Worthy Brief - July 14, 2026
Worthy Brief - July 14, 2026
The altar is calling your heart to honesty!
Matthew 5:23-24 Therefore if you bring your gift to the altar, and there remember that your brother has something against you, 24 leave your gift there before the altar, and go your way. First be reconciled to your brother, and then come and offer your gift. (NKJV)
Yeshua (Jesus) has just exposed the root beneath murder. "You shall not murder" was never aimed only at the hand that sheds blood, but also at the heart that carries anger, contempt, and accusation. Now He takes the matter one step deeper. He brings us to the altar.
The Hebrew word for altar is mizbeach (מִזְבֵּחַ). The word for offering, korban (קָרְבָּן), comes from the root karov (קָרַב), meaning "to draw near." Every sacrifice at the altar was a means of approach to the God who dwells among His people. Yeshua is not devaluing the altar — He is exposing what nearness to God requires: you cannot draw near to the Father while carrying unresolved issues with your brother.
Think about it. The altar was holy ground — yet Yeshua says that if you are bringing your gift and remember your brother has something against you, leave the gift there, go first, be reconciled, and then return to offer it. The King does not want worship to become an escape from reconciliation.
This is the heart of Torah. The commandments were never meant to produce people who look holy at the altar while leaving broken relationships behind them. Yeshua is not diminishing worship; He is purifying it. Worship offered to God cannot be separated from how we treat those made in His image.
Notice the order: "First be reconciled to your brother, and then come and offer your gift." First. That word searches the heart. Reconciliation is not optional, and it does not wait until the pressure passes. In the Kingdom, reconciliation is altar business.
This does not mean every relationship can be fully restored — some situations require wisdom, boundaries, and time, and Yeshua is not commanding foolish trust where there has been abuse. But the disciple may not knowingly carry unresolved offense while pretending nothing is wrong before God.
The prophets repeatedly rebuked worship detached from justice and mercy — Isaiah against hands lifted in prayer while injustice remained (Isaiah 1:15-17), Micah reminding Israel that the Lord requires justice, mercy, and humility (Micah 6:6-8). Yeshua continues that prophetic understanding: do not bring Me a gift while refusing the repair I have placed before you.
Notice also: Yeshua says "your brother has something against you" — not merely that you have something against your brother. The disciple is called not only to release his own offenses, but to consider where he may have wounded another.
When that memory surfaces at the altar, do not bury it under a song or religious activity — do not call worship obedience when the King is calling for reconciliation. Leave the gift. Go. Make it right where you can. Then come and offer.
This is not a rejection of the gift — it remains at the altar, though the heart bringing it must align with the Kingdom. A divided heart cannot offer whole worship; the Lord wants the surrender in your heart, not merely the gift in your hands.
The Hebrew word shalom (שָׁלוֹם) means far more than the absence of conflict — wholeness, restoration, things set right. Yeshua is calling us to pursue shalom (שָׁלוֹם), not superficial peace. He is calling us into the restoring work of the Kingdom itself. And He does not command what He has not already embodied. Yeshua Himself is the greater altar, the greater offering, and the Prince of Peace. He made peace through His cross, came toward us, bore the cost, and opened the way of reconciliation. The reconciled become reconcilers.
Obedience is not measured by another's response, but by whether your heart obeyed the King. You cannot force repentance in another or make every relationship whole. But you can refuse pride, humble yourself, and pursue peace as far as obedience allows.
Leave the gift. Go. First be reconciled. Then come and offer. The order matters because the heart matters. Worship and reconciliation are not enemies. They belong together.
Tthe King is drawing you closer, not pushing you away — He is purifying your worship so your offering can be whole. The altar has become the very place where your heart finds freedom to be fully known and fully loved. Leave the gift there with confidence; your heart matters to the King, and He is worth the trip. Go in humility and truth, carrying shalom (שָׁלוֹם) as far as obedience can take you. Then return with clean hands, a softened heart, and worship that carries the fragrance of reconciliation.
Your family in the Lord with much agape love,
George & Baht Rivka (Baltimore, MD)
Editor's Note: Come with us this October as we lead an unforgettable tour across Israel! - https://worthyisraeltours.com/ Walk through the land of the Bible, experience its history and prophetic significance, and see Scripture come alive. Space is limited, so be sure to sign up before the trip fills up!
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