Category Archives: Discipleship (the Costs)

An Eternity of Glory

This is the promise which He Himself made to us:  eternal life.  (1st John 2:25)

Eternal life … a promise made by One Who cannot lie to those who have been bought with the blood of the Lamb.  We, the redeemed of God, will never stop living.  Have you ever tried to grasp the scope of that word?  When we are 100,000,000,000,000,000,000 “years old” (so to speak), our lives in the presence of Christ will have just begun.  The zeros will just keep on accumulating.

The world is passing away, and also its lusts; but the one who does the will of God lives forever.  (1st John 2:17)

The Apostle Paul describes the eternal state as “the ages to come” (Ephesians 2:7).  Not “the age (singular) to come” but “the ages (plural) to come.”  For this word to be in the plural either means that (1) the one age in front of us is so long it will seem like many ages or that (2) the future will actually witness countless “ages.”  Either way, the redeemed are promised a forever-life!

Are you able to wrap your mind around this Truth?  I’m not.  For me, it is like trying to stretch a two-inch piece of string around the planet Jupiter.  I simply cannot fathom eternity.  But should we expect otherwise?  How can a finite mind comprehend the infinite?  Eternal life is a promise that comes from the one, true God Who, Himself, is too big for any of us to comprehend.

But there is something we must grasp … and with full conviction:  our time on this earth is very short.  Indeed, compared to eternity, our sojourn here is a speck of sand.  So, “When we’ve been there ten thousand years, bright shining as the sun,” what are we going to be really glad we did with the time we have on this earth?

  • Surely, we will be glad for every minute invested in fellowship with the Father.
  • We will be glad for every minute we used to worship Him in spirit and in Truth.
  • We will be glad for every opportunity we used to faithfully trust and obey Him.
  • And we will be glad for every opportunity we used to serve Him with our God-given abilities.

To do all of this, we have been wisely instructed:

No soldier in active service entangles himself in the affairs of everyday life, so that he may please the one who enlisted him as a soldier.  (2nd Timothy 2:4)

So, what kind of “soldiers in active service” are we?

  • Are we depending upon the Spirit of God to bring our character in alignment with the will of the Father?
  • Are we using our God-given abilities to the fullest to strengthen His people?
  • Is our purpose in life to exalt His Name … that He would be highly respected and feared and loved and honored?

Do we have this kind of perspective … one that is focused on eternity?  The fact is, the only way to live wisely in this present life is to

LIVE WITH AN ETERNAL PERSPECTIVE

Let us all be faithful to God.  Those who are have been promised to radiate – forever – the blazing glory of God.

And forever is a long, long time.

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(And now to the One) from Whom and through Whom and to Whom are all things. To Him be the glory forever.  Amen.  (Romans 11:36)

The Leaning Bale of Hay

Arrows

When I was in the 7th grade, my family lived on 11 acres of land with a large creek as one of its boundaries.  My father used this property to graze his small herds of Black Angus cattle and Shetland ponies.  My mother used this property to grow her vegetable garden.  And I used this property to have a whole lot of fun, usually down by the creek with my dog, sleeping bag and fishing gear.  But another way I had fun there was with my bow and a quiver full of target arrows.  To feed our livestock during the winter months, my father kept our barn loft stocked with bales of hay.  I would roll a bale out of the loft and, propping it upright on one of its ends, use it as an archery target.

One day I propped a hay bale upright, walked about 20 yards away, turned around, fitted my arrow, aimed … and then stopped.  The bale was leaning slightly forward.  Thinking that I could straighten it up by shooting the arrow into the top of the bale, I let it fly.  But instead of straightening it, the arrow actually caused the bale to lean just a little more forward.  “I didn’t hit it hard enough,” I thought; so I shot again.  But that only caused it to lean a little bit more forward.  With exceptional smart, I kept shooting my arrows – one by one – into that bale of hay, trying to knock the top of it backwards.  But with each one, all I did was cause it to lean more and more forward.

Even today in my mind’s eye, I can still see what happened with arrow # 19.  As it thudded into its target, the bale of hay fell forward into a cloud of dust, its full weight cracking and splintering and breaking every one of my arrows.  All nineteen of them … ruined … while trying to prop up a lost cause!

Tell me, how is it that a fairly sane 12-year-old could not realize that all those good arrows were going to be shattered while trying to straighten a tottering target!  Was it not obvious that the bale would fall forward?  Did I not have enough foresight to see that it was only a matter of time before it came crashing down?  Why did I fail to see the inevitable?

You know, it is possible for us, as believers, to do that same thing … to “shoot our arrows into a leaning bale of hay.”  We can be so distracted promoting our own earth-bound interests that we end up investing the bulk of our priceless time … and strength … and resources … and opportunities … and abilities in something that will one day pass away.

Do not love the world nor the things in the world … The world is passing away.                         (1st John 2:15-17)

Do you believe that?  Do you believe that

the heavens will pass away with a roar and the elements will be destroyed with intense heat, and the earth and its works will be burned up.  Since all these things are to be destroyed in this way, what sort of people ought you to be in holy conduct and godliness, looking for and hastening the coming of the day of God, because of which the heavens will be destroyed by burning, and the elements will melt with intense heat!  But according to His promise we are looking for new heavens and a new earth, in which righteousness dwells.  Therefore, beloved, since you look for these things, be diligent to be found by Him in peace, spotless and blameless.  (2nd  Peter 3:10-14)

We, the true and living Church, are not in the dark.  We have been told what’s coming.  We do not know the when, but we do know the what.  We are keenly aware of how distracting the things of this world can be as they are dangled in front of us.  But we also know from God’s Word that “the earth and its works” will one day be burned up.

We already know that this “bale of hay” is going to come crashing down.

We have also been told that our lives are going to be examined by an all-knowing Judge.  God’s Word tells us that the quality and the motive of our labors will one day be “revealed with fire.”

Now if any man builds on the foundation (i.e., his salvation through Jesus Christ) with gold, silver, precious stones, wood, hay, straw, each man’s work will become evident; for the day will show it because it is to be revealed with fire, and the fire itself will test the quality of each man’s work.  If any man’s work which he has built on it remains, he will receive a reward.  If any man’s work is burned up, he will suffer loss; but he himself will be saved, yet so as through fire.  (1st Corinthians 3:12-15, parenthesis added)

Do you believe what your Bible says?  Do you believe that one day you will give an account of your choices?

For it is written, “AS I LIVE, SAYS THE LORD, EVERY KNEE SHALL BOW TO ME, AND EVERY TONGUE SHALL GIVE PRAISE TO GOD.”  So then each one of us will give an account of himself to God.  (Romans 14:11-12)

My beloved brothers and sisters in Christ, we have been given the “heads up” as to what is in front of us; and we should not ignore it.  Knowing that our approaching evaluation is certain, let us not squander our resources.  Rather than giving our hearts to the sparkling tinsel this tottering world offers, let us cultivate a devotion to the riches of God.  Let us live our lives with an eternal perspective.  Otherwise, we will spend our entire life shooting our arrows into a leaning bale of hay.

If you have been raised up with Christ, keep seeking the things above, where Christ is, seated at the right hand of God.  Set your mind on the things above, not on the things that are on earth.  For you have died and your life is hidden with Christ in God. (Colossians 3:1-3)

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Finally, brethren, pray for us that the Word of the Lord will spread rapidly and be glorified, just as it did also with you; and that we will be rescued from perverse and evil men; for not all have faith.  But the Lord is faithful, and He will strengthen and protect you from the evil one.  We have confidence in the Lord concerning you, that you are doing and will continue to do what (He) commands.  May the Lord direct your hearts into the love of God and into the steadfastness of Christ.  (2nd Thessalonians 3:1-5)

A Most Certain Appointment

Benjamin Franklin 1 once wrote

“In this world nothing can be said to be certain, except death and taxes.”

It is risky business to challenge the thoughts of a gifted individual.  But when it comes to this particular saying, I must respectfully disagree with Mr. Franklin on both accounts.

In the first place, there are lots of people who can and should – but who do not – pay taxes.  And they get away with it.

Concerning the other issue, the Bible informs us that an entire generation of Church-Age believers will not experience death.  According to the Apostle Paul

“Behold, I tell you a mystery; we will not all sleep, but we will all be changed, in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trumpet … For this perishable must put on the imperishable, and this mortal must put on immortality.”  (1st Corinthians 15:51-53)

So, neither (paying) taxes nor dying is necessarily certain … “in this world.”  But there is something in the next world that is most certain.  Once resurrected, there is something every reborn follower of Christ must do:

“We must all appear before the Judgment Seat of Christ, so that each one may be recompensed for his deeds in the body, according to what he has done, whether good or bad.”  (2nd Corinthians 5:10)

The time is coming when we must all bow before the One sitting on heaven’s throne, lofty and exalted … the train of His robe filling the temple … and the foundations of its thresholds trembling as one angel calls out to another,

“Holy, Holy, Holy, is the LORD of hosts.  The whole earth is full of His glory.”         (Isaiah 6:1-4)

The day is approaching when we must all bow before the One Whose head and hair are white … like white wool … like snow … Whose eyes are like a flame of fire … Whose face is like the sun shining in its strength … and Whose voice is like the sound of many waters (Revelation 1:14-16).

Every true believer has a scheduled appointment with the Son of God.  And dear friends, once we have been ushered into His Presence,

we are going to have the frankest discussion of our lives.

“I, the LORD, search the heart; I test the mind, even to give to each man according to his ways, according to the results of his deeds.”  (Jeremiah 17:10)

To prepare ourselves for this divine examination, we need

to cultivate an eternal perspective

That is the purpose of this course, “Our Approaching Evaluation:  a Study of the Judgment Seat of Christ.”

The goals of this study are

  • for each of us to be sobered by the certainty of this scheduled, face-to-Face appraisal by our all-knowing Master,
  • for each of us to become aware that we – who are saved by grace – will be judged according to the quality and motive of our works,
  • and for each of us to realize that this evaluation of our lives will result in varying degrees of rewards and losses.

So, as the world constantly dangles in front of us its countless distractions of fool’s gold, let us be fully assured.  The Judgment Seat of Christ is a most certain appointment … and it approaches like the wind.  May this study challenge us to live more fervently, not for our own interests in a world scheduled for destruction but for the interests of the King over all kings and Lord over all lords, Whose

“… dominion is an everlasting dominion which will not pass away; and his Kingdom is one which will not be destroyed.”  (Daniel 7:14)

1           Benjamin Franklin was one of the founding fathers of the United States.  He was a leading author, printer, political theorist, politician, the first U.S. Postmaster General, scientist, inventor, civic activist, statesman and diplomat, serving as U.S. Minister to France and, later, U.S. Minister to Sweden.

Click here to view this courseOUR APPROACHING EVALUATION

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To the readers within the believing community:  I would greatly appreciate your prayers, that the Master-Teacher would be the Author of these writings.

10,000 Years from Now

When you were in school, you took a lot of tests.  If your test results looked like mine, you had red check marks beside some of your answers … that is, the ones that were wrong.

I do not ever remember getting back a test from the teacher, looking it over, and thinking, “I’m really glad I answered this one right, and this one right, and this one right ….”  No, what I did was look at all the red on the page and think, “I wish I hadn’t answered this one wrong, and this one wrong, and this one wrong ….”  Is that what you did?  Did you focus your attention on all the red?

Some of us go through life doing that.  We tend to focus on those parts of our past that have “red check marks” beside them.  “I messed up here … and here … and here.”  If that is our practice … to give the bad choices of our past the permission to pull us under … life becomes little more than a broken record of regrets.  Without realizing it, we are allowing the choices of our yesterdays to sour our today … and our tomorrows.

It is an oppressive thing to go through life playing over and over in our minds the things we wish we had not done or the things we wish we had.  So, let’s take some time to do just the opposite.  Sometime soon, sit down and make a list that begins with these words:

I am really glad that I ______.

… then list as many things as you can possibly remember that you are glad you did.  We all need to take some time to consider the things in our past that have “green check marks” by them.  I believe you will find great satisfaction in this little exercise.

There is another list I would encourage you to think through, a list of the wise choices you are making right now.  But let’s not begin with these words:

At the end of my life, I am going to be really glad that I _________.

No, let’s think beyond the next few years.  Instead, let’s begin with these words:

10,000 years from now, I am going to be really glad that I _______.

“When we’ve been there ten thousand years, bright shining as the sun,” what choices are we making right now that we are going to be really glad we made?  Certainly, the only answers that can be on that list are the choices being made with eternity in mind:

What am I doing with the time … and the abilities … and the material goods … and the strength … and the opportunities that Christ has entrusted into my care to strengthen His Church to the glory of His Name?

If the focus of our lives is on everything this world has to offer, we may feel in sync with everyone else out there – for now.  But in the long run, we are piling up a whole lot of red check marks in our lives (i.e., a whole lot of loss).  And when it is time to bow before the Judgment Seat of Christ, we will have forgotten all about being in sync with the Jones’s.

But if we go through this life with an eternal perspective … if we live – right now – for the King over all kings and Lord over all lords … if we give ourselves to the cause of His eternal kingdom,

we are going to be really glad we did that throughout the Ages to Come.

So, what are you going to be really glad you did this week … 10,000 years from now?

Click here to view this courseTHE GOD OF OUR LIVES

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Click here to read the 1ST chapter of The God of Our Lives: YAHWEH, OUR GOD IS OUR CREATOR

To the readers within the believing community:  I would greatly appreciate your prayers, that the Master-Teacher would be the Author of these writings.

In the Palm of His Hand

explosion of atomic bomb on background of sky

‘Ah Lord GOD!  Behold, You have made the heavens and the earth by Your great power and by Your outstretched arm!  Nothing is too difficult for You.  (Jeremiah 32:17)

It is a little-known fact, but what drove the development of the atomic bomb was not America’s fear of Japan.  It was America’s fear of Germany.

Once Adolph Hitler became Chancellor of Germany in 1933, he conducted over the next 12 years a reign of unimaginable brutality.  There were some in Europe with enough foresight (and money) to escape Nazi Germany and make their way to the United States.  Many of these refugees were Jewish; and a few of them were some of the world’s most brilliant scientists.  When they arrived in America, they brought with them a fear that Hitler was on the brink of developing a weapon he must never have.

Germany was the center for the study of nuclear physics.  In a government laboratory located in Berlin, a German chemist had split an atom of uranium.  And when he did, nuclear energy was discovered.  The scientific community knew that this new form of energy had the potential to replace other forms such as oil and gas.  They also thought that it could possibly be used to create a new kind of bomb.

News coming out of Europe was that the German War Department had taken over one of the country’s finest laboratories.  Furthermore, they had outlawed the export of uranium from Czechoslovakia.  So these refugee scientists believed that the German bomb project had already begun; and they were horrified at the prospect of Hitler having in his possession nuclear weapons to execute his campaign of terror.

By 1945 Germany was losing the war.  And in April of that year, Hitler committed suicide.  After his death, the Allies learned that he had never understood the potential of the atomic bomb.  Consequently, he had not provided his atomic scientists the resources they needed to build this weapon.

And so it turned out that the weapon designed to be used against Hitler was not needed for the war in Europe.  But research on the atomic bomb continued.  And to end the war in the Pacific, President Harry Truman decided to use it against Japan.  The atomic bomb was dropped on two Japanese cities:  Hiroshima on August 6th, 1945, and Nagasaki three days later.

Have you ever seen any pictures of the aftermath of those two bombs?  The power released from split atoms is awesome, to say the least.  But that power does not hold a candle to the might of the One Who holds all atoms together “in the palm of His hand.”

Nowhere is the power of almighty God more clearly seen than in His work of creation.  By His spoken word God created the heavens and the earth.  And when He did, we were introduced to another of His Hebrew Names:

In the beginning Elohim created the heavens and the earth.  (Genesis 1:1)

The Name Elohim (translated “God”) portrays God as the all-powerful One.  But we should understand that He does not use His power randomly.  He is highly selective in its use.  God uses His power:

  • to conform the lives of His people into the likeness of His Son,
  • to fulfill every promise He has ever made, and
  • to answer prayer.

Although I don’t think any believer would disagree with these three ways God uses His power, there is a condition that He places on the use of that power that is often ignored by many in the Church.

Elohim limits the use of His power to accomplishing His will … and His will alone.

For God to use His power (1) to change our lives and (2) to keep His promises does not bother or confuse us because that is what we want Him to do.  The way He chooses (3) to answer our prayers, however, can be a different matter.  What we want to receive from God is not necessarily what He wants to give us.  (Sometimes He says “No.”)  And when we want to get something is not necessarily when He wants us to have it.  (Sometimes He says “Not yet.”)  That’s because

God does not use His power to do what makes sense to us.  He uses His power to do what makes sense to Him.

He has the power to answer every one of our prayers with a “Yes.”  But He also has the wisdom and love to not do so.

We should thank Him for that.

How God uses His power is the subject of The God of Our Lives, chapter 8:  “Elohim, Our God is All-Powerful.”

Click here to view this courseTHE GOD OF OUR LIVES

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Click here to read the 1ST chapter of The God of Our Lives:  YAHWEH, OUR GOD IS OUR CREATOR

To the readers within the believing community:  My wife and I would greatly appreciate your prayers, that we would respond to adversity with grace and righteousness.

The Cross of the Lamb and the Throne of the Lion

009  Adonai (Loving Master) [lion] (7035736) (583 x 823)

In his book, Chronological Aspects of the Life of Christ, the late Dr. Harold W. Hoehner presents evidence that Jesus Christ was crucified on Friday, April 3rd, AD 33. 1  On that day several individuals, whose lives would have otherwise faded into obscurity, became infamous participants in the most notorious crime in history.

To be sure, some of them knew they were committing a heinous act of injustice (in particular, the Jewish religious leaders who sentenced Jesus to death).  But it is doubtful that any of them fully understood what was happening.  To them, the Crucifixion was simply the “good riddance” of One Who had robbed them of the peoples’ admiration and threatened to disrupt the rituals of their religion.  But in reality, Golgotha was the pivot point of history:  a day when the justice of God intersected with the mercy of God … a day when capital punishment for our moral crimes was executed – mercifully – upon a sinless Substitute.

On that hill those who had arranged for Christ to die stood in front of His Cross to gawk at His agony and shame:  His shredded skin hanging loose from His back and sides, dripping with blood … His battered face bruised and bleeding from pounding fists … His lips cut open … His eyes swollen shut … His exposed body shivering in the cold of the morning hours … pushing His weight down on the spike driven through His feet to raise His chest for a gasp of breath … and using that breath to ask the Father to forgive the nail-drivers for what they had just done.

[We do well to picture this scene in our minds.  Was it not for you and me that Jesus Christ endured this wrath from God so that we – through faith in His Payment for our moral crimes – would not have to?]

Faithful Savior, eternity is not long enough to thank You for what You did for us.

And so, they stood before Him as He hung on the Cross.  They watched Him suffer; and then they watched Him die.  But this would not be the last time they would stand before Him, for His Cross and tomb marked the end of the Son of God’s humiliation and the renewal of His glory.  There is coming a day when those who stood before the Cross, pointing at the nail-impaled Sacrifice of God and yelling,

“You do not have the right to live,”

will bow before the King of glory and declare,

“You Alone have the right to rule.”

That will be a day very different than the morning of Friday, April 3rd, AD 33.  Those who once stood before the humiliated Lamb of God will find themselves in the presence of the exalted Lion of Judah:  His exposed body now clothed with a radiant robe … a crown of thorns replaced by diadems of glory … and a cross that offered God’s mercy replaced by a throne now demanding God’s justice.  Before Him, they will not stand; they will bow.  And their tongues will not mock; they will confess that

Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father.  (Philippians 2:11)

Indeed, the day is coming when every one of us will acknowledge the Lordship of Jesus, something the true and living Church is already doing.  But when we do, what exactly are we saying?  Perhaps we put this title “Lord” in front of His Name so frequently – and so easily – that we have forgotten the weight of the word.  We would do well to become reacquainted with the commitment we are making when we acknowledge the Lordship of Christ.

To say that “Jesus is Lord” is to say that “Jesus has the right to rule.”

  • He has the right to rule creation.
  • He has the right to rule the nations.
  • He has the right to rule His Church.
  • And He has the right to rule our individual lives.

When we declare His Lordship, we are not giving Christ the right to rule over us.  He already has that right.  We are acknowledging a reality already established by the Father.

All authority has been given to Me in heaven and on earth.  (Matthew 28:18)

To say “Jesus is Lord” is easy … so easy, in fact, that even unbelievers can – and often do – declare it.  Yet, Jesus states that one’s confession of His Lordship is to go far beyond mere words.  Indeed, He strictly warns against paying mere lip service to His authority.

Not everyone who says to Me, “Lord, Lord,” will enter the kingdom of heaven.  (Matthew 7:21)

How then does one sincerely acknowledge the reality of Christ’s Lordship?

by striving to do the will of the Master

Why do you call Me, “Lord, Lord,” and do not do what I say?  (Luke 6:46)

Obedience is what separates the sheep from the goats.  Yes, it is true:  our humanity is frail.  But it is also true that God is not frail.  And dwelling within every reborn saint is the Spirit of almighty God.  God has the power to obey God; and He expects His children to trust Him … to provide the power we need … to obey His will.  And so, with our words and with our lives, let this Truth be our whole-hearted confession:

Jesus Christ is my Lord

No Hebrew name reveals the Lordship of Christ better than the Name Adonai.  This is the subject of chapter 7 in The God of Our Lives:  “Adonai, Our God is a Loving Master.”

Click here to view this courseTHE GOD OF OUR LIVES

Click here to view our websiteSTEWARD OF TRUTH PUBLICATIONS

Click here to read the 1ST chapter of The God of Our Lives:  YAHWEH, OUR GOD IS OUR CREATOR

To the readers within the believing community:  I would greatly appreciate your prayers, that the Master-Teacher would be the Author of these writings.

1       Hoehner, Harold W., Chronological Aspects of the Life of Christ, Grand Rapids, Michigan:  Zondervan Publishing House, 1977, page 114.

The Angel-Warriors

008  Yahweh Sabaoth (Defender) [warrior angel] (1776294) (560 x 857)

Have you ever wondered what it will be like to meet someone for the first time … in Paradise?  If you think about it, we have some pretty fascinating introductions in front of us.

Most certainly, every believer awaits – with anticipation – his first meeting with Christ Jesus.  When I think of my first face-to-Face encounter with the Creator of the universe and Savior of my soul, I feel joyfully excited … and reverently fearful.

Furthermore, can you imagine getting into a conversation with someone, only to find out that you are talking to Eve?  Or to one who crossed through the Jordan with Joshua?  Or to the one who, as a young boy, handed over his five loaves and two fish to Jesus?  Or to one who came to the New World aboard the Mayflower?  Don’t you imagine our next question would be, “What was that like?”

There is someone else I am looking forward to meeting.  Once I awaken from the sleep of death, if I do not see the Lord Jesus first, he may be the first one I see (Luke 16:22).  And when I meet this angel, I want to thank him for something.

According to the Scriptures one of the responsibilities of the angelic host is to carry out the will of God in the affairs of His creation.  One such ministry assigned to the angels is to serve the saints of God:

Are (the angels) not all ministering spirits, sent out to render service for the sake of those who will inherit salvation?  (Hebrews 1:14)

There is Scriptural evidence indicating that every believer is watched over by at least one “guardian angel” (Matthew 18, Acts 12).  Their service to the saints includes

guarding them from danger (Psalm 91)

delivering God’s message to certain individuals (Daniel 10, Luke 1)

protecting them from premature death (2nd Kings 6, Acts 12)

 and …

strengthening them to persevere in God’s call upon their lives (Luke 22)

Jesus Himself benefited from this ministry of the angels.  The night before His Crucifixion, the Lord entered into the most intense period of suffering any human has ever had to endure.

And being in agony He was praying very fervently; and His sweat became like drops of blood, falling down upon the ground.  (Luke 22:44)

Jesus had lived His entire life in obedience to the will of the Father (John 5:30, 6:38).  And He was still resolved to do so, even unto death (Philippians 2:8).  But this resolve was not without great inner turmoil.

“My Father, if it is possible, let this cup pass from Me.”

“No, My Son, this ‘cup’ is My will for Your life.”

“Then Father, Your will be done.”

We then read that one of God’s spirit-ministers arrived in the Garden of Gethsemane.

Now an angel from heaven appeared to Him, strengthening Him.  (Luke 22:43) 1

Lest we forget what it would take for the Son of Man to fulfill God’s calling upon His life,

Christ Jesus was to be impaled to a Roman Cross …

taking upon Himself your sins and mine …

that He might suffer the wrath of God …

in our place … as our Substitute … so that we would not have to suffer eternal death for our own sins …

and rising from the dead, He would be able to give to those who trust in His Payment for our sins …

eternal life

Nothing less than the redemption of man was the calling of God upon His life.  But to faithfully fulfill this calling, the Son of Man needed the perseverance of God.  He needed the strength this angel from God brought to Him …

… and so do we.  In order to faithfully persevere in our respective callings (whatever they may be)

we need the strength that the Lord of hosts provides through the ministry of His angelic warriors

Perhaps you have begun to feel the weariness of your own calling … a prolonged labor that does not seem to be making much (if any) difference.  People let you down.  People put you down.  People walk away from you.  Perhaps your health has weakened.  Perhaps your financial situation has weakened.  Perhaps even your faith has weakened.  You become discouraged.  Doubts set in.  Temptations come from your flesh.  Persecution comes from the world.  Oppression comes from the demonic realm.  Perhaps you don’t want to “keep on keeping on.”  You want to do what every fiber of your being is telling you to do.  You want to chuck the whole thing.

Can you relate to any of this?  If so, I have a question for you, one I have OFTEN asked myself.  When you appear before the Judgment Seat of Christ, do you want to hear Him say to you

Well done, good and faithful slave

… because if we do, there is something we must come to grips with:

for faithfulness to be dyed into the fabric of our souls, situations demanding perseverance must exist

It is impossible to be faithful without trials.  To be aware of that fact goes a long way in understanding why doubts and confusion and weariness are such an integral part of the ministry (whatever ministry we have).  It explains why attacks from our flesh and from the world and from Satan are to be expected.  It explains why God (seems to be) so slow and so silent and so aloof at times.  To face a long-term trial does not mean that God has lost interest in us.  It means that

God is cultivating our faithfulness by stretching our endurance

To Whom, then, should we turn for the “spiritual grit” needed to endure this painful and prolonged tempering of our faith?  To the One Who lay prostrate in the Garden of Gethsemane.

For we do not have a high priest who cannot sympathize with our weaknesses, but One who has been tempted in all things as we are, yet without sin.  Therefore let us draw near with confidence to the throne of grace, so that we may receive mercy and find grace to help in time of need.  (Hebrews 4:15-16)

What is the name of the One Who sits upon this Throne of grace?  One of His Hebrew names is Yahweh Sabaoth, “the LORD of hosts.”  He is the Commander of a vast army of angelic warriors, sent forth to strengthen and defend and comfort His people in their times of need.

When I first enter into the realms of Paradise, I look forward to a great many first-time introductions.  And one of them is to the angel assigned to watch over me these many years.  I want to thank him for his service.  In times of despair he brought to me the perseverance of Christ I so desperately needed.

How Yahweh Sabaoth, “the LORD of hosts,” uses these spirit-warriors in our lives is the subject of The God of Our Lives, chapter 6:  “Our God is a Watchful Defender.”

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To the readers within the believing community:  My wife and I would greatly appreciate your prayers, that we would respond to adversity with grace and righteousness.

1   Why would the Second Person of the Trinity need to be strengthened?  Is He not God?  To answer this question, let’s consider that incredible nine-month period of time when the eternal Son of God “clothed Himself with flesh” while implanted as a Fetus in the uterus of a virgin.  The Lord Jesus Christ is indeed 100% God.  And because of the incarnation, He is also 100% Man.  (He is not 50% / 50%.)  He is the God-Man … fully divine, fully human.  It was the humanity of Christ that needed to be strengthened to fulfill the Father’s calling upon His life.