Monday, May 25, 2026

 

Phil 3. Background.

Philippians 3 (Trad) – Overview continued (2) Introduction – Verses 7–11 – The Great Exchange Paul now calls every earthly gain “loss.” Knowing Christ Jesus overtakes all else. He wants a righteousness that comes by faith, not law-keeping. His life goal: “to know Him and the power of His resurrection and the fellowship of His sufferings.” Verses 12–16 – Still Running Paul hasn’t arrived. He is chasing, stretching, pressing toward the goal of full maturity in Christ. The past—good or bad—no longer rules him. He urges everyone “mature” to adopt the same mindset. Verses 17–21 – Eyes on Home The church should imitate Paul’s pattern, not the “enemies of the cross” whose minds are set on earthly things. Believers are already citizens of heaven, awaiting Jesus, who will transform lowly bodies to match His glorious one. The Great Exchange Vs. 7-11 “But what things were gain to me, those I counted loss for Christ. Yea doubtless, and I count all things but loss for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord: for whom I have suffered the loss of all things, and do count them but dung, that I may win Christ, And be found in him, not having mine own righteousness, which is of the law, but that which is through the faith of Christ, the righteousness which is of God by faith: That I may know him, and the power of his resurrection, and the fellowship of his sufferings, being made conformable unto his death; If by any means I might attain unto the resurrection of the dead.” (7) But what things — Of this nature; were once reputed gain to me — Which I valued myself upon, and confided in for acceptance with God, supposing them to constitute a righteousness sufficient to justify me in his sight; those, ever since I was made acquainted with the truth as it is in Jesus, and embraced the gospel, I have accounted loss — Things of no value; things which ought to be readily foregone for Christ, in order that, placing all my dependance on him for justification, I might through him be accepted of God, and be saved. The word ζημια, here used by the apostle, and rendered loss, properly signifies loss incurred in trade: and especially that kind of loss which is sustained at sea in a storm, when goods are thrown overboard for the sake of saving the ship and the people on board: in which sense the word is used Acts 27:10; Acts 27:21. To understand the term thus, gives great force and beauty to the passage. It is as if the apostle said, In making the voyage of life, for the purpose of gaining salvation, I proposed to purchase it with my circumcision, and my care in observing the ritual and moral precepts of the law; and I put a great value on these things, on account of the gain or advantage I was to make by them. But when I became a Christian, I willingly threw them all overboard, as of no value in purchasing salvation. And this I did for the sake of gaining salvation through faith in Christ as my only Saviour. (8-11) Yea doubtless — Not only when I was first converted, but I still account both these and all things else, how valuable soever, to be but loss. Having said, in the preceding verse, that he counted his privileges as a Jew, and his righteousness by the law, to be loss, or things to be thrown away, he here adds, that he viewed in the same light all the things which men value themselves upon, and on which they build their hope of salvation: such as their natural and acquired talents, their knowledge, their moral virtue, and even their good works; yea, and all the riches, honours, and pleasures of the world; all the things in which people seek their happiness. For the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord — In comparison of, and in order that I may attain, the experimental and practical knowledge of Christ, as my Lord, as my teaching Prophet, my atoning and mediating Priest, my delivering and ruling King, reigning in my heart by his grace, and governing my life by his laws. For the apostle evidently had a respect here to all the offices and characters of Christ, and intended what he says to be understood of sanctification and practical obedience, as much as of illumination and justification. And he accounted all the things he speaks of as worthless, not only because they were ineffectual to procure for him acceptance with God, but because in themselves they are of little value in comparison with the true knowledge of Christ, and of the way of salvation through him; blessings which the apostle so regarded, that he despised all other knowledge, and every human attainment, as things comparatively unworthy of his care, while pursuing his way to eternal life. For whom I have actually suffered the loss of all things — Which the world esteems, admires, loves, and delights in. It seems probable, from this, that he had been excommunicated by the Jews in Jerusalem, and spoiled of his goods: a treatment which some others, who were not so obnoxious to the Jews as he was, met with after they became Christians, Hebrews 10:33-34. And I count them but dung — So far am I from repenting, that I exposed myself to the loss of them. The discourse rises. Loss is sustained with patience; but dung is cast away with abhorrence. The Greek word, so rendered, signifies any vile refuse of things, the dross of metals, the dregs of liquors, the excrements of animals, the most worthless scraps of meat, the basest offals, fit only for dogs: in such a light did the apostle view every thing that would engage his dependance for justification, or stand in competition with Christ for his affection. That I may win Christ — May have him for my Saviour and Lord; may have an interest in all the offices that he sustains, and in all he hath done and suffered for the salvation of men, and may be made partaker of the benefits which he hath procured for me. And be found in him — Vitally united to him by faith and love; not having mine own righteousness, which is of the law — That merely outward righteousness prescribed by the law, and performed in my own strength; but that which is through the faith of Christ — That justifying, sanctifying, and practical righteousness which is attained through believing in Christ, and in the truths and promises of his gospel. See on Romans 4:6-8; Ephesians 4:22-24; 1 John 3:7. The righteousness which is, εκ Θεου, of, or from God — Which is the gift of his grace and mercy, and not procured by my merit; and is from his Spirit, not effected by my own strength, through the instrumentality of faith alone; a faith, however, productive of love, and of all holiness and righteousness. The phrase in the original here, την εκ Θεου δικαιοσυνην, the righteousness of, or from God, is used, says Macknight, “I think only in this passage. It is opposed to mine own righteousness, which is from the law, a phrase found in other passages, particularly Galatians 3:21. Wherefore, since the righteousness from the law is that which is obtained according to the tenor of the law, the righteousness from God by faith, is that which comes from God’s accounting the believer’s faith to him for righteousness, and from his working that faith in his heart by the influences of his Spirit.” That I may know him — In his person and offices, in his humiliation and exaltation, his grace and glory, as my wisdom and righteousness, my sanctification and redemption; or, as my complete Saviour; and the power — Δυναμιν, the efficacy; of his resurrection — Demonstrating the certain truth and infinite importance of every part of his doctrine, the acceptableness of the atonement made by him for sin, (see on Romans 4:25,) opening an intercourse between earth and heaven, and obtaining for me the Holy Spirit, to raise me from the death of sin unto all the life of righteousness, (John 16:7,) assuring me of a future and eternal judgment, (Acts 17:31,) begetting me again to a lively hope of a heavenly inheritance, (1 Peter 1:3,) and raising my affections from things on earth to things above, Colossians 3:1-2 : and the fellowship of his sufferings — Sympathizing with him in his sufferings, and partaking of the benefits purchased for me thereby; as also being willing to take up my cross and suffer with him, as far as I am called to it, knowing that if I suffer with him, I shall also be glorified with him. See the margin. Being made conformable to his death — Being dead to the world and sin, or being made willing to confirm the gospel by enduring the tortures of crucifixion as he did, should it be his will I should do so. If by any means — Having attained an entire conformity to my great Master, and done and suffered the whole will of God; I might attain unto the resurrection of the dead — Unto that consummate holiness and blessedness, which he will bestow upon all his people when the dead in Christ shall rise first, and be distinguished with honour and glory proportionable to the zeal and diligence which they have manifested in his service. Still Running Vs, 12-16 “Not as though I had already attained, either were already perfect: but I follow after, if that I may apprehend that for which also I am apprehended of Christ Jesus. Brethren, I count not myself to have apprehended: but this one thing I do, forgetting those things which are behind, and reaching forth unto those things which are before, I press toward the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus. Let us therefore, as many as be perfect, be thus minded: and if in any thing ye be otherwise minded, God shall reveal even this unto you. Nevertheless, whereto we have already attained, let us walk by the same rule, let us mind the same thing. Brethren, be followers together of me, and mark them which walk so as ye have us for an ensample. (For many walk, of whom I have told you often, and now tell you even weeping, that they are the enemies of the cross of Christ:” (12) Not as though I had already attained — Ουχ οτι ηδη ελαβον, literally, not that I have already received, namely, the blessings which I am in pursuit of, even that complete knowledge of Christ, of the power of his resurrection, the fellowship of his sufferings, and conformity to his death just mentioned; either were already perfect — Τετελειωμαι, perfected, completed: or had finished my course of duty and sufferings. It appears from Php 3:15, that there is a difference between one that is τελειος, perfect, and one that is perfected; the one is fitted for the race, the other has finished the race, and is ready to receive the prize. But I follow after — Διωκω, I pursue, what is still before me. The apostle changes his allusion from a voyage to a race, which he continues through the two next verses. That I may apprehend that perfect holiness, that entire conformity to the will of God, for which also I am apprehended of Christ Jesus — Appearing to me in the way to Damascus, (Acts 26:14,) whose condescending hand graciously laid hold on me when I was proceeding in my mad career of persecuting him and his followers, and in the extraordinary manner of which you have often heard, brought me to engage in running that very different race which I am now pursuing. (13-14) Brethren, I count not myself to have apprehended — To have already attained those high degrees of holiness, internal and external, of usefulness and conformity to my blessed Master, which I have in view. But this one thing I do — I make this my chief business. Or rather, (which the phraseology of the original seems to require,) this one thing I can say, though I cannot say that I have attained what I am aiming at; forgetting those things which are behind — Even that part of the race of Christian experience, duty, and suffering, which is already run; and reaching forth, &c. — Greek, τοις δε εμπροσθεν επεκτεινομενος, stretching forward toward those things which are before — Toward still higher attainments in grace, and the further labours and sufferings which remain to be accomplished, pursuing these with the whole vigour of my soul; I press toward the mark — Which God hath placed before me, even a full conformity to the image of his Son in my heart and life, Romans 8:29; for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus — The felicity, honour, and glory, which I am called of God in Christ to contend for: a noble prize indeed! The reader will easily observe, that there is all along in this passage a beautiful allusion to the foot-races in the Grecian games; and in this last clause, to that particular circumstance respecting the prize, that it was placed in a very conspicuous situation, in order that the competitors might be animated by having it still in their view. Add to this, that the judges sat on a high seat, and from thence, by a herald, summoned the contenders into the stadium, or place where they were to contend. In allusion to which elevated situation of the judges, Macknight thinks the apostle here terms God’s calling him by Christ to run the Christian race, ανω κλησις, a high calling, or a calling from above. The phrase, however, seems rather to mean a calling or invitation to very high things, even to dignity and happiness, great beyond all that we can now conceive. For to every faithful servant shall it be granted, partly at death, and more especially at the day of final judgment, to enter into the joy of his Lord, Matthew 25:23; to sit down with him on his throne, as he overcame and is set down with his Father on his throne; and to inherit all things, even all that God has and is, Revelation 3:21; Revelation 21:7. “From the description which the apostle gives in this passage of his stretching all the members of his body while running the Christian race, and from his telling us that he followed on with unremitting strength and agility, till he arrived at the prize which was placed at the end of the course, we may learn what earnestness, diligence, and constancy, in the exercises of faith and holiness, are necessary to our faith’s being counted to us for righteousness at the last day.” (15) Let us therefore, as many as be perfect, be thus minded. "Perfect" here means mature, full grown, as opposed to babes or children. The word is so used (in the Greek) in 1 Corinthians 14:20; Ephesians 4:13; Hebrews 5:14. "There is a difference," says Bengel, on ver. 12, "between the perfect and the perfected: the first are ready for the. race; the last are close upon the prize." St. Paul exhorts all full-grown Christians to imitate his perseverance; like him, to forsake any claims to legal righteousness; to seek that righteousness which is through the faith of Christ; to know Christ, to win Christ; to press ever forwards to obtain the prize. And if in anything ye be otherwise minded, God shall reveal even this unto you.. If only we be in earnest, pressing onwards in the Christian race with sustained perseverance, God will, by the manifestation of his Spirit in our heart, correct any minor errors of doctrine or of practice. Comp. John 7:17, "If any man willeth to do (θέλῃ ποιεῖν) his will, he shall know of the doctrine whether it be of God." "Otherwise" (ἑτέρως) seems here to mean otherwise thin is right, wrongly, amiss - a meaning which it has not unfrequently in classical Greek, and in our word "heterodox." Even this; rather, this too, as well as the one thing needful, the knowledge of Christ, which he has already revealed. Mark the word "reveal." Paul may teach, but living spiritual knowledge is a revelation from God. This passage shows that the word "perfect" is used here in a restricted sense, not of consummated holiness; as it implies that some of the "perfect" may be "otherwise minded," may be involved in minor errors. Good Christians must have that righteousness which is through faith; they must persevere: they may err in less essential points. It is a lesson of charity and humility. (16) Let us walk . . .—In this verse the last words appear to be an explanatory gloss. The original runs thus: Nevertheless—as to that to which we did attain—let us walk by the same. The word “walk” is always used of pursuing a course deliberately chosen. (See Acts 21:24; Romans 4:12; Galatians 5:25.) The nearest parallel (from which the gloss is partly taken) is Galatians 6:16, “As many as walk by this rule, peace be upon them.” In this passage there seems to be the same double reference which has pervaded all St. Paul’s practical teaching. He is anxious for two things—that they should keep on in one course, and that all should keep on together. In both senses he addresses the “perfect;” he will have them understand that they have attained only one thing—to be in the right path, and that it is for them to continue in it; he also bids them refrain from setting themselves up above “the imperfect;” for the very fact of division would mark them as still “carnal,” mere “babes in Christ” (1Corinthians 3:1-4). (17-18) Brethren, be followers together — Συμμιμηται, joint imitators, of me — Obedient to my directions, and following the pattern which God enables me to set before you; and mark — Observe and imitate them; who walk so as ye have us — Myself and the other apostles of Christ, for an ensample. For many — Even teachers, as they profess themselves to be, walk in a very different manner; of whom I have told you often in time past, and now tell you even weeping — While I write, for indeed well may I weep on so lamentable an occasion; that they are enemies of the cross of Christ — Unwilling to suffer any thing for him and his cause, and counteracting the very end and design of his death. Observe, reader, such are all cowardly, all shamefaced, all delicate Christians. Eyes on Home Vs, 17-21 Nevertheless, whereto we have already attained, let us walk by the same rule, let us mind the same thing. Brethren, be followers together of me, and mark them which walk so as ye have us for an ensample. (For many walk, of whom I have told you often, and now tell you even weeping, that they are the enemies of the cross of Christ: Brethren, be followers together of me, and mark them which walk so as ye have us for an ensample. (For many walk, of whom I have told you often, and now tell you even weeping, that they are the enemies of the cross of Christ:” (17-18) Brethren, be followers together — Συμμιμηται, joint imitators, of me — Obedient to my directions, and following the pattern which God enables me to set before you; and mark — Observe and imitate them; who walk so as ye have us — Myself and the other apostles of Christ, for an ensample. For many — Even teachers, as they profess themselves to be, walk in a very different manner; of whom I have told you often in time past, and now tell you even weeping — While I write, for indeed well may I weep on so lamentable an occasion; that they are enemies of the cross of Christ — Unwilling to suffer any thing for him and his cause, and counteracting the very end and design of his death. Observe, reader, such are all cowardly, all shamefaced, all delicate Christians. Whose end is destruction — This is placed in the front, that what follows may be read with the greater horror; whose God is their belly — Whose supreme happiness lies in gratifying their sensual appetites. The apostle gives the same character of the Judaizing teachers, (Romans 16:18; Titus 1:11,) and, therefore, it is probable that he is speaking here chiefly of them and of their disciples. Whose glory is in their shame — In those things which they ought to be ashamed of: and whoever glories in the commission of any sin, or in the omission of any duty which he owes to God, his neighbour, or himself; or in the gratification of those inclinations and dispositions that are contrary to the love of God and his neighbour; or in that manner of employing his money, his knowledge, his authority over others, or his time, which is contrary to the will of God, and manifests that he is not a faithful steward of God’s manifold gifts, glories in his shame: who mind — Relish, desire, seek, pursue; earthly things — Things visible and temporal, in preference to those which are invisible and eternal; for to be carnally minded is death, Romans 8:6. (18) For many walk… of whom I have told you often, and now tell you even weeping, that they are the enemies of the cross of Christ; rather, I used to tell you; the tense is imperfect. He used to speak thus of them when he was at Philippi; now, during his absence, the evil has increased, and he repeats his warning with tears. "Paul weeps," says Chrysostom, "for those at whom others laugh; so true is his sympathy, so deep his care for all men." He seems to be speaking here, not of the Jews, but of nominal Christians, who used their liberty for a cloke of licentiousness. Such are enemies of the cross; they hate sell-denial, they will not take up their cross. By their evil lives they bring shame upon the religion of the cross. (19 Whose end is destruction. . . .—The intense severity of this verse is only paralleled by such passages as 2Timothy 2:1-5; 2Peter 2:12-22; Jude 1:4; Jude 1:8; Jude 1:12-13. All express the burning indignation of a true servant of Christ against those who “turn the grace of God into lasciviousness,” and “after escaping the pollutions of the world through the knowledge of the Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, are again entangled therein and overcome.” Whose God is their belly. —A stronger reiteration of Romans 16:18, “They serve not our Lord Jesus Christ, but their own belly.” Note the emphasis laid on “feasting and rioting” in 2Peter 2:13; Jude 1:12. Whose glory is in their shame. —As the preceding clause refers chiefly to self-indulgence, so this to impurity. Comp. Ephesians 5:12, “It is a shame even to speak of those things which are done of them in secret.” “To glory in their shame”—to boast, as a mark of spirituality, the unbridled license which is to all pure spirits a shame—is the hopeless condition of the reprobate, who “not only do these things, but have pleasure in those who do them” (Romans 1:32). Who mind earthly things.—This last phrase, which in itself might seem hardly strong enough for a climax to a passage so terribly emphatic, may perhaps be designed to bring out by contrast the glorious passage which follows. But it clearly marks the opposition between the high pretension to enlightened spirituality and the gross carnal temper which it covers, groveling (so to speak) on earth, incapable of rising to heaven. (20-21) For our conversation is in heaven — We that are true Christians are of a very different spirit, and act in a quite different manner. The original expression, πολιτευμα, rendered conversation, is a word of a very extensive meaning, implying our citizenship, our thoughts, our affections, are already in heaven; or we think, speak, and act, converse with our fellow-creatures, and conduct ourselves in all our intercourse with them, as citizens of the New Jerusalem, and as being only strangers and pilgrims upon earth. We therefore endeavour to promote the interests of that glorious society to which we belong, to learn its manners, secure a title to its privileges, and behave in a way suitable to, and worthy of our relation to it; from whence also we look for the Saviour — To come and carry us thither according to his promise, (John 14:3,) namely, our spirits, at the dissolution of this earthly tabernacle; yea, and afterward to transform our vile body, το σωμα της ταπεινωσεως, the body of our humiliation; which, in consequence of the fall of our first parents, sinks us so low, is subject to, and encompassed with, so many infirmities, is such a clog to our souls, and so greatly hinders our progress in the work of faith and labour of love: this body we expect he will transform into the most perfect state and the most beauteous form, when it will be purer than the unspotted firmament, brighter than the lustre of the stars, and, which exceeds all parallel, which comprehends all perfection, like unto his glorious body — Of which an image was given in his transfiguration, yea like that wonderfully glorious body which he wears in his heavenly kingdom, and on his triumphant throne. So that here, as Romans 8:23, the redemption of the body from corruption, by a glorious resurrection, is represented as the especial privilege of the righteous. According to that mighty working — That energy of power; whereby he is able to subdue all things unto himself — To show himself to the whole intelligent creation of God completely victorious over all his enemies, even over death and the grave, the last of them.


 

I Am .. Alpha and Omega

Summarised and adapted from FW Boreham “I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end,” saith the Lord—Rev. 1:8 Moses, 40 years raised as the son of Pharoah, then another 40 years the fleeing refugee on the desert, is summoned by God to know the living God- ‘And the Lord said unto Moses, come now, therefore, and I shall send thee unto Pharaoh, and I will send thee also until the children of Israel. And Moses said unto God, Behold, when I am come unto them and shall say, the God of your father’s hath sent me unto you, and they shall say, What is his name? What shall I say unto them? And God said unto Moses, Thus shalt thou say unto the children of Israel, I AM hath sent me unto you!’ I am—! I am—what? For centuries and centuries that question stood unanswered other than that the name signified One without beginning, before the beginning and therefore after all things as well, the uncreated creator the sustainer of the universe, the LORD; that sentence remained clear but unclear, complete yet partial, revealed, yet clouded in mystery until He should come who should not only reveal it more fully but also be it. And in the fullness of time, he appeared or rather reappeared and filled in the gap that had so long stood blank. I am—! I am—what? ‘I am—the Bread of Life!’ ‘I am—the Light of the World!’ ‘I am—the Door!’ ‘I am—the true Vine!’ ‘I am—the Good Shepherd!’ ‘I am—the Way, the Truth and the Life!’ ‘I am—the Resurrection and the Life!’ And when I come to the end of the Bible, to the last book of all, ‘I am—Alpha and Omega!’ ‘I am—A and Z‘ It is the most sublime revelation of the Inexhaustibility of Jesus. He means that, in His redemptive splendour, He is absolutely incapable of exhaustion. It is therefore a perfect symbol of Jesus himself. The ages may draw upon His grace! the men of all nations and kindreds and peoples and tongues—a multitude that no man can number: a host that no statistician can count—may kneel in contrition at His feet: but His love is as great as His power: it knows neither measure nor end. He is inexhaustible. It is also a sublime revelation of the Indispensability of Jesus. He is indispensable in the unfolding of the divine revelation; He is indispensable to the interpretation of historic experience; and He is indispensable to the unveiled drama of the future. As the disciples discovered on the road to Emmaus, I cannot understand my Bible unless I take Him as being the key to it all; I cannot understand the processes of historical development until I have given Him the central place; I cannot anticipate the unfoldings of the days to come until I have seen the keys of the eternities in His hands. At every point, Jesus is life’s supreme indispensability. It is a sublime revelation of the Invincibility of Jesus. ‘I am—A and Z!’ He is at the beginning, that is to say, and He goes right through to the end. There is nothing in the alphabet before A; there is nothing after Z. However far back your evolutionary interpretation of the universe may place the beginning of things, you will find Him there. However remote your interpretation of prophecy may make the end of things, you will find Him there. When things first began, it was because He began them; when the drama ends it will be because He rings down the curtain. And, all the way through, He is marshalling the pageant of the ages. He is everlastingly in control and in command. And so to for you and I at the individual level. The work which His goodness began … Audits Toplady wrote; The work which His goodness began, The arm of His strength will complete; His promise is Yea and Amen, And never was forfeited yet. ‘I am confident of this very thing, that He who hath begun a good work in you will perform it unto the end.’ And that is what the writer of the epistles of the Hebrews meant when he referred to Jesus as ‘the Author and Finisher of our faith.’ He begins at the very beginning; He is the A; there is no element of salvation until he begins to operate upon the soul. And He persists to the very end: He is the Z; He will never surrender His sublime task until He presents the soul faultless before His Father with exceeding joy. It is the most sublime revelation ever given of the Adaptability of Jesus. Until we have discovered the amazing facility with which Jesus can meet our distinctive yearnings and needs, we cannot possibly appreciate the power and value of the cross. Frank Bullen tells how, when he first saw the whaling ship Catchalot, he thought her the most ugly and shapeless vessel on which he had ever gazed. She looked the sort of ship, he says, that had been built by the mile and cut off by the yard. Later on, however, he obtained another view of her. In the course of an exciting adventure he found himself floating on the back of a dead whale on an ocean that was entirely destitute of a sail. He gave himself up for lost, expecting only an agonising and lingering death. All at once he saw a speck on the ocean on the horizon. It was a ship! It was the Catchalot! As she bore down upon him, he says, he thought her the trimmest, daintiest, loveliest craft that he had ever seen! His desperate need, and her ability to meet it, made all the difference. Therein lies the essential glory of the Son of God. There was a time when I looked upon Him and saw in Him only a Man of Sorrows and acquainted with grief; I hid, as it were, my face from Him; He was despised and I esteemed Him not. But there came a day when I recognised my desperate need of Him. I felt that, unless some divine Saviour loomed upon my horizon, I was utterly and hopelessly undone. And, in that crucial hour, He seemed to me the fairest among ten thousand and the altogether lovely. I may not have sinned more than others; but I have sinned differently. The experiences of others never sound convincing; they do not quite reflect my case. But, He adapts Himself with the most perfect precision to my soul’s deep longing. He is the very Saviour I need.


 

Alpha and Omega

“I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end,” saith the Lord—Rev. 1:8

 Long, long ago a startled shepherd was ordered to visit the court of the mightiest of earthly potentates, and to address him on matters of state in the name of the Most High.

‘And the Lord said unto Moses, come now, therefore, and I shall send thee unto Pharaoh, and I will send thee also until the children of Israel. And Moses said unto God, Behold, when I am come unto them and shall say, the God of your father’s hath sent me unto you, and they shall say, What is his name? What shall I say unto them? And God said unto Moses, Thus shalt thou say unto the children of Israel, I AM hath sent me unto you!’

I am—!

I am—what?

For centuries and centuries that question stood unanswered; that sentence remained incomplete. It was a magnificent fragment. It stood like a monument that the sculptor had never lived to finish; like a poem that the poet, dying with his music in him, had left with its closing stanzas unsung. But the sculptor of that fragment was not dead; the singer of that song had not perished. For, behold, He liveth for evermore! And in the fullness of time, he reappeared and filled in the gap that had so long stood blank.

I am—!

I am—what?

‘I am—the Bread of Life!’ ‘I am—the Light of the World!’ ‘I am—the Door!’ ‘I am—the true Vine!’ ‘I am—the Good Shepherd!’ ‘I am—the Way, the Truth and the Life!’ ‘I am—the Resurrection and the Life!

And when I come to the end of the Bible, to the last book of all, I find the series supplemented and complemented.

‘I am—Alpha and Omega!’ ‘I am—A and Z‘

It is the most sublime revelation of the Inexhaustibility of Jesus

He means that, in His redemptive splendour, He is absolutely incapable of exhaustion. It is therefore a perfect symbol of Jesus himself. The ages may draw upon His grace! the men of all nations and kindreds and peoples and tongues—a multitude that no man can number: a host that no statistician can count—may kneel in contrition at His feet: but His love is as great as His power: it knows neither measure nor end. He is inexhaustible.

It is also a sublime revelation of the Indispensability of Jesus

In the first case they refer to the unfolding of the divine revelation; in the second they refer to the interpretation of historic experience; and in the third they refer to the unveiled drama of the future. As the disciples discovered on the road to Emmaus, I cannot understand my Bible unless I take Him as being the key to it all; I cannot understand the processes of historical development until I have given Him the central place; I cannot anticipate with equanimity the unfoldings of the days to come until I have seen the keys of the eternities swinging at His girdle. At every point, Jesus is life’s supreme indispensability.

t is a sublime revelation of the Invincibility of Jesus. ‘I am—A and Z!’ He is at the beginning, that is to say, and He goes right through to the end. There is nothing in the alphabet before A; there is nothing after Z. However far back your evolutionary interpretation of the universe may place the beginning of things, you will find Him there. However remote your interpretation of prophecy may make the end of things, you will find Him there. When things first began, it was because He began them; when the drama ends it will be because He rings down the curtain. And, all the way through, He is marshalling the pageant of the ages. He is everlastingly in control and in command.

‘I am confident of this very thing, that He who hath begun a good work in you will perform it unto the end.’ And that is what the writer of the epistles of the Hebrews meant when he referred to Jesus as ‘the Author and Finisher of our faith.’ He begins at the very beginning; He is the A; there is no element of salvation until he begins to operate upon the soul. And He persists to the very end: He is the Z; He will never surrender His sublime task until He presents the soul faultless before His Father with exceeding joy.

It is the most sublime revelation ever given of the Adaptability of Jesus

Until we have discovered the amazing facility with which Jesus can meet our distinctive yearnings and needs, we cannot possibly appreciate the power and value of the cross. Frank Bullen tells how, when he first saw the whaling ship Catchalot, he thought her the most ugly and shapeless vessel on which he had ever gazed. She looked the sort of ship, he says, that had been built by the mile and cut off by the yard. Later on, however, he obtained another view of her. In the course of an exciting adventure he found himself floating on the back of a dead whale on an ocean that was entirely destitute of a sail. He gave himself up for lost, expecting only an agonising and lingering death. All at once he saw a speck on the ocean on the horizon. It was a ship! It was the Catchalot! As she bore down upon him, he says, he thought her the trimmest, daintiest, loveliest craft that he had ever seen! His desperate need, and her ability to meet it, made all the difference.

Therein lies the essential glory of the Son of God. There was a time when I looked upon Him and saw in Him only a Man of Sorrows and acquainted with grief; I hid, as it were, my face from Him; He was despised and I esteemed Him not. But there came a day when I recognised my desperate need of Him. I felt that, unless some divine Saviour loomed upon my horizon, I was utterly and hopelessly undone. And, in that crucial hour, He seemed to me the fairest among ten thousand and the altogether lovely. I may not have sinned more than others; but I have sinned differently. The experiences of others never sound convincing; they do not quite reflect my case. But, He adapts Himself with the most perfect precision to my soul’s deep longing. He is the very Saviour I need.


Saturday, May 23, 2026

 

Why Did Jesus weep? John 11

"Jesus Wept" by Dr. Franklin L. Kirksey “Jesus wept.” John 11:35 is known as the shortest verse in the Bible. Jesus shed tears on different occasions for different reasons. For example, when Jesus lamented, “O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, the one who kills the prophets and stones those who are sent to her! How often I wanted to gather your children together, as a hen gathers her brood under her wings, but you were not willing!” (Luke 13:34) Dr. Luke reports, “Now as He drew near, He saw the city and wept over it, saying, ‘If you had known, even you, especially in this your day, the things that make for your peace! But now they are hidden from your eyes’” (Luke 19:41-42). I believe there are three possible reasons Jesus wept at the death of Lazarus. Jesus wept for Lazarus’ family. Mary and Martha were believers who were grievers. 1 Thessalonians 4:13-14 reads, “But I do not want you to be ignorant, brethren, concerning those who have fallen asleep, lest you sorrow as others who have no hope. For if we believe that Jesus died and rose again, even so God will bring with Him those who sleep in Jesus.” Please note it does not say there is no sorrow when we lose a loved one, it says we are not to “sorrow as others who have no hope.” There is a Swedish proverb that says: “Shared joy is a double joy. Shared sorrow is half sorrow.” Romans 12:15 reads, “Rejoice with those who rejoice, and weep with those who weep.” Jesus wept over Lazarus’ friendship. John 11:36 reads, “Then the Jews said, ‘See how He loved him!’” It was obvious to observers that Jesus loved Lazarus as a friend. Jesus knew his friend Lazarus was sick, but He waited in obedience to the Father. A true friend does not like the thought of their friend suffering. It is painful to see others suffer because we do the will of God. We experience grief when we lose a friend. While we know “to be absent from the body and to be present with the Lord” (2 Corinthians 5:8b), we still miss friends who go to be with the Lord. Jesus wept about Lazarus’ future. Psalm 16:11 reads, “You will show me the path of life; In Your presence is fullness of joy; At Your right hand are pleasures forevermore.” Remember Jesus came “Out of the ivory palaces into a world of woe.” Jesus knew what Lazarus experienced in heaven and that he would return to earth to face the torment of being torn between two worlds as Paul expresses in Philippians 1:21-23, “For to me, to live is Christ, and to die is gain. But if I live on in the flesh, this will mean fruit from my labor; yet what I shall choose I cannot tell. For I am hard-pressed between the two, having a desire to depart and be with Christ, which is far better.” Oh, the deep meaning of those words, “Jesus wept!” Dr. Franklin L. Kirksey, Author of Don’t Miss the Revival! Messages for Revival and Spiritual Awakening from Isaiah and Sound Biblical Preaching: Giving the Bible a Voice [Both available on Logos and Amazon] May 22, 2022 © All Rights Reserved


Friday, May 22, 2026

 

Discipleship Luke 9 and 14

The Cost of Discipleship by Dr. Franklin L. Kirksey Dietrich Bonhoeffer warns about “cheap grace” in his book titled, The Cost of Discipleship. Bonhoeffer defines “cheap grace” as “the preaching of forgiveness without requiring repentance, baptism without church discipline, communion without confession. Cheap grace is grace without discipleship, grace without the cross, grace without Jesus Christ, living and incarnate.” The Great Commission of our Lord Jesus Christ involves making disciples (Matthew 28:18-20). From Luke 9:57-62, notice three elements of the cost of discipleship. First, there is an unexpected expense. Luke 9:57-58 reads, “Now it happened as they journeyed on the road, that someone said to Him, ‘Lord, I will follow You wherever You go.’ And Jesus said to him, ‘Foxes have holes and birds of the air have nests, but the Son of Man has nowhere to lay His head.’” While salvation is the gift of God, Jesus explains there is the cost of discipleship that must be counted. As a disciple we must surrender our provisions to the Lord. Second, there is an unexperienced expectation. Luke 9:59-60 reads, “Then He said to another, ‘Follow Me.’ But he said, ‘Lord, let me first go and bury my father.’ Jesus said to him, ‘Let the dead bury their own dead, but you go and preach the kingdom of God.’” Sometimes your family pays a price when you obey God. Some expectations will be unfulfilled. As a disciple we must surrender our priorities to the Lord. Third, there is an unexpressed explanation. Luke 9:61-62 reads, “And another also said, ‘Lord, I will follow You, but let me first go and bid them farewell who are at my house.’ But Jesus said to him, ‘No one, having put his hand to the plow, and looking back, is fit for the kingdom of God.’” As the hymnwriter declares, “I have decided to follow Jesus, no turning back, no turning back.” As a disciple we must surrender our practices to the Lord. Earlier, Luke records this personal penetrating question, “But why do you call Me ‘Lord, Lord,’ and not do the things which I say?” (Luke 6:46). Later, Luke shares the following about the cost of discipleship in Luke 14:25-27, and 33: “Now great multitudes went with Him. And He turned and said to them, ‘If anyone comes to Me and does not hate his father and mother, wife and children, brothers and sisters, yes, and his own life also, he cannot be My disciple. And whoever does not bear his cross and come after Me cannot be My disciple. . . whoever of you does not forsake all that he has cannot be My disciple.’” Bonhoeffer explains, “As we embark upon discipleship we surrender ourselves to Christ in union with his death-we give over our lives to death. Thus it begins; the cross is not the terrible end to an otherwise god fearing and happy life, but it meets us at the beginning of our communion with Christ. When Christ calls a man, he bids him come and die.” Dr. Franklin L. Kirksey, Author of Don’t Miss the Revival! Messages for Revival and Spiritual Awakening from Isaiah and Sound Biblical Preaching: Giving the Bible a Voice [Both available on Logos and Amazon ©May 16, 2025, All Rights Reserved


 

Phil 3  Finally! Rejoice in the Lord outline

Phil 3  Finally! Rejoice in the Lord
"Finally" but then goes on for 2 more chapters.  "Daddy, what does the pastor mean when he says, "Finally"; to which his father responded, "Absolutely nothing, son." "Now then".  The Big protection is to Rejoice in the Lord! It's a command. joy is not an emotion. Joy isn't a temperamental characteristic. Joy isn't related to circumstances or health or bank accounts.  To rejoice in the Lord means that you find in the Lord your source of joy; He is the highest object of your joy; He is the treasure and fellowship of joy.  It is also a safeguard. A protection. Like a protective barrier. Matthew Henry,  "The joy of the Lord is a divine armor against the assaults of our spiritual enemies and puts our mouths out of taste for those pleasures with which the tempter baits his hooks . . . the taste of joy in our mouths makes the tempter's offerings seem bland by comparison." Psalm 34:5, 'They looked unto Him and were radiant.'  'Emerson came into our house this morning with a sunbeam in his face.'  Peter described it as joy unspeakable and full of glory. It is a duty for us to cultivate this joy.  Don’t murmur and complain; or find fault with God's dealings; resist the temptation to depression.   Moreover, we are to rejoice 'in the Lord.' 'In His presence is fulness of joy, and at His right hand there are pleasures for evermore,’   the 'deep, sweet well of joy.' We may not be able to rejoice in our circumstances, friends, or prospects, but we can always rejoice in Jesus Christ. Rejoice at home too. 'Thou shalt rejoice in all the good which the Lord thy God giveth thee';   iv. 4. To quote his own words, 'To write the same things to you, to me indeed is not irksome, but for you it is safe.' Apparently, he was constantly exhorting them to Christian joy.
To Maintain Joy Your Must Be Aware
Beware of dogs.   quarrelsome and contentious folk,  defiling in their influence. Is there one whose influence lowers the tone of our own life? Perhaps his coarseness and abusive speech rubs off on you too.
'Beware of evil workers.'   fanatical,  unbalanced, and unable to distinguish between essentials and non-essential beliefs, magnifying some microscopical point in Christianity until it blinds the eye to the symmetry, proportion, and beauty of Heaven's glorious scheme. These people are the ' Cranks ' of our Churches;  they exaggerate trifles ; they catch up every new theory and vagary, and follow it to the detriment of truth and love. It is impossible to exaggerate the harm that these people do, or the desirability of keeping clear of them, they are the pests of every Christian community they enter.  Exaggerating a truth can be as bad as denying a truth.
Beware of the false circumcision (NASB) mutilation. The Apostle's life was embittered by the antagonism of the Judaising teachers who dogged his steps. They did not deny that Jesus was the Messiah, or that His Gospel was the power of God unto salvation, but they insisted that the Gentile converts could only come to the fulness of Gospel privilege through the Law of Moses; they urged that Gentiles must become Jews before they could be Christians; they asserted that if the new converts were not circumcised after the manner of Moses, they could not be saved (Acts 15:1). Throughout his whole career, the Apostle offered the most strenuous opposition to these men and their teaching. He went so far as to say that they were traitors.  As in every generation so also in ours we must beware of those who say that we must pass through certain outward rites before they can be saved. In addition to faith in our Lord, there must be certain acts of obedience to the institutions of the Church. They demand baptism, baptizing of all children in the family, attendance at the confessional, strict obedience to fasts, acts of self-denial, as conditions of salvation. Against all these we must be steadfastly on our guard, because they obscure and belittle the Gospel, and divert men's thoughts from Him who is the only way to the Father.    It is specially difficult to be on our guard against these false teachers, because they approach us under the guise of being earnest Christians.  They show  sympathy to the church, and have religious feelings. It is not so difficult to watch against the outwardly profane and rebellious, but even the most careful can be caught up by those who seem more religious  or more spiritual. And the super spiritual are not adverse to lying about others to achieve power in the church. It was therefore that the Apostle feared that “as the serpent beguiled Eve with his subtlety, so the minds of his converts should be corrupted from the simplicity which is in Christ (2 Cor.10:3). It is when Satan comes to us as an angel of light that he is most to be dreaded. We should examine ourselves first to keep our hearts close to the Lord.
To Maintain Joy Your Must Be Self-Aware
Do we worship God in the spirit ? The word translated worship  λατρεύοντες  means first to do servant's work, then to do religious service, and sometimes priestly duty. Do we understand what it is to live in the temple of worship, performing every duty as to the Lord i Is our worship, whether in public or private, mechanical in outward posture and routine, or do we know what it is to worship the Father 'in spirit and in truth,' and 'to be in the Spirit on the Lord's Day.’  
 Do we glory (exult) in Christ Jesus? Is He our boast and pride ? Is following Him our highest ideal? Is the pursuit of His 'Well-done' our loftiest endeavour? Are we amongst those who put no confidence in the flesh ? All through the Epistles the flesh stands for self-the self that seeks to justify itself, that endeavours to sanctify itself, that is always fussily endeavouring to win men for God, but has never learned to be submerged beneath the mighty tide and current of God's Spirit. If your religious life is one of self-effort and self-complacency, you must stand back; it is not for you to handle the priceless pearl ; your eyes cannot detect its superlative beauty, excellence, and worth. But let all humble souls, who have nothing in which to glory, save the Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, who put no confidence in themselves, but wholly rest upon the unmerited grace of God, lift up their faces with exceeding great joy. These are the true children of Abraham.
Do we put no confidence in the flesh?  In one of His most exquisite parables, our Saviour depicted a man leaving his house in the morning with a heavy bag of gold, and making his way to the market-place, where pearl-sellers displayed the precious ocean gems. He was seeking good pearls, and passed from stall to stall with the eye and touch of the connoisseur; but from each stall he turned away dissatisfied. At last he approached one of the sellers, and saw before him on the tray the most exquisite, perfect, and transparent pearl that his eyes had ever lit on. Asking the price, he discovered that it would take all the pearls he had bought, and all the gold in his pouch, to procure it. When he learnt that to win that he must sell everything else; and so he does. He counts the rest a loss and the pearl far better.  He counted all things else but loss.
You see, now, because of the sacrifice of Christ and His finished work on our behalf, salvation comes through faith in Christ alone.  No physical mark, no symbol, no act, no ritual, no ceremony can ever change the heart or transform the heart anyway – they all pointed to Christ's sacrifice. If it isn't Jesus alone, it is Jesus plus something.  That's legalism at its core. It steals your joy by suggesting that God's love and favour have to be earned and you'd better do more and you'd better be better. God will never be pleased with you unless your hand accomplishes something that can be added to the cross of His Son.  
Phl 3:4-6. Jesus plus baptism. Jesus plus church membership Jesus plus Sabbath worship Jesus plus tithing  Jesus plus pilgrimages Jesus plus prayers   Then . . . maybe . . . God will be satisfied with you – which implies God the Father isn't satisfied with His Son.  Your baptism doesn't save. No one is saved by an act you might do, whether its religious ritual, race, religion, rules or reputation. My orthodoxy won't save me My activity won't save me My sincerity won't save me My ability won't save me. We are those who trust in ourselves least.  We put no confidence in the flesh.
Nothing in my hands I bring Simply to Thy cross I cling.
Foul I to the fountain (of His blood) fly Wash me Saviour or I die.
Just as I am without one plea  But that Thy Blood was shed for me  And that Thou bidst me come to Thee , O Lamb of God I come I come.
3:7,8   Nothing either great or small— Nothing, sinner, no;  Jesus did it, did it all, Long, long ago.  "It is finished!" yes, indeed, Finished every jot:  Sinner, this is all you need— Tell me, is it not? When He, from His lofty throne, Stooped to do and die,  Everything was fully done; Hearken to His cry: Weary, working, burdened one, Wherefore toil you so?  Cease your doing; all was done Long, long ago. Till to Jesus' work you cling By a simple faith,  "Doing" is a deadly thing— "Doing" ends in death. Cast your deadly "doing" down— Down at Jesus' feet;  Stand in Him, in Him alone, Gloriously complete.
1. Don’t put your confidence in a ritual. Baptism won't save you.
2. Don’t put your confidence in your race or ethnic heritage. Being Dutch don't make you much! You can't ride to heaven on your parents religion.
3. Don’t put your confidence in your rank. Being an elder or a deacon doesn’t make you saved.
4. Don’t put your confidence in your tradition. 5. Don’t put your confidence in your rule keeping.
6. Don’t put your confidence in your religious zeal.
7. Don’t put your confidence in your obedience to the law.


 

Sometimes I feel discouraged at the events of life

Ecclesiastes 3:16 – 4:12    What To Do When Corrupt People Oppress You
Ecclesiastes 3:1-15 And God’s Sovereignty
All Is Appointed in God’s Time        All Is Appropriate in God’s Time 
All Is Adjudicated in God’s Time
The issue of Power, Oppression, Bullying and Corruption are not new issues that suddenly raised their heads in the last few years. They are a reflection of the sinfulness of man and the horrendous and unloving way we treat other people. Corruption. You don’t have to look far to see it. The problem is that people so blur the lines that they just can’t see it.
Hatton used parliamentary privilege to expose organised crime in the Griffith mafia, police corruption and malfeasance within government departments and agencies.[7] In 1994, by 46 votes to 45, he forced the minority Fahey Government to establish the Wood Royal Commission into Police Corruption. During the period of the Wood Royal Commission, I understand more than 8000 police in NSW were dismissed. From the report :
“By 1995, the Commission had uncovered hundreds of instances of bribery, money laundering, drug trafficking, fabrication of evidence, destruction of evidence, fraud and serious assaults in the Criminal Investigation Branch (CIB) at Kings Cross. Participation in misconduct was the norm in the detective division and the senior levels of the CIB in Sydney's inner city were in corrupt relationships with major drug traffickers and the local criminal milieu. " In 1995, the Independent Commission Against Corruption referred a matter to the Commission regarding the possibility of collusion between organised paedophile networks with members from the legal profession, media and political establishment, and the senior ranks of the NSW Police Service and judiciary.   The network operated as a mutual syndicate and was designed to facilitate the distribution of child pornography, the procuring and sharing of underage sexual partners by members, investment in property such as an underage male brothel in Surry Hills and a pooling of resources and information for the purposes of evading law enforcement and maintaining access to illicit markets. Syndicate members also carried on an amphetamine-trafficking enterprise to raise money to help with the significant expense imposed by the requirement to pay bribes, and the high price of illicit materials and services. The relationship between the network and the group of corrupt detectives was extensive and multifaceted, including regular bribe payments to the detectives in exchange for advance warning of law enforcement scrutiny, consignment of large amounts of methamphetamine to the network members on a profit-sharing basis and the planning of insurance frauds and financial crimes. There was an overwhelming body of evidence suggesting the existence of close relationships between police and those involved in the supply of drugs. This encompassed a variety of activities ranging from police turning a blind eye to the criminality of the favoured in return for regular payments, to active assistance when they happened to be caught, to tip-offs of pending police activity, and to affirmative police action aimed at driving out competitors.
Unchecked injustice and oppression make it difficult to see the beauty and coherence in God’s design, and such realities raise questions about God’s moral governance of the universe. These tensions make it difficult to see how God can be sovereign and also good and just. Delays in God’s response to such situations are inexplicable and defy our sense of how things should be. The section connects back to earlier material and confronts us with the tensions for which Qoheleth is well known, as he presents ideas that seem to stand in hopeless conflict.
Justice was a value widely affirmed throughout the ancient Near East. A reform edict of Urukagina of Lagash (ca. 2400 BC) freed the inhabitants of Lagash from usury, burdensome controls, hunger, theft, murder, the seizure of their property, and slavery. As a result “the widow and the orphan were no longer at the mercy of the powerful man.” Similar comments can be found in other Mesopotamian law codes. The oppression of the weak and poor is also recognized as evil in several Egyptian wisdom compositions.
4:1 I looked and saw all the oppression. Few things call the moral governance of the universe into question like oppression, an idea emphasized through repetition (“oppression . . . oppressed . . . oppressors”). The mistreatment of others raises questions about how such things can be allowed to happen and why nothing is done to stop the evil. Whether this involves the economic oppression in a Dickens novel, slavery in the American South, or the genocides in Africa or the Balkans, such acts epitomize evil and things that ordinary moral sensibilities recognize should never be. The egregious nature of such acts calls into question the nature of humankind and the evil of which humans are capable. Oppression also raises questions about the moral governance of the universe in that many who are oppressed have done nothing to deserve the treatment they are receiving. Another aspect of the tragedy is emphasized by the repetition of the phrase “no comforter.” Some people demonstrate their contempt for fellow human beings made in God’s image by oppressing them; others show their lack of compassion by failing to show suffering people the basic kindness and respect they deserve.
Look, it is one thing to know this. It is another to experience the effect of cruelty and corruption.
When you experience it, sometimes it affects you deeply.  :2–3 dead . . . happier than the living . . . better [yet ] . . . one who has never been born.  His shocking statement reflects what oppressive suffering can do to people. Such declarations are not positive statements about death but reflect the reality that suffering under an evil system can be so terrible that death is a welcome relief. Seow says, “The point is that the living still have to witness [and perhaps suffer from] the injustices of life, whereas the dead . . . no longer have to do so.” The person who has never been born escapes all the suffering and misery that is often a part of life. On the other hand, she or he also misses all of life’s pleasures and opportunities.
Job once thought the same thing about himself. After he lost his children, he said, May the day perish on which I was born,  And the night in which it was said, “A male child is conceived .” . . . Why did I not die at birth?  Why did I not perish when I came from the womb? —JOB 3:3, 11
In a world that seems so out of control, where bad things happen to you and those you love while reward falls on those who deserve the opposite, it’s hard to believe that God is sovereign.
How could the one who declares himself to be perfect, wise, good, and loving in every way also be in absolute control of the universe and let all of this happen on his watch?
Much of our regular anxiety, worry, fear, and discouragement results from thinking that when things are out of our control, they are out of control completely. But the Bible tells us that if we want to properly understand what is happening around us, we need to remember what’s happening above us.
                        BUT WHEN IT GETS PERSONAL THEORY DOESN’T CONSOLE
16 Moreover, I saw under the sun that in the place of justice, even there was wickedness, and in the place of righteousness, even there was wickedness.17 I said in my heart, God will judge the righteous and the wicked, for there is a time for every matter and for every work.18 I said in my heart with regard to the children of man that God is testing them that they may see that they themselves are but beasts. 19 For what happens to the children of man and what happens to the beasts is the same; as one dies, so dies the other. They all have the same breath, and man has no advantage over the beasts, for all is vanity.20 All go to one place. All are from the dust, and to dust all return.21 Who knows whether the spirit of man goes upward and the spirit of the beast goes down into the earth?22 So I saw that there is nothing better than that a man should rejoice in his work, for that is his lot. Who can bring him to see what will be after him?
God will get them! Were all going to die anyway!
THE FAILURE OF JOB’S COMFORTERS       THEODICIES
Keller “God has a free will yet is not capable of doing wrong—why could not other beings also be likewise constituted? Also biblical authors teach us that eventually God will give us a suffering-free, evil-free world filled with redeemed human beings. Suffering and death will be banished forever. That means we will be in God’s world but not be capable of choosing evil. Yet we will obviously still be capable of love.
Finally, many Christian theologians point out the biblical teaching on the nature of freedom differs sharply from modern views. The Bible characterizes all sin as slavery, never as freedom. Only when we are completely redeemed from all sin will we experience complete freedom (cf. Rom 8:21). We are free only to the extent that we do what God built us to do—to serve him. Therefore, the more capable you are to commit evil, the less free you are. Not until we attain heaven and lose the capability of evil are we truly and completely free. How, then, could the ability to sin be a form of freedom?
The theodicy assumes that if God gives us the gift of free will, then he cannot control the outcomes of its usage. , Jesus’ crucifixion was clearly foreordained and destined to happen, and yet all the people who, by God’s plan, brought it about were still making their choices freely and thus were responsible for what they did (cf. Acts 2:23). This indicates that it is possible to be free and nevertheless to have our course directed by God—at the same time, compatibly. There are scores of other examples of this. So God can give free will and still direct the outcomes of our choices to fit into his plan for history
Keller “Taken all together, the various theodicies can account for a great deal of human suffering—each theodicy provides some plausible explanations for some of the evil in the world—but they always fall short, in the end, of explaining all suffering. It is very hard to insist that any of them show convincingly how God would be fully justified in permitting all the evil we see in the world. Peter van Inwagen writes that no major Christian church, denomination, or tradition has ever endorsed a particular theodicy. Alvin Plantinga himself wrote: “I must say that most attempts to explain why God permits evil—theodicies, as we may call them—strike me as tepid, shallow and ultimately frivolous.” And we can add to these warnings the book of Job itself. Surely one of the messages, as we will see, is that it is both futile and inappropriate to assume that any human mind could comprehend all the reasons God might have for any instance of pain and sorrow, let alone for all evil. It may be that the Bible itself warns us not to try to construct these theories.”
LEARN CONTENTMENT IN THE WISDOM AND POWER OF GOD
If God has good reasons for allowing suffering and evil, then there is no contradiction between his existence and that of evil. So in order for his case not to fail, the skeptic would have to reply that God could not possibly have any such reasons. But it is very hard to prove that.
“If God is infinitely powerful as you say—why doesn’t he stop evil?” But a God who is infinitely more powerful than us would also be infinitely more knowledgeable than us. So the rejoinder to the skeptic is “If God is infinitely knowledgeable—why couldn’t he have morally sufficient reasons for allowing evil that you can’t think of?” To insist that we know as much about life and history as all-powerful God is a logical fallacy, howsoever much the immanent frame of our culture would incline us to feel that way. And we also now can see why Charles Taylor is right, that the “problem of evil” was not widely perceived to be an objection to God until modern times. Human beings operating within the immanent frame have far more confidence in their reasoning powers and their ability to unlock the mysteries of the universe than did ancient people. The belief—that because we cannot think of something, God cannot think of it either—is more than a fallacy. It is a mark of great pride and faith in one’s own mind.
As in the book of Job, Solomon comes back to the Sovereignty of God. Like Job, we may not be able to trace God’s hands and purposes in the personal crucible of pain inflicted by others, but we can know that God in His Sovereignty is behind it.
James Russell Lowell  Truth forever on the scaffold  Wrong forever on the throne
Yet that scaffold sways the future   And beyond the dim unknown
Standeth God within the shadows  Keeping watch above His own.
William Wadsworth Longfellow elaborated on Lowell’s original sentiment, saying:
Though the mills of God grind slowly  Yet they grind exceedingly small,
Though with patience He stands waiting   With exactness He grinds all.
This is my father’s world,       And though the wrong seem oft so strong God is the ruler yet.
For years, C S Lewis rejected the existence of God because he believed the logical argument from evil against God worked. But eventually, he came to realize that evil and suffering were a bigger problem for him as an atheist than as a believer in God. He concluded that the awareness of moral evil in the world was actually an argument for the existence of God, not against it. Lewis describes his awakening to this point in Mere Christianity. Lewis explains that “there is, to be sure, one glaringly obvious ground for denying that any moral purpose at all is operative in the universe: namely, the actual course of events in all its wasteful cruelty and apparent indifference, or hostility, to life.” So the existence of cruelty and evil in the world was the reason Lewis could not believe there was a good God, a “moral purpose” operating behind the universe.  But then he began to realize that evil in the world was “precisely the ground which we cannot use” to object to God. Why? “Unless we judge this waste and cruelty to be real evils we cannot . . . condemn the universe for exhibiting them. . . . Unless we take our own standard to be something more than ours, to be in fact an objective principle to which we are responding, we cannot regard that standard as valid.” Here was the conundrum for Lewis as an atheist. His objection to the existence of God was that he could perceive no moral standard behind the world—the world was just randomly evil and cruel. But then, if there was no God, my definition of evil was just based on a private feeling of mine. So Lewis wrote: “In a word, unless we allow ultimate reality to be moral, we cannot morally condemn it.” And he concluded with a vivid idea: “The defiance of the good atheist hurled at an apparently ruthless and idiotic cosmos is really an unconscious homage to something in or behind that cosmos which he recognizes as infinitely valuable and authoritative: for if mercy and justice were really only private whims of his own with no objective and impersonal roots, and if he realized this, he could not go on being indignant. The fact that he arraigns heaven itself for disregarding them means that at some level of his mind he knows they are enthroned in a higher heaven still.”
So this leaves us with a question. What if evil and suffering in the world actually make the existence of God more likely? What if our awareness of absolute evil is a clue that we know unavoidably at some level within ourselves that God actually does exist? Alvin Plantinga writes that a secular way of looking at the world “has no place for genuine moral obligation of any sort . . . and thus no way to say there is such a thing as genuine and appalling wickedness. Accordingly, if you think there really is such a thing as horrifying wickedness ( . . . and not just an illusion of some sort), then you have a powerful . . . argument [for the reality of God].”
LEAN ON COMPANIONS
Stabilizing One Another 9,10 : "For if they fall, one will lift up his fellow. But woe to him who is a lone when he falls and has not another to lift him up!"  you need a friend when times are tough. "But woe to him who is a tone when he falls and has not another to lift him up!" Solomon says you are doomed if you are alone when you fall and have no one to pick you up.  CHARLES SWINDOLL :" Friend ships must be cultivated. They don 't automatically occur when calamity strikes. And I have never heard of a rent-a-friend business either."  You cannot be determined to walk alone and expect everyone to be running toward you when you fall. Cultivate friendships now, while you are still on your feet.
Supporting One Another  11 Again, if two lie down together, they will keep warm; But how can one be warm alone? you can accomplish more when you work together with others. ALEX HALEY, had a picture in his office of a turtle sitting on a fence. When someone would ask him about it, he would explain that if you ever see a turtle sitting on a fence, you know it had some help getting up there.
 two are better than one when you go to work.  It's called synergy: parts of the body working together to accomplish human goals no individual part could accomplish by itself. And he applied that lesson to the Church, the Body of Christ. Each Christian is given gifts by the Holy Spirit (1 Corinthians 12:11) in order to build up the Body of Christ (Ephesians 4:12).
Paul Simon gave a song in 1969 in the time of the Vietnam War when everything was disturbing and distressing. "When you're down and out, when you're on the street, When evening falls so hard, I will comfort you, I'll take your part. Oh when darkness comes and pain is all around, Like a bridge over troubled waters, I will lay me down."    In times of stress, find an eternal companion, find your earthly companions. Remember to be there for them to. That's mutual friendship and support.
Strengthening One Another 12 Though one may be overpowered by another, two can withstand him. And a threefold cord is not quickly broken. "A friend is someone who will walk into your house when the whole world has just walked out."  The highest honour in the Church is not government but service.   John Calvin
Sharpened by One Another  And a threefold cord is not quickly broken.   There is the necessity of helping the other stand up to the stress, that we all might hold together. Prov 27:17 As iron sharpens iron, So a man sharpens the countenance of his friend. 
Stimulating One Another Heb 10:24 And let us consider one another in order to stir up love and good works, 25 not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together, as is the manner of some, but exhorting one another, and so much the more as you see the Day approaching.
Heb 3:12 Beware, brethren, lest there be in any of you an evil heart of unbelief in departing from the living God; 13 but exhort one another daily, while it is called "Today," lest any of you be hardened through the deceitfulness of sin.
 
THERE ARE SOME REASONS GOD IS NOT STOPPING INJUSTICE TODAY.
1. We live in a fallen world.  Romans 8: 18-23
2. God sometimes allows injustice to produce a greater good in our life.  Psalm 73  James 1:2-4
3. God sometimes allows injustice to show us that we need a Saviour.
The Cruelty of Corruption can instill humility in us
The Cruelty of Corruption can instill eternity in us
4. God allows injustice only for a season.
 Romans 12:19 "Do not take revenge, my friends, but leave room for God's wrath, for it is written: "It is Mine to avenge; I will repay," says the Lord."


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