Mar 1, 2007
Tony Mazon

Roommates

When I moved to Brentwood to be a part of Innerface, a generous family in our church opened up their home to me. It was a new transition for me, being out on my own as it were. I had to adjust, as did the family. Dinner was at a certain time, and if I missed that time for whatever reason, I was on my own. I was used to doing laundry whenever I needed to, and now I had to squeeze it in when no one was home or try and get my clothes in before someone else in the house did. The bathroom that I use is the public house bathroom, so I have to keep it “user friendly” in case of visitors. I heard conversations that visitors didn’t hear.

The family is much more personal with me than they are with even some of their friends. I see all sides of the family: the good, the bad, and everything in between. I know who these people are because I live with them. I have access to things in the home that not everyone does. I can get into the fridge without asking. I can even store my own personal items in the fridge and pantry. I became the family roommate.

I heard Pastor Matt say in a recent altar call, “If you want to go to heaven, you have to ask Jesus to come and live in your heart.” This is very true, and that phrase got me thinking about roommates. When people ask Jesus to come into their lives, they are in essence asking Him to move in with them, not unlike a roommate.

God is always at work in us. We must allow Him to “move in” to our lives. We must give him access to even the very private things in our lives. The deepest, darkest areas that visitors don’t have access to, must be accessible by Him. We have to open ourselves to Him and let Him work His will in us. He must literally “live” with us.

Here I am! I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears my voice and opens the door, I will come in and eat with him, and he with me.
Revelation 3.20

How sad would it be if the day I moved into the family’s home, they said to me, “Oh, we were just kidding. You can’t live here?” and they kicked me out? How would that make me feel? Probably betrayed and abandoned. The sad part is, many people do this to Jesus. They ask Him to move in, and then kick Him out the very next day. They do this by the way that they live. They respond to a moving altar call and ask Jesus to come in and forgive them and live inside of them, but the very next day they go back to the way they used to live. When a roommate moves in, things change. But if we ask Jesus to come in and we aren’t changed…then we have only asked him to spend the night. The last time I checked, lives were changed when Jesus moved in.

“Revival is an encounter with God the Holy One, disclosed and made known. Revival removes the veil and makes things clear. Revival is stark and absolute, uncovering the nature of man and revealing the glory of God. In the end, it boils down to this: Do we really want God to live in our midst?” – Dr. Michael L Brown

We must be prepared for God to move in. I encourage you today, don’t ask Jesus to move in, and make Him live somewhere else.

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