The Church Walking With The World

The Church Walking With The World

(Matilda Edwards)

The Church and the World walked far apart

On the changing shores of time,

The World was singing a giddy song,

And the Church a hymn sublime.

“Come, give me your hand,” said the merry World

“And walk with me this way!”

But the good Church hid her snowy hands

And solemnly answered “Nay,

I will not give you my hand at all,

And I will not walk with you;

Your way is the way that leads to death;

Your words are all untrue.”

“Nay, walk with me but a little space,”

Said the World with a kindly air;

“The road I walk is a pleasant road,

And the sun shines always there;

Your path is thorny and rough and rude

But mine is broad and plain;

My way is paved with flowers and dew

And yours with tears and pain;

The sky to me is always blue,

No want, no toil I know;

The sky above you is always dark,

Your lot is a lot of woe;

There’s room enough for you and me

To travel side by side.”

Half shyly the Church approached the World

And gave him her hand of snow;

And the old World grasped it and walked along,

Saying, in accents low,

“Your dress is too simple to please my taste;

I will give you pearls to wear,

Rich velvet’s and silks for your graceful form,

And diamonds to deck your hair.”

The Church looked down at her plain white robes,

And then at the dazzling World,

And blushed as she saw his handsome lip

With a smile contemptuous curled.

“I will change my dress for a costlier one,”

Said the Church, with a smile of grace;

Then her pure white garments drifted away,

And the World gave, in their place,

Beautiful satin’s and shining silks,

Roses and gems and costly pearls;

While over her forehead her bright hair fell

Crisped in a thousand curls.

“Your house is too plain,” said the proud old World,

“I’ll build you one like mine;

With walls of marble and towers of gold,

And furniture ever so fine.”

So he built her a costly and beautiful house;

Most splendid it was to behold;

Her sons and her beautiful daughters dwelt there

Gleaming in purple and gold;

Rich fairs and shows in the halls were held,

And the World and his children were there.

Laughter and music and feasts were heard

In the place that was meant for prayer.

There were cushioned seats for the rich and the happy,

To sit in their pomp and pride;

But the poor who were clad in shabby array,

Sat meekly down outside.

“You give too much to the poor,” said the World.

“Far more than you ought to do;

If they are in need of shelter and food,

Why need it trouble you?

Go, take your money and buy rich robes,

Buy horses and carriages fine;

Buy pearls and jewels and dainty food,

Buy the rarest and costliest wine;

My children, they dote on all these things,

And if you their love would win

You must do as they do, and walk in the ways

That they are walking in.”

So the poor were turned from her door in scorn,

And she heard not the orphan’s cry;

But she drew her beautiful robes aside,

As the widows went weeping by.

Then the sons of the World and the Sons of the Church

Walked closely hand and heart,

And only the Master, who knoweth all,

Could tell the two apart.

Then the Church sat down at her ease, and said,

“I am rich and my goods increase;

I have need of nothing, or aught to do,

But to laugh, and dance, and feast.”

The sly World heard, and he laughed in his sleeve,

And mockingly said, aside

“The Church is fallen, the beautiful Church;

And her shame is her boast and her pride.”

The angel drew near to the mercy seat,

And whispered in sighs her name;

Then the loud anthems of rapture were hushed

And heads were covered with shame;

And a voice was heard at last by the Church

From Him who sat on the throne,

“I know thy works, and how thou hast said,

`I am rich, and hast not known

That thou art naked, poor and blind,

And wretched before my face;’

Therefore from my presence cast I thee out,

And blot thy name from its place.”

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The Binary Nature Of God

goodness severity God

Therefore consider the goodness and severity of God: on those who fell, severity; but toward you, goodness, if you continue in His goodness. Otherwise, you also will be cut off. (Romans 11:22)

The Binary Nature Of God

Aaron Rodgers, the star quarterback for the Green Bay Packers, recently opened up about his belief in religion and the nature of God. He complained he was forced to go to church when young and that religion can be a crutch to make people feel good about themselves. He further stated, “I don’t know how you can believe in a God who wants to condemn most of the planet to a fiery hell. What type of loving, sensitive, omnipresent, omnipotent being wants to condemn his beautiful creation to a fiery hell at the end of all this?” His view is a common perception of God and whether acknowledged or not is believed by most people who reject the idea of organized religion. The question is valid and necessitates an answer but there is a problem with how to answer the question posed by Rodgers. There is an ironic twist to the argument that God is a loving, sensitive, omnipresent, omnipotent being because everything a person can know about God’s character is found in the Bible. This cannot be known by natural revelation or the thumbprint of creation. God has revealed Himself through His hand in forming the world and the vast universe but this can only tell a man there is a higher being at work. To know the character of God watching a sunset will not help. Nothing in the nature of the world explains the personality of the Creator. There is no other book in the world that divulges the minute details of the person of God other than the Bible. The conclusion is that all that is known of God comes from one book and there can be no other source. With that being said, the Bible will either proclaim God to be a loving, kind, compassionate and forgiving God or that He is also a God of wrath.

Everything Aaron Rodgers knows about God comes from the Bible. When a man attacks the nature of God declaring he cannot accept the idea that a loving God would “condemn his beautiful creation to a fiery hell,” what he is saying is that he takes the Bible for what he wants the Bible to say about his life rejecting those parts of the Bible that challenge his own lifestyle. It is a process of character assassination to destroy the credibility of God and thereby allow a man to live as he pleases without fear of contradiction or consequence. Believing that God would not condemn a person to a fiery hell does not change the nature of God no more than believing the world is flat will make the world flat. The Bible is very clear regarding the nature of God’s love, His mercy, and endless grace and the beauty of eternal life. God so loved the world He gave His only begotten Son that whoever believes in Him would not perish but have eternal life. How much more love can a man know from God than that? What is missed in this grand message of love is the idea that some people will “perish.” Jesus says more about hell and eternal torment than anyone else in the Bible. If a man decries the wrath of God as impossible to accept because God said He will send His beautiful creation to a fiery hell then one must also reject Jesus Christ and everything He taught. A man cannot have it both ways. Either God is full of goodness and severity and everything Jesus taught is true or God is a cosmic bully and Jesus Christ is a liar.

Scoffers have laid the groundwork for attacking the word of God since the day Satan whispered in the ear of Eve, “Has God indeed said.” Creating a totem of human wisdom to look like the God of the Bible is nothing more than a paper dragon that has no substance. Rejecting the wrath of God for a more appealing character of love is only an excuse to live outside the bounds of eternal law. When a man says he rejects organized religion he merely wants to create his own. Condemning God as a wrathful God does not change the nature of God. To those who obey Him, the Lord God is a wonderful, compassionate and forgiving Father. Like those who love their children and are willing to chasten them, God is also a God of wrath who will punish those who disobey Him. It becomes abundantly clear from the first pages of the Bible that God is full of goodness and wrath. He loved Adam and Eve but He punished them. The world in the day of Noah was destroyed by the wrath of the Creator but His love spared eight souls. Jesus died on the cross by the hand of those who did not believe God would condemn His beautiful creation to a fiery hell and the incredible power of God raised His Son from the dead to bring hope to a hopeless world. Sadly, most people will reject the teachings of God’s grace; and Jesus is the one who said those words. It was the Son of God who declared on the mountain that few people will be saved. God is binary: He is a God of wrath and He is a God of love. The Bible does not declare God to be only a wrathful God and it does not declare God to be only a loving God. Thank God He is both.

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Listening To Correction

constructive criticism23

The ear that hears the rebukes of life will abide among the wise. He who disdains instruction despises his own soul, but he who heeds rebuke gets understanding. The fear of the Lord is the instruction of wisdom, and before honor is humility. (Proverbs 15:31-33)

Listening To Correction

Pride can be a difficult malady to push aside when correction is needed. There is a tendency to believe that self-worth is measured by the belief that views held on a personal level are always the right answers. In other words, the opinion of the individual rises above the mistaken ideas of others who think they know the right answer. It is easy to convince the heart that personal knowledge of a situation is the only right avenue to travel and that no one can convince a man to change. Receiving correction is very difficult and sometimes impossible. Constructive criticism may sound like a noble cause but only to the person giving the correction and oftentimes ill-received by those needing improvement. To be told the character of a person is wrong can bring hard feelings. Pride has a way of exalting self to the height of arrogance rejecting any measures of correction given by others. This is a common problem among the human race and has brought many sorrows to hearth and home. The wisdom literature of God’s word is filled with the admonitions to accept the role of correction from others as a tool to strengthen character. Listening to constructive criticism is a wise thing to do and should be received in the spirit given. Wisdom is found in the heart of the person who knows they do not have all the answers in life and because of the frail nature of the human heart that is mistaken often, accepts the role of those who would seek to admonish, encourage and exhort to greater heights. Listening is hard to do when the mouth wants to jump in with self-importance. Rejecting the guidance of others only brings harm to the person. Taking the time to consider the wisdom of others will help the soul grow in understanding.

The value of criticism is an important part of personal relationships but the fear of the Lord brings a greater understanding of the issues of life. Many reject the idea of an eternal God because they do not want to be corrected or told there is such a thing as right and wrong. Pride has exalted the spirit of humanity to refuse to acknowledge God or to retain Him in their lives. This comes from the feeling of superiority and self-worth of a man that believes he is his own god. He creates his own totems of wisdom declaring himself as his only god ruled by his own law. History is filled with the wastelands of the failure of human wisdom serving self as their gods. This rejection of God is the refusal of the man to listen to constructive criticism of his Maker and Creator who demands righteousness, truth, and purity of life. Rejecting the counsel of the Divine, humanity builds straw houses of pride that will fall every time. Discarding divine discipline only harms the man who seeks to raise himself above the Lord God. The problem rests in the refusal to accept correction by another with greater consequences when the one rejected is the Lord God. Man is stubborn that way. It is hard for him to accept correction from his fellow man and it becomes much more difficult when he must obey the voice of an eternal being. Pride fills the heart to reject any correction and disaster awaits.

Wisdom comes from a willingness to listen to others. Listening is one of the most important parts of a man that will bring him greater happiness, completeness, and guidance in the uneven paths of life. There has only been one man who walked on the earth that had all the answers and He was the Son of God. Jesus subjected Himself to the will of the Father completely. What made the life of Jesus so remarkable is the perfect obedience to the word of God because He was willing to accept the will of His Father at every level with complete and confident trust. The frailties of men are found in the ashes of self-determination when they refuse to perfect their wills to the obedience of God’s word. Wisdom comes from the mind of God and He has given man a book containing His will that will bring happiness to those who follow it. The Bible is the only revelation of truth. If a man refuses to be admonished by the word of God he becomes a fool. Humility precedes a heart that is self-determined changing the spirit of man to accept correction and abide by the word of the Lord. Greater joy will come to those who receive correction in the spirit that it is given whether by godly men or the Lord God Himself. The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom.

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All Or Nothing

hand to the plow

And another also said, “Lord, I will follow You, but let me first go and bid them farewell who are at my house.” But Jesus said to him, “No one, having put his hand to the plow, and looking back, is fit for the kingdom of God.” (Luke 9:61-62)

All Or Nothing

Excuses are feeble attempts to deflect the need to act and many who wanted to follow Jesus were unwilling to dedicate their lives to His message. When the people heard Jesus preach, they recognized He taught them as one having authority. There were no hidden agendas in the teaching of the Christ, no misunderstood meanings to His message and if there is one thing everyone agreed upon is that Jesus did not concern Himself with the opinions of men. He faced the Jewish leadership with great boldness of speech never backing away from telling the whole truth. His message was clear, concise, with power and left no doubt the cost of being His disciples. He was a man that appealed to the spirit of men who wanted to change their lives but often the cost was higher than the people were willing to pay. Jesus was rejected by many because His requirements were too hard. Some came to Jesus seeking to be His disciples and told the Lord of their desire to be with him but on their terms only. Coming to Christ required all of a man’s heart, soul, mind and body or nothing at all. It happened as Jesus and His disciples traveled along, a man came to the Lord confirming his willingness to follow the Lord. He did not realize the cost of being a disciple of the one who had no place to lay His head. Life with the Lord would be a difficult walk and would involve persecution and likened to cross-bearing. One individual was anxious to follow Jesus but need to attend to his family affairs first. Time was of the essence in the work of the kingdom and if a man could not change his life to suit the needs of the kingdom he could not be a disciple. The last man that came to Jesus wanted to follow Him but first, he wanted to go to his family and tell them goodbye and prepare himself to be a disciple. The answer of Jesus was not an insensitive reaction but a deeper examination of the man’s heart. Walking with the Lord required a man to focus his life on the journey ahead without the trappings of the family. If a person was to take upon his shoulders the responsibility of walking with Jesus, the family would have to be placed in second place. Many a man desired to serve the Lord but the call of the familial roots called him back and he walked with Jesus no more. He failed because he was unwilling to put his hand to plan and not look back.

It seems harsh on the part of Jesus to demand so much. Preaching and teaching the kingdom of God required a heart willing to give the time and energy to the task ahead. There is a harsh side of being a disciple of Christ and no one should enter into the discipleship of Christ without self-examination. Jesus would later parallel being a disciple as bearing a cross. When a man is crucified he has nothing else that takes his mind than the burden he bears. He serves at the mercy of others and it is a challenging experience to endure. Serving God has always been all or nothing. From the beginning, God has required (not suggested) the first place. Anything less than first place is the last place. Jesus reminded those who came to Him of the age-old adage of His Father that if you are not willing to give your all, you cannot be His disciple. Putting the hand to the plow requires diligence, focus, determination, careful planning and a keen eye on one goal. When a man plows and allows his mind to wander and takes his eye off the goal, the garden is destroyed. The kind of plow Jesus was speaking about was easily overturned if care was not taken to remain focused. Being a disciple of Jesus requires the same fervent dedication to a single cause as a man with a plow. Nothing comes before the work of the Lord. When the hand rests on the handle of the plow, there is only one object in mind. When a man looks back longing for his home or his family, he is not fit for the kingdom of God.

There are some who are not well-placed to be a disciple because they are not committed. If the man went to give regrets to his family he may never return. If he came to follow Jesus and his mind was always on the family he left, he would be unproductive for the Lord. The challenge Jesus made to the man is to ask if he was willing at that moment to follow Him without going home. Luke does not tell us what the man decided. The Holy Spirit gives the story as an example of what it means to be a child of God. There can be no half-hearted attempt in following Jesus with one heart firmly entrenched in the home and one seeking to please God. This does not suggest we are to deny our responsibilities in the home but what Jesus does require is the family to be focused on the Father and the Father alone. Everything the family does is measured by the will of God. Husbands and wives mold their relationships together with a single purpose: please God. As parents, the children are taught one thing in life: please God. The family fortifies this with the teaching that it must be all or nothing. The husband who puts his hand to the plow of spiritual leadership and looks back will fail as a spiritual leader. When mothers fill their lives and the lives of their children with being involved in all the activities of the world and on the other hand trying to show their children God, they will fail to impress upon them that God must be first in all things. Children must be taught to put their hands to the plow and not look back. The best for this to be done is for the parents to firmly grasp the handles of the plow and not look back. Being a Christian is an “all or nothing” proposition. Are you in or out?

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God’s Grace, Love And Wrath

John-3-16

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)

God’s Grace, Love, And Wrath

One of the most familiar Biblical passages is found in the gospel of John when Jesus is talking with Nicodemus, a ruler of the Jews. This man came to Jesus by night and recognized the Lord as being a man sent from God. The Lord begins to open up the eyes of Nicodemus to the character of those who would be saved. Jesus describes that a man could not see the kingdom of God without the new birth. Nicodemus did not understand the spiritual implications of this birth and the Lord explains the nature of the new birth was by the spirit and the water. Using the story of Moses when the Hebrews rebelled against God fiery serpents were sent among the people, Jesus explained the Son of Man would be lifted up to save all men. Salvation came when Moses made the bronze serpent and those bitten looked upon the image and Christ would be raised up for all men to come to Him for salvation. Whoever believes in Jesus would not perish but have eternal life. The mercy of God is found in the willingness of the Father to save the world. There was nothing redeeming in humanity that deserved the grace of God. The world was a dark and corrupt place rebellious against the Lord God and deserved to face His wrath. God so loved the world that He was willing to give His Son to save men. Grace is the unmerited favor of the Father to bestow His love upon all men. One of the most important lessons for a man to learn is how the grace of God and His grace alone offer him a way of hope and salvation. Without that grace, there would be no sacrifice. Jesus would not have come to earth and suffered as He did without the eternal grace of God. The statement that God so loved the world is beyond the heart of man to understand because it is measured by the eternal grace of God. It is a gift of God. Salvation began in the mind of God not man. His grace ordained the plan of redemption to bring humanity back to the garden of paradise where God and man can live together. Jesus told Nicodemus the grace of God is where the salvation of man resides.

The love of God moves beyond His grace when God gave His only begotten Son. Love was not defined by a thought of grace but the action of love in giving Christ as the lamb of sacrifice to save all men from their sins. Grace alone could not save man. Love had to act on the grace of God. This action came in the form of Christ, who was God and was with God, who became flesh and dwelt among men. Through the sacrifice of the only begotten Son of God, men can find redemption from sin and look to an eternal reward in the presence of God. The love of God was demonstrated in the life and death of Jesus. Like the grace of God, men did not deserve the love of God. But God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son that whoever believes in Him would have everlasting life. There was no greater way for God to demonstrate His infinite love for the creation than the gift of His Son. As a lamb led to the slaughter, Jesus willingly took on the sins of all men. His blood stained the sacrifice as an eternal gift of God’s grace. Love was not in word alone but in the evidence of the act of the dying Son of God. The grace of God and the love of God gave the only begotten Son of God as the single sacrifice for the sins of all men. There is no greater grace or demonstration of love than Jesus Christ. Everlasting life is found in those who obey the will of the Lord and embrace the grace and love of God.

John 3:16 teaches the grace of God and expresses the love of God as eternal tones of mercy. However, another message is found in this wonderful text that is often overlooked and ignored. God’s grace is central to John 3:16 as well as the love of God. Many fail to recognize the other part of Jesus’ admonition to Nicodemus. The Lord used Moses as an example of how the Son of Man would be lifted up that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have eternal life. He reaffirms this again in verse 16 when He says that whoever believes in Him should not perish. The grace of God and the love of God are always explained in the context of the wrath of God. Jesus says those who do not believe will perish implying there is a severe penalty to deny the grace and love of God. Salvation is never by grace alone nor is salvation by love alone. Jesus told Nicodemus that unless one is born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God. There is a need to obey the will of the Lord. To accept the idea that God is love and that is all that is required of man denies the teaching of John 3. Obedience comes when a man is born of the water and the Spirit which the apostle Paul would later explain as baptism. This is an act of obedience through the grace of God given by His love to redeem all men through the blood of His only begotten Son. If a man refuses to obey the will of the Lord he will perish. The wrath of God will come upon all those who refuse to follow the commands of His grace and love. Grace is found in John 3:16 and love is found in John 3:16 but the wrath of God is found in John 3:16 also. The grace of God is immeasurable and His love without end. Jesus taught there is a judgment of His Father’s wrath and that not all men will be saved. In the sermon on the mountain, the Lord declared that most men would perish and few find eternal life. He reaffirms this with Nicodemus that God so loved the world He gave His only begotten Son that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life. Grace. Love. Wrath.

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Good Stewards Of The Manifold Grace Of God

Bible

As each one has received a gift, minister it to one another, as good stewards of the manifold grace of God. If anyone speaks, let him speak as the oracles of God. If anyone ministers, let him do it as with the ability which God supplies, that in all things God may be glorified through Jesus Christ, to whom belong the glory and the dominion forever and ever. Amen. (1 Peter 4:10-11)

Good Stewards Of The Manifold Grace Of God

The Lord has blessed His people with so many blessings they are enumerable. All of nature proclaims the glory of God as the hand of the Creator paints on the canvas of creation the incredible beauty of His works. Day and night declare how magnificent all things in the world and universe open the eyes of men to see the providential care of a Master Creator who holds in His hand the expanse of everything known to man and those things yet to be revealed. From the beginning of time, man has been without excuse to recognize the manifold grace of the One who sustains all things in this world as He reveals Himself through nature. God has not left humanity alone without opening up the portals of heaven to know the will of the Father. The word of the Lord has always been revealed to the creation as the divine purpose of the Creator is fulfilled in the obedience of the men. When God placed Adam and Eve into the Garden of Eden, He showed them the new world as a testimony of His grace to give the man a place to thrive and live by the grace of God. Further, God placed a tree in the midst of the garden and forbade man from eating of that certain fruit to show man the soul of divine law. Adam and Eve enjoyed the grace of God found in the Garden of Eden but they failed to be good stewards of the divine grace of God in the words of the law prohibiting them from eating from the tree of knowledge of good and evil. Disobedience came from rejecting the counsel of God. Throughout the history of man from the days of Noah to the history of Israel, the struggle to follow the teaching of God has placed man in dire circumstances. It has always been an imperative for men to learn to follow the will of God and His will alone without adding or taking away from the divine word.

To be a good steward is to be someone who knows and understands the responsibility placed upon them to carry out the wishes of the one who entrusted them with an object of their concern. God has given all men the obligation to use the gifts from the divine to the purpose they were intended. The word of God has always sought the betterment and goodness of humanity if men would only follow the will of the Father. To be a good minister of the grace of God is to fulfill the divine wishes of God’s care as He has blessed men. If a man is to speak the word of God, he must speak the words that come from the mouth of God. This precludes the notion that men can call upon the name of the Lord and teach that which God has never said. So often men have turned aside from the word of the Lord because they have listened to the doctrines of men that have no foundation in the word of truth. Apostasy comes when men do not speak as if God is speaking. The word of the Lord has never been difficult for a man to understand and obey. He has never given man a command that cannot be kept. The failing of man has always been to create his own way apart from the teachings of God. Everything man needs to be pleasing to God is found in the Bible and yet the world is filled with so many different faiths teaching doctrines that cannot be found in the pages of God’s word. Denominationalism, divisive faiths, false doctrines all point to the failure of men to be good stewards of the word delivered by the hand of God as the authority.

There will come a day of accountability for all the stewards of the word of God. All men have been entrusted with the divine will of the Father. Whether they have been good stewards of the grace of God or whether they have abused the grace of God will be the determining factor of eternity. It boils down to a simple idea that whatever a man does in this world, he must do so in accordance with the singular will of the Almighty who requires all men to follow His will. The grace of God is no value to a person who refuses to obey the word of God. Grace and obedience are necessary to one another. When men speak according to the oracles of God, the glory belongs to God not men. Everyone should strive to serve in the capacity which God supplies, that in all things God may be glorified through Jesus Christ. Anything less bestows glory upon man and this displeases the Father. To be a good steward of the grace of God is to allow the whole counsel of God to guide the teachings of men to the word of God alone. As the old saying of days gone by refrains, “Speak where the Bible speaks and be silent where the Bible is silent.” Let no word come from the mouth of a man that did not first reside within the heart of God. May God be true and all men liars. Speak as though God himself were speaking.

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Living For The Will Of God

Gods will art

Therefore, since Christ suffered for us in the flesh, arm yourselves also with the same mind, for he who has suffered in the flesh has ceased from sin, that he no longer should live the rest of his time in the flesh for the lusts of men, but for the will of God. (1 Peter 4:1-2)

Living For The Will Of God

The life of Jesus was remarkable as a man who lived in the flesh yet without sin. It is difficult to imagine how Jesus spent more than thirty years in the bodily form with the onslaught of Satan constantly confronting His soul to give in to the lust of the flesh and Jesus having the strength to remain true to His Father’s will. Pride was a constant trial for Jesus to endure as He had the power to raise the dead, feed thousands and curse living things with death. It would have been a shorter course to glory if Jesus would accept the invitation of the devil to receive all the kingdoms of the world. In all the trials of the Son of God, He mastered His spirit to learn complete obedience by the daily sufferings endured in the vicarious delicacies offered by the tempter. The suffering of Jesus was not what He had to suffer on the cross. His burden began when He confronted the devil on the fields of human flesh tempted with lusts and pride. The focus of Jesus’ life was that He would not waver from doing the will of His Father. He knew the will of God and He schooled Himself in every part of the word of God. When Satan confronted Him boldly at the beginning of His ministry, He staunchly declared that man could not live by bread alone but by every word that proceeded from the mouth of God. That was not a verse Jesus quoted to deflect the temptation of turning the stones to bread. His declaration was the firm affirmation that for thirty years His goal was to do nothing but what was contained within the word of the Lord. Jesus did not begin a moment Satan tempted Him in the wilderness to decide to serve His Father. From an early age, Jesus knew He had to be about His Father’s work. Living according to the will of God was the only thing that guided the life of Jesus. While the scriptures are silent to the activities relating to most of the life of Jesus, it is clearly defined in holy writ that Jesus of Nazareth was a man wholly devoted to serving God. Obedience came in the same fashion as it did for all men. Jesus learned the will of God and applied the eternal lessons to His life. When Satan came to Jesus (again) and tempted Him, Jesus was prepared. His spirit was ready to do battle with the evil one. Victory for Jesus came from doing the will of God.

There is a Biblical misnomer when the question is asked of when Jesus was tempted. Matthew, Mark, and Luke write in their gospels the story of the temptation but this does not recognize that Jesus was thirty years of age and His confrontation with the devil had been going on for a long time. What made the temptation of Jesus at age thirty so horrific was His fasting for forty days. However, He had endured many years of the lusts of the flesh, the pride of life and the lusts of the eyes. Jesus constantly had to fend off the wiles of the devil as a young man, a man growing into adulthood and a man who stood alone among His peers. At the age of twelve, He told Mary that He needed to be about His Father’s business and that was doing the will of God. Every fiber of His being was dedicated to knowing and understanding the word of His Father. He did not grow to manhood as the Son of God without the temptations of the devil hammering against His soul daily. What steeled Him against the fiery darts of the evil one was the will of God. Nothing penetrated the soul of the Son of God because His will was the will of His Father and Satan could not breach the eternal walls of righteousness. During His short ministry, the Lord continued to hold fast to the will of God. Praying in the garden the Son of God pleaded for relief but was comforted in the knowledge that what was to come was the will of the Father. The final words of Jesus underscore His constant devotion to the will of the Father when Jesus said, “It is finished.” Everything planned from the eternal ages was completed and finished as Jesus breathed His last. The will of God was accomplished.

Peter had seen firsthand the example of Jesus as a man devoted to the will of God. Often Peter would step out of bounds in his understanding of the work of the Lord but he learned how faithful Jesus was to the will of God. It is certain Peter would never be able to remove from his mind his own denial of the Christ and the horrific way Jesus was put to death. His epistles tell the story of a man changed by the life of Jesus Christ and how the sufferings of the Son of God were given as an example for all men to follow. Peter knew to overcome the wiles of the devil that a man must submit to the will of God. The ability to cease from sin is to increase the word of God in the heart. Those who profess allegiance to the Father must strive with every part of their being to refuse to live in the flesh for the lusts of men, but for the will of God. It is a simple plan but so complex many do not see its value. Jesus left an example of faith in doing the will of the Father by submitting Himself to the will of the Father. There was no question where the heart of Jesus resided. Everything about the Son of God was in accordance with the will of God. If a man is to grow in spiritual maturity he must submit his complete will to the word of God. Being a servant of God requires full devotion to the will of the Master. Those who lack faith will find their weakness in how they follow the will of God. Greater faith comes from greater submission to the word and will of the Father. Live for Jesus. Live for God. Live for the will of God.

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Rejoicing As A Christian

Rejoicing As A CHRISTIAN

Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who according to His abundant mercy has begotten us again to a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, to an inheritance incorruptible and undefiled and that does not fade away, reserved in heaven for you, who are kept by the power of God through faith for salvation ready to be revealed in the last time. (1 Peter 1:3-5)

Rejoicing As A Christian

There is so much to be filled with joy and praise in being a Christian. The Bible begins with the fall of man but it ends with the eternal hope of redemption through the resurrection of Jesus Christ. Peter lived in a period of persecution under the tyrannical rule of Nero yet his message was filled with an amazing spirit of blessings. His first epistle is addressed to the pilgrims of the dispersion who were scattered abroad due to persecution. He writes a positive letter of hope to say to the faithful of God not to be overcome by the difficulties of life but to remember that God has promised eternal life in the joy to come and there is no reason to be downcast. It was hard to live a consecrated life in a world given over to bigotry, prejudice, and hatred against Christians. Peter would speak of the genuineness of faith necessary to maintain the courage to face severe trials because it was more precious than anything life had to offer. If the saints would prepare their minds for action and exercise self-control they would do well. He exhorts his readers to put all their hope in the salvation that will come when Christ is revealed to the world in His glory. The promise of joy was yet to come if they would remain faithful. Peter begins his epistle by showing the basis for this joyful hope. The abundant mercy of God made certain promises that could not be taken away. Believing Jesus had risen from the dead instilled in the hearts of the persecuted saints the living hope of eternal life. There was a greater expectation in life than the peripheral happiness of this life. It was transcended by the knowledge and assurance that in death something greater was coming. A living hope contrast a hope that is a maybe or chance event. It becomes a promise without bounds.  What kind of promise has God made?

The joy of being a Christian is to know that through faith in the resurrection of Jesus Christ, there is a birthright that is priceless. God has promised eternal life as something that is incorruptible and undefiled. It cannot be tainted by human affairs or false hopes given by the wisdom of men. While the child of God may suffer in his earthly life, there is no suffering in his eternal life and that is a guarantee by the hand of God. Inheritances can be challenged through the courts of men, changed, dismissed or lost. This is not the case with the promise of God who cannot lie. The Bible teaches the security of the believer and those who believe in the resurrection of Jesus must embrace it. Sadly, the idea of the security of the believer has come to be known as the impossibility of the saint to fall from grace which is false teaching. However, the pendulum has swung so far in opposition to the doctrine of ‘once-saved-always-save’ than many discounts the security of the believer as a Biblical fact. What other kinds of hope is Peter describing than the realization that the Father has promised His children an inheritance that is reserved in heaven for them? It is a blessed assurance that is beyond the reach of change and decay. It does not fade away. There is no corruption. This promise is undefiled. The elect according to the foreknowledge of God the Father, those sanctified of the Holy Spirit and to all who obeyed the will of the Father through the blood of Jesus Christ has been assured, promised, reserved and guaranteed eternal life. No reservations or doubts. Salvation is waiting for its revealing in the day when Jesus will return with His holy angels and take home the redeemed.

Satan has done well to convince the saved they are lost. He has embedded in the minds of the faithful that God would never consider them worthy enough to live with Him and only by a slim margin of victory would eternal life be given. There is no boldness of hope to believe that eternal life is real. When the people of God live cheap lives of imperfect hope they dim their lights of faith in a world growing darker by the minute. It seems the most perfect tool of Satan is not to convince the child of God to engage in some immoral act but rather to live fearful lives of distrust to their Father. If the feelings of fear become strong enough then the Christian will abandon their hope. As a result, death is feared and life is wasted. Hope is found in life now instead of the life to come. Peter wrote in a time of incredible trial to be a Christian yet he writes the positive message of eternal security in the promises of God. The great mercy of God has promised an eternal life that is incorruptible, undefiled and that does not fade away. It is reserved in heaven. He has kept His promise. This truth gives every Christian the confidence that they have eternal life, which God—who does not lie—pledged before the world began. There is great joy in being a Christian because death is only a quiet sleep to awaken in eternal life and that is a promise of God.

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The Joy Of Companionship

rope tie into a knot, studio shot

Two are better than one because they have a good reward for their labor. For if they fall, one will lift up his companion. But woe to him who is alone when he falls, for he has no one to help him up. Again, if two lie down together, they will keep warm; but how can one be warm alone? Though one may be overpowered by another, two can withstand him. And a threefold cord is not quickly broken. (Ecclesiastes 4:9-12)

The Joy Of Companionship

One of the basic needs of a man is a desire to be valued and recognized. Babies come into the world needing the bond of a mother. Children seek connections with their peers. Adulthood is an adventure of relationships where the soul seeks comfort, security, and peace in the companionship of others. The family is created from a need to spend life with another human being. Children become blessings to fill the joy of a couple to enjoy a family together. From the beginning of time, God created man to find the reward of sharing life with another. There is great reward in the union of two souls united together as one. A man alone finds it hard to navigate the uncertain paths of life. When God first created the man He recognized the need that man should not be alone and so made a helper comparable to him. The woman fills that need but this desire for companionship stretches into many other parts of life. Solitary confinement is used as a punishment because being alone is not the nature of man. To be alone and without companionship makes for a meaningless and depressing life. Two people are better than a man alone so they can help the other succeed. When one falls the other can help the fallen stand again. If there were no one there to help, it would be difficult for the man alone to find his strength. People need people. That is the way God created man. His command for Adam and Eve was to multiply and fill the earth. Imagine how lonely and stark the world was when the first man and woman stepped out the Garden of Eden into a world empty of human beings. Their real joy came when children were born and then their children had children and the earth filled with the sounds of humanity. Cities were built, commerce and industry established and the world became a planet of inhabitants. God was pleased with the design He created where men were not alone. Sadly the Lord had to destroy the world save eight souls because men used their unity of companionship to fill the earth with wickedness. It was here the lesson of how to use what God has given is learned. The generation of those who called upon the name of the Lord companioned with those who followed the way of Cain and soon the world was corrupt and destitute. Noah and his family remained alone in a world filled with all unrighteousness but they had one another. Spending over a year in the ark was bearable because the family of Noah had each other.

The joy of companionship is told by Solomon to be of great value because when one is stricken, a companion can help restore the afflicted. Two people lying close to one another will help warm the other when a man alone may freeze to death. A single braid of cord is easily broken but when combined with two other cords creating a triple-braided cord, it cannot easily be broken. So it is with having someone to bind your strength together to withstand the pressures of life. Friendship affords the opportunity to carry burdens, share troubles, enjoy happy times, create lasting memories and find completeness through the life of another human being. There is a stronger spirit when joined with others. Left alone the heart of the discouraged cannot be regained. All men need the spirit of another soul to bind their hearts in the union to find courage as they face danger. Jesus sent His disciples out two by two in large part to bear the burdens of one other. There would discouragement and the disciples would face rejection and persecution but united with another soul they could rejoice in the strength drawn from companionship. Peter and John went together to the Temple to pray and were later imprisoned together. Their spirit refreshed the souls of the other as they faced an uncertain future. Paul and Barnabas did much work (along with others) in establishing churches throughout the Roman Empire. Later Paul and Silas continued that work of evangelizing the world. Bound together in prison, Paul and Silas sang praises to God during the night. Two are better than one because so much more can be done.

When Jesus established the church He followed the will of His Father’s plan for its design. A key element of the New Testament church is the communion of fellowship in the body of Christ. The Hebrew writer alludes to this union of spirit when he speaks of the assembly as a time to exhort and encourage the other. When the disciples forsake the assembly they deny the union of companionship the Lord desired for His people. The music of the early church was not patterned after the Law of Moses but rather souls singing to one another in psalms, hymns and spiritual songs as they made melody in their hearts to one another. This cemented the souls of the saints together as one body. The taking of the Lord’s Supper is a part of the unified pattern of souls joining together to examine the death of Jesus Christ and to share together the remembrance of His suffering. Preaching has no message if no one shows up to hear. The value of companionship is how the church thrives and grows into the image of God’s will. Assembling together is helping for tired souls to become strong and cold hearts to become warm. In part, the purpose of singing is to teach and admonish one another – the company of companionship. Communing together in the supper of the Lord binds hearts together as one body of Christ. Listening to preaching together creates a strong bond of faith through the word of God. Sharing life together with brethren is imperative to strengthen the church. The weak members are necessary and need the help of the stronger. When one brother sees another brother fall, he will lift him up. While one soul may be overpowered by the wiles of the devil, three souls united under the flag of righteousness will gain the victory. The joy of companionship is needed for every home and for the church of the Lord.

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God’s Will Is According To His Will

Gods will

Then, from that day on, they plotted to put Him to death. Therefore Jesus no longer walked openly among the Jews but went from there into the country near the wilderness, to a city called Ephraim, and there remained with His disciples. And the Passover of the Jews was near, and many went from the country up to Jerusalem before the Passover, to purify themselves. Then they sought Jesus, and spoke among themselves as they stood in the temple, “What do you think—that He will not come to the feast?” Now both the chief priests and the Pharisees had given a command, that if anyone knew where He was, he should report it, that they might seize Him. (John 11:53-57)

God’s Will Is According To His Will

The ministry of Jesus began with great expectation and popularity but began to fade quickly as the man from Nazareth challenged the foundations of the Jewish leadership. While His miracles would draw many disciples to His message, there were many who could not bear with the implications of the plain and powerful teaching of righteousness given by Jesus. He became trouble for the Jewish elite who feared their place among the Romans. They could never deny His miracles and never sought to discount any miracle Jesus did but they constantly challenged His claim to be divine. Blinded by their hypocrisy, the chief priests and Pharisees would easily ignore the incredible resurrection of Lazarus from the dead and plot to kill Jesus instead. All of the people that were healed of their diseases could testify to the power of the Nazarene. Many of the ones who condemned Jesus stood in His presence when He did the unimaginable and healed lepers, made withered hands whole, raise from near death a man bedridden and cast out demons. This had no impact on the hardened hearts of the envious who despised Jesus. Because of their self-righteousness to see Jesus as only a carpenter’s son, they could never see Him for who He truly was – the Son of God. When the popularity of Jesus began to challenge their authority, the Jewish leaders tried to stop him. After a debate with Jesus at the Temple where Jesus declared He had been before Abraham, the Jews took up stones to throw at Him but He was hidden from them and left the Temple. Later, after healing the man born blind, the people again took up stones to kill him. When many in Jerusalem began to question whether Jesus was the promised Messiah, the Pharisees sent officers to arrest Him. The officers came to the chief priests and Pharisees empty-handed declaring they had never heard a man speak like Jesus. There were many plans to kill Jesus but to no avail. The people knew there was a desire to kill Jesus and the Lord Himself reminded the people of those who sought His life. Yet, they could not find the man from Nazareth to carry out their murderous deed. After Lazarus was raised from the dead, the search for Jesus intensified.

Jesus knew that in the fullness of His Father’s will, His death would come about. While the plans of men sought to stone Jesus, arrest Him and to kill Him were thwarted on every hand, the will of the Father was being carried out to its divine end. One of the things the rulers of the Jews failed to realize is that every time they tried to arrest Jesus, He evaded them. Early in the ministry of Jesus, he returned to His home in Nazareth and as His custom was, He went into the synagogue on the Sabbath day and stood up to read. After reading from Isaiah, Jesus declared the prophet spoke of Him. This infuriated the people. They mobbed Jesus and forced him to the edge of the hill on which the town was built where they intended to push him over the cliff. To their surprise, He passed through the crowd and went on his way. Jesus lived a controlled life. The will of the Father would permit the death of His Son when it was time for His Son to die – and not before. Jesus would tell His disciples His hour had not come and all of the murderous plans of the Jews would not change that. Near the end of His ministry, Jesus decided to conceal Himself more from the Jews as He no longer walked openly among them. He did not disappear totally from them as He came to Bethany and Jerusalem but His days of public ministry had ended. It would shortly come to pass the divine plan of the Father to die but not before it was the will of God.

The plotters and enemies of Jesus could never succeed when they wanted. It would require a great deal of hindsight to look back and see how the will of the Father was accomplished in the life of Jesus. Judas instructed his cohorts that when he came to the garden and kissed a certain man, that He was the individual they were to seize. Did Judas think about the times the people tried to seize Jesus and could not? As an apostle of Christ, he would have been aware of the attempts on Jesus’ life and the many times the people tried to attack Jesus and were hindered. To believe that any man could seize Jesus would seem impossible. One of the most amazing passages in scripture is when the Holy Spirit says the people laid hold of Jesus and led Him away. That would not have happened if it were not the will of God. Clapping irons on Jesus and dragging Him away as a common criminal only happened because God said it could. The arrest of Jesus in the garden was not a gentle affair. A mob came after Jesus with clubs, swords, weapons, and the chief priests, elders of the people, and a detachment of soldiers. Pilate would chide Jesus that he had the power to crucify Him or release Him. Jesus replied that he would have no power unless it was given to him from above. All that was done to Jesus was in keeping with the divine will of the Father. The life of Jesus is the testimony of the scheme of God’s redemption for humanity to be fulfilled in the life and death of His Son. Throughout the ages of time, the Father’s will is accomplished in keeping with His plan. Man cannot change that.

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