Tag: Christ

  • The Beatitudes and the Multitudes – Part 3

    The Beatitudes and the Multitudes – Part 3

    MERRY CHRISTMAS.

    Merry Christmas.

    Such a joyful greeting from a Christian to another.

    Returning our thoughts to the multitudes hearing Jesus’ teaching:

    Matthew 5

    King James Version (KJV)

    Verse 13

    • You are the salt of the earth.

    Salt is plentiful and worthless, except that it makes our food to last and seasons its flavor to make our food more palatable.

    • But if the salt have lost his savor, wherewith shall it be salted?  It is thenceforth good for nothing, but to be cast out, and trodden under the foot of men.

    I am trodden under the foot of man. But of what worth am I to this man (who calls himself the Son of Man)? What does he mean that I am the salt of the earth?

    • Ye are the light of the world.
    • A city set on an hill cannot be hid.
    • Neither do men light a candle, and but it under a bushel, but on a candlestick; and it giveth light to all that are in the house.

    What can all this mean? What does it mean to meet God on a hill overlooking the city?

    Dearly beloved believer and seeker of the Lord God,

    I leave this to your own conviction of the Spirit. Yet I challenge the context of your hearing the blessings or beatitudes of Jesus once more in considering His calling. Jesus speaks to the multitudes. The believing church sits in the crowd as a light on a hill or a candle lifted on a candlestick to light the whole house.

    Many will hear the Word and wander off back into the darkness and destruction and death. Many will not see the Lord on the hill again until the call of the trumpet to Judgment, of which Jesus further warns the multitudes (immediately after these verses) of the fulfillment of the Law and Scripture in Him.

    To the multitudes, our Lord further speaks of repentance for the sin we have done. He calls us to righteousness exceeding the appearance of the most respected representatives of God’s Law.

    He tells us how to exceed the righteousness of rules by the intention of our heart and the thoughtfulness of our actions. Jesus forbids divorce. Jesus forbids anger without cause. He commands reconciliation between brothers (now he speaks to the church), before thinking that our offering to God is acceptable.

    Jesus tells the crowd and the church how by our actions Christians are to demonstrate God’s light to the house and to the world. He proceeds to tell us how we, as God’s house and God’s city, and God’s people must do more than the Law, to go the second mile.

    Further, He concludes:

    Matthew 5:44

    • Love your enemy.

    • Bless them that curse you.

    • Do good to them that hate you.

    • Pray for them that despitefully use you.

    • And (pray for them that) persecute you.

    Is this the church you signed up for?  Is this the light on the hill you are among men?

    It’s difficult, if not impossible, isn’t it?

    Jesus then says (in verse 45) that we have to do it to be children of the Father.

    Then he says essentially (in verse 46): If you love only those who love you, even the politicians do that. Ouch!

    Then our Lord calls on us to do something that we cannot do:

    Be ye therefore perfect, as your Father which is in heaven is perfect.

    How?

    Repent! Be obedient children of adoption by our Father in Heaven, who did send Christ Jesus to the Cross as perfect redemption for our sins.

    ‘Go; and sin no more,’ as our Lord has called upon us to do. (John 5:14; John 8:11)

    Jesus’ teachings of ‘Blessed are you…” or ‘Happy are you…’ give us, perhaps, a little different than usual perspective on the reason for God to send His only Son to a manger in Bethlehem.

    Have you ever thought of the Nativity of Bethlehem with the baby in a manger to be the beginning of His destination of His place for you on the Cross?

    Do you think of the Cross when you wish someone (perhaps an unbeliever), “Merry Christmas?”

    Do others see Christ’s Light in the salt of your joyful greeting?

    To be continued…

  • No More Tears

    No More Tears

    Each man (especially analytic types of men and women like me) will consider sin and judgment, punishment and grace, in the light of heaven and eternal life. Few will give much consideration to our own possibility of judgment followed by eternal punishment: after all, have we not each chosen our sin knowing the consequence of death?

    Death (the elephant in the room, as an older sister called it) is not much spoken of by sinners or even by the forgiven. Eternal life is mentioned by those covered by the grace of the Cross as a given, often not in light of the consequence of our present fruit of grace. So few christians consider that we may indeed be the fruitless branch the Gardner will prune to give more abundant life to the remaining branches in need of more fruit, namely, the fruit of the Spirit.

    My dear brothers and sisters, how we long for the place of eternal joy and the heaven where there shall be no more tears.

    The Revelation of Jesus Christ to John illustrates a tender scene of those who have come out of the great tribulation.

    Revelation 7

    15 “Therefore they are before the throne of God,

    and serve him day and night in his temple;
    and he who sits on the throne will shelter them with his presence.
    16 They shall hunger no more, neither thirst anymore;
    the sun shall not strike them,
    nor any scorching heat.
    17 For the Lamb in the midst of the throne will be their shepherd,
    and he will guide them to springs of living water,
    and God will wipe away every tear from their eyes.”

     

    How can there be no more tears?

    When my beloved wife died, I endured many days of mourning with many tears. When your child dies young or before you, you will mourn your loss with many tears.  When your life-long friend or your relative of your own blood and flesh and ancestry dies and leaves you here on your own, you will mourn and miss the wonderful times with many tears.

    Yet the hope of the eulogy is that we will be reunited with our loved ones in heaven. How can that be?

    Only through the grace of Christ Jesus and His Cross of sacrifice for our sins.

    Those, and only those, who have place their souls in the hands of the Lord will already have made their place in eternity with us. What a joyous reunion with lost loved ones it will be!

    Many place their hope of heaven falsely in their own goodness or in the ultimate goodness of God that a loving God will not punish our sin with eternal torment and the second death.  We will not see these in heaven, nor even remember the days of their flesh and sin.

    Some, even relatives and near loved ones, expound unfounded hope that death of the flesh is death of the soul – the end. It is not. The Bible and the words of Christ Jesus are clear that the death of the flesh is only the death of the flesh.

    Do you really believe that you are not more than the flesh and bones and brain of your body? Is your meaning of death brain-dead or death of the heart (as if you can observe the very death of who you are as created by God for this temporal body)?

    Do you really think that you are not a soul? Do you not understand that you are not part of the earth anymore than you are part of your bones and blood and flesh?

    Who are you?

    You are a soul, created by God with a body.  Who are angels? Not spirits from bodies, but souls created only with a spirit and no body such as given to man. Yet the Bible is clear that when a man dies, our spirit does not die. The Bible is also clear that our spirit will receive a resurrected body – a risen body – to join once more with our spirit eternal in Christ.

    Without dwelling on the punishment of hell for those who refuse in this short life to come to Christ and follow Jesus in His new righteousness for us, I have often thought of Heaven and how my joy may finally return. It seems that Judgment demands the punishment of the souls of some, even many I love. If I miss these in some way already, how can I not miss these loved ones destined for Hell after I am taken up to Heaven by the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ?

    ALL will pass away: every body, every soul, even the earth will pass away into an end and a judgment and a new untainted sinless life with God OR destruction in punishment.  Yet some, in Christ, will have no more tears… no more suffering from the sin of this world.

    Revelation 21:

    Then I saw a new heaven and a new earth, for the first heaven and the first earth had passed away, and the sea was no more.

    And I saw the holy city, new Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God, prepared as a bride adorned for her husband.

    And I heard a loud voice from the throne saying, “Behold, the dwelling place of God is with man. He will dwell with them, and they will be his people, and God himself will be with them as their God.

    He will wipe away every tear from their eyes, and death shall be no more, neither shall there be mourning, nor crying, nor pain anymore, for the former things have passed away.”

    How can there be ‘no more tears?”

    The answer would seem that we will no more remember them.

    We will not remember that sinful relative, that fun person who reveled in sin at the expense of heaven. We will not remember that friend who clung to Buddha or Muhammad or ancient idolatry of ancestry to reject the grace of Jesus Christ as Lord. As nice and good as these all seemed – as much as we loved these – there is only one way we, of the new heaven and the new earth will not miss them.

    We will remember them no more, forever.

    No more tears.

    Thanks to our Lord and Savior Christ Jesus, God with us. We are with Him, forever.

  • The Beatitudes and the Multitudes – Part 2

    The Beatitudes and the Multitudes – Part 2

    Matthew 5

    King James Version (KJV)

    • Blessed are the poor in spirit.

    NOT the poor in money – not the poor in anything other than a downcast spirit and soul of hopelessness. God has not looked on you with blessing. You live the life of curse and lack of blessing. God’s wrath must have looked on your life as worthy of nothing better than the dust of the earth.

    • For theirs is the Kingdom of Heaven.

    How can this be? Cursed. Living as souls paying the price of every sin. How can one so downcast in heart be blessed with the Kingdom of Heaven?

    • Blessed are they that mourn.

    We all mourn. We mourn the loss of a father, a mother, a husband, a wife, a child, a dear friend, a relative. We mourn their loss by death, by war, by famine, by disease, by abduction, by slavery, by imprisonment, by addictions, by drugs, by alcohol, by divorce, by hatred, by broken relationship, by loss of all hope of making all that is death and evil into desperation of grief. We all wail in the mourning of our hearts, broken again and again until the final grieving as death. I need freed from this!

    • For they shall be comforted.

    What comfort short of death has any man? What peace may a suffering servant know?

    • Blessed are the meek.

    The self-made, driven man is the one blessed by his own hand. Do we not aggressively pursue the best God has for our life now? God helps those who help themselves, right? Those who want to expand their kingdom of blessings on earth cannot be gentle, submissive, mild and gentle.  The world will take from me every blessing, if I am meek.

    • For they will inherit the earth.

    How can I end up with nothing, yet inherit the earth?

    • Blessed are they which do hunger and thirst after righteousness.

    No, not blessed are the hungry – not blessed are thirsty. Am I not hungry every day? Do some hunger for food in their extreme poverty and even thirst for unpolluted water to drink? Yes, these do suffer more than me and more than you. But here in this place Jesus asks the filled and the hungry both to hunger and thirst after righteousness. Hunger to do the right thing before God at all times and in all ways. Desire to feed your flesh with the food and water of God.

    • For they shall be filled.

    How can I be filled with the bread and wine of righteousness? How can the Word of Jesus fill the hunger of my soul?

    • Blessed are the merciful.

    Who would show me mercy? Do the rich and the powerful not enslave us without mercy? Will the conquering nation show mercy on the slaves of their might? Will the poor criminal not pay every penny owed to the rich man, while the influential will bribe the judge?

    • For they shall obtain mercy.

    Will God please show me some mercy, and the unrighteous justice?

    • Blessed are the pure in heart.

    I stand before God with a hypocritical heart and a soiled soul.

    • For they shall see God.

    How will I be cleansed of my impure spirit of the flesh?

    • Blessed are the peacemakers.

    We live in a place where our conquerors have forced peace. Shall I make peace with the unrighteous? We have peace only when we give in to the rule of our leaders.

    • For they shall be called the children of God.

    Does God not call on His children to fight for what is right? Can we be instruments of peace in a place of war? Is it the place of children to fight for the Father?

    • Blessed are they which are persecuted for righteousness’ sake.

    Have the righteous and unrighteous both not been persecuted? Why would I do what is right knowing that I will be persecuted?

    • For theirs is the kingdom of heaven.

    And if I do not do what is right? Will heaven have my soul?

    • Blessed are ye, when men shall revile you, and persecute you, and shall say all manner of evil against you falsely for my sake.

    Is the man also a Prophet? Why does he say that others will speak evil of me for his sake?

    • Rejoice, and be exceeding glad; for great is your reward in heaven: for so persecuted they the prophets which were before you.

    I don’t want to be persecuted for my own sake, let alone for the sake of this Jesus. The Prophets of God were opposed by evil men of their captors and of their own religion.

    (Just some possible thoughts of some in the multitude, hearing Jesus teach the Beatitudes.)

    To be continued…