What happens when God's people finally stop making excuses and start moving in obedience? The book of Haggai provides a powerful answer to this question, showing us how genuine revival begins when we respond to God's word with reverence and action.
In Haggai 1:12-15, we see a dramatic shift from the previous week's message. Where God had confronted His people for misplaced priorities, now we witness their response. The leaders Zerubbabel and Joshua, along with all the remnant of the people, "obeyed the voice of the Lord their God."
This obedience wasn't negotiated or conditional. When God called them out for caring more about their own houses while His temple lay in ruins, they didn't make excuses or try to bargain. They simply obeyed.
God honors obedience because He is sovereign. This means He is God and we are not. He has all authority and power over everything in our lives. Because of His sovereignty and holiness, He is worthy of our obedience without question.
For us today, obedience looks like returning to faithfulness in worship and God's Word. It means aligning our church ministries with Scripture rather than comfort and tradition. It's about saying yes to God and no to the world.
When the people obeyed, God responded with a powerful promise: "I am with you, declares the Lord." This divine presence comes to those who fear Him properly.
Fearing God isn't about being scared of Him. It's about having reverence, respect, and awe for who He is. Just as children might have a healthy fear of their parents - not terror, but respect - we should approach God with reverence.
Our world today says respect must be earned, but God's holiness demands our reverence simply because of who He is. He loved us before we ever loved Him. He died for us while we were still sinners. His position as sovereign God requires our respect.
Our worship should tremble before His glory, not just cater to our preferences. We should bow before Him before we stand before anyone else. We cannot rightfully minister to our community, families, or neighbors if we don't first stand in awe before Almighty God.
When we rightly fear God, His presence becomes richly felt in our lives. This reverence isn't fear of punishment - it's wonder at God's greatness.
The passage tells us that "the Lord stirred up the spirit" of the leaders and all the people, and they came and worked on the house of the Lord. This reveals a crucial truth: God doesn't just command us to work - He gives us the will and power to do it.
Human effort alone cannot rebuild what only God can revive. If we build in our own strength, we labor in vain. True renewal happens when God's Spirit stirs our hearts and moves us closer to Him.
We need to pray for the Holy Spirit to awaken passion and courage within us, to re-engage in ministry with renewed unity and purpose that depends on God's strength, not our own strategies or thinking.
True revival isn't about stirring up emotions - it's about being stirred in the spirit. Emotions are fleeting and change with circumstances, but spiritual stirring leads to lasting transformation.
Revival comes through submission, not emotion. As Scripture says, "When my people who are called by my name will humble themselves and pray and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear and I will heal their land."
Like tending a campfire, we must continually add fuel to our spiritual lives. We can't become complacent and let ourselves grow cold as we step away from the source. We must collect spiritual "firewood" and allow God's Spirit to blow on our fire, keeping it ready to be stirred up to make a difference in our world.
Churches don't enter decline overnight - it's a slow drift where hearts grow comfortable and priorities shift from mission to maintenance. But when God stirs His people through His Word and Spirit, everything can change.
We move from excuses to obedience, from routine to reverence. The presence of God returns, and that's what truly transforms - not music, programs, or greetings, but God's presence moving and stirring in our hearts.
This week, examine your own response to God's voice. Are you living in obedience to what He's already shown you in His Word? Are you approaching Him with the reverence He deserves, or have you become too casual in your relationship with the Almighty?
Challenge yourself to move beyond emotional responses to spiritual submission. Stop making excuses and start moving in obedience. Allow God's Spirit to stir your heart toward deeper worship, faithful service, and genuine reverence.
Ask yourself these questions:
Remember, when God's people rightly respond to His Word with obedience, reverence, and spiritual openness, He promises to be with us and to stir our hearts for His work. The same God who restored the temple through His people in Haggai's time is ready to bring revival to our hearts and communities today.