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Steps
to Life
WEEKLY
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11
The
Worth of a Picture
Dear Friend,
This
generation can hardly function without pictures. We have pictures
everywhere. We hang them on our walls, publish them in books, carry
them in our wallets, watch them on television, and even put them
on our driver's licenses. In spite of the fact that even the best
picture can never replace the real thing, the old familiar adage
that tells us that a picture is worth a thousand words is still
true.
God
understands this. Long ago He gave His people far more than just
the written Word. He gave them a picture of Jesus working out the
plan that Heaven had devised to save us from sin.
As
we read of the Jewish people who lived in the distant fog of biblical
history, we realize that they were not very different from us. They
had many similar struggles. The stress of survival took its toll
on their lives. They had financial difficulties. Illnesses and accidents
came unexpectedly. Governments were corrupt. Loved ones died. The
threat of war hung over their heads. Families broke up or lived
together in miserable disharmony. They were sinners just as we are
today.
We
still face many of these same problems. There was one big difference,
however, between their problems and ours. They had never heard the
story of Jesus. He had not yet come, lived, suffered, and died.
All of this was yet future. They had not seen as clearly as we can
how much sin cost Jesus and how deep was God's love for them. Therefore
He gave them a picture of His love.
"A
picture of His love?" you might ask. "How could He give
them a picture of His love?" That is what our lesson is about
today. We will learn how long, long ago God came down to the children
of Israel and gave them a special picture of His plan to save them
from sin. He had the people build a special building at first it
was just a tent that represented His headquarters in heaven where
He was working for their salvation. They called this building the
"sanctuary." The Old Testament sanctuary was a picture
of God's plan to save mankind through Jesus Christ. It explained
every detail of His ministry.
Unfortunately,
many of the people looked at the picture without comprehension.
The picture told all about Jesus, but when Jesus came they did not
recognize Him. They were like a person who is given a blueprint
for a wonderful house that will be built, but when the house is
finished, the untrained eye sees no similarity between that blueprint
and the house.
More
than that, the children of Israel came to trust in the blueprint
itself. They didn't realize that the sanctuary, like a blueprint,
was only valuable as it reminded them of God and told about His
wonderful love to them. Imagine a home builder showing a prospective
young couple a blueprint and saying, "This is the home I'm
offering to you at a special price today. Just for today you can
have it for only $45,000." The drawing looks as if it represents
a very fine home, so the couple pays him the $45,000. After the
builder has the money, he hands the couple the blueprint and says,
"Here is your home. Enjoy it!" The young couple protests,
but the builder reminds them that he told them that, "This,"
pointing to the blueprint, "is the home I am offering you today
for just $45,000."
"But,"
the young couple protests, "the blueprint is only representative
of the home you are supposed to build us. When you said, 'This is
the home I am offering you,' we thought you meant what the blueprint
represents, not the blueprint itself."
Obviously,
in the illustration above, the young couple was badly taken, but
many of the children of Israel did just the same thing. They came
to trust in the blueprint, instead of the Christ whom the blueprint
pointed forward to.
Pictures
and blueprints are meant to be only representatives of something
else. Imagine with me a certain scenario which the Steps to Life
Television Director told about on the Steps to Life television program
not long ago.
***
The
year is 1968. The Viet Nam war is in full swing and Jim has just
gotten his draft notice. After basic training and AIT, he gets a
12-month assignment to Viet Nam with a thirty-day leave beforehand.
During his home leave he spends every moment he can with his new
and lovely bride. Finally, before leaving, he takes her to a studio
to have a portrait made of her. He wants the best wallet picture
possible to carry with him everywhere he goes.
Tenderly
Jim holds his bride upon his final departure and promises always
to remain true to her. He tells her that her picture will be his
greatest treasure and that it will always remind him of her.
He
does as he had promised. Every morning he takes her picture out
and admires it. Every evening before retirement he looks at it again
and renews his affections for her. Her picture is his constant companion
and greatest treasure while overseas. Through all the tensions and
life-threatening situations of war, Jim never looses nor forgets
his picture. The edges tell of frequent handling. It becomes his
solace and brings him peace. He guards it with his life. Indeed,
it becomes his life. It seems it is the only thing worth living
for. He shows it to all his buddies proudly saying, "This is
my wife."
Jim
is lucky. He makes it through the war alive and soon he is on his
way home again. As he flies over the Pacific Ocean he carefully
pulls out his most prized possession. Lovingly he looks at that
pretty smiling face and expressive eyes that have been his constant
companion for so long.
Upon
embarking in the United States again, he is met by the one the picture
has been reminding him of for so long. She screams with joy as she
runs to meet him. "Jim! Oh, Jim!" she cries, "You
made it!"
Imagine
her surprise and sudden hurt when Jim pushes her away! "Who
are you?" he inquires.
"I'm
your wife," she cries.
"I'm
sorry," Jim says, "you must be mistaken. I have my wife
right here in my billfold. I don't need anything other than this
picture! I've told all my buddies that this is my wife. This wife
has stayed with me through all my loneliness and dangers of Viet
Nam. This is my greatest treasure. I don't need you!"
Of
course, Jim would be admitted for some psychiatric help, but in
reality, that is exactly what the Jewish nation did when Jesus came
down. The whole sanctuary service represented Him. It was a picture
of His work and ministry. But they crucified Him and hung on to
the picture.
The
above story about Jim is only a parable of Marshall Grosboll's to
illustrate a point, but let me tell you a true story, almost too
preposterous to believe, that happened to a young girl named Millie.
***
Fear
gripped six-year-old Millie's heart as she looked from her sister
Gertie up into the eyes of the strange woman. What were they telling
her? Things were happening so fast it was too much to comprehend.
It seemed that the remnants of what little security her life had
known up till now were being ripped from her. Through a fog she
heard their voices telling her that she must go with the "nice
lady" now.
"Everything
will be alright," Gertie said. "They will take good care
of you."
Thoughts
raced through her mind so fast she could hardly pick which one to
think. If only she had a mother to help her, but that was futile.
Mother had drowned when Millie was only two.
She
wanted to run to Dad. Certainly he would stop them and take care
of her. But Dad was gone they had taken him away to prison.
The
thought of leaving Gertie and her two brothers was almost unbearable.
The future seemed so dark, so dreadful.
Gertie's
voice pierced her thoughts. "Millie," she said, "before
you go, I have something for you." In her hand she held a picture.
Millie
took it and looked thoughtfully at the face of her dear daddy. It
was a familiar one to her. She had often looked at that picture
that had been taken of him shortly after his wedding nearly two
decades before.
Gertie
continued to talk, "Millie dear," she said, "look
at that picture every day. We don't want you to ever forget your
dad. Someday you'll see him again. It will make him so happy to
know his baby remembered him."
"You'll
see him again! You'll see him again!" Over and over the words
rang in her ears. The only good thing she'd heard for a long while.
Of course she would look at the picture. Never need to worry about
that. Not a chance that she could ever forget her dear daddy even
if she didn't have his picture.
Millie
clasped the treasure to her heart as she stumbled through her tears
after the strange lady.
Life
was never the same for Millie after that. Security was an unknown
feeling to her. The numerous homes she lived in provided the basic
necessities of life, but they could never fill the empty ache in
her heart. At school, the kids taunted her about being a jailbird.
Night after night her pillow was soaked with tears. No one heard
or knew of her struggles but Jesus.
Faithfully
she kept her promise to look at her daddy's picture. Every night
before going to bed she spent time looking at it and longing for
the time when she would see him again.
A
popular song of the time went straight into her sad heart. It was
a song of a little girl who wanted to go to visit her daddy in prison
but had no money for the train fare. In the song, the conductor
of the train asked her for her fare. After hearing her story, he
promised her she would never need a train fare while he was on the
train. How she wished she were that little girl!
Thoughts
of her dad were never far from her mind. When would she see him
again? How would it happen? Was Gertie telling the truth when she
said that, or was she just trying to soften the blow for her?
From
the day she heard the promise, the hope burned in her heart. Whenever
she walked the streets in town or found herself in a crowd, she
found herself searching the face of every man she saw. Looking,
looking, looking for the daddy in her memory. Looking for a face
that matched the little picture she looked at every night.
As
the years went by, Millie developed into a gentle, lovely young
woman. She finally had the opportunity to be reunited with her brothers
and her sister, Gertie. Time had eased some of the pain in her heart,
but still she looked at her daddy's picture and wondered if she
ever would see him again. One day Gertie and some strangers came
to visit Millie.
"Millie,"
Gertie said casually, "do you know this man?"
Millie
glanced at him with the same quick discerning eye she had searched
so many faces with for so many years. "No," she replied
graciously, "I don't believe we've ever met."
Immediately
she knew she'd said the wrong thing. Everyone's face wore a shocked,
tense expression.
Embarrassed,
she looked at Gertie.
"Millie!"
Gertie remonstrated. "Don't you remember? Don't you know your
dad?"
Color
rushed to Millie's face and her ears seemed to be thundering as
she realized what had just happened.
Embarrassment
faded for a time while the long awaited reunion took place. The
hope was replaced by reality. The picture was replaced by flesh
and blood.
When
Gertie and Millie were alone again they talked about the visit.
"Dad
was so disappointed that you didn't know him, Millie," Gertie
told her.
"Didn't
you remember him at all? Didn't you ever look at the picture?"
she asked.
"Well,
no, I mean. . . um, well, yes, I did look at his picture,"
Millie stammered. "But he was well he was different than I
expected." Millie slowly got out the picture and stared at
it.
What
had happened? As she gazed at it she began to see the resemblance
between the young polished man in the picture and the older haggard
man she had met today. Gertie came and looked over her little sister's
shoulder at the picture Millie had memorized for so many years.
As Gertie looked, understanding dawned upon her. Millie had been
so young. She had probably not even noticed the changes 20 years
had made between her father and the picture when she first received
it. She had not thought of how the hard years he had just experienced
would be written in the lines of his face.
The
picture was good. The only problem was that humans change. Pictures
don't.
Fortunately,
God is not like that. When He gives us a picture of Himself and
His ways, we never need to worry about the picture becoming obsolete.
"Jesus Christ [is] the same yesterday, and today, and forever"
(Hebrews 13:8). When He gives us a picture, we can trust it.
You
know, the strange thing was that even though God had given His people
a picture and asked them to study it so that they would know Him,
when He came they didn't recognize Him.
The
people loved the picture, which in this case was the sanctuary and
its sacrifices. They almost worshiped the picture. There was something
about that picture that made them realize that their religion was
superior to all others. As they worshiped in their temple, they
recited the prayers that showed that they had not forgotten that
the Messiah was coming and that they were longing to see Him. Faithfully
they sought after Him as a nation that did righteousness. (See Isaiah
58:1.)
But
somehow oddly, sadly when He came, they didn't know Him. "He
came to His own, and His own did not receive Him" (John 1:11).
They didn't want to recognize Him. As the evidence began to mount
that His life matched the picture and the prophecies exactly, they
saw that they would have to surrender their pride.
They
saw that their prized possession, the temple, would not be all that
important any more. They didn't realize it was only a miniature
replica of a more glorious sanctuary in heaven. They clutched their
picture to themselves and forgot the person that had made it important
to them in the first place. They forgot that the law enshrined in
the Most Holy Place of the sanctuary was a mere "copy"
(Hebrews 8:5) of the eternal law that even angels adore.
They
clung to the "shadow" (Hebrews 8:5) and despised the One
who loved them. They outwardly honored the law, etched in stone,
but they rejected the Person with God's law etched in His flesh
and blood the One who said, "I delight to do Your will, O my
God, and Your law is within my heart" (Psalm 40:8; John 6:38).
Today
we cherish the sign of the cross. People wear it on necklaces and
lapels. Homes have them on their walls. They are built on church
steeples and walls. We sing about it and preach about it. Pictures
of Jesus Himself are multiplied. But friend, wouldn't it be awful
if we were to make the same mistake as the Jews did and forget what
that cross means to us personally?
We
pray that as you study this lesson about the sanctuary that you
will catch a new appreciation of the picture of Jesus, and through
that picture understand His love a little better. May we never reject
Him for the mere form of religion, but may we invite Him into our
hearts every day.
With
Love,
From
your friends at Steps to Life
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