15 June 2025

Speaking Divine Truth

I am blessed and encouraged by Christians who are intelligent, gracious apologists who take an unapologetic stand on the truth of God's word.  Exploring perspectives and beliefs personally can be beneficial, and God can use these interactions to draw people to Himself.  As we are led by the Holy Spirit, we are Christ's ambassadors to bring the message of reconciliation of sinners to God through the Gospel.  It is important we emphasise the Gospel is not our opinion or view in a sea of options, but Jesus Christ is the exclusive way to eternal life, the Truth in a world of error.  Spurgeon made this point very well in a sermon titled "Gospel Missions," that the divine revelation aspect of our Christian faith can be neglected:
"...I conceive that a great mistake has been made in not affirming the divinity of our mission, and standing fast by the truth, as being a revelation, not to be proved by men, but to be believed; always holding out this:  "He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved; he that believeth not shall be damned."  I am often grieved when I read of our missionaries holding disputes with the Brahmins; and it is somethings said that the missionary has beaten the Brahmin because he kept his temper, and so the gospel had gained great honour by the dispute.  I take it, that the gospel was lowered by the controversy.  I think the missionary should say:  "I am come to tell you something which the one God of heaven and earth hath said, and I tell you, before I announce it, that if you believe it you shall be saved, and if not you shall be damned.  I am come to tell you that Jesus Christ, the Son of God, became flesh to die for poor unworthy man, that through his mediation, and death, and suffering the people of God might be delivered.  Now, if you will listen to me, you shall hear the word of God: if you do not, I shake the dust off my feet against you, and go somewhere else.

Look at the history of every imposture; it shows that the claim of authority insures a great degree of progress.  How did Mahommed come to have so strong a religion in his time?  He was all alone, and he went into the market-place and said, "I have received a revelation from heaven."  It was a lie, but he persuaded men to believe it.  He said, "I have a revelation from heaven."  People looked at his face; they saw that he looked upon them earnestly as believing what he said, and some five or six of them joined him.  Did he prove what he said?  Not he.  "You must," he said, "believe what I say, or there is no Paradise for you."  There is a power in that kind of thing; and wherever he went his statement was believed, not on the ground of his reasoning, but on his authority, which he declared to be from Allah; and, in a century after he first proclaimed his imposture, a thousand sabres had flashed from a thousand sheathes, and his word had been proclaimed through Africa, Turkey, Asia, and even in Spain.  The man proclaimed authority,--he claimed divinity; therefore he had power.  Take, again, the increase of Mormonism.  What has been its strength?  Simply this,--the assertion of power from heaven.  That claim is made, and the people believe it, and now they have missionaries in almost every country of the habitable globe, and the book of Mormon is translated into many languages.  Though there never could be a delusion more transparent, or a counterfeit less skilful and more lying upon the very surface, yet this simple pretension to power has been the means of carrying power with it.

Now, my brethren, we have power; we are God's ministers; we preach God's truth; the great judge of heaven and earth has told us the truth, and what have we to do to dispute with worms of the dust?  Why should we tremble and fear them?  Let us stand out and say:  "We are the servants of the living God; we tell unto you what God has told us, and we warn you, if you reject our testimony, it shall be better for Tyre and Sidon in the day of judgment than for you."  If the people cast that away, we have done our work.  We have nothing to do with making them believe; ours is to testify of Christ everywhere, to preach and proclaim the gospel to all men." (Spurgeon, Charles Haddon. Spurgeon’s Sermons: V. 1-2. Baker Books, 2004. pages 333-335)

14 June 2025

Praying for Peace

It is biblical to pray for the peace of Jerusalem.  Psalm 122:6-9 says, "Pray for the peace of Jerusalem: "May they prosper who love you. 7 Peace be within your walls, prosperity within your palaces." 8 For the sake of my brethren and companions, I will now say, "Peace be within you." 9 Because of the house of the LORD our God I will seek your good."  There may be some who pray for the peace of Jerusalem because they want prosperity, but Christians are to pray for the peace of Jerusalem because Jesus is our peace.  While no temple to God stands in Israel today, Christians stand by God's grace as His chosen habitation, the temple of the Holy Spirit by the Gospel.

The prayers of God's people ought not to be limited by the boundaries of the Old City of Jerusalem, but we can expand our range to include the cities of people who could be viewed as enemies of Israel.  Paul wrote in 1 Timothy 2:1-2, "Therefore I exhort first of all that supplications, prayers, intercessions, and giving of thanks be made for all men, 2 for kings and all who are in authority, that we may lead a quiet and peaceable life in all godliness and reverence."  Jesus came to the world with peace and goodwill for all men, and this includes the people of Gaza as well as Iran.  By faith in God who is righteous, just and gracious, God's people ought to pray for the leaders of Israel and well as Iran in the midst of conflict.  Both countries are filled with people God loves and Jesus died to save, and Jesus taught His disciples to love their enemies and to pray for them.  Having been commanded by our Saviour to turn the other cheek, even when a missile inflicts casualties on our land we can pray for the peace of those responsible for launching it.

When Jesus was crucified between two condemned criminals, He extended grace to those who scorned and killed Him in Luke 23:34:  "Then Jesus said, "Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they do." And they divided His garments and cast lots."  In one sense, the Roman soldiers who crucified Jesus knew very well what they were doing.  They had been given orders, and they carried them out efficiently and effectively.  They had learned the clothing of their victims was their spoil, and they had a system organised to ensure fair distribution amongst themselves.  On the other hand, these men did not realise who it was they stripped and nailed to the cross--even though they affixed the sign over His head that read, "King of the Jews" in three languages.  They did not comprehend Jesus was the Son of God and the atrocity they committed in complying with orders they were given.  It was just another day at the office for them, yet Jesus was no common criminal.

Jesus did not limit God's forgiveness to the ignorant but extended it to men like Saul of Tarsus who sought to incarcerate and execute Christians:  He offers grace, forgiveness and salvation to all people through the Gospel.  Since God is not willing any should perish but that all should come to repentance and be saved, we ought to pray for both the victim and the aggressor, the ones shooting and those who are shot.  We should look with compassion upon the Israelis and Persians caught up in awful violence, to seek God for their good that each one would experience peace within them by faith in Jesus Christ.  Because Jesus is our peace, we can pray for peace with genuine compassion and love without discrimination.  This kind of love is what sets Jesus apart from every other person, ruler and government.  Jesus is the almighty God, and He employs His strength and power to love.

13 June 2025

Blessing of Affliction

Last night at Bible study the passage was Psalm 73, a song of Asaph that describes his struggle with how the wicked seemed to prosper and the envy this stirred within him.  He wrestled with God's grace of blessing the wicked who ought to be punished (in Asaph's mind), and that compared to him they did not seem to suffer.  His legalistic mindset bucked against the grace of God that seemed to reward bad behaviour and repay God's faithful followers with affliction.

It was when Asaph sought the LORD in His temple that he received insight from God in Psalm 73:16-19:  "When I thought how to understand this, it was too painful for me--17 until I went into the sanctuary of God; then I understood their end. 18 Surely You set them in slippery places; You cast them down to destruction. 19 Oh, how they are brought to desolation, as in a moment! They are utterly consumed with terrors."  As Asaph turned his eyes from the prosperity of the wicked and his own suffering and looked to God, he realised the happiness and security of the wicked was a mirage, an illusion that disappeared in an instant.  The wealth and riches of God's enemies was incapable of helping or delivering them from ruin.  Having wealth, money, power and fame did nothing to help avoid coming judgment by the holy God of Israel.

As Asaph was in the temple, he likely saw people leading animals to be slain as sacrifices and burn offerings to the LORD in obedience to the Law of Moses.  These animals resembled his view of the wicked, that they were well-fed, without blemish or fear of death.  They were used to being catered to and enjoyed the best life had to offer.  Their prosperity only fattened them up to be killed.  The owner of an ox, ram or lamb was not cruel to feed and protect their animals without blemish, and God is not cruel to give a man more than he can wish.  God graciously supplies good things to all people, even His enemies, and He will hold all accountable to acknowledge Him as the Creator and giver of all things.  Being well-fed, having a life free of hard labour, conditioned to expect prosperity to always increase, set people up for a shock when God required their souls.  Those who reject Jesus Christ will be brought to certain destruction, and it is only a matter of time.

The news recently has reported missile bombardments raining death and destruction in Israel and Iran, and also there has been a shocking tragedy of a plane crash in India that resulted in deaths of passengers and civilians.  On a daily basis, countless people wake up never realising it would be their last day alive.  Being envious of those who are prosperous leaves us without satisfaction and gratitude we have when we look to God who comforts, provides, protects and saves.  In Christ, we are able to look Death in the face without fear and worry because we died with Christ, and our lives are hid with Christ in God (Col. 3:1-4).  Christians, having been raised to new life by Jesus, are called to seek those things which are above, where Christ is, setting our affections on Him and on what will endure.  Life on earth is short, time is precious, but Jesus is infinitely more important and valuable.  May our eyes be opened as Asaph's were, to recognise the blessing of current suffering for sin that prompts us to seek a Saviour than to live in the lap of luxury and be lost forever.

11 June 2025

Christ the KING

Perhaps out of envy and pride, there are some who characterise God as a cruel authoritarian, labelling Him a tyrant because He has all power.  But if God truly was cruel and intolerant, why would He create people He gives the freedom to oppose, rebel and hate Him?  Why would He choose to freely put on human flesh, suffer and die so sinners could be saved and reconciled to Himself?  Because God is loving, His will is that none would perish but all come to repentance.  All who perish will do so justly, and all who are saved is due to receiving His grace by faith in Christ.

There is an opposite error to the "cruel ogre" caricature of God by those who despise Him, and it is often perpetuated by professing Christians who view God as a grandfatherly pacifist who ignores the folly in his grandchildren he dotes upon.  Their view of God ignores what they feel are uncomfortable subjects like holiness, justice and eternal condemnation.  The picture of Jesus returning to earth in the future riding a white war horse wearing a robe dipped in blood clashes with their preferred subject matter of Jesus healing the sick and holding infants in His arms to bless them:  meek, mild, never raising His voice, with a touch so gentle and comfort so serene judgment and condemnation seem foreign to His nature.

Let us not forget Jesus is the KING OF KINGS, the almighty sovereign who rules over all He has created.  The power and authority of earthly kings are merely a shadow of God's power He wields forever as LORD over all.  His first coming revealed Jesus as the servant of all, the Good Shepherd of the sheep who sought to save the lost, and His second coming will reveal another side of Him as He rules with a rod of iron.  Anyone who thinks Jesus is soft and squeamish concerning punishing His enemies who hate Him--think again.  Jesus has always been more than a "nice guy" with polite manners as we would frame Him in our own image:  He alone is God, and we have been created by Him and for Him.  Every person God has created and given the gift of life with the myriad of blessings that only come from Him, He will hold to account for their accepting Him or having adversarial judgments of Him.

Jesus spoke a parable about a man who received for himself a kingdom, and then the king went to a distant land with a promise to return.  He gave each of his 10 servants an equal amount of money to invest while he was away.  Luke 19:14 says, "But his citizens hated him, and sent a delegation after him, saying, 'We will not have this man to reign over us.'"  The king's citizens did not acknowledge their king or that he had any authority over them.  Upon the return of the king, he settled accounts with his servants and gave those who were faithful to do the task he committed to them greater responsibilities based upon their ability.  The conclusion of the parable must have been sobering to those who hated and rejected Jesus the Son of God in Luke 19:27:  "But bring here those enemies of mine, who did not want me to reign over them, and slay them before me.'"  Upon Christ's return, He will settle accounts both with His servants by rewarding them--as well as destroying His enemies who refused His rule.  In the end, all people will bow before Jesus:  some in worship, and others in death.

God's will is for all people to be reconciled to Him as Paul wrote to believers in 2 Corinthians 5:20-6:2:  "Now then, we are ambassadors for Christ, as though God were pleading through us: we implore you on Christ's behalf, be reconciled to God. 21 For He made Him who knew no sin to be sin for us, that we might become the righteousness of God in Him. 1 We then, as workers together with Him also plead with you not to receive the grace of God in vain. 2 For He says: "In an acceptable time I have heard you, and in the day of salvation I have helped you." Behold, now is the accepted time; behold, now is the day of salvation."  God calls believers to declare His glory among the heathen, and of all people Christians ought to have understanding concerning God's nature, character and power.  Today is the day to be saved; today is the day to be reconciled to God by faith in Christ.

Let us be faithful to do as it is written in Psalm 96:9-10:  "Oh, worship the LORD in the beauty of holiness! Tremble before Him, all the earth. 10 Say among the nations, "The LORD reigns; the world also is firmly established, it shall not be moved; He shall judge the peoples righteously."