Ezekiel 3 this morning. Opens with God’s command to the prophet, “Eat this scroll.” (Makes me think of the marvelous little book by Eugene Peterson entitled with this same phrase: “Eat This Book.”) The way the Spirit works & moves & is described in Ezekiel takes my breath away.
For example, in 3:11 God tells the prophet to go to the exiles & speak to them whether or not they listen. Very next words in 3:12: “The Spirit then lifted me up & I heard a loud rumbling sound behind me—bless the glory of the Lord in his place!” Might be fair to say, sometimes
God tells a prophet “Go” like He did Abram in Gen 12 and the prophet just goes. On his own 2 feet. Other times, maybe when God’s had enough & isn’t in the mood to wait for the dude to meander & pack, He just picks him up, feet dangling, & carries him where he wants him to go.
Makes you wonder sometimes if God’s motto is “We can either do this my way or my way.” The only difference between the latter and the former is how long & drawn out we want the thing to be. Anyway, I’m trying to get to 1 more point because it’s so telling. In Vv5-6 the Lord says,
“You are not being sent to a people of unintelligible speech or a different language but to the house of Israel—Not to the many peoples of unintelligible speech or a difficult language whose words you cannot understand. No doubt, if I sent you to them, they would listen to you.”
Get that last statement? He’s, in essence, saying to Ezekiel, “people who can hardly understand a single word you’re saying would end up listening to you better than the very people who speak your same language.” Isn’t that how it goes sometimes? I mean, conceptually speaking?
That old adage, “familiarity breeds contempt?” The old, “Who do you think you are?” Sometimes the last person on earth we will let speak to us is the person who’s one of us. But here’s the other thing: If that’s you & you’ve been talking your head off, trying to biblically reason
with someone among your own people, you’re not responsible for whether or not they listen. That’s between them & God. Your part is to be obedient. To speak boldly & as boldly in love as in truth. So don’t assume you’ve failed if nothing you’ve said has made a whit of difference.
You be obedient. As much as you can discern the will of God, human as we are & as unclear as it can sometimes be, speak when the Holy Spirit seems to leads and rest your tongue & don’t waste your breath when He doesn’t. You can’t make people listen. You can’t make people change.
But YOU can listen. YOU can change. I can listen. I can change. Listen, if you & I were already complete - no more transformation required - we’d be in the Holy Presence. That Spirit would already have reached down for us and carried us away.

Till then, let’s feast on the Book.
*seems to lead. :)

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More from @BethMooreLPM

11 Jan
“So Moses finished the work.” (Exodus 40:33) I came to the end of my reading in Exodus this morning. To fully appreciate those 5 words, you really need to read the 39 preceding chapters. The whole thing had been such an ordeal, drama from the time God called out to Moses from
the burning bush to the moment he “inspected all the work they had accomplished” in the building of the tabernacle. For starters, Moses wasn’t looking to lead anything but sheep to pasture. He was hiding when God found him. Moses was no volunteer. And even after God called him,
he insisted God find someone else. But the force of the divine call is hard to resist. The people he served nearly drove him nuts. He was supposed to lead a group of worshippers and what he mostly got was whiners. He’d lost his temper over & over. Even thrown the stone tablets
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10 Jan
Happy Sunday, y’all. I’m closing in on the last few chapters of Exodus in my morning Bible readings. Ch 37 today. 1st of all, I’d like to say that Bezalel doesn’t get enough press. As artists go, he’s the GOAT. We’re told in Exodus that God filled him with His Spirit not only to
create the designs for the tabernacle in exact accordance to the pattern Moses was given on the mountain but also to teach others. (35:30-35) I love that. The 1st thing we learn in the Bible about God is that He is creative. Rest assured, artist, He can fill you with his Spirit
to create works far exceeding your natural talent. But back to Exodus 37. “He made a mercy seat of pure gold, 45 inches long and 27 inches wide. He made 2 cherubim of gold; he made them of hammered work at the two ends of the mercy seat, one cherub at one end and one cherub at
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9 Jan
As long as what’s Right or Left is more important to professing Christians than what is right or wrong in light of Jesus, we are doomed to present a caricature of him to the world. Christ is neither left nor right nor is He centrist. God seated him “far above all rule & authority
& power & dominion & above every name that is named, not only in this age but also in the one to come. And he put all things under his feet and gave him as head over all things to the church, which is his body, the fullness of him who fills all in all.” (Eph 1:21-23)
No matter who it is, the president of the United States is not the head of the church in America. He wasn’t the last 4 years. He won’t be the next 4 years. And he won’t be in 2024. Until we get this straight, we are in grievous sin & in desperate need of repentance in the church.
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8 Jan
You have the right to change your mind. Don’t let anybody make you think you don’t. It is a God-given right & the essence of repentance. You have the right to reconsider, to study the fruit of any tree, search your own soul & take an honest look at how you’ve been indoctrinated.
The story is too long for a Twitter thread and, truly, Twitter is not worthy of our deepest, most personal stories. But in hopes that someone might find encouragement, I’ll say this much. 4 1/2 years ago some events shocked me so jarringly that I was forced to stare a number of
very troubling realities in the face. Then I started digging at the roots. They weren’t pretty & neither was I. I don’t know where I belong anymore except I belong with Jesus. I belong in His Word. I belong in a local church. But I no longer belong to a system. I changed my mind.
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6 Jan
Exodus 33 today. A chapter virtually unrivaled in the OT. God tells Moses He’ll keep His word. He’ll send them forth to the land flowing with milk & honey. He’ll place an angel ahead of them to drive out their enemies. He’ll do every single thing He promised. But He’s not going.
More theology - more insight, wisdom, direction & understanding of God - is packed into the response of Moses than we could teach, tell or preach on our own in a lifetime: “If Your presence does not go, do not make us go.” No amount of success can make up for God’s absence.
No goal fulfilled can assuage the hollow soul of a human who once savored the divine presence. Nothing is worth it. At the end of Deuteronomy, we find these words: “No prophet has arisen again in Israel like Moses, whom the Lord knew face-to-face. He was unparalleled...” (CSB)
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5 Jan
My reading today was Exodus 32. Moses has been on the mountain with God, hearing the instructions for the tabernacle & receiving the stone tablets. The people below, who’d seen the smoke above & heard the thunder &, that very morning, filled their bellies with bread from heaven,
decided Moses & that God above were taking too long. They needed a god below who would get with it. Get with them. Get them where they wanted to go. So they gathered around Aaron & said, “Come, make gods for us!” The same Aaron of Ex 24 who’d been invited by God to see the very
pavement beneath God’s feet. Aaron & his sons & the 70 elders, “saw Him and they ate and drank.” That Aaron. So he tells them in Ex 32, Bring me your gold & let’s see what I can do. He fashions it into the image of a calf & they present it to Israel in wording shudderingly
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