Habakkuk 2

Then the Lord replied: "Write down the revelation and make it plain on tablets so that a herald may run with it. For the revelation awaits an appointed time; it speaks of the end and will not prove false. Though it linger, wait for it; it will certainly come and will not delay."

Thursday, January 24, 2013

Make Him Known among the Nations


Thursday, January 24, 2013, 5:00 a.m. – the Lord Jesus woke me with the hymn, “Rejoice, the Lord is King!” Speak, Lord, for your servant is listening. I read Isaiah 12 (NIV 1984):

In that day you will say:

“I will praise you, O Lord.
    Although you were angry with me,
your anger has turned away
    and you have comforted me.
Surely God is my salvation;
    I will trust and not be afraid.
The Lord, the Lord, is my strength and my song;
    he has become my salvation.”
With joy you will draw water
    from the wells of salvation.

In that day you will say:

“Give thanks to the Lord, call on his name;
    make known among the nations what he has done,
    and proclaim that his name is exalted.
Sing to the Lord, for he has done glorious things;
    let this be known to all the world.
Shout aloud and sing for joy, people of Zion,
    for great is the Holy One of Israel among you.”

In that Day

“That Day” refers to both the Day of our Salvation (deliverance) and to the Day of Judgment when Jesus Christ comes to judge the earth and its inhabitants. Let me explain.

In chapter eleven of Isaiah we read a prophecy concerning Jesus Christ, our Lord, Savior, Messiah, Judge and King. We also read prophecies concerning him in chapters two and nine. These prophecies concerning the coming Messiah included prophecies of his birth through his millennial reign on the earth as King of kings and as Lord of lords. These prophecies concerning the Messiah/King were also woven in among warnings of judgment and rebukes of God’s people for their spiritual adultery and their idolatrous ways, and because they put their hope and trust in mankind instead of in the Lord. So, he would come to judge them, but he also promised deliverance and restoration to the penitent. This parallels the prophecies concerning the last days in both the Old and New Testaments, but in particular in the book of Revelation, where Christ Jesus is seen as both Judge and as Savior.

Then, in chapter twelve we see Christ Jesus as the Savior and deliverer, following the time of judgment. The Lord had been angry with his people, but now his anger was turned away from them, and so he comforted them with his salvation (deliverance). This speaks, I believe, of both physical and spiritual deliverance (salvation). So, “That Day” has both a negative and a positive aspect to it. On one end, they were under God’s wrath in divine judgment and on the other end, he delivered them from his wrath, and he restored them to himself, both physically and spiritually.

Yet, lest we get confused, let me clarify here that God’s wrath and judgment against mankind during the time of tribulation is not the same as the final judgment and divine wrath of God that determines our eternal destiny, because scripture teaches us that people will come to Christ (nations will flock to Christ) and the bride of Christ will be purified and made holy and ready for her groom/husband during the time of tribulation. So, God judges us in divine discipline in order to bring people to Christ and in order revive his church and to make her holy and pure before his return, yet there is also a wrath of God that stands against mankind that speaks of our eternal destiny, from which we must also be set free. For those who die outside of faith in Jesus Christ during the time of God’s judgments on the earth, though, they will also face his wrath in sending them to the lake of fire.

Spiritual Wrath and Salvation

In Romans 5 we read about being justified by Christ’s blood through salvation, and about future salvation from God’s wrath. In chapter 9 of Romans we see a parallel between this wrath and ultimate destruction. Then, in Ephesians 2 we learn that when we lived to gratify the cravings of our sinful nature that we were by nature objects of wrath. And, in chapter five we read that God’s wrath comes on the disobedient. In 1 Thessalonians 1 we read that Jesus rescues us from the coming wrath. Then, in chapter 5 we read that God did not appoint us to suffer wrath, but to receive salvation through our Lord Jesus Christ, showing that these are opposite of each other, i.e. wrath here equals eternal damnation.

So, outside of faith in Jesus Christ, we are objects of wrath (eternal damnation). So, God the Father sent his Son, Jesus Christ (God the Son) to die on the cross for our sins so that we could receive eternal salvation and eternal life with God, and no longer be under his wrath (bound for hell). Wrath, in this context, is thus the opposite of salvation. So, in a sense, God was angry with us (his wrath stood against us) when we did not know Christ, yet he also loved us and showed his divine mercy and grace by giving his Son Jesus Christ to die in our place (to take our punishment) so we could go free.

We come to belief in Jesus Christ when we receive his gift of salvation by faith in Jesus Christ. Yet, what is faith? Some people have reduced faith to mean nothing more than an emotional one-time experience at an altar or to some type of surface level acknowledgment of what Christ Jesus did for them in dying on the cross for their sins. Yet, the Bible teaches us that faith in Christ means that we die (daily) with Christ to our old lives of sin, that we are resurrected with Christ to completely new lives, transformed through the process of metamorphosis into new creatures in Christ Jesus (spiritually new born), and that we now live our lives by the strength and power and working of the Holy Spirit within us. We are no longer our own. We were bought with a price, therefore we are to honor God in all that we do (see Eph. 4:17-24; Luke 9:23-25; Gal. 2:20; Romans 6 and 1 Co. 6:20).

Physical Wrath and Deliverance

In the first chapter and second half of chapter two of Isaiah we read Isaiah’s (i.e. God’s) rebuke of Judah and Jerusalem. Judah was a rebellious nation. They had forgotten their God, and they had turned their backs on him. They were children given to corruption. They heaped up meaningless offerings to God, and he was not pleased by them. God could not stand their evil assemblies. Their rulers were rebels, companions of thieves. The faithful city had become a harlot. They were superstitious and idolatrous, arrogant and proud; people who trusted in man over God. God said that if they were willing and obedient, they would be blessed, but if they resisted God and rebelled, they would be devoured with a sword. God promised them judgment in order to purge away their junk (waste), and to remove all their impurities, yet he also promised to restore her penitent ones with righteousness.

In chapters 2 and 3 of Revelation we get a similar account of the majority of the church in the final days before Christ’s return via seven letters to the seven churches in Asia, which I believe represent the church, in general, throughout the ages. Some people believe the church in Laodicea represents the lukewarm church just prior to God’s judgments on the earth during the time of tribulation. I agree, yet I believe each church and each letter represents some aspect of the overall church through each generation. Yet, I do see the institutional church in America overall fitting the description of the church in Laodicea, as well as it fits the descriptions of many of the other churches represented in these letters, too. I can’t speak for other nations, because I live in the USA, and this is what I know.

Yet, what stands out to me about these prophecies in Isaiah in connection with the prophecies in Revelation is how they follow a similar pattern. Both have declarations of Jesus Christ as the Messiah, King, Lord, Judge and Savior, they both contain warnings of judgment, descriptions of rebellion, and calls for repentance to the people of God, which applies to the church today. They both have descriptions of how God will judge (pour out his wrath on) his people in divine discipline, and how he will judge the nations. They both describe the time of judgment as resulting in multitudes from the nations flocking to Jesus Christ and/or of the church (God’s people) having their impurities removed (purified). And, they both describe the time when the judgments will cease, when Jesus Christ will gather his people from the four corners of the earth, and when Jesus Christ will reign on the earth as King of kings and as Lord of lords during a time of peace. And, they both end with songs of praise and shouts of Hallelujah for God’s salvation and his physical deliverance from our enemies.

Proclaim Him

Before Jesus Christ left this earth, he left instructions with his disciples (his followers). They were to wait for the promised Holy Spirit, and when the Spirit of God came upon them, they would be Christ’s witnesses to the ends of the earth. He also told them that they were to go and make disciples (followers of Christ) of all nations, baptizing them, and teaching them to obey everything Christ Jesus taught them. We, as Christ’s followers, are under the same directives. When we receive Christ as Savior, we receive his Holy Spirit within us and thus we are empowered of the Spirit of God to be bold in our witness for Him. And, we are to take the gospel of Jesus Christ to the ends of the earth. We are to make known among the nations what he has done in giving us salvation, and also what is required of us in order to appropriate that salvation to our own lives (see Eph. 4:17-24; Luke 9:23-25).

Yet, part of what they told concerning what the Lord had done was they told of his anger, and how his anger had been turned away, and they told of how God then comforted them and how he saved them. Part of our testimony for Jesus Christ is sharing his gospel, yet part of it is sharing our own personal testimony of where we were before we met Christ, and of how Jesus Christ met us where we were, and the work of transformation he did in our individual lives in saving us from sin and in giving us new lives in Christ Jesus. We share this testimony through how we live our daily lives in the fear of God and in obedience to Christ’s commands, as well as we share it with our mouths in public declaration of his mighty salvation, including sharing the truth of what salvation means for us while we are still on the face of this earth, i.e. what is required of us to be Christ’s followers.

The Day of Judgment

A day of judgment is coming on the earth, known as the tribulation period. This is separate from the final judgment when God will either reward us for being his followers, or he will send us to the eternal lake of fire for refusing him and his Son. I believe the church will go through this time of judgment, though I certainly don’t know everything, and it is not my place to declare with absolute certainty all God has planned for his people.

I just know that Revelation begins with letters to the church warning of divine judgment if they do not repent of their sins, yet there is also an indication that some may be spared. And, I know that following these letters we then have the declarations of judgment. And, I see many parallels between the prophecies in Isaiah and those in Revelation concerning the last days. Plus, I believe with all my heart that God is calling out to his church today to repent of her sins and to return to her first love or face judgment of some kind, in particular to the church in America. So, not only is this a call to rejoice in our salvation and to declare to the nations what Christ has done, but it is also a call to make sure of our own salvation, and/or to get our hearts right with God through repentance and turning to obey Christ.

Rejoice, the Lord is King! / Charles Wesley / John Darwall

Rejoice, the Lord is King!
Your Lord and King adore;
mortals, give thanks and sing,
and triumph evermore.
Lift up your heart,
lift up your voice; rejoice;
again I say, rejoice.

Jesus the Savior reigns,
the God of truth and love;
when he had purged our stains,
he took his seat above.
Lift up your heart,
lift up your voice; rejoice,
again I say, rejoice.

His kingdom cannot fail;
he rules o'er earth and heaven;
the keys of earth and hell
are to our Jesus given.
Lift up your heart,
lift up your voice; rejoice,
again I say, rejoice.

Rejoice in glorious hope!
Jesus the Judge shall come,
and take his servants up
to their eternal home.
Lift up your heart,
lift up your voice; rejoice,
again I say, rejoice. 

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