Showing posts with label Understanding the scriptures. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Understanding the scriptures. Show all posts

Friday, August 9, 2024

PART FIVE: FROM THE SHEEP GATE TO THE CROSS

 Part 1 / Part 2 / Part 3 / Part 4 / Part 5 / Part 6 / Part 7 / Part 8 / Part 9

Stock photo from Microsoft

Before we continue with the string lines, I must speak about the significance of the Cross, and the place where Jesus was crucified. I am in no hurry to complete this study until I have learned all I have to be an exact representative of Christ on this earth. So stay connected to this blog to learn more if you too have a burden to live right.

THE CROSS.

The fact that it was constructed on the Place called Skull, I believe, has a great meaning for us.  

This is the picture I have since I started with this bible study. The plumb line in God’s hand is a true vertical line and everything must stay true to this line. Not even the carpenter can change the plumb line. He must stay in alignment with its truth. Jesus confirms when he said, “Everything I see my father do, I do”.

The cross’s, embedded into the rock of Calvary, vertical beam, is God’s plumb line. And Christ as the carpenter cannot shift this line, but must stay in alignment with God’s commandments. That is the command. That vertical beam stays true. No matter what people might say or believe, that beam is our plumb line. It is our very foundation that keeps us true to what God wants from us. It is the foundation, the cornerstone, not only of our faith but a moral compass of what is right and pure.

The connection between God and us is Christ. And Christ demonstrated that it is possible to follow God’s commandments. Even in today’s self-actualization, entitlement and humanistic thoughts, you cannot stray from this one truth.

So, to understand this, we must look at the gate, a significant part of the journey to the cross.

SHEEP GATE

Gates are built on the road to protect you. You must be sure that your gates are fixed. The practical application of this can be read in Proverbs 25—28 where you must learn to control your own spirit.

A few quick points of interest from these scriptures (See how many you can list from these chapters):

· Search out a matter

· Take away the dross

· Remove wickedness from you

· Don’t think yourself better than others

· Don’t be hasty

· Speak wisely

· Be faithful

· Don’t search your own glory

· Be slow to respond

· Don’t bare false witness

· Don’t be lazy

· Don’t boast

· Be prudent

Gates brings safety. When Jesus was led through Jerusalem and out of the city through the Sheep’s Gate, he secured our relationship with the Father.

It was situated near Golgotha. This site was commonly used to put thieves and other criminals to death. The slope of the mountain looks like a skull bone, and at the time of Jesus’s life on earth, it was called Calvary or Golgotha, which means place of skulls in Hebrew. Today it is called the Damascus Gate.

Matthew 27:33

And when they had come to a place called Golgotha, that is to say, Place of a Skull.

John 19:17

Carrying his own cross, he went out to the place of the Skull (which in Aramaic is called Golgotha).

Mark 15:22

They brought Jesus to the place called Golgotha (which means “the place of the skull”).

Luke 23: 24-28

24 So Pilate decided to grant their demand. 25 He released the man who had been thrown into prison for insurrection and murder, the one they asked for, and surrendered Jesus to their will. 26 As the soldiers led him away, they seized Simon from Cyrene, who was on his way in from the country, and put the cross on him and made him carry it behind Jesus. 27 A large number of people followed him, including women who mourned and wailed for him. 28 Jesus turned and said to them, “Daughters of Jerusalem, do not weep for me; weep for yourselves and for your children.

This place became the altar for Jesus’s sacrifice. He suffered so that we can become holy according to the plumb line in God’s hand.

Hebrews 13:10-14

10 We have an altar from which those who minister at the tabernacle have no right to eat. 11 The high priest carries the blood of animals into the Most Holy Place as a sin offering, but the bodies are burned outside the camp. 12 And so Jesus also suffered outside the city gate to make the people holy through his own blood. 13 Let us, then, go to him outside the camp, bearing the disgrace he bore. 14 For here we do not have an enduring city, but we are looking for the city that is to come.

Right at the beginning of this bible study, I mentioned we must count the cost before we make a choice to follow him. This is the narrow road. It is a place of weeping and shifting to what God wants to fulfil in your life. This weeping will be a heart-breaking sound that will only be experienced when you are in the thick of things. Once you began this journey, there is no turning back. Sometimes this weeping will be heard and other times the pain will be so great that no sound or tear will be able to truly say what you feel. People will think you are drunk or even going mad. Think of Hanna when Eli saw her for the first time. Her cry was so intense that no sound was coming forth. Only her lips moved, and he thought she was drunk. Mikal thought David was beside himself when he burst out in joy. The bible says that she despised him.

Jesus’s last words to his mother was in Luk 23:28 Jesus turned and said to them, “Daughters of Jerusalem, do not weep for me; weep for yourselves and for your children.

Just like Christ, we MUST face anguish and death, not a physical death but a spiritual death. It is only when we are planted on the skull—dead man’s tomb that we can truly come alive. And Jesus knew this, therefore the warning to his mother and the women with her.

Weeping is to break down in tears. To cry uncontrollably. To mourn something or someone. It is the absolute feeling of loss so profound that words are not enough.

You must die so that Christ can live in you. And it will cost you dearly. If you thought that this would be a motivational study to make you feel good, you are deeply mistaken. Not many preachers talk about this, too afraid their members will run in different directions. But to know Christ, we should be honest about this. We should talk about the skeleton in the closet or on the hill. Only then can we truly overcome.

But let’s get back to the Sheep Gate.

The first time the Sheep Gate is mentioned in the Bible is in Nehemia 3.

These are the people who helped rebuild the wall and gates of Jerusalem:

The high priest Eliashib, and the other priests rebuilt the Sheep Gate and hung its doors. Then they dedicated Sheep Gate and the section of the wall as far as Hundred Tower and Hananel Tower.

You see, the Sheep Gate had to be rebuilt for one purpose. All the sheep that had to be sacrificed had to go through the Sheep Gate. They had to be spotless lamb, chosen by hand to be presented to the High priest. And Jesus himself had to go through this gate as a spotless lamb. Chosen by God to sacrifice himself on the cross. Everything that Jesus had gone through, every experience, had led him to this point. The cross. God’s plumb line. He had to be measured, stripped and spit on and slaughtered to show us the way.

In John 10, Jesus revealed himself as the shepherd. He had to go through the gate, otherwise he would have been a thief or robber. He had to become the gate himself to save us. No hireling could stand in the gap. He had to do it.

John 10: 1-17

Jesus said: I tell you for certain only thieves and robbers climb over the fence instead of going in through the gate to the sheep pen. 2-3But the gatekeeper opens the gate for the shepherd, and he goes in through it. The sheep know their shepherd's voice. He calls each of them by name and leads them out. 4When he has led out all of his sheep, he walks in front of them, and they follow, because they know his voice. 5The sheep will not follow strangers. They don't recognize a stranger's voice, and they run away. 6Jesus told the people this story. But they did not understand what he was talking about.

Jesus Is the Good Shepherd

7Jesus said: I tell you for certain that I am the gate for the sheep. 8Everyone who came before me was a thief or a robber, and the sheep did not listen to any of them. 9I am the gate. All who come in through me will be saved. Through me they will come and go and find pasture. 10A thief comes only to rob, kill, and destroy. I came so everyone would have life, and have it fully. 11 I am the good shepherd, and the good shepherd gives up his life for his sheep. 12Hired workers are not like the shepherd. They don't own the sheep, and when they see a wolf coming, they run off and leave the sheep. Then the wolf attacks and scatters the flock. 13Hired workers run away because they don't care about the sheep. 14 I am the good shepherd. I know my sheep, and they know me. 15 Just as the Father knows me, I know the Father, and I give up my life for my sheep. 16I have other sheep that are not in this sheep pen. I must also bring them together, when they hear my voice. Then there will be one flock of sheep and one shepherd. 17The Father loves me, because I give up my life, so I may receive it back again. 18No one takes my life from me. I give it up willingly! I have the power to give it up and the power to receive it back again, just as my Father commanded me to do.

He is the great shepherd that finds you when you are lost and brings you back into his fold. He carries your burdens on his shoulders. He leads you to still waters so that you can have peace. Have you noticed verse 17? He does what the Father commands him to do. Even Jesus had to follow the plumb line to be true to Father’s commandments. He couldn’t do his will. Jesus couldn’t practice self-actualization and demand entitlement. His highest level of development was to do the will of the Father. His full potential was realized when he died on the cross. There was no but in that equation. He became the accurate reflection of the plumb line in the Father’s hand. Now, he is the plumb line which we must stay true too.

When you die, you become the plumb line for others. The true reflection of Christ. Remember Paul’s words to the church?

We can only reach our full potential when we die to ourselves and do what the Father commands. This becomes our actualization, our focus. Our potential fully developed to be an accurate representation of Christ on this earth. 

Next time, we will look at the marks of a shepherd.

Continue to study the word. Ask the Lord to show you what you need to change and where your gate needs fixing.

Don’t wait another day to do the repairs. Do it quickly.

Grace and peace to you. 

Part 1 / Part 2 / Part 3 / Part 4 / Part 5 / Part 6

PART NINE: FELLOWSHIP WITH EACH OTHER, THE SECOND STRING LINE

  All pictures are Microsoft Stock photos.  When we do an in-depth study of the foundation, then our hearts will be tested and scrutinized. ...