Some of his disciples
were remarking about how the temple was adorned with beautiful stones and with
gifts dedicated to God. But Jesus said, “As for what you see here, the time
will come when not one stone will be left upon another; every one of them will be
thrown down”. Luke 21:5-6
Jesus said, “Destroy
this temple, and in three days I will raise it again”. John 2:19
I know someone who loves old
buildings, especially churches. His idea of a good holiday is not so much a
pub-crawl as a cathedral-crawl. He will plan a trip around the various
cathedrals he would like to visit.
Well, I have to admit that
that wouldn’t suit me!
Of course I can admire the splendour
and magnificence of great buildings, including non-Christian ones. I am not greatly
travelled, but I have stood in Hagia Sophia in Istanbul, the Christian church
which is now a museum, not to mention the marvellous Blue Mosque. I have
visited St Paul’s Cathedral in London and St Peter’s Basilica in Rome. I have
wandered in the Parthenon in Athens. I have removed my shoes to enter the Dome
of the Rock in Jerusalem, and likewise the massive Hindu temple just a mile or
two from where I live in north-west London.
All these have been moving experiences. But I
don’t think I could summon up the kind of enthusiasm my friend has.
If ever I feel a bit guilty
about this I take comfort from the seeming indifference of Jesus towards the coming
destruction of the great Jewish Temple in Jerusalem.
It’s easy to picture the
scene. Jesus’ disciples, country boys up from Galilee, are dazzled by the sight
of the Temple: “Wow, isn’t it incredible! Look at those decorations! What a fantastic
building!”
To which Jesus replies “Yes,
marvellous, isn’t it? - and very soon it will all be knocked down.” Talk about pouring cold water on someone’s
enthusiasm! And what he predicted did in fact come true some forty years later,
when the no-nonsense Romans marched in and razed everything to the ground.
I’m sure Jesus, in fact,
wasn’t indifferent. In common with his fellow Jews he would have believed that
the Temple was the most important building in the world. It was the earthly
dwelling-place of God, the place where heaven and earth came together.
But what really broke his
heart wasn’t the destruction of a beautiful building - no, it was the judgment
of God that that destruction represented on a stubborn and disobedient people. The
loss of the building was a terrible calamity - but nothing like as bad as the
failure of God’s people to share his glory with the rest of humankind.
This little conversation
between Jesus and his disciples triggers in my mind questions about two big
topics: buildings, and beauty.
First, buildings.
The early church, of course,
had no buildings. The first Christians met for worship and fellowship in hired
halls or in people’s homes. Only later did they start to erect special
buildings.
And the question arises, Was
this a good development? Did Jesus ever want his followers to put up special buildings, whether
splendid cathedrals or modest little mission halls? When it comes to the
church’s mission, worship and evangelism, are special buildings a blessing or a
curse?
My answer would be: they can
be a blessing, but too often become a curse. They consume large amounts of
money and energy in upkeep and maintenance. And, especially in the case of the very
beautiful ones, they can become a distraction from God rather than a pointer to him. Worse, they can give to the outsider, the
non-Christian, a very wrong impression of what Christianity is all about.
And so I find myself torn in
two. I can stand in St Paul’s, for example, and hear myself talking with two contradictory
voices: First, “Isn’t this glorious!” And second “Why oh why did they ever
build this place!” (Can anybody help me, please, to harmonise those two voices?)
Second, beauty.
All that is beautiful is to
be valued and appreciated. After all, where does beauty come from if not from
God? In Revelation 21:24 we are told that “the kings of the earth will bring
their splendour” into the new, the heavenly, Jerusalem. (Something to think
about, that!)
Beauty matters. Art matters.
Human creativity matters. And this is a truth that we as Christians should
affirm, especially perhaps in our western world where there is so much
cheapness and vulgarity, shallowness and triviality.
But what matters most is the beauty of character which the
Holy Spirit produces within us. The reason Jesus
didn’t lament the destruction of the Jerusalem Temple was because he believed
that he had come to replace it. Isn’t
this what John 2:19-22 means?
And isn’t it significant
that Paul speaks of both the universal church
and the individual Christian as “the
temple of the Holy Spirit” (put together 1 Corinthians 6:19 and 2 Corinthians
6:16)?
Yes, we Christians, both corporately and individually, are meant to be
the reflection of God’s supreme beauty, a “place” where people can meet with him.
Is that how you see
yourself? A living, breathing, walking temple?
Enable me, Lord God,
to value and appreciate all that is beautiful and fine in this world. But
enable me still more to be, by the power of the Holy Spirit, a beautiful,
Christlike person, a true “temple of the Holy Spirit”. Amen.
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