CHESHVAN 29
Come Away
“Then He said, “Come out and stand on the mount before Adonai.” Behold,
Adonai was passing by—a great and mighty wind was tearing at the mountains and
shattering cliffs before Adonai. But Adonai was not in the wind. After the wind
there was an earthquake, but Adonai was not in the earthquake. After the earthquake a fire, but Adonai was not in
the fire. After the fire there was a SOFT WHISPER OF A VOICE.” (1Kin 19: 11-12 TLV, emphasis
mine)
There is some speculation that the cave in which
Elohim appeared to Elijah (1Kin 19:9) is the same ‘cleft in the rock’ where He
had also appeared to Moshe centuries before (Ex 33:22) – only the El-Shaddai, the All-Mighty God, would know for sure. Both men, Elijah and Moshe, possessed an
intense hunger for Adonai, for His Torah, His ways, His righteousness, more of Him in their lives. One way for them to achieve this goal was to
spend quality time with Him, to travel up the ‘mountain of Elohim’, and hide
themselves away from the rest of the world:
alone with Adonai, their God
and Father. Because of the time Moshe
invested in his relationship with his Creator, Elohim would say of Moshe, “you have found favor,
loving-kindness, and mercy in
My sight and I know you personally and
by name.” (Ex 33:17 AMPC)
Centuries later, following his own ‘close encounter of the Messiah kind’, the Apostle Paul spent time in what was then called Arabia (See Gal 1:16-18). Again, many have speculated that our Creator called Paul to a time of intimacy on this same mountain of Elohim, where He had ministered to both Moshe and Elijah. Paul was, in his own words, a Pharisee of Pharisees, and learned in the Torah (Phi 3:4-6). But after having met the risen Master and been filled to overflowing with the Spirit of Elohim, all this learning had to be illuminated by the light of the Spirit. May we call it “a one-on-one tutorial session”?
This can also pertain to us. We MUST connect with the Source, the Creator, the Giver of life, He who is our beginning and our end. And we must do so in spirit and in truth, in quality, integrity, AND in sincerity. The Father so very eagerly meets our every need; are we as eager to meet His desire for fellowship? Moshe had the care of an estimated 1.5 to 2 million people, yet it was more important to him to turn everything off, and seek the intimacy, the fellowship, of his Avinu Malkeinu, his Father and King. In our present time, this could be termed “turn off FB, shut the ringer off on the phone, lay aside the remote control, close the unfinished novel”. Do we dare to do the same?
“My soul yearns, yes, even pines and is homesick for the courts of the
Lord; my heart and my flesh cry out and
sing for joy to the living God.” (Ps 84:2 AMPC)
©2021
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