Like Produces Like

For he who sows to his flesh will of the flesh reap corruption, but he who sows to the Spirit will of the Spirit reap everlasting life. (Galatians 6:8)

Like Produces Like

The principle of reproduction was established on day four of creation when God created the grass, the herb that yields seed, and the fruit tree that yields fruit according to its kind. This would apply to the abundance of living creatures in the waters, the birds that fly above the earth, the cattle and creeping things, and beasts of the earth, and finally, a man and a woman. Reproduction is based on the principle that everything reproduces after its own kind. An apple tree cannot bear figs, and a cow cannot reproduce a duck. Children can only be conceived by a man and a woman. The law of reproduction is established by the hand of God, and the habitation of the Divine cannot be changed.

Sowing and reaping are true in the spiritual world. A person’s life is determined by what they sow in their hearts. There are only two possibilities. Either a man will sow of his flesh, or he will choose to follow God and sow in his heart the seeds of the Spirit. The harvest always shows what is sown. A cornfield reveals that corn seeds were planted. Apple orchards come from apple seeds. A corrupt and wicked life comes from sowing the seeds of corruption and evil. To have a spiritual life with God requires sowing seeds of the Spirit. Crossbreeding is not possible between kinds. It is impossible to live a fleshly life and receive everlasting life. Like produces like.

When Jesus said it was impossible to serve two masters, He showed that like can only produce what it represents in life. If a man will not plant the seeds of the word of God in his heart, he will become what he has ingested into his spirit. The wise man noted that as a man thinks himself to be in his heart, he will become. What a man plants in his heart will determine the kind of man he will become. Those who sow to the flesh will of the flesh reap corruption because goodness cannot come from evil hearts. When a man sows the seed of the Spirit in his heart, he will of the Spirit reap everlasting life. Like produces like.

Sowing and reaping is the basic principle of life. Everyone has the free choice to decide what seed they want to implant in their life. If a man wants to be close to God, learn about Jesus Christ, and commune with the Holy Spirit, he must spend the time required to fill his heart with the message of God’s grace. Faith comes from hearing the word of God, and the proportion of faith will largely be determined by the sowing of the seed of the word in the heart. Without the sowing, there can be no harvest. A man becomes what a man desires to be. If he wants to know everything about the word of God, he will dedicate his heart to know his will. The sowing of the seed of God’s word will bring a bountiful crop of righteousness, truth, and the knowledge of God’s will.

Everyone becomes what they desire to be. That desire must be to sow to the Spirit. The reward of sowing to the Spirit cannot be compared to anything in this world. Everlasting life comes from those who have sown the word in the heart. Sowing is hard work. It is laborious and taxing. The more acres of spiritual seed planted in the heart, the greater the harvest. Sowing the seed of the Spirit will reap an eternal harvest.

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Love And Commandment Keeping

Now by this we know that we know Him, if we keep His commandments. He who says, “I know Him,” and does not keep His commandments, is a liar, and the truth is not in him. But whoever keeps His word, truly the love of God is perfected in him. By this we know that we are in Him. He who says he abides in Him ought himself also to walk just as He walked. Brethren, I write no new commandment to you, but an old commandment which you have had from the beginning. The old commandment is the word which you heard from the beginning. Again, a new commandment I write to you, which thing is true in Him and in you, because the darkness is passing away, and the true light is already shining. (1 John 2:3-8)

Love And Commandment Keeping

Obedience to the word of God has always challenged the free will of man. Satan told Eve she could dismiss what God told her about the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. The fall of man occurred when Adam and Eve disobeyed God’s command. When the Lord destroyed the world in the days of Noah, the heart of man was wicked continually. Sin is the transgression of God’s law. Because of the rejection of God’s law, the world was destroyed by the flood. Noah found grace in the eyes of the Lord because he loved the Lord and kept His commandments.

John is commonly viewed as the apostle of love. His gospel is a declarative thesis on the divinity of Jesus, proving without a doubt the Sonship of the man from Nazareth as the Son of God. In the final hours of Jesus’ life, the Son of God tells the eleven that if they keep His commandments, they will show the Father their love for Him. Abiding in Christ is keeping the commandments. Jesus showed His love for the Father by keeping His commandments.

Knowing Jesus is more than knowing Jesus. Many people believe Jesus to be their Savior but refuse to accept Him as their Lord. Loving Jesus requires following the Father’s will. To know Jesus fully is to understand and obey the word of God. If a man says that he has a relationship with Jesus and does not obey His word, he is a liar, and the truth is not in him. Those who keep the word of God will find the love of God in their hearts. Abiding in Jesus is walking according to the commandments of God. This is not a new idea. Satan convinced Eve to love herself more than God and to take the forbidden fruit. When sin takes over the heart, it is self-love that fills the heart for men to live and think as they desire.

The religious world is filled with men and women who profess a love for Christ but never follow His will. Many people believe that as long as they love the Lord, God will glorify Him in their lives, regardless of whether they follow His word. They will accept the saving message of Christ, but to subject themselves to the laws, commandments, precepts, and testimonies of the word of God is more than they will accept. Salvation by works is rejected in favor of the acceptance of a misguided notion that grace does not require obedience. Love demands obedience. How can God give His only begotten Son as a sacrifice for sinful man and then require man to do nothing but love him in a personal experience?

Children of God are commandment keepers by the grace of God. Noah found grace in the eyes of the Lord, but he still had to build the ark to the specifications given to him by the word of God. The Lord has never left man without the word of truth to guide him and direct him. What the Father expects (commands) in return is for the heart of man to love Him and to keep His commandments. When a man refuses to obey the commandments of the Lord, he shows his disdain for God. Refusing to keep the will of the Father will result in condemnation.

In the mountain sermon, Jesus taught that only those who do the will of the Father will be saved. He also highlights that many people will stand before His Father in judgment, declaring their love for God but who have failed to keep His word. They will not be saved. Jesus will reject them. Love is an important part of the relationship, but refusing to keep the will of the Father will keep one out of heaven. Keeping the commandments shows man’s love for God. Love demands obedience.

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The Godhead In The Old Testament

For since the creation of the world His invisible attributes are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made, even His eternal power and Godhead, so that they are without excuse, because, although they knew God, they did not glorify Him as God, nor were thankful, but became futile in their thoughts, and their foolish hearts were darkened. (Romans 1:20-21)

The Godhead In The Old Testament

Moses wrote down the story of the creation of the world, with a brief overview of thousands of years before the opening scene in Exodus, when God’s plan to create the nation of Israel is revealed. The writings of Moses are dated around 1450 B. C., showing that many years were unaccounted for before Moses was born. Moses described the creation in which the Godhead was actively involved in bringing everything in the world to life. The central theme is the Almighty God and Father, who takes precedence over all beings and exercises all authority. As the world is void and without form, the Holy Spirit hovers above the waters. The Christ is present at creation as one of the Godhead. On the sixth day, God directs the Holy Spirit and the Christ to complete the plan of creation to form man from the dust. Eve is created from the rib of Adam.

After the fall, Adam and Eve are expelled from the garden, but they are not excluded from the presence of the Lord. God reveals Himself to His creation to show them His will, His character, His nature, and His power. Cain and Abel offer sacrifices to God because they know who God is and what is expected of them. From the beginning of time, God promised to redeem man through the promise of the Seed. The fulfillment of the Seed promise would not be realized until Jesus Christ rose from the dead, but the concept of a coming Christ was always present in the minds of men. It is clear that God revealed the nature of His word and the Godhead to early man so that he would know how to worship Him. Abraham predates Moses by many generations, and he met Melchizedek, a priest of the Most High God.

The priesthood of Melchizedek shows how God revealed His will to man. Nothing is recorded about the priesthood of Melchizedek, but it was an order of priests ordained by God to worship Him in spirit and truth. The absence of writings describing the priesthood of Melchizedek does not suggest ignorance of man of the character of the Godhead. Moses wrote down the books of the Law for a foundation for Christ, showing why God chose Israel as His own people. Early man would have known about the Seed promise through God’s revelation. Moses was not the first man to know about the Seed promise. Abraham believed in the promises of God before the promise of Isaac was fulfilled. The man Job knew about the Holy Spirit as well as his friend Elihu. David pleaded with God not to take away the Holy Spirit from him. From the beginning of time, God revealed Himself to the world in the form of the triune personalities of the Divine.

Moses declared the glory of God when he wrote about the Godhead forming man in their image. Man was created to show the glory of God, the hope of the Christ, and the power of the Holy Spirit. Early man understood through a dark mirror the nature of the Godhead. Time would slowly reveal the story of God’s redeeming love. Throughout the Old Testament story, the faithful of God hoped for and longed for the fulfillment of the promises made in the Garden of Eden. Time would unfold the story of Jesus, the Christ, the Son of the Living God. The Holy Spirit would burst upon the scene of the early church, not as a new revelation but as part of the Godhead actively involved in the scheme of redemption.

The invisible attributes of God are clearly seen from the beginning of time. There has never been a time when man could plead ignorance to the character and nature of the Godhead. Although they knew God, they rebelled against Him and rejected His word. The nature of the Seed promise was not fully realized until Jesus came to earth as a man. When the early church began, the nature of the Holy Spirit was magnified in His work of revealing truth and showing the power of God through miracles. For the world today, the story of God, Jesus Christ, and the Holy Spirit is contained within the pages of the Bible to lead the heart of man back to God. All men are created in the image of the Godhead – the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit.

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The Glory Of God

The city had no need of the sun or of the moon to shine in it, for the glory of God illuminated it. The Lamb is its light. (Revelation 21:23)

The Glory Of God

The imagery of heaven is hard to imagine. In the Revelation given to the apostle John, the Holy Spirit paints on an eternal canvas images that symbolically describe the immense beauty of eternal life, often in terms difficult to grasp. Taking pictures from the pages of life, the painting of the eternal city becomes an incredible vista of an immense city filled with streets of gold. The gates of the city are made of a single pearl. Jewels garland the city to express its eternal glory in the presence of God. Everything about the imagery is breathless. Helping to complete the picture, the Holy Spirit reveals that the center of the eternal city is the glory of God.

From a human standpoint, the rising of the sun is a normal occurrence that takes place each morning without thought. Every day the sun sets in the west, and the moon reigns over the night. Children are taught that light comes from the sun, hundreds of thousands of miles away. Without the sun, life on Earth would die. The presence of the sun and moon is necessary for life to continue. John’s message in the Revelation is that the eternal city will have neither sun nor moon. When the Lord returns, the heavens will pass away with a great noise, and the elements will melt with fervent heat. Everything on earth will be destroyed. The heavens that contain the sun, the planets, including the moon, and all the stars will be obliterated into nothing.

In the absence of the heavens and earth, the eternal city will be filled with the glory of God. There will be no need of the sun or of the moon to shine in it. The eternal city is not a place of physicality determined by the natural laws, but a place where the glory of God will shine brighter than the sun, and the Lamb will be its light. Illumination will come from the glory of the Father. The visible splendor of His glory will fill the eternal city for the children of light to bask in and walk in. God’s glory fills the eternal places. There will be no night in the city of God. The glory of God will be the only light. Everything will glorify the image of the Lord God Almighty and the Lamb.

Eternal life is yet to come, and the fulfillment of what John wrote is still to be fulfilled. Until the day of the Lord, the sun, moon, and stars remain. Each day, the sun rises to bathe the earth in its warm glow and sets in the evening. While the eternal city has yet to be realized, the imagery of God’s glory filling the city remains the true hope that man has for eternal life. Children of light have filled their lives with the glory of God. Jesus taught that the lives of the faithful are like lights shining in a dark world. The more the Christian fills himself with the glory of God, the brighter he shines in the world.

God will fill the eternal city one day, but God needs to fill the tent of flesh as the people of God walk among men. Everything about the life of the Christian must be the glow of God’s glory. The speech of the Christian is light to the world. Attitudes expressed by children of God are the radiant beams of God’s word. The example of the Christian reflects the glory of God. When the world sees the life of the child of God, what they are to see is the glory of God filling every part of their lives so that all the world sees is the Lamb of God. Filling the heart with the brilliance of the glory of God will help those in darkness find the way, the truth, and the light. Heaven will be filled with the glory of God. Until that time is realized, fill your life with the glory of God.

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The Horrors Of War

So Hazael went to meet him and took a present with him, of every good thing of Damascus, forty camel-loads; and he came and stood before him, and said, “Your son Ben-Hadad king of Syria has sent me to you, saying, ‘Shall I recover from this disease?’ ” And Elisha said to him, “Go, say to him, ‘You shall certainly recover.’ However the Lord has shown me that he will really die.” Then he set his countenance in a stare until he was ashamed; and the man of God wept. And Hazael said, “Why is my lord weeping?” He answered, “Because I know the evil that you will do to the children of Israel: Their strongholds you will set on fire, and their young men you will kill with the sword; and you will dash their children, and rip open their women with child.” (2 Kings 8:9-12)

The Horrors Of War

Ben-Hadad, king of Syria, was ill and sought the counsel of the prophet, Elisha, whether he would recover. An officer of the king, Hazael, was sent to inquire of the prophet, taking with him great gifts. Elisha told Hazael to tell Ben-Hadad that he would recover, but in truth, the king would die. When Elisha told Hazael the news of his king, the prophet’s countenance changed dramatically. Elisha sank into a stare, and he began to weep. Hazael asked why the prophet was weeping. Elisha reveals to Hazael that he knows what will happen to Ben-Hadad and what Hazael will do. When Hazael returns to tell Ben-Hadad the news, the next day Hazael takes a thick cloth soaked in water and murders the king.

What saddened Elisha was what God revealed to the prophet, the level of cruelty Hazael would bring upon the people of God. The Lord used the Syrians to punish His rebellious people. Hazael would bring great suffering to the land of Israel, burning their cities to the ground, and killing all the young men with the sword. The Syrians would take the small children and dash them against rocks. They would take pregnant women and rip open their wombs, killing both mother and child most horrifically. The prophets Hosea and Amos would both declare God’s fury and wrath against Damascus for the atrocities of war committed against the children of Israel.

War crimes are as old as the history of humanity. No nation that has gone to war survives without condemnation for cruelty in battle upon the opposing army, and especially the innocent. The inhumanity of man against his fellow man is evidence of the nature of sin and wickedness. There is no justification for torture, rape, murder, and cruelty toward others in the name of war. Nothing will go unpunished. The Syrians were a tool used by God to punish His people, as were the Assyrians and Babylonians, but judgment came upon all those who exacted horrible acts of cruelty toward others. God does not ignore nor forget what the soldiers did to the young men and women with child.

Sin is at the heart of cruelty. Elisha was saddened by what he knew Hazael would do. He could see through the mind’s eye the atrocities committed by the Syrians against the people of God. Israel had rejected God, and He was bringing judgment upon His own people because of their sin. The Syrians sinned in killing the innocent and ripping open the women with child. Israel was guilty of wickedness by going after the gods of Baal, Asherah, and Chemosh. Idol worship included human sacrifice, rape, and torture. Israel was no less guilty than Syria. God will punish the heart of evil.

When Cain killed Abel, the consequence of sin was highlighted by the senseless murder of an innocent man. This act of murder would be repeated for thousands of years until the ultimate murder of a sinless man brought hope to a dark world. The Jews killed Jesus of Nazareth out of envy and jealousy. Jesus was sinless, who knew no sin. Through the death of Jesus, the inhumanity of man against others could be brought to light for the saving power of Jesus Christ. Peter told those on Pentecost that they killed the Son of God. Cut to the heart, they asked what they must do to be saved. Peter told them to repent and be baptized for the remission of sins. Three thousand believed and were baptized. The love and grace of God were shown to highlight that in the face of the inhumanity of man, God is willing to forgive. There is no greater love than to forgive those who killed the Son of God. God’s grace is amazing, beyond measure, eternal in the heavens. Sin will not be ignored. Obedience can wash away sin. Even the most horrible sin.

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Asking God For Help

Let your gentleness be known to all men. The Lord is at hand. Be anxious for nothing, but in everything by prayer and supplication, with thanksgiving, let your requests be made known to God; and the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and minds through Christ Jesus. (Philippians 4:5-7)

Asking God For Help

There is a story about a young boy working with his father in the yard. The boy decided to move a large stone. The father watched his son struggle with the rock, but it would not budge. Finally, the man asked the boy, “Are you using all your strength?” “Yes, Daddy,” he said panting, “I’m using all my strength.” “No, you’re not,” the father replied. “You’re not using all your strength—because you haven’t asked me to help.”

Life is full of trials and obstacles. Sin brought heartache to the world, as the consequence of rebellion was expulsion from paradise. Man must battle sin. The flesh will suffer and die. Because of the sin, life is full of labor and toil by the sweat of the brow. Life is full of troubles, doubts, fears, and uncertainty. God punished man for rebellion, but He did not leave His creation alone. At the moment God punished man, He blessed him with the knowledge to overcome the trials he would face. The world is full of trials, and the answer to overcoming them is to ask God for help.

Pride keeps the heart from seeking the help of the Almighty. Obstacles come into life that human wisdom cannot overcome. A man will try everything he can to get through his trouble, neglecting the greatest source of comfort he has – God! Throughout scripture, the Lord shows, by example and commandment, that He is willing and able to help with anything a man struggles with. Noah found grace in the eyes of the Lord, and through God’s will, Noah and his family were saved from the flood. Nothing in human wisdom could have prepared him or told him how to save himself.

The blessing of being in Christ is asking the Father for help, and He will answer. This is not something those outside of Christ share. There is no need to be anxious about the affairs of life when the heart fully trusts in and depends upon the blessings of God. The key to the Father’s blessing is to ask. Sadly, many of God’s people are in spiritual kindergarten when it comes to prayer. The Lord wants His people to seek His help in everything by prayer and supplication. A thankful heart moves the spirit to beg for God’s mercy, grace, and help in times of need. God may know the needs of a man, but He wants the heart to seek, ask, and knock.

Prayers unasked are the most tragic of petitions. God desires for His children to speak with Him, share their thoughts and wants with Him. He is the God of blessings who will shower His grace upon those who seek His help. As the God of peace, the Father will give understanding that surpasses the wisdom of man when men ask for His guidance and help. The key is found in the asking. If a man tries to answer the challenges of life apart from God, he will fail. Ask God. Seek the Lord. Let your requests be made known to God.

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Killed For Preaching Truth

Then the Spirit of God came upon Zechariah, the son of Jehoiada the priest, who stood above the people, and said to them, “Thus says God: ‘Why do you transgress the commandments of the Lord, so that you cannot prosper? Because you have forsaken the Lord, He also has forsaken you.’ ” So they conspired against him, and at the command of the king, they stoned him with stones in the court of the house of the Lord. (2 Chronicles 24:20-21)

Killed For Preaching Truth

Zechariah was stoned to death by the people of God in the house of the Lord for preaching truth. He challenged the king, who was taking the nation away from God. Zechariah’s father had been a close counselor of the king and helped bring the people back to the Lord. After Zechariah’s father died, the king listened to the wrong advisors. The king heeded the will of the people, leaving the worship of the one true God for the wooden images and idols of the pagans. God sent prophets to the people to declare the word of the Lord, but they refused to listen.

The Holy Spirit came upon Zechariah, and he told the people they were transgressing the commandments of the Lord. Moses warned the people that if they rebelled against the Lord, He would bring His wrath to bear upon them. Zechariah appealed to the Law, reminding the people of the dangers of leaving the word of the Lord. God warned His people that if they forsook His word, He would forsake them. As the hearts of the people turned to idols and wooden images, God’s grace and love turned away from the people. The prophets warned the people, but to no avail. Zechariah boldly proclaimed the word of the Lord to the people. A group of men conspired against the man of God and stoned him to death in the Temple area.

Zechariah stood against the king, the false prophets, and the people because they were wrong. Joash did much good for the people as long as Jehoiada, the father of Zechariah, was alive. But his heart was turned away by those he allowed to influence him. It was bold for Zechariah to stand against the will of the king. Zechariah was in conflict with other prophets who gave the people a false hope. Even the people were against Zechariah. Truth exposed the sins of the people. They responded by rejecting the word of the Lord. Those who conspired against Zechariah enacted revenge by stoning the prophet of God to death.

The death of Zechariah did not change the word of the Lord. What the prophet said was true. The Lord would punish the people for their rebellion, and the word of the prophet Zechariah would bear testimony to the sin of the people. Truth will always be victorious, and false words will always be defeated. Killing Zechariah did not alter the plan God had for His people, as they would go into captivity and eventually be destroyed. The Jews killed Jesus because of envy and jealousy, but their hatred for the Son of God exposed the love of God for all mankind. Killing Jesus became the power of the gospel in the cross. Zechariah was a courageous man who preached the gospel of truth, resulting in his death. His death became his resurrection. Truth stands. God’s word is everlasting.

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When Blindness Opened The Eyes

Now when they had gone through the island to Paphos, they found a certain sorcerer, a false prophet, a Jew whose name was Bar-Jesus, who was with the proconsul, Sergius Paulus, an intelligent man. This man called for Barnabas and Saul and sought to hear the word of God. But Elymas the sorcerer (for so his name is translated) withstood them, seeking to turn the proconsul away from the faith. Then Saul, who also is called Paul, filled with the Holy Spirit, looked intently at him and said, “O full of all deceit and all fraud, you son of the devil, you enemy of all righteousness, will you not cease perverting the straight ways of the Lord? And now, indeed, the hand of the Lord is upon you, and you shall be blind, not seeing the sun for a time.” And immediately a dark mist fell on him, and he went around seeking someone to lead him by the hand. Then the proconsul believed, when he saw what had been done, being astonished at the teaching of the Lord. (Acts 13:6-12)

When Blindness Opened The Eyes

A proconsul was a man of authority in the Roman government, governing of a senatorial province. He answered to Rome, wielding great power over the citizens of the territory. When Paul and Barnabas began their first missionary journey, they traveled to Barnabas’s homeland, where they preached the word of God in the synagogues of the Jews. Arriving in the city of Paphos, the capital of the island of Cyprus. Paphos was the residence of the Roman governor, Sergius Paulus. Upon hearing of Barnabas and Paul, the proconsul called for them to come and share the word of God with him. Accompanying Sergius Paulus was a sorcerer, a false prophet, a Jew named Bar-Jesus (also known as Elymas).

When Sergius Paulus invited Barnabas and Paul to share the message of Jesus with him, Elymas interfered, urging the governor to pay no attention to what Barnabas and Saul said. He withstood the preachers seeking to deflect what they were teaching, and Sergius Paulus believed in Jesus Christ. It is clear that the sorcerer knew if the proconsul believed in Christ, his work as a sorcerer would come to an end. He was trying to keep the governor from believing in Jesus Christ. The actions of Elymas angered Paul. Filled with the Holy Spirit, the apostle denounced the actions of the false prophet, declaring his words were the works of Satan, being filled with unrighteousness and perverting the straight ways of the Lord.

Paul pronounced a curse on Elymas, appealing to the Holy Spirit to blind the false prophet for a time. Immediately, a dark mist fell on Elymas, and he stumbled around trying to find someone to guide him. Luke does not tell how long the blindness lasted, but it had a lasting impression upon the Gentile proconsul. When Sergius Paulus saw what Paul did and the evidence of the miracle of instant blinding of the false prophet, he believed. Paul’s preaching, confirmed by the miracle against Elymas, pierced the proconsul’s heart and brought about obedience to the gospel of Christ. Elymas’s blindness led to the eyes of Sergius Paulus being opened.

Jesus told the eleven to preach the gospel and use miracles to confirm the word. Miracles have ceased, but the power of the gospel to change lives has not. The blindness of one man led to the enlightenment of another. Preaching the whole counsel of God declares the goodness and severity of God. The righteousness of God is revealed in the gospel, and so is the wrath of God. They both serve the purpose of the other to explain the nature of God. Blinding Elymas was the power of God’s wrath upon unrighteousness. The heart of Sergius Paulus was moved to see the power of God, and he believed. Throughout scripture, God shows his love and kindness toward those who repent and obey. His wrath is against those who refuse.

An old proverb declares that the scriptures are given to comfort the afflicted, but it is also written to afflict the comfortable. Sergius Paulus became a believer after witnessing the power of God. That same response must come to the hearts of all men to see how much God loves them and to understand the lengths God took to save the world – His only begotten Son. The violence of the death of Jesus should move men to believe He is the Son of God and repent. When men see the horror of sin, open hearts will respond with a desire to believe and serve the Lord. Sergius Paulus believed when he saw what had been done. He was astonished at the teaching of the Lord. Open your eyes to the glory of a loving Father who gave His son to save you.

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Everyone Gets The Same

Then God said, “Let there be lights in the firmament of the heavens to divide the day from the night; and let them be for signs and seasons, and for days and years; and let them be for lights in the firmament of the heavens to give light on the earth”; and it was so. (Genesis 1:14-15)

Everyone Gets The Same

Before the fourth day of creation, light existed without the glowing sun or sparkling stars. God placed lights in the universe in the firmament to divide the day from the night. In creation, the Creator established time. Days were separated before the fourth day, but the order of time with days and years was established with the placement of the heavenly beings. God created the world in six days and rested on the seventh. He ordained that time would be divided by days, weeks, months, and years. The first man created died at the age of 930, as determined by time.

Everything has continued as God created it since the fourth day of creation. The sun rises in the east and disappears beyond the western horizon. Stars fill the night sky, declaring the glory of God. The moon soothes the night with its soft reflection of the brilliant sun. All that Adam and Eve gazed upon in the heavenly skies remain in the same orbit with each generation. Adam and Eve were given twenty-four hours with each passing day. They enjoyed weeks together, which became months and years. The names of days and months have changed over the centuries, but the rotation of heavenly orbs remains the same.

There is one constant that has remained since the creation of Adam. All humanity shares the same amount of time within a day. The ordination of the planets to regulate time remains unchanged. There are twenty-four hours in a day. The days of man multiply to determine his age. These constants are the same for everyone, anywhere, and at any time. Noah had the same amount of time in a day as someone would have in one thousand years. Everywhere in the world, everyone has the same number of hours. There are 1,440 minutes in a day. That number remains unchanged since Adam. This works out to 86,400 seconds per day. Everyone has the same amount of time.

The remarkable thing about time is that it has never been a matter of volume (which is always the same) but the amount of energy one expels within the confines of what God has given. William Penn said, “Time is what we want most, but what alas we use worst.” Baltasar Gracián observed, “All that really belongs to us is time; even he who has nothing else has that.” What excuse can a man give that time is wasted? He has the same amount of time as everyone. An equal amount of time is given to each individual every day. What makes life fruitful is the proper exercise of what has been given by God to all men.

Throughout the scriptures, the word of the Lord warns against wasting time. The certainty of time is that it is fleeting. Time is not eternal. Eternity is without end, but time is governed by the rotations of the heavenly bodies that will one day be destroyed. How a man uses the time given to him determines the outcome of his life and his eternal home. A wasted life is taking the gift of God and failing to use it to its full potential. Complaining about not having enough time is a contradiction of the established order that all men have. Everyone has the same amount of time. What they do with that time is what measures life and eternity. What time is it?

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The Fame Of Jesus

And Jesus went about all Galilee, teaching in their synagogues, preaching the gospel of the kingdom, and healing all kinds of sickness and all kinds of disease among the people. Then His fame went throughout all Syria; and they brought to Him all sick people who were afflicted with various diseases and torments, and those who were demon-possessed, epileptics, and paralytics; and He healed them. Great multitudes followed Him—from Galilee, and from Decapolis, Jerusalem, Judea, and beyond the Jordan. (Matthew 4:23-25)

The Fame Of Jesus

Early in Jesus’ ministry, the man from Nazareth was causing quite a stir among the people. Never had the multitudes seen such power as Jesus exhibited. He healed all kinds of sickness and all kinds of disease among the people. There was nothing that Jesus could not do. Everyone who came to Jesus with whatever crippling malady, cancer, broken bone, or chronic disease was healed and the disease taken away by the hand of the Lord. It was so incredible that swarms of people flocked to Jesus for relief from their suffering.

During the ministry of Jesus, God allowed demons to possess men to show the power of His Son over Satan and the demonic world. Jesus healed all the demon-possessed. He cured those who had epilepsy. The people with paralysis were given new life. No one came to Jesus to be healed who was not healed instantly. The healing of Jesus was not a gradual recovery. His power flowed in the bodies of the disease and brought soothing relief to the sufferings of those afflicted. Great multitudes followed Him. They came from hundreds of miles for healing. Jesus healed them all. Robertson observes, “Jesus had a moving hospital of patients from all over Galilee and Syria.”

The fame of Jesus went throughout all Syria. When people heard a man could heal any and every disease known to man, they dropped what they were doing and made the pilgrimage to where Jesus was. This was no easy task. Leaving families behind. Work was left unattended. Traveling long distances while ill made the journey arduous. It was a monumental effort to find Jesus and await the healing. They were rewarded for their effort as the healing power of the Holy Spirit flowed through Jesus to heal them. Everyone went home a new person, whole, relieved, and rejoicing. Jesus was famous for healing. He took away their pain, sorrow, grief, and torment. The man from Nazareth was famous for healing the multitudes.

Jesus performed miracles without number. He proved He was the Son of God. What the diseased multitudes overlooked was the greater healing Jesus had, which would get Him killed. Jesus went about all Galilee, teaching in their synagogues, preaching the gospel of the kingdom. Being cured of leprosy was a life-changing gift from the hand of Jesus, but it did not change the sinful nature of man. Coming to Jesus to be healed of sickness, disease, torments, demon-possession, epilepsy, and paralysis did not take away the scourge of sin. They went home healed of body, but what about the spirit? The preaching of the gospel of the kingdom healed men of sin. Healing from the disease was only temporary.

People went to great lengths to find healing from the hand of Jesus. The world takes little interest in Jesus’ teachings. They take little or no notice of what He teaches. If Jesus were on the earth, healing every disease, the sick would fly from every part of the world to be healed. The gospel of Christ is ever powerful today in the word of God, but few take the interest or effort to know what it means to be healed of sin. There is no interest in the Savior Jesus. The fame of Jesus was remarkable when He healed the multitudes and fed the masses. They killed Jesus because of His teachings. The world has remained unchanged. Jesus is famous only as a good man who lived long ago.

The fame of Jesus was well deserved for the relief He gave the multitudes. As His ministry drew nearer the time of the cross, His miracles diminished, and His teaching increased. Jesus came to preach and save souls. Washing sins away is the greatest miracle man can know, made possible by the greatest miracle of the resurrection of Jesus. He rose from the dead to be the one miracle that would lead all men to the Father. Jesus is famous today, but for many of the wrong reasons. The fame of Jesus must spread in the hearts of men who hear the word of the gospel and obey. Death will end disease, but eternal death will never be cured. The gospel does not heal disease; it removes the blight of sin. Make Jesus famous for what He came to do: seek and save the lost.

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