and to do things in God’s way. The love for the Lord will compel a person to do things God’s way. The religious community has lost that today. Church isn’t church any longer. It’s a school…it’s a place to eat…it’s a place to play sports…it’s a movie night…it’s a comedy club—it’s become many things. And in all that changing, it’s lost the sense of reverence for God and His word. Aaron held his peace. His boys were trying something new. Younger folks are always interested in NEW. New music. New fashions. New looks. New stuff. And in this case, new worship. Different. Strange. Unique. They didn’t get that from a deep study of God’s word. No, it came from somewhere else. That’s where most worship changes come from, not the Bible but from somewhere else. Aaron knew. He held his peace. He lost two boys that day because they loved change more than they loved the Lord. They didn’t think that it mattered. It did. They were reckless in their thinking. God ended it. Hard and fast. He wasn’t going to have another generation of rebels. This lesson is repeated over and over throughout the Old Testament. God’s people stopped listening to His Word and introduced idols. Again and again they would be punished. Aaron held his peace. He loved the Lord.

 

We do well to learn from Aaron in this passage. I’ve seen parents rush off to the school or the church, child in arm, and anger in their eyes, because someone dared to call down their little angel. They will defend the child all the way to the jail house. I’ve seen whole families leave a congregation because they would rather stand with a rebel in their family than stand with the people of God who are trying to do what the Bible says.  God or family…Aaron held his peace. He didn’t complain. He didn’t say something that he would later regret. He held his peace. We do not help our family members when we defend them when they are wrong. We do not help them when we become co-dependents or enablers to their bad choices in life. Sometimes a trip to the pig pen, like the prodigal, will open the eyes of those who are wrong. The road home will never be traveled as long as we support, defend and help those that are wrong. Aaron held his peace.

 

What a great statement that is. There are so many applications. I hope this gives you some things to think about.

 

Roger