Saturday, August 29, 2020

Short Beds and Narrow Sheets

August 30, 2020                        NOTES NOT EDITED
Short Beds and Narrow Sheets

Isaiah 28:1-20, esp. 20

 SIS: Jesus is the Only Sure Foundation for our present peace and future hope.  

Let us begin reading today a message of warning for nations from the Book of Isaiah, chapter 28, verses 10-20.

 If you have seen any T.V. at all in the last few weeks, you know our nation is “literally on fire.”  Like a ship at sea with a hole in the haul, we are taking on water and in danger of sinking.  Shortly after the birth of our great nation, Jefferson reminded us:  “The God Who gave us life, gave us liberty.  Can the liberties of a nation be secure when we have removed the conviction that these liberties are the gift of God.” Our nation was founded in a resolute, rock-solid trust in the Almighty God of the Bible.

Even our coins remind us of that great heritage: “In God We Trust.”  Our Pledge of Allegiance was modified in 1952 to include the word, “One Nation Under God.”  Are we still “One Nation Under God?”  Can we still say with any degree of confidence that as a nation, a people, “In God We Trust.”  I think our national trust in God is something that is fading at best, and completely discarded at worst.  We are a “dying nation,” just like Israel we read about earlier.  We are a nation trusting in something other than Almighty God.  We are a nation reclining on “short beds and with narrow sheets” as Isaiah warns.  People are trusting in political pundits and pompous experts stirring our nation into a massive panic.  Add to that the horrid violence and anti-American hatred of organizations like Black Lives Matter, and the nation is literally in flames.  The very foundations of our national life are crumbling.  Trust placed in anyone or anything except Jesus Christ the Lord is a “misplaced trust.”

Isaiah calls such misplaced trust, “short beds and narrow sheets.”    Let’s read our text together.  

Without the covering of God’s grace, we can no longer expect the peace and rest of God’s Providence. We are resting on flimsy foundations.

 The danger of trusting in “short beds with narrow sheets” is expressed in our text by a grammatical form called an “interjection.”  These are short, expressive words like “oh or wow.”  In this case the Hebrew word beginning our text is “hoy,” or in Yiddish, “oy vey.”  It means “alas or woe,” and almost always expressive something negative.  Except for one place in the Book of Kings, it is only used in the prophetic parts of the O.T.  It serves as a warning of approaching doom for a nation.

 Similar to Edward Gibbons massive historical tome, “The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire (700+ pages),” chapters 28-33 of Isaiah has six such warnings for nations facing decay and death.  Each introduced by the word, “hôy,” we mentioned a moment before.  This first “woe” expresses a warning to Ephraim sounding the alarm for pending death to the Israeli Tribal State.  The text outlining the pending doom of Ephraim shows THREE COMMON ELEMENTS in the death of any “nation, tribe or people.”  Isaiah uses the “fading of a flower” as a symbol for the process of death for a people.  The first element in this process is Decadence (1-6).  Isaiah uses the image of a “drunkard.”  Second, in the death of a nation is Double-speak (10-13).  Truth is sacrificed on the altar of political self-interest and all news becomes, “fake news”, or double speak, like “Do and do, do and do, rule on rule, rule on rule; a little here, a little there” (v10) comes from the religious leaders mocking the message of Isaiah and confusing the people with nonsensical talk, that sounds like a stammering tongue or foreign language. Lies and falsehood (v15) supplant reason and truth.  News becomes nonsense. Verse 10 sounds like a Hebrew version of Dr. Seuss:  “ki sav lasav sav lasav kav lakav kav lakav zeer sam zeer sam.”   

The other day I saw a clip the other day that could have been a Saturday Night Live parody, but it was from a major "news" station (I use that world cautiously these days). The reporter was commenting on the "mostly peaceful protests in a city," while the camera showed buildings and cars on fire in the background. This is the kind of “nonsensical doublespeak,” or Fake News that forebodes the death of a nation.

Finally, a dying nation actually makes a covenant with death (v15).  The Israelites looked to Egypt to protect them from Assyria but it was futile.  The introductory word, “hôy” actually comes from the language of a funeral lament.  Israel, represented in this woe by Ephraim, is dying.  Decadence, Double-speak, and a covenant with Death are the elements leading to this demise.  What say we then in regard to our own nation?  Decadence, Double-speak and fake news by our leaders, and a covenant of Death made with Planned Parenthood to sacrifice innocent children.  Are we on the same path as Ephraim?  It certainly appears so.  We are a ship taking on water as surely as the Titanic after it struck an iceberg in the North Atlantic.  Unless we take quick action, the ship of the U.S. will sink as surely as the HMS Titanic. 

So, this brings us to the heart of our message today.  What are we relying on as a people to save our sinking ship, our dying nation?  Are we relying on “short beds and narrow sheets” as Isaiah warns us about? 
What are the inadequate foundations on which many lay their trust for a present hope or eternal peace. What “short beds and narrow sheets might Isaiah have had in mind?  There are at least four “short beds and narrow sheets” or inadequate escape plans.

  The “short bed of PRESUMPTION (V7)

 Let us look closer: (Isa 28:7)   And these also stagger from wine and reel from beer: Priests and prophets stagger from beer and are befuddled with wine; they reel from beer, they stagger when seeing visions, they stumble when rendering decisions.

 In Isaiah’s day, the nation of Israel was about to be steam-rolled by the massive Assyrian Army.  Calamity was imminent.  Disaster was impending.  Yet, many had the attitude, “Let’s eat, drink and be merry.” From the leaders down, the people were like drunken sailors staggering about on a night of liberty, presuming all would be the same come morning.  “To presume” means “to take for granted.” Some people presume, quite falsely, that “hell is merely a myth conjured by the feeble mind of intellectual midgets.”   Or, others presume, again quite falsely, that “God is a God of love and he will not send anyone to hell!”   Such people have no basis for a present peace or a future rest.  These folk lie upon “short beds with narrow sheets.”

As a nation we presume we can eliminate God from our day to day lives and He is somehow obliged to rescue us.  The truth is, in fact, God loves us too much to let our sin go unpunished. For, what a great tragedy it would be if God were to let a person’s sin, a nation’s sin, to go unpunished and allow that person to pass through the Gates of Paradise.   For this would turn even heaven into a hell.

A great man of God once declared, “God’s wrath flames in the passion of His love.” The Bible declares the very same thing, “There shall in no way enter anything into heaven that is unclean, or he that makes an abomination and a lie” (Deu. 7:26). For a person to have a present peace and eternal repose, his or her faith must rest on the bed of God’s love, for sure, but we must not presume that such a deep and pure love could in anyway abide such behavior as we find here in our text.  Those that “eat, drink, or be merry” while the army of judgement bears down upon them foolishly presume upon the goodness and love of God, and they will not find rest for their souls.  Presumption is a “short bed and narrow sheet.”

The short bed and narrow sheet of PAST EXPERIENCE  (V1)

 (Isa 28:1)   Woe to that wreath, the pride of Ephraim's drunkards, to the fading flower, his glorious beauty, set on the head of a fertile valley–

 There is a tragic note of sarcasm here in the words, “set on the head.” Eprhaim you might recall was the younger of Joseph’s sons, Mannaseh being the oldest.  As the patriarch Jacob, Joseph’s father, came to the end of his life, it was time to pronounce a blessing on his grandchildren’s generation.  This blessing traditionally fell upon the oldest child, which would have been Joseph’s son, Mannaseh.  But the Scriptures teach that Jacob (Israel), “But Israel stretched out his right hand and put it on the head of Ephraim, the younger, and crossing his hands, put his left on Manasseh’s head” (Gen 48:14). Thus, Ephraim became the chosen tribe of Israel.  Now, the flower of Ephraim’s blessing is fading and the blossom of God’s favor is dying.

The territory allotted Ephraim in Northern Palestine blossomed with prosperity. Samaria, the capital, was set on a hill overlooking a rich valley.  It lay on the prosperous trade routes of the ancient world. Ephraim quickly blossomed with bounty and beauty.  Herein lies the sarcasm.   What once was the “pride of the nation and a blossoming flower of prosperity” had become a “drunkard and fading flower.” Ephraim now dangles as a wilted bloom upon a fertile valley. I think

rose bushes around the house and church.  How beautiful and full they are when they burst open in bloom.  But, soon that beauty fades, and the petals drop, leaving behind an empty, thorny branch as a reminder of a beauty that once had been.  This demonstrates the “short bed and narrow sheet” of PAST EXPERIENCE.  Trying to live off of yesterday’s manna only to find it full of worms.

 At one time, many of you moved to the front of a church, or bowed on the hearth at home.  Your hope blossomed as you considered Christ as the Lord.  But, that was many years ago.  Your blooming faith never came to harvest.  The soft petals of your emerging faith were not protected and nourished.  Your faith sprang to life, but withered because of years of neglect.  Many of you are resting on a “bed too short,” because it is a “bed of past experience and yesteryear’s testimony.” There is no present vitality as would naturally have if one were close to the Lord.  Your struggles overwhelm you, because your faith has never overtaken you.

You can have no present hope or eternal rest, lying on the dusty bed of past experience. {{{{Please Close Your Eyes.   In the last year

has my walk with the Lord flowered with more passion than at that moment since I first sought rest in Christ?  If not, you are resting on the “short bed” of a past experience.  OK. Now open your eyes.}}}}

 A man recently asked his friend, “Hey Joe, have you heard about the new GARLIC SANDWICH DIET?”  Joe, who had always struggled with his weight replied, “No, I’ve tried every diet in the book but I’ve never heard of the GARLIC SANDWICH DIET. Does it work?”  Joe’s friend replied, “Well, you don’t lose any weight, but you do look smaller from a distance!”

That idea is similar to the moral philosophy of most people.  As long as we “give the appearance of being good people,” from a distance, we look alright.  We are like the church of Sardis condemned by the Lord as having a “reputation of being alive but you are dead.” We can’t enjoy the ride always looking the rearview mirror reminiscing of the places we have been. The adventure is in through the windshield not the rearview mirror.

  MORALITY is simply another “short bed with narrow sheets” upon which person’s erroneously lay their hope of present peace and eternal rest.  Look at verses 16 and 17 closely:

 {16}So this is what the Sovereign LORD says: "See, I lay a stone in Zion, a tested stone, a precious cornerstone for a sure foundation; the one who trusts will never be dismayed. {17} I will make justice the measuring line and righteousness the plumb line; hail will sweep away your refuge, the lie, and water will overflow your hiding place.

 Many people measure themselves according to a “plumbline of their own making.” A plumb line is a tool that builders use to assure that a wall is truly vertical, or plumb.   A metal weight, or plumb bob, is tied to string and allowed to hang freely alongside the vertical face of a wall.  If the wall is “true” or “plumb”, the distance from the wall to the string will be consistent all the way down the wall. God’s

plumb line is His Word.  That is the measure of justice, righteousness, and morality.  We may be pretty good, by the world’s standards, but we fail miserably according to God’s standards. Sooner or later, the wall of our life comes crashing down, as in the case of many politicians, and many others, because we gage our morality by human polls, rather than Divine Pronouncements.

Morality is a “short bed with narrow sheets.”   Nothing but the blood

of Jesus is sufficient to cover your sins and give you eternal rest.  People lie upon short beds of PRESUMPTION, PAST  EXPERIENCE, and MORALITY.  None of these are sufficient to provide a present peace and eternal rest.   There is yet, another “short bed with narrow sheets.”

RELIGION.  Perhaps more than anything else, this is a “short bed with narrow sheets.”  There is no rest in religion.  (V 15)

 You boast, "We have entered into a covenant with death, with the grave 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."

 Some schoars suggest that this verse escribes the ancient religious ritual of NECROMANCYor talking with the dead . Other scholars describe the sin as lâtsōm, or a “free-thinking scorn that rests on an insolent self-confidence.” (Keil-Delitzsch).   Regardless, the implications are the same.   Religion is an attempt to achieve by human means that which can only come by divine intervention.  Religion is man’s attempt to reach God.  True eternal rest comes only when God reaches down to man.  Religion trusts in “self” confidence rather than confidence in the Savior.  Religion is simply a ritualistic bed upon which persons lay their eternal hopes–it is a “bed too short with sheets too narrow.”   It is an inadequate foundation for a present peace or eternal rest.  Religion is man’s attempt to create God in our own image!

RELIGION IS A DAMNABLE LIE. Look at vs. 15, we have made a lie our refuge and falsehood our hiding place." Again in verse 17: I will make justice the measuring line and righteousness the plumb line; hail will sweep away your refuge, the lie, and water will  overflow your hiding place.

THERE IS NO REST IN RELIGION–THEY ARE ALL LIES!

Hinduism is a lie that has man chasing the “ghost of nothingness.”  Islam is a lie that shackles man to the “whim of fate and hopelessness.”  Mormons, Jehovah Witnesses, Catholics, Protestants—they are all lies unless they rest upon “bed of Divine Grace and are covered by the blood of Our Blessed Redeemer, Jesus Christ!”

LIES!  LIES!  LIES!  ALL RELIGION IS BASED UPON LIES! That includes your religion, even if you are a Baptist. We must trust in the Lord, not a liturgy.  We must pursue a relationship, not a religion–if we are to find a bed of present peace and eternal rest.

PRESUMPTION, PAST EXPERIENCE, MORALITY, AND RELIGION–All these Isaiah declares are “short beds and narrow sheets.”

Since as far back as I can remember, I’ve always had an “escape plan” in life.  I grew up in a reclaimed farm sold to a developer by a man named, Maxwell.  It was called, Maxwell Acres.  The houses were small and mostly alike.  They were a “split level” design.  The kitchen and living room were down stairs and the three small bedrooms and one bath were upstairs.  Yes, one bathroom for the seven of us.  Even my cousins out in the country had “two-holers” out back. I guess, at least our plumbing was in doors.  I slept in a bedroom with my two brothers above the garage.  I like to think of it as growing up in a “penthouse.”  For whatever reason, I always thought of burglars breaking into the house to harm our family.  So, I had a plan I rehearsed in my mind.  I rehearsed this plan so many nights, that I actually dreamed about carrying out this plan in a recurring nightmare.  Now, there were two windows in our bedroom.  One looking out over the concrete driveway in front, and one looking out the side toward our neighbor’s house about 12 feet away.  In the event that attackers would come, they would have to come through the first floor.  I would hear them because I am a very, very light sleeper.  Then, I’d go to the side window, remove the screen, hang from the ledge, leaving me dangling about six or seven feet above the ground—no small drop for a little kid.  Then, I would run behind and around the neighbor’s house, rush in the front door to my house and save my family.  Now, some of the details I didn’t have worked out really well, like what was a little kid going to do to stop deadly burglars.  Anyway, I had a plan.  I believed in this plan and it helped a neurotic kid sleep at night—though it also caused a recurring nightmare.

Do you have an escape plan for the trouble that is coming upon our nation and our world?  Do you have an escape plan for dealing with the sin in your life when you stand before God?  Are you trusting in Jesus for your security and comfort now, as well as for eternity?  If not, whatever you are trusting in Isaiah calls a “short bed with narrow sheets” which are inadequate to give you rest and protection from the cold night of trouble.

Where then can we find a SOLID FOUNDATION for a present peace and eternal rest?  Isaiah gives us the One Sure Foundation. Look at vs 16.

So this is what the Sovereign LORD says: "See, I lay a stone in Zion, a tested stone, a precious cornerstone for a sure foundation; the one who trusts will never be dismayed.

Jesus, Jesus, Precious Jesus! He is long enough to provide the sweet repose of eternal peace because He’s wide enough to cover our sins completely.  Jesus is a “long bed with wide sheets.”

 

 

 

Saturday, August 22, 2020

Blessitudes: Overcoming

August 23, 2020                        NOTES NOT EDITED
Blessitudes:  Attitudes That Elevate

Matthew 5:10-11

 

SIS—True believers will face and will overcome persecution.

 

Over the last several Sunday mornings we have examined one of the most significant portions in the entire Bible--the opening of the Sermon on the Mount.  Here Jesus outlines the 8 basic virtues that should characterize the life of a citizen of God’s Kingdom.  Dr. Gene Getz, and incredible Bible teacher describes this sermon on Blessitudes by saying: “To discover enduring spiritual fulfillment, we must be saved by grace through faith and then demonstrate those qualities of life that reflect God’s perfection.”

Are Christians being persecuted?  This question is being raised in many circles as a result of the government’s exercise of the Public Health Act to determine which businesses and organizations they deem essential and non-essential.  For example, most abortion clinics are deemed essential by the government but the Church is deemed non-essential (except by the President and most GOP governors).

Another example.  In Nevada a casino that seats 1000 is allowed 500 in the establishment.  A church that seats 1000 is only allowed 50.  That sure seems like preferential treatment, if not outright persecution.  Now, is the government “throwing Christians to the lions in the coliseum?”  No, it hasn’t gone that far . . . yet. 

 

Tyranny is a progressive act.  Historically, tyranny follows a particular, progressive route.  First, the church is ridiculed.  Then it is marginalized.  Then, the government seeks increasing levels of control.  Finally, Christians (or other religious and ideological groups) are imprisoned, beaten, and killed. 

Jesus said, “Blessed are those who are persecuted because of righteousness, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.”  The Greek word translated, “persecuted,” is very important to the entire sermon on beatitudes.  Its construction indicates it was chosen very carefully.  The root word from which the word “persecuted” comes means, set into rapid motion.”  Another way to translate it would be, put into a panic.”  In our day it could be paraphrased, create a panic-demic,” my favorite word for describing the Covid Crisis Response.

As I said, I don’t think we’ve yet experienced an explosion of persecution against the Christian Church in America, but the fuse has been lit.  Many Christians cower before the bench of black-robed judicial pawns of the petty potentates sitting on their thrones of state, so I’d say the “panic” is pretty effective.  Panic and persecution sprout from the same linguistic root and will ultimately bear the same fruit—tyranny.

 

We have looked at seven “blessitudes: humility, spiritual mourning, meekness, spiritual desire, mercy, purity, and peacemaking.  The final “blessitude” ties a neat bow around the bundle: the blessitude of perseverance.

 

(Mat 5:10-12)   Blessed are those who are persecuted because of righteousness, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. {11} "Blessed are you when people insult you, persecute you and falsely say all kinds of evil against you because of me. {12} Rejoice and be glad, because great is your reward in heaven, for in the same way they persecuted the prophets who were before you.

 

Perseverance, or overcoming, is a theme that comes up often in the Scriptures.  In His Letters to the Seven Churches of Revelation, the Lord ends each letter with a “promise of victor to those that overcome persecution and remain faithful.”  

 

History in the last 2000 years is replete with the testimonies of martyrs who were severely persecuted for the faith, yet, remained faithful in their loyalty to Christ.  In fact, they even rejoiced to be counted worthy to suffer for Christ.  The early church was born amidst severe persecution, but they persevered.   Acts 5:41 tells us:

 

The apostles left the Sanhedrin, rejoicing because they had been counted worthy of suffering disgrace for the Name.

 

Martyrs always died with words of victory and rejoicing on their lips.

 

How could this be?  Because faith allows us to focus on the prize of Christ not the pain of criticism and torture. One of the early martyrs was Polycarp, Bishop of Smyrna (Izmir, Turkey) about 160 AD.  He was a disciple of the Apostle John.  Refusing to burn incense to Caesar, he was tied to a stake, sentenced to burn to death.  On his farewell to his friends and followers, he said: "I bless you, Father, for judging me worthy of this hour, so that in the company of the martyrs I may share the cup of Christ."  Given one last chance to deny Christ as his Lord, Polycarp declared, "Eighty and six years I have served Him, and He has done me no wrong, how then can I blaspheme my King and Savior? You threaten me with a fire that burns for a season, and after a little while is quenched; but you are ignorant of the fire of everlasting punishment that is prepared for the wicked."  

 

The Church has always faced persecution (see grammatical structure, persecuted, pf., participle).  We overcome persecution by being Positive, Prepared, Persistent, and maintaining an eternal Perspective.

 

1.  First, We Must Be POSITIVE, vs 12a, ( “rejoice and be glad” )

 

The longer I live, the more convinced I become that the greatest gift a father can give his children is a positive outlook on life from the perspective of faith in Jesus Christ.  Zig Ziglar, a world-renown motivational speaker, hits the nail on the head when he says, “Many times I hear people talk about someone being a ‘negative Christian.’ I challenge the terminology.  I’m convinced that you can either be negative or you can be a Christian, but you can no more be a negative Christian than you can be Christian and Communist.  The two are incompatible.”

 

With our past forgiven, our present secured, and our future guaranteed, “how can a Christian be negative.”

 

Our attitude is our greatest ally, or our fiercest enemy. Dr. Victor Frankl has come to be known as one of the world’s foremost psychiatrists.  He was a Jew.  His wife, his children, and his parents were killed by the Nazis during the holocaust.  He himself was once paraded before the Gestapo and stripped naked.  The Gestapo chief noticed that Frankl still was wearing the wedding ring, a reminder of his late wife’s love.  They stripped him of that also.  The purpose was to break him--to so utterly humiliate him as to make him subhuman.   Here is what Frankl told them, “You can take away my wife, you can take away my children, you can strip me of my clothes and my freedom, but there is one thing no one can ever take away from me--and that is my freedom to choose how I will react to what happens to me.”

 

WOW!  That’s a powerful statement.  Faith breeds a positive attitude A positive attitude gives us power over even horrible circumstances.

 

2.  Second, Be PREPARED, vs 11  11because of me”

 

Please hear this: if you are in step with Christ, YOU WILL BE out of step with the world! The world hated Christ—it will hate Christ-followers. The Bible is very clear: the gospel is confrontational.  Listen to the words of our Lord:  (Mat 10:34-40)

 

"Do not suppose that I have come to bring peace to the earth. I did not come to bring peace, but a sword. {35} For I have come to turn "'a man against his father, a daughter against her mother, a daughter-in-law against her mother-in-law-- {36} a man's enemies will be the members of his own household.' {37} "Anyone who loves his father or mother more than me is not worthy of me; anyone who loves his son or daughter more than me is not worthy of me; {38} and anyone who does not take his cross and follow me is not worthy of me. {39} Whoever finds his life will lose it, and whoever loses his life for my sake will find it. {40} "He who receives you receives me, and he who receives me receives the one who sent me.

 

There is a dangerous myth milling about in church growth seminars that we, the church, must make the gospel acceptable to the lost world.  It is easier to make broccoli acceptable to a toddler.

 

I do believe that we must tear down any barrier traditionalism has erected that makes it difficult for a lost person to come into contact with the gospel.  I believe we can allow for various tastes in music, from rock to Rock of Ages.  I believe we can make our services warm and inviting.  But, there is absolutely NO WAY we can change the gospel to make it less confrontational.

 

The world hates Jesus, because Satan is the god of this world. Persecution of believers is a sign of the last days. Lk 21:12-19) tells us, "they [the government] will lay hands on you and persecute you. They will deliver you to synagogues and prisons, and you will be brought before kings and governors, and all on account of my name. {13} This will result in your being witnesses to them. {14} But make up your mind not to worry BEFOREHAND how you will defend yourselves. {15} For I will give you words and wisdom that none of your adversaries will be able to resist or contradict. {16} You will be betrayed even by parents, brothers, relatives and friends, and they will put some of you to death. {17} All men will hate you because of me. {18} But not a hair of your head will perish. {19} By standing firm you will gain life.

Don’t expect special treatment at work because you are a Christian.  Don’t expect an easy road in school because you are Christian.  In fact, be prepared for just the opposite: insults, insinuations, isolation, and incrimination.  The world hates us, because it first hated Christ (Jn 15:18).  So, to overcome, you must be prepared.  You might recall a few years ago a major earthquake in California that caused the collapse of the “Cypress Freeway” in the San Francisco Bay Area in 1989.  The Loma Prieta Earthquake collapsed the upper deck pancaking the cars below.  A few months earlier, I travelled this same freeway every day to Seminary in San Francisco.  The earthquake struck without warning.  Lives were lost along with millions of dollars in damage.  I remember shortly thereafter that major TV stations were broadcasting the “how to’s” of putting together an earthquake survival kitso that you could stay alive for the few days, or perhaps weeks, in which you would be without water, electricity, food, or medical supplies.  It was not a matter of being prepared IF another quake hit, but a matter of WHEN another quake would hit.  Be prepared---persecution is inevitable. Third,

 

3.  Be PERSISTENT vs 12c

 

“they persecuted the prophets who were before you.”

 

Persecution of God’s people is not new as we have already said.  Evil forces have always opposed God’s plan, even before the creation of the cosmos:

(Isa 14:12-15)   How you have fallen from heaven, O morning star, son of the dawn! You have been cast down to the earth, you who once laid low the nations! {13} You said in your heart, "I will ascend to heaven; I will raise my throne above the stars of God; I will sit enthroned on the mount of assembly, on the utmost heights of the sacred mountain. {14} I will ascend above the tops of the clouds; I will make myself like the Most High." {15} But you are brought down to the grave, to the depths of the pit.

 

Some scholars dispute the validity of using this passage as a basis for understanding the origin of Satan.  However, this is the same language Jesus used when describing Satan:  (Luke 10:18 He replied, "I saw Satan fall like lightning from heaven.

 

When did Jesus see Satan fall--before the cosmos was created.  The point is this: Satan has been accusing and abusing God’s people from the beginning--and he’s not about to let up on us now.  We must be persistent, and stand in patience against persecution, just “like the prophets before us.”

 

A person never graduates from the school of hard knocks until they go home to be with the Lord.  Count on trouble from your baptism into the church until your coronation in the kingdom! Perseverance requires persistence.

 

There was a lady who had a parrot.  She thought he could only say three words, “Who is it?”  That’s all she ever heard.  On one occasion her basement flooded.  She called the plumber, but the plumber did not know exactly when he could get there.  The lady waited and waited.  Finally, she decided to run to the corner store quickly for some bread.  As you might expect, the plumber arrived right after she left.  He knocked on the door and a voice said, “Who is it?”  He answered, “The plumber.”  The voice replied again, “Who is it?”  The plumber responded a little louder thinking the person had not heard him, “It’s the plumber.  You called and said your basement was flooded.”  Expecting that the person would open the door, he heard the voice again, “Who is it?”  The plumber irate and began to yell, scream and pound on the door saying,  “I said it is the plumber.  Either let me end or I’m leaving!”  Well, the plumber became so frustrated and angry, he passed out with a thud on the floor.  The neighbor heard the commotion and rushed over, just as the lady of the house arrived from the store.  Seeing the man on the doorstep the neighbor asked, “Who is it?”  A voice from behind the door replied, “It’s the plumber!” Moral of this story:  don’t buy a bad parrot.

 

Life will present some very frustrating situations.  We must be persistent in our trust in God.  We must persistently cling to His promise to take care of our every need, and lead us through every dark valley in life.  We can’t give up.  We must be persistent.

Perseverance and overcoming requires persistence. To overcome we must be positive, prepared, persistent and of course, we must always.

 

4.  Keep an Eternal PERSPECTIVE.  Vs 12b

 

“great is your reward in heaven”

 

Benjamin Franklin was known for many things, but he was primarily a printer and publisher.  On his tombstone we find these words:

 

The Body of Benjamin Franklin, Printer

Like the Cover of an old book,

Its contents torn out and stripped of its
lettering and gilding

Lies here, food for worms.
But the work shall not be lost

For it will (as he believed) appear once more

In a new and more elegant edition

Revised and corrected by The Author.

 

The promise of heaven and eternal life puts our problems and persecution in proper perspective.  The enemies of Christ can do much to damage our body--but, nothing can touch our souls.  Our reward is deposited in God’s eternal bank, and they are secure.  We will make withdrawals on our reward when we finally enter God’s eternal kingdom.

 

I often tell others, what I remind myself when facing persecution . . . “In a hundred years--it really won’t matter!” What WILL matter, is what we have done for the Lord.  As Christians, we each have a cross to bear.  We must view our present cross with an eternal perspective.

 

A great preacher reminds us God washes the eyes with our tears until they can behold the invisible land, where tears come no more. —HWB

 

The promise of Heaven makes all the difference in how we view persecution– One drop of heaven’s sunshine, and earth’s storms are a forgotten memory!  “Blessed are those who are persecuted . . . for theirs is the Kingdom of Heaven.”  Always think ETERNALLY.

 

Are Christians being persecuted?  This question is being raised in many circles as a result of the government’s exercise of the Public Health Act to determine which businesses and organizations they deem essential and non-essential.  Abortion clinics liquor stores are deemed essential by the government but the Church is deemed non-essential (except by the President and some GOP governors).  In Nevada a casino that seats 1000 is allowed 500 in the establishment.  A church that seats 1000 is only allowed 50.  That sure seems like preferential treatment, if not outright persecution.

Now, is the government “throwing Christians to the lions in the coliseum?”  No, it hasn’t gone that far . . . yet. 

 

Tyranny is a progressive act.  Historically, tyranny follows a particular, progressive route.  First, the church is ridiculed.  Then it is marginalized.  Then, the government seeks increasing levels of control.  Finally, Christians (or other religious and ideological groups) are imprisoned, beaten, and killed.

All over the world, Christians are being killed, like in Nigeria by the Boka Haram, or in Syria by Radical Islamic Terrorists.  In fact, more Christians were killed for their faith in the Twentieth Century than all the previous 19 centuries combined.

Persecution IS coming to America, and in some ways it is already here.  We can overcome any persecution that comes if we have the right “attitude,” the Blessitude of Perseverence.

 

These eight “blessitudes” are attitudes that elevate.  They allow us to live above the world on a godly plane.  As Dr. Gene Getz has said, “To discover enduring spiritual fulfillment, we must be saved by grace through faith and then demonstrate those qualities of life that reflect God’s perfection.”

Revisit this passage often for an attitude adjustment—attitudes that bring incredible blessing by “reflecting God’s perfection.