For I am resolved to know nothing while I talk to you today except Jesus Christ and him crucified. (1 Cor 2:2)
he shewed me a pure river of water of life (Rev 22:1)
Christians today should be agreeable with the idea that there is one great central truth to be kept ever before the mind in the searching of the Scriptures:
Christ and Him crucified
Every other truth is invested with influence and power corresponding to its relation to this theme. It is only in the light of the cross that we can discern the exalted character of the law of God. The soul wracked by sin and fear can be blessed with life only through the work wrought out upon the cross by the Author and the Finisher of our salvation.
Have you ever wondered why Jesus had to die?
Was Jesus just some kind of martyr dying for a good cause? Why was the Sacrifice of Christ necessary? Was it to seek to appease an angry God? Why was it absolutely essential to our salvation? If Jesus had lived a perfect life but had never died on the cross, would our salvation be possible? The Bible answers to such questions are vital. Our eternal destiny depends upon answering them correctly.
Lets review what kind of attitude the Apostle Paul always expressed towards the cross of Christ. This is what Paul once said:
But it’s unthinkable that I could ever brag about anything except the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ. By his cross my relationship to the world and its relationship to me have been crucified. (Gal 6:14, GW)
As Christians we glory not in our good works but in God’s infinte love, mercy, and grace.
Jesus told us clearly what the result of His death would be.
When Jesus had spoken these words, he lifted up his eyes to heaven, and said, “Father, the hour has come; glorify your Son that the Son may glorify you,(John 17:1, ESV)
Praise God. There are three reasons that the hour of Christ’s death would be the moment of His greatest glory.
a) For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord. (Rom 6:23, NIV) b) Christ died for us when we were unable to help ourselves. We were living against God, but at just the right time Christ died for us.
(Rom 5:6, ERV) c) But Christ died for us while we were still sinners, and by this God showed how much he loves us.(Rom 5:8, ERV)
What then did Jesus redeem us from?
The law says we are under a curse for not always obeying it. But Christ took away that curse. He changed places with us and put himself under that curse. The Scriptures say, “Anyone who is hung on a tree is under a curse.” (Gal 3:13, ERV)
The curse of the law is simple for us to understand. It has nothing to do with the ten commandments somehow being cancelled by the death of Christ on the cross. Why would Jesus ever do away with His Father’s holy law? (Rom 7:12) Jesus vindicated the law of ten commandments, and held it up before all people as a rule of life. He showed that all of us are under the most solemn obligation to obey that law, which Christ came to make honorable. (Isa 42:21) The Bible teaches that Christ is the only one who can release people from the consequences of breaking the divine law; and that it is only by repentance for their past transgressions, faith in the atoning sacrifice of Christ, resulting in the life of obedience, that we can hope to experience the favor of God. The Bible says that Jesus came to “fulfill” the law, meaning to demonstrate to us how to keep it. (Mat 5:17)
“Do not think that I have come to abolish the Law or the Prophets; I have not come to abolish them but to fulfill them.” (Mat 5:17, ESV)
The curse of the law is simply the separation from God that sometimes happens in our relationship with Him, when we choose to not accept Him. In the struggle between good and evil, Jesus took the moral responsibility for our sins. Jesus died the death that we deserve so that we can live the life that He deserves.
Here is how Paul describes the way that unbelievers view Christ’s death
The teaching about the cross seems foolish to those who are lost. But to us who are being saved it is the power of God. (1 Cor 1:18, ERV)
Isa describes it like this:
He was despised and rejected by mankind, a man of suffering, and familiar with pain. Like one from whom people hide their faces he was despised, and we held him in low esteem. Surely he took up our pain and bore our suffering, yet we considered him punished by God, stricken by him, and afflicted. (Isa 53:3-4, NIV)
To the unconverted heart, God dying for humanity makes absolutely no sense but nonsense. But to the converted heart, Christ’s death on the cross represents the most amazing demonstration of God’s love ever seen anywhere.
Some would ask “did Jesus sin?” Or “Did Jesus become sin?” The Bible tells us
God made him who had no sin to be sin for us, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God. (2 Cor 5:21, NIV)
Jesus never once sinned. Jesus did take upon Himself the penalty, condemnation, shame, and results of our sin.
There are four gifts that Jesus offers each one of us through the cross:
And because of him you are in Christ Jesus, who became to us (1) wisdom from God, (2) righteousness (3) and sanctification (4) and redemption
(1 Cor 1:30, ESV)
In the cross, we discover God’s incredible love towards us. Jesus would have rather died eternally, if need be, than to have one of His children be lost. Jesus offers to all His righteousness. Through the revelation of His love on Calvary, and the presence of His Holy Educating Spirit in our hearts, Jesus daily prepares us for eternal redemption. For everlasting life.
What a hope! What a Savior! All we can do is to bow before Him and worship Him!
Paul continues to emphasize that the way to receive salvation is so simple that any person who wants to can understand it. Skill and wisdom do not get a person into God’s Kingdom—simple faith does. So no one can boast that personal achievements helped him or her secure eternal life. Salvation is totally from God through Jesus’ death. There is nothing we can do to earn our salvation; we need only to accept what Jesus has already done for us.
God is our source and the reason for our personal relationship with Christ. Our union and identification with Christ results in our having God’s wisdom (Col 2:3), being acceptable to God (2 Cor 5:21), being pure (1 Thes 4:3-7), and having the penalty for our sins paid by Jesus (Mark 10:45).
Do not depreciate or degrade yourself, but give yourself to Jesus today; Jesus will (like a nail in a sure place – Isa 22:23) find a place in this life for you and make your life worth living. Notice that God has put you into personal union with Christ Jesus. (John 1:12) Everything we need for life and godliness is in Him. We must make all that we can of our wonderful position and possessions.
Think of Christ’s humiliation. He took upon Himself fallen, suffering human nature, degraded and defiled by sin. He took our sorrows, bearing our grief and shame. He endured all the temptations wherewith man is beset. He united humanity with divinity: a divine spirit dwelt in a temple of flesh. He united Himself with the temple. “The Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us” (John 1:14) because by so doing He could identify with the sinful, sorrowing sons and daughters of Adam.
Will you take the time to pray
Ask Jesus in your heart to stay
Keeping you safe this very night
to wake your joy in morning light
You boast, “We have entered into a covenant with death, with the realm of the dead we have made an agreement. When an overwhelming scourge sweeps by, it cannot touch us, for we have made a lie our refuge and falsehood our hiding place.”Your covenant with death will be annulled; your agreement with the realm of the dead will not stand. When the overwhelming scourge sweeps by, you will be beaten down by it. (Isa 28:15,18)
living water of life
Can it be that people really have “a covenant with death?”
For the last two weeks we have been discussing from the Bible about what happens when we die? In Living Lies About Death #1, and Living Lies About Death #2 we discovered that “a living soul” is the whole person, not a separate entity, and that the only one who has immortality is God. No one else will be immortal until the second coming. (see 1 Thes 4:13-18)
Some of today’s preachers have gotten really carried away with the subject of death and what happens when we die. I have heard several preachers who have said things like
“The believer’s death day is really their best birthday – the time of their greatest triumph.”
“Of all the happy days, the death day will be the happiest of all. The day of our new birth. The day of our coming of age. The day of our conversion. The day of our entire sanctification. The day of our marriage. The day of honor. And all other days are nothing compared to the delightful death day which shall usher us into our Father’s House on high.”
Why is death such a happy event? Because, as Pastor Heslop who wrote the above tries to assure us, dead people are not dead. Even though the Bible says they are dead, he and many others keep saying “no they are not. “
Heslop further states:
“Death to the believer in Jesus Christ is but a doorway to a house not made with hands.” “Death is only the hand that snaps the fetters and emancipates the soul. Death is only the bridal peal calling the sanctified soul to its everlasting espousals. Death is the door opener into a city without sin, sorrow or suffering, A sunrise without a sunset.”
There Is No Death
There is no death. There are no dead. These words were found on the stone marker that identified the site of the original Fox Sister’s cottage in Hydesville, New York, in 1948. The obelisk at the later spiritualistic church in Rochester New York also contained the same falsehood: There is no death. There are no dead.
The Yearbook of Spiritualism for 1871 states:
“In strictness there is no death.”
What Are Modern Christians saying Now?
Jesus taught that death was simply a sleep. Jesus taught that death was a rest. There was an occasion where Jesus’ friend Lazarus had died. And Lazarus had become very, very sick before that. And Jesus got word that Lazarus was sick. Jesus waited before going. He waited a couple days, and by the time he got there, since there was a journey, he was in Galilee, and Lazarus was in Bethany. It was four days. This is a time that Jesus was four days late, and yet, as we now know, Jesus was right on time.
Why did Jesus wait like that? Why didn’t Jesus just go to Lazarus right away? Because he wanted to work a miracle that was greater than merely healing an illness. Jesus was going to work a miracle of raising Lazarus from the dead! After he had said this, he went on to tell them
Our friend Lazarus has fallen asleep; but I am going there to wake him up.”
His disciples replied
“Lord, if he sleeps, he will get better.”
Jesus had of course been speaking of his death, but his disciples thought he meant natural sleep. So, then Jesus told them plainly
“Lazarus is dead, (John 11:11-14) Here, in John 11, they come to Jesus, and they say, Jesus, your friend Lazarus is sick. And Jesus says, our friend Lazarus sleeps, but I’m going to wake him up. Well, they thought, wait a minute. If Lazarus is sleeping, he’s going to get well. This is not to death. Our friend Lazarus is sleeping. They thought, this is good news, because if you’re sick and you sleep, maybe the fever breaks. Maybe the sickness is over. And then the Bible says
“However, Jesus spoke of his death, but they thought that he was speaking about taking rest in sleep.”
And then Jesus makes it plain.
“Jesus said to them, plainly, Lazarus is dead. So, they clearly understood.”
Now, how did Jesus treat death? What did Jesus say to his closest followers? Did he say to them, now, don’t worry at all about Lazarus, because, sure, he’s dead, but he has this immortal soul, and it’s gone up to heaven. Not at all. No such teaching in the Bible. And Jesus certainly didn’t believe that anyway. Jesus simply said, Lazarus is sleeping. And then Jesus said, Lazarus is what? Lazarus is dead.
So, Christ then went to the home of Mary and Martha. And as he talked to the sister of Lazarus, Jesus said to her, your brother’s going to rise again. And she said, oh, Lord, if you would have been here, he wouldn’t have died. And I know he’s going to rise again in the last day. This sister of Lazarus, who got her religion directly from Jesus, Mary said, I know he’s going to rise the last day in the resurrection. (the last day). Jesus looks at her and recognizes that she understands the truth about death. What did Martha believe about death? She believed that her faithful brother would rise in the resurrection. She did not believe that he was up in heaven looking down upon her. Mary learned her religion directly from Jesus. And she believed in the resurrection when? At the last day. All the great men and women of faith in the Old and New Testament believe that.
Remember what Paul said there writing to Timothy? He said, my life is being poured out and I wait the righteous judge who will have the crown of life for me in the last day. Paul believed that Christ was going to come again and that he, if he died in that Roman prison, that he would be resurrected in the last day. All believers know that. John believed it, exiled on the island of Patmos. Paul believed it. Mary believed it. Martha believed it. Jesus taught it.
Mary and Martha were crying, not because they thought Lazarus was up in heaven, but because of the pain and the agony of separation from him until the resurrection at the last day. Jesus says to her, I am the resurrection and the life. He who believes in me, though he may die, he shall live. In other words, even though that person dies, though they go into the grave, they are going to live again. They will be resurrected from the dead. That first death will not hold its victims. The grave will not keep its victims. That death is not a long night without a morning. The tomb is not simply a dark hole in the ground. So, Jesus said, if you believe, your brother is going to live again to demonstrate his power over death, to demonstrate his power over the grave, to demonstrate his ability over death. Jesus comes to that grave, and Jesus says, Lazarus, come forth.
And Lazarus comes out of the grave, rises to new life. He had been in that grave four days. Lazarus comes out of the tomb. New life, Jesus says to those who see him. Loose him and let him go. He was all bandaged up with the grave clothes. Life is pulsating through his body. There’s a new smile on his face. There’s a new sparkle in his eyes. There’s a new spring in his step. I can just imagine how he comes, and I can picture him as he embraces Christ.
If what some people believe is true, Jesus didn’t say, Lazarus, come down. Jesus said, Lazarus, come forth. If I were up in heaven for four days, rejoicing in glory, if I were fellowshipping with the angels, if I were eating from the tree of life, and Jesus said, come down, I would have yelled back from heaven if I were Lazarus. Nothing doing, Lord. I’m not coming. You just called the wrong name, Lord. You just called the wrong person. I’m already up here in glory. I’m rejoicing in the kingdom of God. I am not coming back. Why would I?
If anybody could have given a testimony about life after death, it would have been Lazarus. If he were up in glory, think of the books he could have written that would have been sold throughout the Middle East, throughout Jerusalem, on life after death. But Lazarus had nothing to say. Why not? Because he wasn’t in glory. He wasn’t in glory. He was resting, sleeping there in the tomb, resting like every believer will rest until the coming of Jesus, with no pain, no suffering, no heartache, no sorrow, no death, resting. The Bible says
“His sons come to honor, and he does not know it. They are brought low, and he does not perceive it.” (Job 14:21
Somebody says, I like to think of my mother up in heaven. I like to think of her looking down at me. It just gives me comfort. Would it be comfort for a mother up in heaven if her son was drafted off to war and the enemy captured him and tortured him and gouged out his eyes and gouged out his tongue and tortured him mercilessly? Could that mother be happy in heaven? But what about a mother up in heaven looking down and here’s her little five-year-old and he’s kicking a ball, and he kicks it on the street and the car screeches, doesn’t see the boy, crushes him and the boy’s a quadriplegic for the rest of his life? Would that mother up in heaven be happy? Or think of fathers in heaven seeing their daughters beaten brutally by some angry man?
Isn’t God’s plan so much better?
Our loved ones are not in heaven They don’t see children that have gone astray, gotten involved in drugs and alcohol. Our mothers and fathers are not up there in heaven looking down upon the conflicts and families and the wars on earth. How could they possibly be happy in heaven if they could look down on us and see all the horrible things happening? Even Jesus did not go to Heaven right away. When Jesus died, he was just keeping the Sabbath.
Our fathers and mothers are not up in heaven. Death is a state of perfect rest or sleep until the resurrection when Christ wakes you up and speaks saying now all the sorrow is over, now all the heartache is over, now all the disappointments are over. You see, my friend, God’s way is so much better. We are sheltered in his arms in that perfect sleep. Our true life, the record of our life is hidden with Christ in God. Others cannot always see it because only God can read the heart. Our all-powerful, infinite God knows our identity. It is in his hands. (Isa 49:16)
When we die, we don’t live. How can we live and die at the same time? THAT would just make the Bible out to be an idiotic lie because it says, “when you die you live.” How absurd is that? Are we bound to believing that kind of contradiction? Does God really contradict Himself like that?
The Scripture says that our bodies go to the earth. The life, the breath goes back to God. There is no conscious existence after death until the resurrection. We rest until the Christ comes. In the next moment, we see him coming down from the sky. The Bible says, Psalm 115:7
the dead do not what? The dead do not praise the Lord, nor any that go down into silence. If you went up to heaven when you died, you’d at least praise the Lord, right? Wouldn’t that be what you would be doing? But the Bible says, the dead praise not the Lord. Fifty-three times, death is called a sleep in the Bible. Sixteen hundred times, the Bible uses the word soul, never uses the phrase immortal soul. The Bible says, in that very day that a person dies, even their thoughts perish, Psalm 6:5
Psalm 115:17 the Bible says, the dead praise not the Lord.
Ecclesiastes 9: 5-6, the living know that they shall die, but the dead know not anything.
God’s plan is so much better than human tradition. The immortality of the soul comes in through Greek philosophy, and according to Revelation, will be preparing the world for an overwhelming deception. The Bible says that the works of the dead follow them. It says that those that die in Christ have works which follow them.
When a father or mother dies, and they’ve taught their children about the things of Jesus, those children have that inclination for Christ in their hearts, that inclination for Christ in their lives, and they have that desire to follow Christ. And the works of the parents still follow them, and one day, that child will, making choices to follow Christ, because of an influence of their parents, will be in heaven with Jesus and their parents to rejoice forever and ever. (Prov 26:3, Acts 16:31) God’s word is so clear about this subject of death.
But somebody says, wasn’t there the story of Jesus and the story of the thief on the cross who died, and didn’t the Bible indicate that he would be in heaven with Christ? Well, look, when you have text after text after text that talks about the second coming of Christ, when you have passage after passage in Scripture that talks about the return of Christ, you cannot take one Bible text out of context regarding the thief on the cross and throw out these many other clear texts on the coming of Christ that talk about the resurrection of the body.
Didn’t Jesus say, you will be with me in paradise today? Remember, Jesus is hanging on the cross. There’s a thief on the left, thief on the right. Then the thief says, if you’re the Son of God, come down from the cross. Jesus, hanging there with nails through his hands, with blood running down his wrists, with a crown of thorns upon his head, looks like he cannot save anybody. The other thief turns to Christ, and he says, Lord, remember me when you come into your kingdom. Thankfully, nobody has asked that question. Nobody has made that request. Nobody has made that appeal genuinely and sincerely and been turned away by Jesus. (John 6:37)
You’ll recall that Christ died on the cross on Friday. He rested in the tomb on Sabbath. He was resurrected from the dead-on Sunday. And you will also remember that Mary comes to him on Sunday morning, after the resurrection, falls at his feet. And what does Jesus say? John 20:15, Jesus said to her, Woman, why are you weeping? Whom are you seeking? She thinks he’s the gardener and says to him, Sir, if you’ve carried him away, if you’ve taken my Lord away, please tell me where he is. Tell me where you’ve laid him. And I’m going to take him away and give him a proper burial. And what does Jesus say to her?
Jesus says, Mary, Rabboni, which is to say teacher, don’t cling to me for I have not ascended to the Father. But go to my brethren saying, I am ascending, present tense right now, to your Father and my Father and your Father and my God and your God. What does Jesus say to Mary on Sunday? I have not yet ascended to the Father. How could Jesus have said to the thief on Friday that they would be together in paradise on that Friday if Christ had not ascended yet to the Father on the following Sunday morning? Certainly, Jesus did not ascend to Heaven on Friday. So, what was really going on there? Jesus is hanging on the cross. And what does he say? He says, I say unto you today, you will be with me in paradise. It all depends on where you put the comma in that passage. The comma or other punctuations are not inspired. If we put the comma after the word today, it’s clear. If we put it before, it’s a little fuzzy. It becomes a contradiction. If you quote the text this way “I say to you, today you’ll be with me in paradise,” then it appears that Jesus would be in paradise with the thief that day. On the Friday. But if we say, “I say to you today, comma, you will in the future be with me in paradise,” it makes so much more sense. You say, how do you know where to put the comma? Well, first, there were no commas in the original text. That did not come until the 1300s, much later. You don’t take a misplaced comma and throw out 53 texts that say the death is but a sleep, throw out all the texts that talk about the resurrection, and you don’t deny scripture when Jesus himself says that he did not ascend to the Father on that Sunday.
What did Jesus mean when he said that to the thief?
He said, I say to you today, this day that I’m dying on the cross, this day that there’s nails in my hands, this day that there’s a crown of thorns upon my head, this day that it doesn’t look like I can save anybody, I say to you this day, I make that declaration that I will be resurrected from the dead. I will ascend to the father. I will remember you. I will remember you when I come into heaven and paradise. And Jesus says that to you. When you say, Lord, remember me. Remember me in all my guilt. Remember me in all my shame. Remember me, Father. Remember me, dear Jesus. Touch my heart, O Holy Spirit. I feel convicted I must come to you.
Remember me, Jesus says. I accept you, my child. I’ll forgive you, my child. I’ll change your life, my child. You will be with me in paradise. You need not fear death because I have conquered the grave. 1 Corinthians 15:55
O death, where is thy sting? O grave, where is thy victory? But thanks be to God who gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ.
Jesus gives us victory over sin. Jesus gives us victory over the grave. Jesus gives us victory over death. 1 Thessalonians 4:16
the Lord himself shall descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of the archangel, and the trumpet of God, and the dead in Christ shall rise first. We which are alive and remain shall be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air, and so shall we ever be with the Lord.
Have you lost some loved one by death? Some father, some mother. You still miss your dad and your mom? My father has passed away. My wife has died. Many others that I have loved are now dead. I long for that day that Jesus will come. Have you lost some husband or wife? Some father or mother? Some sisters or brother? Some sons or daughter? They’re not lost. If they’re a believer in Christ, they are resting where they can never be lost. Their true life, the record of that life, their identity, is hid with Christ in God. They are resting from the pain, the heartache, the sorrow, the tears of life. They know no passage of time. Like that all day surgery I had years ago, the next thing they will know is the coming of Jesus Christ in the clouds of heaven. (Rev 1:7) And as Jesus comes, that little baby will be put in Mom’s arms again. Mom will reach up and hug your face again. You can look into the eyes of that child one day once again. That son or daughter, lost by death, will be reunited with you. One day that father or mother will embrace you again. One day Jesus Christ will come. And one day the sorrow and heartache of earth will be over.
Would you like to connect with Jesus right now? Will you consider asking Jesus to be both your Savior and your Lord? I’d like to say, Jesus, pass me not, O gentle Savior. Lord, I’m coming to you. Lord, I want to see my father again. I want to see my mother again. I want to see my son again, my daughter again. I want to see my spouse again. I want to be caught up in that glorious joy when Jesus comes and live forever with them through all eternity. Lord, I want to be in that resurrection so that I can see them again.
Here is the incredibly good news. Jesus will not pass you by. Savior, Savior, hear my humble cry. The thief on the cross, in his dying breath, said, Lord, remember me. Remember me when you come into your kingdom. And Jesus gave the thief on that very day the assurance of eternal life. When the thief woke up that morning, he had no idea that his whole life would be changed that day. When he trudged up Golgotha’s hill with Christ, he had no idea that his life would be changed that day. When they drove nails through his hands and he writhed in agony, he had no idea that his life would be changed that day. But in that moment, under the conviction of the Holy Spirit, God spoke to him, and he accepted the gift of eternal life.
Right now, God is speaking to you. Right now, God is talking to your life. Maybe you had no idea that you would be reading this article now, but God’s Holy Educating Spirit is speaking to you just now. You can accept Christ right now. Through an act of your will, you can say “Jesus, I am yours.”
That choice changed the thief’s life. That choice will change your life right now as we pray.
“…It came to pass that the brook dried up” (1 Kings 17:7).
Wow! Jesus calls ME Friend!
The education of my faith has long been incomplete. I could not for so long learn how that there is a providence in each loss, in every sorrow, in all things concerning me. A beautiful, providential ministry of failing, of stolen dreams, of broken heart and wrecked life, and of fading things. The special gift of emptiness. The material insecurities of my life make for its spiritual establishment in Christ alone. The dwindling stream by which Elijah sat and reflected here is a true picture of the life of each of us.
“…It came to pass that the brook dried up”– that is the history of our yesterday, and a prophecy of our tomorrows.
In some way or other we will have to learn the difference between trusting in the gift and trusting in the Giver. The gift may be really good for a while, but the Giver is the Eternal Love. “The everlasting arms.” (Deut 33:27)
The Brook Cherith where Elijah cringed in fear and despair was a difficult problem to Elijah until he got to Zarephath, and then it was all as clear as daylight. The prophet had realized God’s hard words are never His last words. The woe and the waste and the tears of life belong to the interlude and not to the finale.
Had Elijah been led straight to Zarephath he would have missed something that helped to make him a wiser prophet and a better man. Closer to God. Elijah lived by faith at Cherith. And whenever in your life and mine some spring of earthly and outward resource has dried up that we have been enjoyng. Leaning on. It has only been so that we might learn that our hope and help are in God alone, who made Heaven and earth.
Those in the highways are not to be neglected; neither are those in the hedges; and as we journey about from place to place and pass by house after house, we should often inquire, “Have the people who are living in these places heard the message? Has the truth of God’s Word been brought to their ears? Do they understand that the end of all things is at hand, and that the judgments of God are impending? Do they realize that every soul has been bought with an infinite price? As I meditate upon these things, my heart goes out in deep longing to see the truth carried in its simplicity to the homes of these people along the highways and places far removed from the crowded centers of population.It is our privilege to visit them and acquaint them with God’s love for them and with His wonderful provision for the salvation of their souls. {Ev 45.2}
This life is full of gracious opportunities, which you can improve in the exercise of your God-given abilities to bless others, and in so doing bless yourself, without considering self in the matter. Trivial circumstances oftentimes prove a decided blessing to the one who acts from principle and has formed the habit of doing right because it is right. Seek for a perfect character, and let all you do, whether seen and appreciated by human eyes or not, be done with an eye single to God’s glory, because you belong to God and He has redeemed you at the price of His own life. Be faithful in the least as well as in the greatest; learn to speak the truth, to act all times the truth. Let the heart be fully submitted to God. If controlled by His grace, you will do little deeds of kindness, take up the duties lying next to you, and bring all the sunshine into your life and character that it is possible to bring, scattering the gifts of love and blessing along the pathway of life. Your works will be far-reaching as eternity. Your lifework will be seen in heaven, and there it will live, through ceaseless ages, because it is found precious in the sight of God. Remember that what is worth doing at all is worth doing well. {ML 219.4}
This Sabbath Day I am celebrating that God’s love has been there “all along.” His Hand has been guiding me. Loving me. Taking care of me. Giving me people in my life to be His hands of blessing upon my soul. Our Lord is “mighty to save.”
Who is this coming from Edom, from Bozrah, with his garments stained crimson? Who is this, robed in splendor, striding forward in the greatness of his strength? “It is I, proclaiming victory, mighty to save.” (Isa 63:1)
Edom was a constant enemy of Israel despite its common ancestry in Isaac (Gen 25:23). Edom rejoiced at any trouble Israel faced. The imagery in this passage is of a watchman on the wall of Jerusalem, seeing Edom approaching and fearing that the Edomite king in his red garment is leading an attack. But it turns out to be the Lord, in bloodstained clothes, who has trampled and destroyed Edom.
And he was clothed with a vesture dipped in blood: and his name is called The Word of God.(Rev 19:13)
John’s vision shifts again. Heaven opens, and Jesus appears—this time not as a Lamb but as a warrior on a white horse (symbolizing victory). Jesus came first as a Lamb to be a sacrifice for sin, but he will return as a conqueror and king to execute judgment (2 Thes 1:7-10). Jesus’ first coming brought forgiveness; his second will bring judgment. The battle lines have been drawn between God and evil, and the world is waiting for the King to ride onto the field.
Christ has given to the church a sacred charge. Every member should be a channel through which God can communicate to the world the treasures of His grace, the unsearchable riches of Christ. There is nothing that the Savior desires so much as agents who will represent to the world His Spirit and His character. There is nothing that the world needs so much as the manifestation through humanity of the Savior’s love. All heaven is waiting for men and women through whom God can reveal the power of Christianity. {AA 600.1}
If the church will put on the robe of Christ’s righteousness, withdrawing from all allegiance with the world, there is before her the dawn of a bright and glorious day. God’s promise to her will stand fast forever. He will make her an eternal excellency, a joy of many generations. Truth, passing by those who despise and reject it, will triumph. Although at times apparently retarded, its progress has never been checked. When the message of God meets with opposition, He gives it additional force, that it may exert greater influence. Endowed with divine energy, it will cut its way through the strongest barriers and triumph over every obstacle. {AA 601.1}
All Along (Written by Jennifer Lamountain Originally Performed by Jennifer Lamountain)
“Time just drifts away
and as I look back on the years
with memories of
happiness and bitter tears
Through it all there is
a common thread
that cannot be ignored
You were there teaching me to be
Your servant Lord
All along
Your hand has been guiding me
shaping my life to be a beautiful song
All along
You’ve led me through
things that you knew would
make me strong
Your love has been there all along
Every joy and pain
have a reason of their own
now I realize that I was not alone
The changing seasons of my life
were not left up to chance
Lord, I know You were working to fulfill Your plan
All along
Your hand has been guiding me
shaping my life to be a beautiful song
All along
You’ve led me through
things that You knew would
make me strong
Your love has been there all along
Tomorrow when I turn around
and I look back at today
I will understand Your
purpose and my thankful heart will say
All along
Your hand has been guiding me
shaping my life to be a beautiful song
All along
You’ve led me through
things that You knew would
make me strong
Your love has been there all along
Anyone who is among the living has hope—even a live dog is better off than a dead lion! For the living know that they will die, but the dead know nothing; they have no further reward, and even their name is forgotten. (Eccl 9:4-5, NIV)
resurrection power
Last week, in Living Lies About Death #1, we said that this week we will deal with what the Bible says about “immortality.”
To understand death, we really must understand this idea of immortality. Is the soul immortal, or is there a resurrection? If you have an immortal soul that wings its way to Heaven as soon as you die, why would you need a resurrection of the body? We must look at what does the Bible teach about immortality? Do we have it now? Will we have it in the future? Do we have an “immortal soul?” Is this thing called the soul immortal? What is the soul? And what about the resurrection that the Bible teaches about? Where can we find answers?
The truth of the matter is that yes, we can find answers. We find answers deeply embedded in Scripture. We find answers in the Word of God. The Bible helps us to understand the mystery of death.
In Rev 1:18 we read: ” And behold, I’m alive for evermore. Amen. And I have the keys of Hades and of death.
Christ was alive, crucified on the cross, went into the grave, rested on the seventh-day Sabbath, and was resurrected from the dead, on Sunday, the first day of the week. It was at that point that Jesus said, I’m going to my father.
Mary tried to cling to his feet and Jesus said,
“Touch me not, I’m ascending to the father.” (John 20:17)
So now we have the basic and Biblical idea idea of death, rest in the tomb over Sabbath, resurrection, Jesus ascending to heaven. But notice what Jesus says.
“I have the keys of Hades and death. Hades, the grave.” (Rev 1:18)
This is incredibly good news. Death is not some locked up tomb or prison in the earth. Jesus said, I have the keys. You need not fear death. Jesus already experienced death. And Jesus already conquered the grave. Death is a defeated foe. Every time Jesus faced death, Jesus won, and death lost. Every time Christ faced the grave, he came out victorious. And he demonstrated his power over the grave by raising from the dead many who had died in those days.
Christ has conquered the grave. Jesus went into the grave and came out. And because Jesus has the keys to the grave, death is an unlocked mystery through Jesus. The Bible teaches that one day Jesus will come again. One day the dead in Christ will be resurrected. Check out 1 Thessalonians 4:16. It talks about the coming of Jesus.
“The Lord himself shall descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of the archangel, with the trumpet of God. The dead in Christ will rise first.” If the dead in Christ “rise first” then how can it be possible that we go to Heaven as soon as we die?
We are told to not fear death because Jesus is coming again. (Rev 1:7) We can see our loved ones again!
When my late wife died of cancer in my arms, she had this hope. I read that passage to her daily in the days preceding her death.
What does the Bible teach about the idea of the immortal soul? Does the Bible teach that the soul is immortal? Let’s go back to the book of Genesis because if we understand how God created humanity in the beginning, we can also understand about what happens when we die.
Gen 2:7 informs us that there is no such thing as people having a soul. Having an immortal soul. And note what the Bible does not say. The Bible does not say that God put an immortal soul in human beings when they were created.
God formed us. God fashioned us. God shaped us out of what? The dust of the earth. “And man became a living soul.” God breathed his life-giving breath into man. We do not “have a soul.” We are a soul! God formed Adam out of the dust of the Earth and then God breathed into Adam’s nostrils the “breath of life.” And it was right after this that the Bible tells us “Man became a living soul.” We do not have a soul. We are a soul.
We could look at it this way.
Dust, that is, the dust of the earth is what God created mankind from, and God’s Spirit breathed into man “the breath of life” and thus created “a living soul.” In the Bible the soul is not something put into a human being that is immortal. A human being is a living soul. A mortal. Body plus “breath of life” = “living soul.” (Gen 2:7) The body plus the breath equals a living soul. In the Bible, when the word soul is used, it is used as something we are. I am the product of body and breath. I am a living soul, a living being, a living personality. A living soul means a living being or a living personality. In Scripture, a living being, a living soul, means a living person. We don’t “have a soul.” It is our whole being that is collectively called “a living soul” by God Himself. A living soul means an individual who’s thinking, functioning, and breathing.
Is the soul immortal? Can the soul ever die?
“Behold, all souls are mine. The soul of the Father as well as the soul of the Son is mine. The soul who sins shall die.” (Ezekiel 18:5)
The soul that sins shall what?
“DIE.”
How else could we read that passage? The same way we read Genesis 2:7 The person, the living being that sins is going to die. So, let’s go back to Genesis again. It tells us that God created man out of the dust of the ground, breathed into his nostrils the breath of life. And only then “Man became a living” what? A living soul or being or personality. A person. The soul who sins. What’s going to happen to them? They’re going to die. The word soul simply put can mean in the Bible
“a living being.”
An entire, or complete being. Not a separate entity of any kind.
Another name for soul in the Bible is person or life. Two-thirds of the time, the Bible uses the term soul. It’s for life. One-third is for person. Sometimes the Bible talks about the soul as something we are, the product of body and breath. Sometimes the Bible uses the term soul as something we have, two-thirds of the time, in fact. But it never once says that we have an immortal soul. We have life. Mortal life. because the soul that sins will die. No two ways about it. We have life. But in our current, mortal state we can lose it. The only way to attain unto immortality in this, our current state is the resurrection.
The Bible says in Matthew 16:25-26
For whoever wants to save their life will lose it, but whoever loses their life for me will find it. What good will it be for someone to gain the whole world, yet forfeit their soul? Or what can anyone give in exchange for their soul?
Whoever desires to save their what? Whoever desires to save their life, will lose it. But whoever loses their life for my sake will do what? They will find it. Then he goes on to say, Mat 16:26 “For what profit is it to anyone if they gain the whole world and lose their own what? Soul. Or what will a person give in exchange for their soul?
In the earlier verse, it talks about losing your life. Then this verse, it talks about losing your soul. It talks about preserving your life or preserving your soul. When the Bible talks about soul, it can be talking about life. About our mortal state.
When we die, our life is no more. The Bible never talks about soul in the sense of immortal soul. In fact, the Bible uses the term soul 1,600 times. Never once does it put the word immortal with the word soul. Never once does it link those two things together. Wouldn’t you think if human beings had an immortal soul, that at least it would be linked once together in Scripture? In the Bible, it is never linked together. Only God is immortal currently. Mortal means subject to death. Immortal means imperishable. The Bible never uses the terms immortal soul or the immortality of the soul. The Bible does, however, speak about Jesus as the One who alone, is immortal.
Now to the King Eternal, immortal, invisible, to God who alone is wise, be honor and glory forever and ever. (1 Tim 1:17)
Immortality is something that God has. Something that God is. Not us. At least, not yet.
Shall mortal man be more just than his maker? (Job 4:17)
We are mortal. Our impermanence is acutely felt every time a loved one dies. Jesus Himself died and was resurrected. Why wouldn’t the same happen to us? We seek for immortality. But we do not have it now in our current state. The Bible tells us when it will happen:
Listen, I tell you a mystery: We will not all sleep, but we will all be changed—in a flash, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trumpet. For the trumpet will sound, the dead will be raised imperishable, and we will be changed. (1 Cor 15:51-52)
We put on immortality when Christ comes. At His second coming. Because we are mortal. The Bible says clearly that “death is the LAST enemy to be destroyed.” (1 Cor 15:26)
As Humans. As mortals, we do seek for immortality. The Bible says that we put on immortality when Jesus comes again. We put it on when Christ comes. Currently, God alone has immortality.
Let’s look now at something in 1 Tim 6
In the sight of God, who gives life to everything, and of Christ Jesus, who while testifying before Pontius Pilate made the good confession, I charge you to keep this command without spot or blame until the appearing of our Lord Jesus Christ, which God will bring about in his own time—God, the blessed and only Ruler, the King of kings and Lord of lords, who alone is immortal and who lives in unapproachable light, whom no one has seen or can see. To him be honor and might forever. Amen. (1 Tim 6:13-16)
Christians who know their Bible look for the day that we’ll be clothed with immortality when Jesus comes. According to the Bible, God alone is the only One that has immortality now.
The ancient Greeks believed that the soul was immortal and that it would leave the body at death. Also, this idea of the immortality of the soul can be traced back to the Babylonians, it can be traced back to the Egyptian culture. Many pagan cultures had this idea. But the Bible always teaches that the soul was not/is not something that was/is immortal.
Mortality. It’s something we are, the product of body and breath. All our parts and pieces, including our character, collectively are “a living soul.” God created humans out of the dust of the ground, breathed into their nostrils the breath of the spirit of life. We become a living being, a living soul. The soul represents our life. We die, we no longer breathe, that life is over. The Scriptures teach that death is but a rest, a sleep, until the resurrection, and that there is nothing like the immortality of the soul found in the Bible.
What Does New Age/Spiritualism Say?
Spiritualism teaches that the soul is immortal. If you accept the idea of the immortality of the soul, then that leaves you very open, very vulnerable to spiritualism. If we believe the first lie that when we die, we don’t really die, we lay ourselves wide open for the last day deceptions of the devil and his demons who will either impersonate dead loved ones or even impersonate Christ at His second coming. (2 Cor 11:14)
The Bible speaks of spiritualistic delusions in the last days of earth’s history. The devil is preparing men and women through a false understanding or a misunderstanding of death. The devil is preparing men and women through that very first lie in Eden about death with the idea of the immortal soul. The devil will use that specific idea about death to deceive us. The devil can use wrong ideas about death to lead us down the pathway of destruction.
The Bible says
“As the cloud disappears and vanishes away, so they who go down to the grave do not come up. (Job 7:9)
You see, spiritualism says that there’s an immortal soul that leaves the body at death, and that under the right conditions, that this supposed immortal soul, this being that has died, didn’t really die and can still communicate with the living. But the Bible says death is a sleep until the resurrection. Just like the cloud disappears and vanishes, so too, the person who goes down to the grave is not going to come up again until the second coming and the resurrection.
“The dead know not anything.” (Eccl 9:5)
If you are someone who has seen a loved one and talked to them after they have died, you must follow the examples of others who have had to say to these spirit visitants:
“I know you’re not my loved one. I know you’re a demon. In the name of Jesus Christ, be gone.”
As we understand what the Bible really teaches about death, as we understand what the Bible teaches about the immortal soul, God will protect us in the spiritual crises and deceptions of the ages that is almost upon us now. That’s why it’s so vital to understand these truths from the Bible.
Several people I have talked to have said it something like this:
“There is no death in the graveyard. I have frequent talks with the dead. I cannot doubt that people live after death, for I frequently talk with them.”
From the popular, modern magazine called Psychic Powers, page 93 we read:
“The world of mediumship offers a tantalizing promise: the ability to act as a conduit between the living and the deceased. The ability to relay conversations from beyond the grave suggests that life doesn’t truly end with death, a notion that provides many people with comfort. Mediums claim that spirits can provide many people with comfort. Mediums claim that spirits can provide information about their lives, death, and the afterlife, messages that the medium can then relay to their client.
There is no scientific evidence to support the existence of an ability to channel the dead, but we do have insight as to why hearing words from the spirit world presents itself as a true phenomenon that people would want to fervently embrace. It allows us to contemplate a reality where the bond we share with our loved ones can be a magical conduit for communication, which provides comfort and affirmation that love, and life continue beyond death’s door.”
Spiritualism is repeating the first lie in these last days and this very same first lie will be the last lie by which many are deceived in these end times that we are living in now.
Spiritualism is dependent on the idea of the immortal soul. The Bible warns us against spiritualism for several good reasons.
“Do not go to mediums or wizards for advice—they will only make you unclean. I am the LORD your God. (Lev 19:31)
The people will say, “Go to the fortune-tellers and wizards who mumble and chirp like birds. Ask them what to do.” But I say, “Shouldn’t people go to their God for help? Why go to the dead to get help for the living? You should follow the teachings and the agreement. I swear, if you follow those other things, there is no future for you. (Isa 8:19-20)
The Spirit clearly says that in the last times some will turn away from what we believe. They will obey spirits that tell lies. And they will follow the teachings of demons. (1 Tim 4:1)
Contrary to the teaching of the Bible, many people deny the bodily resurrection of Jesus. They reject the idea that for believers, death was being asleep until the second coming of Christ.
The Bible reveals the plans of God. The Bible unmasks the plans of Satan. The Bible teaches that death is like a sleep. The believer who dies is as secure as if they were sleeping in the arms of Jesus Christ. Safe in the arms of Jesus. That’s the message that Jesus gives to us in the Bible. More than 53 times in the Bible, death is mentioned as a sleep. 1 Corinthians 15: 51-52 says
Behold, I tell you a mystery. Jesus, through the apostle Paul, is going to tell us the mystery of death. He’s going to solve that mystery. We shall not all what? Sleep. But we shall be changed when? In a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trump, for the trumpet shall sound. If it was true that we just go to heaven right away when we die, then why on earth would we need a resurrection? Why would Jesus drag us down for a resurrection if we were already in heaven? Who would want to leave heaven if they were already there?
When we die, it’s just as secure as sleeping in the arms of Jesus. We die and we just rest. There’s no pain, there’s no suffering, and notice there’s no passing of time. It says, in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye. When you fall asleep, what’s the next thing that you know? You wake up. You see Jesus, (Rev 1:7)
I once had a 13 1/2-hour surgery. When they put me to sleep, I lay on that operating table all day having all kinds of things happen to me and around me. But I was unaware of all of it. When I woke up it seemed as though only a few minutes had passed. I fell asleep and the next thing I knew, I was awake. That’s all death is. Nothing to be feared. If you’re a believer, we simply fall asleep and we rest. The next moment, the next instant, the next conscious thinking moment, we will see Christ coming. (Rev 1:7, Mark 14:62, Job 19:26-27)
In a moment, in the twinkling of an eye at the last trumpet, for the trumpet will sound, the dead will be raised incorruptible, and we shall be changed. We are changed in a moment, in an instant. Changed from mortality to immortality, to receive these glorious new bodies in Christ. But this only happens at the second coming. On that resurrection morning.
When God created Adam, He placed his breath within him, not within an immortal soul. (Gen 2:7). The Lord God formed man of the dust of the ground, and he breathed into his nostrils the breath of life. Notice what God is breathing into him. It’s the breath of life. Adam was not immortal” before this. Man becomes a living soul. What is this breath that God breathes into him? You see, death is creation in reverse. Death is nothing more than creation in reverse.
“Then the dust will return to the earth when we die as it was and the spirit will return to God who gave it. (Eccl 12:7)
Notice how it doesn’t say the SOUL will return to God who gave it. This is where many people make a big mistake. They think the soul and the spirit are the same thing. They are not. They are two different words that mean two different things. The spirit is nothing more than the breath that God breathed into us initially. The Old Testament word for spirit is ruach, and it means breath. So, God breathes his breath or His spirit, His life force into us.
What goes back to God?
The power of God that he has given us to sustain life.
The spirit and the soul are two different things in the Bible. The soul is something that we are. We are the product of body and breath combined. Not separate entities. The soul has to do with our life. The spirit is the breath of God that sustains or gives us that life. Only when God breathed into it, we lived. When he breathed into that body, we lived. If he wouldn’t have breathed his life into it, we would not have lived. So, the breath of life, the spirit of life, the life-giving force, energy that God puts in us enables us to live. Every breath we take is dependent on the very life that God gives us. It is His breath of life, not our’s.
When we die, we go back to the earth. “Ashes to ashes, dust to dust.” The breath/spirit goes back to Him, and we await in sleep that resurrection day. The spirit or breath of life, the power of life, goes back to God. The Bible teaches that the breath and the spirit are the very same thing. They are one in Scripture. But the “soul” is something quite different.
The Bible teaches in Job 27:3 that often there’s something called in Hebrew parallelism. God says something in the first verse. He explains it in the latter part of that verse.
if I have life within me, the breath of God is in my nostrils, (Job 27:3)
Notice, all the while my breath is where? In me. And the spirit of God is where? In my nostrils. Its the same thing. Breath equals spirit, in this case.
Let’s suppose that the light bulb represents our body. So, this represents our body, or we’re created out of the dust of the ground. Let’s suppose the electricity represents the spirit or the breath. So, somebody turn on the light. Throw the switch. There we go. Thank you very much. Okay, so when the power comes through the power cord, representing the breath or spirit, to the light bulb, what happens? There is illumination. So, to have illumination, what do you need? Do you need just power and the cord? No. You need what? A light bulb. Do you have a light bulb? Do you have illumination? No. You need power. The spirit represents the power. The light bulb is represented by the body. Now, if you turn off the power, please turn off the power. Thank you. Okay, if you turn off the power, what happens? The electricity is back to the powerhouse. What happens to the bulb? It no longer has illumination.
When a person dies, the spirit goes to God, the body, represented by the light bulb, is buried in the earth, and the person’s true life is hidden with Christ in God. They no longer exist as a living soul. They no longer exist as a living being. As a “living soul.” That which goes back to God is not something that thinks. It’s not something that feels. It’s not something that we can call some conscious entity. Since the power to create life is with God, his spirit, which gave life, returns to God. Is there any consciousness in death? Any thought processes going on in death?
The Bible says, Psalm 146:4
When their spirit departs, they return to the ground; on that very day their plans come to nothing.
If there was some kind of immortal soul that went back to God, which the Bible doesn’t teach, what would happen to the thought processes? They would continue. But the Bible says the thought processes do what?
“His thoughts perish.”
Ecclesiastes, chapter 9:5-6 makes it so plain. Notice what it says. “Anyone who is among the living has hope—even a live dog is better off than a dead lion! For the living know that they will die, but the dead know nothing; they have no further reward, and even their name is forgotten. Their love, their hate and their jealousy have long since vanished; never again will they have a part in anything that happens under the sun.” (Eccl 9:4-6)
How much do the dead know? (nothing). The Bible says the dead know not anything. Their love, their hatred, their envy has now perished. If a person went immediately to heaven, they would have to have love to love God. They would, notice, if they went immediately to hell, they would have hatred or envy. But the Bible says the living know that they shall die. And that the dead knows how much? The dead don’t know anything. Every emotion is ceased. Why? Because they’re resting. Resting until Jesus comes. Resting until they receive their final reward. Resting until the resurrection of the righteous or the resurrection of the unrighteous. (Dan 12:2, Mat 25:46, Acts 24:15)
Death is asleep until Christ’s coming. The Bible writers mention this already over 50 different times. Let me give you some examples. Psalm 13:3,
Consider and hear me, David says, O Lord my God, enlighten mine eyes, lest I sleep the sleep of death. What did David believe about death? He believed that it was asleep. King David believed that it was a rest until the coming of Christ. And we find this same idea throughout the entire Old and New Testaments.
Next week, In Living Lies About Death #3 we will examine what the Bible calls “A Covenant with Death,” and a few other favorite arguments from people who say “we shall not surely die.”
“It is appointed to everyone to die once,” and for those who are loyal to Jesus and only what His Word says, they will rise again. On the resurrection morning.
Perhaps you are reading this article now and maybe you are experiencing strong emotions. Someone close to you is dying or they have already died. Did you know there is assurance in God’s Word about this topic that can make you happy, grateful, joyful even “in the valley of the shadow of death?” Your loved one may die soon, or maybe has already died. Yet, our happiness in Christ can’t be erased by any earthly sorrow. Jesus expressly stated, “I am the resurrection and the life.” (John 11:25) which means you will see your loved one again.
“the dead in Christ shall rise”
As the Scriptures say
“For you we are in danger of death all the time. People think we are worth no more than sheep to be killed. But in all these troubles we have complete victory through God, who has shown his love for us. Yes, I am sure that nothing can separate us from God’s love—not death, life, angels, or ruling spirits. I am sure that nothing now, nothing in the future, no powers, nothing above us or nothing below us—nothing in the whole created world—will ever be able to separate us from the love God has shown us in Christ Jesus our Lord. (Rom 8:36-38, ERV)
Psalm 23:4 Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil, for you are with me. Your rod and your staff, they comfort me.
I lost my wife to cancer a few years back and have lost many other people I have known to death. It is times like this when I think our Shepherd’s staff is of relevance. Supporting us. Giving us a living Hope. His promises are our special comfort. We ride all of the waves in this life on the wings of God’s promises.
1 Thes 4:18 says “comfort one another with these words.”
“Those words” are the Shepherd’s staff that we may lean on for support when a loved one is dying or has died already. Those words, that we are to comfort one another with are the promise of the resurrection. “Those words do not say “your loved one is happy in Heaven now. That tradition does not come from the Bible. The Bible does not say anywhere to comfort one another by saying your loved one is in Heaven, but to comfort one another with this promise of the resurrection. (1 Thes 4:13-18) If our loved ones are promised the resurrection, how can it be that they would go to Heaven as soon as they die? Waiting for the resurrection must mean that a person has died! The Christian should not be in ignorance of the blessed hope, the return of Christ to resurrect the dead in Him, and to translate living believers, together with those who have died in Christ to meet together with Jesus in the air. (1 Thes 4:15, 17). This “precious promise” (2 Pet 1:4) is designed to be the greatest comfort for all believers, of all times.
Fear not my friends. You are not really going to lose your loved one. At least not permanently. You will see them again. The next thing they will know after they die will be meeting us all together with the Lord in the clouds. (1 Thes 4:17, Rev 1:7). “At the last day.” (John 11:24). At the resurrection! (John 6:40)
In Heaven, I can see my mom being so surprised and laughing when she sees her David finally realizing his childhood dream of flying. I tried so hard as a kid to make myself artificial wings so I could fly. And I would hit the ground every time with a polite but surprised thud. The thing my mother taught me about God is His patience and love for us. She didn’t realize it at the time, but she had set the foundation for me to accept the resurrection truth (1 Thes 4:13-18) later in my life.
I remember the day well. It was a cold winter day, and I was only 5 yrs old. I got mad one day and said to her “I’m leaving home!” I remember the sweet smile she had as she helped me pack a little suitcase with a few things. I remember wondering about that grin.
And then out I stomped angry as can be. I started marching through the snow and down the street. I got about a block away and realized
“O my. It’s like minus 20 out. Now what do I do?”
So of course I went slinking back home, tail between my legs, and Mom was standing at the door, arms crossed, with that same grin on her face.”
The lesson I learned from that was that something like my mom, God knows us and loves us anyway. God will always be there for us. I can never doubt the love of God again because of my mom. And because God keeps telling me everyday that He loves me through all kinds of people that remind me of her. Suddenly, I have this urge to go out and try again to make me a pair of wings so I can practice my flying. I have no doubt that God will still love me, no matter what kind of stunts I pulled.
Thank you, God, for my mom. It’s not hard to think of God’s promises when I think of her.
The Bible assures us:
Brothers and sisters, we do not want you to be uninformed about those who sleep in death, so that you do not grieve like the rest of mankind, who have no hope. For we believe that Jesus died and rose again, and so we believe that God will bring with Jesus (back to Heaven) those who have fallen asleep in Him. According to the Lord’s word, we tell you that we who are still alive, who are left until the coming of the Lord, will certainly not precede those who have fallen asleep. For the Lord himself will come down from heaven, with a loud command, with the voice of the archangel and with the trumpet call of God, and the dead in Christ will rise first. After that, we who are still alive and are left will be caught up TOGETHER with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air. And so, we will be with the Lord forever. Therefore encourage one another with these words. (1 Thes 4:13-18)
Now, of course, everyone’s light in that cloud of 1 Thes 4:17 will be Jesus!
Sadly, many people have gone with false theories on what happens when we die. Many have said to me that Jesus told us “We would never die” in John 11:26 Here is the exact wording of what Jesus said:
“And whoever lives by believing in me will never die. Do you believe this?”
At first their explanation sounds true but when we look at the context of John 11:26 we soon realize that this idea of going to Heaven as soon as we die cannot be true, based on John 11:26. The context of that verse is shown clearly by John 11:25
Jesus said to her, “I am the resurrection and the life. The one who believes in me will live, even though they die”
According to Jesus people die first, just like Jesus did. Then we await the resurrection after we die. There would be no need for the resurrection if we went straight to Heaven when we die. And if we don’t need the resurrection then what do we need the cross for?
We must keep in mind that God never contradicts Himself (Numbers 23:19) and that God never lies. (Heb 6:18) God is never the author of confusion. (1 Cor 14:33) When we study any given subject in the Bible it is never right to use just one verse to try to negate several other verses that seem to say differently. It is important to use the Bible text to identify the context and to reconcile what we think are differences. They are just a paradox. If many verses say that the dead know not anything or that we die first before the resurrection and that we don’t go to Heaven as soon as we die, then why would it be OK to try to use just one or two texts to dismiss or negate all of the many verses that clearly say differently?
The Bible says that if anyone negates or lessens our need for “the cross” then they are the spirit of antichrist.
Every spirit who doesn’t confess that Jesus Christ has come in the flesh is not of God, and this is the spirit of the Antichrist, of whom you have heard that it comes. Now it is in the world already. (1 John 4:3, WEB)
There simply is no need for Jesus to “come in the flesh” and to die on the cross if there is no need for a resurrection if we go to Heaven as soon as we die. Sadly, anyone who teaches different than what the whole Bible actively teaches on this subject is teaching antichrist doctrines, no matter how many Bible verses they quote. (1 Tim 4:1-2)
Now if Christ is preached, that he has been raised from the dead, how do some among you say that there is no resurrection of the dead? But if there is no resurrection of the dead, neither has Christ been raised. If Christ has not been raised, then our preaching is in vain, and your faith also is in vain. 15 Yes, we are found false witnesses of God, because we testified about God that he raised up Christ, whom he didn’t raise up, if it is so that the dead are not raised. For if the dead aren’t raised, neither has Christ been raised. If Christ has not been raised, your faith is vain; you are still in your sins. (1 Cor 15:12-17)
When I was a little boy, I always drove my mom nuts because I was constantly asking questions. My most common question was just “WHY?” WHY Mom? WHY?
I think I was only 5 years old when Great Grandpa died. I remember my mom standing at the kitchen sink preparing supper when she told us. She said several times that Great Grandpa was in Heaven now and that he was finally very happy with no more pain. Even as a young child I had questions about this. No one had yet had a chance to brainwash or indoctrinate me yet. All I knew was how grossed out I was at the funeral when the adults told us kids, we all had to file past his body in the coffin and kiss him. I was so disgusted, and I started wondering how the adults could say that Great Grandpa was alive and in Heaven now. As a little boy, he looked dead to me.
I remember after the funeral asking my mom another one of my many whys. I said “Mom. They said at the funeral that there would be no tears or sadness in heaven, (Rev 21:4) right? Well, how can Great Grandpa be happy up there if he is looking down on us and sees me crying and so sad that he is gone? How could he ever be happy there when he sees what’s happening to us down here?” I didn’t get any answers as a boy. The answers to that why came later when I was an adult.
The Bible a provides penetrating insight into the future. It reveals the plans of God. It unmasks the plans of Satan and his schemes against the people of God. One of the devil’s greatest deceptions has to do with spiritualism. It has to do with the impersonation of our dead loved ones by evil spirits. My friends, today’s topic is about how The Word of God reveals the deadly delusions of end time events that we will all face soon.
One of Satan’s deadliest delusions has to do with what happens when you die. The very first lie ever told by “the father of lies” (John 8:44) was about this very subject. On the one hand God says, “You will surely die,” (Gen 2:13) and on the other hand Satan says, “You will not surely die.” (Gen 3:4) The very first lie will also be the very last lie in the time of the end spoken of in Bible prophecy.
There are many different ideas about what happens when a person dies. The question arises
“Can we find hope beyond the grave?” A hope that goes beyond the tomb. A hope that pierces the darkness of night. A hope that can rise above the many false, hopeless theories that are being proffered, even by many churches?”
What really happens when you die? What takes place five minutes after death? Is it heaven? Is it hell? Is it nothingness? If we went out and took a survey about what happens when you die, and if we asked five different people, well, one might say, oh, when you die, nothing, that’s it, it’s the grave. You go into the grave, the ground, and you stay there. Somebody else might say, well, you’re reincarnated to a variety of life forms. Somebody else might say, well, when you die, you do not die. You just go immediately to heaven, or you go to hell.
Yet others will say, when you die, you rest until the coming of Christ. In the most pejorative ways possible, many professing Christians will label this as “soul sleep.” It is a sad fact that many of our churches have swallowed the lie that death is some kind of friend and will bring peace to us somehow. But the Bible doesn’t call death an enemy for no reason. (1 Cor 15:26) The fact is, is that the Bible says how death should be viewed:
“The last enemy to be destroyed is death.” (1 Cor 15:26)
Why do so many churches repeat the first lie in Eden that ‘we will not surely die” but we will just go to Heaven right away as soon as we die? How can such a death be “the last enemy” (1 Cor 15:56) if that first lie in Eden was true? (Gen 3:4) If death is in fact the last enemy to be destroyed, then it would have to take place at the resurrection when Jesus comes again. Only then would death truly be
“The last enemy to be destroyed.”
The real answer to the problem of death, of course, must be found in the Bible. We have a variety of opinions about death, but what Scripture says is authoritative, because the author of life reveals secrets about death. Are the dead asleep, waiting for the resurrection when Jesus comes, or are they in Heaven already? Many Christians are quite confused about that point. many false prophets are teaching them anti Christ doctrines on this point.
Sometimes when we go to a funeral, the preacher will say,
“Well, your dead loved ones are up in heaven looking down upon you now. Don’t worry. They are very happy there now.”
Then a few paragraphs later in the same sermon, they will say,
“Well, your dead loved ones will be resurrected when Jesus comes.
And people will be quite confused because of such contradictions. Where are our loved ones who have died?” Are they already in Heaven, or are they waiting for the resurrection? How can it possibly be both?
Some say, well, when we die, there is kind of a spirit being that goes up to Heaven, but that spirit being has to be somehow reunited with the body when it’s resurrected. Then we must ask, if the spirit lives in Heaven, what is it? Does it have eyes? Does it have hands? And why does it need to be reunited with the body if it’s already been up there for hundreds of years? The Bible is much simpler than that, much clearer and definite than that, and much less confusing. We must recall here that “God is not the author of confusion.” (1 Cor 14:33) The Apostle Paul raises some startling points about this very thing: he says
For if the dead are not raised, not even Christ has been raised. And if Christ has not been raised, your faith is futile, and you are still in your sins. Then those also who have fallen asleep in Christ have perished. If in Christ we have hope in this life only, we are of all people most to be pitied. (1 Cor 15:16-19)
If it’s true that we go right to Heaven when we die, then there is no need for the resurrection, or the cross for that matter. Anything that lessens or negates the need for Christ and Him crucified is clearly the voice of the Antichrist speaking. (1 John 2:18-19, 1 John 2:21-22)
To understand death, we really have to understand this idea of immortality. Is the soul immortal, or is there a resurrection? If you have an immortal soul that wings its way to Heaven after you die, why would you need a resurrection of the body? So, we have to look at what does the Bible teach about immortality? Do we have it now? Will we have it in the future? Do we have an immortal soul? Is this thing called the soul immortal? What is the soul? And what about the resurrection that the Bible teaches about? Where can we find answers? The truth of the matter is we can find answers. We find answers deeply embedded in Scripture. We find answers in the Word of God. The Bible helps us to understand the mystery of death.
In Rev 1:18 we read:
” And behold, I’m alive for evermore. Amen. And I have the keys of Hades and of death.
Christ was alive, crucified on the cross, went into the grave, but was resurrected from the dead. It was at that point that he said, I’m going to my father. Remember, Mary tried to cling to his feet and Jesus said,
“Touch me not, I have not yet ascended to the Father.” (John 20:17)
So now we have the basic idea of death. Rest in the tomb over Sabbath. Resurrection. Jesus ascending to heaven. But notice what Jesus says.
“I have the keys of Hades and death. Hades, the grave.” (Rev 1:18)
This is incredibly good news. Why? Death is not some locked up tomb or prison in the earth. Jesus said, I have the keys. You need not fear death. Why don’t we need to fear death? First, Jesus already experienced it. And he already conquered the grave. Death is a defeated foe. Every time Jesus faced death, Jesus won and death lost. Every time Christ faced the grave, he came out victorious. And he demonstrated his power over the grave by raising from the dead people who had died in New Testament times.
Why don’t we need to fear death? Because Christ has conquered the grave. He went into the grave and came out. And because he has the keys to the grave, death is an unlocked mystery through Jesus. The Bible teaches that one day Jesus will come again. And one day the dead in Christ will be resurrected. Check out
1 Thessalonians 4:16. It talks about the second coming of Jesus.
“The Lord himself shall descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of the archangel, with the trumpet of God. The dead in Christ will rise first.”
If the dead in Christ “rise first” then how can it be possible that they are in Heaven as soon as they die? We can see already that it is quite impossible that we go to heaven as soon as we die, short-cutting on the resurrection promised for all who love Jesus. We are told to not fear death because Jesus is coming again. (Rev 1:7) We can see our loved ones again!
What then, does the Bible teach about the idea of the immortal soul? Does the Bible teach that the soul is immortal? In our study for next week, we will go back to the book of Genesis because if we understand how God created humanity, in the beginning we can also understand about what happens when we die.
Until then, may we all say and believe with the love, mercy, and grace of Jesus Christ our Lord
I think that all things are worth nothing compared with the greatness of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord. Because of Christ, I lost all these things, and now I know that they are all worthless trash. All I want now is Christ. I want to belong to him. In Christ I am right with God, but my being right does not come from following the law. It comes from God through faith. God uses my faith in Christ to make me right with him. All I want is to know Christ and the power that raised him from death. I want to share in his sufferings and be like him even in his death. Then there is hope that I will somehow be raised from death. (Phil 3:8-11, NIV)
In Christ all the fullness of the Godhead dwells. Jesus teaches us to count all things but loss for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus our Lord. This knowledge is the highest science that any person could ever reach. It is the sum of all true science.
“This is life eternal,” Christ declared, “that they might know thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom thou hast sent” (John 17:3)
Stay tuned for next week’s study on Immortality. May God add His blessing to the reading of His Word.
Paul wanted to know for himself the power of the Savior’s grace. He trusted in His power to save even him, who had persecuted the church of Christ. In his estimation no treasure could equal the value of the gift of the knowledge of Christ
Will you take some time just now to know Jesus for yourself? John 17:3 tells us it is eternal life to know Him. Jesus knows just what you are like and yet He calls you friend. His adopted child. Jesus will not turn you away. He is waiting for you just now. In your own words, your own way, let Him know you are His and ask Him to take over all those things you can’t control.
When the sins of Jesus washed red, your sins washed white.
The Spirit and the bride say, “Come!” Everyone who hears this should also say, “Come!” All who are thirsty may come; they can have the water of life as a free gift if they want it. (Rev 22:17)
And all things are of God, who has reconciled us to Himself through Jesus Christ, and has given to us the ministry of reconciliation; (2 Cor 5:18)
all things are of God
O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable are His judgments, and His ways past finding out! For who has known the mind of the Lord, or who became His counselor? Or who first gave to Him, and it will be repaid to him? For of Him and through Him and to Him are all things; to Him be glory forever! Amen. (Rom 11:33-36)
God brings us back to himself (reconciles us) by blotting out our sins (see also Eph 2:13-18) and making us right with him. When we trust in Christ, we are no longer God’s enemies, or strangers or foreigners to him. Because we have been reconciled to God, we have the privilege of encouraging others to do the same, and thus we are those who have the “task of reconciling people to him.”
But now in Christ Jesus you who were once afar off are made near by the blood of Christ. For He is our peace, He making us both one, and He has broken down the middle wall of partition between us, having abolished in His flesh the enmity (the Law of commandments contained in ordinances) so that in Himself He might make the two into one new man, making peace between them; and so that He might reconcile both to God in one body by the cross, having slain the enmity in Himself. And He came and preached peace to you who were afar off, and to those who were near. For through Him we both have access by one Spirit to the Father. (Eph 2:13-18)
All things in providence are of God. ‘We know that all things work together for good to them that love God, to them who are the called according to his purpose’ (Rom 8:28). ‘For of him, and through him, and to him, are all things: to whom be glory for ever’ (Rom 11:36). Every event of providence is ordered and ruled according to the sovereign will of our God. The thoughts of men and the actions of men, good and bad, angels and demons, the path of every grain of dust on a windy day and the path of the whirlwind — everything in this universe is absolutely under the control and direction of God’s sovereign providence. Nothing happens by accident. Our great God, in his sovereign majesty, rules everything with as much case as if there were nothing to rule.
With undisturbed serenity, God rules! Because God rules all things, we know that all things will be so ruled of God as to bring about the spiritual and eternal good of all who trust him and all things will be to the praise of his glory, ‘According to the purpose of him who worketh all things after the counsel of his own will’ (Eph 1:11). Because God is totally, absolutely, universally sovereign in providence, we know that his purpose will be accomplished and his promises will all be fulfilled. Anything less than a totally sovereign God cannot be confidently trusted.
All things are of God in salvation. ‘Salvation is of the Lord’ John 2:9). ‘By grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God’ (Eph 2:8). ‘Of him are ye in Christ Jesus, who of God is made unto us wisdom, and righteousness, and sanctification, and redemption: that, according as it is written, He that glorieth, let him glory in the Lord’ (1 Cor 1:30-31).
Grace, redemption, regeneration, sanctification, preservation, resurrection and glorification are works of God alone. God gave us life. God gave us faith. God gave us a new heart and a new will by revealing Christ in us. We ‘are kept by the power of God’ (1 Pet 1:5).
We worship and trust and love the one true and living God, who is sovereign in creation, sovereign in providence and sovereign in salvation.
In the contemplation of Christ we linger on the shore of a love that is measureless. We endeavor to tell of this love, and language fails us. We consider His life on earth, His sacrifice for us, His work in heaven as our advocate, and the mansions He is preparing for those who love Him, and we can only exclaim, O the height and depth of the love of Christ! “Herein is love, not that we loved God, but that He loved us, and sent His Son to be the propitiation for our sins.” “Behold, what manner of love the Father hath bestowed upon us, that we should be called the sons of God.” 1John 4:10; 1John 3:1. {AA 333.3}
In every true disciple this love, like sacred fire, burns on the altar of the heart. It was on the earth that the love of God was revealed through Christ. It is on the earth that His children are to reflect this love through blameless lives. Thus sinners will be led to the cross to behold the Lamb of God. {AA 334.1}
God brings us back to himself (reconciles us) by blotting out our sins (see also Eph 2:13-18) and making us right with him. When we trust in Christ, we are no longer God’s enemies, or strangers or foreigners to him. Because we have been reconciled to God, we have the privilege of encouraging others to do the same, and thus we are those who have the “task of reconciling people to him.”
For if, when we were enemies, we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son, much more, being reconciled, we shall be saved by his life. (Rom 5:10
The love that caused Christ to die is the same love that sends the Holy Spirit to live in us and guide us every day. The power that raised Christ from the dead is the same power that saved you and is available to you in your daily life. Be assured that, having begun a life with Christ, you have a reserve of power and love to call on each day for help to meet every challenge or trial. You can pray for God’s power and love as you need it.
Some have learned to see in the lowly Nazarene whom their forefathers rejected and crucified, the true Messiah of Israel. As their minds have grasped the significance of the familiar prophecies so long obscured by tradition and misinterpretation, their hearts have been filled with gratitude to God for the unspeakable gift He bestows upon every human being who chooses to accept Christ as a personal Saviour. {AA 379.3}
It is to this class that Isaiah referred in his prophecy,
“A remnant shall be saved.”
From Paul’s day to the present time, God by His Holy Spirit has been calling after the Jew as well as the Gentile.
“There is no respect of persons with God,” declared Paul.
The apostle regarded himself as “debtor both to the Greeks, and to the barbarians,” as well as to the Jews; but he never lost sight of the decided advantages possessed by the Jews over others, “chiefly, because that unto them were committed the oracles of God.” “The gospel,” he declared, “is the power of God unto salvation to everyone that believeth; to the Jew first, and also to the Greek. For therein is the righteousness of God revealed from faith to faith: as it is written, The just shall live by faith.”
It is of this gospel of Christ, equally efficacious for Jew and Gentile, that Paul in his epistle to the Romans declared he was not ashamed. {AA 380.1}
Timothy once stated
I charge you before God (who makes all things alive) and in the sight of Christ Jesus (who witnessed the good confession to Pontius Pilate), that you keep the commandment without spot and without blame until the appearing of our Lord Jesus Christ. (1 Tim 6:13-14)
In the immediate context, Paul was exhorting Timothy to avoid empty religious argumentation (1 Tim 6:3-5) and the greed of materialism (1 Tim 6:6-10). Timothy was to remain faithful to Christ until He appeared again. Thus, Paul was encouraging Timothy to focus on the return of Christ, not on temporal gain. The imminent return of Christ should be a motive for godly living (2 Pet 3:10-16; 1 John 2:28).
This “good confession” made by Christ in front of Pilate was equivalent to the “good profession” (1Tim 6:12—same Greek word) made by Timothy before many hostile witnesses. So with our own profession of faith (compare Mat 10:32; Rom 10:9; 1 John 4:15).
This is why Jesus said
Then everyone who shall confess Me before other people, I will confess them before My Father who is in Heaven.(Mat 10:32)
In the closing proclamation of the gospel, when special work is to be done for classes of people hitherto neglected, God expects His messengers to take particular interest in the Jewish people whom they find in all parts of the earth. As the Old Testament Scriptures are blended with the New in an explanation of Jehovah’s eternal purpose, this will be to many of the Jews as the dawn of a new creation, the resurrection of the soul. As they see the Christ of the gospel dispensation portrayed in the pages of the Old Testament Scriptures, and perceive how clearly the New Testament explains the Old, their slumbering faculties will be aroused, and they will recognize Christ as the Savior of the world. Many will by faith receive Christ as their Redeemer. To them will be fulfilled the words, “As many as received Him, to them gave He power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on His name.” John 1:12. {AA 381.1}
A patchwork religion is not of the least value with God. He requires the whole heart. No part of it is to be reserved for the development of hereditary or cultivated tendencies to evil. To be harsh, to be severe, too self-important, selfish, to look out for one’s own selfish interest and yet be zealous that others shall deal unselfishly is a religion which is an abomination to God. Many have just such an experience daily, but it is a misrepresentation of the character of Christ {6BC 1101.6}
Before I knew Jesus I had suffered serious burns to 50% of my body. I became an addict, and I felt lost and alone and crippled from the burns and other injuries. One night I was lying in my hospital bed, crying loudly. I was afraid. Everyone thought I was going to die. Most of the nurses could not handle coming around me because I was a handful and I guess I looked like Frankenstein. But at shift change a different nurse came into my room and when she saw what was going on she just took my hand and said “David, I am going to stay right here with you until you are not afraid.” And I was asleep in just a few minutes.
That nurse had an amazing quality of goodness and compassion to her character that really stood out from all the other staff. She did not say a word about Bible, church, or any other such things. Over a period of years after that night, I would sometimes meet people who had a similar quality to their character as did that nurse. I remember saying to myself “I don’t know what these kind of people have, but whatever it is I want that too.” At one point I met some Adventists in Calgary, and again they had a similar character of hopefulness and compassion as did that precious nurse so many years ago and so I eventually gave my heart to Jesus and asked Him to be both Savior and Lord.
Some 25 years later I found myself back in the small Ontario town where I was burned and I decided to see if there was an Adventist Church there. Sure enough there was. Can you guess who was greeting visitors there that day as they entered the sanctuary? YES! It was that nurse! We both just burst out crying and after a bit, she said
“Oh David, are you a Christian now or did you just walk in off the street?”
And all I could say was BOTH! Praise God from whom all blessings flow!
Pure religion is an imitation of Christ. A religion that is built on self-confidence and selfishness is worthless. The true Christian is a follower of Christ. This following means walking in the light. The heart must be opened to receive the heavenly guest. As long as the heart is closed against His entrance, there can be in it no abiding peace. No sunshine can flood the chambers of the soul temple, breaking through the mist and cloud. {6BC 1101.2}
There is a special mountaintop experience I had a while ago. It was related to one of my favorite Bible verses.
“They that wait upon the Lord will mount up with wings as Eagles, they will run and not grow weary, they will walk and not faint.” (Isa 40:31)
water
The Lord gave me a personal illustration of this verse from the top of a mountain I had climbed one summer. The amazing thing about this experience was that I am a very strong person. I try to stay in good shape. Yet the winds from that storm were so strong that even I was hanging on to the rocks for dear life. For fear of being blown away over the edge. That is a pretty severe storm when one is on top of a mountain.
There I was at the top. I was looking out over the edge to the valley below. It was obscured by storm clouds in some spots. I could not see very much detail. Then, I saw something moving through the storm clouds into the sunlight above them, where I was. It was a great bald Eagle rising effortlessly through the dark stormy clouds into the light above.
I noticed something very peculiar about that eagle. He had his wings spread all the way out, and he was not moving his wings even a little bit. He was expending very little to no effort to rise above this storm. Why? Simply because he was born with the secret that he could actually harness the sheer power of that storm to rise above it. That amazing eagle used the power and strength of the storm to rise above it and into the beautiful sunlight above.
According to this and to our opening text, our self-centered, straining, driving efforts will never accomplish the work that God has given each of us to do. We can never do anything “for” God in our own strength. But in His strength, we do all things “with” God. God will use our storms as the path to the strength we will need to rise above them, and into the sunlight of His presence above.
As Paul stated it in Phil 4:19:
my God shall supply all your need according to his riches in glory by Christ Jesus.
The eagle of the Alps is sometimes beaten down by the tempest into the narrow defiles of the mountains. Storm clouds shut in this mighty bird of the forest, their dark masses separating her from the sunny heights where she has made her home. Her efforts to escape seem fruitless. She dashes to and fro, beating the air with her strong wings, and waking the mountain echoes with her cries. At length, with a note of triumph, she darts upward, and, piercing the clouds, is once more in the clear sunlight, with the darkness and tempest far beneath. So we may be surrounded with difficulties, discouragement, and darkness. Falsehood, calamity, injustice, shut us in. There are clouds that we cannot dispel. We battle with circumstances in vain. There is one, and but one, way of escape. The mists and fogs cling to the earth; beyond the clouds God’s light is shining. Into the sunlight of His presence we may rise on the wings of faith. {Ed 118.2}
Like the mighty Eagle, only God Himself who works without any strain, and who never overworks, can do the things He has assigned to His sons and daughters in their daily pilgrimage. (John 1:12) When we restfully trust in Jesus to do it, it will always be well done, and completely done. The way to let Jesus Himself do it, the way to let Jesus do His work through us, is to partake of Jesus so fully, by faith, that Jesus more than fills our life.
God admonishes us in Phil 2:12
Therefore, my dear friends, as you have always obeyed—not only in my presence, but now much more in my absence—continue to work out your salvation with fear and trembling,
Notice here, Paul is encouraging us to develop and work out our salvation, but not to work for our salvation. We can only “work out” what Jesus puts in. That’s why, in the next verse we are told
for it is God who works in you to will and to act in order to fulfill his good purpose. (Phil 2:13)
The Psalmist puts it this way:
I have hidden your word in my heart that I might not sin against you. (Psalms 119:11)
God’s Word is “is a lamp unto my feet, and a light unto my path.” (Psalms 119:105)
God will put something in you, only if you are willing to “work it out” (Phil 2:12)
“This is the covenant I will make with the people of Israel after that time,” declares the LORD. “I will put my law in their minds and write it on their hearts. I will be their God, and they will be my people. (Jer 31:3)
This is the covenant I will establish with the people of Israel after that time, declares the Lord. I will put my laws in their minds and write them on their hearts. I will be their God, and they will be my people. (Heb 8:10)
If our heart is not changed, following God’s rules will be unpleasant and difficult. We will rebel against being told how to live. The Holy Spirit, however, gives us new desires, helping us want to obey God (see Philippians 2:12-13). With a new heart, we find that serving God is our greatest joy. What God puts in us, we work out to others in our life paths.
So then, just as you received Christ Jesus as Lord, continue to live your lives in him,rooted and built up in him, strengthened in the faith as you were taught, and overflowing with thankfulness. ” (Col 2:6-7)
Like the mighty eagle of the Alps, it is no effort to harness the strength of our storms to rise above them into the sunlight of His presence, because God has put something in us to work it out. To help us rise above it for we can do nothing of our own selves!
Once we realize this secret of rest in Christ, we will have the experience of coming to Jesus, and drinking of that “water of life” and we will never be thirsty again. Our new motto will then be “not overwork, but overflow.”
This overflow has made all the difference in my life. There is no effort in overflow. It is quietly irresistible. It is the normal life of omnipotent and ceaseless accomplishment into which Christ invites us today and always.
but whoever drinks the water I give them will never thirst. Indeed, the water I give them will become in them a spring of water welling up to eternal life.” (John 4:14)
Many spiritual functions parallel physical functions. As our bodies hunger and thirst, so do our souls. But our souls need spiritual food and water. The woman at the well confused the two kinds of water, perhaps because no one had ever talked with her about her spiritual hunger and thirst before. We would not think of depriving our bodies of food and water when they hunger or thirst. Why then should we deprive our souls? The living Word, Jesus Christ, and the written Word of God, can satisfy our hungry and thirsty souls to the point where it overflows into the lives of all whom God sets in our path.
We all must seek to have an indwelling Savior, who will be to us as a well of water, springing up into everlasting life. The water of life flowing from the heart always waters the hearts of others.
The water that Christ referred to was the revelation of His grace in His Word where God makes every provision for us.
“Thy Word is a lamp unto my feet and a light unto my path” (Psalms 119:105)
His Spirit, His teaching, is as a satisfying fountain to every soul.
God’s holy, educating Spirit is in His word. A light, a new and precious light, shines forth from every page. Truth is there revealed, and words and sentences are made bright and appropriate for the occasion, as the voice of God speaking to the soul. {COL 132.2}
“For as the rain and the snow come down from heaven and do not return there but water the earth, making it bring forth and sprout, giving seed to the sower and bread to the eater, so shall my word be that goes out from my mouth; it shall not return to me empty, but it shall accomplish that which I purpose, and shall succeed in the thing for which I sent it. (Isa 55:10-11)
All of us dream and make plans for the future. Then we work hard to see those dreams and plans come true. But to make the most of life, we must include God’s plan in our plans. He alone knows what is best for us; he alone can fulfill his purpose for us and in us.
As you make plans and dream dreams, talk with God about them.
“The LORD will fulfill his purpose for me; your steadfast love, O LORD, endures forever. Do not forsake the work of your hands.” (Psalms 138:8)
For we are made partakers of Christ, if we hold the beginning of our confidence steadfast unto the end; (Heb 3:14)
this is the confidence that we have in him, that, if we ask any thing according to his will, he hears us: (1 John 5:14)
In Christ is fullness of joy forevermore. Christ’s gracious presence in His Word is ever speaking to the soul, representing Him as the well of living water to refresh our thirsting. It is our privilege to have a living, abiding Savior. He is the source of spiritual power implanted within us, and His influence will flow forth in words and actions, refreshing all within the sphere of our influence, begetting in them desires and aspirations for strength and purity, for holiness and peace, and for that joy which brings with it no sorrow. This is the result of an indwelling Savior. Not overwork, but overflow.
whether you eat or drink or whatever you do, do it all for the glory of God. (1 Cor 10:31)
do the dishes
1/ If you don’t do a good job then you might be a hypocrite
“Woe to you, teachers of the law and Pharisees, you hypocrites! You clean the outside of the cup and dish, but inside they are full of greed and self-indulgence. Blind Pharisee! First clean the inside of the cup and dish, and then the outside also will be clean. Mat 23:25-26)
2/ Cooking utensils should be washed after the meal
The clay pot the meat is cooked in must be broken; but if it is cooked in a bronze pot, the pot is to be scoured and rinsed with water. (Lev 6:28)
3/ If you do a good job then your example may be something that will illustrate or glorify God’s work
I will stretch out over Jerusalem the measuring line used against Samaria and the plumb line used against the house of Ahab. I will wipe out Jerusalem as one wipes a dish, wiping it and turning it upside down. (2 Kings 21:13)
Jesus condemned the Pharisees and religious leaders for outwardly appearing upright and holy but inwardly remaining full of corruption and greed. Living our Christianity merely as a show for others is like washing only the outside of a cup. When we are clean on the inside, our cleanliness on the outside won’t be a sham.
The rebuke of Christ to the Pharisees is applicable to those who have lost from the heart their first love. A cold, legal religion can never lead souls to Christ; for it is a loveless, Christless religion. When fastings and prayers are practiced in a self-justifying spirit, they are abominable to God. The solemn assembly for worship, the round of religious ceremonies, the external humiliation, the imposed sacrifice, all proclaim to the world the testimony that the doer of these things considers themselves as righteous. These things call attention to the observer of rigorous duties, saying, This person is entitled to heaven. But it is all a deception. Works will not buy for us an entrance into heaven. The one great offering that has been made is ample for all who will believe {5BC 1098.5}
So men! Do the dishes! And do them right! Love can begin in the kitchen!
I no longer call you servants, because servants don’t know what their master is doing. But now I call you friends, because I have told you everything that my Father told me. (John 15:15, ERV)
Wow! Jesus calls ME Friend!
Good Morning God.
This morning I am struck with amazement. Gratitude.
Who on earth am I that you are even mindful of me when I call? That you hear me? When I call? And every time too?
This morning, I rejoice that I am a friend of God! How Jesus would want to love me is so amazing! Jesus calls ME His friend! I am a friend of God! Jesus wants to make ME salt and Light, drawing others to His infinite heart of love, mercy, and grace. Its so amazing! I am a friend of God! Jesus calls ME His friend!
At the cross, Jesus loved me and brought ME back to Him!
I will be lifted up from the earth. When that happens, I will draw all people to myself.” (John 12:32, ERV)