Tag: Christ

  • Conquest of Love; Sin Slain at the Gate

    Conquest of Love; Sin Slain at the Gate

    Philippians 2:

    overlooking jerusalem  And being found in human form,
        he humbled himself
        and became obedient to the point of death—
        even death on a cross.

    Therefore God also highly exalted him
        and gave him the name
        that is above every name,

    10 so that at the name of Jesus
        every knee should bend,
        in heaven and on earth and under the earth,
    11 and every tongue should confess
        that Jesus Christ is Lord,
        to the glory of God the Father.

    It was neither the conquest nor the King Jerusalem expected. The Messiah would surely take back the Temple and the City centered on the worship of God. He must by His miraculous power from Almighty God reclaim the promise and the land.

    Herod had rebuilt the Temple, just as Nehemiah had prevailed in the land conquered by gentile invaders, evil unbelievers who destroyed the House of worship and enslaved the people once more.

    Centuries had passed with silence from the Lord – not one Prophet until just this time when John had proclaimed the coming of the Messiah.

    Yet Rome would have nothing of trouble-makers like John, though he hid in the desert. And Herod could not remain King with another King of the Jews at the gate.

    A Conqueror greater than David was poised to ride into Jerusalem. He had been there before, a faithful Rabbi who taught with authority. His miracles were well documented and witnessed by many. Now the crowds followed.

    And the gates could not be closed for the most profitable festival of the entire Jewish year. Many would come to the Temple and buy their kosher food for the Seder, overpriced animals required for the sacrifice and souvenirs of the Temple to take back home throughout Judea, Samaria, Asia and even Rome itself.

    Another zealot insurrection could not be tolerated by Centurions guarding the gate and controlling the crowds.

    And Jesus of Nazareth rides a colt down the hillside to the very gate of Jerusalem with thousands shouting: HOSANNA! HOSANNA! SON OF DAVID!

    Five centuries earlier Zechariah had prophesied:

    Zechariah 9

    Rejoice greatly, O daughter Zion!
        Shout aloud, O daughter Jerusalem!
    Lo, your king comes to you;
        triumphant and victorious is he,
    humble and riding on a donkey,
        on a colt, the foal of a donkey.
    10 He will cut off the chariot from Ephraim
        and the war-horse from Jerusalem;
    and the battle bow shall be cut off,
        and he shall command peace to the nations;
    his dominion shall be from sea to sea,
        and from the River to the ends of the earth.

    11 As for you also, because of the blood of my covenant with you,
        I will set your prisoners free from the waterless pit.
    12 Return to your stronghold, O prisoners of hope;
        today I declare that I will restore to you double.
    13 For I have bent Judah as my bow;
        I have made Ephraim its arrow.
    I will arouse your sons, O Zion,
        against your sons, O Greece,
        and wield you like a warrior’s sword.

    The stage of all history is set, the battle prepared, the King has come to Jerusalem.

    To be continued…

  • Reflections: Jerusalem – a city of sacrifice

    Reflections: Jerusalem – a city of sacrifice

    siloette of jesus on cross[ Lament over Jerusalem ]

    “O JerusalemJerusalem,

    the city that kills the prophets and stones those who are sent to it!

    How often would I have gathered your children together as a hen gathers her brood under her wings, and you were not willing!

    – words of Christ JesusMathew 23:37

    destruction-of-jewish-temple-70-ad-lgThe Temple of Herod would be destroyed when Jerusalem again fell in the year of our Lord 70, not even four decades after the Crucifixion and Sacrifice of Jesus on the Cross; followed by His glorious resurrection of the body, appearances to many believers and physical ascension into the clouds.

    Yet prior to the controversial proclamations of John the baptizer and miracles of Jesus in the Temple and throughout Judah and many places, God had remained silent for centuries while Jerusalem suffered the consequence of a disobedient people who always rejected God and ridiculed or killed the Prophets of the LORD.

    TempledestructionCaptive Jerusalem before Christ lay vulnerable to the swords of the nations, even prior to the conquests of Rome. The LORD allowed its fall into ruin, for His people had not listened to their Prophets; therefore the LORD kept silence beyond their generations into the centuries.

    These are the words of Jeremiah the Prophet, after the LORD had warned the people… after the people refused to listen… after the LORD allowed the calamity of which His Prophet had warned:

    Lamentations 1 

    How Lonely Sits the City

    How lonely sits the city
        that was full of people!
    How like a widow has she become,
        she who was great among the nations!
    She who was a princess among the provinces
        has become a slave.

    She weeps bitterly in the night,
        with tears on her cheeks;
    among all her lovers
        she has none to comfort her;
    all her friends have dealt treacherously with her;
        they have become her enemies.

    Judah has gone into exile because of affliction
        and hard servitude;
    she dwells now among the nations,
        but finds no resting place;
    her pursuers have all overtaken her
        in the midst of her distress.

    The roads to Zion mourn,
        for none come to the festival;
    all her gates are desolate;
        her priests groan;
    her virgins have been afflicted,
        and she herself suffers bitterly.

     18 “The Lord is in the right,

        for I have rebelled against his word;
    but hear, all you peoples,
        and see my suffering;
    my young women and my young men
        have gone into captivity.

    19 “I called to my lovers,
        but they deceived me;
    my priests and elders
        perished in the city,
    while they sought food
        to revive their strength.

    20 “Look, O Lord, for I am in distress;
        my stomach churns;
    my heart is wrung within me,
        because I have been very rebellious.
    In the street the sword bereaves;
        in the house it is like death.

    Minor-Prophets-TimelineBy the time Ezra and Nehemiah returned to the site of the destroyed Temple, God’s chosen people had completely forgotten the Law.

    For a time they repented. Then once more God was forgotten in the land and Jerusalem remained only a dark shadow of promise once made to a people who failed to keep the Law in the words of their mouth and meditate on it every day and every night.

    Have contemporary believers in Jesus Christ also done what is evil in the eyes of the LORD in these last days?

    Hear the hastening approach of our Lord, King of the New Jerusalem…

     

  • Reflections: Jerusalem – a city of Kings

    Reflections: Jerusalem – a city of Kings

    talkofJesus.com

    [ Lament over Jerusalem ]

    “O Jerusalem,Jerusalem, the city that kills the prophets and stones those who are sent to it! How often would I have gathered your children together as a hen gathers her brood under her wings, and you were not willing! – words of Christ JesusMathew 23:37

    mosque and temple21 Chronicles 2:

    A Genealogy of David

    These are the sons of Israel: Reuben, Simeon, Levi, Judah, Issachar, Zebulun, Dan, Joseph, Benjamin, Naphtali, Gad, and Asher.

    The sons of Judah: Er, Onan and Shelah; these three Bath-shua the Canaanite bore to him.

    Now Er, Judah’s firstborn, was evil in the sight of the Lord, and he put him to death.

    His daughter-in-law Tamar also bore him Perez and Zerah. Judah had five sons in all.

    1 Chronicles 3 

    Descendants of David

    These are the sons of David who were born to him in Hebron: the firstborn, Amnon, by Ahinoam the Jezreelite; the second, Daniel, by Abigail the Carmelite, the third, Absalom, whose mother was Maacah, the daughter of Talmai, king of Geshur; the fourth, Adonijah, whose mother was Haggith; the fifth, Shephatiah, by Abital; the sixth, Ithream, by his wife Eglah; six were born to him in Hebron, where he reigned for seven years and six months.

    And he reigned thirty-three years in Jerusalem.

    These were born to him in Jerusalem: Shimea, Shobab, Nathan and Solomon, four by Bath-shua, the daughter of Ammiel;

    then Ibhar, Elishama, Eliphelet, Nogah, Nepheg, Japhia,Elishama, Eliada, and Eliphelet, nine. All these were David’s sons, besides the sons of the concubines, and Tamar was their sister.

    +

    Jews and Christians take joy in speaking of Abraham, faithful sojourner and father of nations. Jews and Christians speak well of Jacob, who God renamed Israel, and his favored wife Rachel. Jews and Christians proclaim the might and right of the heart of young David as he slew Goliath the Philistine [*Palestinian] by faith, while Saul was indecisive after he disobeyed the LORD.

    Jews and Christians and the nations proclaim the wisdom and wealth of young Solomon, who asked the LORD for wisdom and received abundant blessing throughout His reign over a United Kingdom of Israel, feared and respected by the enemies of the LORD.

    Yet Jews and Christians fail to warn the generations of the failures of compromise, failures of a price paid by David for alliances with kings and wives of other faiths.

    Even more so, Solomon failed in wisdom as his years progressed: wives and concubines believing in everything but God! Sons and daughters believing in anything but God!

    Generations of Kings and compromise for plans not from God and a future of generations who knew nothing of the God of Israel or the Law of the Promise.

    WE THE PEOPLE depose the LORD our God.

    Will we not reap the harvest of lawyers, Judges, Priests and Kings of unrighteousness?

    Roger Harned – talkofJesus.com

    How history fails to recall the failures of sin so evident from century to century; civilization to loss of civility; a time of promise to a time of judgment.

    Jerusalem is a city captured, conquered, destroyed, deserted, re-inhabited, rebuilt, destroyed again, conquered again, rebuilt once more  time and time again throughout the ages.

    Jerusalem is the city of the Temple: built (by Solomon), destroyed, rebuilt (by Ezra and Nehemiah), destroyed again, rebuilt by its captors (Rome) on the ruins by the King who did what was evil in the sight of the LORD. (Herod, if you fail to understand the politics of Jesus’ Jerusalem of the first century.)

    Kings of the United Kingdom (c 1025-925 BC)
    King Relationship to
    Previous King
    God’s
    Judgment
    Saul none did evil
    Ishbosheth* son (unknown)
    David none did right
    Solomon
    (AKA Jedidiah)
    son did right in youth,
    evil in old age
    * The kingdom was divided during Ishbosheth’s reign;
    David was king over the tribe of Judah.

    Israel first became divided.

    Two countries: only Judah with Jerusalem as the place for its King.

    As Prophets warned: Israel fell first. (The area north of Judah was later was known as Samaria.)

    Yet true Prophets of the LORD also warned Judah of her faithlessness and whoredom. Judah and Jerusalem fell under the rule of Kings who did what was evil in the eyes of the LORD.

    Kings of Judah (c 925-586 BC) Kings of Israel (c 925-721 BC)
    King Relationship to
    Previous King
    God’s
    Judgment
    King Relationship to
    Previous King
    God’s
    Judgment
    Rehoboam son did evil Jeroboam servant did evil
    Abijam
    (AKA Abijah)
    son did evil
    Asa son did right
    Nadab son did evil
    Baasha none did evil
    Elah son did evil
    Zimri captain did evil
    Omri captain did evil
    Ahab son did evil
    Jehoshaphat son did right
    Ahaziah son did evil
    Jehoram
    (AKA Joram)
    son of Ahab did evil
    Jehoram
    (AKA Joram)
    son did evil
    Ahaziah
    (AKA Azariah
    or Jehoahaz)
    son did evil
    Athaliah mother did evil Jehu captain mixed
    Joash
    (AKA Jehoash)
    son of Ahaziah did right in youth,
    evil in old age
    Jehoahaz son did evil
    Joash
    (AKA Jehoash)
    son did evil
    Amaziah son did right in youth,
    evil in old age
    Jeroboam II son did evil
    Uzziah
    (AKA Azariah)
    son did right
    Zachariah son did evil
    Shallum none did evil
    (surmised)
    Menahem none did evil
    Pekahiah son did evil
    Pekah captain did evil
    Jotham son did right
    Ahaz son did evil
    Hoshea none did evil
    Hezekiah son did right
    Assyrian captivity
    Manasseh son did evil
    Amon son did evil
    Josiah son did right
    Jehoahaz
    (AKA Shallum)
    son did evil
    Jehoiakim
    (AKA Eliakim)
    son of Josiah did evil
    Jehoiachin
    (AKA Coniah
    or Jeconiah)
    son did evil
    Zedekiah
    (AKA Mattaniah)
    son of Josiah did evil
    Babylonian captivity

    Source: http://www.vtaide.com/gleanings/Kings-of-Israel/kings.html

    To be continued…