In the past year, between this blog, a book, and my normal preaching schedule, I have written over 435,000 words. I shall now take a bit of a break from this blog for a month or two. When I return in the spring of next year the format will involve something along the lines of a post a week rather than every day. For those of you that have been with me on this journey through the life of Christ this year I express my appreciation. The only thing that writers like more than writing is being read, and I hope you found your time profitable.
Stay tuned...
Friday, December 12, 2014
Whom God Hath Raised Up
Life of Christ 173
We have also seen the response to all of these. We
have seen doubt and fear and greed and anger and malice. We have seen insult
and attack. We have seen lies and rebellion. With awful finality we have seen
violence, conspiracy, betrayal and murder.
The Sanhedrin, secure in
their ritual cleanliness, goes home to their Passover meal. Caiaphas and Annas
have triumphed again. The Pharisees will feast and sleep well tonight. The
Sadducees will remain in their leadership positions. The Herodians are content
that a great threat to Rome has been removed. And the demons of hell run riot
through the streets of Jerusalem howling with glee.
But the greatest travesty of justice ever produced
from the foul heart of hell will not, cannot stand. Peter explained it well
fifty days later in his great sermon at Pentecost.
Acts 2.22-27
22 Ye men of Israel, hear these words;
Jesus of Nazareth, a man approved of God among you by miracles and wonders and
signs, which God did by him in the midst of you, as ye yourselves also know:
23 Him, being delivered by the
determinate counsel and foreknowledge of God, ye have taken, and by wicked
hands have crucified and slain:
24 Whom
God hath raised up, having loosed the pains of death: because it was not
possible that he should be holden of it.
25 For David speaketh concerning him, I
foresaw the Lord always before my face, for he is on my right hand, that I
should not be moved:
26 Therefore did my heart rejoice, and
my tongue was glad; moreover also my flesh shall rest in hope:
27 Because thou wilt not leave my soul
in hell, neither wilt thou suffer thine Holy One to see corruption.
Up from the grave He arose. And Christianity was
furnished with its great proof. And Christianity was furnished with its great
peace. And Christianity was furnished with its great power.
The same Jesus that walked the hills of Judea and the
towns of Galilee two thousand years ago is still alive today. And He is coming
back. Someday, I shall go to Him, and ask Him to walk with me to the mount
where He delivered the greatest sermon ever preached. I shall ask Him to show
me where He started the first church in the mountains above Caesarea Philippi.
I shall ask Him to walk with me and share His life again with me. But most of
all, I will ask Him to walk with me to Calvary so that I may fall at His feet
and thank Him for coming, and living, and dying, and rising again for me.
Thursday, December 11, 2014
The Murder of the King
Life of Christ 172
It is 9 AM on Wednesday.
Tonight at sundown Passover begins. Pilate, hands still dripping wet from his
attempt to wash the responsibility for this crime off of them, stands before
the howling bloodthirsty mob of Israel's religious leadership and he gives
sentence that is should be as they required.
Immediately, Roman
soldiers reach for Him. They tear the simple robe off his back. Lifting His
arms they tie his hands to a post above His head and they send for the scourger.
A Roman soldier lifted
the whip above his head and swung with all his force until it struck the back
of Jesus Christ. At the end of the whip were several leather thongs in which
iron balls and sheep bones had been set. As the iron balls struck they caused
deep contusions and the bones cut into the skin and the underlying muscle. As
the flogging continued the lacerations widened and deepened. Soon ribbons of
flesh hung from his back, and blood first trickled and then ran down His body
to drip onto the stone flagged floor of the Praetorium. Thirty-nine times the
whip rose and thirty-nine times the whip fell.
Untying his arms from
the post the rough soldiers decided on a little sport. During Herod's brief
examination an hour earlier he had clothed Jesus in a rich purple robe in
mockery of His claim to be the King of Israel. It had been discarded in
Pilate's judgment hall but now someone grabs it, throws it round the huddled
bloody mess on the floor, and hauls Him to His feet. Someone else places a
staff into His hand in place of a scepter and another, having plaited a circlet
out of material from a bramble bush in the courtyard, places it on His head. Jeering,
they act out a little pantomime of bowing before Him.
Soon, though, the jeers
turn to blows. Someone grabs the stick out of His hand and pounds Him about the
head, driving the crown of thorns down around His scalp. A blindfold is tied
around His eyes and one at a time they take turns punching Him in the face and
stomach and demanding that He prophetically pronounce the name of the one who
had so struck Him. Some yanked chunks of hair out of His head as He sank to the
ground, weak from blood loss and repeated beatings. Gathering around the
pitiful figure still garbed in blood spattered purple one by one they take
turns, in contempt, spitting on this man who thought He could be the King of
the Jews.
A quaternion of four
soldiers is assigned to Him; they are not allowed to leave His side until He
has been pronounced as dead. Together with two other quaternions and prisoners
He is marched through the streets of the city. Going ahead of the sad little
procession was a man carrying a sign on which was written the crime of the
guilty party. The sign, penned in mockery of Christ and of the Sanhedrin, reads
THIS IS JESUS THE KING OF THE JEWS. In moments it would be nailed to the top of
the post from which He would hang.
That post was already
fixed in the ground on Golgotha but the crossbeam was not. Just prior to
leaving the Praetorium the soldiers stretched out Jesus' arms and tied the
crossbeam to them. Somewhere along the route through the city Jesus stumbled
and fell beneath the hundred pound weight of that crossbeam. The soldiers
forced Him to His feet but He fell again, weakened by repeated beatings and a
terrible scourging. In haste, they snatch a random man from the rapidly growing
crowd, and compel him, Simon was his name, to carry the crossbeam for Christ.
Three days ago He and
His Apostles had marched into the city surrounded by throngs of cheering,
shouting, singing Jews. Now the King of Israel, betrayed, abandoned, unjustly
sentenced, scourged, beaten, and mocked, stumbles through the same streets on
the way to Golgotha.
Those streets are
largely silent; the crowds looking on hushed. From somewhere up ahead a group
of women begin to lament loudly. As Jesus draws even with them He lifts His
thorn shadowed brow to look at them. Not unkindly, He tells them to save their
lamentation for their children – the children that thirty years would perish by
the hundreds of thousands in the Roman siege of a rebellious Jerusalem.
At the site of the
execution Roman law allowed a liquid narcotic to be given to the condemned man
so that some of his pain would be eased. Jesus refused this, choosing to remain
in full possession of His faculties but also choosing thus to experience
greater pain.
Upon arrival He was
thrown on His back and the crossbar that Simon had carried for Him placed under
His outstretched arms. Taking a six inch iron spike a Roman soldier knelt over
Him and placed it with great precision at the base of His hand where the wrist
begins. There the radius and the ulna of the arm join together at the hand and
with the carpals form a small opening of bone through which the median nerve
runs. Another soldier steps up and swinging a sledgehammer drives it through
His body and into the wood of the crossbeam. The process is then repeated with
the other arm.
Raised back to His feet,
Jesus was lifted into the waiting hands of Roman soldiers standing above Him on
ladders. Hoisted into the air from above and pushed from beneath His body hung,
swaying, suspended in mid-air by those two iron spikes. The crossbeam with its
now three hundred pound weight was then dropped onto the embedded post. Quickly,
the Roman soldiers grab His feet and holding them together place yet another
iron spike through them into the wood of the embedded post.
In this way, suspended
between earth and Heaven, the crucified man would torturously die by inches
over the next several days. He would die of exhaustion, of thirst, of asphyxiation,
and of blood loss from the constantly re-opened wounds on his back.
Looking on the assembled
Sanhedrin smiled with glee. Looking on, the imps of hell howled in silent
triumph. Looking on, His mother wept and recalled Simeon's prophecy of long ago
pronounced in that very city over her precious infant child. Behold, this child is set for the fall and
rising again of many in Israel; and for a sign which shall be spoken against;
Yea, a sword shall pierce through thy own soul also. (Luke 2.34-35)
Along the way He kept His head. He won the thief
beside Him to Himself. He took care of His earthly responsibilities – His
mother. Stunningly, He forgave the assembled Romans and Jews who were murdering
Him. And the darkness stole into His soul as He contemplated being rejected and
abandoned - not just by His people, not just by His Apostles, but by God
Himself.
He who had known perfect
fellowship for eternity was now taking upon Himself the noxious stench of the
monstrous pile of humanity's sins against God.
And as the Father turned His back on the Son the true pain of the cross
was shown.
My God, My God, why hast thou forsaken
me?
Just over the city walls
in the Temple Jewish priests gathered by the thousands and Jewish men gathered
by the tens of thousands. One by one, hundreds of thousands of lambs were
slaughtered in representation of that long ago night in Egypt when only the
blood protected the people from the death angel. And hanging on the cross the
Lamb of God, with His life's blood streaming from His body, shouted a single
Greek word – tetelestai – which being interpreted is It is finished.
In moments, He dismissed
His spirit and died. And the Roman centurion looked up in awe and said, Truly, this man was the son of God.
Isaiah 53:3 He is despised and rejected
of men; A man of sorrows, and acquainted with grief: And we hid as it were our
faces from him; He was despised, and we esteemed him not.
4 Surely he hath borne our griefs, And
carried our sorrows: Yet we did esteem him stricken, Smitten of God, and
afflicted.
5 But he was wounded for our
transgressions, He was bruised for our iniquities: The chastisement of our
peace was upon him; And with his stripes we are healed.
6 All we like sheep have gone astray; We
have turned every one to his own way; And the LORD hath laid on him the
iniquity of us all.
7 He was oppressed, and he was
afflicted, Yet he opened not his mouth: He is brought as a lamb to the
slaughter, And as a sheep before her shearers is dumb, So he openeth not his
mouth.
8 He was taken from prison and from
judgment: And who shall declare his generation? For he was cut off out of the
land of the living: For the transgression of my people was he stricken.
9 And he made his grave with the wicked,
And with the rich in his death; Because he had done no violence, Neither was
any deceit in his mouth.
10 Yet it pleased the LORD to bruise
him; he hath put him to grief: When thou shalt make his soul an offering for
sin, He shall see his seed, he shall prolong his days, And the pleasure of the
LORD shall prosper in his hand.
11 He shall see of the travail of his
soul, and shall be satisfied: By his knowledge shall my righteous servant
justify many; For he shall bear their iniquities.
There is only one proper response to this. It is to
say, from the bottom of our hearts, 'thank you.' For mercy at no charge and the
price it cost Him to furnish it.
Wednesday, December 10, 2014
And Pilate Gave Sentence
Life of Christ 171
It is Wednesday morning.
Caiaphas and his bunch have finished their illegal trials. They have convicted
Jesus of blasphemy and sentenced Him to death. But they have no actual
authority to put a man to death; only the Roman Empire does. Thus it is that
Jesus just after sunrise is ushered into presence of Judea's Roman governor,
Pontius Pilate.
As the Sanhedrin delivers
their prisoner to Pilate he asks them what indictment they bring against Him.
(John 18.29) Their initial response is laughable. They simply said that He was
a bad man as if their word alone was enough to crucify a man. (John 18.30)
Pilate, perceiving that the Sanhedrin had no valid political or criminal case
against the prisoner, assumed all they had was a religious case. (He was
correct about this, of course.) He tells them that religion is their
jurisdiction and their problem. (John 18.31)
The Sanhedrin then moves
on to Plan B. They inform Pilate that the indictment is indeed political, and
that Jesus was guilty of sedition and treason. (Luke 23.2) Pilate has been
standing outside of the Praetorium, his judgment hall, discussing this with the
Sanhedrin. (They refused to enter on the grounds that entering a Gentile
dwelling would make them unclean and thus unfit to observe Passover in just a
few hours. Curious, isn't it, how they were so concerned about being ritually
clean while committing murder?)
Pilate turns and goes back inside to question the
prisoner. Pilate asks Him if He does indeed claim to be the king of the Jews.
(John 18.33) Jesus' response is that yes, He does claim to be the king of the
Jews, but it is not a worldly kingdom. It is a spiritual kingdom. The proof is
the evident fact that His followers are not seeking to break Him out of jail,
so to speak. (John 18.36) Accepting this as sensible, and mindful of his first
inclination that this was a religious question after all, Pilate returns to the
Sanhedrin and formally pronounced Jesus innocent. (John 18.38).
Pilate wants out from under this situation. He is
being pressured to sentence a man to capital punishment that he thinks is
innocent. But at the same time the last thing he needs is to make the Sanhedrin
and thus the Jews mad at him. To Caesar, a governor's job was well done when
his province was quiet, peaceful, paying taxes, and producing wealth for the
Empire. Pilate, who had as his unhappy lot the province of the troublesome Jews,
was already on thin ice with Caesar in this respect.
Despite the Jews well known abhorrence of graven
images, respected by his predecessors, Pilate upon initial acceptance of his
charge had a cohort of Roman soldiers take possession of the Temple Mount and
Fortress Antonia with banners flying. These banners were emblazoned with
Caesar's image. The resulting near riot lasted six days, and only ended when
the Jewish leaders willingly submitted to threatened death. Pilate had to
recant and take down the banners.
Some time later, Pilate, sensing the need for more and
better water in Jerusalem, proposed a new aqueduct. So far, so good. But he
proposed paying for it with Temple money. Not good. Pilate, anticipating
resistance, had plain clothes men mingle with the Jewish group who came to
argue with him about it. At a nod from him they fell upon the crowd with clubs,
perhaps with more energy than he intended, and many died from the beatings and
the resulting crowd stampede.
Additionally, only recently, Pilate had instructed his
soldiers to kill a number of rebellious Jews on the grounds of the Temple
itself, and the resulting butchery mingled the blood of the Jews with the blood
of the sacrifices.
The current Caesar ,Tiberius, was a paranoid,
suspicious, sick, and increasingly bloodthirsty man. Think Josef Stalin here.
The last thing Pilate needed was for the Sanhedrin to lead the Jews in a fuss
which would draw the negative attention of Rome's ailing emperor. The Sanhedrin
understand the political calculations going through Pilate's mind all too well.
Remorselessly, they press home their attack, demanding that Pilate execute
Jesus, asserting that He had spread sedition from Galilee to Judea. (Luke 23.5)
The word 'Galilee' is like a straw tossed to a
drowning man. Pilate has jurisdiction only of Judea. If the prisoner is from
Galilee this is Herod's problem, not his. Herod is in town for Passover and
Pilate promptly ships Jesus to Herod. He hopes thus to get out from underneath
the maddening situation. (Luke 23.6-7)
Herod had long wanted to meet Jesus, not out of any
spiritual desire, but because he had heard that Jesus was a miracle worker.
Jesus completely ignores Herod (Luke 23.6-12) and refuses to dignify his
foolishness with any response whatsoever. Herod quickly gets bored with the
whole thing, and ships Jesus back to Pilate.
While Jesus had been with Herod Pilate's wife came to
him and begged him to let Jesus go. (Matthew 27.19) He already thought Jesus
was innocent and this only adds to his desire to get out of what the Sanhedrin
wants him to do. Sending Jesus to Herod did not work so he tries something
else. Perhaps a little shed blood, via a scourging, will suffice to please
them. (Luke 23.13-16) No, that is also unacceptable. Undeterred, Pilate tries
something else. It was his custom to pardon one Jew every Passover. He decides
to frame the opportunity this time as a choice between a clearly innocent man
and a clearly guilty one. (Mark 15.7-9) After all, who wants a murderer
released back into the general population? The Sanhedrin, though, quickly
quashes the idea and whips the people to an emotional fervor demanding, of all
things, that Barabbas be released. (Mark 15.11)
Pilate, still resisting but running out of ideas,
begins to transition from trying to get out sentencing Jesus to death to
finding a way to make himself look good while doing it. To that end, he gets
the people to verbalize their blood-thirsty intent thus supposedly getting him
off the hook. (Mark 15.12-14) They oblige him by issuing a full throated demand
for Jesus' death.
In this whole scene we see two contrasting desires - Pilate
to let Jesus go and the Sanhedrin to kill Him. Pilate pushes back saying it is
a religious question. The Sanhedrin pushes back saying it is a political
question. Pilate pushes back with a legal declaration of innocence. The
Sanhedrin pushes back saying Jesus is fomenting rebellion in Galilee. Pilate
pushes back by sending Jesus to Herod. Herod pushes back by sending Jesus back
to Pilate. Pilate pushes back by offering instead to scourge Jesus. The
Sanhedrin refuses and insists on capital punishment. Pilate pushes back by
framing the traditional release to be between Jesus and Barabbas. The Sanhedrin
pushes back by asking for Barabbas. Pilate pushes back by asking them to
specifically verbalize their intent for the record. The Sanhedrin pushes back
by whipping the crowd into a fever and demanding crucifixion.
Like a skilled boxer, the Sanhedrin has Pilate up
against the ropes. Now they deliver the knockout blow. If thou let this man go, thou art not Caesar's friend: whosoever maketh
himself a king speaketh against Caesar. (John 19.12) Pilate is deathly
afraid of the autocratic paranoid Tiberius. Pilate knows full well he governs
an unruly people. He has repeatedly antagonized those unruly people. He does
not need brought to the negative attention of Tiberius and the Jews are
promising him that he will be if he does not issue the ruling they demand. Like
a deflated balloon, he collapses to the mat. And Pilate gave sentence that it should be as they required. (Luke
23.24)
Pitifully attempting to robe himself in the tattered
remains of his conscience and his dignity he calls for a bowl of water. He
proceeds to symbolically wash his hands clean from the blood of a prisoner he
knows is completely innocent. The demonically inspired blood lust of the crowd
throws this back in his face with spine chilling cry, His blood be on us, and on our children. (Matthew 27.25)
With this cry Judaism was, in
the person of its representatives, guilty of denial of God, of blasphemy, of
apostasy. It committed suicide; and, ever since, has its dead body been carried
in show from land to land, and from century to century: to be dead, and to
remain dead, till He come a second time, Who is the Resurrection and the Life!
- Edersheim
No greater travesty of
justice ever occurred. No greater consequences ever grew for those involved in
an injustice. And no greater blessing ever flowed from such an injustice.
Tuesday, December 9, 2014
Tried by the Sanhedrin
Life of Christ 169
It is well after
midnight. Jesus has poured out His soul to His Father in Gethsamane and
received the strength He needs to face Calvary. He wakens the Apostles from
sleep and then calmly awaits the advent of the end. And He doesn't wait long. And immediately, while he yet spake, cometh
Judas, one of the twelve, and with him a great multitude with swords and
staves, from the chief priests and the scribes and the elders. (Mark 14.41-43)
Judas Iscariot, after
leaving the Last Supper in the Upper Room, must have gone immediately to the
Sanhedrin. He proceeded to inform them that Jesus was in the city after dark
and that He could thus be arrested quietly. The Romans would not allow the
Sanhedrin much in the way of an armed force. They appealed to Pilate in order
borrow some of the Roman cohort that was stationed at Fortress Antonia adjacent
to the Temple, and Pilate consented. Taking to the streets with Judas Iscariot
they marched to the Upper Room and found it empty. Bethinking himself of other
places to which Jesus was wont to go at night the Iscariot led them next to the
Garden of Gethsamane.
It would be easy to get
confused in the dark and so the conspirators had previously agreed on a
necessary signal for identification. Thus it is that Judas Iscariot comes to
place the infamous traitor's kiss upon the brow of our Saviour. Once having
been so marked, the Roman soldiers ask for verbal confirmation. Jesus gives it,
and then asks them to spare His Apostles (John 18.8) most of whom are rapidly
departing the scene. Peter puts up a bit of a fuss, wildly swinging his short
ceremonial Passover sword to a not quite so deadly effect before he is calmed
down. Jesus' hands are bound and He is led through the sleeping streets of
Jerusalem to the high priest's palace. (John 18.12-13)
Jesus Before the Sanhedrin, William Brassey Hole, 1900 |
The position of high
priest had long ago devolved into a corrupt family business. The Romans sold
the position to Annas' family, and they maintained a hold on it using differing
relatives over a period of several decades. The Bazaars of Annas were infamous
in the day, and the corrupt monopoly they held over Temple transactions had
twice moved Jesus to visible displays of wrath. Annas' son-in-law, Caiaphas,
nominally held the position of high priest at the moment but it is to the power
behind the throne that Jesus is first brought for examination.
Annas seeks first to
establish the extent of Jesus' teaching and of His followship. (John 18.19).
Jesus retorts that this information was readily known for His ministry was
nothing if not public. (John 18.20-21) This response, viewed as impudent, was
met with the harshness of blows from Annas' lackeys. (John 18.22) This
terminates the interview, and a frustrated Annas turns Jesus over to his
son-in-law, Caiaphas, and a hastily assembled Sanhedrin. (Mark 14.53-65)
Technically, this was a
pre-trial examination. Realistically, it was a kangaroo court. How do you
convict a man of a capital crime who has never done a single thing wrong in His
entire life? That was the conundrum facing the Sanhedrin. At first they sought
to get around that gigantic obstacle by paying witnesses to lie. That did not
work for their testimony, being hastily made up, did not agree and so this
angle had to be abandoned. Next they tried to question Jesus and get Him to
make some kind of incriminating silence. But
he held his peace and answered nothing. After all, why talk when your
prosecutors are doing a swell job of making their indictment look foolish?
Finally, Caiaphas asked Jesus directly if He was the Messiah, and if He claimed
to be God. This Jesus, in good conscience, could not and was not willing to
deny. He confidently asserted that He was and that the day would come when He
would sit in judgment on those who were now sitting in judgment on Him. This
answer, which included a claim to be divine, was tantamount to blasphemy.
Finally, the Sanhedrin had stumbled upon a capital offense. Then the high priest rent his clothes, and
saith, What need we any further witnesses? Ye have heard the blasphemy: what
think ye? And they all condemned him to be guilty of death.
What followed was a
demonic orgy of hate. These venerable doctors of the Law gathered around Jesus
and began to spit on Him. Others struck him with open hands and even fists. The
religious leadership of the nation of Israel had lain down with Judas Iscariot
and woken up in Satan's bed. For the next twelve hours their actions would be
marked by an increasing bloodthirstiness that is only explainable when we
accept it was birthed in the pit of hell.
Finally, the sun rose to
see the worst day in the history of humanity. Once dawn had come the Sanhedrin
was legally allowed to assemble. Hurriedly they formally poll the assembled
quorum and a sentence of death results.
No matter how you slice
it, legally or morally or spiritually, the Sanhedrin's actions were nothing
short of appalling. But hell had loosed the dogs of war on Jesus Christ. They
had plenty of rebellion and hatred and jealousy and evil with which to work,
and their work would not cease until the blood pooled at the foot of the cross.
…and what precious blood
that is! The imps of hell and the wicked doctors of the Law together
unknowingly combined to produce the greatest of victories. Without
shedding of blood is no remission. (Hebrews 9.22) But it was shed, and
there is glorious remission.
Monday, December 8, 2014
The Great Lesson of Gethsamane
Life of Christ 168
It is after midnight on
Wednesday morning. These are the last few moments of freedom Jesus has prior to
His arrest in just a little while. He must prepare Himself for all that is
coming. So much of this last day He has spent preparing the Apostles but now He
must see to His own spiritual needs. So He comes, as He often did, to the
lovely glade of Gethsamane to pour out His soul in prayer.
After arriving He first
separates the Apostles into two groups, one of Peter, James, and John, and the
other with the rest. He lays out before these three Apostles the burden of His heart
and begs them to pray for Him. (Matthew
26.37-38) He then leaves them in order to find a quiet spot of His own in
which to pray. (Matthew 26.39) He
prays for a while, and then returns to check back with Peter, James, and John.
When He finds them asleep He responds with the burden of a great sorrow (Matthew 26.40) and asks them, once
again, to pray for Him in His time of need. (Matthew
26.41) Leaving again, He makes His way back to a quiet corner and opens up
His heart to His Heavenly Father. (Matthew
26.42) Returning to Peter, James, and John unbelievably He finds them
asleep again. In weariness of soul, spirit, and body He turns without waking
them and goes back to His quiet corner to pray for the third time. (Matthew 26.43-44) And for the second
time on this, the longest day that any human being has ever lived, the Heavenly
Father tenderly strengthens the Son for what He is about to face. (Luke 22.43) Finally, having prayed
through, so to speak, and accessed the grace and strength He needs to face the
horror of Calvary He returns to the Apostles. He wakes them, informs them His
hour has come, and the quiet lovely little glade is overwhelmed with booted
tramp of a cohort of Roman soldiers. (Matthew
26.45-46)
Gethsamane, Adam Abram, 2008 |
Many years ago when I
first began studying the life of Christ I came across a statement in
Edersheim's massive tome. He said that the outstanding characteristic of the
life of Christ was His obedience to His Heavenly Father. At first, in my
simplicity, I disagreed with him. Surely it must have been His miracles. After
all, no other human being on the planet had ever walked on water, fed thousands
with one lunch, cleansed lepers, healed the blind, cast out devils, and
repeatedly raised the dead. Or perhaps it was His holiness. After all, no other
human being had ever lived a completely sinless life. Or perhaps it was that He
began the world's largest, best, and most enduring religion. Or perhaps it was
His atoning death. After all, no one can pay for their own sins let alone the
entirety of humanity's. Choosing something amazing about the life of Christ is
like going to an exceptional buffet – it is all amazing. Yet as time passed I
found myself gradually growing into agreement.
Saying that the most outstanding characteristic of His
life is His obedience to the Father does not take away from anything Jesus did
in any area. What it does do, however, is bring His life in some small way down
to our level. Beloved, you and I are not going to walk on water. Well, I can
occasionally if it is frozen but even then it is difficult. We are not going to
raise the dead or lead lives of moral perfection. We will not atone for
anyone's sins. But we should and can live lives of obedience to the will of our
Heavenly Father. In this He set His greatest example.
Jesus said His meat was to do the will of His Father. (John 4.34). He said that He did not
seek His own will in anything. (John
5.30) He said He did not come to do His own will but to do the Father's will.
(John 6.38) He said, I do always those things that please the
him. (John 8.29) And thus it is that we find Him in lovely Gethsamane
gazing full on into the bitter cup of Calvary – and yielding to His Father's
will on the matter.
Mat 26.39 And he went a little further,
and fell on his face, and prayed, saying, O my Father, if it be possible, let
this cup pass from me: nevertheless not as I will, but as thou wilt.
Matthew 26.42 He went away again the
second time, and prayed, saying, O my Father, if this cup may not pass away
from me, except I drink it, thy will be done.
The great question that
faced Jesus in the Garden is the great question that faces you and me today.
Will we do what we want to do or will we do what God wants us to do?
I know how Jesus
answered that question His whole life long.
How will we answer it?
Friday, December 5, 2014
The Upper Room Discourse
Life of Christ 167
Following the conclusion of the Last Supper Jesus gives to His Apostles
what is practically His last will and testament. In just a few minutes they
will arrive at the Garden where He will pray for them while they sleep and then
events will be taken out of their hands humanly speaking. This is the last free
instruction and interaction He would have with them prior to His death. Some of
it took place in the Upper Room and some of it took place as they were walking
to Gethsemane.
This passage is historically known as the Upper Room
discourse. It is found in John 14-16 with
an accompanying prayer by Christ in John
17. It reminds me in some respects of the Sermon on the Mount in that it
covers a variety of topics over the space of a few chapters. It is a very rich,
rich passage. Of course, it is impossible to adequately discuss the Upper Room
discourse in one blog post but I will give you a broad overview of it.
Jesus Christ was keenly aware on this Tuesday evening
that His Apostles' entire world was about to be turned upside down. In twelve
hours He would be dead and they would enter the dark night of the soul that
would stretch from the arrest at the Garden until they received news of the
Resurrection on Sunday morning. When viewed in this light it is not surprising
that we find the Upper Room discourse majors on subjects such as peace, joy,
comfort, and love.
It is in these chapters that we find the exceedingly
precious promise of the indwelling Holy Spirit who is called, not
coincidentally, the Comforter. (John
14.16) There is much discussion of peace. Indeed, I often myself reading
from these chapters when as I visit dear members of our church who are laid up
in hospital rooms. Peace I leave with
you, my peace I give unto you: not as the world giveth, give I unto you. Let
not your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid. (John 14.27) Christ
also points them for the second time that day to look for the Second Coming. In
this context He specifically says such a knowledge ought to keep us ever
rejoicing. (John 16.22)
Amongst all of these encouraging themes is also mixed
in a fair amount of doctrine. One of the most famous verses in the entire Bible
is in this passage with a completely valid application to salvation. Jesus saith unto him, I am the way, the
truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me. (John 14.6) We
also find clear reference to the necessity of believing in the divinity of
Christ (John 14.9) and vital
instruction regarding the primacy of abiding in Him. (John 15.4)
From this broad overview I draw this thought: our
religion is birthed in a belief in correct doctrine but once birthed it is a
tremendous practical help to us. Many a benighted soul wants to avail
themselves of Jesus' words here regarding peace and comfort and joy without
placing them upon the proper foundation of belief. In short, if you are not
saved there are no promises for you here. All the comfort and joy and peace you
could ever possibly need is only available to you if you have placed your faith
in the claims of Jesus Christ. But once you have, oh, is it ever available!
What do you need today? Peace? Come get it. Joy? Come get it. Comfort? The very
Comforter Himself lives within us. You cannot get any better than that.
Over a century ago
Longfellow said, 'Into each life some rain must fall.' But it is worse than
that. Into each life the bleak midnight enters at some point. The sun is
shining only on other people. The moon refuses to cast her reflection for you.
Even the stars are blotted out. There is nothing but the blackness of darkness.
When, not if, this comes to you, beloved, allow me to point you in the
direction of Christ's last words to His own in the hours before His
crucifixion. And may you find here all the peace and joy and comfort you need.
Thursday, December 4, 2014
The Last Was The First
Life of Christ 166
One of the least
appreciated aspects of the Last Supper is just how tremendously important it is
in the transition from Judaism to Christianity. Perhaps I could say that more
biblically by referring to the old covenant and the new covenant. The old
covenant was entered into by the Jewish people in Sinai under Moses. The sum
and substance of it was contained in the Mosaic Law. It was entered into in a
solemnized blood-sprinkled ceremony.
Exodus 24:7–8
7 And he took the book of the covenant,
and read in the audience of the people: and they said, All that the LORD hath
said will we do, and be obedient.
8 And Moses took the blood, and
sprinkled it on the people, and said, Behold the blood of the covenant, which
the LORD hath made with you concerning all these words.
If the Old Testament
shows us anything it shows us that the Jewish people singularly failed to live
up to their promise. The history of the Jewish people prior to the time of
Christ is a history of one failure after another. In just a few hours they will
exponentially compound those failures by executing their own Messiah.
Of course, none of this
surprised God. Indeed, the Old Testament prophets themselves spoke of this
(Isaiah 53 for instance). They also spoke of the necessity of a new covenant.
Understanding this is very important for the Christian for it speaks directly
to the transition from Judaism to Christianity.
Jeremiah 31:31–33
31 Behold, the days come, saith the
LORD, That I will make a new covenant With the house of Israel, and with the
house of Judah:
32 Not according to the covenant that I
made with their fathers In the day that I took them by the hand To bring them
out of the land of Egypt; Which my covenant they brake, Although I was an
husband unto them, saith the LORD:
33 But this shall be the covenant that I
will make with the house of Israel; After those days, saith the LORD, I will put
my law in their inward parts, And write it in their hearts; And will be their
God, And they shall be my people.
The Old Testament prophecy of a new covenant is the
scriptural support that Jesus and the Apostles used to explain their shift from
an ethnically centered religion of ceremony to a world-wide religion of
personal experience from the heart. This new covenant had a new chosen people –
the Church (though Israel's role is not yet finished). This new covenant had a
new Scripture – the New Testament (though the Old Testament is still
Scripture). This new covenant had a new mission – propagation via the Great Commission.
This new covenant also needed a new ceremony. The old
covenant was symbolized best in the Passover observance. This was designed
to point the people forward to the redemptive role of the coming Messiah. They
totally missed this but that was its point nonetheless. With the arrival of
that redemptive sacrificial death tomorrow there would be no more need for the
Passover observance. Instead of looking forward toward the sacrifice of the
Lamb of God the new covenant would look backward on the sacrifice of the Lamb
of God. The purpose of the Lord's Supper as observed in the Church is to focus
us squarely back on the cause and meaning of it all – Jesus Christ. This do in remembrance of me. (Luke 22.19)
Thus it is that the Last
Supper, a Passover seder, became the Lord's Supper and marked forever the
transition from Judaism to Christianity.
1 Corinthians 11:23–27
23 For I have received of the Lord that
which also I delivered unto you, That the Lord Jesus the same night in which he
was betrayed took bread:
24 And when he had given thanks, he
brake it, and said, Take, eat: this is my body, which is broken for you: this
do in remembrance of me.
25 After the same manner also he took
the cup, when he had supped, saying, This
cup is the new testament in my blood: this do ye, as oft as ye drink it, in
remembrance of me.
26 For as often as ye eat this bread,
and drink this cup, ye do shew the Lord’s death till he come.
Wednesday, December 3, 2014
War at Supper
Life of Christ 165
It is Tuesday evening.
Jesus will die tomorrow. He and His Apostles have gathered in the Upper Room
for the Last Supper. Typically, the head of the party led in the ordered
ceremonial observance of a Passover. This includes various psalms, drinks,
herbs, bread, and meat eaten at different times after different prayers.
Several years ago it was my privilege to celebrate one with a group of
messianic Jews here in Chicago and I enjoyed it very much.
Toward the beginning of
the meal Jesus makes the startling statement that one of those assembled there
that night was about to betray Him. Immediately a babble of conversation breaks
out in which each of them demands to know if they are the guilty party. Matthew
tells us that Judas, sitting in the place of honor next to Christ, quietly
asked Jesus the same question. Jesus responded chillingly, thou hast said. (Matthew 26.25) Can you imagine the undertone of
emotion in that exchange? Judas knew his perfidy had been discovered but
remained bent on his course.
Peter, precious
impetuous Peter, beckons to John at the foot of the table and asks John to
privately ask Christ who the guilty party was. John does so, and Jesus answers
quietly that it is he to whom He offers the sop. The sop was a crucial step in
the ceremony. It involved wrapping some lamb in flatbread, dipping it in bitter
herbs, and handing it to each guest. The first one that Jesus prepared was
offered to Judas.
I believe in the reality
of spiritual warfare. There are examples of it from one end of the Bible to the
other. But there can be no greater example than this: at the Last Supper Jesus
and Satan sat side by side. Yes, you read that right, side by side. And after the sop Satan entered into him.
(John 13.27) For one brief earthly moment, the primary antagonists in
history's first, greatest, last, and most important war sat elbow to elbow. And
Jesus kicked him out. Then said Jesus
unto him, That thou doest do quickly. And Satan ran into the night lusting
after a great triumph. In reality, the only thing he would actually accomplish
this night would be his own utter defeat.
For this purpose the Son of God was manifested, that he might destroy
the works of the devil. (I John 3.8)
But
thanks be to God, which giveth us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ. (I
Corinthians 15.57)
Tuesday, December 2, 2014
The Greatest Lesson on Service Ever Delivered
Life of Christ 164
The visual image that
comes when we think of the Last Supper is Leonardo da Vinci's famous 1498
painting. In actuality the seating arrangements would have been entirely
different. On formal occasions the Jews of Jesus' day did not sit down on
chairs at a table. Instead, they partially reclined on low cushions around a
much lower table and their feet would have been stretched out behind them. You
will recall the stories of two different women who anointed Jesus' feet while
He was attending banquets and this would have been a similar arrangement. The
Talmud tells us that the end of the Passover table was kept uncovered and was
used to hold the various dishes of food. Instead of da Vinci's picture it would
have been laid out more like this:
We know from the
interaction that takes place during the Last Supper that Jesus sat at the head
of the table and had someone on His right hand and His left. We also know that
at one point Christ whispered something privately to John, who was leaning on
His breast, regarding the identity of the traitor in their midst. We also know
that Jesus and Judas had a private conversation in which Jesus told him that He
knew he was the traitor. We also know that Peter beckoned to John across the
foot of the table to ask him who the traitor was. The above chart fits all of
these scenarios.
The Pharisees held that
it was a great honor to be seated in the chief
seats at a feast and Jesus had just that morning rebuked them for it. (Matthew 23.6) Sadly, as Jesus and His
Apostles enter the Upper Room a dispute breaks out amongst them over who would get
to sit where. Although the Apostles were still clueless regarding the approaching
crucifixion they did realize a crisis point had been reached. Their
interpretation of the events led them however to a completely different
conclusion. They believed that Jesus was about to be accepted by the nation as
her Messiah and they were about to fill high places of authority in the
kingdom. In my opinion, some of them thought that their seats around the
Passover table in the Upper Room were indicative of their level of authority in
the soon arriving kingdom. Thus it was that they began to quarrel among
themselves over access to the chief seats.
What a grief this must
have been to Christ! He is hours from the unspeakable horror of Calvary and the
men He is counting on to hold everything together after He leaves are selfishly
quarreling among themselves. Jesus contrasts that sad display of pride with
words exalting the primacy of serving.
Luke 22:24–30
24 And there was also a strife among
them, which of them should be accounted the greatest.
25 And he said unto them, The kings of
the Gentiles exercise lordship over them; and they that exercise authority upon
them are called benefactors.
26 But ye shall not be so: but he that
is greatest among you, let him be as the younger; and he that is chief, as he
that doth serve.
27 For whether is greater, he that
sitteth at meat, or he that serveth? is not he that sitteth at meat? but I am
among you as he that serveth.
28 Ye are they which have continued with
me in my temptations.
29 And I appoint unto you a kingdom, as
my Father hath appointed unto me;
30 That ye may eat and drink at my table
in my kingdom, and sit on thrones judging the twelve tribes of Israel.
Jesus then takes His
instruction a step further by giving them a never to be forgotten illustration
of His point. Assuming the garb and work of a servant He rises to wash the
Apostles' feet. (John 13.1-17) To
drive the point home He began, not with those seated by Him at the head of the
table, but with Peter who had impetuously responded to Jesus' remonstrance by
rushing for the foot of the table. Many and good are the sermons preached from
this story but we must never lose sight of the context. Jesus is hours from
death. The Apostles are hours from the dark night of the soul. Israel is hours
from violently rejecting the very reason for her existence. Spiritual war is
breaking out on all sides and the devil throws everything he has at the Son of
God.
Christ Washing the Disciples' Feet Tintoretto, 1549 |
…and in the middle of
all of that selfishness, pride, and horror Jesus teaches the greatest lesson on
service ever delivered. The antidote to pride is a selfless and humble
service.
Monday, December 1, 2014
The Last Supper - Seder or Not?
Life of Christ 163
It is Tuesday evening.
Jesus will die tomorrow afternoon. The morning had already seen the unveiling
of the dead fig tree and the verbal confrontations with Israel's religious
leadership in the Temple. The afternoon had seen the Olivet discourse with its
solemn pronouncements of a second coming and Judas Iscariot's secret
arrangements to betray Christ. We come now at sundown to the evening of
Tuesday. To the Jews this would be the beginning of Wednesday. This was the day
of preparation in which the Jewish households made their arrangements to
observe Passover and the Feast of Unleavened Bread.
There is some
disagreement over whether the Last Supper was a seder or not. Whether one holds
the Wednesday or Friday view of the crucifixion does not change the fact that
Scripture repeatedly says that Jesus died on the day of preparation. In other
words, since Jesus died a day before Passover began then the Last Supper took
place 24 hours prior to the accepted observance of the seder.
Those against the Lord's
Supper being considered a seder point out that Jesus as an observing Jew would
not have celebrated Passover an entire day early. They point out that it would
have been impossible to get the lamb properly sacrificed since these were not
sacrificed until the afternoon immediately prior to the evening seder. How do
you get a proper Passover lamb on Tuesday night when all the lambs were not
sacrificed prior to Wednesday afternoon? At the same time, we must accept that
Scripture repeatedly calls the Last Supper a Passover (Matthew 26.18-19; Mark
14.14, 16; Luke 22.8, 11, and 15).
How do we reconcile
these two contradictory positions? I choose to believe simply that Jesus
celebrated Passover a day early with His disciples. If He claimed emphatically
to be Lord even of the Sabbath day
(Matthew 12.8) why could He not choose when and how to celebrate Passover?
And if He could feed thousands with a simple lunch could He not furnish the
necessary sacrificial lamb? Of course He could.
Sometime earlier in the afternoon Jesus had
sent Peter and John back into Jerusalem to ensure that everything necessary for
the seder had been arranged. This was no small task. Cunningham Geike, a
nineteenth century Scottish Presbyterian sets the scene for us in his 1893 book
The Life and Words of Christ:
The head of each family, as evening closed, began the household
purification with the prayer - "Blessed art Thou, O Lord, our God, King of
the universe, who hast sanctified us with Thy commandments, and requirest us to
remove the leaven," and then proceeded, in rigorous silence, to search
every room, gathering every crumb that could be found, and finally tying all up
till the following morning. A further search, which must end before noon, was
then made for any liquid or solid product of fermented grain, and for all
dishes or vessels that had held it. All were taken out of the house, and the
crumbs and dough carefully burned, with a repetition of prescribed prayers. The
house itself was then cleansed in every part, and no one could enter the
unpurified house of a heathen, henceforth, during the feast, without being
defiled. Nothing leavened could be eaten or permitted in the house during the
next seven days, - for defilement, bringing with it unfitness to eat the
Passover, would follow in either case.
This purification of the house, however, was by no means all. Vessels
of any kind, to be used at the feast, were cleansed with prescribed rites, in a
settled mode. Metal dishes &c., after being scoured, must be first dipped
in boiling water - in a pot used for no other purpose - and then into cold.
Iron vessels must be made red-hot; then washed in the same way. Iron mortars,
for crushing grain for baking, were filled with red coals, till a thread, tied
outside, was burned through. Wooden vessels, after being wetted, were rubbed
with a red-hot stone. No clay dish would be used at all if not quite new, and
it had to be first dipped thrice in running water, and consecrated by a special
prayer. Personal purity was as strictly enforced. Every one had to cut his hair
and nails, and to take a bath.
Somehow, on the day
prior to the day of preparation, most of these accommodations were already provided
for and thus in the evening of that day Jesus and His Apostles came to the
Upper Room.
Mark 14:13–17
13 And he sendeth forth two of his
disciples, and saith unto them, Go ye into the city, and there shall meet you a
man bearing a pitcher of water: follow him.
14 And wheresoever he shall go in, say
ye to the goodman of the house, The Master saith, Where is the guestchamber,
where I shall eat the passover with my disciples?
15 And he will shew you a large upper
room furnished and prepared: there make ready for us.
16 And his disciples went forth, and
came into the city, and found as he had said unto them: and they made ready the
passover.
17 And in the evening he cometh with the
twelve.
Friday, November 21, 2014
The Son of Man is Betrayed
Life of Christ 162
Judas Iscariot leaving the Last Supper, Carl Bloch, 1890 |
It is Tuesday afternoon.
Jesus will die tomorrow. He and His Apostles are on the slopes of the Mount of
the Olives where they have just finished a discussion about the end times. And it came to pass, when Jesus had finished
all these sayings, he said unto his disciples, Ye know that after two days is
the feast of the Passover, and the Son of man is betrayed to be crucified.
(Matthew 26.1-2) It is worth noting that Jesus knows exactly when He will
die (the day of preparation), the earthly cause of His death (betrayal), and
the method of His death (crucifixion).
The Sanhedrin, which has
been actively conspiring to assassinate Jesus for months, dearly wants to do it
soon but they are afraid of His popular support at Jerusalem during Passover
week. They gather together at Caiaphas' house sometime early in the week to
plot how to get around this obstacle. Then
assembled together the chief priests, and the scribes, and the elders of the
people, unto the palace of the high priest, who was called Caiaphas, And
consulted that they might take Jesus by subtilty, and kill him. But they said,
Not on the feast day, lest there be an uproar among the people. (Matthew
26.3-5) The Sanhedrin had been mad at Jesus for a long time. For over a
year they had been tacitly fomenting mob violence against Him. But when Lazarus
was indisputably resurrected from the dead just two miles outside of Jerusalem
a month ago they began to be more than mad at Christ – they began to fear Him
as a political threat. (John 11.48) Then,
to add insult to injury, Jesus shows up on Monday morning and ruins their best
money making week of the year by wreaking havoc in the Bazaars of Annas. (see Life of Christ 149) They were mad at Him already and wanted to do away with Him. Then they
got frightened for their political future. Then He again attacked them in the
pocketbook. Now they have reached their breaking point.
The Sanhedrin, however,
faced two problems in doing away with Jesus. First, they did not have the legal
authority to execute someone; only Rome did. Second, they were afraid of the
reaction of the common people packed into Jerusalem. They needed a way to solve
both of these problems and they found it in the person of Judas Iscariot.
Judas solved their legal
dilemma (or at least they thought he did). In Dwight Pentecost's excellent book
on the life of Christ he discusses this aspect:
Judas agreed to fulfill a point of Roman law, a necessary requirement
if the Sanhedrin was to proceed with their plot to execute Christ. A person
could not be brought to trial before a Roman court until an indictment had been
officially lodged against him, charging him with a crime. This indictment had
to be signed by witnesses who, by signing the indictment, agreed to appear in
order to give testimony for the prosecution against the accused. Thus Judas
offered himself as a witness against Christ. He agreed to go before the Roman
courts when Christ was brought to trial on a yet undetermined charge.
Not only that, but Judas
also agreed to find a way to solve their publicity dilemma:
Luke 22.3 Then entered Satan into Judas surnamed
Iscariot, being of the number of the twelve.
4
And he went his way, and communed with the chief priests and captains,
how he might betray him unto them.
5
And they were glad, and covenanted to give him money.
6
And he promised, and sought opportunity to betray him unto them in the
absence of the multitude.
Now let us turn from
examining the thinking of the Sanhedrin to examining the thinking of Judas. Last
Friday night after arriving in Bethany a special dinner was held for Jesus.
(see Life of Christ 145) The story is placed parenthetically in Matthew 26 to explain some of the reason for Judas' resentment. But
I believe the actual root of Judas' discontentment with Christ goes further
back than the previous Friday. Judas had long ago been chosen to help the group
in administering its finances. He must have had some gifting in this area. A
gifting implies a desire and there is only a short step from a gifting with
desire to ambition. In my opinion, Judas latched onto Jesus because Judas was
ambitious. He thought Jesus was going places – a throne – and Judas wanted to
be right beside Him when it happened. Scripture shows us that thoughts of their
place in the future kingdom were much on the minds of the Apostles on numerous
occasions.
We know from our study
of Jesus' life that He initially experienced a time of great popular enthusiasm
especially in Galilee. Judas had watched that fade away and perhaps in his mind
he placed the blame for that on Jesus Himself. John the Baptist had been
beheaded and Jesus had done nothing about it except to run away. Jesus often
seemed to flee, whether from confrontation or attempts to make Him king. Jesus
chose not to publicly declare His claims on numerous occasions. Jesus refused
to miracles in situations in which they would have been greatly advantageous.
Jesus did nothing to defuse the growing animosity of Israel's religious
leadership. Lately, He had often been referring to the morbid subject of His
own death.
In the other Apostles
this same deteriorating course of events led to a strengthening of their faith.
Jesus at one point (John 6) asks His
disciples if they would also go away and abandon Him like everyone else. Peter
answers wonderfully, To whom shall we go?
Thou hast the words of eternal life. Yet the same circumstances that
increase one person's faith doom another's and this was the case with Judas
Iscariot.
We see Judas completely
unmasked in contrast with Mary during the Friday night supper referenced in Matthew 26. Her discernment, deep
sorrow, and obvious love for Christ stand in stark relief to Judas' selfishness,
covetousness, and hypocrisy. Since then the situation, from Judas' perspective,
has only worsened. Jesus had a weird depressed thing going on during the
Triumphal Entry. Jesus completely failed to capitalize on that great moment of
popular enthusiasm. The next day He unnecessarily aggravated the authorities by
cleansing the Temple again. All morning today (Tuesday) He had bickered with
the powers that be in the Temple. Then, in the afternoon on the Mount of
Olives, it had been all doom and gloom and the end of the world. Satan, sensing
his time had come, takes possession of a Judas who had gradually brought
himself to such a place of spiritual emptiness.
The Pact of Judas, Barna de Siena, 1350 |
I cannot leave this
awful scene in the Passion week without mentioning one application. Our heart
can turn to wickedness even in the best of surroundings. For three years Judas
Iscariot lived in close proximity with Jesus. And the result was awful. A
thousand years before Christ Solomon said, I
was almost in all evil in the midst of the congregation and assembly. (Proverbs
5.14) You can surround yourself with the best of friends, insert yourself
into a church on fire for the Lord, and vigorously protect what enters your
eyes and ears – but if you do not guard your heart wickedness will find you
anyway. It grows in all of us and the crowd we run with cannot protect us from
a bad heart.
It is absolutely
astounding to think of what depths Judas sank in relation to his close
proximity with Jesus. No man has ever gone so low in hell from being so close
to Heaven. Indeed, the distance between where he was and could have been and
where he is now is greater than that of any other person in human history.
…and there, but for the grace of God,
go you and I. Beloved, let us never forget it.
Thursday, November 20, 2014
The Olivet Discourse, Applied
Life of Christ 161
It is Tuesday afternoon.
Jesus will die tomorrow afternoon. He and His Apostles are sitting on the Mount
of Olives discussing the end of the world. Literally. From this story (Matthew
24 and 25) known as the Olivet Discourse I offer you three brief observations.
First, the best thing to
do with the Tribulation period is to skip it.
Mat 24. 21 For then shall be great tribulation, such as
was not since the beginning of the world to this time, no, nor ever shall be.
22
And except those days should be shortened, there should no flesh be
saved: but for the elect’s sake those days shall be shortened.
Several years ago I
studied the book of Revelation extensively. The majority of it covers the
events of that awful seven year period. A quick survey reveals John discussing
the following list of events during this time: -the four horseman of the
apocalypse (the antichrist, war, famine, death), together they kill ¼ of
humanity; -millions will get saved after the Rapture and millions will then be
martyred; -God will show His face to earth (earthquakes, a blackened sun, a
reddened moon, and falling stars will follow); -one third of everything green
will be burned up; -one third of the sea will turn to blood; -one third of fish
will die; -one third of ships will be destroyed; -one third of fresh water will
be poisoned; -a demonic scorpion swarm will be released from hell, it will
target a different city for 150 nights; -an army of 200 million demons will
slaughter humanity by the billions for exactly 391 days and one hour; -open war
breaks out on Earth between Satan and God; -all must worship the antichrist and
receive the mark of the beast; -this mark must be accepted in order to buy or
sell anything; -sores fall on those who receive the mark; -the rest of the
oceans turn to blood; -the rest of the flowing fresh water becomes undrinkable;
-the sun becomes exponentially hotter; -an unnatural darkness covers the
beast's capitol city; -the biggest earthquake in world history occurs; -the
great city Babylon is smashed to bits; -…and then comes the enormous slaughter
known as Armageddon.
I say again, the best
thing to do with the Tribulation period is to skip it. You do not want to be on
Earth. How do you skip it? By casting yourself in faith at the feet of Jesus
and pleading for mercy now. Do not wait. Make sure you are saved now.
Second, we ought to
always be looking for the Second Coming.
Matthew 24.42 Watch therefore: for ye know not what hour
your Lord doth come.
43
But know this, that if the goodman of the house had known in what watch
the thief would come, he would have watched, and would not have suffered his
house to be broken up.
44
Therefore be ye also ready: for in such an hour as ye think not the Son
of man cometh.
…
Matthew 25. 13 Watch therefore, for ye know neither the day
nor the hour wherein the Son of man cometh.
For us, as the Church,
this all begins with the Rapture prior to the Tribulation period. And there is
no warning. It is imminent. We are to think of it and look for it constantly.
God designed it this way specifically so that in so doing we will adjust our
lives accordingly in holiness.
Third, let us make good
use while we can of the talents God has given us. Scripture shows us that
rewards come for those using their talents in His service (Matthew 25.19-21)
and judgment comes on those who do not. Every person reading this has God-given
talents. You also have a God-given choice – serve yourself and your own agenda
or serve Him. By all means, do not put off this decision. He could literally
come at any moment.
He is coming back. This is just as sure of a fact as
that He came the first time. It will be much better to be coming back with Him
than to be on Earth. And it will be much better to have served Him than to have
served yourself.
Beloved, let us live in
the light of the Second Coming. Let us serve God while time remains. Let us
trust that He is coming no matter how badly things may look at the moment.
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