Spirit Fruit – Love

But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, longsuffering, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control. Against such there is no law. (Galatians 5:22-23)

Spirit Fruit – Love

The foundation of humanity has always been the essence of love. Creation was established through love as the Creator formed the perfect union of a man and woman for His glory. Adam immediately recognized the beauty of the creation before him when God brought the woman to him. He knew she would be a part of him as the union of their souls was united in the bond of marriage. Love was in its infancy, but it would fuel the relationships of humanity and the bond between God and man. Sin destroyed the nature of love as designed by God. Through the word of God, love can find its divine worth to rekindle the need of love for God, love for a spouse, and love for others.

Love is a multifaceted and complex word defined in many ways but at its root it means to have an affection for and show goodwill. The nature of love is essential to the human soul. Developing love becomes how relationships are made and kept. Central the character of love is to never seek anything but the highest good for another. True love removes selfishness, exalting the needs of others above self. Many parts of love come naturally, but more complex avenues of love must be learned.

The Holy Spirit is a blessing given to every Christian when they obey the gospel of Christ. Every disciple enjoys the gift of the Holy Spirit and enjoys all the blessings received from the Spirit. The fruit of the Spirit is the character of righteousness produced within the godly spirit by the influence of the Spirit of God. Foremost in the fruit of Spirit is love. It does not seem to be a coincidence that when Paul defines the fruits of the Spirit, it begins with love. Walking in the Spirit and being led by the Spirit starts with love. The other fruits of the Spirit come from the foundation of love.

What is unique about love is that while it is an amazing feeling and experience, it can only be known from the action it prompts. God loved the world, but He showed His love by sending Jesus to die for all men. If a man tells his wife he loves her but never shows it; love is vain. Love is defined by the manner it expresses itself to another. The Bible is full of examples of God’s love for man. The Lord wants men to love Him, which is found when God’s commands are kept. Throughout scripture, the Lord admonishes His people to show their love by obeying His word. The Christian’s love is expressed in obedience.

The disciple of Christ must show their love for God and His Son, Jesus Christ, with something more than lip service. Loving others is a part of the character of the Christian, including loving enemies. Husbands and wives are to love one another as God designed the home, including loving the children. Loving others takes courage and faith. This kind of love does not come automatically and without effort. The fruit of the Spirit is where the more profound kind of love comes from. Without spending time in the word of the Spirit (the Bible), love will not be defined. If love is a fruit of the Spirit, love must come from the Spirit. The Holy Spirit teaches in His Word the divine will of love, and as the Spirit leads a man, he will find the fruit of love expressed in his life. Finding the fruit of the Spirit in love will remove the guilt of sin, depression of the soul, prejudice of others, the anxiety of the present, and fill the heart with great confidence and courage.

There is a great need for the people of God to get into the fruit of the Spirit and begin each day with love. Jesus taught in the mountain sermon the test of one’s character is the fruit he bears. The person of God is a person whose heart is directed by love. It must be the beginning. Everything that follows must be fused with a love for God and others. When the fruit of the Spirit is living and active in the life of a Christian, they will bear fruits of love in their lives. Let the Spirit lead with love.

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Four Words On A Wall

In the same hour the fingers of a man’s hand appeared and wrote opposite the lampstand on the plaster of the wall of the king’s palace; and the king saw the part of the hand that wrote. Then the king’s countenance changed, and his thoughts troubled him, so that the joints of his hips were loosened and his knees knocked against each other. The king cried aloud to bring in the astrologers, the Chaldeans, and the soothsayers. The king spoke, saying to the wise men of Babylon, “Whoever reads this writing, and tells me its interpretation, shall be clothed with purple and have a chain of gold around his neck; and he shall be the third ruler in the kingdom.” Now all the king’s wise men came, but they could not read the writing, or make known to the king its interpretation. (Daniel 5:5-8)

Four Words On A Wall

The feast seemed to be going well. It was a grand affair for a thousand of the king’s nobles filled with wine, women, and merriment. Everything was going along so well; the king ordered the gold and silver vessels his predecessor had taken from the temple in Jerusalem to be brought and used for the debauchery. Quickly, the servants went to the storehouse, gathered all the Jewish vessels together, and brought them to the grand hall. His lords, wives, and concubines filled the vessels with wine and continued the drunken feast with great enthusiasm. As they lifted up the vessels of Jehovah, they praised the gods of gold and silver, bronze and iron, wood and stone. It was a time of extravagant feasting as the carnal spirits of ungodliness filled the hall.

In the same hour of the abomination of Belshazzar, the fingers of a man’s hand wrote upon the wall opposite the lampstand. The king saw part of the hand that wrote the words. His face turned pale with fright. His knees knocked together in fear, and his legs gave way beneath him. He demanded his astrologers, wise men, and soothsayers to declare the meaning of the words. The king promised a reward to any man who could tell the meaning of the words purple and gold and third place in the kingdom. All attempts to read the words failed, and the king was left without an answer.

Hearing what had happened, the Queen comes to the hall to find the king trembling with great fear. She assured him there was a man in the kingdom with whom the spirit of the Holy God was upon who could tell the meaning of the words. Daniel was called to tell the interpretation of the words “Mene, Mene, Tekel, Upharsin,” meaning the king the Holy God whose vessels the king had defiled had numbered the days of his kingdom, and it was at an end. Further, the kingdom of Belshazzar would be given to the Medes and Persians because the king had been weighed in the balance and had not measured up to the grace of God. Daniel received the honor promised by Belshazzar, but that night Darius the Mede was already outside the city of Babylon. In the same night, the Medes entered the city and killed Belshazzar, just as the word of the Lord had said.

There is a contrast of worldly views found in the story of Belshazzar and the writing on the wall. On one side is the carnal pursuits of the fleshly nature fulfilled in the debauchery of the feast. It was a feast filled with drunkenness, sexual immorality, lewdness, and blasphemy. None of those gathered had a thought of what tomorrow would bring. They lived for the moment. In the midst of their frivolity, a sign was given to remind them of who was in charge of the world. Ironically, all the wisdom of Babylon gathered in one room could make no sense of its meaning. The best and brightest of the kingdom were oblivious to interpreting and explaining the meaning of the words. Their passions were centered upon their self-indulgence. Trying to understand four words escaped them. They were doomed and did not know it.

Daniel is on the other side of the story. The words were not complicated or hard to understand, but the need was to see them from God’s mind. Belshazzar was king of Babylon, but the Holy God of Israel, whose vessels the king had defiled, was the Creator of the universe holding the king’s breath in His hand. God owned all the king’s ways, and the king did not glorify the true God. All the wisdom of Babylon or the world could not make sense of four words. The wisdom of man is useless in the face of the divine word. It took a humble servant of the Lord to explain the meaning of the words. Daniel showed an incredible amount of courage to tell the king – to his face – his kingdom was over, and he would die.

The world is filled with souls who go through life enjoying the sensual joys of fleshly indulgence with no care or concern for God. All the wisdom of humanity will never bring them true happiness, answer the more profound questions of the human equation, or promise anything of value. Like Babylon’s knowledge failed as it faced the word of God, desperate hearts seeking worth in themselves will fail. God’s word is not four words but the message of a graceful God found in the Bible. Only when men turn to the Creator and listen to His words can happiness in life be found. Who do you follow? The wise men of the world or the voice of God?

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Is There Life On Other Planets?

For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life. (John 3:16)

Is There Life On Other Planets?

The news recently rekindled an age-old question of flying saucers, UFOs, and the quest to find life on other planets. Presently, NASA’s Perseverance rover is on the planet Mars to collect samples and find evidence of ancient life. Missions to Mars have taken place since 1965, with plans to launch manned flights to the lunar south pole by 2024 as proving ground for strategies to reach Mars. Neil Armstrong found when he first stepped foot on the Moon the same thing when vehicles landed on Mars – no extraterrestrial beings live there. Scientists believe they will find evidence of life on the planets to understand the origins of the Earth, which is contrary since the only life to be seen is on Earth.

When Neil Armstrong and pilot Buzz Aldrin walked on the Moon’s surface, it was a remarkable feat of human engineering. Since 1969, other men have walked on the Moon with Gene Cernan, the last man to stand on the lunar surface in 1972. Mars is the next closest planet to land vehicles upon but requires nearly seven months to arrive on the surface when Mars and Earth align, allowing for a quicker and more efficient journey (occurring every 26 months). While the pictures coming back from the surface of Mars are outstanding, there are no primitive buildings, smiling Martians, and evidence of life. It is a barren, frigid, inhospitable world half the size of Earth.

Is there life on other planets? Will the day come when, like early explorers, new lands and new peoples are found dotting the landscape of the vast tapestry of the star-filled heavens? Long before the advent of Flash Gordon’s Hollywood productions, My Favorite Martian, Star Wars, and Star Trek, men have imagined aliens from the heavens landing on Earth. In 1938, Orson Welles scared the world with his rendition of the War of the Worlds, suggesting Martians had landed on Earth terrorizing the world. Sightings of unidentified flying objects find their way into the news, fueling speculation the government is hiding a covert program of extraterrestrial beings used for science studies. Many believe the day will come that space travel will be as common as going to the store for milk.

The Bible is a book that answers many questions, and it addresses the question of whether there is life on other planets. In the beginning, God created the heavens and the Earth. Whatever is seen in the sky was made by the hand of the Divine. The Moon and Mars did not take billions of years to form. They were created at the instant the Creator spoke. Moses reveals that when creation was finished, God formed man from the dust of the ground (Earth) and then took a rib from the first man and created the woman. Adam’s name means “red earth.” Paul will later tell the saints in Corinth that Adam was the “first man” and that he was “of the earth, made of dust.” Whatever beings are in the universe were created by God.  Since Adam was the first, all beings are human or in Adam’s image. The first time a human left the bounds of Earth to travel into space was in 1961 when Soviet pilot and cosmonaut, Yuri Alekseyevich Gagarin, entered the void above the circle of the Earth. He was not a Martian or a being from another planet. The search for life on other planets is an exercise in futility because God created Adam as the first and all other creatures follow in his similitude.

A final reason there are no extraterrestrial beings running around the universe is found in the words of Jesus. He told Nicodemus that God so loved the world – limiting the geography of God’s grace. Jesus came to Earth to become a man and die for the sins of the world, not for Moon-people, Martians, or Klingons. If God created all that is in the universe and Jesus only came to Earth to die for humankind, there are no other civilizations on planets spread throughout the universe. UFOs do exist, but only in the context; they are flying objects that are not identified. It may do well to consider governments’ secrets creating machines that are unknown to the public (stealth technology, for example). One thing is sure about UFOs – they do not have little green creatures that look like an octopus on steroids flying them. The suspicion is they are human-made, earthy, and secret. Look to God. He is real.

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Bring Your Glove To Church

Then the brethren immediately sent Paul and Silas away by night to Berea. When they arrived, they went into the synagogue of the Jews. These were more fair-minded than those in Thessalonica, in that they received the word with all readiness, and searched the Scriptures daily to find out whether these things were so. Therefore many of them believed, and also not a few of the Greeks, prominent women as well as men. (Acts 17:10-12)

Bring Your Glove To Church

The American Baseball season is well underway, with games dotting the landscape of towns across America. It has been called “America’s Pastime” and the essence of the American spirit. A most unusual game took place recently. The time was set for the teams to play, and the fans gathered to watch a rival match between two champions. Batting first, the visiting team sent their first batter to the box to prepare for the opening pitch. As he gazed over the field for a strategic place to play the ball, the batter noticed that five or six of the nine players did not have gloves, including the catcher. The visiting team routed the home team as players were unable to handle the balls without the glove.

Tim Kurkjian writes, “A player’s glove, especially for a good defensive player, is his most personal piece of equipment, and it is treated with great respect and care.” No one would imagine a game where the teams would show up without their gloves. Kurkjian relates how “former Indians pitcher Brian Anderson once forgot his glove on a spring training bus trip to Winter Haven, Fla., so, in full uniform, he borrowed a car to go buy a glove” at Walmart. The glove is one of the most important tools a player has to play the game. If a player refused to bring his glove to the game, he would not last long in the sport.

When Jesus promised the apostles that He would build His church, there were expectations included in that promise. The saints would gather on the first day of the week to worship the Father, remember the Son of God’s sacrifice, and fellowship as saints in the grace of God. Every first day of the week would be when God’s people would gather together in the same place for the singular purpose of obeying the Lord, receiving edification and instruction, and admonishing one another in love. The focus of the assembly would be worship. Reading from the pages of holy writ would be the primary foundation of worship. It would be impossible to worship God in spirit and truth without the written word. As the canon of God’s word was established, it became known as “The Bible.” This book would become the foundational rock of truth in the church of Christ.

For many years, the Bible was considered a person’s most personal possession, and it is treated with great respect and care. Families would go to church each Sunday carrying their Bibles in their hands. Children learned early how to find the books of the Bible. Memory verses were learned to gain knowledge of scripture. Preachers would preach from the Book, citing many passages the audience would turn to and read along with the speaker. Almost everyone had a Bible, and if they happen to forget their Bible, they used the one found in the pew. Worship service was a time of investigating, learning, and opening up the word of God.

Sadly, so often in today’s busy world, many of God’s people come to services without a Bible. Pew Bibles are available to open and follow along, but many sit dispassionately listening to the message. Few Bibles are opened. With the advent of media, there is no need to open the Bible as all the scriptures are displayed on the screen for the audience’s convenience. There is a good reason for showing the passages on the overhead because many of those sitting in the pew have no idea where the books of the Bible are located, much less how to find chapters and verses. This again is a sad commentary on how God’s people have little knowledge of God’s book. The church is like a baseball team showing up to play but without their gloves.

Sometimes, the innovations of men have crippled the instructions of the Lord. When churches begin to fill with saints who do not bring their Bibles and who do not open a Bible to read along with the message or spend time examining the text, the work of the Lord suffers. A lot. Bible class teachers who do not teach the Bible in class but instead spend the hour playing – are preparing a generation to forget God. Churches who do not put the word of God first will be first in apostasy and worldliness. The Bereans were more noble than those of Thessalonica because they knew what to do with a baseball glove.

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Lovers Of

For men will be lovers of themselves, lovers of money, boasters, proud, blasphemers, disobedient to parents, unthankful, unholy, unloving, unforgiving, slanderers, without self-control, brutal, despisers of good, traitors, headstrong, haughty, lovers of pleasure rather than lovers of God, having a form of godliness but denying its power. And from such people turn away! (2 Timothy 3:2-5)

Lovers Of

The world at large is made up of those who love themselves and those who love God. It is not hard to distinguish the two apart from one another. The majority of the people of the world have little or no interest in God and live to please themselves. Life for the mass of humanity consists of waking each day to fulfill whatever desires and wishes they deem necessary and valuable to their lives. It could be their job that brings them complete satisfaction. Life can be measured by schemes to make more money. Many spend endless hours grooming their bodies to be the most beautiful, glamorous, and seductive allurements for others to gaze upon. The fame of the red carpet is where the heart of prideful spirits seeks fulfillment. Young minds are filled with the desire to be a famous athlete or musician, or actor to be looked upon with admiration.

Paul offers a concise list of challenges facing the majority of souls in the world. For most, life is about self and the love of self. Those who are lovers of themselves believe the world revolves around their life. They have the spirit of entitlement expecting the world to cower to their whims and desires. Lovers of money spend their lives conniving, scheming, and manipulating to gain as much wealth as possible. Many faithless hearts boast in arrogance to their self-worth. Pride is the spirit of the self-entitled men and women who view the world as their playground to do as they wish. Blasphemers are people who become their own gods, creating an air of self-worship and personal exaltation.

Family relationships have no meaning to lovers of self. There is no honor to parents or older adults as families are abandoned for the pleasures of self-indulgence. Life is characterized by what can be taken without any thankfulness or gratitude for others. The daily life of lovers of self is wholly unholy, immoral, and ungodly. They are unloving, unforgiving, and will slander others, and have no self-control. They will be cruel and hate what is good. It will mean nothing to betray friends, act reckless, and boast of their superiority to all the world. These hearts are filled with the love of pleasure and nothing else.

Jesus told the multitude on the mountain most people will follow the broad path to destruction, and few will find everlasting life. It will only take a moment to see the picture of carnality in the world. These traits fill the landscape of the human experience. Look around and see how many lives follow the path in one form or another described by Paul. Sadly, the lovers of pleasures will enjoy life until they die and find no happiness after life. Lovers of God will be the only souls who find peace, happiness, and hope in this life and enjoy eternal rest in the life to come. The greatest tragedy for lovers of themselves is they live for pleasures that have no lasting value. It never brings the happiness they desire. Misery and hopelessness is the only answer they find. Lovers of God lived fulfilled lives full of value and worth. There are two kinds of people: they are both lovers of something. What they love is what makes a difference in their life now and, more importantly, what they find after life is gone. Your choice. What do you love?

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Throw Jesus Over The Hill

So all those in the synagogue, when they heard these things, were filled with wrath, and rose up and thrust Him out of the city; and they led Him to the brow of the hill on which their city was built, that they might throw Him down over the cliff. Then passing through the midst of them, He went His way. (Luke 4:28-30)

Throw Jesus Over The Cliff

Nazareth was the hometown of Jesus where He grew up with his brothers and sisters in a village known for its carpenters. The family of Joseph and Mary was well-known among the tight-knit community. Beginning His Galilean ministry, Jesus returned to Nazareth where he had been brought up, and as His custom was, went into the synagogue on the Sabbath day. He had often read from the scriptures, and when he was handed the book of the prophet Isaiah, Jesus read from the section of the text describing the coming Messiah and how the Spirit of the Lord would be upon Him. Closing the book and handing it back to the attendant, Jesus sat down, and the eyes of all who were in the synagogue were fixed on Him.

No one in the synagogue could have expected what happened next. Following the reading from Isaiah, Jesus told the crowd the He was the fulfillment of the passage from Isaiah. Jesus spoke graciously to the crowd, but they became angry when He suggested they were hard-hearted and unwilling to hear His teaching. The only thing the people of Nazareth could see was a lowly carpenter’s son. They refused to accept Jesus was anything but common. As Jesus spoke, the fury of the people increased to murderous anger. Grabbing Jesus roughly, the crowd shoved their fellow citizen out of the town to throw Him headlong over the cliff in the hopes of killing Him. Jesus did not fight back or resist. Tussled along the road and out of the city, the men held Jesus firmly with rough hands, screaming at him and threatening His life. As they neared the place at the top of the hill, Jesus passed through them and went His way.

A miracle was done in their presence, and no one seemed to take note. As the men carried Jesus to the hill, He disappeared. Were they so intent on their murderous plot, they could not see the miracle before their eyes? Jesus went to Capernaum, about 30 miles, and began teaching in the synagogue. He healed many people in the area and spent time preaching throughout the synagogues of Galilee, but no one from Nazareth came and acknowledged what happened in their city. How did they explain what happened to Jesus when they returned to the city? Throughout His early ministry, Jesus would visit the area around Nazareth, and again, the people of the city made no special effort to acknowledge what Jesus had said and done.

God has always made Himself visible to the world. His Son came in the flesh and through teaching and miracles showed Himself to be the Son of God. The spirit of the people of Nazareth pervades the hearts of men who shut their ears to the teaching of Christ and would rather throw Him over the hill headlong to kill Him than to accept His message. Many opportunities are given for the people to see the power of Jesus, but they refuse. The Bible is the mind of God revealed to help man find peace and truth, and like the people of Nazareth, men squander the opportunities until it is too late. Their disbelief did not change the fact that Jesus was the fulfillment of Isaiah. He died to bear the sins of humanity and to open a pathway to the grace of the Father. Pardon cannot be given to a man who refuses to accept it.

Jesus came to show men He was the only begotten Son of God, and through Him, salvation is found. Everything man needs is provided in the Bible to direct him to God. The words of Jesus are true, and He is the light of the world. Sadly, none of this will matter to hearts that are stopped up. Men would rather throw Jesus over the hill than listen to Him. When the miracle of the final day comes, there will be no more hope. As Jesus disappeared from the crowd the day they wanted to kill Him, so will the opportunities for salvation fade away. What will you do with Jesus?

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The Word Of God Is Pure

Every word of God is pure; He is a shield to those who put their trust in Him. Do not add to His words, lest He rebuke you, and you be found a liar. (Proverbs 30:5-6)

The Word Of God Is Pure

In metallurgy, metal is refined to its purest form purifying the metal of all impurities. 24-karat gold is the purest gold, but it is only 99.9% pure. Its value is increased from 9-karats to the highest of 24-karat. The word used by the wise man about the word of God is that it has been purified like a refiner’s fire. Every word of God is pure without any contaminants. It is not 99.9% pure – it has nothing added to it, giving it a purity rate of 100% without a mixture of error and dross. Whatever trials it may be exposed to, it is always like gold: it bears the fire and comes out with the same luster, the same purity, and the same weight. The difference is that every word of God is pure, and nothing is added that will contaminate.

The problem has always been the meddling of human wisdom mixed with the word that has created a tainted gospel. It is not uncommon for men to take the word of God and incorporate it in their own doctrines, and while retaining a luster of gold, it is not the pure word. To the untrained eye, there may be a slight difference between 14-karat gold and 24-karat gold. It will require investigation to determine the mixture of metals in the gold, but a trained eye will notice the subtle differences and, upon examination, declare the gold impure. Every word of God is pure when it is received as it is, the word of God. The warning of the Lord has always been not to add to the divine will. If a man presents a piece of gold and tells the buyer it is 24-karat when it is of less value, the man will be found a liar. Preaching a gospel that is not the pure word of God makes the man a liar.

Gold can be found in different qualities and value, but the word of the Lord is of one quality and one value. It is the purest of all things on earth. Another mistake human wisdom will make to God’s pure word is to reject one part of teaching. The wise man said every word of God is pure. When a man refuses to accept one piece of scripture because he does not like it, he rejects the whole word of God. A man will say that he believes in Jesus Christ and believes Him to be the Son of God but refuses to follow all the teachings of Christ. Religion becomes a choice of what pleases men rather than what the word of God demands. Satan is careful to allow a man to believe in God and taint the picture of God’s word with a mixture of human wisdom. There are 2 billion followers of Christ in the world, but the large majority of that number will not accept the whole word of God. Either a man must take every word of God as pure or reject the entire message of God as error. Every word of God is pure without exception, or it is not the word of God.

There is a figure by which everyone must be a spiritual metallurgist. In other words, when the Bible is presented in its golden form, the true disciple of Jesus Christ will examine the quality of the word to make sure it is 100% pure the word of God. The best gold can be refined to its highest value of 99.9%, but God’s word is 100%. This requires investigation, comparison, and examination to know if what is being taught is the word of God. Too many souls have accepted the golden message of God tainted with the impure metals of human wisdom and carnal doctrines. Like gold, mixing in other metals decreases the worth of the word of God. The true value of God’s word is when a man accepts every word as pure – with no exceptions.

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Repent Or Face The Lord’s Anger

Gather yourselves together, yes, gather together, O undesirable nation, before the decree is issued, or the day passes like chaff, before the Lord’s fierce anger comes upon you, before the day of the Lord’s anger comes upon you! Seek the Lord, all you meek of the earth, who have upheld His justice. Seek righteousness, seek humility. It may be that you will be hidden in the day of the Lord’s anger. (Zephaniah 2:1-3)

Repent Or Face The Lord’s Anger

The message of Zephaniah begins with an immediate, forceful, and demonstrative declaration of the wrath of God. He begins his book by declaring the Lord will utterly consume all things from off the land because of the people’s idolatrous practices. God’s people had turned back from Him and did not seek the Lord nor inquire of the word of the Lord. Zephaniah fearlessly proclaimed the day of the Lord. If the people were to be saved, they must repent or face the Lord’s anger. God warns Judah, including the scope of divine judgment if the nation fails to change their hearts. Hope is found in the remnant of Israel to be restored.

Judah, under the rule of Josiah, will experience a time of restoration. The young king did that which was right in the Lord’s sight and walked in all the ways of David his father. Along with Jeremiah the prophet, Zephaniah will seek to bring the people’s hearts back to the Lord. Zephaniah’s message is with a clear tone of divine warning that there would be no hope without repentance. The prophet begins his message with the terrors of the judgment of God to demonstrate the holiness of a jealous God who demands obedience from His people. There is an unmistakable tone of doom against those who would refuse to turn away from sin. Judgment would come in certain terms without regard to the person. Sin defiles the heart of man, and the wrath of God cleanses the filth of sin. The message of Zephaniah is loud for all the people to hear and for them to know the coming judgment of the Lord was absolute.

The language of Zephaniah speaks of the Lord’s fierce anger and the day of the Lord’s anger. Repentance demands recognizing the wrath of God. Sin will not go unpunished. When men seek to come before the Lord, they must change their hearts not because they are worthy of anything but to know how terrible sin is to the eyes of the Lord. Fear is a motive behind repentance as well as godly sorrow. To say one is sorry for a deed without remorse or fear cannot bring repentance. Zephaniah pleads with the people to seek the Lord, seek righteousness and seek humility. A man who does not fear God will not seek Him. Righteousness demands knowing the wrath of God. Humility is found when the heart of man meets the will of the Lord.

Forgiveness is joyful because the wrath of God is hidden. No one deserves the mercy of God, yet, through a penitent heart, the Lord will take away His wrath and accept the contrite person who knowing the anger of the Lord, seeks His favor. The words of the Publican who could only pray to the Lord for mercy as a sinner knew the fierceness of God’s wrath and the soothing peace of forgiveness. A man will deceive himself into believing he can seek forgiveness without a heart filled with the fear of God’s wrath. The joy of God’s grace is His willingness to remove sin as far as the east is from the west and take away His anger. What a joy to know of the divine love of God and His eternal mercy.

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The Word, The Creator, And The Light

In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was in the beginning with God. All things were made through Him, and without Him nothing was made that was made. In Him was life, and the life was the light of men. And the light shines in the darkness, and the darkness did not comprehend it. (John 1:1-5)

The Word, The Creator, And The Light

John describes Jesus in the three roles necessary for man to come to God. Human wisdom cannot bring happiness to man’s soul, and God has always given His word as guidance. Hearing the word of God will have no importance if man does not believe that God, as Creator, has all power to accomplish what He says He will do. Thirdly, as the word of God is manifest to humanity and the assurance of God’s power is seen, the human spirit can find the true light that will guide him to live a life with hope and promise. All of these traits are based on the truth that Jesus is God.

Adam and Eve were helpless without the guidance of their Creator. When God placed them into the garden, He gave them instructions. There were things they were permitted to do, but God prohibited them from eating the tree of knowledge of good and evil. When human reasoning caused them to disobey the word of the Lord, Adam and Eve were cast out of the garden, and sin took dominion of the soul of man. The world rejected God’s word, but Noah found grace in the eyes of the Lord because he believed the word. Obeying the instructions of God, Noah built an ark to save his household. Abraham received the word of the Lord and obeyed. Moses, Joshua, Samuel, David all obeyed the word of the Lord and were blessed in their lives.

Jesus came to be the Word of God and to share the Word of God with all men. The Son of God was the embodiment of the message of the Father as Jesus taught the people, lived an example of the word, and gave His life in a demonstration of the word. Everything about Jesus exemplified the message of a loving Father seeking His children’s renewal to His love and care. The word of God is the message of a dying Savior. Before time began, Jesus was with the Father and knew God’s will was to come to earth and die for the sins of humankind. He willingly offered His life to become the eternal word and show the glory of the word of God to humanity.

Hearing the word of God could not save a man alone. This required a belief in the message. Jesus performed many miracles to prove He was the Son of God. Unlike His faithless disciples, there was nothing Jesus could not do. As Creator, Jesus had dominion over substance, time, spirits, and death. He could not have this power if He were not the Creator of all things. It was a marvelous thing to consider the Creator walking among men. The signs, wonders, and miracles Jesus performed pointed all men to the Father to confirm the Word and to confirm Jesus as the Divine word. Rejecting the miracles meant that men were rejecting the Creator.

Hearing the word of the Lord and believing it through the power of Jesus, the light of salvation shone in the hearts of honest men. The challenge of humanity is to know where to go and how to live. Living in darkness, human wisdom could not answer the questions of life. Jesus came as the Word to give hope, as the Creator to show His power, and as the Light to guide all men to the Father. Light gives life. Jesus came to give life to dying souls burdened with the guilt of sin. Only the divine light can separate the darkness of sin and open the vistas of divine grace. Jesus taught the word as the light of the world. His power as Creator established His authority to dispel the darkness. Through the light of His life, Jesus opened the doors of Heaven for all who would obey to come to the Father.

Jesus was the Word, and through that word came truth. His authority was Creator establishing His word from the Father. Through the teachings of Jesus Christ, the light of salvation shines throughout the world for all to see, know, and hear the redemptive grace of a loving Father. When men read the word, accept the dominion of Christ in their lives, and walk in the light, they will find the glories of heaven waiting for them and the blessings of the Father. The Word. Creator. Our Light.

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The Second Crossing

And it shall come to pass, as soon as the soles of the feet of the priests who bear the ark of the Lord, the Lord of all the earth, shall rest in the waters of the Jordan, that the waters of the Jordan shall be cut off, the waters that come down from upstream, and they shall stand as a heap.” So it was, when the people set out from their camp to cross over the Jordan, with the priests bearing the ark of the covenant before the people, and as those who bore the ark came to the Jordan, and the feet of the priests who bore the ark dipped in the edge of the water (for the Jordan overflows all its banks during the whole time of harvest), that the waters which came down from upstream stood still, and rose in a heap very far away at Adam, the city that is beside Zaretan. So the waters that went down into the Sea of the Arabah, the Salt Sea, failed, and were cut off; and the people crossed over opposite Jericho. Then the priests who bore the ark of the covenant of the Lord stood firm on dry ground in the midst of the Jordan; and all Israel crossed over on dry ground, until all the people had crossed completely over the Jordan. (Joshua 3:13-17)

The Second Crossing

When the Lord brought the Hebrews out of Egypt, they walked across the Red Sea on dry land. Moses had stretched forth his hand over the sea, and the Lord caused the sea to go back by a strong east wind all night, turning the sea into dry land. The waters were divided as a wall on the right and left. There was no escaping the Egyptian army before God’s deliverance, and the people feared the Lord and believed the Lord when they walked through the sea. When the Egyptian army came after the Hebrews, the Lord caused the waters to return and cover the chariots, horsemen, and all the army of Pharaoh, killing every man. Israel’s deliverance from Egypt would be recounted for centuries as a story of the goodness and severity of the Lord. By grace, the Hebrews are delivered, and by the wrath of God, their enemies are destroyed.

The crossing of the Red Sea would be a story vividly told forty years later when the harlot, Rahab, hid the spies in her home at Jericho. No one would forget the story of the people walking across on dry land in the midst of a great sea. The God of the Hebrews was the greatest of gods showing His power as greater than anything. When the Lord gave the Law to the Israelites at Sinai, He reminded them that it was by His power they were brought out of the land of Egypt and the house of bondage. The Hebrews did not deliver themselves – only God could do that. Crossing the Red Sea was the grace of God, His infinite mercy, and undying love for His own special people.

There is an illustrative lesson in the deliverance of the Hebrews from Egypt. The Hebrews were in bondage to the Egyptians like man is in bondage to sin. There was nothing the descendants of Abraham could do to deliver themselves and, without God’s power, would have remained in bondage. Sin has the power to enslave the heart, and man cannot save himself. Only through the love and grace of God was Israel delivered, and only through the love and grace of God can a man find grace to wash away sin. God parted the Red Sea, allowing Israel to escape. The Father gave His Son a sacrifice to release man from the bondage of sinful man could walk across the sea of grace to redemption.

In obedience, man is given a law to bring him to the promised land. Israel wandered through the wilderness forty years before reaching the Jordan River with the land of promise on the other side. When a man is baptized into Christ (crossing the Red Sea), accepts the covenant of Christ (Sinai), and lives a faithful life (wilderness), he stands on the banks of the Jordan looking over into Beulah land. He cannot enter on his own because the land of milk and honey is a place provided by God’s grace. Crossing into the land of rest can only come about by God’s will and His will alone.

Israel stood at the banks of the Jordan as the people had stood at the shores of the Red Sea forty years earlier. Once again, the power of God will translate the people from a wilderness journey to a land of rest. As the priests carry the ark of the Lord through the waters of the Jordan River, the waters of the Jordan will be cut off. The waters that flow from the north will stand up in a heap, and the water flowing to the south will disappear. Once again, the people will walk across a body of water on dry land. God’s grace and power will not deliver them but translate the people to a land of rest. The journey is over, and the promise is fulfilled.

While in Egypt, the Lord promised to deliver the Hebrews to a land of goodness. The faithful kept the word of the Lord and received the promised land. Sin enslaves the heart, and through the gospel of Christ and the waters of baptism, the soul is delivered from the power of sin. When the wilderness of life is completed, God translates the faithful across the Jordan River, symbolic of death on wings of angels to the bosom of Abraham. The second crossing is when the saints die, and God delivers them to His dwelling place. When the Israelites crossed the Jordan, their eyes saw a land more beautiful than they had ever seen. As the people of God close their eyes in death, they will awaken to a land more beautiful than they have ever seen. God’s grace led the Hebrews through the Red Sea and then brought them home through the Jordan River. His grace leads believers out of sin so that one day they can cross the river of death to a land flowing with milk and honey. Lord, divide the waters today.

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