Back when I was in college, I heard a prof criticize the song "The King is Coming" because the words don't fit any known eschatological scheme. While it's true that the song doesn't describe the Second Coming, as author Bill Gaither intended, it does describe what happens every Lord's Day when God gathers His people together in worship and communion.
At the invocation, God rends the normal bounds of our three-dimensional reality, Heaven and Earth interface, and we find ourselves upon the holy mountain in the presence of the angelic host and the King of kings and Lord of lords. The King has come to His people to receive their worship, to exhort them to the work of His kingdom and to bestow His blessing upon them.
Every Sabbath, as we approach His sanctuary, our hearts should resonate with the exciting truth that THE KING IS COMING.
At the invocation, God rends the normal bounds of our three-dimensional reality, Heaven and Earth interface, and we find ourselves upon the holy mountain in the presence of the angelic host and the King of kings and Lord of lords. The King has come to His people to receive their worship, to exhort them to the work of His kingdom and to bestow His blessing upon them.
Every Sabbath, as we approach His sanctuary, our hearts should resonate with the exciting truth that THE KING IS COMING.
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