They that trust in the LORD shall be as mount Zion,
which cannot be removed, but abideth for ever

Mount Zion, in the Bible, means any mountain with a temple atop it.
In the East, people feel that the highest place is the best place to build a
temple because it is closer to God.
Our
tradition is that St.
Thomas, the doubting
Apostle, was the founder of Christianity in India, and built a church outside Madras on a hill.
The
people regard these mountains as very sacred. People may be seen going up and
down the mountain at any time of the day or night, to worship at the temple.
Even if there are wild animals on the mountain, the people are not afraid
because they believe they will not be harmed on the holy mountain.
In
the summer, people voluntarily carry water up the mountain to water the trees
and grass. Anyone who is hungry is free to eat of the fruit of any of the trees
on this mountain, but no one may destroy or deface anything there; not even a
stone is moved or touched in an area fifty feet from the base of the mountain,
to the very top.
I
remember once when the British wanted to build a railroad which would destroy
part of one of these holy mountains, that the people became desperate. God's
holy mountain must not be touched. When the day came for the machinery to move
the earth of the mountain, all the people came, even women with little babies
in their arms, and children, and laid down in front of the earth-moving
equipment. They would rather lay
down their lives than to see the sacred mountain defaced. These people believed
that God was in the mountain.
Let
us look for a moment at the first verse of Psalm 121, "I will lift up mine
eyes unto the hills, from whence cometh my help." I do not believe this
translation is quite correct, for I am sure the Psalmist knew that God did not
live in the hills, even though the pagans who lived around about the Israelites
often believed this way.
In
the next verse, we read, "My help cometh from the LORD, which made
heaven and earth." Because of this, I feel that the writer of the Psalm
was asking a question in the first verse: "Shall I lift mine eyes unto the
hills ...?" and then in the second verse, answering this with the glad
affirmation: "My he1p cometh from the LORD, which made heaven and
earth."
We
Christians are like Mount Zion, because God lives in us by His Spirit.
[Psalm 125:1 - "They that trust in the LORD shall be as mount Zion, which cannot be removed, but abideth for
ever."] He will never leave us or forsake us. He will provide our needs
and sustain us, because He abides within us.
What
a wonderful blessing this is for believers of today. Those who trust in the
Lord shall be as Mount Zion which cannot be removed and that in this, the Holy
Spirit age, we may worship Him in spirit and in truth. God bless you.
Bishop K.C. Pillai, D.D. |