Preamble:
Before Jesus speaks of His Father’s house, Leviticus speaks of a house under examination. Before Luke shows us a child growing in wisdom, Leviticus shows us walls that must be inspected. Before favor is named, something hidden must be faced.
That is a severe mercy for an age like ours. We know how to occupy houses, decorate houses, defend houses, market houses, and boast about houses, but we do not always know how to examine them. We know how to measure attendance, protect appearances, preserve programs, and keep the machinery moving. We know how to ask whether the room is full, whether the money is steady, whether the sound is right, whether the public face remains intact.
Scripture asks a more dangerous question:
what is living in the walls?
What has settled beneath the plaster?
What has spread in the dark while respectable people kept calling the structure sound? And what is this house quietly shaping in the souls of those who live inside it?
That question does not stop at the church door. It reaches into homes, neighborhoods, cities, and nations that speak of strength while trembling underneath. We are living in a time when leaders promise security and peoples inherit anxiety, when the language of peace is often spoken over fractures that have never truly been healed, when the world is learning again that silence is not the same as reconciliation and restraint is not yet wholeness. A house may look calm from the street and still be carrying trouble in the walls. A people may speak proudly of order and still be living with fear just beneath the paint.
So the Spirit places these two witnesses beside each other. In Leviticus, a house is emptied, inspected, shut up, scraped, and repaired. In Luke, Jesus is found in the Temple, listening, asking, answering, and naming the place where He must be. One text shows a house being tested. The other shows what a true house of God is meant to produce: wisdom, obedience, reverence, and favor. One text deals with what must be uncovered. The other reveals what holiness can raise up when a house is rightly ordered.
So the question before us is not only, Are we in the house? The question is,
What kind of house have we become?