"When man began to multiply on the face of the land and daughters were born to them, the sons of God saw that the daughters of man were attractive. And they took as their wives any they chose. Then the LORD said, “My Spirit shall not abide in man forever, for he is flesh: his days shall be 120 years.” The Nephilim were on the earth in those days, and also afterward, when the sons of God came in to the daughters of man and they bore children to them. These were the mighty men who were of old, the men of renown. The LORD saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every intention of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually. And the LORD regretted that he had made man on the earth, and it grieved him to his heart. So the LORD said, “I will blot out man whom I have created from the face of the land, man and animals and creeping things and birds of the heavens, for I am sorry that I have made them.”" (Genesis 6:1-7)
Saturday, January 1, 2022
"Happy" New Year?
Thursday, December 30, 2021
There will be a day of justice--it's just not today!
Malachi is a brief but sobering book. In 4 chapters we are given the immediate state of God's people with a foreboding message for all future generations who follow the same courses of rebellion as the people of Malachi's day.
""Your words have been arrogant against Me," says the LORD. "Yet you say, 'What have we spoken against You?' "You have said, 'It is vain to serve God; and what profit is it that we have kept His charge, and that we have walked in mourning before the LORD of hosts? 'So now we call the arrogant blessed; not only are the doers of wickedness built up but they also test God and escape.'"
A quick tally of all the indictments against "God's people" ought to be a wake up call to people of faith today.
1. Pride causes the "clay" to dare push back against the "Potter." "Thus saith the Lord" is routinely dismissed out of hand today is it not?
2. God's people argue with HIS assessment of their sin.
3. God's people contend it is pointless to live by the Word of the Lord.
4. God's people's rebellion empowered the wicked to continue and increase in their wickedness.
Tuesday, September 21, 2021
"We esteemed Him stricken..."
"He was despised and forsaken of men, A man of sorrows and acquainted with grief; And like one from whom men hide their face He was despised, and we did not esteem Him. Surely our griefs He Himself bore, And our sorrows He carried; Yet we ourselves esteemed Him stricken, Smitten of God, and afflicted. (Isaiah 53:3-5)
This is one of my earliest memory verses dating back to the mid 70's. It is a well known passage to most Christians and one of the more pointed prophecies of the coming One who is the One and Only. But in this morning's annual trek through the Word, I caught a different glimpse of this wonderful assurance of our salvation.
When Jesus was walking the Earth there were those who were enamored by His various uniquenesses, he was tolerated by the curious, worshipped by a few, but overall he was despised by the majority. Hence, when given the offer to release him, the multitudes chose a known murderer.
Our view from after-the-fact is easy; He was our substitute, He was the Righteous One taking the place of we the GUILTY. But in real time, that was not what played out. The most plausible, explanation for the brutality he suffered was that he had it coming to him. He deserved what he was receiving. I mean after all "we" (Rome) are a civil society with laws, and protections and rights for the innocent. If he were not guilty as charged he certainly would not have suffered the string of injustices and brutal tortures he did.
There is only one obvious explanation; he had it coming. "Shall not the Judge of the whole earth do right?" Of course. Bottom line, he is under the judgement of God who knows all things, therefore, "...we ourselves esteemed Him stricken, Smitten of God, and afflicted." He had it coming.
This sticks in my craw and I'm not even sure where that is but it is uncomfortable... How many times have I judged people I know, people I have heard of or read of in the news? "C'mon, this wouldn't have gone this far if he wasn't guilty as sin..." But it's worse than that. I see someone walking the street, I size them up based on next to nothing other than my first impressions by their appearance. I have a check in my spirit tempering my wretched judgementalism. I wonder, "What tragedies, what horrors have they lived through that has so obliterated their sense of worth and meaning?" I pray.
OK, I strike up a minor victory.................. only to "return to the vomit." (Prov 26:11)
Isaiah continues: "BUT! He was pierced through for our transgressions, He was crushed for our iniquities; The chastening for our well-being fell upon Him, And by His scourging we are healed."
He didn't have "it" coming. Far from it. He is the only one born of woman NOT to have it coming and I, who have it coming, am absolved only because "[GOD] made Him who knew no sin to be sin on our behalf, so that we might become the righteousness of God in Him." (2 Corinthians 5:21) And I cry out, "Oh wretched man that I am. who shall deliver me from this body of death?"
Thursday, April 22, 2021
How to pray in these times according to 1 Tim 2:1-2
Sunday, April 4, 2021
Can you imagine?
You've heard the prophecies, you've sat upon your grandpa's lap listening to stories, fantastic stories, unbelievable stories. A hero was coming, someone unlike anyone the world has ever known and he would make every wrong-right, every injustice-just, and every bad guy who ever got away with anything, was going to get his comeuppance. Finally YOU would have that one who always had your back, who was right there waiting to take up your cause and because he was a super-hero no one could defeat him. Because of him YOU would be unbeatable.
The you heard that this wasn't a fantasy, it was the holy prophecies passed down through the generations with eye-witness accounts of his mighty power and victories unlimited. And as you are growing up you learn that that ONE was right there, living in your town, and he had already had so many run-ins with the law that he was a wanted man. But his stature only grew as he continued to shut the mouths of skeptics, and convince the unconvinceable by the stories of his heroics and his to-good-to-be-true heroics.
And one day, word is out that he has been executed and not simply put to death but first a ritual of mockings, ridicules, insults, being slapped, spit upon and beaten so severely that he was unrecognizable.
And it dawns on you that you might be next. You were outspoken, you stood your ground, and you were growing in disfavor with friends, family and the law because of your unwavering support of the one who was going to fix it all. And now he's dead.
In disbelief you sneak a peak at the festivities of celebration at the brutal death of that one in whom you placed ALL your hope and joy and confidence. And now he is dead...
In the midst of fear, sorrow, and despair he;\'s there. What? WHAT? "Remember how I told you..." He shows you his hands, your mouth is agape, you want to both pass out from stunned shock, yet levitate with a joy you have never known.
DEATH HAS BEEN DEFEATED! THERE IS
NOTHING MORE THAT CAN DEFEAT YOU--EVER.
IMMANUEL--GOD WITH US
HE--IS--RISEN
Saturday, April 3, 2021
A meditation for Easter "Today you will be with me in Paradise!"
As you are aware, there were three executed that day—two public enemies #1, not unusual, and the Savior of mankind. Unprecedented.
Matthew writes:
“…two robbers were crucified with Him, one on the right and one on the left. And those passing by were hurling abuse at Him, wagging their heads and saying,
"You who are going to destroy the temple and rebuild it in three days, save Yourself! If You are the Son of God, come down from the cross."
In the same way the chief priests also, along with the scribes and elders, were mocking Him and saying, "He saved others; He cannot save Himself. He is the King of Israel; let Him now come down from the cross, and we will believe in Him.
"HE TRUSTS IN GOD; LET God rescue Him now if he delights in him; for He said, 'I am the Son of God.'"
The robbers who had been crucified with Him were also insulting Him with the same words." (Matthew 27:37-44)
At the time Jesus was crucified, Matthew and Mark note something Luke does not.
This “could” be perplexing to some but it need not cause any consternation.
If every writer in the Scriptures made the exact same observations or highlighted precisely the same details as every other writer on the same occurrence, it would be needless repetition.
When Matthew and Mark—inspired by God Almighty—mention that both of these wretched men being crucified with Jesus were not merely casual scofflaws,
they want us to note these convicts were irreligious men, godless to their core,
having no inkling that The merciful Savior was in their midst.
They themselves are suffering, struggling to muster enough strength to push themselves up a few inches by their feet nailed to their crosses enabling them to take one more gasp of breath until they could no longer do so.
Oh but the goodness of our Loving God compels Luke to focus on something else only one of the two convicts said. He shines the Light of Revelation on what is truly a death bed confession of faith in the One and Only Messiah!
Mind you, crucifixion was designed to be a slow agonizing torture. It would take hours for a person to die which is why the soldiers not infrequently had to finally break the legs of those crucified preventing them from scootching up to take
another sip of life giving air.
Now sometime between Matthew and Mark’s observation that BOTH robbers were taunting Jesus, and their final succumbing to hypoxia-- hours had passed.
So we note that this “robber,” more likely a violent insurrectionist, has nothing to commend himself to the mercies of God.
Furthermore--He had not a single minute to rectify his wretched life, he was devoid of any good. All he brought was a confession uttered as a rebuke to the other villain with him.
"Do you not even fear God, since you are under the same sentence of condemnation?" (Luke 23:40)
So apparently in those passing torturous hours this one, moved by the gracious compulsion of the Almighty, cries out,
"Jesus, remember me when You come in Your kingdom!” (Luke 23:42)
And Jesus replies “Truly, I say to you, today you will be with me in paradise.” (Lk 23:43)
What thou, my Lord, has suffered
Was all for sinners' gain;
Mine, mine was the transgression,
But thine the deadly pain.
Lo, here I fall, my Savior!
'Tis I deserve thy place;
Look on me with thy favor,
Vouchsafe to me thy grace.
Oh your grace oh God, your grace is greater than all my sins..
My God, Why have You forsaken Me?
“My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?”
Moment of Reflection and Meditation--
I am not sure what the weather was the day God incarnate was executed on the torturous cross. But when the darkness engulfed the land at the time of day when the sun would be overhead it was not mistaken for a heavy over cast or any other “normal” climatological occurrence.
Throughout the historical narratives unusual darkness is commonly emblematic of Divine Judgement. This was no normal darkness but the kind that penetrates the soul giving one a nauseating sense of impending doom.
In Matthew’s account of the execution of God, Jesus had already been stripped naked, a scarlet robe derisively draped around the King of kings, and those Jesus came to save fashion a crown of thorns jamming it onto his brow kneeling mockingly before the very One who millennia before cursed the once holy soil from which those thorns had been culled.
Cursed thorns were a reminder to the first couple of Eden that their wretched rebellion against God Almighty brought judgement on all creation.
So obscene was their arrogance asserting they knew better than the very One who fashioned them, death spread to all of creation---for the wages of sin is death.
Oh but this is—"Pantokrator” “Ruler over All Things!” El Shaddai! God Almighty.
And HIS plan from before the foundations of the Earth--the crushing of the Serpent’s head--was about to be completed punctuated by a ghastly shriek.
Eli, ELI! Lama Sabachtani!” “My God, My God Why have you forsaken me.”
His horrendous cry from the executioner’s cross was mistaken by those who were witnessing the most mercy-filled travesty of all time. They thought the words from this man in anguish were beseeching the prophet--
“Eli-jah” Elijah! My God Jahweh, The great Prophet of centuries past--
But this was no desperate plea for rescue. The Son of Man—who, for the joy set before Him-- had already endured, the insults, the mockery, the brutal beatings and the pre-torture, tortures and then spikes nailed to beams secured your sins and mine to the executioners’ cross----Jesus assuming to Himself the separation of Hell--the consequence of sin of all who come into the world.
Consummate abandonment, eternal separation —where friends, and loved ones, are unknown; God Himself disregards you.
Shunned, pushed away, denounced, relegated to a solitary confinement, the Son of Man tastes the horrific cleavage of intimacy formerly assumed and embraced, now gone without a trace.
And Jesus receives it all with open arms.
“Union without fusion, distinction without separation” in the mystery of mysteries, The Father turns His back on the Son and He cries out —"My God, Why? have you forsaken me?”
It is there on the pages of God’s Word: It was For your sake, and mine--
"God made Him who knew no sin to be sin on our behalf, so that WE might become the righteousness of God in Him." (2 Corinthians 5:21)
WHY? It was Him or US. And God said, Let it be ME.”
"It is a trustworthy statement, deserving full acceptance, that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners… (1 Timothy 1:15)
The sacrificial Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world was finishing the purposes for which He came.
Elizabeth Browning writes--
His mercies are from everlasting to everlasting. Thanks be to God!