Showing posts with label Revelation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Revelation. Show all posts

Thursday, May 3, 2018

End Times?


Not too long ago I was talking with man I know casually, a man who is a Christian and who knows I'm a pastor.  He was wondering a bit about current events and end times.  From his point-of-view there seemed to be a number of things going on in the world that suggested that the end was drawing near.

"End times" is a dicey subject. The Bible teaches of it, but not in such a way as to be crystal clear in all the details. There are a number of different viewpoints, each of which may be valid, without those differences falling outside of saving faith.  I am not my friend's pastor, and so I don’t know what his pastor may teach on the subject, or what the faith statement of his church may have to say about it.

Jesus speaks of end times several times, all basically in the same way. In Mark 13:32-33 he says:

“But concerning that day or that hour, no one knows, not even the angels in heaven, nor the Son, but only the Father. Be on guard, keep awake. For you do not know when the time will come."

If the one I call Savior and Lord doesn't know when the end will come, that is good enough for me.  As a husband, father and pastor, he has certainly given me plenty of things to do in his service in the meantime.

But in the same passage he says "keep awake" and so with that thought in the back of one's mind it is easy to read Revelation and to watch the news and wonder if some of the events that will precede the return of the Lord are happening now.

I think that for many Christians their "end times" meter begins to rise whenever anything happens in Israel, or among it's neighbors.  But…in my lifetime…there has never been a real, lasting peace between Israel and it's neighbors, or within the countries nearby.  Are today's events really any different than what took place in Israel in 1967, or 1973?  Or the rise or Islamic nationalism in 1979?

One thing that I do think that the Bible teaches, in a non-specific way, about end times is that things will generally get worse throughout the world.  That injustice and evil will increase in ways that are subtle and accepted by a broad swath of people. And in that sense I do believe there is evidence that history is continuing to move towards that time when the Lord returns and history comes to an end.  Here are three things that come to mind this morning:

1. The Alfie Evans case. This is an absolute tragedy. Whatever the circumstances may have been from a medical perspective, it was morally wrong for the government of England to intervene against the parents, particularly when another government was willing and able to provide completely for Evan's medical care.  A government, which intervenes to bring about death rather than life, is one which may be on the downside of the slippery slope, with no hope for return.

2. The normalization of abortion as "heath care." While in the interview excerpts cited here Cecile Richards, the president of Planned Parenthood, is vague about the moment life starts, I think that most adults with same basic education about biology would agree that something distinctly human, and distinctly alive, is present at the moment of conception. To have large segments of our population believe that the intentional ending of that life at any point between conception and birth as an act that has no moral difference from birth, something to call "health care", may well be, as in the Evan's case, a sign that our culture is on the downside of the slippery slope, with no hope for return.

3. Attempts in California to regulate free speech. In the time of my childhood we would say to each other "Sticks and stone may break my bones, but names will never hurt me."  We said it, and we believed it. Now we have come to a point in time when to write and sell books that would oppose ideas on human sexuality that in less than one generation have moved from nearly impossible to believe in to mainstream must be fought through legislation. Instead of "live and let live" things seem to be moving toward "Let me live and don’t dare tell me that what I'm living is actually a lie."

End times. They are coming, on the Lord's timing.  We may not know the specific meanings of some of the events of Revelation, but we do know that for people confessing Jesus as their Savior and Lord, the persecution of those times may be very hard, even to death.  But we also know the promises of God to his children, promises that no end times events can alter, and so I'll close with the words of Romans 8:31-39:

"What then shall we say to these things? If God is for us, who can be against us?  He who did not spare his own Son but gave him up for us all, how will he not also with him graciously give us all things?  Who shall bring any charge against God's elect? It is God who justifies. Who is to condemn? Christ Jesus is the one who died—more than that, who was raised—who is at the right hand of God, who indeed is interceding for us. Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? Shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or danger, or sword?  As it is written,

“For your sake we are being killed all the day long;
    we are regarded as sheep to be slaughtered.”

 No, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us.  For I am sure that neither death nor life, nor angels nor rulers, nor things present nor things to come, nor powers,  nor height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord."



Scripture quotations are from The Holy Bible, English Standard Version® (ESV®), copyright © 2001 by Crossway, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

Thursday, September 28, 2017

Prettier Than The Picture


One day late last week I looked out the window of our kitchen.  It was late in the day, with the wind blowing, some rain was falling, and bits of daylight were breaking through the clouds as the sun went down.  I took a picture and then shared it on Facebook, describing the setting and saying that the scenery south of our house at the moment was actually a lot prettier than the picture showed. 

I believe we see something similar when we read our Bibles.  The Bible has a lot to say about a lot of things, describing many of them in great detail, and yet also leaving us with many questions about things, questions that cannot be answered with any kind of certainty.  From beginning to end we read things that I believe will be much more beautiful, much more spectacular and glorious, then we can possibly imagine them to be from our vantage point on this side of heaven.

Heaven itself is a good place to start.  Revelation, especially chapters 21 and 22, portray heaven in some amazing ways, and yet also leaving much to the imagination.  I think that when we get there and begin to look around we will find it to be absolutely dazzling, and always exciting.  Whatever it may look like, it won’t be the kind of place where we will ever find ourselves bored.

We will be in the very presence of the Lord Jesus Christ.  What will He actually be like?  We could let our imaginations run wild with the possibilities.  Like heaven itself, we can’t make any but the most general of answers while we are here on earth, but I expect that one of the feelings we might have of that first face-to-face meeting with our risen Savior and Lord will be of heart-pounding excitement. 

In that same moment I believe that we will have a greater understanding of some of the words we use somewhat casually around church.  Things like grace, mercy, forgiveness and holiness.  In the presence not just of the holiness of Jesus, but the holiness of heaven and all who live there, we will see what it means to truly be holy.  And we will understand the true power of grace, the depth of mercy, and the majesty of forgiveness.

I could go on, but I hope you are getting the picture.  The Bible portrays many wonderful things about God, about His mercy towards sinners in the forgiveness they receive when they have faith in His Son, and about the beauty of eternal life with Him as a result of that forgiveness.  So continue to read your Bible, read God's promises and know the truth they contain, and read with a sense of excitement, knowing that the truth's they point to will be even more marvelous on that glorious day when every one of them will be fulfilled.

Saturday, January 2, 2016

Perspective


Last Monday I ran out on Narrow Gauge road.  It was cold out and the road was covered in ice and snow, which on one hand was not exactly unexpected, given the snow and deep cold of Christmas week.  On the other hand it was a bit unusual.  This has not been the kind of weather we have known to this point of our journey in Dulce. 

Many times we have told our family and friends back in the Midwest how the temperature can regularly change 20-30 degrees in a day, so that when snow falls here it often melts away in a few days in any place where the sun shines on it.  We get cold and snow but not the kind that endures, certainly not that endures in the way it does where we lived before.  For all practical purposes we could expect winter in Minnesota to begin the first day of November and last until the end of March.  When the first good storm of the season came you could be fairly certain that snow would be on the ground continually for 3-4 months. 

The present conditions in Dulce are unusual for our experience here, but we have been through many winters that were much worse, and we know that winter, while occasionally unpleasant and inconvenient, doesn't last. 

Thinking about winter as I ran reminded me that the rough seasons of our lives don't go on without end either.  Going a step farther, when we travel through life as followers of Jesus we can have a completely different understanding of all times, good and bad.

First, He promises to always hold those who have come to Him in faith. So we can go through hard times knowing that He is present with us and will never let us go.

Second, because we know that He is with us, we can begin to seek to understand His purposes in our hard times.  There may be something about a particular struggle that He is using to shape us in His image.  At some point during our struggle we need to turn our attention off of ourselves and onto Him, so that we can begin to see and understand His purposes.

And lastly, we need to remember that He has promised His children a future that is better than anything they can imagine.  The seasons of the calendar come and go.  The unrelenting cold and snow will pass to the warmth and beauty of spring and summer, a cycle that repeats over and over.  But the time-line for believers in Jesus extends beyond the horizons of this world and into eternity.  We know that one day that Jesus, our Savior and Lord, will carry us to a place where well be with Him forever.   Revelation 21:3-4 says,

“Behold, the dwelling place of God is with man. He will dwell with them, and they will be his people, and God himself will be with them as their God. He will wipe away every tear from their eyes, and death shall be no more, neither shall there be mourning, nor crying, nor pain anymore, for the former things have passed away.”

If you are going through a period of struggle in your life, know that by faith in Jesus you have a sure and certain hope that will not fail.  Ever.




Scripture quotations are from The Holy Bible, English Standard Version® (ESV®), copyright © 2001 by Crossway, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

Saturday, August 2, 2014

"…, has conquered,…"


Last week  Tuesday I preached from Revelation 5:1-5.  The occasion was a funeral and as I was selecting the text the phrase "has conquered" jumped out at me.

I have been reading Charles Spurgeon's Morning and Evening as a devotional lately.  It is available free online here.  Time and again Spurgeon takes a verse, or a part of a verse, and connects it to the Good News of God in Jesus.  His words are filled with power, passion, and great truth.  His method may have its weaknesses but he writes with a passion that is rare, passion that always points his reader to Christ.

So, feeding on Spurgeon, those words, has conquered, jumped out at me from the text in Revelation.  John the Evangelist is making reference to Jesus as the one who has conquered, so that Jesus is then the only one who can open the seals of the scroll.


And that makes all the difference.  Because Jesus has conquered sin and death Paul says that we who believe in Him are "more than conquerors."  We will be raised up with Him to an eternal life that is better than anything we could imagine.   

We have had some hard times recently in our community.  But amidst the pain, the sorrow, the heartache, the truth remains.  

Jesus has conquered.  To God be all the glory!





Scripture quotations are from The Holy Bible, English Standard Version® (ESV®), copyright © 2001 by Crossway, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

Friday, July 25, 2014

"Surely I am coming soon."


The news over the past week seems to be an endless cascade of chaos.  A civilian airliner shot down over the Ukraine.  Another airliner crashing in Africa.  Fighting between Israel and Hamas, that, while not labeled as such, shows all the characteristics of war. 

Syria.  Iraq.  The girls in Nigeria still being held as captives.  The largest known outbreak of Ebola, an incurable disease.

Closer to home there is the crisis at the southern US border.  Reports of children forgotten in cars, cars parked in the heat of summer.  People being shot.  Some randomly and some not.

I imagine that in virtually every community there are hard and painful things that have happened recently.  Unplanned, unexpected things, things that have torn people apart.  People being forced to live in pain that they couldn't plan for.  That they couldn't imagine. 

As I was reading of some of these things today, and pondering the ways in which our community and the congregation I serve was being affected, I found myself reading the last words of Jesus recorded in the Bible, Revelation 22:20, where Jesus says this:

"Surely I am coming soon."

Jesus speaks these words as He concludes the Revelation that He gave to John the Evangelist.  It is a revelation that includes wonderful pictures of what eternity will look like for those who are God's own, when sin and the enemies of God are completely defeated, as well as the eternal destiny of those who will remain as God's enemies. 

Nearly two thousand years after Jesus spoke those words we who have placed our faith in Him are still waiting.  From our vantage point two thousand years hardly seems to be "soon," especially in the chaos that seems to be all around us.

But from the One who created time itself, two thousand years has an entirely different look.  He has His reasons, and I trust that they are very good ones.  I have no doubts that He will return, in power and glory, in His timing.  And so, in the chaos of today, I include in my prayers the words that John prayed in response to Jesus:

"Amen. Come, Lord Jesus!"





Scripture quotations are from The Holy Bible, English Standard Version® (ESV®), copyright © 2001 by Crossway, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

Friday, November 8, 2013

Who is he?

I'm a pastor and as a part of my job I prepare and preach a sermon each week.  I've only been a pastor since the end of August so I will be the first to admit that I am fairly new at preaching week in and week out.  I spend a good portion of my time each week in prayer, study and the writing of my sermon. 

This morning I walked over to the church and went through the draft of the sermon I finished yesterday.  Then I came home to edit it and make an outline to use on Sunday morning.  I was in the midst of this when the phone rang.  It was a woman who identified herself as  a Jehovah's Witness from the town 27 miles east of ours.  She asked if she could read me a Bible verse. 

"Sure," I said, reaching for my Bible, which was sitting on my desk and open to the passage I was working on. "Which one?" 

"Revelation 21:4" she replied.  "Do you have a Bible?"

"In my hand right now" I said.  And I began to read the passage aloud.  It says:

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

"Isn't that nice?" she asked.

"Who is 'he'?" I replied.  "This verse doesn't mean anything unless we know who 'he' is."

In all honesty I can't accurately recall the conversation past this point.  It was fairly brief and included my mentioning that I was the pastor of the local Reformed church; that I was working on my sermon when she called me; that the identity of 'he' as Jesus was, in my opinion, of supreme importance for this verse to make any sense; and at the heart of any sermon I preach are two things: Who Christ is and what he did.  This is what Paul meant when he said to the church at Corinth:

"For I decided to know nothing among you except Jesus Christ and him crucified."

I would have liked to talk with her more, because I don't know much about what Jehovah Witnesses believe, but she wanted to move on. 

We can read verses like the one my caller had from Revelation and come away thinking that they are 'nice.'  Our culture is full of things that sound nice, that claim to be inspirational, but that in the end do little except help us feel better for a brief period of time.  They promote a vague spirituality which is often centered in our selves and our feelings.

The Bible offers us something radically different from soft spirituality.  It brings us the living, breathing, Lord of Heaven and Earth, who gave his only Son in order to repair the rift that separates each and every sinful human from a holy God.  This Son, Christ Jesus, is the 'he' of the verse from Revelation. 

He, and He alone, is one who will truly wipe away every tear.  He is my Savior.  He is my Lord.  And I pray that He is your Savior and Lord too.




Scripture quotations are from The Holy Bible, English Standard Version® (ESV®), copyright © 2001 by Crossway, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved.