Showing posts with label John 8. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John 8. Show all posts
Monday, August 27, 2018
Patrick Hawthorne's "Has the Separation Begun ?"
Sometimes it takes me a loooooong time to see simple things. Sometimes I even need some help.
Patrick Hawthorne, a blogger in Shreveport whom I sometimes read, helped me with this one in his post "Has the Separation Begun ?" (https://servinggrace.com/2017/10/13/has-the-separation-begun/)
Even so, I had to read it twice to get it: once last year when he posted it, and then this week, when God again (after He'd given me a year's more instruction) highlighted it again.
Patrick's scripture was Ephesians 5:27: “…that He might present her to Himself a glorious church, not having spot or wrinkle or any such thing, but that she should be holy and without blemish.”
Actually, I should say Patrick's mom helped me, as she helped him, to an understanding. When he was discussing that scripture with her, she (paraphrased) asked him, “Did you know that the spots and blemishes of the Church are people?" and directed him to II Peter 2:12-13:
“But these, like natural brute beasts made to be caught and destroyed, speak evil of the things they do not understand, and will utterly perish in their own corruption, and will receive the wages of unrighteousness, as those who count it pleasure to carouse in the daytime. They are spots and blemishes, carousing in their own deceptions while they feast with you..."
When the Church is presented to Jesus as His Bride, she will have no spots or wrinkles: the corrupt and deceived people who had attached themselves to the Church will have been removed.
I can't think of any scriptures that more clearly point to the "dividing" of the Church that God's had me meditating on. The spots and blemishes are people currently in the Church, who will be removed from the Church. The people of the Church will be divided: some will stay, and some will go.
In his graciousness, I doubt God will drive out those who leave, anymore than He condemns people to hell. As C.S. Lewis wrote in The Great Divorce, "There are only two kinds of people in the end: those who say to God, 'Thy will be done,' and those to whom God says, in the end, 'Thy will be done.' All that are in Hell, choose it."
I have to think the "spots and blemishes" God removes from the Church will similarly choose it for themselves. I have to think the evil-speaking, corrupt, carousers and deceivers, the unrighteous who presently infest the Church will...by God's will, and with His affirmation...willfully separate themselves from the Church.
So it was in Jesus' earthly ministry: He had to deal with people who were "spots and blemishes" among those "who had believed Him" (John 8:31-59). There was no angry command that they "Get out!!," and no need for the whip He had used earlier on the money-changers in the Temple. He simply revealed what was in their own hearts, for that was what made them "spots and blemishes."
Jesus said their hearts showed satan was their father: that their love of lies and murder was proof they were satan's own (v. 44). By the end of the conversation, they had angrily rejected Him, rained insults on Him, and were ready to kill Him...which was exactly what He'd said was in their hearts.
Ideally, those who who are the "spots and blemishes" on the Church today would similarly find themselves uncomfortable (at the very the least) among people who follow Jesus because they love Him and want to hear His words. When He says that satan is "the father of lies" and "the murderer," and that those who are satan's children show it by their love satan's ways, how could they not realize He sees, and is revealing, their hearts ? Doesn't Jesus' word, like His sight, still pierce to men's hearts ?
But the "spots and blemishes" among us feel entirely comfortable in today's political "Church." Why should they leave ? Their love for lies and murder (which Jesus defines in Matthew 5:21-2 as angry contempt for others) are acceptable among many: are indeed laudable marks of loyalty to the liars and murderers whom the political "Church" follows.
The people whom Jesus recognized as "spots and blemishes" will be cleansed from the Church of which He is the Head. I can only expect...and hope...that a "Church" like today's in America, so completely turned from Christ that it embraces the ways of the enemy, is due a very great cleansing.
I hope any readers who have been carried by their politics into satan's anti-Church will examine their hearts, and turn back to the Church God is preparing His Son, holy, and without blemish.
"He who testifies to these things says, 'Yes, I am coming quickly.' Amen. Come, Lord Jesus."
(Revelation 22:20.)
Friday, June 15, 2018
anti-Christ Today: Beyond Speculation
Speculation about some world-figure being the
anti-Christ is usually misguided: and indeed, intentionally misleading. It's point is usually to "prove" that some world-figure, whose politics are contrary to those of the self-appointed "prophet'," is the person scripture calls "anti-Christ." Satan loves nothing better than that we vigilantly watch for his approach, in a direction he's not coming.
I heard enough of such speculation from my "conservative" family to have become skeptical of it, long ago. The first world-figure I heard them claiming was anti-Christ was John F. Kennedy. But a few years later, they were convinced that Richard Nixon was a man who'd done nothing wrong, brought down by his enemies' lies. That level of misdirecting political "discernment" remains characteristic of "conservatives" and their Christian "prophets."
I'm myself convinced that anti-Christ is pre-eminently a spiritual figure, and will only be recognized by spiritual discernment...and only at the time God is pleased to reveal him to the faithfully spiritually-discerning. "Discerning" him by one's politics has to be the greatest self-delusion there could be: and inevitably misleading to all who accept it..
I heard enough of such speculation from my "conservative" family to have become skeptical of it, long ago. The first world-figure I heard them claiming was anti-Christ was John F. Kennedy. But a few years later, they were convinced that Richard Nixon was a man who'd done nothing wrong, brought down by his enemies' lies. That level of misdirecting political "discernment" remains characteristic of "conservatives" and their Christian "prophets."
I'm myself convinced that anti-Christ is pre-eminently a spiritual figure, and will only be recognized by spiritual discernment...and only at the time God is pleased to reveal him to the faithfully spiritually-discerning. "Discerning" him by one's politics has to be the greatest self-delusion there could be: and inevitably misleading to all who accept it..
But there's substance and reason for talking about the Anti-Christ: the Bible clearly tells us definite facts about him. That much is beyond speculation. Revelation13 and 17, for example, say satan will give him "authority," and that he will direct the "kings of the earth" in battle. It's therefore clear that the Anti-Christ will be a person of world-stature and fame, with worldly political power and influence.
It's misguided to interpret him, and end-time
events, by politics, as most speculation about the Anti-Christ does. It's entirely
wise, however, and obedience to Jesus' command to "the crowds" in
Luke 12:54-56, to analyze "the times"...including political events
and figures...by the discernment the Spirit gives us.
In that discernment we probably should understand that the definitive spiritual fact about the Anti-Christ is that he will be the embodiment of satan's spirit, as Jesus was
of His Father's Spirit. And God has
attested to us some truths about the spirit of satan.
Pride may be satan's greatest characteristic. The "taunt against the King of
Babylon" in Isaiah 14 is generally understood to be addressed to
satan. It quotes him as saying "‘I
will ascend to heaven; I will raise my throne above the stars of God...I will
make myself like the Most High" (vv. 13-14). If this scripture attests that willful self-pride was satan's own "original
sin:" we should probably expect it will be a prominent characteristic of
his "son," the Anti-Christ.
Similarly, the two characteristics Jesus singles out as
showing that spiritual paternity in those He's confronting in John 8:31-47 are
"lies" and "murder."
As I've mentioned before, I think we have to understand Jesus' mention
of "murder" here by His definition of murder in Matthew 5:21-22:
hateful contempt for others. (It's worth
noting that He finds these spiritual characteristics of satan in people
"who had believed him," v. 31. We should therefore probably consider it possible the same could happen in our time.)
Does honest spiritual discernment call to mind any current world-figures whose
manifest character is pre-eminently what scripture says is satan's character:
willful pride, lies, and angry contempt for others ? I'm sure there's always been some degree of
pride, lies and violent hatred in the character of most world-leaders...and probably in almost all human beings. But those are manifestly
the character of the current American president to a degree never seen before
The politically-minded can take the above comments as scripture-twisting for political
purposes. The politically-minded, of course, inevitably perceive all things as political. But if what I've said above is straightforward affirmation of what scripture says, as is my intention, I'd hope readers will meditate on what
scripture says. The spirit of satan is the spirit of anti-Christ.
Scripture says more.
John wrote that "...just as you heard that antichrist is coming, even now many antichrists have appeared; from this we know that it is the last hour" (I John 2:18). If it was "the last hour" in John's time, our time, 2000 years later, is all the more "the last hour." If the appearance of "many antichrists" was the notable spiritual event of John's time, we should expect there will be all the more "antichrists" in our time. As Jesus is the Elder Brother among God's many children, so is Anti-Christ among satan's many children.
So I am not here identifying the current president as the Anti-Christ. Clearly he manifests satan's spirit, and satan's spirit is the spirit of the Anti-Christ. But satan's spirit is manifestly the spirit of all the "many antichrists" active in the world. And there are scriptural reasons to believe the current president is not THE Anti-Christ.
John wrote that "...just as you heard that antichrist is coming, even now many antichrists have appeared; from this we know that it is the last hour" (I John 2:18). If it was "the last hour" in John's time, our time, 2000 years later, is all the more "the last hour." If the appearance of "many antichrists" was the notable spiritual event of John's time, we should expect there will be all the more "antichrists" in our time. As Jesus is the Elder Brother among God's many children, so is Anti-Christ among satan's many children.
So I am not here identifying the current president as the Anti-Christ. Clearly he manifests satan's spirit, and satan's spirit is the spirit of the Anti-Christ. But satan's spirit is manifestly the spirit of all the "many antichrists" active in the world. And there are scriptural reasons to believe the current president is not THE Anti-Christ.
If Jesus' words about "false Christs" and
"false prophets" apply to the Anti-Christ...and surely they do, since he
is THE epitome of both...it would seem the Anti-Christ will be a world-leader
"slick" enough "...to mislead, if possible, even the elect"
(Matthew 24:24). It's doubtful anyone
who looks at the current president without political blinders can find him
credible (plausibly "slick") in the least. He has thus far been notably unsuccessful in misleading many Americans, and even less so world-citizens.
The caveat is that spiritual deception can trump natural commonsense. We've seen that happen with the current president's followers, including many Christians. With satan's maximum power of deception behind him, perhaps the Anti-Christ will not need even a fig-leaf of credibility to cover his naked lies.
The caveat is that spiritual deception can trump natural commonsense. We've seen that happen with the current president's followers, including many Christians. With satan's maximum power of deception behind him, perhaps the Anti-Christ will not need even a fig-leaf of credibility to cover his naked lies.
But the greatest scriptural objection to identifying the current president as the Anti-Christ is that, to this point in time, he has not made war on the
saints, as scripture tells us the Anti-Christ will (Daniel 7:21 and Revelation
13:7). In part that's been a political calculation: many
Christians are part of the current president's political "base;" hardcore followers whom he
doesn't want to alienate. It makes sense that neither he, nor the Anti-Christ, would attack those who willingly idolize, agree with, and follow him.
But this is a time which consequently demands our maximum Spiritual discernment, day by day, as events rapidly unfold. I'm particularly watching the current president's response now that some
Christians are speaking out against his policies (or rather whims) which
contradict Jesus' teachings. This week some
Christian leaders have made fairly strong statements on that basis against his policy of
separating the children of asylum-seekers and illegal immigrants from their families. I don't find it at all hard to believe
that if his wishes were thwarted a time or two by people speaking up for Jesus' teachings, the current president could easily become a violently implacable enemy of anyone who spoke up for Jesus' teachings.
We've all seen that's how the current president "wars" on anyone he considers an "enemy:" Democrats, James Comey, Hilary, John McCain and other members of his own party who disagree with him, "the lying media," Rosie O'Donnell, Obama...the list is endless. If he came to regard those who spoke up for Jesus' teachings as "enemies," it's not at all hard to believe he would use every means at his disposal to destroy those saints: though undoubtedly Christians who remained part of his political "base" would be safe from his wrath.
I titled this post as being "beyond speculation," but obviously the last paragraphs are speculative; near-future events in the
realm of possibility, but not yet reality.
That said, I'd urge readers to be rigorously spiritually-discerning of the current president in all his future pronouncements and deeds, especially toward those who publicly advocate Jesus' teachings.
Monday, March 12, 2018
Being Misunderstood
Nothing infuriates me more than being misunderstood.
I know that "understanding" is the other person's job. If I say what I mean as clearly as I can, that's all that I can do, or be expected to do. I can't "understand" for someone else.
My problem (and it is my problem) is thinking that if I explain things again, in a slightly different way, the person I'm talking to will be able to "get it." And if they don't, maybe another try, from a different angle, will get across to them what I'm saying. In library-school terms, I tend to "re-package" information to make it "accessible" to the "consumer."
But I know that amounts to trying to make another person understand, which isn't in my control. And it always has something of manipulation to it, when you try to make another person's cognitive processes work the way you want them to.
That kind of "manipulation" isn't always a bad thing. Anyone who teaches (formally or informally) is manipulating another person's cognitive processes, to a desired end. It's the process we call "learning," and human society could not exist without it.
And anyone who has ever tried to teach another person something, formally or informally, knows that there are people who simply don't will to, or even consciously will NOT to, learn. Many times the frustration of talking to people who "don't get it" is that they clearly don't want to understand, or want to "understand" only in their own terms.
Yesterday in Sunday School we were talking (after watching a rather "pious," in the not-best sense, Max Lucado film about the resurrection) about forgiveness. That isn't it wonderful God forgives us; and doesn't He command us to forgive each other; and how many times did Jesus say we should forgive others ?
My thought was that forgiving people who do wrong is one thing: but that there are people who are wrong. That forgiveness is redemptive toward those who recognize right and wrong, and can see that they've done wrong; but wasted toward those who vest their identity in wrong character.
In John 8 Jesus confronted some of "...those...who had believed Him," telling them they were children of the devil, because they wanted to lie and murder, just like their father. In II Thessalonians 2 God says He eventually writes off those who persist in refusing to "...receive the love of the truth so as to be saved:" and at that point Himself sends them a "deluding influence" ("strong delusion," KJV) so they will believe a lie.
Obviously none of us manifest Jesus' "seamless" Character (Lucado talked at great length about how Jesus' seamless garment was like His Character)...but people unmistakably show what they are by whether they love truth, or love lies.
One gal in the class disagreed, as she has before, by saying people had certainly fooled her before. Which is true, for any of us. People have certainly fooled me before.
But it seemed to miss my point, which was that everyone is unmistakably of one character or the other. The way God sees it is that human beings are either of the spirit of truth, or that of lies. We have to say God sees it rightly...and we have to see it the way He does. That simple.
It also seems simple to do. We have the Holy Spirit, Whom Jesus called "the Spirit of Truth:" we only need to listen to Him to see it as God sees it. And to hear what He says, we only need to ask Him.
What I replied to my sister was something like "The Holy Spirit doesn't get fooled." I didn't mean it that way, but thought later she may have taken that as a put-down: that she wasn't spiritual enough. She may have even taken it as "I'm spiritual, and you're not," and been offended. I don't know.
I doubt she's one of those people who choose to misunderstand, because they don't want to hear what you're saying: but I think she misunderstood. She was talking about person-to-person perception, and I wasn't. There can only be understanding when two people are talking about the same thing.
Nonetheless, it was frustrating to be misunderstood. Quite apart from the fact I felt like I was saying something important about how God sees things, and how we must see things, it was frustrating on a person-to-person level.
Frustrating that I said what I meant as clearly as I could, and it evidently didn't get across to people. Frustrating that people will "understand" my words the way they choose to, and I can't do anything about it.
Frustrating that my sister may have been offended because of the way she "understood" my words, and if so, there's nothing I can do about that either. If offended, I hope she'll remember that our context was God's command we forgive each other.
Wednesday, December 21, 2016
Slavery, Lies...and FREEDOM
To the Jews who had believed him, Jesus said, "If you hold to my teaching, you are really my disciples. Then you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.” They answered him, “We are Abraham’s descendants and have never been slaves of anyone. How can you say that we shall be set free?” Jesus replied, “Very truly I tell you, everyone who sins is a slave to sin. Now a slave has no permanent place in the family, but a son belongs to it forever. So if the Son sets you free, you will be free indeed. I know that you are Abraham’s descendants; yet you seek to kill Me, because My word has no place in you. I speak the things which I have seen with My Father; therefore you also do the things which you heard from your father . . .
Why do you not understand what I am saying? It is because you cannot hear My word. You are of your father the devil, and you want to do the desires of your father. He was a murderer from the beginning, and does not stand in the truth because there is no truth in him. Whenever he speaks a lie, he speaks from his own nature, for he is a liar and the father of lies." (John 8:31-38, 43-44)
I have been hearing from God for some months that He will be setting free many of His people. I came to this scripture-passage to look at what He says about slavery. It's necessary to understand with God's understanding what slavery truly is, to know what God rescues us from . . . and how we got ourselves into that situation..
Jesus tells it, both sides. Sin makes you a slave. Truth will set you free. That simple.
The Jews listening to Him..."Jews who had believed Him"...are greatly offended. They say slavery and freedom are existential: a matter of who they are because of their patrimony.
Yes, says Jesus: your spiritual patrimony. I speak My Father's words. If you cannot hear His Truth, it's because your spiritual family-heritage is directly from "the father of lies."
This is very bad news for today's "post-truth" Christians. Some are no doubt sincere in saying they believe in Jesus: they just don't want to believe "The Truth"...and that's Who He said He IS. Their spiritual patrimony is manifest, that they "want to do the desires of [their] father" (my emphasis). They show who they really believe, and who they really are, by their violent hatred, and their lies.
Lies are sin: an especially definitive sin, since Jesus says that is the very nature of satan, who is the source of all lies. Lies are also very much the definitive political sin. American Christians are, and have long been, enslaved by that political sin. Christians are, have long been, persuaded by lies to unthinkingly do the (political) will of others: and that is the definition of slavery.
Jesus says knowing Truth will set us free. God is now promising us "FREEDOM !!" I believe Him; and I understand Him to mean He will set many free from their political slavery, to political lies. I'm confident He will open the eyes of all whose hearts are truly set on Him above all else. I'm rejoicing that He will open the eyes of many to know The Truth, and The Truth will set them free.
I don't think it coincidental that God led me in this meditation today, as people prepare for the supposed "holiday" of Christ's birth upon earth. He Who identified Himself as "The Truth" still lives among us, and still sets free any who will receive Him. But in this "post-truth" year and world, He is less welcomed than ever before...even by those celebrating that He formerly came among us.
But He is still here. And He is still coming. And He will still come. And in every time and place and heart He comes, He sets free all who welcome Him.
HALLELUJAH !! Come, Lord Jesus !!
Saturday, December 10, 2016
More Truth
"The one who does not love does not know God, for God is love...God is love, and the one who abides in love abides in God, and God abides in him." (John 4:8, 16)
I'm thinking again about what it means when Jesus says "I AM...The Truth..." (John 14:6) That's been the core of my Christology for some years: as it SHOULD be for everyone's Christology (along with His Self-identification as "The Way" and "The Life").
I'm thinking even more about what it means that Jesus IS "The Truth," as the contrast between Himself and the "post-truth" world grows wider and more stark.
I am fully convinced (including experientially) that Jesus is God, powerful and able to do whatever He will: able even to BE an abstract noun. But it seemed one of His "hard sayings" (John 6:60, KJV); such as when He identified Himself as the "Bread" from heaven, which we must eat to "abide" in Him.
"I AM...The Truth" seems a "difficult statement" (in the NASB's translation). Most difficult of all, to understand how we can functionally identify with Him...the essence of faith.
It helped, as I studied, to see that in Greek there is a verb "to truth," used in Galatians 4:16 (translated, "tell the truth"), and Ephesians 4:15 (translated, "speak the truth"). In both cases, "truth" is an action we are exhorted to do.
But the greater understanding came in testing Jesus' words. If Jesus IS "Truth," every scriptural mention of "truth" should still make sense when His name was substituted for "truth."
It was a convincing test: and one that gave further light. "You will know Jesus, and Jesus will make you free" (John 8:32) particularly stood out. As it did that God's Spirit is repeatedly called "the Spirit of Jesus" (John 14:17, 15:26, 16:13). The clincher was that He asked the Father to sanctify us in Truth/Jesus, because "Your word is Jesus" (John 17:17).
Jesus gave us a hard saying to understand, when He told us Who He IS. But He also gave us operational understanding in which to act in identity with Who He IS.
That understanding is obvious, and simple. Those who love Jesus love truth. Those who follow Jesus, follow truth.
It's exactly analogous to what the opening scripture (above) tells us: God's identifies Himself as Love...and all who are His, love in identity with Who He IS.
By this we "test [ourselves], to see if [we] are in the faith" (II Corinthians 13:5). We can know that we "...[have] both the Father and Son" (II John 1:9) when we are "truthing in love" (Ephesians 4:15).
And by that same measure with which we measure ourselves, we can unmistakably know the "many deceivers...and the antichrist" abroad in this world (II John 1:7). They are those not merely devoid of truth and love: they actively embrace and walk in the spirit of their "father, the devil;" and Jesus said he is a murderer and a liar (John 8:44).
The deceived of today's "post-truth" world (including many "Christians") are unabashed in their desire to be ruled by unrighteousness, by love for violence and lies. But in this world of darkness, God is making His light even brighter.
To all with Spiritual eyes to see, He is today giving increasing clarity of vision...to know Him more clearly, and more fully, as "The Truth." To those who receive Him as "The Truth" He IS, He gives the power to become "sons of God"...as He IS (John 1:9).
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