Women’s Role In The Church

Let a woman learn in silence with all submission. And I do not permit a woman to teach or to have authority over a man, but to be in silence. For Adam was formed first, then Eve. And Adam was not deceived, but the woman being deceived, fell into transgression. (1 Timothy 2:11-14)

Women’s Role In The Church

On the sixth day of creation, God created man from the dust of the ground and called him Adam. All of the animals had been created in the heavens, seas, and dry land. The Lord brought them to Adam to see what he would name them, but there was not found a creature compatible for the man. God placed Adam in a deep sleep and created woman by taking a rib from his side. When the Lord brought the woman to Adam, the first man 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.” (Genesis 2:23)

God placed the man and woman in the Garden of Eden with every blessing of the garden at their disposal. The only prohibition was the tree of the knowledge of good and evil in the garden’s midst. God had told them they could not eat of the tree lest they die. Satan knew the command of the Lord and, desiring to destroy the creation of God, sought a way to tempt the woman. Using the form of the serpent, the most cunning of creatures, Satan spoke to the woman, challenging what the Lord had told her about the forbidden tree. He convinced the woman she would not die if she took of its fruit, and she would be like God.

The woman gazed upon the tree and saw that it had beautiful fruit. She thought it would be good for food and she would be very wise. Tempted to disobey the command of God, the woman took of the fruit and gave some to Adam. The eyes of both of them were opened immediately, and they knew they were naked. Hearing the sound of the Lord walking in the garden, Adam and his wife hid from the presence of the Lord. Confronted by God by what they had done, Adam blamed the woman, and the woman blamed the serpent. The Lord cursed the serpent, who would later be identified by the apostle John as Satan. Turning to the woman, God pronounced that she would give birth in pain due to her rebellion. Far more reaching than pain in childbirth, the Lord changed the relationship between Adam and his wife.

When God created woman, He brought to Adam a helpmeet, a companion equal to him. Because of her rebellion and being deceived by the serpent, the woman’s desire would always be for her husband. This law was established in the Garden of Eden and has not diminished. Every time a woman gives birth to a child, the consequence of her deception reminds her of her subjection to the man. The apostle Paul would use this story to explain the relationship of the woman’s role in the church. In 1 Timothy 2:8-15, the Holy Spirit establishes the woman’s role in the church as limited. It does not suggest there is nothing for the woman to do in the church’s work, but a limitation is placed upon her.

A woman cannot usurp authority over the leadership of a man. This shows that while women are created in the image of God like the man, they cannot take the leadership role of preaching and teaching over the authority of men. Paul gives two reasons for this prohibition: first, Adam was created before Eve; second, Adam was not deceived, but the woman being deceived fell into transgression. The woman’s subjection to the man is a law established in the garden of Eden that has remained unchanged in the mind of God.

Writing to the church at Corinth, Paul admonished the women to keep silent in the churches (1 Corinthians 14). Speaking of the worship on the first day of the week, the apostle outlines various charges of how the assembly is carried out. The use of the gifts of tongues was limited and controlled, including the woman’s activity. Women are not permitted to take leadership roles such as preaching. They are to be submissive according to the Holy Spirit. Their general conduct is to learn in quietness but not permitted to teach or have authority over a man.

Prohibiting the woman’s role does not limit her to no work at all. Paul admonishes the wives of bishops and deacons to be teachers of good things and for older women to admonish younger women. This requires teaching. As a wife, the woman can be a vital asset to her husband in helping others learn the gospel. Aquilla and Priscilla (Acts 18) are an excellent example of the unity of Spirit in teaching others the way more perfectly.

There is much work for women in the church, like Eunice, Lois, Dorcas, Phoebe, Mary, Tryphena, Tryphosa, and Nereus’s sister, to name a few. In the modern world of loose interpretation of scripture, women are beginning to take on the roles in the Lord’s church without the authority of scripture. Within the family of God, women lead singing (praise groups), serve on the table, make announcements, and preach. This is a false doctrine and without authority from God. The implications of the Garden of Eden remain as much as pain in childbirth. God prohibits the woman from having authority over the man.

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It’s Friday, But Sunday’s Coming

Now it was about the sixth hour, and there was darkness over all the earth until the ninth hour. Then the sun was darkened, and the veil of the temple was torn in two. And when Jesus had cried out with a loud voice, He said, “Father, ‘Into your hands I commit My spirit.’ ” Having said this, He breathed His last. (Luke 23:44-46)

It’s Friday, But Sunday’s Coming

The death of Jesus was the most tragic event in history. An innocent man was condemned to die for envy and hatred. Unjustly judged and treated with contempt, Jesus suffered the most humiliating death known to man. It was the greatest miscarriage of justice. The accusers did not realize the victim was dying for them. Crucifixion was the most heinous method of death by torture created by evil men. When Jesus was offered a mild anesthetic to ease the pain, He refused. He would drink the cup of God’s wrath in full fury.

Jesus suffered and died on Friday. Everything leading up to His arrest, conviction, and trials were managed by the will of the Father. It was not by chance Jesus died on Friday. His mission was not completed with the circumstances of human will. Jesus knew He would die and rise from the grave on the third day. When He knew the hour had come, Jesus began the slow process of facing the cross and His death.

Arrested on Thursday evening and taken to the Jewish leadership and Roman authorities, the Son of God stood on Golgotha around 9:00 am Friday. His death would come some six hours later. The world was bathed in darkness. When He died, the earth quaked, and rocks were split open. In the Temple, the priest was serving at that hour, witnessing the massive veil in the Temple rend from top to bottom with a great noise. Everything in creation reacted to the death of its Creator. It was Friday, and Jesus was dead.

The disciples forsook Jesus. Those gathered at the cross beat their breasts as they returned home. Joseph and Nicodemus received permission from Pilate to take the body of Jesus and place it in a tomb. The tomb where Jesus was laid was a new tomb. It was sealed with a great stone, and a Roman guard was placed at the request of the Jewish council. Saturday was a day of high Sabbath. The disciples mourned. They were lost in their thoughts to what it all meant for their Lord to be dead. Saturday passed. Sabbath was over.

On the first day of the week, the greatest miracle man would ever know took place in solitude. God raised His Son from the dead, releasing Him from the tomb. The stone was rolled back, the garments Jesus wore in the burial were neatly arranged inside the empty tomb, and Heaven shouted forth in glorious tones of heavenly joy. It was the first day of the week. Friday was a death of death and darkness, but the first day of the week was a day of life and light. Jesus had risen from the dead.

There is much to say about what happened on Friday, but Sunday was coming. The sting of death invaded the body of Jesus on Friday. On the first day of the week, the sting of death was defeated. Friday was a day that Satan thought he gained victory. Sunday was the day when Satan learned his greatest defeat. On the day when the cross gained its greatest victim, the world was in darkness. When Sunday came, the cross gave its greatest victory. Jesus could not be held by death. His body would not see corruption. Hades had no power over Jesus. It was Friday, but Sunday was coming.

The glory of the first day of the week is when God wants His people to worship in praise and majesty the good news of what happened on the first day of the week. We call it Sunday. This is the day Jesus rose from the dead. Fifty days later, on the first day of the week, three thousand Jews rose from the grave of water baptism to be ushered into the kingdom of God. The first day of the week was the day the early church assembled to worship. They praised God for His salvation on Sunday by remembering what happened on Friday.

Jesus had to die. He died on Friday. When He died, He knew Sunday was coming. God had promised to raise Him from the dead. The resurrection of Jesus is the greatest miracle man will see. There can be no greater evidence of God’s love, His grace, mercy, and truth. Sunday is not just any day. That is the day Jesus Christ rose from the dead.

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The World Is A Very Good Place

Then God saw everything that He had made, and indeed it was very good. So the evening and the morning were the sixth day. (Genesis 1:31)

The World Is A Very Good Place

Opinions matter. When God looked upon the world on the sixth day of creation, He saw what He made was very good. The heavens were filled with the sun, moon, and stars. Oceans, lakes, and rivers abounded with fish, and the skies peppered with many species of birds. On the land, animals of all types roamed freely. Cattle, beasts, creeping things, and two unusual creatures called Man and Woman. A garden of immense beauty was the home of the highest of creation, filled with trees of all kinds. The world was in a state of perfection.

Man and animals lived in harmony with one another. The fear of man was not yet upon the animals. It can be suggested that man and animals could communicate with one another. At least, when the serpent spoke to Eve, it did not shock her. That conclusion will be left to the mind of God. What highlighted the world was the communion of God and man. In the cool of the day, the Lord would walk with man in the garden. They would talk together. The fellowship was a kindred spirit of like images. Everything about the world was very good.

From the pristine world of perfection came the deceiver. Satan saw the same world God saw but did not believe what he saw was very good. His view of the world angered him that God would create such a perfect world. He wanted to destroy what God created as he rebelled against all the Lord God Almighty accomplished. It would be the first in many wars the devil would fight against God.

On a beautiful day filled with glistening sunlight, the serpent whispered his deceitful lie to Woman. He challenged the word of God, asking the woman why she would allow the Lord to keep her from what she deserved and wanted. The woman listened to the voice of Satan and took the fruit, giving Adam the forbidden fruit. In an instant, the perfect world was gone. It was not in a literal sense, as the sun still shone brightly above, and the rushing waters of the rivers were heard throughout the garden. What changed was a spiritual union of God and man. Adam and Eve knew immediately their perfect world had ended.

Taking the forbidden fruit, the eyes of Adam and Eve were opened, and they knew they were naked. Seeking some form of modesty, they attempted to cover their nakedness. Hearing the sound of the Lord God walking in the garden, they hid themselves in fear. Cast out of the garden for their rebellion, Adam and Eve stood in a world filled with the glory of God that was still very good. What changed was that sin darkened the world with the deceitfulness of the devil’s lie.

In the darkness of sin, the world remained a place that was very good. Adam and Eve lived alone in the world for a long time before it began to be populated with their children. The sun shone brightly, the rivers flowed through the land, and the animals filled with earth to the wonder of Adam and Eve. There was much to enjoy in this paradise world of almost perfection. What soiled the world was the nature of sin. Adam and Eve remembered the days in the Garden of Eden with fondness and the regret of listening to the deceiver’s voice.

The world is still a place that is very good. Thousands of years have passed since its creation. God looks upon the world and sees a place that is very good. Man has muddled some parts of creation but can never destroy the world or make it uninhabitable. The sun still shines just like it did the day Adam first laid his eyes upon that bright circle in the sky. Every night, when the moon rises to its apex of glory, the majesty of God is illuminated through the dark sky of God’s perfect love. The world remains a place that is very good. That has never changed. Men have changed, but the world remains the same.

Man was created in perfection but fell in sin. What makes that story very good is that Jesus Christ came to restore the fellowship of God with man. The gospel is the power of God to bring man back to harmony with his Creator. There is the joy of something beyond very good found in the sacrifice of Jesus Christ. Hope springs in the hearts of those who see what very good things were done at Golgotha. God reminds man that what He creates and what He does is very good. Man cannot change that. He can reject it, but he cannot change the nature of God. The world is a very good place. Salvation in Jesus Christ is a very good place. Thank God for all those things that are very good. Praise God.

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Ethical And Humane Does Not Apply To Animals

Then God said, “Let Us make man in Our image, according to Our likeness; let them have dominion over the fish of the sea, over the birds of the air, and over the cattle, over all the earth and over every creeping thing that creeps on the earth.” So God created man in His own image; in the image of God He created him; male and female He created them. (Genesis 1:26-27)

Ethical And Humane Does Not Apply To Animals

A growing segment of society seeks to make animals and man equals. Some laws governing animals sometimes have a harsher punishment than acts against humans. The commercial world has created a billion-dollar industry for the sanctity of dogs and cats as near human equals. Phrases often convey a familial connection between the two species. During the Thanksgiving celebrations, one commercial encouraged only turkeys that were ethically and humanely treated to be considered for the time of feasting.

It seems contradictory to ask for someone to “do one thing” by selecting an animal that was treated with ethical care and raised humanely just so that the same animal can be killed, cooked, and eaten. There is a moral dilemma in understanding the difference between the two. If someone suggested the same thing to be done to a human, the consequences would be severe. That is immoral on every level of common sense, but not the same for the poor turkey. The animal is treated with ethics before it is killed and eaten.

Ethics is the discipline of right and wrong. Humane treatment suggests the relationship of how one engages with a human being. How is it possible to engage in ethics with an animal or treat an animal like a human? That is impossible because the animal is a life force that begins and ends with nothing beyond death. What separates man from animals is that when a man dies, he does not stop existing – he abides in a world of eternity. A dog that dies is dead. There is no eternity for dogs, cats, snakes, horses, dinosaurs, eagles, worms, chiggers, lovebugs, etc.

God created man in His image. He did not create the animals in His image. Man has dominion over all the animals of the world. That has been the law of God since the beginning of time. It was not until after the flood that the fear of man came upon animals, and man was permitted to eat the flesh of the animals. God does have a covenant with the animal population as a promise He will never flood the world again. If a man is cruel to an animal, he breaks an ethical law, but not because the animal understands ethics. It is because of the ethics the man has before his Creator.

The agenda of the Humanist is to convince the world animals are like men and that men can become like animals. Blending the two species together is the ploy of deception from the father of lies, Satan. God put animals on the earth as a blessing for food, companionship, and evidence of the incredible power of God. All animals have a place in the scheme of God’s creation. Man is the highest of all creation. Jesus died for all men – He did not die for animals. An animal cannot know ethics or the meaning of humane treatment. The knowledge of right and wrong is reserved for the spirit of man, who was made in the image of God.

There is glory in the animal population. They bring laughter, joy, comfort, and amazement. God put animals on the earth to show His glory. When an animal dies, it is nothing more than the matter he is made of and becomes nothing. Man is an eternal spirit abiding in a physical body that will die. When the body stops functioning, the spirit of man lives on. God told Noah that life is in the blood. Killing a man is murder. Having a turkey for Thanksgiving is part of the blessings of God to feed His creation. Keeping the two separated is upholding the will of the Father.

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What Is Known And Unknown

The secret things belong to the Lord our God, but those things which are revealed belong to us and to our children forever, that we may do all the words of this law. (Deuteronomy 29:29)

What Is Known And Unknown

There is an unfathomable chasm between God’s mind and humanity’s wisdom. This difference is not measured in miles, by time, or by level of knowledge; there is no comparison. God is the Creator, and man is the creation. The Lord does not seek man’s counsel to make a divine decision. God is not man. That is the hardest reality the world refuses to accept.

Two things are certain: there is a God, and no man can make that claim. Man’s wisdom is microcosmic compared to the most minor things the Lord knows. From the beginning, God has revealed truth as He determined necessary for the well-being and happiness of man. Everything a man needs to know in life is given by the Lord through revelation. God decided what to reveal and what to keep hidden.

Many questions are left unanswered, but the fact they remain without revelation reveals the truth of what man must know to be saved. The Bible is a miracle of God’s word given to man applicable to every generation in every part of the globe for all time. Everything needed to know what to do to be saved from the wrath of God has been revealed. God did not leave anything out; there is nothing man can add to the divine revelation.

Moses reminded the Hebrews that everything that had happened to Israel was according to God’s will. The people could have asked many questions about the why and the how and demanded answers from the Lord. Moses wrote the five books of the Law to show what a man needed to do to be saved at that time. What God thought proper to reveal was all man required. There were many things left untold in the books of Moses. More than three thousand years later, the revelation of God is found in the Bible, and this is everything a man needs to know to be saved.

It is a failure when men seek to know more than can be found in the Bible. The pattern of wisdom is clearly defined as what men know is only what is found from Genesis to the Revelation. If a man explains a matter without finding it in the Bible, he is a liar and a false teacher. God revealed all that needed to be known, demanding that no man add or take away from His revelation. How dare man decide he knows more than God? That is the height of stupidity at best. The hidden things belong to the Lord, and man cannot and will not wrest that knowledge from the Divine.

It is sad that men spend a lifetime seeking truth in every place but the Bible. What is a greater tragedy is the acceptance that so many have of knowledge not found in the Bible. How often have religious discussions turned on matters not revealed by God in the Bible? The wisdom of men seeks to answer questions never answered by God. How ridiculous and absurd. Moses said the secret things belong to the Lord, which settles that question.

The word of God is settled in Heaven. What man can journey to the divine and change the word of God? Everything a man needs to know is given by the divine revelation of God. Refusing to obey what is revealed has eternal consequences. Demand accountability by those who teach the word of God. They must teach only what is found on the pages of holy writ and nothing else. If you cannot find a teaching in the Bible, reject it. Throw away the books that seek to unveil the secret things of God. Properly divide and understand the word of God. Your eternal soul depends on knowing the truth of God – as revealed.

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Woodcutters And Water Carriers

All of you stand today before the Lord your God: your leaders and your tribes and your elders and your officers, all the men of Israel, your little ones and your wives—also the stranger who is in your camp, from the one who cuts your wood to the one who draws your water— that you may enter into covenant with the Lord your God, and into His oath, which the Lord your God makes with you today, that He may establish you today as a people for Himself, and that He may be God to you, just as He has spoken to you, and just as He has sworn to your fathers, to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. (Deuteronomy 29:10-13)

Woodcutters And Water Carriers

The end of the forty years of wandering was finished as Moses wrote his final declaration of the history of Israel. A new generation had come out of the last four decades as Joshua prepared to take the people across the Jordan into the promised land. Moses wants the people to know the grace of God has not changed. The Lord is giving the land of Canaan to the Hebrews, but they can only retain it if they obey His commandments.

Forty years earlier, God made a covenant with the people in Horeb. In the land of Moab, Moses reaffirms the covenant between Israel and the Lord. What makes the covenant important is knowing that God is not a respecter of persons. The law of God is given to the leaders, elders, and officers of Israel and all the men of Israel. But the law is also given to the children and the women. The law was given to those who cut the wood and drew the water. No one was excluded from the plan of salvation.

The leaders, elders, and officers were important men of Israel responsible for the leadership of God’s people. They had certain duties that elevated them as men of importance carrying heavy burdens. God made a covenant with them as His people. The law of God did not exclude the children and women of Israel. They each had a place in the blessings of the Lord to be faithful to the word. Israel was a nation made up of families important to the future of the kingdom. The children needed to know the law of God. Moses would tell the parents to teach their children constantly about the covenant of the Lord. The family was the foundation of knowledge for the nation to know about God.

Slaves were common in Israel, but they were not to be forgotten. There were those whose job was cutting wood and gathering water. These were not overlooked in the covenant God made with Israel. They were not the important, prestigious men of leadership, but God included them in the salvation of Israel. Moses was reminding all of Israel that everyone was important. No one should be left out in the work of the nation, and salvation is found in the covenant with God.

The early church was fashioned in the same manner as Israel of old. Twelve men served as the apostles of the church, exercising an important leadership role. As the church evolved, men were ordained as elders who would shepherd the church of God. Deacons would be chosen as leaders in the work of the kingdom. The wives of shepherds and deacons played a pivotal role in the early church. Moses pointed out the children, women, woodcutters, and water gatherers as important to the covenant with God, and in the church, no one is to be left out. There is much work to do for everyone.

There are men who take on the role of overseeing in the church, exercising leadership vital to the plan of God for His kingdom. But the church cannot exist without its “woodcutters and water gatherers” who are working hard in the kingdom of Christ. Children and women have a role in the church to help it grow. When every part is doing its share in the work of the church, growth is the result, and the Lord is glorified. God has a covenant with all kinds of people today in the church. There is work to do for everyone willing to put their shoulders to the wheel and work for the Lord. I may not be able to do anything more than cut wood but let my wood cutting be for the glory of God. The Lord needs me. He needs you. Let’s all work together in the kingdom of Christ, whatever our roles may be.

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Eternal Security

These things I have written to you who believe in the name of the Son of God, that you may know that you have eternal life, and that you may continue to believe in the name of the Son of God. Now this is the confidence that we have in Him, that if we ask anything according to His will, He hears us. And if we know that He hears us, whatever we ask, we know that we have the petitions that we have asked of Him. (1 John 5:13-15)

Eternal Security

God so loved the world He sent His only begotten Son to die for all men, redeeming them by His blood. The price of salvation is measured in the act of grace, as Jesus gave His life to save man from the wrath of God. Jesus manifested the glory of the Father through His teachings and miracles, but men rejected Him. The Jews were the chosen of the God who refused to accept the man from Nazareth as God. Their lineage with Abraham did not guarantee them salvation. Throughout the teaching of Jesus, He commanded men to obey the word of the Father and that unless a man did the will of the Father, they could not be saved.

Salvation has always been conditional. Jesus came to bring the power of grace to the Jews, and they rejected Him. The salvation for the Jew could only be found in believing Jesus was the Christ, the Son of the Living God. After the feeding of the five thousand, many believers of Jesus turned and walked no more with Him. They had believed He was the longed-for Messiah, but when Jesus taught things they did not like, they rejected Him, showing that it was possible to be a believer and turn away from grace.

The doctrine of “Eternal Security” is also known as “Once Saved, Always Saved.” This doctrine is how John the Baptist referred to the Pharisees who came to his baptism when he reminded the Jewish leaders that to believe since they were the seed of Abraham, they had special privileges with God was false. When men began to teach original sin, a natural outgrowth of the false doctrine established the need for man never to lose his salvation, ergo, the believer’s eternal security. Is it possible to live in such a manner it is impossible to lose the salvation found in Christ? Does a believer have the confidence that no matter how they live, God will save them? What are the consequences of eternal security?

There are many examples of God’s faithful people being rejected by the Lord because they refused to obey Him. The nation of Israel is a central theme in the Old Testament. Isaiah described Israel as a vineyard planted by the Lord to produce the choicest grapes (Isaiah 5). God expected the vineyard to bring forth good grapes, but it brought forth wild grapes. Israel turned away from the grace of God. Many disciples of Jesus turned away from Him. In the early church, saints of God who enjoyed the grace of eternal life turned their backs on Jesus. Ananias and Sapphira (Acts 5) were children of God, bought with the blood of Jesus. Because they lied to the Holy Spirit, they were struck dead as an example of God’s wrath upon disobedience.

Paul listed the names of several Christians who turned away from God’s love and mercy. Demas forsook Paul, “having loved this present world” (2 Timothy 4:10). Hymenaeus and Alexander suffered spiritual shipwreck whom Paul “delivered to Satan that they may learn not to blaspheme” (1 Timothy 1:20). Hymenaeus is mentioned again with Philetus in 2 Timothy 3:17-18 whom Paul said had strayed concerning the truth, saying the resurrection is already past. These men had caused others to have their faith overthrown. Paul warned the Ephesian elders of those who would rise up among them speaking perverse things (Acts 20:29-30). Jesus called the church at Sardis a “dead church.” Still, there were a “few names even in Sardis who have not defiled their garments, and they shall walk with [Him] in white, for they are worthy” (Revelation 3:4). Paul said there was a Christian at the church in Corinth who was guilty of sexual immorality that was not even found among the Gentiles (1 Corinthians 5).

The Bible never teaches the unconditional security of the believer as once saved, always saved. When men suggest there is nothing a person can do to lose his salvation, they deny the teachings of the Holy Spirit. Those in Jesus Christ are not condemned (Romans 8:1) as long as they are in Christ. The Hebrew writer clearly shows the possibility of those “were once enlightened, and have tasted the heavenly gift, and have become partakers of the Holy Spirit, and have tasted the good word of God and the powers of the age to come” (Hebrews 6:4-5) to fall away and crucify Jesus again (Hebrews 6:6). In Hebrews 10:26-31, a child of God can sin willfully and trample underfoot the Son of God. Peter described those who had escaped the pollution of the world and become entangled in sin again to their destruction (2 Peter 2:18-22).

Kyle Pope writes, “The Bible makes it clear that a person can obey the gospel and then sin in such a way as to be lost and separated from God once again. There is security that rests in Christ, but this security is conditioned upon abiding in Christ and in His word. To teach otherwise is to diminish the necessity of Christ’s death and mock the very justice of God.” (Ready To Give A Defense, p 43)

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Outer Darkness

Then the king said to the servants, “Bind him hand and foot, take him away, and cast him into outer darkness; there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth.” For many are called, but few are chosen. (Matthew 22:13-14)

Outer Darkness

Before the world was created, darkness was on the face of the deep. God would not create light until the first day. The light would be divided from the darkness, and the darkness would be called Night. God would not create the sun, moon, and stars until three days later. It is difficult to determine the depth of darkness before creation. God created light to dispel the darkness and rule over it, but the pre-creation darkness was something more than the absence of light. It was darkness at an eternal level unknown to the human eye.

Jesus had more to say about eternal punishment than any other Bible character. He is the only one to refer to the place of perdition as a place of “outer darkness.” This darkness was not like a moonless night or a dark cave. The kind of darkness described by Jesus was an eternal darkness with fear and horror in its wake. There are many places to go on Earth without artificial lights, and the night seems to resonate with a glow of darkness. The kind of place Jesus describes is a place of torment where there is weeping and gnashing of teeth.

Three times, Jesus speaks about a place of outer darkness. A Roman centurion begs the Lord to heal one of his servants, and Jesus agrees to go and heal him. The centurion stops Jesus and declares his faith that he believes Jesus must only speak a word and the man would be healed. Jesus is astonished at his faith, commenting that He had not seen such faith among His own people. The Lord notes that those of the house of God who did not have this kind of faith would be cast out into outer darkness where there would be weeping and gnashing of teeth.

In the parable of the wedding feast, Jesus describes a man who was at the feast and did not have a wedding garment on. The king ordered his servants to bind the man hand and foot, take him away, and cast him into outer darkness where there would be weeping and gnashing of teeth. Finally, in the parable of the talents, the one talent man was thrown into the outer darkness. Jesus again emphasizes this will be a place of weeping and gnashing of teeth.

The place of outer darkness is the everlasting fire, the lake of fire and brimstone, everlasting punishment, and Hell. It is not a place of joy. Jesus said the rich man was in torment in the flames. The damned will spend eternity in outer darkness in the greatest horror they have ever known. There will be no relief and no end. It does not matter whether men can understand the concept of eternity and eternal punishment without end. Jesus declared He was the way, the truth, and the life, and He declared there is a place of eternal torment in the outer darkness.

Outer darkness is real. Jesus said it was real. There can be no doubt it is real. What is the saddest reality is that most people will be in outer darkness. The wicked, unrepentant, false religions, false faiths, and religious people in error will not be accepted into eternal life. Jesus will say to most people, “Depart from Me, you who practice lawlessness.” Only a few will be saved. Outer darkness will consume those who have not done the will of the Father. There is a terrible reality that awaits most people, but God is not willing for anyone to perish. Many will perish, but that is not the desire of a loving God. Outer darkness can be taken away with the Light of the world: Jesus Christ. Don’t believe men. Know the truth. Let the word of God show you the light of hope in obedience to the will of God.

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God’s Part And Man’s Part

If My people who are called by My name will humble themselves, and pray and seek My face, and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven and will forgive their sin and heal their land. (2 Chronicles 7:14)

God’s Part And Man’s Part

When Solomon finished building the Temple, the Lord appeared to the king with His divine blessing. Worship has always been contingent on man’s actions and the acceptance of God. The Lord told Solomon that He would hear the people’s prayers if they would do their part. When the people come to God, they must humble themselves, pray, seek the face of the Lord, and turn from their wicked ways. Then, and only then, would the Lord hear from heaven, forgive their sins, and heal the land.

It is easy for men to see God as the great Provider, giver of grace, full of love, merciful, kind, and forgiving. The word of God reveals all His nature for men to read and understand how benevolent the Creator is for His creation. God so loved the world He gave His only begotten Son. Jesus willingly gave His life for the sins of men. The Holy Spirit worked through the agency of God’s will to carry out the divine scheme of redemption. Every day is a blessing as God allows the sun to rise and the rain to fall on the just and unjust.

What men fail to understand is the benevolent mercy of God comes with a cost. God will forgive, but man must humble himself. Prayer is the agency where man comes to God, not where God comes to man. The Lord will not come to a man who is unwilling to first come to God. One of the greatest falsehoods accepted by men is the idea that they can live in their wicked ways and God will accept them. The world is filled with those who profess to love God and never take the time to obey the will of the Father. They believe as long as they have a whisper of love for God, He will accept them in His great and infinite mercy.

The message to Solomon is not a new theology. God’s grace and mercy have always been given to those who seek the Lord, but none of the blessings of the Lord will come if man does not come to God first. God has done His part. Man must do his part. There will be no forgiveness if a man does not humble himself. A man who does not pray receives nothing. When life is seeking after the things of the world and never takes the time and effort to seek God, there will be no blessings. Damnation awaits those who refuse to turn from their wicked ways. Having a dancing foot for Satan and a praying knee on the same leg is impossible.

Solomon’s life became the fulfillment of what God warned the young king. As the reign of Solomon increased, he did not humble himself before the Lord. His prayer life diminished to the enjoyment of his pleasures, and his face turned away from seeking the Lord. Instead of turning from his wicked ways, he followed the path of his many wives. The Lord appeared to him twice, commanding him to repent. Solomon refused. The reign of David’s son was filled with adversity. When men refuse to obey the word of the Lord, God will not hear. He will not forgive. There will be no healing. God has done his part. You must do your part.

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A Life Of Gentleness

Let your gentleness be known to all men. The Lord is at hand. (Philippians 4:5)

A Life Of Gentleness

Jesus was a man who was gentle among all men. It does not suggest that the Lord was never angry with men or did not express His wrath against the hypocrisy of the scribes and Pharisees. The general demeanor of Jesus was a life characterized by a general soberness and an example of a controlled life. He was not ostentatious. There was no excess in the life of Jesus. He remarked to one disciple that He had nowhere to lay His head. The Lord did not own any land or carry a money bag. His life was a simple life of devotion to the work of His Father.

The model of Jesus’ life was what Paul encouraged the followers of Christ to emulate. In a simple and brief statement, the apostle exhorts his fellow Christians to be people of a gentle character and attitude. One of the traits of the Roman world was the extreme excesses many followed. There was little restraint in how they lived. For the Christian, life was about restraint. Their character was not governed by their appetites, tempers, or habits. The gentleness of character set them apart from the culture of excess.

It is not easy to be a people of restraint. Many temptations tug at the heart. To be like the world is an appealing part of life, enjoying all of the excesses life has to offer. Learning to be like Christ removes the desire to dress like the world, talk like the world, and act in the same fashion as the worldly-minded. Christians are set apart to be set apart. Letting the world see the gentle spirit is not done with pride. Living peacefully with all men as an example of self-control sets the Christian apart from the world.

Paul reminds the saints to let the world see their forbearance and gracious attitude. The life of the Christian should clearly be defined by moderation. A gentle spirit rules the heart. Everything about the Christian is modeled after the gentleness Jesus showed all men. He was temperate in His life to show others the Father. As people of God, Christians should let Christ shine through their gentleness. Others will notice this and take note. The religious leaders tried to find fault in the life of Jesus and could find nothing. That should be the goal of every Christian to live in such a way no charge can be brought against them.

Living peaceable lives is where blameless lives come from. Being reasonable in character moderates the heart from anger, hatred, malice, jealousy, and other sins. Being blameless is not sinlessness but letting others see a spirit of gentleness. That should be known to all men. Names define who we are, and when our name is spoken, it should reflect the character of being a person of virtue and honor. The world can tell by how we clothe ourselves outside and how we are clothed on the inside. When our neighbors judge our speech, they should see language seasoned with salt and the grace of the Lord. Our co-workers will know if we are children of God by the example of forbearance.

Evangelism involves many layers of talking with others about the gospel. One of the best ways of teaching lost souls of God’s saving grace is by letting the world see a life modeled after the peaceable character of Jesus. Letting our gentleness known to the world opens up vistas of opportunity to show what God has done in our lives to change us. Be gentle. Show Christ.

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