The Joy Of Reconciliation

And not only that, but we also rejoice in God through our Lord Jesus Christ, through whom we have now received the reconciliation. (Romans 5:11)

The Joy Of Reconciliation

Hope is the mainspring of the Christian’s life, helping the heart endure tribulations to find peace in Jesus Christ. The joy of salvation is knowing how the Father has taken His child from the weakness and crippling impact of sin to the heights of glory found in the blood of Christ. There was a time when all men were enemies of God, without strength, ungodly, underserving, and facing the wrath of God. Through the blood of Jesus, God has offered pardon through the death of His Son, all who would accept His love to be justified by grace.

There was a time when all men were enemies. Reconciliation was made possible by Jesus Christ to bring together the Creator and His creation. Adam and Eve were created for the glory of God, but Satan destroyed that union as the forbidden fruit was taken. Sin reigned over the world until Jesus came to complete the grace of God in reuniting the Divine with humanity. Reconciliation takes away the sting of death and the victory of Hades.

When a man obeys the gospel of Christ in the burial through baptism into death, God joins His love, mercy, and grace with the individual’s faith, works, and obedience. As a man is raised from the spiritual grave of baptism, he walks in the newness of life as a man reconciled to the Father. The joy of reconciliation is knowing one is saved. There is no doubting or facing the fear of God’s wrath. The blood of Jesus has cleansed all sins away, and the Holy Spirit testifies with the spirit of the man that he is a child of God. There is no condemnation to those who are in Christ. They are reconciled. Saved. Free from the fear of God’s wrath.

The joy of reconciliation is seeing where a man once was and where he finds himself by God’s grace. There should be greater joy in the hearts of God’s children to know they are saved. Hope does not come from chances, maybe, possibilities, or uncertainty. Reconciliation is the divine joining of a man’s heart to the heart of God. The Lord makes reconciliation possible as He embraces the saved as His children cry, “Abba, Father.” There is no bondage again to fear. To be led by the Spirit of God emboldens the heart to embrace reconciliation.

There is great joy in being a child of God. Salvation comes in the hope of the promises of God, who cannot lie. The child of God is more than conquerors through Him who loved and gave His only begotten Son to reconcile sinful man to Himself. Nothing can separate those reconciled to the love of Christ. Joy fills the heartstrings of salvation for the child of God as he praises the Lord for the joy of eternal life. There is much to sing about. We are saved. Reconciled. Brought near. Forgiven. Lifted up. Loved. The joy of reconciliation – what joy.

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Once Enemies, Now Children

For if when we were enemies we were reconciled to God through the death of His Son, much more, having been reconciled, we shall be saved by His life. (Romans 5:10)

Once Enemies, Now Children

An enemy is someone who is antagonistic toward another, seeking to injure, overthrow, and treat with harm. Enemies are hostile forces fighting against one another. Nations go to war with their enemies. Civil war is when fellow citizens fight against their brothers. It is terrible to have an enemy but to have God as an enemy is the wrath of the Divine.

The consequences of having an enemy among men can be severe, but there is no comparison to what it means to be an enemy of God. Man was created in the image of God. The Lord created man for His glory. God is omniscient, omnipresent, and omnipotent. Finding oneself an enemy of a God who possesses these attributes is eternal. The worst that man can do to another is to kill him. What God can do is send an eternal spirit to perdition, outer darkness, a lake of fire and brimstone: Hell!

Man struggles to understand God’s demand for worship. The wisdom of man makes him think he is smarter than his Creator. He rebels against the commands of the Lord. There is no desire to seek the Lord. Man dies. God’s wrath is poured out with an eternal vengeance. There is nothing man can do. Eternity has no end, and there will be no mercy or grace allowing the damned soul to receive a reprieve from his eternal horror. God’s wrath does not last for a moment. The wrath of God is without end.

All have sinned and fallen short of God’s glory, facing God’s wrath. In the deepest darkness of man’s fallen state, God gave His only begotten Son to give man a chance to escape eternal wrath. Every child of God was once an enemy of God. Yet, through God’s love, the sinner can be reconciled to God through the death of Jesus Christ. Reconciliation is the ceasing of hostilities between two parties. It is not man that can make that peace – only God. When a man turns to Christ in obedience, having his sins washed away in the waters of baptism, the wrath of God is removed.

The enemy of God is now the child of God. As a child of God, eternal life is given. There is no more wrath or condemnation to those who are in Christ. Saul of Tarsus faced the wrath of God for the wickedness of his life and was an enemy of God. Through the grace of the Lord and Saul’s obedience to the command of God, Saul became a child of God. He would later call himself the worst of sinners, but he was not alone. All men are enemies of God. Through the grace of God, the enemy becomes the child.

To understand the grace of God, a man must remember where he came from. There was a time in every person’s life when they stood as an enemy of God. It is not a fearful thing to consider what a man can do to another; what is fearful is what God can do. That same wrath can be changed into mercy when a humble heart seeks the mercy of God and becomes a child of the Divine. The man who once was an enemy is now promised eternal life. There will be no horror or suffering for the one reconciled by the blood of Christ. Eternal life is a grace given by a wrathful God who has shown love and mercy. What a joy to know – I am saved.

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Saved From God’s Wrath

Much more then, having now been justified by His blood, we shall be saved from wrath through Him. (Romans 5:9)

Saved From God’s Wrath

The joy of salvation is found in the justification given by God through the blood of His Son, Jesus Christ. Grace is the measure of the gift of eternal life to a creation undeserving of divine blessings. God loved the world so much that He gave His Son. Jesus loved the world equally by offering Himself as the lamb of sacrifice. When a man comes to the knowledge of Jesus Christ in obedience to the will of God, he finds the greatest peace and happiness known to man. Justification is a time of joy.

There is another side of justification that must be realized by the grace of God. Through the blood of Jesus, the wrath of God is removed. The Bible is given to the world to show them the goodness and severity of the Lord. When Paul wrote to the Romans, he explained the gospel of Jesus Christ as the power of God unto salvation for everyone who believes. Contained within the gospel is the righteousness of God and the wrath of God. There are many stories of the love and compassion of God to sinful man. The Bible also has stories of God’s wrath measured against those who rebel against him.

The wrath of God is found in the story of the flood, where every living thing is killed. Only Noah and seven other people are saved in the ark. It was a worldwide flood that killed millions of people. The history of Israel is proof positive of the wrath of God. It began with the destruction of Egypt and the judgment against the nations that stood against Israel. God also punished his own people: Nadab and Abihu were struck with fire from heaven, the rebellion of Korah ended when the earth swallowed up the rebels, thousands died from snake bites and disease, and everyone above the age of twenty years died in the wilderness.

Throughout the history of Israel, thousands died who rebelled against the Lord. In one night, an angel of the Lord killed 185,000 Assyrian soldiers. The Assyrians destroyed the ten tribes of the north. Thousands died at the hands of the Babylonians. God’s wrath was severe and without mercy against those who defied His will. During the ministry of Jesus, the Son of God spoke more about eternal damnation than anyone. Hell is a real place prepared for the devil, his angels, and all those who rebel against God. There is no doubt when reading the Bible that the wrath of God is very real.

Jesus took the wrath of God away. Justification by the blood of Jesus saves a man from the wrath of God. All have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God, but through Jesus Christ, a man can be justified and sanctified when he rises from the waters of baptism to find the cleansing blood of Jesus Christ. The only place the blood of Jesus justifies is in spiritual circumcision: baptism. What a joy to know the wrath of God has been removed. To be saved from the wrath of God is to know the wrath of God and find grace in the love of God.

Praise God for the joy of being saved from God’s wrath. Everyone deserves the wrath of God, but Jesus made it possible for His Father’s wrath to be removed. Jesus drank the cup of wrath so that you and I would not face the fury of a vengeful God whose righteousness demands justice. Much more, having been justified by His blood, I am saved from the wrath of God.

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The Demonstration Of God’s Love

For scarcely for a righteous man will one die; yet perhaps for a good man someone would even dare to die. But God demonstrates His own love toward us, in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us. (Romans 5:7-8)

The Demonstration Of God’s Love

Stories of heroism have long filled the pages of history. Men and women put themselves in harm’s way to save others. The courage of some to sacrifice their lives for the safety of others is an incredible story of love. Parents sacrifice their lives to protect their children. Total strangers help others to find rescue and, in the process, lose their own lives. These stories inspire humanity’s spirit for the goodness in others.

Consider the reasons people give for dying for others. A father sees his young child in the path of an oncoming car and pushes the child out of the way to save her. He dies to save his child. There is a sense of justice to take the place of a good or righteous man who is facing death. From the human standpoint of justice, taking the place of a condemned man is hard to accept.

A man walks into a business and kills several people. He is condemned to die for his act of murder and hatred. Family members tell the man they forgive him, but are they willing to take his place of execution? The measure of mercy shown against a vile and despicable person is a more challenging issue to resolve. A sense of fairness demands the guilty be punished and condemned to die without mercy. Most would understand this kind of rationale to punish the guilty.

God is not man. This simple fact is what creates the most incredible love story in the history of man. No man has ever lived that measures to the wickedness and evil of what the Lord looked upon the earth and saw. It was not a single person who had offended the Creator. All of humanity hated God, despised Him, rebelled violently against Him, and treated Him with contempt. In all fairness, the world should have been wiped clean of every human. There is none righteous. No one.

When God looked upon the face of the earth during the days of Noah, everyone would die by His hand except four men and four women. God wiped off the face of the earth, everything that had the breath of life. The flood did not cure the problem of sinful man. It was not long before sin took over the hearts of men. Viewing the hearts of men from His eternal domain, God saw the intent of men’s hearts as continually evil. Instead of destroying man – who was guilty of sin and worthy of the wrath of the Creator – God chose to save mankind.

The sacrifice of Jesus was not because anyone was worthy or deserving of His blood. Jesus was sinless. He had never wronged man, and He had never disobeyed God. Every man on the face of the earth was guilty of sin. God demonstrated His own love, allowing the wretched creature of His creation to torture and kill His beloved Son. Why? Because God loved man.

Jesus did not die because someone was righteous or good. In fact, Jesus died for the worst creature on earth. Man was a sinner, a weak creation, an ungodly product of his own lusts, and an enemy of God. Everything screamed for God to destroy humanity – He chose to save it. The demonstration of love is beyond words for men to understand why God would do such a thing.

There is nothing worthwhile in me to deserve the love of God. Christ died for me. I am the reason Jesus died on the cross. Two thousand years may separate me from the event outside Jerusalem where the Jews screamed for Jesus to be crucified and the Romans nailed the Son of God to a tree – but I am guilty and undeserving. By God’s grace, I see His love. More than that, I see the demonstration of God’s love. His act of love to sacrifice His Son can never be repaid. Thank God for His demonstration of love.

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Christ Died For The Ungodly

For when we were still without strength, in due time, Christ died for the ungodly. (Romans 5:6)

Christ Died For The Ungodly

The death of Jesus was the greatest tragedy in the history of humanity, yet the greatest act of love in the history of the world. God’s love was so great for the world He willingly gave His only begotten Son to die in the place of rebellious man. The death of Jesus was not a mistake or miscalculation. Everything leading up to the murder of God’s Son was divinely crafted before the world was created. Throughout the unfolding of history, everything pointed toward that fateful day outside the city of Jerusalem.

Jesus of Nazareth was killed by his brethren at the hands of the Romans. Jews and Gentiles alike share in the death of Jesus. All men sin, making them accountable for the death of Jesus. No man can live a sinless life, highlighting the life of Jesus, who lived more than three decades and never sinned. He was tempted in all points like all men, yet without sin. Noah was a great man of faith but a sinful man. God used Job as an example to Satan of the righteousness of a man but not as a perfect man. Job sinned. Abraham, Moses, David, and Peter are examples of great men of faith who failed to live sinless lives.

All men struggle with sin and are enslaved by its power. There will never be a person who can live a life without sin. No man can ever claim he is sinless and perfect. Christ did not die to save sinless men. Jesus died to save the ungodly. An ungodly man is a wicked man. He is damaged goods. There is nothing worthy to be found in an ungodly man. Goodness does not make a person godly. Doing religious things will not make a man perfect in God’s eyes. Christ died because all men are ungodly.

Before a person can understand the death of Jesus, they must understand what they are. All men are ungodly. Not godly or good – ungodly. Destitute. Broken. Deserving the full wrath and fury of God. Without hope. No mercy was given. Undeserving. Jesus died for those who had no strength. He did not die for a righteous man or a good man. Jesus died to save sinners—the enemies of His Father. Nothing is redeeming in man that would qualify him to deserve the sacrifice of God’s only Son.

The picture is complete. Man is ungodly. Sin has darkened the world of humanity, deserving the full wrath of God as unleashed on the world of Noah. And yet, in the midst of this darkness, came the Light of the world to die for the ungodly. The price of the sacrifice illuminates the depth of man’s fall. Animals could never make a man whole because animals are not eternal creatures. The blood of bulls and goats never satisfied the debt of sin to reconcile all men to the Father. Only through the blood of Jesus Christ, the Son of God, could the wrath of God be averted.

Christ died for the ungodly. He did not die because anyone deserved His death. God allowed men to treat His Son with contempt and hatred and to kill Jesus on the cross in the most horrific manner. Jesus died for the ungodly to show the mercy and grace of a loving Father. The amazing grace of God is measured by the extreme price paid to save a wretched man who is called “ungodly.” You are ungodly. I am ungodly. We did not find salvation through any worth of our own. Steeped in sin, we stood under the wrath of God.

Through the blood of Jesus, reconciliation was given to those who would obey His word. Instead of being the ungodly condemned to eternal death, now the ungodly can be saved from wrath through the grace of God. There is no greater demonstration of love than Christ dying for the ungodly. The saved are justified through His blood and saved from wrath. Praise God. I am redeemed.

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The Holy Spirit

Now may the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing, that you may abound in hope by the power of the Holy Spirit. (Romans 15:13)

The Holy Spirit

In the beginning of time, the Holy Spirit was hovering above the face of the waters. From creation, the Holy Spirit has been an integral part of unfolding the scheme of redemption. Moses performed miracles by the Holy Spirit. Through the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, Moses described the world of Genesis and then penned the other books of the Pentateuch.

Throughout the history of Israel, God worked His wonders through the Finger of God (Holy Spirit). Jesus was conceived in the womb of Mary by the Holy Spirit. At the beginning of His ministry, Jesus was baptized to fulfill all righteousness.

When Jesus came up out of the water and was praying, the heavens were opened to Him, and He saw the Spirit of God descending like a dove and alighting upon Him. All the miracles Jesus performed were accomplished by the Finger of God (Holy Spirit).

Knowing that He must return to the Father, Jesus instructed the eleven to remain in Jerusalem until they were given power from on high. Ten days after Jesus ascended to the Father’s right hand, the twelve apostles (now including Matthias) were in Jerusalem when they were baptized in the Holy Spirit.

This was a sign of the power of God given to His ambassadors of the gospel of Jesus Christ. When the devout Jews asked Peter and the other apostles what they must do to be saved, Peter told them to repent and be baptized for the remission of their sins, and they would receive the gift of the Holy Spirit. What Peter promised was to be given to all men in every generation. That promise was not the promise given to the apostles by Jesus.

A distinction must be made between the Baptism of the Holy Spirit and the gift of the Holy Spirit. Jesus promised the apostles the power of the Holy Spirit but only to the apostles. They were endowed with power from God to perform all types of miracles (healing, raising the dead, casting out demons), which they did in their ministry.

The gift of the Spirit promised by Peter in his response is the promise of the Holy Spirit to everyone who obeys the gospel of Christ. This gift is non-miraculous and has no power attached to it.

This is best understood from the story of Philip preaching in Samaria (Acts 8). Philip went down to the city of Samaria and preached Christ. The multitudes obeyed the gospel, hearing and seeing the miracles which he did.

A sorcerer named Simon also obeyed the gospel. When the apostles in Jerusalem heard what Philip was doing in Samaria, they sent Peter and John, who came and parted the gifts of the Holy Spirit to the saints. Simon thought to purchase the power and was rebuked for his wickedness.

Philip had the power of the gifts of the Holy Spirit, but he could not pass that gift to another person. The Samaritans (including Simon) had been baptized into Christ and received the gift of the Holy Spirit (non-miraculous). Peter and John came to Samaria to pass along miraculous gifts to the waiting saints.

Three things are noted about the Holy Spirit in this story: (1) Philip had received the power of the gifts of the Holy Spirit (casting out demons, healing the paralyzed and the lame). (2) All those who obeyed the gospel received the gift of the Holy Spirit; (3) Peter and John were apostles and were the only ones who could pass along the gifts to others. When Peter goes to the home of Cornelius, the baptism of the Holy Spirit is given to the Gentiles in the same fashion as upon the apostles at Pentecost.

The miraculous gifts of the Holy Spirit were part of the scaffolding of the early church. Through the gifts of the Holy Spirit, the church was able to go throughout the world unto every nation. When the establishment of the church was completed with the fully revealed word of God, the spiritual scaffolding was removed – the age of miraculous gifts ceased.

The Holy Spirit is still active today through the saints who have been baptized in Christ and the power of the word. Paul explained to the Christians in Rome how the Holy Spirit dwells in them, and to the Ephesian brethren, the sword of the Holy Spirit is the word of God.

To the churches of Galatia, Paul reminded them of the fruits of the Holy Spirit. Until the Lord returns, the Holy Spirit will continue to fulfill His work of the divine plan of the Father.

All Christians must realize the importance of filling their hearts with the word of God and setting their minds on the things of the Spirit. The Holy Spirit is not to be worshiped as Jesus Christ because everything the Spirit did was to lead men to Christ.

Jesus died for all men. The Holy Spirit guided men into all truth so they could see and realize the love of God accomplished through His only begotten Son.

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168 Hours Of Friendship

Now when Job’s three friends heard of all this adversity that had come upon him, each one came from his own place—Eliphaz the Temanite, Bildad the Shuhite, and Zophar the Naamathite. For they had made an appointment together to come and mourn with him, and to comfort him. And when they raised their eyes from afar, and did not recognize him, they lifted their voices and wept; and each one tore his robe and sprinkled dust on his head toward heaven. So they sat down with him on the ground seven days and seven nights, and no one spoke a word to him, for they saw that his grief was very great. (Job 2:11-13)

168 Hours Of Friendship

The story of Job is the courage of a man who faced overwhelming odds, experienced his own mortality, challenged God wrongfully, and remained a man of faith in the end. Job’s story is one of victory. His faith was put to the test, as few men experience. He sunk in despair in his misery, blaming God. Like any man, Job struggled with the burden of the flesh and the desire to serve the spirit. Compounding his story were three men who came to see him.

Eliphaz the Temanite, Bildad the Shuhite, and Zophar the Naamathite were friends of Job. These three men heard of the terrible things that happened to Job and felt the need to visit their dear friend. The story of Job is centered on the discussions between Job and his friends. Before Job and his friends unravel the mystery of life, a story of friendship is established that is often overlooked.

Life is a busy activity of taking care of family, working to support the family and the challenges of living. It isn’t easy to take a lot of time off from the heavy responsibilities of the daily grind. When Eliphaz, Bildad, and Zophar heard of the tragedy of Job, they could have done many things. They could have sent provisions to Job, couriers telling their friend of their sorrow, or thought within themselves how sorry they were for their friend. What these three men did was a remarkable example of deep friendship.

Eliphaz, Bildad, and Zophar planned to leave their families to visit their friend face to face. He needed to see them. Their presence is what was required of the day. Whatever the distance was, it was of no consequence. They made an appointment together to see their friend, mourn with him, and comfort him. Friendship is the willingness to sacrifice the time to help someone in need. Their hearts were broken when they saw him. They could not recognize Job. More importantly – Job recognized them. How his heart must have leaped at the sight of his trusted friends. In the midst of his sorrow, Job experienced friendship.

When the friends of Job planned to visit, they did not plan on stopping by and leaving. They desired to help Job as long as it took. No one could have imagined what would happen next. The three men sat down with Job on the ground. Not on soft cushions of fine silk relaxing in the splendor of riches accustomed by the rich. Eliphaz, Bildad, and Zophar sat on the ground with Job. And they sat there on the ground with Job for a week – seven days – 168 hours – 10,080 minutes. For seven days, no one spoke a word to Job. They watched him day by day take a potsherd and scrape himself while he sat in the midst of the ashes.

Job suffered from painful boils from the sole of his foot to the crown of his head. The three friends watched Job writhe in pain for seven days, and they did not leave him. The nights were long, and the days filled with the sorrow of Job, but they did not forsake their friend. They could have run away, but they remained for seven days without speaking a word. Job spoke first, deploring his birth, and then a conversation ensued with his friends, trying to understand what happened.

Job and his friends were wrong about their conclusions. In the end, God rebuked Job, but the man of God was not lost. His faith was firm, and so was the faith of his friends. What is missed in the story of Job is the faith of his three friends in the beginning and at the end. The friends were indeed wrong in their conclusions. God’s wrath was aroused against Job’s friends, demanding they make sacrifices so that Job could pray for them. They humbled themselves and obeyed the word of the Lord. As they made their way home, Eliphaz, Bildad, and Zophar were greater men of faith because of their friendship with Job and their faith in God.

I must learn to be like Job’s friends. We all find ourselves in the place of the three men trying to understand the issues of life. The joy of the story is found at the end when the four men parted ways, more profound in their love for one another and richer in their experience of faith in God. I suspect somewhere among the hosts of witnesses looking down on my wrecked life are four men who understand the value of friendship and the eternal reward of godliness. Thank you, Eliphaz, Bildad, and Zophar; and thank you, Job.

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Wife Catchers

And the children of Benjamin did so; they took enough wives for their number from those who danced, whom they caught. Then they went and returned to their inheritance, and they rebuilt the cities and dwelt in them. (Judges 21:23)

Wife Catchers

In the closing days of the period of the Judges over Israel, there was war with the Benjamites. The children of God were fighting against their fellow brethren of the Lord. When the battle was over, twenty-five thousand men of valor from Benjamin died. The men of Israel were remorseful to destroy so many of the Benjamites. Without men to produce a continual seed line, the tribe of Benjamin could disappear. After appealing to the Lord for guidance, the elders of the people devised an unusual plan.

The first plan involved sending twelve thousand of their most valiant men to fight against the inhabitants of Jabesh Gilead. They were to kill all the males and the women who were not virgins. When the fighting was over, they found four hundred young virgins who had not known a man intimately. Unfortunately, there were not enough women for the tribe of Benjamin. It seemed Benjamin would not survive as a tribe.

A second plan was put into action by the elders of the congregation. There was a yearly feast of the Lord in Shiloh. The Benjamites were told to hide in the vineyards and watch. When the daughters of Shiloh come out to dance, the Benjamites are instructed to catch a wife for himself and take her to the land of Benjamin. The daughters came out of the city, and the Benjamite men caught themselves a wife and took her back to their homeland. They rebuilt their cities, and life returned to normal.

“Wife catching” was an unusual courting ritual. The tragedy of Jabesh Gilead was those who died in the fighting and the four hundred taken from their homes and families. When the daughters danced outside the city of Shiloh, they were captured by men hiding in the vineyards and taken back as their wives. Many families suddenly lost their daughters without warning. It was a sad story for so many people.

There are many twists in the story of Israel, and the period of the Judges was when there was no king, and everyone did what was right in their own eyes. Finding wives for the Benjamites came as the result of an internal war pitting brother against brother, Hebrew killing Hebrew, and the people of God trying to destroy one another. The men of Gibeah, a town of Benjamin, committed a terrible outrage on the concubine of a Levite, raping her to death. At the war’s end, only six hundred men remained in Benjamin.

The story of ‘wife catching’ illustrates the failing of the wisdom of man when they seek after the wickedness of the world. There was no king in the land, leaving everyone to do as they desired. This ended in a disastrous war with tens of thousands of lives lost. Families were destroyed as their daughters were kidnapped and given away as wives. The wisdom of man always ends in disaster. Israel is left as an example of what happens when men do not follow the plan of God.

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God Is My Refuge

Thus God, determining to show more abundantly to the heirs of promise the immutability of His counsel, confirmed it by an oath, that by two immutable things, in which it is impossible for God to lie, we might have strong consolation, who have fled for refuge to lay hold of the hope set before us. (Hebrews 6:17-18)

God Is My Refuge

A refuge is a place of shelter or protection from danger or distress. In the Law of Moses, God made provisions for cities of refuge where a manslayer could flee. There were six cities of refuge in Israel as cities of the tribe of Levi. From a military standpoint, a refuge was a fortress of protection from enemies, usually a high place. Typically, whoever held the higher ground had the advantage. Taking refuge in God was a constant theme of divine protection from the wiles of the devil.

Sixteen psalms speak of the refuge of God. The Lord will be a refuge for the oppressed in times of trouble. God was a refuge for the poor. David wrote about the Lord being his rock and the saving refuge of His anointed. Seeking refuge in the Lord was finding security in the fortress of divine power. Finding refuge in God gave strength, a very present help in trouble. The people of Israel sought the Lord of hosts, the God of Jacob, as their refuge.

When David hid from King Saul in a cave, the psalmist wrote about the mercy of God enveloping him as the shadow of eternal wings and refuge in the day of trouble. God is called salvation, glory, the rock of salvation and refuge. The people of God could always trust in Him and pour out their hearts to Him because He is their refuge. As the protector of the righteous, the Lord was One whom the saints could seek continually because of the promise to protect them.

God was always a refuge for His people living in a world that denied the Lord God. As a refuge and fortress, security was to be found in the bosom of the Father. Like a powerful, great bird, God would spread his feathers around His child, drawing them under His wings for refuge. A shield and buckler were used for defense against enemies, and God was that refuge. Like the high hills and cliffs protected the wild goats and rock badgers, the Lord would lift His people up to heights of safety without fear.

When the eyes of the faithful turn to the Lord, He becomes their refuge because He cares for them. No soul would be destitute in the refuge of the Lord. His portion would be in the land of the living. David said it best when he described the grace of God as lovingkindness and fortress, his high tower and deliverer, his shield, and the One in whom he took refuge, who subdued his enemies around him.

There is no greater hope than to come to the Lord God as a refuge to lay hold of the hope set before them. God has made promises that He will protect His children, and that promise is security and hope. Paul said the Lord will not allow Satan to tempt a man beyond what he can endure. Why? God is the refuge that will limit the power of the devil. Jesus taught His disciples to ask the Father to keep them from the wicked one. Why? God has the power to protect His people.

God does not lie. He cannot lie. To understand how powerful seeking refuge in God is demands the understanding of the promises of God. The Lord has shown abundantly to the heirs of promise the immutability of His counsel. As the refuge of His people, God is unchanging. Everything promised by God comes true, and that is the refuge all men should seek. For those who are saved, it becomes the strong consolation of hope that God is faithful no matter what happens in life. His words are true. He does not change. Refuge in God is everlasting when one turns their life over to the will of Him who is the high tower, deliverer, shield, and lovingkindness of mercy. The storms of life will not overcome those who take refuge in the rock of salvation.

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Instrumental Music

And do not be drunk with wine, in which is dissipation; but be filled with the Spirit, speaking to one another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing and making melody in your heart to the Lord, giving thanks always for all things to God the Father in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, submitting to one another in the fear of God. (Ephesians 5:18-21)

Instrumental Music

Instruments of music have been around since the beginning of time. Jubal was the seventh generation removed from Adam, and “He was the father of all those who play the harp and flute” (Genesis 4:21).

David was a skilled harpist and inventor of musical instruments. “Then David and all Israel played music before God with all their might, with singing, on harps, on stringed instruments, on tambourines, on cymbals, and with trumpets.” (1 Chronicles 13:8)

During the temple worship of Solomon, instruments filled the House of the Lord (2 Chronicles 5:11-14). The Jews were experts with instruments of worship. There is little doubt the worship of Israel was filled with the music of instruments of music.

The first converts to the gospel of Christ were Jews. There would be a time of transition for the Jews to learn that circumcision was no longer a sign of the covenant between them and God. They would know the Sabbath was no longer required to be kept sacred. Many laws no longer applied to salvation, and many things they did in worship were not done in the early church.

Three thousand devout Jews were the first Christians, and from Pentecost, the church never used instruments of music in worship. If there were a people versed in the use of instruments of music, the Jews were that people. In all the early church writings, the Jews never suggested or used the instruments.

The reason is clear: when they continued in the apostle’s doctrine, the Holy Spirit instructed the first disciples to use the musical instrument designed by God – the mouth.

When the doctrines of the New Testament church were established, singing was the type of music commanded by God. Ephesians 5:19 does not mention pianos, guitars, and trumpets.

Paul affirmed the same message in Colossians 3:16 for the saints to sing to one another. The church at Corinth needed correcting about their worship, and Paul reminded them to sing with the understanding of what is being sung (1 Corinthians 14:15).

The use of instruments of music came in the sixth century and was not readily accepted until the 16th century. So great was the opposition that it would have been abolished by the Council of Trent but for the influence of Emperor Ferdinand.

Another argument against using instrumental music in worship is what history has to say. Consider the writings of some early church fathers. Thomas Aquinas said, “Our church does not use musical instruments, as harps and psalteries, to praise God withal, that she may not seem to Judaize.”

Augustine (354 A.D.) writes, “Musical instruments were not used. The pipe, tabret, and harp here associate so intimately with the sensual heathen cults, as well as the wild revelries and shameless performances of the degenerate theater and circus.”

In 190 A.D., Clement of Alexandria declares, “Leave the pipe to the shepherd, the flute to the men who are in fear of gods and intent on their idol worshipping. Such musical instruments must be excluded from our wingless feasts, for they are more suited for beasts and for the class of men that is least capable of reason than for men.”

During the Protestant movement against the teachings and practices of the Roman Catholic Church, many religious leaders condemned using instruments.

John Calvin (Presbyterian) said, “Musical instruments in celebrating the praises of God would be no more suitable than the burning of incense, the lighting up of lamps, and the restoration of the other shadows of the law. The papists, therefore, have foolishly borrowed this, as well as many other things, from the Jews. Men who are fond of outward pomp may delight in that noise; but the simplicity which God recommends to us by the apostle is far more pleasing to Him.”

Charles Spurgeon, an influential Baptist preacher (1834-1892), writes, “What a degradation to supplant the intelligent song of the whole congregation by the theatrical prettiness of a quartet, bellows, and pipes! We might as well pray by machinery as praise by it.”

A popular commentator named Adam Clarke (Methodist) declared, “Music, as a science, I esteem and admire; but instruments of music in the house of God I abominate and abhor. This is the abuse of music; and here I register my protest against all such corruptions in the worship of the Author of Christianity.”

Clarke went on to write, “John Wesley, who was a lover of music, and an elegant poet, when asked his opinion of instruments of music being introduced into the chapels of the Methodists said, in his terse and powerful manner, ‘I have no objection to instruments of music in our chapels, provided they are neither heard nor seen.”

Finally, Martin Luther summed it all up when he said, “The church rings with the noise of trumpets, pipes, and dulcimers; and human voices strive to bear their part with them. Men run to the church as to a theatre, to have their ears tickled.”

History does not authorize the use or non-use of instruments because Jesus is the only authority. But history helps to clarify and illustrate the rejection of instruments in times past. The student of scripture must find in the word of God the authority to use instruments of music. There is no authority, and using instruments of music is without divine approval.

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