GOING TO THE MEETING?
Going to the meeting?
by Michael Penfold, Bicester, England
by Michael Penfold, Bicester, England
It’s meeting time.‘Let’s see . . . keys, mobile phone,
Bible. Let’s go’. If that’s all the ‘getting ready’ you do before the
opening hymn, this article is for you! Though most believers know that
assembly fellowship involves more than merely ‘turning up’ on time and
filling a seat for an hour, truly ‘getting ready’ for the meeting is
fast becoming a lost art. Yet the Bible outlines three obligatory
pre-meeting activities. Three words will help the memory:
1. Preparation
2. Examination
3. Reconciliation
For preparation, consider the Lord’s words in Exodus 23:15, “None shall appear before me empty.”
Worshippers at the annual ‘callings together’ of Israel had to come
with an offering. None could simply arrive and feel they had done their
duty.
Are there long gaps in the breaking of bread meeting where
you gather? Do the brothers who take part repeat more or less the same
words each week? Do a number of them never have anything to say at all?
Surely, much of this poverty is due to a lack of exercise in
preparation. Were we to regularly read and meditate on God’s word
through the week, our hearts would automatically be full of material to
present to the Father when we gather. The wise men did not pick up their
gifts in the souvenir shops in Jerusalem. They brought them from the
land they’d been living in. What will you be bringing this Lord’s Day?
For examination check 1 Corinthians 11:28, “Let
a man examine himself and so let him eat. There’s a solemnity about
handling emblems that represent the body and blood of Christ.” To
spend the week soaking up the world’s entertainment, language and
company, and then to sit down and break bread without judging ourselves
is to treat the Lord with contempt. How solemn, before going to the
meeting, to kneel at the throne and ask the Lord to show us anything in
our lives that grieves Him, and to confess it and clear it. Are you
willing to respond to Paul’s earnest call for regular self-examination
before taking the bread and the cup
Regarding reconciliation we have
the Lord’s words in Matt. 5:23-24. “Therefore if thou bring thy gift
to the altar, and there rememberest that thy brother hath ought against
thee; leave there thy gift before the altar, and go thy way; first be
reconciled to thy brother, and then come and offer thy gift.” This
man had prepared something, but he still had a way to go. Perhaps as he
examined himself he remembered an angry outburst against a brother; or a
hasty cruel word he’d written; or a debt he hadn’t paid. He was aware
that while he was outwardly professing all was well between him and his
Lord, all was not well between him and his brethren.
Is there a bad feeling between you and another? Was your last conversation with someone a time when you walked away in anger or slammed down the phone in a rage? Would you be willing to apologize and make it right, even if you feel you are not entirely to blame? It’s a hard price to pay for an unhindered life of worship and a clear conscience – but it’s worth it. It’s worth it a thousand times over. Are you ready for the meeting?
Is there a bad feeling between you and another? Was your last conversation with someone a time when you walked away in anger or slammed down the phone in a rage? Would you be willing to apologize and make it right, even if you feel you are not entirely to blame? It’s a hard price to pay for an unhindered life of worship and a clear conscience – but it’s worth it. It’s worth it a thousand times over. Are you ready for the meeting?
Young Precious Seed Magazine, 2006, Volume 3, Issue 2
www.youngpreciousseed.org