This Train is Bound for Glory! – Charles Gardner ISRAEL TODAY
This Train is Bound for Glory!
Wednesday, October 19, 2016 |  Charles Gardner  ISRAEL TODAY
Want more news from Israel?I was thinking about the Feast of Tabernacles when I booked my train ticket to London and was rather tickled by the Virgin Trains slogan âBe bound for gloryâ, obviously based on the traditional gospel hit This Train. If it means Virgin boss Richard Branson is spreading the good news, whoâs complaining?
I was making a pilgrimage to see my mum, but I was also mindful of Sukkot, one of three festivals for which the ancient Israelites were required to visit Jerusalem (Leviticus 23) and which, in the millennial reign of Messiah, every nation will be required to make (Zechariah 14.16). I was particularly thinking about pilgrimage at the time because of reports of a downturn in Israel tour bookings from the UK due to the poundâs drop in value against the dollar.
Many Christians I have known over the years have taken the view: âGod can meet me here, where I am. Why should I go over there where God is apparently pouring out his Spirit in a special way?â Yet there is a great emphasis in the Bible on places that are made special by Godâs extraordinary presence. Jerusalem is obviously the best earthly example. Even atheist TV documentary maker Simon Reeve, on arriving in the city, said it took his breath away. It did that for this journalist too and I can well understand the exiled psalmistâs feelings as he considered Jerusalem his âhighest joyâ (Psalm 137.6).
By the way, UNESCOâs denial of Jewish ties to what another psalm referred to as âthe joy of the whole earthâ (Psalm 48.2) would be laughable were it not so tragic. But my âtrain of thoughtâ is getting off track.
Even the Wise Men of the nativity travelled some 1,000 miles to worship the Christ-child. The pioneers of the modern-day Pentecostal movement travelled halfway round the world back in 1906 to catch something of what God was doing at Azusa Street, Los Angeles. And I regularly took a 210-mile round trip for evening services in Sunderland when fresh stirrings of the Holy Spirit broke out there in 1994.
There is no doubt that tours of the Holy Land bring the Bible to life and, though of course I understand that economic, security and other considerations will adversely affect bookings, there is clearly a need for a sharper focus on the important nature of such pilgrimage, which should be seen as a further expression of our Christian journey, of reaching deeper into Godâs wells of salvation and unearthing the treasures of His precious land.
In celebrating Godâs bountiful harvest and, in building temporary shelters, we are reminded how He provided for his people in the desert and of how we are only temporary sojourners here on earth, and that our real destiny is âthe city that is to comeâ (Hebrews 13.14). And we remember how Yeshua came to âtabernacleâ with us (John 1.14).
As with all discipleship, there is sacrifice â in terms of cost and effort â in pilgrimage. And we should surely take heed of Solomonâs wisdom, that âwhoever watches the wind will not plant; whoever looks at the clouds will not reap.â (Ecclesiastes 11.4) In other words, donât wait until all the conditions are in perfect alignment. If pilgrimage is a passport to meet with God in a deeper way, it will surely be well worth it. Be bound for glory!Â
Charles Gardner is author of Israel the Chosen, available from Amazon, and Peace in Jerusalem, available from olivepresspublisher.com
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