Thursday, 20 December 2018

DEMYSTIFYING MYSTERY MAN, MELCHIZEDEK


 INTRODUCTION

The biblical narrative concerning Melchizedek first appears in Genesis 14:17-24: “After his return from the defeat of Chedorlaomer and the kings who were with him, the king of Sodom went out to meet him at the Valley of Shaveh (that is, the King’s Valley).  And Melchizedek king of Salem brought out bread and wine.  (He was priest of God Most High.)  And he blessed him and said, ‘Blessed be Abram by God Most High, Possessor of heaven and earth; and blessed be God Most High, who has delivered your enemies into your hand!’  And Abram gave him a tenth of everything. And the king of Sodom said to Abram, ‘Give me the persons, but take the good for yourself.’  But Abram said to the king of Sodom, ‘I have lifted my hand to the LORD, God Most High, Possessor of heaven and earth, that I would not take a thread or a sandal strap or anything that is yours, lest you should say, ‘I have made Abram rich.’  I will take nothing but what the young men have eaten, and the share of the men who went with me.  Let Aner, Eshcol, and Mamre take their share’” (ESV). This article represents a modification/expansion of a sermon I preached to my congregation on the occasion of the third quarter (2018) LORD'S SUPPER service. In this article, a humble but bold attempt is made to resolve one of the mysteries in the Holy Bible -  the true identity of Melchizedek, king of Salem. We will establish His connection with the emblems of the LORD'S SUPPER and reveal what He communicated to father Abraham by means of those emblems. Let me quickly define the unfamiliar word "demystify".  The WordNet Dictionary defines it as "to make less mysterious or remove the mystery from; hypernym: clarify, clear up, elucidate."


BACKGROUND TO ABRAHAM AND MELCHIZEDEK’S ENCOUNTER
There was war between four foreign kings with the five kings of Canaan (Genesis 14:1-11). It resulted in the capture and captivity of Abraham's nephew, Lot, all members of his household and their property (Genesis 14:12-13). Abraham raised an army from members of his household and embarked on a rescue mission to deliver Lot and, by God's miraculous assistance, succeeded therein (Genesis 14: 14-16). He met Melchizedek while returning from war in which he was victorious (Genesis 14:17-18).


MELCHIZEDEK: NAME OR TITLE?
"Melchizedek" means "King of Righteousness" (Hebrews 7:2). Opinions are divided among Bible scholars about whether Melchizedek is to be considered a personal name or royal title. Those who believe Melchizedek represents a royal title base their position on reference to Adonizedek, the king of Jerusalem in the time of Joshua (Joshua 10:1-3). In this connection, S.J. Andrews notes that "Melchizedek and Adonizedek may have been Canaanite royal epithets." He cites fellow scholar, E. A. Speiser who "has argued that Melchizedek is the Canaanite equivalent of the Mesopotamian title Sar Mesarim, 'the just king' (Speiser, 318 n. 24)." Andrews concludes: "this would suggest that Melchizedek is a royal title rather than a personal name" (S.J. Andrews, "Melchizedek," Dictionary of the OT-Pentateuch, p. 563). I share the same view.


MELCHIZEDEK: NOTIONS REGARDING HIS IDENTITY
The NET Bible notes that "Salem is traditionally identified as the Jebusite stronghold of old Jerusalem. Accordingly, there has been much speculation about its king. Though some have identified him with the pre-incarnate Christ or with Noah’s son Shem, it is far more likely that Melchizedek was a Canaanite royal priest whom God used to renew the promise of the blessing to Abram, perhaps because Abram considered Melchizedek his spiritual superior. But Melchizedek remains an enigma. In a book filled with genealogical records he appears on the scene without a genealogy and then disappears from the narrative. In Psalm 110 the LORD declares that the Davidic king is a royal priest after the pattern of Melchizedec" (NET BIBLE NOTES in MyBible App).
Bible scholar, John Peter Lange comments thus: "Melchizedek as priest and king in one person, without genealogy in his priesthood, which he executed for his people by virtue of a sovereign individual call, is a type of the Messiah, and is represented as such, Psalm 110:4, but especially in the Epistle to the Hebrews (Hebrews 5:6; 7:17). From the circumstance that Melchizedek was not a worshipper of the Canaanitish Baal, but was a monotheist, or as Knobel thinks, a worshipper of the Semitic principal deity, El, Knobel concludes that he belonged to the Semitic tribe, Lud, to which also the tribes at war belonged. The supposition of a Semitic chief deity is in an erroneous manner transferred from the relations of a later time, to the times of the primitive religion. It is the characteristic of the primitive religion, that in it throughout Heathenism and Monotheism cleave together and go asunder. Melchizedek might, therefore, well belong to the Hamitic race. He is not a Christ of the heavenly world, as perhaps the Gnostics would make him, nor Shem, nor Enoch, as the Rabbins and the Church fathers have thought; he is a type of Christ, because he is king and priest at the same time, because his priesthood rests upon his individual personality (. . . Hebrews 7:3), and because Abram, the ancestor of the Levitical priesthood, gave tithes to him. He is not ‘perhaps the last witness and confessor of the primitive revelation out of the night of heathenism’, for that is the splendor of an evening sky which reaches through all time; but he is the last representative of the period of the primitive religion, and therefore he blesses Abram in a similar sense to that in which the Baptist must baptize Christ the Lord, in Jordan. He, in his way, stands as the last of the first world-period; Abram is one who belongs to the future, and therefore he blesses Abram, and Abram does him homage. That he is Melchizedek, is in the first place significant (‘it may be concluded from Joshua 10:1; Joshua 10:3, where a later king of Jerusalem, Adoni-Zedek, i.e., lord of righteousness, is mentioned, that this was a standing name of the old kings of Salem’. Keil); then, the name of his residence, Salem; further, that he is priest and king at the same time (‘in the old PhÅ“nician custom’. Delitzsch); finally, that he represents no legal and genealogical priesthood, but shines singly and alone as a clear, bright star, in the night of Canaan: all these constitute him a mysterious, renowned type of Christ (see Delitzsch, p. 363; Keil, p. 144; Auberlen upon ‘Melchizedek’, in the Studien und Kritiken, 1857, p. 153). As he is the priest of El Elyon, that can only mean, that he intercedes for his people before the Most High God with prayer and sacrifice, that he sought either to lead back the Jebusites at Salem to a living monotheism, or to preserve them in it" (Lange's Commentary in MyBible App).
Rightly understood, Melchizedek was not only a type of Christ but actually the Pre-Incarnate Son of God in one of His many theophanies on earth, as we shall see shortly (Micah 5:2).


REGARDING SALEM
Melchizedek is introduced to readers of Genesis as King of Salem. In the second reference to his kingship, he is so presented (see Hebrews 7:1-4).  Many scholars consider "Salem" to be a short form of "Jerusalem" on the basis of Psalm 76:2. The Complete Word Study Dictionary explains thus: "Salem ('peace'). The oldest name, Jebus the next, Jerusalem ('seeing', or 'the foundation of peace') the latest, of Jerusalem. The cities of the plain were probably South of the Dead Sea; so Salem is Jerusalem, and "the king's dale" the valley of the Kedron. The theory of their being North of the Dead Sea is what necessitates its upholders to seek Salem far north of Jerusalem (Gen 14:17-18). but no king of Salem distinct from Jerusalem is mentioned among the kings conquered by Joshua. Moreover, Adonizedek ("lord of righteousness") king of Jerusalem (Jos 10:3) was plainly successor of Melchizedek ("king of righteousness"), it was the common title of the Jebusite kings. Further, "the king's dale" (2Sa 18:18), identified in Gen 14:17 with Shaveh, is placed by Josephus and by tradition (the Targum of Onkelos) near Jerusalem (Heb 7:1-2). Lastly, Psalm 76 identifies Salem with Jerusalem" (CWSD in MyBible App).  
But the interpretation of "King of Salem" in Hebrews 7:2 as "King of Peace" indicating "Salem" as a variant of "shalom," the Hebrew word for peace, forbids us to think of Salem as a place name, i.e., Jerusalem, over which Melchizedek reigned in the time of Abraham. It would then mean that Jerusalem existed as a place name in the time of Abraham. This does seem to be true. In fact, the idea is disputed by 19th Century Baptist theologian and Bible scholar, John Gill, who formerly subscribed to it. He writes, "Salem, of which he was king, is by the above Targums said to be Jerusalem, and which is the opinion of many writers, Jewish and Christian, and of which opinion I myself was formerly, [See comments on Heb 7:1]; Jerusalem being plainly called Salem, Ps 76:2, but it seems clear from hence that it must be near to Sodom, and lay in the way between Damascus and Sodom; whereas Jerusalem was in a contrary situation, and lay nearly forty miles from Sodom; for Josephus says, 'the lake Asphaltites, where Sodom once stood, was three hundred furlongs from Jerusalem, which is about thirty eight miles'; and Jerom relates, 'that Salem was a town near Scythopolis, which was so called in his times, and where was showed the palace of Melchizedek, which, by the largeness of the ruins, appeared to have been very magnificent, and takes it to be the same place with Shalem in Gen 33:18; and Salim, near to which John was baptizing, Joh 3:23'."
The history of Jerusalem itself does not support the view that Melchizedek's Salem was Jerusalem. During the time of Abraham, that area of Canaan was called "land of Moriah" (Genesis 22:1-2). Jewish and Church tradition says our Lord Jesus Christ was crucified at the very spot where Abraham attempted to sacrifice Isaac. Before the death of Abraham up to the time of the Exodus of his tremendously multiplied descendants from Egypt to the Promised Land, what became Jerusalem was known as Jebus, and the inhabitants called Jebusites, one of the Canaanite tribes (Genesis 10:16; 15:21; Exodus 2:8; 3:17; 13:5; 23:23; 33:2; 34:11; Deut 20:17; Joshua 3:10).  Both at the time of Joshua and the Judges it was still called "Jebusi" (see Joshua 18:16, 28; cf. Joshua 15:8, 63). Later on, during the monarchical period, David raised an army and conquered Jebus and rechristened it "Zion," "the City of David" (2 Sam 5:1-8; cf. 1 Chron 11:1-6; 2 Chron 3:11). I think the placename "Jerusalem" should be dated from sometime after David's conquest and takeover of the city from the Jebusites, most likely after the completion and dedication of his royal palace there (Psalm 76:1-2). An important point to note is that we are dealing here with historical material/record. The implication is that there is clearly a timeframe difference between the occurrence of events recorded and the precise time of recording. Accordingly, the fact should be acknowledged that prior to David, Jerusalem was known as Jebus/Jebusi, but from the time David conquered the city and made it the headquarters of his government, it assumed three names, namely, the city of David, Zion, and Jerusalem (city of peace). The same historical principle applies to the land of Nod where Cain fled to and settled after murdering Abel, his sibling (Genesis 4:16). Definitely, at the precise time of his flight there, the place had no name, he (along with his twin sister, if the narrative in the apocryphal Book of Adam and Eve is to be believed) being the only inhabitant. But when Moses penned the Pentateuch, the place was populated and bore the place name of "Nod." Another point to buttress the probability of nonexistence of Jerusalem as a place name during Abraham's lifetime, so that Melchizedek was not the ruler of Jerusalem, is the manner of his appearance to Abraham. A close reading of Genesis 14:17-18 and Hebrews 7:1 with special emphasis on the words, "brought forth bread and wine" and "met him," will show that Abraham's meeting with Melchizedek was literally an encounter, a chance, unexpected meeting. Apparently, Melchizedek was not confederate with the five kings, nor was he under the sovereignty of Chedorlaomer. One can say that Melchizedek came out of the blues, that he met Abraham from nowhere. Abraham did not expect him. He expected the King of Sodom, not Melchizedek. He was a mysterious figure very much like the one Joshua encountered prior to his siege against Jericho (Joshua 5:13-15).


MELCHIZEDEK AS PRIEST OF THE MOST HIGH
The priesthood of Melchizedek provides another sound basis for arguing that He was not a ruler of a place called Salem/Jerusalem, but a mysterious figure that encountered Abraham to fulfill a divine mandate in Abraham's life. Normally, designating someone a priest presupposes existence of a religious or worshipping community that he presides over or offers spiritual guidance. Accordingly, a question becomes pertinent: Was there a community in Canaan which worshipped the true God prior to the call of Abraham from Ur of the Chaldeans? If there was, why would the Almighty go to Chaldee and fetch Abraham who, along with father, siblings and kindred, were worshippers of the moon deity, Nnana and the moon goddess, Sin? Since He wanted one through whom He would raise a race through which the promised Seed of the Woman would be born, He could have easily chosen one from among the Canaanites who worshipped Him through the priestly guidance of Melchizedek.
Truth be told, Melchizedek was never a priest of a worshipping community in Canaan. Rather, He came as the Representative of the True and Living God, Maker of Heaven and Earth, Who had called Abraham to walk with Him; He came in the role of a priest to Abraham specifically to provide opportunity for him to fulfill a solemn religious obligation - PAYMENT OF TITHES - a very common practice even in the pagan religions of the ancient world. Tithe represents "a tenth part of one's income consecrated to God" (Davis' Dictionary of the Bible, p. 828). John D. Davis explains that "the separation of a certain proportion of the products of one's industry or of the spoils of war as tribute to their gods was practiced by various nations of antiquity. The Lydians offered a tithe of their booty (Herod, i.89). The Phoenicians and Carthaginians sent a tithe annually to the Tyrian Hercules. Those tithes might be regular or occasional, voluntary or prescribed by law. The Egyptians were required to give a fifth part of their crops to Pharaoh (Genesis 47:24)" (Ibid). Abraham was a tither while a worshipper of Nnana. He was aware of the universality of the practice of tithing. He wished to pay his tithe not to the demonic gods and idols whom the Canaanites, with whom he dwelled, worshipped, but to the Great God, Maker of Heaven and Earth, Who had called him out of his kindred to the Promised Land. Abraham wondered how he would perform the solemn act or ritual of thanksgiving, considering the fact that his new God did not have a Temple with Priesthood into which he would enter and pay his tithes. In the midst of his wondering, the Celestial Council dispatched the Pre-Incarnate Wisdom and Word of YAHWEH to materialize as Melchizedek, King of Peace, to Abraham, introducing Himself as Priest of El Elyon (God, the Most High One; God, the One Distinguished from and Incomparable to the gods of the nations, Incomparable to the gods of the Chaldeans and the Canaanites). With his delivery of the tithes to Melchizedek, Abraham's devotional need was satisfied. Thenceforth, Abraham became aware that this new God of his also has a Priesthood that is founded on Righteousness and Peace. He quickly or instantly adopted El Elyon as the name of his God. He discerned a fundamental difference in spirituality and morality between Nnana's corrupt priesthood and the holy and righteousness-promoting priesthood of El Elyon.


THE PROPHETIC SIGNIFICANCE OF MELCHIZEDEK'S GIFTS
 Genesis 14:18-20. The true identity of Melchizedek was revealed to Abraham through the gift of Bread and Wine. Hebrews 7:1-4 clearly reveals Melchizedek's identity to be a divine personality. Through the Bread and Wine, Melchizedek prophesied and intimated to Abraham the fact that in the later days, He will incarnate as Son of El Elyon to die or shed His blood to provide redemption for sinful mankind (Luke 1:32-35; 8:28). There is certainly a veiled reference by our Lord to His meeting with Abraham in the person of Melchizedek in John 8:48-59; precisely in John 8:56 where it is written: "Your father Abraham rejoiced to see my day; and he saw it, and was glad."  Clearly and emphatically speaking, our Lord Jesus Christ was Melchizedek Who met Abraham as he returned from the slaughter of the heathen kings. The prophetic revelations of Isaiah and Jeremiah suggest that our Lord Jesus Christ was indeed the One who met Abraham as Melchizedek (Isaiah 9:6; Jeremiah 23:5-6; Isaiah 11:1-5). Melchizedek's blessing of Abraham and praise of God reveal the principal functions of the priesthood, and corresponds to the blessing of the Aaronic priesthood in Numbers 6:25-27 and the High Priestly prayer of our Lord in John 17. Both in His pre-incarnate and incarnate days on earth, it was a consistent manner of our Lord to make Himself and His redemptive mission known through the act of breaking of bread and sharing of wine (see Matthew 26:26-29; Luke 22:17-22; 24:30-35). Think about it.


WHAT DOES THIS SAY TO US?
In His incarnate life, the Son repeated precisely what He did with Abraham during the last Passover Feast He observed before His arrest, trial, and crucifixion, on which occasion He instituted the New Covenant (Matthew 26:26-30). Prior to that, and referring to His death, He had told the Jews that unless they eat His flesh and drink His blood, they would never live forever (John 6:47-58). What did the Lord Jesus Christ mean by such scary statement? Was He preaching or promoting cannibalism? Not at all; He was preaching saving faith, justifying faith, believing in and receiving Him into one's heart as one's personal Saviour, Lord and Master. That is what He meant as the context of that statement indicates (see John 6:27-29, 35-40, 47, 54, 58; 1:12-13). This then is what the LORD our God requires of you: to repent of your sins and invite Jesus, the Son of God, into your heart, to enthrone Him as King of Righteousness and King of Peace in your heart. Then and only then will you receive the assurance, the inward testimony, of your inheritance and possession of everlasting blissful existence with God in this world and the world to come.


CONCLUSION
Having now known who Melchizedek was and the prophetic significance of His encounter and gifts to Abraham for our redemption, which has been fulfilled by the Incarnate Son of God, let me assure you that if you give your hearts to Jesus, the joy which swept through the soul of father Abraham when he saw the day of Christ at his meeting with Melchizedek, will sweep through your soul also. May it be so in the mighty Name of Jesus Christ.




For solution of the 666 mystery, get a Copy of my book THE LAST EMPEROR: Understanding the Beast and the Mark of the Beast at http://amzn.eu/d/dFHTXJ6

Friday, 10 July 2015

FRIENDSHIP WITH GOD, OUR ULTIMATE STATUS



“This is My commandments, that you love one another, just as I have loved you.  Greater love has no one than this, that one lay down his life for his friends.  You are My friends, if you do what I command you.  No longer do I call you slaves, for the slave does not know what his master is doing, but I have called you friends, for all things that I have heard from My Father I have made known to you.  You did not choose Me, but I chose you, and appointed you, that you should go and bear fruit, and that your fruit should remain, that whatever you ask of the Father in My name, He may give to you.  This I command you, that you love one another.” (John 15: 12-17, NASB)
Though we are fallen creatures, though sin has made our life on earth full of hardship and sadness, there are still some experiences which give us a measure of joy and excitement.  One such experience is   friendship.  We derive great joy and excitement being in the company of our friends.  In Proverbs 17:17 it is written: “A friend loves at all times, and a brother is born for adversity.”  Proverbs 18: 26 declares: “A man of many friends comes to ruin.  But there is a friend who sticks closer than a brother.”  Indeed friendship is about intimacy between intelligent beings divinely designed and equipped for relationship.  There is friendship between man and man.  There is also friendship between man and God, the subject of this article.  We will, by the help of the Eternal Spirit, show, with scriptural support, that in our relationship with God in Christ Jesus over time following our conversion, we could be brought to a point in our spiritual journey where God in Christ regards us as His friends and makes us conscious of the fact.  Actually, that, by divine design, is our final and highest position in Christ, our highest spiritual standing and attainment in Christ, while we live on earth.
Our text (John 15: 12-17) forms part of the Upper Room discourse the Lord Christ gave to His original disciples.  The discourse spans Chapters 13 through 17.  The subject of Chapter 15 from where our text comes is the spiritual union of the Lord Christ with those who genuinely believe in Him, and the moral, functional, and social consequences of that union.
On the basis of the spiritual union of believers with Him, our Lord commands the disciples in verse 12 to love one another, deriving inspiration and motivation from His example: “Just as I have loved you,” referring to His sacrificial love for them.  In verse 13 our Lord shows the proof or evidence of His love for His disciples.  In verse 14, He affirms the disciples as His friends, provided they keep His command, which is that they love one another. 
To be noted is the fact that by calling His disciples, “My friends,” the Lord Jesus was promoting and ushering them into a new and ultimate level in their relationship with Him.  In this article we are going to explore the implications of friendship with God in Christ.
Historical Survey of Christ’s Relationship with His disciples
There is a significant phrase in Verse 15: “No longer do I call you slaves. . .”  This phrase implies duration of some length in Christ’s relationship with His disciples.  It requires that we do a historical survey of that relationship.  Verse 16 gives us a clue.  There the Master says: “You did not choose Me, but I chose you, and appointed you, that you should go and bear fruit, and that your fruit should remain, that whatever you ask of the Father in My name, He may give to you.”  Here is the revelation: When the Lord chose His disciples, He ushered them into the first phase of their relationship with Him, which is discipleship.  When He appointed them “that you should go and bear fruit, and that your fruit should remain,” He ushered them into the second phase of their relationship with Him, which is ‘servantship.’  Now He was taking them to the third and ultimate phase, which is friendship (verse 15).  I should point out that two levels or phases of relationship were effected when the Master called His disciples initially: sonship and discipleship.
Here then is the result of our survey: The disciples went through four levels or phases of relationship with the Lord Christ.  The first was sonship in which they were made partakers of the divine nature as a result of their faith in Jesus as the Messiah.  The second was discipleship which involved their learning from Christ, their being students of Christ.  The third was ‘servantship’ which involved their serving and working for Christ.  The fourth and final phase was friendship in which they became very intimate with, and received perfect knowledge from, Christ; they were initiated into the mysteries of the Kingdom of Heaven  -  “. . . but I have called you friends, for all things that I have heard from My Father I have made known to you” (Verse 15, italics mine).
Why were the Disciples promoted to Friendship?
Friends share personal secrets with each other.  Friends open their hearts to each other.  Friends confide in each other.  Friends counsel each other.  Friends are there for each other when one goes through a crisis of life (Proverbs 27:6-10).  Jesus promoted the disciples because they were consistent in their commitment and followership toward Him; because there is nothing He received from the Father that He did not share with them.  Their obedience to their Master was absolute, so that He had no modicum of doubt concerning their devotion to Him.
The Defining Characteristics of the friends of God
There are persons in the Bible who were friends of God.  God regarded and designated them as His friends either explicitly or implicitly.  Among them were Enoch (Genesis 5:21-24; Hebrews 11:5), Abraham (2nd Chronicles 20:7; Isaiah 41:8; James 2:23), Job (Job 29: 4), Moses (Exodus 33:11; Numbers 12:6-8), Elijah (1st Kings 17:1; 18:15), Daniel (Daniel 9:23; 10:11, 19), and King David (Acts 13:32).  None of these men was born a friend of God.  Before they assumed the status of God’s friends, they had surrendered their lives to the leadership and guidance of God, walked consistently with Him in course of which they passed through  many  experiences which The Almighty used to edify and refine their them.  God gave them the grace and opportunities to prove themselves absolutely loyal and dependable servants of God before declaring them His friends.   A close study of the lives of these men reveal the defining characteristics of the friends of God: (1) Intimacy with God (Exodus 33:11; Job 29:4-5.  (2) Devotion to God coupled with  resolve to keep His commandments or to live by His word (Genesis 18:19; Hebrews 11:5).  (3) God’s love for them seems to be special (Daniel 9:23; 10:11).  (4) They clearly possess a very high level of spiritual knowledge and understanding (Genesis 18:17-21).  (5)  They resemble God in character and in luminous or glorious appearance (Exodus 34:29-35; cf. 2nd Corinthians 3:7).
How to become God’s Friend in Christ
From our historical survey of the disciples relationship with the Lord Christ and  exemplification of the friends of God in the Bible, it is clear that becoming a friend of God is not something that happens in a twinkling of an eye.  It is fundamentally a matter of choice and something we have to pursue earnestly (Hebrews 12:14).  Clearly speaking, becoming a friend of God is a function of  growth toward spiritual maturity.  It is about being passionate to become Godlike or Christlike (in character).    A sadness of Heaven is to acknowledge that so many  followers of the Lord Christ on earth at the present time are satisfied with being  sons and daughters of God only; are contented with being born again and sure of heaven only.   They do not understand that there are many phases or levels in their relationship with God in Christ.  They do not know that life in Christ is a journey with God into God.  Growing into friendship with God in Christ is God’s longing for us His children and servants
In verse 14 of our text, Jesus says: “You are My friends, if you do what I command you.”  Doing what the Lord Christ commands is the way into friendship with God.  Fundamentally, His command is that we be governed and driven by love.  Here then are the things we should do to become God’s friends:
1.       We should love God for God’s sake (John 14: 15, 21; Psalm 37:4; Matthew 22: 36-38)
2.       We should love our fellowmen for God’s sake and for God’s pleasure (John 15: 12, 17; 13:34; Matthew 22: 39-40)
3.       We should love, delight in, and obey God’s word habitually (Psalm 1:2; 119: 14, 16, 131; Deuteronomy 6: 6-9)
4.       We should love and commit ourselves God’s work, serving Him diligently both in and outside the local assembly (Deuteronomy 10:12)
5.       We should love and practice constant communion with and contemplation of God in prayer (Luke 18:1; Romans 12:12).
The universal perception of life as a journey is more applicable and pertinent to our life in Christ.  The spiritual life is a journey with God into God; a journey with God into the fullness of God.  The Apostle Paul prayed for the Ephesian believers that they be led by the Spirit into that fullness (Ephesians 3:14-19).  It is the will and pleasure of our Heavenly Father that we grow into His fullness, that we mature in our walk with Him till we assume the status of His friends in the here and now.  Therefore, let us not be content with sonship/daughterhood.  Let us resolve to expand and extend our relationship with God in Christ.  Let us move from sonship through ‘servantship’ to friendship.  Let us make friendship with God in Christ our must-attain spiritual goal.
If you are not yet in Christ, the LORD God is inviting you to get connected to Jesus Christ now and commence your journey into friendship with Him.  I welcome you to walk the ancient paths where you will find rest for your soul.        
THE LORD’S SCRIBE

Monday, 22 June 2015

LOOKING FOR THE BLESSED HOPE



“For the grace of God has appeared, bringing salvation to all men, instructing us to deny ungodliness and worldly desires and to live sensibly, righteously and godly in the present age, looking for the blessed hope and the appearing of the glory of our great God and Saviour, Christ Jesus; who gave Himself for us, that HE MIGHT REDEEM us FROM EVERY LAWLESS DEED and PURIFY FOR HIMSELF A PEOPLE FOR HIS OWN POSSESSION, zealous for good deeds” (Titus 2: 11-14, NASB)
Introduction
The Holy Scripture declares that until we, non-Jews, accepted Christ as our personal Saviour and Lord, we were without hope in this world (Ephesians 2:2).  Hope is a very significant and helpful quality of the mind.  A life without hope is an aimless life.  A life without hope beyond this world is a miserable life, a fear-laden and spiritually insecure existence.  No wonder the Scottish theologian and philosopher, Thomas Chalmers, said: “the grand essentials of happiness are something to do, something to love, and something to hope for.”1  Hope is something we cannot do without if we desire purposeful and meaningful living on the earth.
What really is hope?  What is the Blessed Hope?  From where does the Blessed Hope originate and what does it contain? What do we need to sustain this hope in our minds?  What about its influence?  Most importantly, how can one who is bereft of this hope acquire it?  These are questions we will deal with in this article.
What is hope?
The Word Book Dictionary defines hope as “a feeling that what one desires will happen.  The thing hoped for.  A cause of hope; a person or thing that gives hope to another or that others hope in.  Thus to hope for something is to wish and expect it, to desire a thing passionately and look forward to realizing it.  Generally speaking, this is hope.   However, in the sense of the Bible, hope is the translation of the Greek word eipis which means “favourable and confident expectation.  It has to do with the unseen and the future.  In the New Testament eipis is frequently used to signify: (a) The happy anticipation of good (Titus 1:2; 1st Peter 1:2); (b) the ground upon which hope is based (Acts 16:19; Colossians 1:27); (c) the object upon which the hope is fixed (1st Timothy 1:1).2
What is the Blessed Hope?
The Blessed Hope or our Blessed Hope is what all true believers joyfully hope for, joyfully look forward to.  It is called Blessed Hope because when realized we shall be completely and eternally happy.  We shall be completely and eternally satisfied.  Hope in this context means the very thing hoped for, i.e. the glorious appearance of our Great God and Saviour, Jesus Christ.  Therefore, the Blessed Hope is the second coming of Christ our King.
At this point it is important to explain the use of the conjunctive preposition and (Greek kai) in Titus 2:13.  Some preachers and teachers have been led by this preposition to separate and differentiate the Blessed Hope from the glorious appearing of our Great God and Saviour, Jesus Christ.  They say the Blessed Hope refers to the Rapture of believers before the Great Tribulation, while the glorious appearing of our Great God and Saviour Jesus Christ refers to the second coming at the end of the Great Tribulation.  Thereby they represent the Rapture of the saints to heaven as an event completely separate from and unconnected with the second coming.  But that is never the teaching of Holy Scripture.  In Matthew 24:30-31, 39-41; 1st Thessalonians 4:16-17 and 2nd Thessalonians 2:1, it is clearly shown that the Rapture takes place at the Second Coming.  Rapture is the first event associated with the Second Coming.  The Lord must descend before the saints are gathered to Him.  The Lord must be in the air before the saints, resurrected and living, join Him there.  To separate the Rapture from the Second Coming is unwarranted by Scripture.
Now, unlike the use of and in English as a conjunctive, it is used not only as a conjunctive in Greek, but equally and validly as an epexegetic, that is,  to define what precedes it in a sentence in the same way i.e. or a long dash --- is used in English.  Thus and in Titus 2:13 is used not conjunctively to make the Blessed Hope different from the glorious appearing of Christ.  It is used definitively to define and signify the Blessed Hope as the Glorious Appearing of our Great God and Saviour, Jesus Christ. Acts 23:6 provides another example of the use of and epexegetically so that the resurrection of the dead defines the preceding hope.  The Amplified Bible translation of Titus 2:13 confirms our point: “Awaiting and looking for the [fulfillment, the realization of our] blessed hope, even the glorious appearing of our great God and Savior Christ Jesus (the Messiah, the Anointed One).”
 The glorious appearing of our Lord means His return will be laden with blazing brightness, with awesome splendor.  God’s glory is the manifestation of God’s presence represented by a glow of flaming fire (Exodus 16:10; 19:14-19; 24:15-17; 40:34-35; Isaiah 4:5; Matthew 17:1-3).  Thus the glorious appearing speaks of the majestic splendor, intimidating and overwhelming light and brightness, flaming and shining train of angels riding on shining white horses, holding their glittering swords, and awesome trumpet blasts which Holy Scripture clearly shows, will characterize the Second Coming of our Lord and King (see Revelation 19:11-16).
Our Blessed Hope – the Second Coming of our Lord  -  is a single event which will unfold in three stages:  (1) The Parousia Stage – His presence on the earth plane.  (2) The Apokalupsis Stage – His self-revelation from previous hiddenness.  (3) The Epiphaneia Stage – His splendid appearance, visible manifestation or glorious exposure.  Matthew 24:29-31 captures these three stages of the Lord’s coming.  I will elaborate more on this in a book on the Second Coming that I am working on currently.
The Source and Content of this Hope
As indicated in verse 11, the source of this Hope is the grace of God, God’s favour and kindness to us humans that we do not deserve nor merit, made manifest through His beloved Son, Jesus Christ and His gospel.  The Hope is contained in the salvation brought by the grace of God.  Every truly saved person possesses this Hope.  Indeed  it can be said that it is a basic component of the experience of salvation in Christ.
Things needed to sustain this Hope
What should we be doing while looking for the Blessed Hope?  How should we live as we wait for the Second Coming of our Lord?  There are certain things God requires us to do in order to sustain our hope in the Blessed Hope.  They are indicated in verse 12: (1) Negatively, we are to deny ungodliness.  This means we are not to associate with those who have no time for God and His way of life, nor behave like them.  Among them are the atheists and agnostics.  It also means we are to actively refute their atheistic ideologies.  Next we are to deny worldly lusts.  This means we are to have nothing to do with the lusts of the flesh (sensualism), the lusts of the eyes (materialism), and the pride of life (egotism) (see 1st John 2:15-16).  We are to cultivate the habit of the blessed man “who does not walk in the counsel of the wicked, nor stand in the path of sinners, nor sit in the seat of scoffers” (Psalm 1:1, NASB). (2) Positively we are to live soberly, i. e. live constantly with the consciousness of our heavenly citizenship, noting that we are sojourners on earth.  It also means we are to live thoughtfully, prayerfully and be  spiritually alert always.  Next we are to live righteously, committing ourselves to the pursuit of holiness and blamelessness, always remembering that our Lord is coming back for a church that is morally pure and spotless.  Then we are to live godly in the present age.  The meaning is that we have to ensure that our thoughts and actions are love-driven.  We should passionately desire and pursue Christlikeness in character, thought, word and deed as we wait for the Lord’s return.  Finally, we are to commit ourselves to good works, meeting the needs of the needy and poor among us and proclaiming the gospel of the Kingdom.  While we look for our Blessed Hope we can become the five foolish virgins if we fail to live soberly, righteously and godly in the present age, and engage in good works.  The hope for the Blessed Hope is sustained in our hearts when we do these things.
Influence of this Hope on life
A passionate expectation of the Second Coming of our Lord is highly beneficial for our spiritual development and stability.  Its impact on our life in Christ is edifying and sanctifying (see 1st Thessalonians 1:3; Hebrews 6:18-19; 1st John 3:1-3.  Our souls get purified and we become keenly watchful against the entrance of sin into our daily life.
What does the LORD GOD require of us?
Our Blessed Hope is the Second Coming of our Great God and Saviour Jesus Christ.  By the Spirit, the Apostle Paul says we should be looking for. That is, we should be constantly expecting the return of our King; we should be expectant daily regarding the Second Coming.  The original word translated looking for means to look favourably, to joyfully expect the return of the Lord Jesus.  It seems to me, as I watch the behavior of contemporary believers, that many are not looking for what we hope for.  Many of us are so busy enthusiastically pursuing earthly things to the extent that we have forgotten the irrefutable fact that we are sojourners on earth, that we are never going to be here for long, that many end-time Bible prophecies are being fulfilled in our time, indicating that the return of our King is around the corner, because of which we should be looking for our Blessed Hope.  Let the truth be told: the desire for and experience of abundant prosperity is being used by the enemy of our souls to divert our inner focus on the Blessed Hope.  We ought to be like the Thessalonian believers who passionately looked for our Blessed Hope such that when false teachers propagated the false news that the Day of the Lord had come, they became very much upset (2nd Thessalonians 2:1-3.
Looking for the Blessed Hope demands that we discern the signs of the end, become end-time prophecies-conscious, avoid sinning, and keep ourselves pure.  Let it be said again: The Lord Christ is coming back to earth for a Church that is pure, holy and without blemish (Ephesians 5:27).
Conclusion
Sometimes I have wondered how human life on earth would have been if God did not provide a reasonable object of hope for us.  Without doubt life would have been utterly hopeless and meaningless.  We have to thank God our Heavenly Father for the hope He has given us in Christ.  Nothing in the world gives life meaning and purpose like this hope.  It is indeed “the anchor of the soul” (Hebrews 6:19). I plead with the reader to take some moments and meditate on these questions: Do I have hope beyond the grave? Do I have hope beyond this world? Do I have the hope of heaven? Do I have hope of resurrection?  Am I hoping for the Rapture of the saints?  Do I have the hope of the glorious appearing of our Great God and Saviour Jesus Christ?  Do I have the hope of eternal life with God in Heaven and in the coming New Earth?  Scripture shows that in spite of the suffering for righteousness that we face in this world, we rejoice in hope (Romans 5:2-5; Psalm 16:9; Hebrews 3:8).  According to Colossians 1:27 the presence of Christ within a person produces this hope in him.  Therefore I invite you to surrender your heart to Jesus and receive this hope.  Then as you begin to walk the ancient paths, the old paths, you will find rest unto your soul and the assurance and hope of everlasting life.
THE LORD’S SCRIBE
NOTES
1Ben Patterson, The Grand Essentials (Camel, New York: Guideposts, 1987), p. 13
2Vine’s Complete Expository Dictionary of old and new testament words, 1996 ed., p. 311