Read Mark 11:15–19
ALSO IN SCRIPTURE
“‘This is what the Lord says: Be fair-minded and just. Do what is right. Help those who have been robbed. Rescue them from their oppressors. Quit your evil deeds! Do not mistreat foreigners, orphans, and widows. Stop murdering the innocent!’” (Jeremiah 22:3 NLT)
Altars reveal what we worship. Some are obvious—raised platforms of stone and flame. Others are quieter, constructed in systems, reputations, loyalties, and assumptions. Lent is a season of holy examination. It calls us to look closely at what we have built, what we defend, and what we trust. In this series, we conduct an audit—not of budgets or buildings, but of allegiances. Lent strips away every false altar until only Christ remains.

Part 6: The Altar of Preservation. Scripture often speaks about protecting the vulnerable. It is language most of us recognize immediately. When we hear the word, certain images rise naturally in our minds—the poor, the widow, the orphan, the foreigner. These are the people the prophets name again and again as deserving protection and care.
And rightly so. The Scriptures are unmistakably clear that the people of God are judged by how they treat those who live without protection in society.
Yet the word vulnerable is broader than we sometimes assume.
In the biblical imagination, vulnerability is not only about poverty. It is about power.
The vulnerable are those who lack protection within a system. Those whose voices are easily ignored. Those whose suffering is inconvenient. Those whose stories threaten the stability of what already exists.
In every age, the vulnerable include the ones whose truth is easiest to dismiss.
Jeremiah spoke into a society where the temple stood at the center of national life. It was the heart of worship, but also the heart of the economy. Pilgrims traveled from across the region to Jerusalem. Roman coins bearing the emperor’s image could not be used in the temple treasury, so money changers exchanged them. Animals for sacrifice were sold for those who had traveled far. The temple complex functioned not only as a sanctuary but as a marketplace, a treasury, and a gathering place for the whole community.
Commerce itself was not the problem. Jesus undoubtedly participated in it throughout his life.
What troubled the prophets—and later Jesus—was what happens when a sacred system begins to protect itself more than it protects the people God commands it to defend.
Jeremiah speaks plainly: rescue the oppressed, help those who have been robbed, refuse to exploit the powerless. These commands were not abstract ideals. They were the measure of whether the people truly honored God.
Centuries later, Jesus enters the temple courts and overturns tables. To many readers this scene feels like sudden anger, but it is actually a continuation of the same prophetic warning Jeremiah delivered generations earlier.
“You have turned it into a den of robbers.”
A den of robbers is not where robbery happens. It is where robbers hide.
Jesus’ accusation cuts to the heart of the matter. The temple—the very place meant to embody justice and mercy—had become a refuge for those who exploited others. The institution that should have protected the vulnerable was now protecting the system itself.
This is the altar of preservation.
Institutions often begin with holy purpose. Communities gather to worship, to serve, to care for one another, to embody the justice of God in the world. But over time something subtle can shift. The mission that created the institution becomes secondary to the survival of the institution itself.
Preservation quietly becomes the highest good.
Once that happens, difficult questions feel dangerous. Voices that challenge the system are treated as threats. The vulnerable become problems to manage rather than people to defend. Stability is valued more than justice.
And when preservation becomes sacred, the altar has already been built.
Jesus’ action in the temple was not simply about overturned tables. It was about a warning that echoes through every generation of God’s people: a religious system can continue to look holy long after it has forgotten what holiness requires.
The prophets were clear. Worship that ignores injustice is not worship at all.
The altar audit asks a hard question during Lent: What are we truly protecting?
The mission of God—or the systems we built along the way?
THOUGHT OF THE DAY
When preserving the system becomes more important than protecting the vulnerable, the altar has already shifted.PRAYER
God of justice and mercy, examine the altars we have built and the systems we defend. Give us courage to protect those without power, wisdom to recognize when preservation has replaced faithfulness, and humility to follow Christ wherever truth leads. Amen.








