Trying To Hide From God

And they heard the sound of the Lord God walking in the garden in the cool of the day, and Adam and his wife hid themselves from the presence of the Lord God among the trees of the garden. (Genesis 3:8)

Trying To Hide From God

Hiding from God is a hobby that men have been trying to do since the Garden of Eden. The first time someone tried to hide from God, it was Adam and Eve who did so. When God created the garden, He placed two trees in the midst of the garden and told Adam and Eve they could eat all they wanted from one tree, but were forbidden to eat of the other tree. Nothing in the command of God was lost on the first couple, and they understood completely what God had told them. Satan deceived Eve into taking the forbidden fruit, and she gave some to Adam. The eyes of Adam and Eve were opened immediately, and they knew they were naked.

Realizing the shame of their nakedness, Adam and Eve fashioned coverings to hide their shame. Hearing the Lord God walking in the garden in the cool of the day, Adam and Eve hid themselves among the trees of the garden. The Lord God called to the couple, asking where they were – God knew where they were. Adam explained they heard the voice of God in the garden, and because they were naked and ashamed, they hid themselves. God had warned Adam and Eve that the day they ate of the forbidden fruit, they would die. At the moment Eve took of the fruit and gave some to Adam, God knew what had happened. The Lord God felt the separation between Himself and man because of sin.

Hiding from God seemed like a good idea at the moment, but there is no purpose in the creation seeking to hide from the Creator. God created Adam and Eve. As the Creator, His omniscience overshadowed everything Adam and Eve did. When the Lord asked Adam and Eve where they were, He was drawing out a confession from them. He knew they had taken the forbidden fruit, and He knew where they were and what they were doing. Repentance demands confession. There is nothing that can be hidden from the eyes of the Lord.

Adam and Eve had a son named Cain, who killed his brother Abel. Trying to hide things from God was a family tradition. After Cain killed Abel, and the Lord asked where Abel was, Cain pretended not to know where Abel was or what had happened to him. God had warned Cain about his anger. The moment Cain killed Abel, God knew. During the days of Noah, the world had become a corrupt and immoral place. God knew the wickedness of man was great and that every intent of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually. The world tried to hide what it did from God, but to no avail. In the midst of the spiritual darkness, God knew the hearts of Noah’s family, and they found grace in His eyes.

Hiding things from God (or attempting to) is a family tradition handed down from generation to generation from Adam. David and Bathsheba tried and failed. The nation of Israel pretended to worship God and followed idols, which was met with disaster. Jesus walked among men and knew their hearts. Ananias and Sapphira, two Christians in the early church, tried to hide their greed from the Lord. God struck them dead as a warning to all who seek to hide things from Him. Nothing man can do will hide what they do from God. Jesus explained how men love the darkness because they are fooled into believing their actions are hidden. Daniel told King Nebuchadnezzar that God knows what is in the darkness. Nothing is hidden from God.

Knowing that God sees all and knows all should change the hearts of men to walk more perfectly in the light of Christ. Trying to hide anything from God is the most ridiculous thing a man can do. It is possible to hide things from others, but the judgment of the Lord will lay bare all that man has done. He will judge the heart for everything that is done in life. If it is evil, God will judge according to His wrath. He will give grace when He sees the goodness of man seeking the glory of God. Live in the full knowledge that God sees all and He knows all. That is a comforting message of hope, of the care and love of God. How wonderful to know that God knows everything about me.

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Does Faith Alone Save Us?

You see then that a man is justified by works, and not by faith only. Likewise, was not Rahab the harlot also justified by works when she received the messengers and sent them out another way? For as the body without the spirit is dead, so faith without works is dead also. (James 2:24-26)

Does Faith Alone Save Us?

The doctrine of salvation is the most important question that must be answered according to the divine will of the Father, or eternal consequences will follow. There is nothing more pressing in the scheme of redemption than to know and understand what a man must do to be saved. A good Bible student will recognize that Satan has no desire for the world to know the real answer to what to do to be saved, and he has been very effective in his deceptions. One of the greatest lies he has told is to convince religious people that they are saved by faith alone. This lie is not new. The devil convinced Israel that they could follow after idolatry and God would still save them because they were the seed of Abraham. Satan lied, and God destroyed Israel.

There are many different denominations among the Protestant churches. Most follow some form of Calvinism, especially the idea that salvation comes by faith alone. The “Health & Wealth” religion of today touts a poisonous blend of the Bible with the cowardly doctrines of salvation through goodness and grace that convince thousands they are saved; when in the eyes of God, they are not. To believe that all a person has to do to be saved is believe in Jesus Christ is the most destructive and vile doctrine of the religious world. The reason is simple: the Bible does not teach the doctrine of salvation by faith only.

James was not addressing doctrinal issues, but the principles he employed to exhort brethren to care for one another are applicable. He writes that faith by itself, if it does not have works, is dead. Believing Jesus is the Christ does not bring salvation because Satan believes that, and his demons believe, and they tremble! James declares that faith without works is dead. If a man thinks he is saved by faith alone, he is seeking to be saved by a dead faith – which cannot happen. Dead faith is dead. Abraham is an example of faith and works. God tested the patriarch, telling him to offer Isaac as a burnt offering. Abraham did not reply to God that he had faith, so why take the journey? Faith moved Abraham to act upon his belief in God, and he offered Isaac on the altar. Faith required works!

Rahab, a prostitute of the city of Jericho, was justified by works when she protected the spies sent into the city by Joshua. She believed the Hebrews served the one true God, and Rahab acted upon her faith. God did not save her by faith alone. No one has ever been saved by faith alone. The plain teaching of scripture, the divine will of God, the word of God, and the inspiration of the Holy Spirit declares that faith without works is as dead as the body without the spirit. James never discounts the need for love, mercy, and grace, and religious people who discount salvation by faith and works will not be saved. They will die joyously, longing to see Jesus face to face and realize too late they are eternally lost. Salvation by faith only is a lie. Stop listening to the whispers of the devil. Read the Bible. Tell anyone who preaches or teaches faith only that they are telling a lie. Stand for truth.

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The Greatest Author

“Though He was a Son, yet He learned obedience by the things which He suffered. And having been perfected, He became the author of eternal salvation to all who obey Him.” (Hebrews 5:8-9)

The Greatest Author

Fyodor Dostoevsky, Charles Dickens, J.R.R. Tolkien, William Shakespeare, C. S. Lewis, William Faulkner, Virginia Wolfe, Leo Tolstoy, Mark Twain, Zane Grey, and Ernest Hemingway are among the elite authors in world history who have changed the face of literature. Their writings are considered classics in their own right alongside many other authors who share the historical significance of changing the world. Few men attain the notability of worldwide authors who are remembered for centuries. Their writings are studied, examined, and quoted, and form the basis of intellectual discussions in higher levels of education. If a man were able to combine all the great writings in the history of language into one collection, none would be a shadow of significance to the one person who is the greatest author of all – Jesus Christ.

An author is someone who invents, originates, and promotes an idea and publishes those ideas into a series of philosophies, doctrines, or stories. The truth about human wisdom is that nothing is truly original. Hugh Miller said, “No dramatist can draw taller men than himself.” Every author is limited in his creation because, like the axiom in physics that water cannot rise above its level, no man can create a character greater than himself. If all the authors of all time were gathered into one room and their talents combined into one united force, they could not begin to create the story of God’s redemption of man and the story of Jesus Christ.

 When the Roman soldiers crucified three men outside Jerusalem long ago, the man in the middle was the author of the greatest story ever told. Jesus Christ became the author (causer) of eternal salvation when He died for the sins of the world. His story became the means by which sinful man could find eternal life. There is no other story that will save man. All others are false religions created by human wisdom of failed theologies, condemning their followers to life without God. Jesus is the author of eternal salvation only to those who obey Him. His story will have no impact if the heart does not accept His word. The cross is the central story of Jesus Christ, who, for the joy that was set before Him, learned obedience in the things He suffered to receive authority from God and become the Savior of the world.

There is no greater author than Jesus Christ. The story of Jesus begins in Genesis and triumphs in the Revelation. Every jot and tittle of the message penned by holy men of God declares the authorship of Jesus Christ. His hand is in every word. The power of the Holy Spirit inspired every syllable. God’s message of redemption permeates each page of divine revelation to declare the glory of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. Eternal life can only be found in the message of the author of eternal life, and Jesus is His name. Knowledge is power, and reading is learning the grace of God’s message to a lost world. Faith comes from reading the words of the author of eternal salvation. Without faith, there is no salvation. Jesus is the greatest author. Read His book often. Your destiny depends on it.

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Forgive Them

Then Jesus said, “Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they do.” And they divided His garments and cast lots. (Luke 23:34)

Forgive Them

On a hill outside Jerusalem, three criminals were being put to death according to Roman law. The execution of malefactors was not uncommon. Crucifixion was the evidence of how cruel man could be, as thousands were nailed to a cross and left to die. It was reserved for the worst of criminals, the murderers, and the rebellious. Rome held an iron fist on the empire to maintain law and order with cruelty, barbarism, and infanticide. More than thirty years earlier, the Roman government sent soldiers into a small village south of Jerusalem and killed all the male children two years and under. There was no mercy. The city was overcome with great weeping and crying.

Three men were sentenced to die, and the Roman soldiers carried out the execution with precision. First, the victim was scourged with a whip that opened up his back in slivers of bleeding flesh. The soldiers knew not to scourge the man too much to kill him, but the man in the middle received a harsh beating. After scourging, the victims had to carry the cross-piece on their shoulders to the place of execution. One man was unable to carry it fully, and a victim was chosen from the crowd to finish the journey. Three men made their way through the streets of Jerusalem as people hurled insults, curses, and threw things at the condemned men. The crowd showed no mercy.

When the condemned men reached the Place of a Skull, the man forced to carry the cross-piece threw the heavy piece on the ground, and the soldiers prepared the man from Nazareth by nailing his hands to the wood. Other soldiers did the same to the men on the right and left. Lifting the weakened body of the man in the middle to the stipe or post in the ground, the soldiers secured the patibulum and then nailed the feet to the rough wood. Their work was done. The soldiers backed away, and three men struggled to push against the nails in their feet to breathe. Each breath caused extreme pain in the hands nailed to the wood. Death would be torturous and slow and would never come soon enough.

As the soldiers divided the remaining earthly possessions of the victims, the crowd that gathered mocked and scorned the three men. They especially took pleasure in taunting the man in the middle. He had claimed to be a great teacher sent from God and had told the Jewish leadership he would destroy the Temple and rebuild it in three days. It infuriated the crowd that this man claimed to be the Son of God. If He was the Son of God, they demanded He show them by coming off the cross. Even the two robbers cursed and swore against their fellow criminal. And then the man in the middle spoke.

Jesus had come into the world, born of a virgin, to fulfill the will of the Father. He humbled Himself to take on the form of the greatest servant to save a world that turned against Him. Everything Jesus did was for the glory of the Father to show the world the one true light. He healed untold thousands, performed undeniable miracles, and taught a message of love, hope, mercy, and forgiveness. His message was stern and forceful. He never sinned in His life, and yet the people cried out, “Crucify Him, crucify Him” – and they did. Within the power of Jesus was to call 72,000 angels to come and destroy the world, but He opened wide His arms and accepted the will of His beloved Father.

Instead of calling down twelve legions of angels, Jesus called down the greatest words offered to a rebellious and dark world: “Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they do.” Jesus prayed for those who were killing Him, mocking Him, and denying Him. He asked for mercy because of the complete failure of human wisdom. The Jews knew what they were doing when they brought Jesus to Pilate. Pilate knew what he was doing when he sentenced Jesus to death. The crowds knew what they were doing when they cheered on the soldiers to kill Jesus. And that was the divine irony of the wisdom of human knowledge. They killed the Son of God, and He prayed for them. That is the picture of divine love.

The death of Jesus took place more than two thousand years ago, but human wisdom continues to deny that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God. Everyone thinks they know what they are doing, but they are failing, just as they did outside the city of Jerusalem. On the Day of Pentecost, three thousand people realized the failure of human wisdom and asked forgiveness for the death of Jesus. That same message is given today for men to lay aside human wisdom and believe Jesus is the Son of God. The Father is willing to forgive sinful man, regardless of what he has done, if he will but only repent and be baptized. There is no measure to the divine wisdom of God. The wisdom of man is clearly a failure. Jesus prayed for those who were killing Him. What greater example of love can there be in a dark world of human wisdom? Thank you, Jesus, for being the Son of God.

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Tightening The Strings

And not only that, but we also glory in tribulations, knowing that tribulation produces perseverance; and perseverance, character; and character, hope. Now hope does not disappoint, because the love of God has been poured out in our hearts by the Holy Spirit who was given to us. (Romans 5:3-5)

Tightening The Strings

As the musician tightens the strain on his violin strings, yet is careful not to snap them asunder, but only to secure a sweeter melody and better accord, so God, through affliction, makes his own children more perfect instruments for His service. God created pain to show man that he is alive. When Adam and Eve were expelled from the garden, suffering and trials became a part of everyday life. Affliction can either destroy the spirit of man or make him a better person. No one enjoys suffering, but there is a way to view the trials of life with a positive outlook.

The early Christians suffered from persecution and trials, and yet the Lord told them to count it all joy when the trials come. How is it possible to look at life with troubles and have a spirit of hope? Without God, it is impossible. With God, the spirit sees the real nature of life with a view of eternity. The problem with looking at trials the wrong way is to believe life here and now is all there is. Having the hope that life is short and in death greater blessings await changes the view of life.

At the beginning of the epistle of James, he tells those scattered abroad to know that the testing of their faith would produce patience. They were suffering under the hand of persecution. God wants them to know He hears their prayers and understands their pain, but their suffering will lead to greater things. The testing of their faith would produce a stronger faith if they trusted in the Lord. Prayer was central to the character of enduring trials. Seeking wisdom from God helps to understand the trials of life.

The apostle Paul told the saints in Rome to glory in tribulations, knowing that tribulation produces perseverance; and perseverance, character; and character, hope. It is difficult to see hope in the midst of tribulations, but allowing the process to be filled with the love of God gives the heart of man the strength to produce character, leading to hope. This kind of hope is everlasting. God demonstrated His love for man when He allowed His Son to suffer. Jesus had the power to call down 72,000 (twelve legions) angels to defend Him, but he suffered to show the path of hope. God never forsook Jesus in His suffering, and He will not forsake us in our suffering.

There is much suffering in the world, and that will not change. Living through those trials can only be done with the hope in Christ. Belief in God does not take away pain, but it helps to understand its purpose. The reality is that suffering is but for a short time and then eternity. Find peace in God. He offers hope. There are answers to suffering.

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An Elder Is A Bishop

For this reason I left you in Crete, that you should set in order the things that are lacking, and appoint elders in every city as I commanded you— if a man is blameless, the husband of one wife, having faithful children not accused of dissipation or insubordination. For a bishop must be blameless, as a steward of God, not self-willed, not quick-tempered, not given to wine, not violent, not greedy for money, but hospitable, a lover of what is good, sober-minded, just, holy, self-controlled, holding fast the faithful word as he has been taught, that he may be able, by sound doctrine, both to exhort and convict those who contradict. (Titus 1:5-9)

An Elder Is A Bishop

Titus is not mentioned in the book of Acts, which covers much of Paul’s ministry throughout the Roman Empire. Paul mentions him in three of his letters (2 Corinthians, Galatians, and 2 Timothy) and includes a letter to Titus. When Paul left Crete, he left Titus there to set in order things lacking in the churches of Crete. One of the main goals of Paul was for Titus to establish the New Testament church according to the pattern given to them by the Holy Spirit. As the early church grew, there were growing pains as the saints came to understand the role of the church, its leadership, authority, and pattern established by the Holy Spirit. Titus was there in Crete to put those things together.

Every church is lacking something. One of the most needful things for the churches in Crete was the establishment of men to be elders or bishops. Paul and Barnabas had gone throughout Asia Minor appointing elders in every church. This would be a constant pattern for Paul to establish the church as God wanted it to be. Paul wrote to Timothy, instructing him about the role of those who would be called bishops. Specific qualities are given to Timothy and Titus about the men who would shepherd the local flock of God’s people. These were not ordinary men in many ways, as they had to be married, fathers, men of good character, and examples to all. Their role was to lead the local church to grow in the grace and knowledge of the Lord and care for each member. They were called elders, bishops, shepherds, overseers, and pastors.

An elder and a bishop (overseer) are the same thing. These men hold a leadership role in the local church to tend and care for the souls in their care. They are not exalted men wearing flowing robes of distinction. The world has perverted the idea of a bishop to be a person of exalted stature who exercises authority over a diocese, including several churches. Nothing is further from the truth. There is never a record in the New Testament of a bishop being anything but an elder who shepherds one local congregation. He must meet the qualities of character shown to Timothy and Titus. Any deviation from this is an error and false doctrine.

Many people often mistakenly call a preacher a pastor. This is another term that religious groups have perverted. A pastor is an elder or bishop who has followed the guidelines of scripture shown to Timothy and Titus. Preachers are not pastors. On a few occasions, a preacher may become an elder, bishop, or pastor if he is following the model set forth by the Holy Spirit, but the general use of calling a preacher a pastor is misapplying scripture. It should be noted that calling a man “Reverend” is an affront to the name of God. The only time “reverend” is used in scripture; it denotes the name of God.

Names are important. The religious world is free with the use of names that are not found in the Bible. Misapplying roles of the church is an egregious insult to the character of God because it flies in the face of His holy word. Honest Bible students will hold accountable those who misuse scripture. An elder is a bishop. A pastor is an elder. He oversees one flock as a shepherd. His qualities are in line with what Paul wrote to Timothy and Titus. Any deviation from this is not the New Testament church. Does it make a difference? It matters to God, and it should matter to you.

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We Are But Frail Creatures

Lord, make me to know my end, and what is the measure of my days, that I may know how frail I am. (Psalm 39:4)

We Are But Frail Creatures

Young men think they will live forever, and old men understand how frail life is. The spirit of youth clouds the vision of knowing the reality of life, that little time is given for a man to walk upon this earth. From a young age, life seems like an endless adventure filled with expectations and accomplishments. The energy of a youthful eye cannot see what is beyond the horizon because everything is about the here and now. Life is measured by the vitality of an endless day that stretches over time without end. There is no knowledge of the trials of life, heartaches, disappointments, and realities of growing old. Far removed is the eye of wisdom that knows how short life is measured and that death has always been near; but a whisper away.

The old must die, the young can die. When an old man dies, he has lived a full life. A young man dies, and tears of grief question how he could be cut down at the prime of life. The reality is, there is no difference between the old and the young. Life is not justified by age. Babies die in childbirth. Old men die after many years lived. The grave is an impartial judge. It is difficult for a young man to have the life experience that comes with age. With age comes wisdom, but not for all. An old man can refuse to accept his time on earth and seek for youth in his later years, but he fights a losing battle. God has ordained death for all men, and for most, it is accomplished through the aging process. An old man who seeks to relive his youth is a fool. Young men are young, and old men are old. Life is measured in this form by the hand of God.

Wisdom comes from understanding how frail life is. The psalmist David examined life and found that youthfulness serves a purpose, but it is fleeting. True knowledge comes from looking at life from the viewpoint of the Creator. To truly understand the nature of life, God must be acknowledged. Every man comes into the world by the hand of God, and everyone leaves this world by the decree of God. God gives life to the eternal spirit dwelling in a mortal body. Because of sin, God has limited the days of man. Death is certain, and nothing man can do will stop that. David understood the complexity of life, which must be measured to know its length. After seeing how short life is, the psalmist concludes what God wants man to know: life is a vapor that appears for a moment and then it is gone. That is how frail life is.

When a man looks at life as God gives life, he can understand how valuable each moment is. The frailty of life is heard when parents see their children grown and remark, “Where did childhood go?” Measuring life shows how quickly the world turns when milestones are reached in life. Graduation from school, marriage, children, grandchildren, retirement, and old age. It seems but for a moment. How frail life is. The frailty of life is highlighted when death invades the heart, with so many dying at a young age and at an old age. Time marches slowly as the expectation of many more years is now few. Frailty of body and mind creeps in. Challenges increase. The darkness of old age overshadows the heart.

David knew how to live each day for the God he served. The Holy Spirit said David rested with his fathers and was buried in the City of David. Death is called a sleep – a rest, because life is fragile. When a man dies, he goes to his long home, an everlasting home, the eternal home. The contrast is stark. Life is but a vapor. Eternal life is forever. What once was measured and frail is now unmeasured and secure. Count your days. They are fleeting. Life is a brief moment and then eternity. Only God can help you measure your days to find salvation in eternal life.

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Families That Do Not Call On God

O Lord, correct me, but with justice; not in Your anger, lest You bring me to nothing. Pour out Your fury on the Gentiles, who do not know You, and on the families who do not call on Your name; for they have eaten up Jacob, devoured him and consumed him, and made his dwelling place desolate. (Jeremiah 10:24-25)

Families That Do Not Call On God

The tragedy of the human race is the failure of the home. Nothing is more central and foundational to society than the union of a man and woman creating a home. Every nation is crafted from the substance of the home. If the home is full of goodness, the nation will be a place of goodness. When the home turns away from God, the nation will soon follow. The law of the home becomes the law of the land. Morality is not a national spirit; it is a seed that grows from the ground of the home. Immorality grows the same way. In the early days of the earth, the family became corrupt, and every thought was evil continually. Before long, the world was corrupted, and God destroyed it.

God created the home to be a perfect union of man and woman joined in the holy relationship of godliness. Satan destroyed that when he tempted Eve. The home has always been the bulwark of truth and righteousness, with honor given to the headship of the home. Under the Law of Moses, striking the parents brought death. Cursing the father or mother was met with the death penalty. The Lord was sending a message to all generations about the hallowed nature of the home and that it was to be honored and respected. If the home turned away from God, He turned away from the home.

Jeremiah’s message in the last days of Israel was for the Lord to bring His fury on the Gentiles and on the families who do not call on the name of the Lord. Israel was destroyed because the people lacked the knowledge of God, turning away from the holiness of God to the embrace of an immoral and decadent world. God’s wrath is brought against the home that does not honor Him. It is futile to establish a home without putting God first. Without the guidance of the Creator of the home, there can be no happiness or joy. The home is destitute and empty.

Most homes do not have God. Some claim to have God in their midst, but they do not follow His word. Many claim to say, “Lord, Lord,” but do not do the will of the Father. They are ‘religious’ but only as a prosthetic that is worn to satisfy the longing for acceptance, not realizing God does not accept them. Jesus taught the disciples that most homes are ungodly. He said that most people will be lost to an eternal flame. Those people He spoke about came from homes where God was denied. A family that does not call upon the name of the Lord is doomed to face the wrath of God.

Every home has the opportunity to know God. When the husband and wife or father and mother choose to give their lives to a dedicated service of putting God first in everything, the central altar of the home is truth and righteousness based on the word of God. The home is made up of sinners who need the grace of God. Successful homes are those that instill in their children a love for God at all costs. A united family in Christ stands with the character of God’s divine image impressed upon their hearts. Be warned – God will bring His wrath upon the home that does not call upon His name. He will bless the home that seeks Him first in all things.

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What Satan Knows

The devil, who deceived them, was cast into the lake of fire and brimstone where the beast and the false prophet are. And they will be tormented day and night forever and ever. (Revelation 20:10)

What Satan Knows

Satan, the fiery red dragon, the serpent of old called the devil is powerful. He has a clear agenda and a defined purpose driven by his rebellion. Jesus came to earth to destroy the works of the devil. When Jesus rose from the dead, Satan knew something. He knew he was totally defeated. There was nothing he could do against Jesus, although he tried innumerable times while Jesus walked as a man. Did Satan consider the death of Jesus (God) a victory? If so, it was short-lived. God had told the devil that he would bruise the heel of the Seed, but that his head would be bruised. Everything came to pass when Jesus died and rose on the third day.

Paul warned the early Christians of the power of Satan, describing him as the master of evil principalities, powers, rulers of the darkness of this age, and the spiritual hosts of wickedness in the heavenly places. The devil is not a being to be taken lightly or ignored. Any day with the devil is an evil day. The fiery darts of the dragon are powerful. His wily ways are unscrupulous and very effective. Satan destroyed the relationship between God and man when he successfully tempted Eve in the garden. The world was destroyed in a flood through the power of the devil. Only Noah and his family survived. Satan destroyed the apple of God’s eye when he brought Israel down. The devil was bold to tempt Jesus at the beginning of His ministry with three powerful allurements. He failed.

Satan is powerful, but his power is limited. When he went after the man Job, God limited what he could do. Jesus showed His power over Satan in healing demon-possessed souls. All the demons obeyed the voice of Jesus without hesitation. James tells us the minions of Satan believe and tremble. The Bible is the manual for dealing with the influence of Satan. God gave man a book to read and understand the enemy he is up against. With greater knowledge comes greater power to withstand the pressures of the evil one. If a man resists the devil, the old lion will flee.

The apostle John wrote the Revelation of Jesus Christ nearly two thousand years ago. His message was sent to the seven churches in Asia to exhort, rebuke, correct, and challenge the early saints to walk faithfully before the Lord. The early Christians were suffering under the heavy hand of the Roman Government, religious persecution, and the influence of an ungodly world. In the Revelation, the Lord reveals to His people that He knows their pain and suffering and that He has heard their prayers. One of the most important lessons they needed to learn was not to fear the devil. He is the dragon behind the persecution, but the good news comes at the end of the story. The devil will be cast into the lake of fire and brimstone and will be tormented day and night forever and ever.

Satan is not unaware of his future. It has been written down on the divine ledger for more than two thousand years for the devil to read time and time again until that last and final day. All wicked people who die will be surprised when they find themselves in a place of torment. No one really expects God to exercise His wrath with an eternal Hell – but He will. Everyone in Hell will know why they are there and will agree that God’s justice is righteous. There will be no arguments made for ignorance or leniency. But the devil? It will be no surprise to him and his angels. They know exactly where they are going and why. The time has not been set yet, but that day is coming. That will be the only surprise for Satan.

There is part of faith that should be reassuring, knowing the enemy of God’s people is a powerless and a condemned being with literally no future. Nothing is going to change the course of Satan’s path. The devil and his demons believe and tremble and are damned to Hell, and they know it. God shows the victory in the Revelation of Jesus Christ, and the greatest victory is that death, Hades, and the devil will be cast into the lake of fire, which is the second death. They will never be released from that eternal torment. The power to seduce people to rebel against God is gone. There will be no more tears, sorrow, pain, or suffering – all brought about as a consequence of sin. When you are being tempted to sin, look Satan square in the face and remind him where he is doing. Remind him often! He knows!

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Carry The Bride Across The Threshold

Husbands, love your wives, just as Christ also loved the church and gave Himself for her, that He might sanctify and cleanse her with the washing of water by the word, that He might present her to Himself a glorious church, not having spot or wrinkle or any such thing, but that she should be holy and without blemish. So husbands ought to love their own wives as their own bodies; he who loves his wife loves himself. (Ephesians 5:25-28)

Carry The Bride Across The Threshold

Have you ever wondered why the guy is supposed to carry his bride over the threshold? Blame the Romans. They believed that good and evil spirits fought for control at a home’s entrance. For good to prevail, Romans felt you must enter a room with your right foot first. Romans concluded that a new bride in a highly emotional state might be careless and forget about the “right foot” stuff. To prevent possible tragedy, they decided it was best for the groom to carry his bride across the threshold.

The Romans were very superstitious people, basing life decisions on concepts foreign to truth, but the principles have merit. A newlywed couple begins a life together with commitment, trust, and hope for the future. Unbeknownst to the Romans, what they suggested is a principle that is important to the establishment of the home. God created the man before He created the woman. The woman was taken out of man to be his helper or helpmate in life. This relationship changed when the serpent, the devil, deceived Eve. Part of the consequence of her actions is that God said her desire would always be for her husband, and he would rule over her.

Paul taught the Ephesian Christians that, just as Christ is the Head of the church, so the husband is the head of the wife. This role is not one where the man is a tyrant or bully. He is to love, cherish, and nourish his wife as his own flesh. The husband has the leadership role in the family according to God’s divine pattern. He must take on that role of leadership to guide the family in the way of the Lord. There is a figure by which the man must carry the bride across the threshold of the home to show his willingness to lead the family in the way of God.

There can only be one head in the home. The wife is a very important part of that leadership. If a man cannot understand his role, he must examine the way Christ died for the church, loves the church, and guides the church by His leadership. The husband must take responsibility for leading the family. As a husband, his role is to help his wife find eternal life. A father will do everything in his power to ensure his family discovers the joys of salvation in Christ. As head of the family, that is his work and passion.

No one has a greater responsibility than a man who takes on the role of husband. He must make that right “first step” to ward off the influences of ungodliness. His goal is to protect his family from the wiles of the devil while protecting himself. It begins with the right “first step.” That step is found in a relationship with Jesus Christ. Based upon a study of the word of God, the man will lead his family in the grace of God.

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