
One of the things I’ve learned about homeownership is that you constantly have to maintain it to keep it from falling into disrepair. It’s often little things, but they pile up quickly if they’re not taken care of. I’ve even seen this in a new home. I knew someone who was going to buy a house. It was almost ten years old, but had never been lived in because the couple divorced before completion. They never could agree to sell it. When they finally did, there were so many problems, my friends walked away. On the other hand, Saltford Manor in England is considered to be the oldest continuously occupied house in the country. It was built around 1150. Because it has been maintained, it is still standing to this day.
In 1 Kings 18, Elijah challenged the profits of Baal to a duel on top of Mount Carmel. He brought out two bulls and told the other prophets to choose one, build an altar, sacrifice the bull and pray for Baal to send fire for the sacrifice, then he would do the same thing and pray to God. He told the people to quit wavering between two opinions. Either God is God or some other deity is. The prophets of Baal prayed and chanted for hours to no avail. Then verse 30 says, “Then Elijah called to the people, ‘Come over here!’ They all crowded around him as he repaired the altar of the Lord that had been torn down” (NLT). I couldn’t help but notice the altar had fallen into disrepair and been torn down. The rocks were there, but it needed to be rebuilt. I started thinking about how we often neglect the altar of God in our own life because of busyness and other priorities. A stone or two could be missing or the whole altar could be lying in disrepair. It’s time we rebuilt it.
Hebrews 2:1,3 says, “Therefore we must pay much closer attention to what we have heard, lest we drift away from it. How shall we escape if we neglect such a great salvation? It was declared at first by the Lord, and it was attested to us by those who heard” (ESV). We can’t afford to neglect so great a salvation from God that we have received. We need to get back to paying attention to what we have been taught, get back involved in church, renew our fellowship with other believers and return to our first love. When this altar falls into disrepair, it affects the rest of our life. We can spend a lot of time trying to find answers or even sacrificing the wrong things, but it won’t get us anywhere until we repair the altar to God in our life. Then God will answer and show up like He did for Elijah. It’s time to quit waving and put God back in His place in our life.
Photo by Andrew Ridley on Unsplash


