PSALMS 84:10 - I WOULD RATHER BE A DOOR KEEPER IN THE HOUSE OF MY GOD

Visit www.DoorKeeperMinistries.com


Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Daily With One Accord

We do live in the WORLD. But on the day after Passover, April 7th, we traveled to the far southwest corner of Colorado to gather with 70 others in a week-long celebration of the Feast of Unleavened Bread. We met at the San Juan Bible Camp, 8,500 feet high in the Colorado Rockies, in the midst of a beautiful, pristine pine forest. The camp was led by my dear friends, Steve and Shirley Rees (the Peregrinnatti). It will be very difficult for me to find words to express the unity, purity and joy we experienced as one big family in Messiah Yeshua; and pretty much impossible for me to usher you into the weighty glory of the Presence of God we all felt as we kept "David's Tabernacle Worship" every morning and evening. Yet, I want to try to share it with you, because it was the closest thing to the Acts 2 model that I have ever tasted in all my many years of ministry and worship.

 We were 72 in all - a number that seems to mean a lot to the Lord! Moses took 72 elders with him to the top of the mountain to have a banquet with Yeshua. During this anointed week, 72 of us gathered at the top of the mountain to worship and to experience a "rehearsal" of the Wedding Banquet of the Lamb. I kept waiting for things to get tense as the days went by. We were, after all, gathered together in a small space with shared bathrooms and showers, one big kitchen to cook in, one dining room to eat in, and 29 children among us! By Thursday of that week a sense of awe was overshadowing me, as I realized I had never heard a single conversation of gossip, a single cross word, or a single children's quarrel! "What is this?" I wondered. "How can so many gather together and maintain such integrity, cheerfulness, and kindness toward one another?

 Over and over I witnessed women caring for one another's children, men being quick to help with everything from cooking meals to fixing broken-down cars and feeding toddlers. During Torah studies I heard various opinions offered in humility, with no divisions and no arguments. Everytime we got into the line for meals, younger children ushered us ahead and said, "Please go first, you are the elders." The entire camp was operating in a biblical order of respect and esteem for one another that was unlike anything I have ever experienced. Was it the emphasis on and time spent in worship that was blessing us? Our schedule called for David's Tabernacle worship to begin at 8:30 a.m. and continue until 10:00 a.m. We had about 8 psalms that corresponded with the season of Unleavened Bread and with accompaniment of piano, harp, guitar, drums and dancers, we spontaneously chanted and sang these psalms over and over, allowing the Ruach to speak through the worship, and pausing when someone had a word from the Lord. Sometimes the children would come forward and lift our hearts with their pure worship; sometimes the Celtic drums would start beating out a war cry, and the dancers would be stomping Satan under their feet! Other times the gentle simplicity of the harp washed over us. After about the third day, no one wanted to leave David's Tabernacle, and because of Steve & Shirley's great hearts for worship, entire morning schedules were forsaken in order for the worship to continue on as long as the Spirit wanted us there! I had never experienced this before either.

 I became keenly aware that something entirely NEW was taking place. We talked among ourselves about how weary we all are of conferences with hectic schedules, and gatherings where children and adults are separated. Here we were all together - from the youngest (2 months) to the oldest (72) - doing everything together as the Body of Messiah, in the spirit of love and unity. All in one accord!! So, continuing daily with one accord in the temple, and breaking bread together, they ate their food with gladness and simplicity of heart, praising God and having favor with all the people." (Acts 2:46-47).

As the week drew to a close and we were approaching the final High Shabbat of Unleavened Bread, the men began preparations to construct the kadar (wedding chamber) for the Bride to enter in with her Bridegroom. The women sewed, ironed, and hung beautiful panels of fabric in breathtaking colors. Inside the kadar were placed numerous candles, a basin for washing hands, and one for washing feet, a menorah with seven lights, and glowing banners honoring King Yeshua. There are many pictures of this amazing week on my website, and I hope you will take time to visit the slide show on the front page: www.doorkeeperministries.com. The pictures are worth a thousand words!

 The men were given ketubahs (marriage contracts) for their brides. Tears streamed down my face as I watched these 12 men kneel before their wives and once again ask the privilege of taking them as wives, and ushering them into the wedding chamber. (Yes, we had 12 men there, beautifully symbolic of the 12 tribes!) One couple at a time we entered, closing the gleaming white curtain, and sharing a time of incredible intimacy together, making new vows to one another. We emerged from the wedding chamber with lighted candles and tear-stained faces, and I watched the little children's faces as they saw the love and romance their parents were sharing. What a witness in their young lives of God's model for holiness in marriage!

 Now we are all back home in the world - but I have a sense that none of us will ever be the same. How could we be, after tasting God's way of life? Through all that lies ahead of us, we will remember how we spent one glorious week doing what it tells us in Romans 12:2: And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, that you may prove what is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God.

Blog Archive