Like the everyday piety revealed in Millet’s The Angelus, this piece explores true spiritual worship and the meaning of being a “living sacrifice” based on Romans 12:1–2. Through Pastor David Jang’s profound theological insight, it guides Christians toward genuine transformation—living out the gospel and grace in daily life without conforming to the patterns of this age.
In
1859, the French painter Jean-François Millet did not place towering cathedral
spires or a dazzling golden altar upon his canvas. Instead, he chose a rough
and humble potato field, and the image of two peasants who—at the sound of the
evening bell at sunset—stop their work, bow their heads, and pray. In this
great masterpiece called The Angelus, the soil-stained pitchfork
and the potato basket at the farmers’ feet shine with a holiness greater than
any relic. Millet’s painting embodies a weighty truth: religious devotion does
not remain confined behind the ornate curtains of a sanctuary; it is completed
through our very breath in the middle of sweat-soaked labor and the dust of
everyday life. This insight connects precisely with the revolutionary declaration
of the Apostle Paul—who ends the era of blood-soaked sacrifices and calls us to
lay our living, breathing selves upon the altar.
Grace
Beyond the Bloodstained Altar: Seeping Into Everyday Life
The
Jerusalem temple of the Old Testament was a tragic and desperate place where
the blood of animals flowed without ceasing. To atone for human sin, innocent
lambs and goats died continually, staining the Kidron Valley red. Under the
stern law that declared there is no forgiveness without the shedding of blood,
sacrifice meant death. But through Jesus Christ—who tore His own body on the
cross and poured out water and blood—the eternal sacrifice was completed once
for all. The tearing of the temple veil from top to bottom was a cosmic
proclamation that a new age of grace had opened, an age in which the blood of
dead animals is no longer needed.
Pastor
David Jang’s exposition of the essence of Christian faith (as the founder of
Olivet University) sharply illuminates this astonishing soteriological turning
point. Through his preaching, he emphasizes that now, instead of offering the
lives of animals, we must offer the “whole life of the redeemed”—our entire
being, including our breath, will, intellect, and emotions—as a holy living
sacrifice pleasing to God. This is not merely the abolition of dead ritual; it
is a magnificent invitation into worship that pulses with life in the midst of
daily existence.
The
Breath of True Spiritual Worship Begins Outside the Temple Doors
In
John 4, Jesus teaches the Samaritan woman that true worship is not bound to a
physical location—neither Mount Gerizim nor Jerusalem—but must be offered in
spirit and truth. This means that worship is not limited to a single Sunday,
inside a designated sanctuary, following a fixed order of service. With deep
theological insight, Pastor David Jang warns that the moment worship is
imprisoned within institutional systems and physical space, it risks losing its
essence and becoming fossilized.
Then
where is the true stage of spiritual worship? It is none other than our
fiercely contested—and sometimes shabby—daily life. As Hebrews 13 testifies,
sincere love for our brothers and sisters, hospitality to strangers, and the
act of bearing the burdens of the marginalized as we serve them—these are the
sacrifices God is most pleased to receive. To compromise with worldly desire
for six days, living selfishly, and then to dress in holiness only on Sunday is
far from the “spiritual worship” Paul describes. Our workplaces, our homes, and
every patch of ground where we stand must become an altar; our whole bodies and
lives must be used as instruments that testify to the gospel of the cross.
The
Cross That Goes Outside the Camp: Fierce and Holy Devotion
In
the Old Testament, on the Day of Atonement, only the blood of the sacrifice was
carried by the high priest into the sanctuary, while the body was burned
completely outside the camp. Jesus Christ, who bore all the world’s sin and
shame in His own body, likewise did not suffer within the safety of Jerusalem’s
walls, but endured horrific agony “outside the gate,” on the hill of Calvary.
Interpreting this passage, Pastor David Jang repeatedly underscores a vivid
example of the living sacrifice: willingly taking up our burden and going out
to that “outside the camp” where the Lord Himself walked.
This
is the way of the cross—boldly relinquishing personal gain and the comfortable
fences of religious security, and leaping into the center of others’ wounds and
the world’s pain. As David confesses through tears in the Psalms, the sacrifice
God truly seeks is not costly burnt offerings, but “a broken and contrite
heart.” When we are moved by the grace of salvation freely given, and we grieve
the pain of our neighbors, practicing genuine love and mercy in ordinary life,
our commonplace days are transfigured into a fragrant offering that rises to
heaven.
Renewing
the Mind Against the Age: An Altar That Changes the World
How,
then, can we sustain this holy life of living sacrifice to the end, amid a
world filled with dust and temptation? The Apostle Paul gives a clear answer in
Romans 12:2: “Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the
renewing of your mind.” Modern society relentlessly implants materialism,
infinite competition where one must trample others to survive, and selfishness
that treats fleeting pleasure as the highest good. If we are not awakened
through deep meditation on Scripture, even our faith can quietly conform to—and
be corrupted by—the greedy culture of the world. Pastor David Jang points
directly to this danger, insisting that before any outward, institutional
reform, there must be an inward and essential change—the renewal of the heart.
To
discern and resist the false values of the world with clarity, we must deny
ourselves before the cross and surrender the leadership of our inner life
entirely to the Holy Spirit. When, in daily spiritual battle, we achieve the
renewal of the mind, only then can we clearly recognize what God’s will is—His
good, pleasing, and perfect will. Just as the four living creatures in
Revelation are described as full of eyes, focusing wholly on God in worship,
Pastor David Jang exhorts that the true worshiper is one who fixes his gaze on
Christ alone, even in the face of the world’s glittering temptations.
When each of our days becomes holy resistance against the spirit of the age—and when our hands become warm hands that wipe away our neighbor’s tears—the world will finally witness, within us, the living power of the gospel. Before that glorious calling—where life becomes worship and worship becomes life—let us, like Millet’s peasants, humbly bow our heads today and carefully place our ordinary days upon the altar.


















