Friday, August 7, 2015

The Seven Churches of Revelation - Ephesus


Ephesus
1 Unto the angel of the church of Ephesus write; These things saith he that holdeth the seven stars in his right hand, who walketh in the midst of the seven golden candlesticks (Revelation 1:16-20);

The previous verses state that the seven stars are the seven angels which are held in the hand of Jesus and the seven golden candlesticks are the seven churches.  The main problem is that the word translated angel in the verse means messenger, not specifically an angel or spiritual creation of God.  We know that stars were used to tell the story of redemption so the star reference may talk of a messenger bringing the words of Christ to the church.  The candlesticks or lampstands are the churches which should be set up tall to draw all mankind (Luke 11:33).  Notice it says that Jesus is the one who upholds us and gives us strength, not we ourselves.  He is the one who walks amongst all our churches.

Some scholars believe the ‘angels’ are the bishops of the various churches.  This point of view has some validity because over the centuries, bishops (and apostles, prophets, pastors, teachers and evangelists) would come and go, but the only thing keeping everything correct and in accordance with God’s will is the Word of God.  The idea that these ‘angels’ are actual angels has another problem.  Why would Christ chasten various angels for failing to keep the church serving, obeying or loving correctly.  They can hardly be held responsible for our unwillingness or inability to obey God perfectly.

No, the only thing that makes sense is that they are the bishops or leaders of individual churches or groups (denominations) and Christ is warning them to keep their doctrine, execution of His will and hearts pure and upright.  When you consider that no denomination or group or idealists are going to last forever, but God’s Word remains supreme, then this makes perfect sense.  As I said; bishops come and bishops go but the church, the body of Christ will continue.  There will always be a remnant that keeps His Word sacrosanct and will not allow it to be diluted or poisoned by this world’s rapidly changing moral climate.  As He says in Malachi 3:6, “I am the Lord and I change NOT.”  Jesus is the Lord.  He and His Father are one.  Jesus is the Word of God made flesh.  The Word is Eternal.  It is unchangeable.  It is perfect.  It alone brings life. 

What do I mean by all this?  Simply that God leads His church.  He holds the seven original churches in His hands and those seven churches, those seven types, those seven leanings make up the seven types of Christians, churches and religious lifestyles in the world throughout history.  From the time of Adam until now Satan has filled man’s days and nights with trickery, flattery and false promises to help us stumble while God has quietly tugged at the hearts of those precious few to establish His more noble leaders and workers of the truth.  Like the mixed multitudes from Egypt who followed Israel out of bondage and then caused them to waver in their determination to obey the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, there are always those who will consider taking shortcuts and adding bondages to the perfection of God’s Word.  It is to these souls that God speaks His warnings of love and concern.

2 I know thy works, and thy labor, and thy patience, and how thou canst not bear them which are evil: and thou hast tried them which say they are apostles, and are not, and hast found them liars: 3 And hast borne, and hast patience, and for my name's sake hast labored, and hast not fainted.

There are always those who decry and weep over the evil that is in the world today.  They cannot stand the terrible pain and grief caused by those who would bend mankind’s will to their plans or perversions.  We have often heard the saying, “Try the word (of the one speaking) by the word (of God).”  We who serve God know His Word is perfect and entire.  There are always some who would malign this belief and call them fools or deluded dreamers.  This is especially true of those who find themselves in opposition to one or more rules or regulations found in the Word of God.  They will mock it or say it does not say what it patently does say until the whole matter is thoroughly muddy and then declare, “The Word of God is a farce!”  It is against these concerted attacks that God would speak to the beloved children of Ephesus, “Stand fast!”

They have stood the test of time and have continued to hold onto the proper doctrines and rules of God.  They have not allowed those tricky interlopers to taint, dilute or pollute God’s doctrine.  They are the guardians of truth and the bane of false rhetoric.  With tooth or claw, word and deed they continue to battle against all who would dare speak against the promises of God.  They have girded up their loins like men and fought for the scriptural truth.  They have endured.  They are like the fighter raising his hands after the battle, victorious but no longer innocent; still passionate for the truth but having forgotten the center of God’s passion in John 3:16…

“For God so loved…”

4 Nevertheless I have somewhat against thee, because thou hast left thy first love.

We sing songs and quote scriptures devoted to the love and passion of God and we do not realize that we are no longer protecting the Word of God out of love for the lost and a desire to see them saved, but because we are the protectors.  We no longer do it because our love for God and His purposes drives us on, but because we would punish those who would sully or soil this perfect word.  We have strained at a gnat and swallowed a camel and it can choke the life out of us.  Our lives should be moved by statements like, “Love lifted me,” or “His love constrains me,” or “I love you with the love of God.”  We should not be angry and enraged because you who do not know the grace of God have offended us.  Love is greater than the offense.  Love constrained Christ to die for us while we were yet sinners.  Without love we become the offender. 

5 Remember therefore from whence thou art fallen, and repent, and do the first works; or else I will come unto thee quickly, and will remove thy candlestick out of his place, except thou repent.

So, Ephesus was patient and hated liars and those who commit evil.  The response of Jesus seems by many to be excessive.  They are defending the faith and protecting the Word from those who seek to change its meaning.  Why then is Christ so angry?  Because they have forgotten why God came to them in the first place; to love.  We’re not talking about the passionate eros love of strange flesh and one night stands, but the true love, the agape love of God; the love that gives and nurtures rather than bows to lust.  Jesus didn’t march around with signs saying, “God Hates Liars, Thieves and Murderers.”  Where to we think saying, “God Hates Gays” is any more appropriate.  They forgot that even in sin, sinners are capable of embracing the gracious all giving love of God and having their hearts changed and redeemed.  God didn’t change our lifestyle overnight and we should give others the same opportunity to bow to His Word and mercy personally.

6 But this thou hast, that thou hatest the deeds of the Nicolaitans, which I also hate.

The Nicolaitans were a sect that was begun by a deacon named Nicolas.  He might be called the original “It doesn’t take all that” troubler of the New Testament.  A number of scholars state that he taught it was allowed to eat meat offered to idols, swapped wives (holding wives in common as has been put forth in several modern cults), and followed the acts of Baalim who caused Israel to sin by offering loose women and other gods for them to worship.

A sometimes quoted saying in churches is the idea that clean sheets can’t get each other dirty.  In other words, two saved people can’t really sin because they are both holy in Christ.  By this theory you can sleep with your brother’s wife because you are both saved and holy.  This idea is an abomination to God and part of the doctrine of the Nicolaitans.  I’m sure Nicolas wasn’t the first preacher to be loose with his morals but he certainly was one of the first to have his name entered in Christ’s hall of shame.

7 He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto the churches; To him that overcometh will I give to eat of the tree of life, which is in the midst of the paradise of God.

Do you hear this statement of Christ?  To him that overcomes I will allow to eat of the tree of life.  The tree of the knowledge of good and evil was side by side with the tree of life in the Garden of Eden.  God never destroyed the garden but simply placed a true angel at the entrance so no man could enter there.  What we read here is that if we are as Ephesus and carefully watch and guard our hearts and the churches of God for true doctrine and do not allow it to be twisted within the church, and if we continue to treat even our enemies with love, then we will be allowed to eat of the tree of life.  Sadly, with Satan’s help we have managed to fail God badly and choose the knowledge of good and evil over eternal life.  One hopes we will choose more wisely this time.

For a greater study of their struggles read Paul’s letter to the Ephesians.

Monday, July 27, 2015

Honor Thy Spiritual Father and Mother



3 John (Amp)
1 THE ELDERLY elder [of the church addresses this letter] to the beloved (esteemed) Gaius, whom I truly love.

John was the oldest of all the disciples.  Jesus even hinted that he might never die (John 21:20-23) which was not the case but some of his disciples chose to believe that.  He did live longer than any other disciple and according to history died in 100 AD at advanced age.  He was rumored to have been boiled in oil and miraculously spared and was interred on the island of Patmos for many years.  Everyone knew that he was the disciple truly beloved of God. 

Tradition says that when John was very old and near death he was asked what is the most important part of the gospel of Jesus Christ.  He answered that it was love … agape.  Some may seek to picture John as a somewhat effeminate man who merely spouted words of love and tenderness.  In reality John was John ben Zebedee, one of the son’s of thunder.  He and his brother James were hard fighting fishermen who powerfully portrayed how the love and grace of God could change a heart and mold a life.

When Jesus was dying on the cross and his mother wept on the ground below, Jesus looked down at her and said, “Woman, behold your son,” and then looked at John and said, “Behold your mother.”  Of all his disciples, John alone did not flee; when the women went to the tomb and Mary Magdalene discovered the Lord’s body was missing she hurried to tell Peter and John of the miracle.  Of all the disciples who traveled with Jesus, none was more beloved of Christ and more likely to be heeded when he spoke.

2 Beloved, I pray that you may prosper in every way and [that your body] may keep well, even as [I know] your soul keeps well and prospers.

The King James translation of this verse says, “Beloved, I would that you prosper and be in health even as thy soul prospers.”  Many take that to mean that if your soul ‘spirit’ prospers then your body and finances will also.  In the Amplified it appears to be a prayer for health and wealth to keep pace with his already strong faith.  I tend to believe that it is indeed a blessing rather than a specific promise of good health following spiritual maturity.  I have known too many mighty saints of God who suffered ill health and poverty.  Jesus even told the poor and poverty stricken church in Smyrna (Revelation 2:8) that they were rich.  God does not promise that all of His children will be rich and live perfect lives in this world.  We will suffer persecutions and setbacks as we grow; in fact Jesus told the wealthy church of the Laodiceans, “Because thou sayest, I am rich, and increased with goods, and have need of nothing; and knowest not that thou art wretched, and miserable, and poor, and blind, and naked (Revelation 3:17).”  Wealth is no indicator that you are ‘doing it right.’ 

3 In fact, I greatly rejoiced when [some of] the brethren from time to time arrived and spoke [so highly] of the sincerity and fidelity of your life, as indeed you do live in the Truth [the whole Gospel presents]. 4 I have no greater joy than this, to hear that my [spiritual] children are living their lives in the Truth.

Consider this statement of John’s.  He has no greater joy than to hear that his spiritual children live their lives in the truth.  Do you?  Are you blessed to know that those you have poured your heart into are prospering, possibly more than you?  We ought to be comfortable enough with our faith to trust God even when our spiritual children far surpass us.  I recall a story I heard about a man in a shoe store who used to pray for and witness to those who came in.  He ministered to a man who ministered to another man who inspired another man who won another man to the Lord.  That last man became a famous evangelist.  Sadly, I do not recall which modern evangelist that is; but you must ask yourself if you would be comfortable pouring your all into every life you come in contact with in the hopes that they will one day supersede you?

My late Apostle, Joseph L. Sims was one such man and as such I cannot think of anyone greater in that respect.  He reached out to fools and pimps, addicts and losers, preachers and actors.  His most powerful weapon was his humble grace and the ability to offer a strong arm and tender heart to all who he met.  I will admit that he was also able to deliver a swift kick or sharp rebuke when needed as well, but was quick to give grace to the repentant.  He was wounded many times over the years and never allowed it to interfere with the dispensation of God’s love and deliverance.  If he had a creed it was to make godly men out of those only God could love.  He was good at it.  I am proud to call him my father in the gospel.  I can hear him calling from heaven, “Come on son, you can do it!”

5 Beloved, it is a fine and faithful work that you are doing when you give any service to the [Christian] brethren, and [especially when they are] strangers.

How about this?  Do you consider it a fine and faithful work to offer help and finances to those who are actively doing the work of God in areas and ways that you are not able?  If you are a preacher, are the tithes you receive for you alone or are you always thinking of ways to bring help to the poor around you?  The last part of this, “…especially when they are strangers,” is most telling.  Strangers come and go.  They are not likely to be able to reciprocate with you and bless you in turn.  They come and go at the behest of the Lord and you may not see them again.  Are you willing to bless those who work passionately and tirelessly for the Lord knowing full well you will never receive anything in return?  The best you might hope for in this circumstance is a hearty, “Well done thou good and faithful servant.”  Is it enough?

6 They have testified before the church of your love and friendship. You will do well to forward them on their journey [and you will please do so] in a way worthy of God’s [service].

Apparently Gaius was one such leader of God’s people.  He was always quick to bless those who passed through on their way to minister God’s Word in virgin territory.  Notice that John says he does well to do so.  The word ‘well’ is kalos which means to leave no room for blame.  This is in spite of the vast number of people who would find fault.  He will discuss them later in this letter. 

7 For these [traveling missionaries] have gone out for the Name’s sake (for His sake) and are accepting nothing from the Gentiles (the heathen, the non-Israelites). 8 So we ourselves ought to support such people [to welcome and provide for them], in order that we may be fellow workers in the Truth (the whole Gospel) and cooperate with its teachers.

In the amplified version “Name” is capitalized because it refers to more than the sound of a name just as Jesus, Christ and Lord mean more than the sound of those words.  In KJV it says, “…his name’s sake.”  Name here is autos which carries the idea of presenting all that the name means, not merely identifying an individual.  The word ‘sake’ is hyper which means to go above and beyond.  These traveling missionaries are not merely telling a tale of God’s love; they are carrying that love, that power and that vision to all who will hear.  They are going above and beyond for the purpose of exemplifying the Word of God to the lost heathen.  They are presenting the Alpha and the Omega, the Beginning and the Ending, the First and the Last, Which was and which is and which is to come; our Lord and Savior Jesus, the Christ. 

Defining all these attributes is only the beginning of what these brave ministers endeavored to bring to the lost souls in the pagan world.  To make sure they win as many as possible they refuse to so much as receive an offering from those they reach.  The church was supposed to send them out and the church was supposed to support them.  If we do not support these who go out and do the work then we have no part or honor in the work they are doing.  Preaching to the lost is the best and greatest work of any ministry; well above merely feeding the born again sheep.

9 I have written briefly to the church; but Diotrephes, who likes to take the lead among them and put himself first, does not acknowledge my authority and refuses to accept my suggestions or to listen to me.

John was the ‘beloved disciple’ of scripture.  None was closer to Jesus, not even Peter who often appeared to be the bold brash little brother who always tagged along and occasionally got in the way.  When Jesus asked Peter who he believed Jesus was he said, “You are the Christ, the Son of the living God (Matthew 16:13-18).”  There is no doubt that Peter had faith along with his impetuosity, but though that faith, that rock of certainty would be used to build the church, he was never the ‘beloved disciple.’  Everyone who believed in Christ knew that John was one of the great and most senior apostles.  When he wrote you a letter, you listened. 

Diotrephes was apparently a local elder or pastor of a church near Gaius.  Paul desired him to assist these traveling missionaries which would have meant putting them up for a few nights and possibly giving them a few shekels to tide them over.  Diotrephes was that pastor who believed that he spoke for God more powerfully than anyone else.  John was a very gracious man by this time.  His rough edges had mostly been filed down and he sought to bring God’s grace and mercy to all mankind.  Even so, this gracious man knew the authority in which he walked. 

In John 15:7 he wrote, “If we abide in Christ and His word abides in us, we can ask whatever we will and it will be done for us.”  Did anyone abide more in Christ and His Word than John?  You might suggest Paul who wrote most of the New Testament or James or Jude who were actually Jesus’ brothers, but in truth, John was the truly BELOVED disciple.  He had a position that was unique and knew it.  He cared for and protected the Lord’s mother.  He was the one who lay at Jesus breast during the final supper.  When such a one makes a suggestion either through letter or face to face, you ought to consider what that suggestion will mean to your future in God should you make the wrong choice. 

Proverbs 11:24 says that a man can scatter abroad and have much increase while one who withholds more than is fitting will starve.  Diotrephes chose to withhold, to mock John and scorn his authority.  In the parable of the wicked husbandmen (Luke 20:9–19, Mark 12:1–12, and Matthew 21:33–46), it tells of those who are hired to perform a task and to provide rent to the landlord.  This hireling in his greed abuses the servants of the landlord and eventually murders his beloved son.  They supposed that the landlord was weak and ineffectual, unable to defend his own property.  In our case God’s son prayed for us while we were killing Him.  He took up our cause and prayed for our souls to be forgiven.  He paid the entire deadly price for our salvation and left his beloved disciple to assist in establishing the church.

Scripture says that the power of life and death is in the tongue.  The more we grow in Christ, the more we can be trusted to use the power of God wisely, the more this is true for us individually.  Diotrephes, like many in authority today, had forgotten from where his authority derived.  He did not really believe that at one word from John, God might dispatch a legion of angels to defend his servant’s honor.  The Son of God had already been killed for the salvation of mankind.  Does it seem wise for this man to mock or ignore one who was His most beloved friend upon the earth?

10 So when I arrive, I will call attention to what he is doing, his boiling over and casting malicious reflections upon us with insinuating language. And not satisfied with that, he refuses to receive and welcome the [missionary] brethren himself, and also interferes with and forbids those who would welcome them, and tries to expel (excommunicate) them from the church.

John’s description of Diotrephes is a pot beginning to boil over with his own selfish pride and arrogance.  It was not enough for him to simply tell John he couldn’t help him at this time.  He chose to allow his pride to run his mouth and began to speak evil of John and cast aspersions against him falsely.  Perhaps he told his people that he was closer to Jesus than John or that John was sinning against God and it was his responsibility to bring that failure out.  Whatever his thoughts on this matter, John was neither fearful or uncertain of how to meet this threat to the body of Christ.

Sadly, he did not stop there but even threatened to excommunicate all who would help those John had sent.  He even went so far as to attempt this against those with a love of God and John.  Have you ever known anyone like this…someone who believed they knew better than anyone what God desired in any given situation and would fight to make sure they were obeyed?  I have and it was not pretty.  Hear what John said about these situations. 

11 Beloved, do not imitate evil, but imitate good. He who does good is of God; he who does evil has not seen (discerned or experienced) God [has enjoyed no vision of Him and does not know Him at all

There are pulpits all over the world filled by men of God who love Jesus’s Word and await His appearing.  There are also pulpits around the world that are filled with men of pride, hatred and a desire to see the kingdom of God made over in their image and personal vision.  Satan began this when he believed himself to be equal with God.  He now seeks to continue his blasphemy in the hearts and minds of mankind.  In many cases he is hugely successful.  These men do not know God at all and He does not know them.  This does not stop them from insisting they alone know how we must approach God and obtain salvation.

Tuesday, June 30, 2015

TRUST IN THE LORD?



Proverbs 3:5-6 ESV - Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and do not lean on your own understanding. In all your ways acknowledge him, and he will make straight your paths

This verse may well be one of the very first I ever memorized and it has given me great comfort over the years.  Whatever language you understand and whatever version you prefer, you should know this verse by heart.  In the past few weeks as I studied the book of Job I came to one conclusion; we are gnats living at the whim of a giant of unfathomable knowledge, wisdom and holiness.  He is not moved by our ignorance except to feed us knowledge.  He is not moved by our pain except to offer us love and a direction away from that pain.

All Job’s friends offered him wonderful advice following Man’s wisdom about God and of the four of them, the three oldest and wisest were wrong.  Job had not sinned.  He did not deserve what happened to him.  There was no handy scriptural formula or pattern that could lift their friend up from his current position of grief and restore his fortunes.  For his part, Job was incensed that they would keep demanding that he acknowledge his faults and admit to the sin they KNEW must be there.  Job had kept the faith and had not sinned against God in word or deed; a miraculous event in itself.  If he had a fault it was to cry out, “I have not fallen short!”  That led God to censure him for his pride.

The fourth man was a young man and he of the four did not blame Job for his sins.  He was far more angry with the other three for failing to offer any help to Job in his circumstances.  Of the four, he alone did not warrant a chastening from God.  The others were so certain of their righteous understanding that they failed to acknowledge that there might be some wisdom, deep wisdom, that God had not chosen to reveal to them.  God’s insistence that they offer a sin offering through Job was a complete slap in the face to their pride and arrogance. 

I feel like the fourth man.  I know we are not perfect and never insist that I have perfect and flawless knowledge of God’s Word.  I have learned enough to know that there are many levels to knowledge in God’s Word and I have just scratched the surface.  When I hear someone say, “It doesn’t take all that to serve God,” I know that they have completely missed the depth and holiness of God’s Word. It truly is living and powerful and sharper than any two edged sword.  I may die for my faith but as long as I live I will live for it as well.

I love how God sought Job’s input on the creation of the universe.  “Tell me little man if you can, how did you stand the earth on it’s pillars and set the stars in place (Job 38:3).”  Job’s answer is priceless,  “Lord, I’m just going to sit here with my hand over my mouth and SHUT UP! (Job 40:3-5)”  This is often a wise decision that should be copied by all the earth.  You may not understand God and what He is doing in the earth today, but He expects your total faith, obedience and adherence to His Word, whether you know why things are happening or not. 

Job 1:6 Now there was a day when the sons of God came to present themselves before the Lord, and Satan also came among them. 7 The Lord said to Satan, “From where have you come?” Satan answered the Lord and said, “From going to and fro on the earth, and from walking up and down on it.” 8 And the Lord said to Satan, “Have you considered my servant Job, that there is none like him on the earth, a blameless and upright man, who fears God and turns away from evil?” 9 Then Satan answered the Lord and said, “Does Job fear God for no reason?

It appears that the angels present themselves to God at regular intervals, perhaps on a yearly basis.  Notice that they are called the “Sons of God, Ben Elohim.”  Some have tried to say that this referred to the line of Seth the son of Adam but in reality Seth was not Ben Elohim but Ben Adam, son of Adam.  Only angels were called the sons of God until after the crucifixion of Jesus when we too were redeemed and could be called the sons of God.  Prior to that point all mankind – except for Adam – were called ben Adam.  Only Adam was ben Elohim because he was a direct creation of God.  After the fall it only applied to angels until Jesus came and redeemed us to God.

You can hear a note of curiosity in God’s question to Satan, “Have you considered my servant Job?”  Satan “the accuser” answered, “Why shouldn’t Job serve you faithfully.  You have him hedged and protected from all harm.”  Satan was once Lucifer, the brightest angel of great light.  His pride darkened his vision and now he can only see things through that pride and anger.  Angels have free will just as we do.  Do you stop to consider that God must work with angels as well?  Isn’t it possible that even the Angels must be trained and taught?  We wrongly tell ourselves that we are the center of God’s universe when we might well be a poor neighborhood with a high crime rate; a slum in effect.  He has a universe of life and light and we may well be just a small part of that universe.  

Stop screaming.  I know most of us believe we are the greatest creation of God and this universe is all ours.  Perhaps, but there is no certainty of that.

In Job Satan once again questions the honor of God, “Doth Job serve you for nothing?   Notice Genesis 3:1 where Satan works to seduce Eve,

“Now the serpent was more subtil than any beast of the field which the Lord God had made. And he said unto the woman, Yea, hath God said, Ye shall not eat of every tree of the garden?

Hath God said…?  What is the main challenge from those who want to disbelieve scripture?  You hear it time and time again, “Is the Bible real?”  “Is the Bible true?”  “Is homosexuality wrong?”  “Is stealing wrong?”  It is only a step or two from “Thus saith the Lord,” to “Did He really?” to “It doesn’t take all that.”  Men and women now actively insult and mock a God they say they do not believe in and yet when they really want to curse someone they choose the name of God.  Even in homosexual relationships there is always a masculine and a feminine partner.  Our sexuality was preordained from the garden of God in Eden.  Even when we try to change our passions through abominable practices we still are drawn by the Word of God to truth, even if it is a false symbol of truth. 

Psalm 44:22 KJV Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and do not lean on your own understanding.  In all your ways acknowledge him, and he will make straight your paths.

Live before God according to SCRIPTURE and He will direct, guide and make straight your paths.  This doesn’t say you will always enjoy the path He has you on.  Jesus didn’t.  You might ask yourself why you are led in a particular life direction but if it is scriptural and godly then let God direct you.  He has preordained your path and your provision.  Walking with the Lord is a growth process.  He is not concerned if you don’t use all your gifts immediately as long as you are willing to press into them and gradually grow into your complete purpose. 

If we judge ourselves by others we may feel good about ourselves or bad depending on who you observe.  If you judge yourself against God you will always acknowledge your weaknesses, flaws and dependence on Him.  This is just fine with God.  Where we are weak, He is strong.  Not leaning on God is considered a lack of faith.  Failing to trust in Him is sin as well.

Isaiah 53:7 KJV He was oppressed, and he was afflicted, yet he opened not his mouth: he is brought as a lamb to the slaughter, and as a sheep before her shearers is dumb, so he openeth not his mouth.

Jesus had a powerful reason to release His life and comfort…your salvation.  God certainly could have protected Dr. Martin Luther King or more recently Pastor / Senator Pinckney.  There may come a time when your death will win more souls and progress the purpose of God to a greater degree than simply dying of old age.  Are you willing to be so spent?  I suppose it would grieve me to know that my death would do more good than my life, but I am still hopeful that I am somewhat centered on the path God has for me.  As an individual, I want to see God do more with me…selfishly I suppose.  In Christ I am willing to spend and be spent for the gospel sake. 

Acts 8:29 KJV Then the Spirit said unto Philip, Go near, and join thyself to this chariot. 30 And Philip ran thither to him, and heard him read the prophet Esaias, and said, Understandest thou what thou readest? 31 And he said, How can I, except some man should guide me? And he desired Philip that he would come up and sit with him.—32 The place of the scripture which he read was this, He was led as a sheep to the slaughter; and like a lamb dumb before his shearer, so opened he not his mouth: 33 In his humiliation his judgment was taken away: and who shall declare his generation? for his life is taken from the earth.

Should we do less?  God considered this passage of greater importance to the eunuch than any other.  It was so important that He supernaturally transported a preacher to explain it to him.  Jesus was led as a sheep to the slaughter and did not open His mouth to call down the angels to defend Him.  That call was His right.  If you had the right to speak an end to someone, would you use it?  Wisely?  Without error?  Would you know the heart of that man or woman you ordained to die?  I don’t think so.  This is why God will often keep us in those places of trial and pain until we cry out, “Not my will but thine be done Lord!”  Then He knows you have given all.  If you curse Him and rail against His plan for your life it won’t stop Him from working on you.  It will however let Him know you aren’t ready for release yet.  You need more time in the slow cooker.

Back to the above scripture.  God for His own reasons informed the Eunuch that Jesus had not died permanently as was supposed and that He would return again.  Why would this be so important to God and the Eunuch?  I have an idea but for now remember, God never does anything for frivolous reasons.  He always has a powerful purpose.  There is reason enough to believe that God will still do this today for reasons important to His plan.

Romans 8:35 KJV Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword? 36 As it is written, For thy sake we are killed all the day long; we are accounted as sheep for the slaughter. 37 Nay, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him that loved us.

Shall we do less?  Once again I ask the question.  Should we do less than Jesus?  When Jesus met Nathaniel He told him that He saw him in the spirit praying to god.  Nathaniel said, “You are the son of God.”  Jesus answer was, “Because I said unto thee, I saw thee under the fig tree, believest thou? thou shalt see greater things than these (John 1:50).”  As the body of Christ we are supposed to be walking miracles.  Our lives should be surrendered to His Word to the point that God will give a quiet unction and we will move immediately or as the Word says, “suddenly.” 

We are kings and priests.  Kings rule.  Priests intercede.  The body of Christ ought never be powerless and defeated.  I remember watching movies as a kid where they would burn a witch or an evil person.  That person would curse them and speak terrible imprecations against the one who punished them.  The most you might do to me is to kill me and I promise you this; if you do, God will have something powerful to say about it.  Revelation speaks of the tribulation saints crying out from under the altar, “Lord, where is our justice (Revelation 6:10)!  The day of grace was over and the day of the vengeance of our God had begun.

Psalm 116:12 What shall I render unto the Lord for all his benefits toward me? 13 I will take the cup of salvation, and call upon the name of the Lord. 14 I will pay my vows unto the Lord now in the presence of all his people. 15 Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of his saints.

God does not take your life OR death lightly.  You are not God and may never understand His complete ways.  God is eternal.  Even He cannot remember a time when He did not exist.  Life in Christ requires a sacrifice just as it required a sacrifice for Jesus Himself.  Roman’s chapter eight is one of the greatest chapters in the Bible.  In verses 16-18 God said,

“16 The Spirit itself beareth witness with our spirit, that we are the children of God: 17 And if children, then heirs; heirs of God, and joint- heirs with Christ; if so be that we suffer with him, that we may be also glorified together. 18 For I reckon that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be revealed in us.

Just how much authority does your flesh have over your joy, happiness and self worth?  Does your spirit rule or your flesh and passions?  We live in a dangerous world and yet for the one who is bought by the blood of the Lamb of God it is safe and secure.  You might lose your life, but it will only cause you to gain it eternally.  I hope you will understand that while trials and tribulations come they are not to cause us any terror or sudden fear (1 Peter 3:6). 

I wrote this lesson after hearing dozens of men and women cry to me about their pain and sorrow and wondered why God didn’t do something.  He has His reasons.  That may well be the only comfort you will have.  There is more than enough TRUTH with a capitol T in the Bible to let you know it is truly the Word of God.  That said, you will still have to trust Him when all the lights are out and the heavens are brass.  I have great respect for those who have learned to serve God without prophetic gifts or major prophetic words in their lives.  Those people serve God based purely on what they read in the Bible and live victorious lives.  What would I have done in those circumstances? 

Beloved, having done all to stand, stand therefore.

Bishop J

Tuesday, June 9, 2015

The World Needs To Know…Right



That cry is often heard by those who call themselves the news media.  They try to set themselves as the protectors of mankind while trampling the privacy and lives of everyone.

This past month the world of sin has screamed and jeered and happily tried to disassemble a family in America because of the foolishness of a Na’ar.  What is a na’ar?  A na’ar is a youth, a child too young to have developed all the wisdom, reason and understanding we should develop as adults.  They may have been taught the basics of Christian doctrine and how to live but it has not yet become fully established in their life.  A young man behaved badly toward some family members and others and his parents had to take measures to ensure he received correction.  His life thereafter has been one of growth and maturity even while living in a fishbowl of cameras and observation.  In all the thousands of hours of video his family has lived under they have only been able to find one or two instances of thoughtless comments to hound him on. 
I am 58 years old.  I would hate to have all my foolish comments or actions from my teens and early twenties thrown back in my face.  If I have lived a few years with no increase in bad habits and a definite pattern of good ones then both God and man should be satisfied with that.  Thankfully God is but man holds grudges even if it may cost them their eternal future.  Growth is a continuous process, it is added to our lives, line upon line and precept upon precept.  The demonic attack against this young man has not come because someone is righteously trying to protect the public.  There is no public danger involved in this man’s life, in fact his goals and honesty have placed him light years ahead of his peers.  He is a godly caring Christian man and that is where the problem lies.  His life will forever be ridiculed by those who are offended by his desire to be better and rise above the rampant flesh we all war with. 

Many of his accusers do not even try.

Romans 1:28 And since they did not see fit to acknowledge God, God gave them up to a debased mind to do what ought not to be done. 29 They were filled with all manner of unrighteousness, evil, covetousness, malice. They are full of envy, murder, strife, deceit, maliciousness. They are gossips, 30 slanderers, haters of God, insolent, haughty, boastful, inventors of evil, disobedient to parents, 31 foolish, faithless, heartless, ruthless. 32 Though they know God’s righteous decree that those who practice such things deserve to die, they not only do them but give approval to those who practice them.

I won’t attempt to write about all of this right now.  Verse 28 explains the result of a refusal to acknowledge the God of the universe.  Once you have declared God to be non-existent he leaves you to your father the Devil.  It is no wonder that those who do not believe usually are disgusted by or bear animosity toward Christians.  The Spirit of God dwells in us and Satan hates us.  Christians and Jews have always been hated and abused throughout history.  It has always been so except for those periods when the state religion has been a twisted form of Christianity that bore little relationship to the truth.  They are filled with malice, strife, deceit and maliciousness.  By definition they bear us ill will. 

These people gossip and slander any with whom they do not agree.  If a Christian desires to live a holy and upright life before God, he or she is said to be filled with hatred and a ‘phobe’ of one sort or another.  It does not help that many Christian churches respond in fear rather than love, in many cases appearing to prove those opinions against us.  That these churches have absolutely broken the doctrines contained within our scripture is conveniently ignored for the purpose of casting blame, not where it is deserved, but where it is most wanted.  If someone wishes to blame Christians, then there are enough deluded lunatics who call themselves “Christian” to heap that blame upon us all. 

Oddly enough, they will accept Islam with it’s doctrine of death and jihaad but not Christianity with its doctrine of love and grace. 

In our most pure state, we are truly the people of the book.  Our scriptures are not flexible, allowing for hatred, thievery, unmarried sexual intercourse or violent anger.  These things are forbidden of us.  Christ said, “Love thy enemies.”  Any other response places you dangerously near the enemy’s camp.  While we are not forced to fixedly obey the Old Testament law, we are required to obey an even greater law of love, grace, mercy and forgiveness.  I once wrote a book about the heart.  Most scriptures I explained took a single chapter for sufficient depth.  The few verses about the agape love of God contained in First Corinthians 13 required six chapters.  It takes great faith in God to love those who do not love us.

1 Timothy 5:13 Besides that, they learn to be idlers, going about from house to house, and not only idlers, but also gossips and busybodies, saying what they should not.

Recently I wrote about a woman of virtue.  Proverbs 31 shows how she stayed busy and did not idly lay about.  She was a woman who sought out the vision of God for her life and multiplied that vision 30, 60 and 100 fold.  There is another type of woman (and probably man for that matter).  First Timothy 5:13 speaks of the other sort.  They wander from house to house spreading private truths and even lies with a sparkle of malice in their eyes.  They tell a tale with an eye to wounding a soul and breaking a heart.  Verse 12 says that they receive damnation for telling truth OR lie for the sake of wounding another. 

Whether or not the story you tell is true or not is unimportant.  God says that the tongue is a world of iniquity.  We are supposed to protect each other and help one another to grow.  1 Peter 4:8 says, “Most important of all, continue to show deep love for each other, for love covers a multitude of sins.”  God has never intended that everyone’s sins and flaws should be revealed for the whole world to see.  He is gracious toward us when we repent and often covers our faults even as He forgives them.  When we shove those forgiven flaws out for the world to see, we have set ourselves in the place of God and that is a position He will not allow us to take.  Gossip is an abomination as great as any other. 

2 Corinthians 12:20 For I am fearful that somehow or other I may come and find you not as I desire to find you, and that you may find me too not as you want to find me—that perhaps there may be factions (quarreling), jealousy, temper (wrath, intrigues, rivalry, divided loyalties), selfishness, whispering, gossip, arrogance (self- assertion), and disorder among you.

In this scripture Paul placed gossip right along side of factions (taking sides), jealousy, anger or wrath, selfishness (and coveting), disloyal (lying friends), whispering (back biting), arrogance and disorder.  Take a moment to ask if any of these moral flaws are found in your own heart.  We’re quick to judge others for transgressions we call the BIG sins, but God judges the heart well before judging mere actions.  He came to heal the broken hearted and it is a well known saying that hurt people hurt people, damaged people damage others and wounded people are quick to wound.  Unless you see someone’s heart and treat that heart with God’s Word then you have no right to point out actions.

In Proverbs 30 says a man prays, “7 Two things have I required of thee; deny me them not before I die: 8 Remove far from me vanity and lies: give me neither poverty nor riches; feed me with food convenient for me: 9 Lest I be full, and deny thee, and say, Who is the Lord? or lest I be poor, and steal, and take the name of my God in vain.”

  Living for the Lord is a balancing act.  We stand between the complete (and unreachable) holiness of God and the desperate and abominable degradation of man.  As long as we are living in this fallen world, we will often find ourselves struggling to simply ‘obey the Spirit.’  Paul decried the impossibility of this life in Romans 7:22, “For I delight in the law of God, in my inner being, 23 but I see in my members another law waging war against the law of my mind and making me captive to the law of sin that dwells in my members. 24 Wretched man that I am! Who will deliver me from this body of death?”  For this reason it behooves us to minister God’s love to others by grace and mercy.  In Matthew 7 Jesus said, “Judge not, lest ye be judged.” 

1 Peter 4:3 AMP For the time that is past already suffices for doing what the Gentiles like to do—living [as you have done] in shameless, insolent wantonness, in lustful desires, drunkenness, reveling, drinking bouts and abominable, lawless idolatries. 4 They are astonished and think it very queer that you do not now run hand in hand with them in the same excesses of dissipation, and they abuse [you]. 5 But they will have to give an account to Him Who is ready to judge and pass sentence on the living and the dead. 6 For this is why the good news (the Gospel) was preached [ in their lifetime] even to the dead, that though judged in fleshly bodies as men are, they might live in the spirit as God does.

I had a friend who was in the Air Force with me.  She was an alcoholic who drank every day with the men and women of her shop.  One day she gave her heart to Jesus and he delivered her from her dependence on alcohol.  Instead of partying with the others she would sit quietly aside and read her Bible during slow times rather than drink.  The people in her office were deeply offended by this action.  She never spoke against their lifestyle or got “preachy” toward them as is the usual complaint against Christians. 

She didn’t act like that Baptist church that curses people at homosexual’s funerals.  It didn’t matter.  They began to lie about her and say she refused to do her job.  They hounded her about her activities and ordered her not to bring a Bible to work even though she only read it when others were drinking and playing cards.  Eventually they forced her to accept a discharge and except for the Lord’s help would have given her a bad conduct discharge.  He worked it out so she received an honorable discharge instead.

1 Peter 4:7 But the end of all things is at hand: be ye therefore sober, and watch unto prayer. 8 And above all things have fervent love among yourselves: for love shall cover the multitude of sins. 9 Use hospitality one to another without grudging. 10 As every man hath received the gift, even so minister the same one to another, as good stewards of the manifold grace of God.

This scripture is one that should affect all our lives powerfully.  We are living in the end times.  This much is obvious by our current world climate and recent history.  Israel has returned and is in her rightful place.  All the world hates or is beginning to hate her.  Even many Christians, God’s elect, are against Israel and siding with the so called Palestinians.  The truth is that God STILL curses those who curse Israel and blesses those who bless Israel (Ezekiel 36:1-8). 

Verse eight tells us to FERVENTLY love one another.  That means we must love each other with great zeal.  We don’t have the right to love in a lukewarm manner.  The second part states that this fervent love hides a multitude of sins.  People sin, saved people sin; as long as we live in this body we will sin because it is our NATURAL inclination to do so.  Christians who live as holy a life as they can are fighting against that sin nature.  All of us fail and fall short but we are admonished to press toward the mark of the high calling and grow into greater maturity.  The Bible says a righteous man falls seven times but he gets back up again (Proverbs 24:16).

When people in the world point out our failings to make themselves feel better it doesn’t change the fact that overall we are more holy and live better lives.  On the one hand we can’t compare ourselves to them because it is God’s holiness we are aspiring to; on the other, they can’t honestly compare themselves to our shortcomings because it isn’t who or what we are and our righteousness is of God as Isaiah 54:7-8 says, “No weapon that is formed against thee shall prosper; and every tongue that shall rise against thee in judgment thou shalt condemn.  This is the heritage of the servants of the Lord, and their righteousness is of me, saith the Lord.”

We make mistakes as Christians when we follow a dynamic personality and try to live up to their expectations.  We should always strive to live up to God’s expectations.  Obviously we’ll always fall short overall, but we will improve daily, line upon line and precept upon precept.  Verse nine above should be a challenge to all of us.  We must offer hospitality to one another without grudging.  If you can help someone, help them.  Certainly there are those who are users and abusers, I don’t believe you must allow yourself to be misused but on the other hand, you should never shut up your bowels of compassion toward others (1 John 3:17).

In verse ten we are admonished to fully use the gifts we have been given.  It also says that we received those gifts due to the manifold grace of God.  We are to be good stewards of that grace and those gifts.  It isn’t ours.  God gave them to us to be used.  They are our talents and those who fail to use them may find themselves cursed by God and lose all they have (Matthew 25:14-30).  Love is not a choice; it is a commandment.

John 8:1 But Jesus went to the Mount of Olives. Now early in the morning He came again into the temple, and all the people came to Him; and He sat down and taught them. Then the scribes and Pharisees brought to Him a woman caught in adultery. And when they had set her in the midst, they said to Him, “Teacher, this woman was caught in adultery, in the very act. Now Moses, in the law, commanded us that such should be stoned. But what do You say?”

Galatians 3:28 says there is no difference between male or female, even the Torah said adultery was a death penalty offense for both men and women, but we can see from this challenge to Jesus that obedience to scripture fell short here.  If she was caught in the VERY ACT of adultery, where was the man she was found with.  People who judge one sex or race or nationality to be above another have not surrendered to the love of God or even the righteousness of God.  There ought to have been two people standing before Jesus, one man and one woman. 

Can you picture this scene?  Under Roman rule or not, the Jews would normally have stoned this couple.  The Law of Moses was clear, they (or she) should have been stoned.  They only brought her out for political reasons to make Jesus stumble.  Her crime was a death penalty offense.  Under Moses, you might repent and ask God for mercy, but the LAW offered little in the way of grace.  Jesus came that we might have life and have it more abundantly. 

John 8:6 This they said, testing Him, that they might have something of which to accuse Him. But Jesus stooped down and wrote on the ground with His finger, as though He did not hear. So when they continued asking Him, He raised Himself up and said to them, “He who is without sin among you, let him throw a stone at her first.” And again He stooped down and wrote on the ground.

They wanted desperately to find some flaw in Jesus’ logic or in His instructions.  How could he possibly slip out of this one?  The law was clear, stoning.  He appeared to ignore them and squatted down on the ground, writing with His finger.  Never forget, every word, every idea and every action in scripture is filled with meaning.  Jesus is the Word of God.  Whatever He wrote on the ground had great meaning.

In Exodus 31:18 it says God wrote the law on the tablets with His finger.  In Daniel 5:5 God’s fingers wrote the judgment of Belshazzar on the wall.  Many scholars believe that Jesus was the hand in both of those instances in His pre-incarnate form and that while he stooped upon the ground and wrote He was writing down the sins of each of those accusers.  Remember Matthew 7:1-2 says, “Judge not, lest you be judged with the very same measure.”  I’m not sure what it is about people who are fully aware of their own sins and yet will point out someone else’s and incur God’s judgment upon themselves. 

I might tell you that homosexuality is a sin, but I am not going to vilify you before others as if my sins (and we all have them), are somehow less disgusting to God.  One problem I have with people mocking or attacking Christians in media for their sins is that it is often after these people have already identified their sins and have corrected them and asked God for forgiveness.  1 John 1:9-10 says, “If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness. If we say that we have not sinned, we make him a liar, and his word is not in us.” 

I don’t believe Christian young man in the news this month has ever stated that he has never sinned or never sins.  The point people miss is that he has repented of those sins and has corrected his behavior which occurred as a 14 year old child.  As far as God is concerned they never happened.  He is forgiven.  Satan and his children use condemnation to marginalize us.  Whether the unsaved or even Christians will give him that grace is unimportant.  God will still use him and punish those who have publicly attacked him.  I can’t even imagine how severe the punishment will be for the Chief of Police who released his sealed records for the sake of political gain or the news media who ran the story.  How ever you judge someone else, your sins will come out and attack you (1 Timothy 5:24-25).

John 8:9 Then those who heard it, being convicted by their conscience, went out one by one, beginning with the oldest even to the last. And Jesus was left alone, and the woman standing in the midst. When Jesus had raised Himself up and saw no one but the woman, He said to her, “Woman, where are those accusers of yours? Has no one condemned you?”  She said, “No one, Lord.” And Jesus said to her, “Neither do I condemn you; go and sin no more.” Then Jesus spoke to them again, saying, “I am the light of the world. He who follows Me shall not walk in darkness, but have the light of life.”

I love how it says that they were convicted by their conscience from the oldest to the youngest.  Scribes and Pharisees, the cream of Israelite religious society, brought this pitiful sinner to Jesus.  They were the KEEPERS OF THE LAW.  From the most noble and aged scholar to the youngest trainee, they all walked away trying to maintain as much dignity as possible in their retreat.  They knew they were all sinners.  If Jesus was using His gifts to tell their sins when He wrote on the ground it would have served to shake the arrogance of even the most self righteous leader. 

Maybe we need that today, someone who has the prophetic gifts to call up the President or congressmen and say, “This is your hidden sin and God expects a change.”  Might be good for them.  In this case He finally got up and looked around.  He and the woman stood alone in the midst of those He had been teaching.  He had just publically embarrassed all the Pharisees and Scribes with knowledge of their own sins.  Jesus came to bring grace, frequently withheld by the proud religious leadership, and he dispensed it to the woman, “Go and sin no more.”  If you notice he asked her, “Woman, where are those accusers of yours?  Does no one accuse you?”  She answered, “No one Lord.”  By now she was probably saved AND delivered.  She called Him “Lord,” kyrios, not “teacher” didaskalos like the Pharisees did to put Him in His place.  She knew He was the life and death authority over her.  So did the people.  It didn’t silence the Pharisees long but they were NEVER able to win a single argument with Him. 

There have been many times where God has shown me an “Ah hah!” moment; where I understood a new truth about a scripture.  When we decide we know all there is to know about scripture we will become as petrified and traditionalized as they were and God can no longer teach us anything.  This was a major lesson He taught, and while the common people believed, the Pharisees did not.  Luke spoke of this attitude in Acts 17:10-13.  The men of Berea were willing to hear what Paul and Silas said and searched the scriptures to see if it was true.  The Jews from Thessalonica came and tried to start trouble when they heard about it.  They denied any possibility of a deeper understanding.

The word talebearer is used for the word gossip in the King James Version of the Bible.  The word gossip is used in the New International version (NIV).  Talebearer defines the word gossip well.  Proverbs 11:13 states, “A talebearer reveals secrets, but he who is of a faithful spirit conceals a matter.”  The Bible also states “Whoever spreads slander is a fool (Prov. 10:18a) and, “A truthful witness gives honest testimony, but a false witness tells lies (Prov. 12:17 NIV) or “Like a club or a sword or a sharp arrow is the man who gives false testimony against his neighbor (Prov. 25:18).” 

Gossip may be completely true, partially true or a complete lie.  It usually has greater or lessor amounts of truth.  In the case of the young na’ar in the news, gossip was a sin because God had dealt with the flaws and mistakes of a child and had reinforced His holy word in that young man’s life.  God has offered us the opportunity to be forgiven and have our sins washed away.  Man wants to punish those who fall short UNLESS they are the one who has fallen short; then they want to be forgiven.  Man cries, “JUSTICE!”  God says, “You do not want justice.  It will cost you your life and an eternity of suffering.”  Jesus said, “I come that you might have life and have it more abundantly.” 

There is no sin too great to be forgiven except blaspheming against the Holy Spirit.  That sin is so difficult to accomplish that few have done it.  Simply looking to Heaven in a moment of anguish and crying, “I hate you God!” is not enough.  God knows what is in man and is gracious and merciful toward us.  We ought to give that same grace and mercy to those around us.

John 6:70 AMP Jesus answered them, Did I not choose you, the Twelve? And [yet] one of you is a devil (of the evil one and a false accuser).

Judas falsely accused Jesus of conspiring against God.  He knew in his heart it was a lie.  He was zealous of a future where Israel would defeat Rome.  He was also a thief who hid his sin in self righteous complaint against Christ.  Judas carried the bag with their money and stole from it (John 12:4-6).  He even complained that a gift of ointment given to Jesus should have been sold and given to the poor who he disdained.  Many of our accusers are living lives of darkness and wish to steal our light.

Beloved, love one another.  Be gracious to one another.  Keep your opinions to yourself.  Preach the Word, be ready day or night to speak God’s truths.  Trust the Lord.

Bishop J.