Diane Bahler is a contributing writer and her articles do not necessarly reflect "Or Tzion's" view. 
We feature her articles to give another voice opportunity to speak of her relationship to Israel and 
Israel's Messiah and King.





Happy Housecleaning: Part I
by Diane Bahler <DBahler5@aol.com>
It's housecleaning season. Hanukkah began December 10 and celebrates the clename="GENERATOR" content="Mozilla/4.76 [en] (Windows NT 5.0; U) [Netscape]">name="Author" content="Diane Bahler, contributing author">ansing and rededication of the Temple following the liberation of Jerusalem from Greek Rule in 165 BCE. It seems to me that it is a good time to begin doing a little cleansing of the current temple, which has become polluted with all sorts of false mindsets and confusion. 

Have you ever wondered why history seems to repeat itself? I think it is partly because the Lord is a circular thinker. We think of history as moving from point A to point B in a linear fashion but the Lord is not a linear God. He is the Alpha and the Omega, the Beginning and the End. The end and the beginning meet in a full circle. His perspective is from every perspective but we're only able to comprehend one level at a time usually. That is why Scripture is like poetry. It can be read on a very basic, very concrete level or it can be read on a very high level with multiple interpretations, applications and implications.

Such is our life. As a child we learn very basic, concrete lessons that we learn again as adults on a more complex level. For example, the lesson of sharing at the age of three becomes more complex as we become aware of the needs of others in the world and learn to share our blessings. When we marry we learn new lessons in sharing our lives. By the time we reach middle age, hopefully we have begun to learn to share our wisdom and knowledge and to give back to the world in less tangible ways. The lesson of sharing builds on itself and becomes increasingly complex, abstract and COMPLETE. The same principle applies to our individual spiritual life and maturity.
Paul said,  "When I was a child, I talked like a child, I thought like a child, I reasoned like a child. When I became a man, I put childish ways behind me. (1 Cor. 13: 11) It is time for the Bride to put childish mindsets away and to begin to think like an adult. The Lord is not interested in marrying a child. He wants a helpmate that is a true match for Him - a wife of full stature. In the past we have known the Lord as father, friend and brother but now it is time to know Him as husband and lover. This requires maturity.

Well, history is the record of the corporate lessons in maturing of the Body of Christ. From Adam and Eve to the present day we have been learning essentially the same lessons over and over through the historical events of the world on progressively more mature and complete levels. We are now entering into the fullness of time when the Bride will become "perfect" and enter into the age of MATURITY. She no longer has to traverse the circle of history but comes "full circle", bringing the lessons of history to complete fruition and birthing Kingdom Truth into the earth in fullness. 

So let's look at the history of Hanukkah with an eye to gain maturity from its lessons so that we are not doomed to go around this particular circle again and again. 

Antiochus Epiphanes, a harsh, cruel and ruthless man, had an ambition to have a one world power in which he was the king of a Hellenistic world. In fact, Antiochus believed he was "the visible god." As part of his attempt to rule the world, Antiochus signed a peace treaty with a brother of the high priest of Israel. Joshua (who later changed his name to the Greek name Jason) supposedly offered Antiochus the power to rule over Israel in return for protecting Israel.  What he really "sold" Israel for was the opportunity for him to become high priest. In other words, POWER. He built a gymnasium in Jerusalem dedicated to Greek athletics which would become a recruitment center where citizens of the world and Israel could sign up to become citizens of Antioch in significant alliance with the Greek world government. 

Does any of this sound familiar yet? Well, we'll get into the correlation with today when we start cleaning house.

Antiochus was making progress on building his world empire when his armies were successful in conquering the Egyptian kingdom south of Israel. He became infuriated when he received a message from Caesar in Rome giving him the ultimatum of giving up Egypt or being attacked by Rome. Antiochus tried to stall and negotiate out of it but was forced to make a decision when the messenger took out a sword and drew a circle with it around him. Antiochus was told:  "You may not leave the circle until you give your answer back to Caesar." Infuriated at having to back down Antiochus marched up from Egypt through Israel and found that the people in Jerusalem were fighting over his kingdom. Having received an incorrect message, they thought he was dead in Egypt.

Antiochus could have used a little training in anger management. He was so mad that he ordered his lead commander to destroy Jerusalem, killing thousands of Jews and taking many of them into slavery. They hacked and knocked over the porticoes in the Temple and robbed many of the Temple vessels. He marched into the Temple and built a statue in the outer courtyard to the Greek god Zeus.  The statue had a face that looked amazingly like Antiochus. Antiochus sacrificed a pig to the statue and sprinkled the blood in the Holy of Holies. He poured its broth on the Holy Scrolls and then cut them to pieces and burned them. Next he ordered his men to make the entire Temple a shrine to Zeus.

To understate it, Antiochus broke his treaty with Israel in which he had promised to protect her. He instituted a new law abolishing all the religious practices of Israel. Whole families would be killed if a Torah scroll was found in the house or if they were caught eating "Kosher". Many apostate priests accepted this new law and Israel became poisoned as it spread from town to town. 

It was time for a Braveheart. Enter Mattathias, an old man in priestly garments from a nowhere town called Modi'in. One of Antiochus's commanders set up a statue of Zeus in Modi'in and thought that if he chose a leader that the people respected to be the first to sacrifice to it that all the people would follow. He picked the wrong old man. Even though the commander attempted to bribe him with the promise of being rewarded with great riches and authority, Mattathias replied that he and his family and brothers would not depart from the law of Moses even if the whole world went along with the new law. Out of the crowd, a counterfeit, an apostate priest, stepped up to the altar to offer the pig for sacri- fice. Mattathias knew that if the priest was successful and the people went along with it that they would lose the Torah and they would all fall away from the law.  Holy anger rose up in Mattathias as he drew his sword and slew the false priest and the commander. At the same time his sons rose up against the troop of men and killed them all.

Mattathias, his sons and supporters headed for the hills and began a guerrilla war against the Greeks and their Jewish allies. Jewish leaders were hostile to Matta- thias' movement and the community was so far into the process of assimilation that they were ambivalent about the loss of their faith. It took three years for them to gain enough support to be a serious threat and Mattathias died of old age passing on his leadership to his son Judah the Maccabee. Judah lead his troops against the troops of Antiochus and finally liberated Jerusalem on Kislev 25, 165 BCE on the third anniversary of its desecration by Antiochus. 

Judah reclaimed the Temple and had it cleansed and rededicated. It is said they could only find enough oil to light the Temple menorah for one day and it would take eight days to prepare new oil. The oil miraculously burned for eight days and the light never went out. That is why the Hanukkah candles are lit for eight days.

History has brought us back around to the lessons of Hanukkah. In the spirit of the festival I am going to send out a series of articles over the next few days that I hope will begin to cleanse some of our faulty mindsets and re-light the lamp with some fresh oil. 

In the next installment we'll look at how the story of Hanukkah is the story of where we are today.

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