03

Jump Start # 1301

Jump Start # 1301

Revelation 2:21 “I have her time to repent, and she does not want to repent of her immorality.”

  This somber passage from Revelation is devoted to Jezebel. We know it’s not the actual Jezebel. She lived back in the Old Testament period, married to the weak king Ahab, she was a murderous, evil person who died a violent death. A type of Jezebel was working through the church family at Thyatira. Who ever this person was, she considered herself a prophetess, and she was busy leading God’s people astray, especially into idolatry. Worse, the context tells us that the church was tolerating her. She was busy doing bad and the good folks were doing nothing. That is all it takes for evil to survive and multiply.

 

The church was tolerating but God was not. The church accepted and God was demanding repentance. What God had in store wasn’t for the faint of heart. He declared that she was going to be thrown on a bed of sickness and her children were going to be killed. God had run out of patience with this wicked heart. He had given her time, but she didn’t do anything productive with that time. Now, she had run out of time. God was not looking the other way because she was a woman. God was patient to a point. She took advantage of the patience of God.

 

Two thoughts come to mind here:

 

First, why does a church tolerate wrong? Seems like a simple question, but it’s not. Sometimes who it is can lead some to look the other way. A wife of one of the leaders, the wife of the preacher, the wife of a large contributor, or instead of a wife, a child, and that’s all it takes for some to tolerate. Understand tolerance and patience are not the same. At a moment, it may seem that both, tolerance and patience, are putting up with wrong behavior. Tolerance can continue to put up with wrong. Tolerance has no end in sight. Tolerance accepts and just looks the other way. Patience is looking to an end. Patience is waiting for a change, first in the heart and then in behavior. There comes a time when patience sees no hope. The person is not changing. Jesus told the disciples not to cast pearls among the swine. Here in our passage, Jezebel does not want to repent. It’s the “does not want to” that changes everything. Someone that is slipping and sliding along, and trying—we are to be patient and helping. Someone that doesn’t want to change, the clock is ticking and will soon stop. Not wanting to change is an attitude. It’s not the same as someone who wants to, but they don’t know how. It’s not the same as someone who is just moving at a slower pace than we’d like. The not wanting to crowd isn’t going to change. Their heart is set on staying wrong. There comes a time when a family, a church, a marriage must move on. A husband who is seeing another woman and doesn’t want to change, has all but killed that marriage. A prodigal who has gone to the far country and does not want to change, has all but ruined his relationship with his family. A member who does not want to walk with Jesus will find himself out of fellowship with his church family. It’s the not wanting to that makes all the difference. God ran out of patience because Jezebel did not want to change.

 

Second, God is patient to a point. God is expecting and looking for improvement. He is looking for positive movement. The repentance would come about from a heart that has been touched by the word of God. The honest and good heart changes. It is that heart that responds to the word of God. The honest heart realizes the pain and wrong that has been caused by their poor choices. Sin has taken over. They have moved away from God. The goodness of the Gospel reaches that heart. It’s not too far gone. It’s still wanting to do what is right. The person grieves over his sins and turns to Christ. God is waiting. God is willing to forgive. Under the banner of the Cross, forgiveness and hope are restored. A person stands united with God, justified and redeemed by the precious blood of Jesus. They are sorry for their sins. They regret the wrong that they have done. Lessons have been learned. Faith grows. God is patient toward such. God doesn’t want any to perish but all to be saved.

 

 

The patience of God leads to a couple of other thoughts. First, there comes a time when God’s patience has run out with the world. At that time, Jesus will be sent. Everything changes when Jesus comes. He will gather up His people, the world will come to a sudden end and all of us, living and dead, will be cast into eternity. There is a day coming, only God knows, when He will say, “Enough. No more. Go Jesus.” Every day, is one more day of patience from God. Our stupid world continues to ignore the patience of God and spins faster and faster and deeper and deeper into sin. People are living without any compass, any conscience and any thought that each day is one more opportunity to repent before God. Some day, God will say, “They do not want to repent.” Give them another year, another decade, another generation, and they just get worse and worse. Some day, God will have enough of this.

 

Second, we must wonder about ourselves. Is God waiting on you and I to change? Are we stubborn? Are we fighting God? Jezebel didn’t want to change. How about you? How about me? Maybe the reason Jesus hasn’t come is because God is just waiting for us to give our hearts wholly to Him.

 

Tolerance and patience—they are not the same.

 

Roger

 

02

Jump Start # 1300

Jump Start #1300

 

Joshua 4:7 “then you shall say to them, ‘Because the waters of the Jordan were cut off before the ark of the covenant of the Lord; when it crossed the Jordan, the waters of the Jordan were cut off.’ So these stones shall become a memorial to the sons of Israel forever.”

 

Our verse today signifies an important event in Israel’s history. After all those years, the nation was finally moving into the promise land. This was a promise God made to Abraham and his children a long time ago. Moses led the people up to this point but now, Joshua was leading them across the Jordan River and into the place God wanted them to be. A miracle took place as they crossed the Jordan. The waters parted, similar to the Red Sea, forty years before when they left Egypt. As they crossed the Jordan, orders were given to gather stones from the river bottom. These were reminders, memorials. This is where our verse takes place. Years later, when new generations ask about those rocks, they were to be told about crossing the Jordan and God keeping His promise. God didn’t want them to forget.

 

Memorials are important. Washington D.C. is a city full of memorials. Gettysburg is lined with memorials. Even in many of our homes, we have tokens, furniture, keep sakes that belonged to grandparents or great grandparents. There is sentimental meaning to those things. They are a connection to our past and to our people. We don’t want to forget.

 

In the N.T. we have the Lord’s Supper on Sunday, God’s grand reminder of the greatest act of love and the keeping of His promise to redeem us from our sins. A little cracker and a little juice and we can be on our way without much thought. Shame on us for that. We must pause. We must remember. We must reflect. We must thank. It was the cross that changed the world. It was the cross that changed our destiny. The cross was God’s explanation point to sin. It was the cross that the apostles preached everywhere. Remember the cross.

 

Within the N.T. are other reminders and things to remember.  The Hebrews were told to remember those who first taught them and led them. The flow of the passage leads us to believe that those early teachers had gone on. Don’t forget them. They were important in their lives and helped them to who they were. We have spiritual teachers like that in our lives. Those that taught us the gospel. Those that patiently answered our questions. Those first preachers that we remember. We were young and they were old. They seemed serious. They talked loud. Their suits were always dark. There was something special about those men of God. They helped us.

 

At the church building where I worship, there are a couple of special reminders that I really like. Recently, we acquired some very old, original Bible pages—three to be exact. They are framed and displayed in our entry way. One is from the 1600’s pulpit Bible that was printed on a Gutenberg press. Beside it, is hand written sheepskin from the book of Genesis. It’s written in Hebrew. It dates around the mid 1700’s. Then there is a page from the Collins’ Bible, which also dates from the late 1700’s. It was the first Bible printed in America after the Revolution. Old Bible pages. Reminders. I wish we knew where all those pages had been, who has read them and the good that they may have done. Those pages remind us to treasure, guard, love and teach the truth.

 

The other item in our church building is an old wooden pulpit. It’s now used in a classroom. There is a brass plate on it that reminds us that it was used as the main pulpit for more than 50 years. It was in use before I was born. When I stand behind that old pulpit, I think about some of the mighty voices that preached from it. The list is enormous. Great men of God have thundered God’s message from that old pulpit. Most of those men have passed on. Many lives were changed because of the message that sounded from that pulpit. The church stands strong today because of the men who courageously taught God’s word from that pulpit. It’s a reminder, much like a river bottom rock was. Those rocks weren’t the story, as neither is our old pulpit. The story is God. It was God who made and kept those promises. It is God whose message was preached and believed from that old pulpit.

 

Remember. Reminders. They serve a valuable lesson. These things teach us that we look both directions, much like we were taught when young about crossing the street. You look this way, and then you look that way. We look back, we remember, are thankful. We look forward and realize that God is not finished. There is still a work to be done and now it’s our time to do it. Carefully honoring God’s way, we move onward. We teach, reach and connect with others about Jesus. The work isn’t over. The church isn’t a museum gathering artifacts. We are marching onward, with the Lord. New technology allows more people to hear the message than ever before. The church is teaching more than those in the neighborhood. The message reaches across the ocean. The preached word is heard over and over because of recordings.

 

Recently I was given three CD’s of sermons preached by legendary Foy E. Wallace, Jr. A generation ago he was very famous and did much good throughout the kingdom. He has been gone for a long time. He died before CD’s were even thought of. But now, because of technology, these old sermons are still preached. That’s amazing in my book. The good that is being done lasts beyond us today, and even beyond this generation.

 

So, Onward Christian Soldiers, we must be. Ever faithful to the word of God. Ever true to the God we love. Doing all that we can for our God who loves us and saved us.

 

Roger