This is what the Lord Almighty says: “These people say, ‘The time has not yet come to rebuild the Lord’s house.
Haggai 1:2
After their return from exile, God's people had delayed building God's temple for 18 years! While they lived in houses with panelled walls, God's house had a foundation and no walls. And their excuse, was that the time had not yet come to rebuild. They knew it was God’s will for them to rebuild the temple.
As Matthew Henry points out, “they didn’t say that they would not build a temple, but, not yet.”* And in this way they deceived themselves and lulled themselves into disobedience. I often say to my children, delayed obedience is disobedience, and I believe that applies to these verses.
This sin isn’t unique to the Jews that lived 2,400 years ago though, is it? We still do this today, don’t we? Most people don’t say that they'll never get saved; just not right now. Christians rarely decide that they'll never get baptized, but they do tell themselves that they just aren’t ready yet. They need to mature more first. Or they would be too nervous to do it right now, maybe later. And we don’t say that we'll never lead a single person to Jesus, or that we'll never share the gospel with our family member or friend or neighbor or co-worker. We don’t do that. We just convince ourselves that now isn’t the right time. Maybe someday soon.
Is there anything you know you ought to do, anything that God has commanded you to do, that you're putting off? Is there anything you are saying “not yet” to or “maybe one day” to or “when the time is right” to? Delayed obedience is disobedience. Don’t deceive yourself! If God has commanded it, then you should obey it... now. Look for opportunities to obey, not reasons to delay.
*Matthew Henry and Thomas Scott, Matthew Henry’s Concise Commentary (Oak Harbor, WA: Logos Research Systems, 1997), Hag 1:1.
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