1 Peter 2:4-5
As you come to Him, the living Stone – rejected by humans but chosen by God and precious to Him – you also, like living stones, are being built into a spiritual house to be a holy priesthood, offering spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ. Yesterday, while in the office, I saw a pictorial history of the building of the church building on our Cerritos campus. There were pictures of different stages of the building as it went up. Praise God for the beautiful facility that He has blessed us with. As I reflected on the pictures, the building of the church became instructive as a metaphor for my relationship with God and the church. God too is involved in a construction project with me. Admittedly, it is a peculiar project. Instead of working with inanimate objects like wood and stone, God is constructing a building that is alive, made of human beings. Strangely, we are not only construction materials but participants in the construction process. As today’s text says, God is constructing a house made of “living stones.” Today, I want to focus on our attitude toward the project, or perhaps more accurately, towards the construction material and the process of construction. There are three words in our text that form a continuum of how we feel about God’s project: “rejected,” “chosen,” and “precious.” God’s construction project begins with the foundation or “cornerstone” (1 Peter 2:6), which is Jesus Christ Himself. How we deal with Jesus is essential to our participation in God’s construction project. If we reject Him, we cannot take part in it at all. But it is important to note that Jesus is not the whole building. He is “the living Stone,” but there are other “living stones” which are essential to God’s building. We are called not only into a relationship with Jesus but into a relationship with His followers in a community of faith. We cannot claim to “accept Jesus” and at the same time reject those He has called to Himself. As the Apostle John wrote long ago, “For whoever does not love their brother and sister, whom they have seen, cannot love God, whom they have not seen” (1 John 4:20b). So, we must choose and not reject the community of faith to which God has called us. Practically, that means becoming part of a local church where we can learn the ways of Jesus—which centrally includes being built into a living community of faith. We are both construction materials and construction participants in this work. God the Spirit is at work not only in us individually, but also with us in our relationships with one another. Learning to love brothers and sisters who are quite different from us is hard and messy work. Loving Jesus who is sinless is a lot easier than loving your brother or sister who is not. No wonder Jesus’ final commandment to His disciples is: “Love each other as I have loved you” (John 15:12). Being part of a local faith community is costly work for each of us, but one which Jesus says is worth our very lives. And when all other hope fails, it is worth remembering that God is building something in the church that will not only endure into eternity, but where He will ultimately dwell in His fullness (Ephesians 1:23). The construction pictorial of the Cerritos sanctuary hints at God’s goal – something exceptionally functional and beautiful. Finally, it is one thing to “choose” something and another to find it “precious.” We love our building project. I am sure at certain points, we got excited about the potential result. Of course, as in any constructions, there are times we get frustrated and even angry when things go wrong. But there is no mistake about how deeply we cared for the work, for the materials, and for the process. In the builder’s eyes, the project and all its aspects are “precious.” I find that challenging as I think about my attitude towards my local church. How do you feel about your local church? What might God be calling you to work on in your relationships in your local community of faith? Lord Jesus, we are grateful that You are the living cornerstone of God’s building project. Everything in God’s house is intended to be aligned with You and the way of life You taught and embodied. Help us to live faithfully before You. Give us grace to love and live with one another as You have loved us. Comments are closed.
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