ELUL 18
Grieving the Ruach
“And do not grieve the Set-apart Spirit of
Elohim ...” (Eph 4:30)
There is nothing that grieves the heart of a parent more than when
their child misbehaves and disobeys, especially when that child KNOWS BETTER, and is aware of the
consequences for their transgression. To
openly disregard and disobey rules and instructions is nothing more than
rebellion, and it is heart breaking to realize that our children have so little
respect for our authority. And yet, most
of us at some point during our youth, have all done similar things, whether it
was sneaking out at night, smoking cigarettes with the neighbor kid, or even
stealing candy from the local convenience store. Does that justify the wrongdoing? Of course not. However, when our children do similar acts of
disobedience, we can now understand the emotional turmoil we put our parents
through.
Our Creator is also our Father, and He has laid out for us through the
pages of Scripture His rules, regulations and instructions in moral and
righteous living. His Word is His
will. Let me say that again: His Word is
His will. It doesn’t take a rocket
scientist to recognize that when we are diligent to obey His Word, His Torah,
we are walking in His will. Neither does
it take a 160 IQ to figure out that when we break off on a ‘rabbit trail’ that
is completely in opposition to what Torah teaches us, we are no longer IN His will. We have, in essence, ‘snuck out at night, and
we are meeting the neighbor kids to engage in nefarious activity’.
Where do we get the idea that our insubordination and rebellion does
not grieve our Father, and His Ruach,
His Holy Spirit? The Ruach
is the Spirit of life, He is the breath that we draw every minute of every day
(Gen 7:22). Elohim fills us with His Spirit, enabling us to learn all that we must
know, in order to walk this Torah walk (Acts 2:4). The Ruach
is our teacher (Luke 12:12), our guide (John 16:13), our memory bank (John
14:26), always leading us and pointing us in the direction of Torah.
The opposite of kadosh – holy
– is common, casual, and trivial. When
we make the decision to treat the kadosh Torah
of our Elohim - our instruction manual - as something common and casual, and
not worth adhering to, we have successfully mounted an insurrection against our
Creator, and brought pain and grief to our Father.
As we rapidly approach the fall feast days of Elohim, can we turn our
eyes inward in self-examination, looking honestly and realistically at areas
where we may have caused grief to our Abba?
And let us repent, do teshuvah,
turning away with the resolve to never, ever,
do this again.
Amein …
“In His love
and in His compassion He redeemed them, and He lifted them up and carried them
all the days of old. But they rebelled and grieved His Set-apart Spirit, so He
turned against them as an enemy, and He fought against them.” (Isa
63:9-10, emphasis mine)
©2021

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