Where The Saved Are

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So continuing daily with one accord in the temple, and breaking bread from house to house, they ate their food with gladness and simplicity of heart, praising God and having favor with all the people. And the Lord added to the church daily those who were being saved. (Acts 2:46-47)

Where The Saved Are

Location. Location. Location. It has a lot to do with where a person is in life. In the business model, location can mean success or failure. When it comes to salvation, it means everything that has to do with eternity. Location in the spiritual sense is not a geographical point on a map but a relationship with the Father. For the Jews under the Law of Moses, circumcision was a sign of where they were with God. The most severe punishment inflicted upon a Jew was to be cut off from the people. To be excluded from the fellowship of the law was the worst thing that could happen to a child of God. This same principle is found in the church of the Lord regarding a matter of fellowship. Where one finds himself in relation with the Father determines whether they can enjoy the spiritual blessings of God.

When the apostles preached on Pentecost the message of salvation, three thousand souls responded to the obedience of God’s will. Peter told them to repent and be baptized for the remission of sins and they would enjoy the blessings of a loving Father. Luke concludes the story showing how that God added all those new converts to the church. The church was not a byword of convenience where people gathered for social and recreational enjoyments. Salvation was described as a relationship with where one found themselves in the church. The Lord was adding daily those who were saved to the church. If they were not in the church, they were not saved. Early Christians did not view the church as a matter of choice but knew the necessity of being in the church to be saved. It is impossible to be saved and not be a part of the church. The addition of a soul to the church was in the mind of God alone but the church is where the saved are found.

There were many local congregations of God’s people throughout the New Testament world. Joining oneself to a local congregation is a part of the obedience to the word of God. The scriptures show the necessity of assembling as a body of saints to worship as one and enjoy the fellowship of the saved. The Lord adds one to the church and removes one from the church in a universal sense but men complete obedience by forming local congregations. Salvation and the church are necessary for one another. The saved are added to the church by the will of God. Paul would later use the term “in Christ” describing the same relationship. The unsaved are not in the church and are not in Jesus Christ. Hope, joy and eternal salvation are found only in the church. The blood of Jesus Christ brings one into the church and this blood is in the waters of baptism. If the church is not important – the blood of Jesus Christ is of no value. The reason God added to the church daily those who were saved is because they were washed in the blood of Jesus Christ: baptism.

The New Testament teaches there is one church. Jesus promised to build His church (singular) and the early disciples taught the necessity of obedience through the blood of Jesus Christ in baptism. Every time a person obeyed the gospel of Christ, God added them to the church. He did not add them to a denomination formed by man. Being a part of the church of the Lord was salvation. All the blessings of God were poured out on the one who had been added to the church. If a person was not in the church, they were not saved. There are many so-called churches today that lead men in different paths but the Bible shows only one true church. It is the body of believers that looks exactly like it did when God first formed the church on the day of Pentecost. The saved are in the church.

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Trust In The Lord

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The Lord also will be a refuge for the oppressed, a refuge in times of trouble. And those who know Your name will put their trust in You; for You, Lord, have not forsaken those who seek You. (Psalm 9:9-10)

Trust In The Lord

One of my favorite stories about trust is found in the man who bought a brand new sports car and took it to the mountains for a test drive. He flew around corners and plunged down long embankments speeding up quick hills to the exhilaration of the thrill of his brand new machine. Everything was going fine until he swerved to miss a boulder in the middle of the road and he crashed through the guardrail plunging down a deep crevasse. The car flipped over and over exploding in a huge fireball at the bottom. Luckily for the man he had been thrown free of the car tumbling down the side of the mountain before a limb stopped his fall. He hung clinging to the limb with no way to climb back to the top and fearing to let go for the height of his fall would mean certain death. There he was between heaven and earth and little hope. He cried out to passing motorist but no one could hear him. His arms began to ache as he struggled to maintain his hold on the only thing saving him from death. As he hung suspended in the air his thoughts turned to what the preacher in the village had said every Sunday. “Trust in the Lord and He will take care of you.” At the time, the man was too busy to think of such things. Now that is all he could think of. Crying out, the man shouted with a loud voice, “God if you are there, can you help me?” Clouds rumbled together and a voice came from the cloud, “Yes, I am here.” “Lord,” the man replied, “I am in a real fix here. I lost control of my car, plunged over the side and I only have this limb to save me. Would you please help me Lord?” There was a silence and then a voice said, “If you trust in Me and do as I say, I can help you.” “Oh yes, Lord,” the excited man exclaimed. “You tell me what to do and I will do it for sure. Thank you, Lord.” The voice replied, “Let go of the branch and I will catch you. Then I will put you back on the road and you can return home.” A long silence followed. “Hey, can anyone else hear me?” the man shouted.

Trusting God is learning how to let go of the branch. The challenge for man is to remember that he cannot be the master of his life without first putting God in charge. We want to do things our way and often delegate God to a “when needed basis” to be called on in an emergency. The Lord is great, powerful, and majestic but I do not need His help until I fall over a cliff and some calamity happens. Trusting in God is allowing Him to take charge of our lives letting His will be my guide and the light for my path. Letting go of the branch is releasing our desires and accepting the providential mercy of the Lord to direct my heart, my speech, my thoughts and plans. He will be our refuge and protection only when we let Him. We have to trust Him. This conviction is not a prosthetic that I take on and off when needed. Faith in God is a daily recognition that everything I have is from Him and anything my life will be is because of His grace.

Fear takes a heavy toll on our trust factor. Suspended high in the air of life and the Lord asking us to let go is faith multiplied by the grain of a mustard seed. It can be done but we have to believe that God will catch us. That is where we struggle. How far will He let me fall before He catches me? Those first moments of free-fall are unsettling. Trusting in God is knowing He is always right and His way will bring peace and safety. Abraham let go of the branch when he rose early in the morning to begin his journey to Moriah. It was there he was to offer his only son as a burnt offering. Peter had faith to walk on water. Paul trusted in the providence of God to guide his life; even when facing death. Whatever we face in life must begin with letting go of the branch.

Jesus does not say, “There is no storm.” He says, “I am here, do not toss but trust.” (Vance Havner; 1901-1986)

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The Death Penalty

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Now while the children of Israel were in the wilderness, they found a man gathering sticks on the Sabbath day. And those who found him gathering sticks brought him to Moses and Aaron, and to all the congregation. They put him under guard, because it had not been explained what should be done to him. Then the Lord said to Moses, “The man must surely be put to death; all the congregation shall stone him with stones outside the camp.” So, as the Lord commanded Moses, all the congregation brought him outside the camp and stoned him with stones, and he died. (Numbers 15:32-36)

The Death Penalty

God gave the Law of Moses to the people of Israel at Mt. Sinai. Moses instructed the people concerning the laws that were established by the will of the Lord demanding complete obedience in keeping the statues, commandments and judgments. The Ten Commandments were the preamble to the whole law but the law itself was quite extensive. It covered every part of the Jewish life from government, war, education, health, family life and worship. The Law of Moses governed the kind of clothes worn, relationships within families and neighbors, how to determine various diseases and bodily functions, festivals, marriage laws, music, sacrifices, financial laws, foreign policy and crimes against one another. God authored the Law by His own will and the foundation of the Law of Moses was answerable to the Lord. It was a strict law. Man’s wisdom did not craft the tenets of right and wrong; this came from the mind of God.

Picking up sticks is not considered immoral. What made the act so horrible was the man who gathered sticks on the day of Sabbath disobeyed a clear command of the Lord that no man was to work on the Sabbath. There was probably a good reason he was gathering wood. It did not matter. What the people learned the day a man was found gathering sticks on the Sabbath day was that God’s law was a demonstration of the goodness and severity of the Lord. Disobedience is not tolerated by God. Keeping the law will bring joy but disregarding the law will bring judgment. When the people found the man on the Sabbath gathering sticks, they were uncertain what to do. It is possible they knew what the penalty would be but it had not been explained how serious the charge of profaning the Sabbath was. How could a man be put to death for picking up sticks? It seemed implausible. When Moses inquired to the Lord what should be done with the man, he was told to stone him with stones outside the camp. The people led him outside the camp and began to throw stones at him until he was dead.

It is not hard to imagine what the accused thought when he was first arrested and then told the punishment. He may have thought in his mind why this would happen to someone who was just gathering sticks together. Was he needing firewood to warm his family or cook his food? The act itself was not wicked. As the crowd led him outside the camp, he must have begged with them to not do what they were planning. He was terrified he was going to die for picking up sticks. The lesson learned that day for the man and the people was the seriousness of God’s law and His righteousness. Man cannot trifle with God. When the Lord struck down Nadab and Abihu for offering profane fire, Moses told their father Aaron God must be regarded as holy and the Lord must be glorified. Gathering sticks on the Sabbath disregarded the holiness of God.

The death penalty under the Law of Moses was a tool exhibiting the righteousness of a jealous God. Many laws carried the death penalty: murder, striking mother or father, cursing mother or father, bestiality, adultery, rape, homosexuality, profaning the Sabbath, human sacrifice, mediums or familiar spirits, blaspheming the name of God, and the outsider who comes near the tabernacle; to name a few. The Law of Moses came from God and its perfection was found in its design to show man the need to glorify a jealous and wrathful God. When Christ came to earth, He abolished the Law of Moses. While the Law of Moses is no longer binding as authority, the penalty of sin remains the same. Judgment will not be meted out in this life for the wicked practices of men but eternal death will await those who disregard the holy character of the Lord God. The last and final death penalty is eternal fire. It is real. It is sure. It is certain. The man who gathered sticks on the seventh day learned a very hard lesson. His story should bring pause to our lives to know the jealous nature of our God.

The discipline of the Old Testament may be summed up as a discipline teaching us to abhor and flee from sin. (Matthew Arnold, Culture and Anarchy, 1869)

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Jacob’s Love

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So Jacob served seven years for Rachel, and they seemed only a few days to him because of the love he had for her. (Genesis 29:20)

Jacob’s Love

Love is more than just a splendid thing; it is an incredible emotion that bonds two people together that time cannot erase. Jacob had fled from his home in fear of his life. Arriving in Padan Aram, he met a young shepherdess named Rachel. She was beautiful in form and appearance and Jacob fell in love with her. Desiring to marry Rachel, Jacob agreed with her father, Laban, to work seven years. He would have gladly married her as soon as possible but the agreement was to wait seven years. It is hard to imagine being in love with someone and waiting seven years to marry. Long engagements are not unusual and are often for good purpose. Working seven years to marry the woman you love would seem like an arduous task. The Holy Spirit tells us that Jacob did not notice the time as seven years rolled by. He was so in love with Rachel that almost a decade seemed like a few days. Seven years is 84 months or 2,555 days. The love for Rachel helped Jacob fly through the time as if time itself stood still. He was in love.

After seven years, Jacob thought he was marrying his beloved Rachel but through trickery married her sister, Leah. After the deceit was discovered, Jacob had to work another seven years for Laban. Rachel and Jacob were married during this final seven years but Jacob worked 14 years because of his love for Rachel. Sadly, the one who wanted the love of Jacob was Leah but never found the love he had for her sister. God had compassion on Leah and Jesus came through the seed of Leah instead of Rachel. Love is an emotion and it is something learned. Paul tells Titus to have the older women teach the younger women how to love their husbands and their children. Jacob had a love for Rachel that was a deeply devoted love. Seven years seemed like days because his life was dedicated to one woman. There were hard days and there were good days. Love was not something to be cast aside for any reason. Jacob and Rachel kept their marriage vows ending only in death. Rachel would die in childbirth when Benjamin was born.

Jacob’s love is love that sees through the hardships and difficulties with a union of one spirit. Jesus loved His bride to die for her. Husbands are to love their wives as Christ loved the church. Jacob saw only one woman in his life and there would be no other. He was tricked into marrying Leah but Rachel was his true love. Jacob’s love is still possible in the hearts of men who fully give their lives to God first and then to their wives. It must begin with a heart of love for the Lord before it can build in the hearts of men to love their wives. Jacob’s love for Rachel dismissed the seven years he labored to gain her hand. His life was spent in finding ways to show Rachel how much he loved her. He would tell her often. Love for Jacob was the grace of the woman he loved. It was not how she could make him happy; it was what he could do to make her happy.

Mysterious is the fusion of two loving spirits; each takes the best from the other, but only to give it back again enriched with love. (Romain Rolland, Jean Christophe, 1912)

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His Twelve Disciples

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And when He had called His twelve disciples to Him, He gave them power over unclean spirits, to cast them out, and to heal all kinds of sickness and all kinds of disease. Now the names of the twelve apostles are these: first, Simon, who is called Peter, and Andrew his brother; James the son of Zebedee, and John his brother; Philip and Bartholomew; Thomas and Matthew the tax collector; James the son of Alphaeus, and Lebbaeus, whose surname was Thaddaeus; Simon the Cananite, and Judas Iscariot, who also betrayed Him. These twelve Jesus sent out …” (Matthew 10:1-5)

His Twelve Disciples

Jesus had a mission. He knew the purpose of His work leads Him to a terrible death. On a number of occasions, the Lord will tell His disciples He is going to Jerusalem to be mocked, spit upon, beaten and killed. He also tells them He will rise from the dead. The challenge of His mission would be what happens after He returns to His Father. Jesus ministry is very short but the message of the gospel needs to be spread throughout the world and throughout the ages to come. How is that going to be accomplished with Jesus spending less than three years on the earth? He cannot remain to oversee the work. His Father did not plan on angels taking over the ministry. The future generations must hear the plan of salvation so that God’s grace is given to all men. What is the plan that ensures the continual growth of the gospel message? Enter twelve men.

Before time began, God had a design for the saving of man. Jesus promised to build His church and this would not be accomplished until the day of Pentecost when twelve men stood before a crowd of Jews preaching the resurrection of the Christ. It would be left in the hands of men that were fishermen, a tax collector, Jewish zealot and a bunch of unknowns. These are not men of stature in the world of the Jews or the Romans. Among the disciples of Jesus, these were men of regular cloth but these were the men of Jesus. They were chosen from all of the disciples to be His inner circle. Twelve men would receive special instructions and insight into the work of God’s Son. Their hearts would hear teachings none other would know. A few were granted more personal access to events in the life of Jesus.

The work of Jesus was exhaustive. Filling the shoes of an apostle would have felt the weariness and toil of trying to keep up with the Lord and His vibrant work. City after city heard the message of Jesus as days dragged on with travels to different regions of Judea and Samaria. The twelve were His special envoys granted incredible powers to heal all kinds of sickness and all kinds of disease. On a few occasions, the Lord sent His twelve disciples out to teach the message of truth and godliness. Twelve men going throughout the countryside bringing people to salvation. A dozen devoted disciples that had a special place in the life of Jesus. They were called “His twelve disciples.”

There was camaraderie among the twelve that set them apart from the other disciples. Their bond was a close-knit group of men that would learn greater hardships after Jesus died. The sudden death of Jesus was unexplained at first but then they came to understand the greater role they had been groomed to accomplish. Along with the death of Jesus was the betrayal of one of the twelve – Judas. He was one of the twelve. Judas had shared in the preaching, miracle working and inner conversations with the Lord. He taught people about Jesus, healed all manner of sickness and disease. One of the twelve allowed Satan to fill his heart betraying his Lord for a penance of silver. Following the betrayal, Judas committed suicide. How tragic and sad. One of the twelve had been lost.

The twelve were the apostles of Jesus Christ. They were His chosen leaders to fulfill His work while He walked among men. Eleven men would later take the gospel to the whole world choosing Matthias to take the place of Judas. Today their work still speaks to all men. The writings of Peter, John and Matthew are still studied and read today. For nearly two thousand years, the work of twelve men resounds to every corner of the world. It seems incredible that so much has been accomplished through the workings of twelve men. Every saint alive today enjoys the blessings of God’s wonderful grace because of the vigilant work of twelve men; who through the power of the Holy Spirit took the gospel of Christ to all men.

If twelve men can turn the world upside down, what is hindering me from showing the light of Jesus Christ in the world I live in? They did not have the conveniences of our modern world or the advanced technology allowing man to reach out to the four corners of the world. The Bible is available in every form known to man including the printed page in every language of the world. My friends and neighbors need to hear the message of Jesus Christ. Twelve men knew what to do. They were the disciples of Jesus Christ. The Lord sent them out to heal all manner of disease and teach the message of hope. Our work today must reflect the spirit of the twelve who went out to do the work of the Lord. Healing hearts afflicted with sin is the miracle of God’s grace. Let us rise up and build the walls of salvation as did the twelve. Let us be called “His disciples” and carry out His message of mercy to a lost and dying world.

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The Greatest Builder

 

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And I also say to you that you are Peter, and on this rock I will build My church, and the gates of Hades shall not prevail against it. (Matthew 16:18)

The Greatest Builder

Frank Lloyd Wright is arguably one of the greatest architects of history. He is joined with master artisans like Frank Gehry, Ieoh Ming Pei, Ludwig Mies van der Rohe and Michelangelo. Through the centuries, great works of art rise from the earth in architectural beauty defining a generation by the buildings that bear the names of great craftsmen. These building reflect the artists hand in structure, design and function. Those versed in the language of architecture can immediately see the hand of the master in a building. The unknown builders of ancient Egypt still marvel the modern mind as the Pyramids stand for centuries belying the logic of time. Great buildings are a testimony to the wisdom of great men.

Among all the creations of architecture in the history of man, no institution is of greater beauty and power than the church built by Jesus Christ. What is unique of this structure is that it does not consist or mortar and stone. The church of Christ is not an edifice that possesses one place on earth but spreads to the four corners of the world as a building of hope, promise, peace and salvation. Two thousand years ago, Jesus promised to build His church, the one that would bear His name, His mark, His blood and His purpose. It would not be placed among men as a second thought but purposed before time began. Jesus would build His church. What a remarkable thought. The church would bear His character. God’s Son would design a splendid creation that would never decay or fail over the centuries of time. Men build structures that decay over time. Not so with the church of Jesus Christ as it withstands the winds of change through the years retaining its power and glory unchanged.

The promise of Jesus to build His church came at a price. His death on the cross purchased the eternal body of believers that would become the living stones of the church. The church is a blood-bought spiritual edifice. Jesus Christ purchased the church with the agony, suffering and pain of a cross at Calvary. On the first day of the week, Jesus arose from the dead becoming the cornerstone of the church in the promise of the resurrection. Twelve men gathered in Jerusalem on the Day of Pentecost and opened the doors of the Kingdom of Christ for the first time. The church was born. It flourished in the teaching of Jesus Christ expanding its borders all over the world. After nearly two millennia, it remains as vibrant and active as the day it was formed. Known as the Kingdom of God, the church of Christ retains the character designed by Jesus.

Jesus promised to build His church and through that promise allowed men to follow a simple pattern recreating His church in every country of the world. The simplicity of the New Testament pattern attunes to the perfect design established by His Father. While there are differences in cultural aspects of worship, the church has the same pattern in Nicaragua as it does in South Korea or China and cities of America. A person can travel the globe and find the pattern of the New Testament church followed in the plan prescribed by its builder. Jesus built a remarkable body of people that share together in the grace of the Father. Thank God for the church, the body of believers, a spiritual house and the bride of Christ.

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They Were Called Something Special

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And the disciples were first called Christians in Antioch. (Acts 11:26)

They Were Called Something Special

After two-thousand years, the name Christian has lost some of its luster. There are so many ways to use the name describing a nation, people or cause. If a person is a good person, they can be described as a Christian. Many non-religious people are called Christians because they pay their taxes, work hard and seldom get a speeding ticket. America is considered by some to be a Christian nation because of certain values that founded the nation and “made this nation great.” Schools can be Christians, families, groups, organizations are labeled as Christian. There are more Christians walking about who have little idea who God is, Jesus Christ and the value of authority in scripture. A Christian is just an adjective for nobility and being kind.

During the New Testament first century, many were good and noble. The common man embraced a simple lifestyle of doing the best he could do in a harsh environment of Roman dominion. They faithfully paid their taxes, worked hard, enjoyed a moral life of peace within their family and seldom found themselves at odds with the authorities. The Jews were not the only ones who feared God. There were Gentiles who honored the one true God as Lord along with all their household. They were generous and prayed fervently to the Lord. From time beginning there have always been good people believing in God who exemplified a noble life of honesty. What separated these honest people in the New Testament was that being good and noble did not make them a Christian. What happened in Antioch of Syria was a line was drawn of demarcation.

The disciples in Antioch were called Christians because they clearly defined their lives in a different way. Being called a Christian was a name of distinction, clarity, derision, identity signifying something very different from anyone else in the world. It was not because they were good people; although they were good people. The name was not given because of a general perception of how nice these people were. These people were followers of Jesus Christ and everyone knew it. They were not ashamed to be known as a disciple of the Son of God. The disciples at Antioch were first called Christians because they stood out like a beacon of light in a world filled with darkness. Kings would recognize the value of the name Christian as the apostle Paul pressed hard the message of truth in their hearts. Peter would proclaim that to suffer as a Christian was a blessing from God. In the early church, the term Christian was a name bathed in the blood of Jesus Christ and evidenced by a life devoted to righteousness and truth.

It seems that among the people of God, the name Christian has lost its luster. If they come to worship once in a while and have their name on a roll somewhere, they are a Christian. They pay their taxes, obey the laws, and work hard. No one sees them as different from the world because they dress like the world, talk like the world and play like the world – but they have their name on a roll they are a Christian. The saints in Antioch were not like the modern day actors who ply their trade of mediocrity. They were called Christians for the first time because something dramatic stood out in their lives. These people were sanctified, holy, righteous, marching soldiers of the King of Kings who let everyone know they were not going to live like the world. The Christian was a person who declared to all there was one truth, one God, one faith and one Way. They did not drink, smoke, curse and imbibe in worldly pleasures. Their lives were purified from the trappings of the flesh. A Christian in the city of Antioch was a person who identified his family with Jesus Christ and nothing less.

It would do well for many in the church today to look again at what it means to be a Christian: in terms of the Biblical meaning. The Lord demands that all who wear the name of HIS SON are separate from the world. Do not forget that when you call yourself a Christian – you wear the name of Christ. Live each day with the name of Jesus Christ as your banner so that others can see God living in you.

Most church members live so far below the standard; you’d have to backslide to be in fellowship. We are so subnormal that if we were to become normal, people would think we were abnormal. (Vance Havner; 1901-1986)

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The Law Of Moses Was Not A Universal Law

 

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And Moses called all Israel, and said to them: “Hear, O Israel, the statutes and judgments which I speak in your hearing today, that you may learn them and be careful to observe them. The Lord our God made a covenant with us in Horeb. The Lord did not make this covenant with our fathers, but with us, those who are here today, all of us who are alive. The Lord talked with you face to face on the mountain from the midst of the fire. I stood between the Lord and you at that time, to declare to you the word of the Lord; for you were afraid because of the fire, and you did not go up the mountain. He said: ‘I am the Lord your God who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of bondage. ‘You shall have no other gods before Me.’ (Deuteronomy 5:1-7)

The Law Of Moses Was Not A Universal Law

As Moses stood with the children of Israel on the threshold of Canaan, the great man of God rehearsed the law and history of Israel to a new generation of Hebrews. The preceding generation had rebelled at Kadesh-Barnea and died in the wilderness during a forty-year pilgrimage. Canaan stood ready to conquer as ripe fruit on a vine. Moses would not be allowed into the land of promise but he impressed upon the people the Law given at Mt. Sinai they had witnessed at a young age. When they crossed the Jordan River, the Law would be their guide to establish the nation in the land promised to their fathers Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. The nation of Israel would rise from the fertile soil of Canaan building a nation formed and possessed by the Law of Moses. At Mt. Sinai, God has shown His power and might when He delivered the Ten Words to the people. The commandments of the Lord were preparatory to whole Law. The Law would govern every part of the Jewish life including worship, family life, daily work and devotion to God. If they were obedient to the Law blessings would flow bountifully upon them. Choosing to disobey the Law would bring the wrath of God.

The Law of Moses and the giving of the Ten Commandments was a law given to a specific people. Repeating the Law of God to the people, Moses reminds them the statues and judgments they were to hear came from the mouth of God when He made a covenant with the Hebrews in Horeb. Abraham was not accountable to this law or any of the fathers before them. The Law of Moses was only given to the Jewish nation. This covenant bonded the people of Israel with the Lord God because they were the ones He delivered from Egypt. No other people came from Egypt. Only the Jews. The Law of Moses was the covenant made at Sinai between God and the nation of Israel. It did not apply to the Chinese, Amorites, Egyptians or other nations of the world. God’s law for Israel was for their benefit as they shared in a special covenant with the Lord.

Many in the religious world are confused to the place of the Law of Moses; specifically the Ten Commandments. There is a belief that everyone is accountable to the Ten Commandments and the Law of Moses. What they fail to understand is what Moses clearly declared: the Jews were the only recipients of the Law (including the Ten Commandments). God gave the Ten Commandments to the children of Israel at Sinai as part of the covenant established that day. Moses emphasizes the Law was given only to the Jews. The Gentiles were not accountable to the Law of Moses. Paul would later show that Abraham was justified without keeping the Law of Moses. Noah found grace in the eyes without the Law of Moses. The Gentile city of Nineveh repented at the preaching of Jonah without the Law of Moses. Justification for the Jew came through the Law and justification for the Gentile came through faith. It is paramount to learn the Law of Moses (including the Ten Commandments) was not a universal law for all men.

The scheme of redemption shows that man could not live apart from the law (Gentile) and man would fail to keep the written law (Jew). Israel exemplified the futile attempt of man to keep the Law of Moses and the Gentiles proved man could not live as a law to himself. Salvation will only come through Jesus Christ who lived under the Law of Moses without sin. He removed the curse of the Law. Man cannot be saved by keeping the Ten Commandments. Jesus took that law away. Following any part of the Law of Moses will be rebellion against the grace of God in Jesus Christ. Trying to justify salvation by keeping a law to himself will only bring destruction for man. Grace, mercy and truth are in Jesus Christ. It matters not if a person is a Jew or Gentile, male or female, slave or free – all are one in Jesus Christ.

Reading the New Testament account of the early church, it is clear that salvation cannot come from the Law of Moses. The early church never taught obedience by keeping the Ten Commandments or portions of the Law. Disciples were made when they obeyed the gospel of Jesus Christ. The great commission did not include the Ten Commandments. It demanded obedience by believing Jesus was the Son of God, repenting and being baptized for the remission of sins. Moses gave the Law to the people of Israel alone. Christ came bringing the full measure of salvation to all men. The gospel is the power of God to salvation. Thank God for His incredible gift of His Son.

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The First Family

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And the Lord God said, “It is not good that man should be alone; I will make him a helper comparable to him.” Out of the ground the Lord God formed every beast of the field and every bird of the air, and brought them to Adam to see what he would call them. And whatever Adam called each living creature, that was its name. So Adam gave names to all cattle, to the birds of the air, and to every beast of the field. But for Adam there was not found a helper comparable to him. And the Lord God caused a deep sleep to fall on Adam, and he slept; and He took one of his ribs, and closed up the flesh in its place. Then the rib He which the Lord God had taken from man He made into a woman, and He brought her to the man. And Adam said: “This is now bone of my bones and flesh of my flesh; she shall be called Woman, because she was taken out of Man.” Therefore a man shall leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife, and they shall become one flesh. And they were both naked, the man and his wife, and were not ashamed. (Genesis 2:18-25)

The First Family

When God finished creation on the sixth day, He looked on all that He had made and said it was very good. A pristine world, perfect in design and harmony, glistened from the hand of the amazing power of the Lord’s creation. The centerpiece of His work was the man and woman He had placed in a garden called Eden. Creation exalted the name of the Lord as the sun, moon and stars sang forth His glory and the mountains, plains and seas burst forth with vistas of beautiful tapestries of His handiwork. Fish and sea creatures filled the waters as birds glided among the firmament of the heavens. The beasts of the earth, cattle and every creeping thing walked among the forests, glades and meadows of a brand new world. Central to all of creation was Adam and Eve who were created in the image of the Creator. Unlike the animals that filled the land, sea and sky, man was an eternal creature that would never cease to exist.

Six billion souls walk the earth today. Through the centuries, billions of people have lived and died in the history of man. Every man and women who has walked upon the face of this earth owes their existence to the first family of earth; created by the hand of God according to His image. Adam and Eve are the first creation of all humanity. The man was formed from dust. There was no creature in the world that would bring happiness to man. The Lord proclaimed it was not good for man to be alone. There was a need in Adam that could not be found in anything of the world. The man needed a companion that was like him. God showed His wisdom when He took a part of man to make the woman. She was not created from the dust like Adam. The Lord did not create woman out of thin air. He took a part of man and formed a woman showing the union of the family. His design in creation was perfection and this is seen clearly in the first family.

Before sin destroyed the relationship of God and man, there was harmonious beauty and happiness between the family and God. Walking among the trees of the garden, Adam and Eve were in a paradise of joy because of their relationship with God. Adam looked upon the woman as a creation that was taken from his bones and his flesh. They were naked but had no shame. The purity of the marriage of Adam and Eve came from the relationship with God. When Satan tempted Eve and she ate of the forbidden fruit, the family changed. Adam took of the fruit also and immediately there was fear and shame. They both hid from the presence of God. This had never happened before. Their nakedness now brought shame. The voice of the Lord brought fear. God’s creation had changed. Punishment followed. Adam and Eve were expelled from their paradise home.

What was lost in the garden can be found again. It will never be the same as Adam and Eve experienced but the Lord God created man and woman to be happy and to find contentment with each other. The first family was created to show the power of God and His love in marriage. Ridiculed and denigrated by the evil desires of man, marriage remains the highest of creation as a place of truth and happiness. Sin marred the first family and will continue to battle against the family today. Husbands and wives should find the happiness of Adam and Eve when they mold their characters into the image of the One who created them. God formed the first family to share happiness. The home is the bastion of gladness when the Lord God is the centerpiece. Marriage was created to fulfill the needs of the man and the woman. This has remained unchanged. Like the Garden of Eden, when sin is allowed to reign in the family, destruction follows. Troubled families are troubled because the word of God does not guide the home.

The first family is an example of what God created and what He expects. There will be battles of sin as Satan continues to attack the home. Husbands and wives can be happily married because that is what God created. Fathers and mothers should teach their children to love God more than anything else. The home should be a place of safety, security and peace within the bounds of God’s love. Let the glory of God fill the heart of the man and woman as they form a home joined in one flesh. Remember the words of Adam when he proclaimed that woman was bone of his bones and part of his flesh. He understood in the beginning the beauty of the woman in his life. The first family loved God and served Him. We can do no less.

Adam could not be happy even in Paradise without Eve. (John Lubbock, Peace and Happiness, 1909)

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The Churches Of Men Have Failed Jesus

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I do not pray for these alone, but also for those who will believe in Me through their word; that they all may be one, as You, Father, are in Me, and I in You; that they also may be one in Us, that the world may believe that You sent Me. And the glory which You gave Me I have given them, that they may be one just as We are one: I in them, and You in Me; that they may be made perfect in one, and that the world may know that You have sent Me, and have loved them as You have loved Me. (John 17:20-23)

The Churches Of Men Have Failed Jesus

When Martin Luther nailed his statements of denial on the church door of All Saints Church in Wittenberg, Germany, a great period of reform began that set in place generations of spiritual failures. The work of Luther began a process of fighting against the oppressive dogmas of the Roman Catholic Church and served well the legacy of church history. However, what began as a movement of reform also created the bastion of religious error that is prevalent today as the Protestant movement. In the past five hundred years, new churches have sprung up from reformers seeking to carve a new path of religion for man. Today, there are myriads of churches with different names, practices, creeds, patterns and beliefs that decry the prayer of Jesus to His Father. All believe to be part of a greater picture of unity with the appeal of Jesus Christ and the Bible as their guide. Lutherans, Episcopalians, Presbyterians, Baptists, Methodist and a host of others owe their beginnings to a legacy of five centuries of existence. Before Jesus went to the cross, He spent time in prayer pleading with His Father that His followers be one and especially mentioned those who would live generations after His death. Looking at the religious world today, men are denying that prayer.

Jesus prayed for the eleven that gathered around Him but He also prayed for those who would believe on their words. As the church grew, disciples would come to know the power of the gospel message spread through the world by the apostles and teachers of the First Century. For two thousand years the church of the Lord has remained in place with humble disciples worshiping in the pattern of truth laid down by the Holy Spirit. Jesus prayed for all these followers to be united as one under the single banner of one truth. The Lord’s desire for every Christian was to be one as He and the Father were one. Everything Jesus did in His life was in harmony with His Father. They spoke the same thing because they had the same purpose. Is it possible to look at the religious diversity today and suggest there is unity of speech and purpose? Religious leaders have fooled people into believing that while they all carry different names, beliefs and practice that harmony exist. This is a lie. A Baptist is a Baptist because they believe the Baptist doctrine. Lutherans are not Baptists because they follow a different creed. Becoming a Methodist requires following the Methodist faith, not the Presbyterian dogmas or teachings or the Episcopalian doctrines. And yet religious leaders want us to believe the religious world is one?

Religious diversity denies the prayer of Jesus. The Son of God prayed that His followers be one so the world can see the glory of the Father. Driving down the street seeing fifty different churches all claiming to be the church of the Lord does not show the glory of God but the foolishness of man. The world does not believe in Jesus because those who are so-called followers of Jesus Christ cannot find themselves on the right page of anything. Five hundred years have passed and man is more divided than ever before. Everyone seems to want to get their niche in the scheme of religious diversity with so many different kinds of churches appearing in communities across the land. When a man wants to be a follower of Jesus Christ, unity must prevail. There is one pattern for one church given by one Lord from one Father. That pattern is found in the only book that will show a man truth: the Bible. The Roman Catholic Church epitomizes the apostasy foretold by the Holy Spirit and has spawned the illegitimate children of error dividing the religious world into fragments of self-made, self-serving churches who deny the gospel of Jesus Christ.

Jesus prayed that His followers be one. If all the believers in the Son of God would go back to the Bible for absolute authority, the churches of men would crumble under the weight of truth. Authority is established by the word of God. His pattern is the only pattern for worship, faith, doctrine and what man must do to be saved. The church of Jesus Christ is a body of believers who are united in what they say, how they worship and what they believe. Speaking the oracles of God is speaking words that come from the pages of God’s word. If it does not come from the Bible, it is a lie. When you examine the churches of men and do not find what they teach and practice in the Bible, they are a lie. If the name of your church is not in the word of God, it is a lie. Jesus did not die so that men could choose the church of their choice and worship as they saw fit. He died for all men to be one thing: ONE. He prayed for unity. Let us all seek that unity in the word of God and the word of God alone.

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