In
Genesis 24, Abraham sends his chief servant back to the land of his relatives
to find a wife for his son, Isaac. When the servant gets to the land of
Abraham’s relatives, he prays for God to lead him to the women who God would
have for a wife for Isaac. God answers his prayer and leads him to encounter
Rebekah.
The
servant goes to stay in the home of Rebekah’s family. He shares with her family
the reason for his visit and tells them that Rebekah is the one God has
selected for Isaac’s wife.
Rebekah
agrees to go back with the servant and become Isaac’s wife.
In
this story we have a picture of God’s relationship to the church.
Three
times in the book of Revelation, the church is referred to as the bride of
Christ.
The
comparison of Rebekah becoming Isaac’s bride and the church becoming Jesus’
bride reveal some truths about our relationship with Jesus.
The
church was created by God to be the bride of Christ just as Rebekah was created
by God to be Isaac’s bride.
Because
we were created to be Jesus’ bride, that means that nothing else will satisfy
us the way Jesus does.
We
tend to look to things like:
People
Success
Possessions
Money
Comfort
Acceptance
Romance
Family
Power
A
Cause
to
give our lives meaning.
They
can’t because none of those things are the bridegroom.
God
planned for Isaac and Rebekah to marry each other and be used by Him to be part
of the process that brought the Messiah into the world. God planned for the
church to marry Jesus and be the instrument that He uses to change the world.
It
is not just about finding the bridegroom; it is about marrying the bridegroom.
We
marry Jesus by joining every part of our life with Him.
We
join our:
Heart
Soul
Wounds
Longings
Desires
with
Jesus.
Raise the Roof and
Remove the Walls
is joining all of your life to Jesus.
Abraham’s
servant went and sought out the bride, Rebekah. The servant gave gifts to
Rebekah and her family to draw her to Isaac.
God
sought us out. God through His Spirit wooed us and drew us to Jesus.
The
bridegroom seeks out the bride, and the bride simply opens herself up to the
bridegroom.
Raise the Roof and
Remove the Walls
is us opening ourselves up to Jesus.
There
was a waiting time between the betrothal period and the wedding ceremony. That
was the time for the bride to prepare herself to be married to the bridegroom.
Rebekah
had the trip to Canaan to prepare herself. We as the church have been betrothed
or promised to the bridegroom, but the wedding ceremony has not taken place
yet.
But
we have been changed. Things around us may look the same and feel the same. We
are in the world but not of the world. We no longer belong to our
circumstances, or our past, or our sins, or our limitations. We now belong to
Jesus.
Raise the Roof and
Remove the Walls
is about belonging to Jesus and being free.
When
Abraham’s servant told Rebekah’s family it was time for him to take Rebekah to
Isaac, they tried to delay his leaving. When they asked Rebekah, she was
willing to go right then.
When
we commit to marrying Jesus, open ourselves up to Him completely, and see
ourselves as belong to Him, we then focus on Him and not what we are leaving
behind.
Just
as Rebekah left her family, we have to leave things and values of this world
and take the things of God and what He values.
We
are to no longer look on this world as our home but look to our eternal home
with our bridegroom, Jesus.
Raise the Roof and
Remove the Walls
is focusing on Jesus and nothing else.
Genesis
24 gives us a beautiful picture of the bridegroom seeking His bride and of the
bride saying yes and giving herself completely to the bridegroom.
As
the Bride of Christ, Raising the Roof and Removing the Walls,
Joe