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Purifying
the temple
---Jesus purified the temple
twice, and he did it with violence. It was perhaps the
biggest demonstration of force that our Lord carried out
amongst men. They had profaned the temple specifically
the atrium with merchants. Therefore, taking a whip
of cords, He drove out those that bought and sold, and
He told them: "My house, shall be called a house
of prayer; but you have made it a den of thieves."
---Straightaway, the Scripture
says that the blind and lame came to Him in the temple,
and He healed them. The temple was sanctified and then
immediately the Holy Spirit acted there to heal. The Lord
cleaned that place.
---So then, what is the temple
for us? What does this action of the Lord mean that was
so forceful?
---The temple is our body
(1 Cor. 6:19). and it is in the body where the biggest
daily fight is, where the passions that usually profane
it are let loose. It is here where the merchant and the
money changer are; and where there are animals trampling
and dirtying everything.
---Faced with that, the Lord
used a whip. But he was not the only one who did it. The
apostle Paul also did it, in the temple of his body: "...but
I beat my body, and I make it my slave, so that having
been a messenger for others, I myself might not be eliminated"
(1 Co. 9:27). However, this 'beat the body' is not asceticism;
nor is it annihilation by means of the rudiments of the
world. The rudiments are not reliable, because they are
destroyed with use, and they don't have any value against
the appetites of the flesh.
---Rather, it concerns keeping
the body under control. If it is satisfied in all its
desires, it will become an unsociable master. On the other
hand, if it is restricted, it will learn how to be a servant.
---Of the three parts that
make up man spirit, soul and body, it is the
body that is in most direct contact with the world. The
body is more exposed, and it needs permanent attention.
The body can drag us towards the vilest sins or it can
be a sanctified temple, useful to the Lord.
---Consecration begins with
the body, as the apostle Paul teaches very well: "So,
brothers and sisters, I beg you by the mercies of God
that you present your bodies in living sacrifice, Holy,
pleasing to God which is your reasonable service"
(Ro. 12:1). But consecration doesn't remain there, it
then passes to the heart. However, the body is the starting
point.
---The purification of the
temple teaches us that sooner or later in the life of
the Christian and also from then on it should
be clear who's in control with the whip of cords,
if it be the body or the spirit. Therefore a deep cleansing
should take place so that the body doesn't lose the dignity
of its calling, so that it may truly be a house of prayer
and not a den of thieves.
---The Lord purified the
temple in Jerusalem twice, once at the beginning of His
ministry, and again in the final week. This is a double
lesson that we must never forget, neither at the start
nor at the end.
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