“If one bear holy flesh in the skirt of his garment, and with his skirt do touch bread, or pottage, or wine, or oil, or any meat, shall it be holy? And the priests answered and said, No. Then said Haggai, If one that is unclean by a dead body touch any of these, shall it be unclean? And the priests answered and said, It shall be unclean.” Haggai 2:12–13, KJV.
The book of Haggai is written to the Jewish people who had finally returned home after seventy years of Babylonian exile. They were given the sacred privilege of rebuilding the Temple; the very place where God’s presence would dwell among them once again.
From the outside, everything looked right. The work had resumed, the altar stood, and the people were busy with the Lord’s work.
Yet in love, God paused their progress.
Through Haggai, the Lord asked His priests two simple but searching questions. First, Can touching something holy transfer holiness? The priests answered, “No.” Then, He asked, Can touching something unclean transfer uncleanness? The answer was, “Yes.”
He wanted His people to understand that working on a holy assignment does not automatically heal their heart, just as sacred activity cannot replace personal consecration. God was not rejecting His people; He was protecting them from unresolved sin or hidden issues.
The work of rebuilding the Temple was good, but God desired something deeper first: a people made clean from the inside out.
Their labor and offerings were not accepted, not because God was displeased with them, but because He loved them too much to allow unhealed places to follow them into holy spaces.
God Values You
Today, many of us find ourselves rebuilding—ministries, families, dreams, callings. And while God values the work, He values you more. Sometimes we stay busy because it feels safer than being honest. Or, we may be serving faithfully while quietly carrying pain, bitterness, or unresolved sin.
But, God cares more about the condition of your heart than the success of your assignment. He is not asking for perfection, He is inviting surrender.
As we near the end of this year, this is a tender and holy moment to pause; not in fear, but in trust. Let us invite God to search us with compassion.
Heart-Searching Questions
- Am I relying on ministry, service, or worship to cover what God is gently asking me to confront?
- Have I resumed spiritual activity without allowing God to cleanse my heart?
- What “dead thing” is God asking me to release so I can walk fully in life?
A Word of Hope
Just a few verses later, God speaks these beautiful words:
“From this day will I bless you,” Haggai 2:19.
The moment their hearts were realigned with His, blessing followed. And isn’t that beautiful? God would rather have your heart than your performance. He desires more than your work, He desires your presence.
