10

Jump Start # 1700

Jump Start # 1700

Ephesians 3:4 “By referring to this, when your read you can understand my insight into the mystery of Christ”

  Her name was Mary, but everyone called her “Granny.” She died in 1914 at the age of 91. I had heard of her but didn’t know much about her. A recent trip to visit my dad got us into looking into our family history. He brought out a small box, that looked like an old wooden eyeglass case. And, yes, there was an old pair of wire rimmed glasses. Those were “Granny’s”, he told me. A few yellowed news clippings and a folded receipt from the Singer Sewing machine company for a purchase of a sewing machine in 1886. Why the family kept this is beyond me. But on the paper were signatures. The sewing machine cost $30.00 and monthly payments were set up to complete the deal. Granny’s name appears at the bottom among the signatures. Beside her name, hard to see at first, was an X. Above the X was the word, “her.” Her X. Granny couldn’t spell her own name. She was 64 years old when she got that sewing machine, and she didn’t know how to write her own name. I have thought and thought about that ever since I saw that old piece of paper. Granny had been married four times. All of her husbands died, including one in the Civil War. She was my grandfather’s great grandmother. Too many greats in there for me to count.

 

This verse came to my mind when I saw “Her X.” If she didn’t know how to write her own name, I doubt she could read. Why no one ever taught her I do not understand. Maybe the people around her couldn’t read or write. Simple, common people, but unable to read and write. Paul said, in our verse, “when you read you can understand my insight into the mystery of Christ.” We can know what Paul knew, when we read Ephesians.

 

There was a time throughout Europe, when the majority of the people could not read or write. They would have to depend upon someone else to tell them what the Scriptures said. They would be unable to hold God’s wonderful book in His hand and see for themselves what promises and blessings God has for His people. We take reading for granted today. Everyone can read, yet many don’t. There are huge numbers of people who are highly educated, but they rarely read. Once completed with school, they busy themselves with family and career and never expand the mind by the joys of reading.

 

For whatever reason, God chose the form of communication with words. God didn’t send pictures. God didn’t use feelings. He used words. Words preached. Words written. Those words could be understood. Words have definitions. They mean things. Art, for instance, can have vast interpretations based upon what a person sees. I’ve been to art galleries and stood before a picture in which to me, it looked like someone threw a bucket of paint at. The guides will tell you that the picture represented a turning point in the artist’s life that was brought about by the challenges he faced in society that was fighting racial oppression. I look at that and think, “How did you get all of that from a few splashes of blue paint with green and yellow lines?” Music is the same way. We went to hear Mahler’s 2nd Symphony the other day. Great music. But I didn’t get the death, trying to find the meaning of life and resurrection parts. My wife understood those parts. I simply heard some nice music. The point is, in music, art and feelings, interpretations vary. It doesn’t mean the same to each person. Words do. “Don’t” means “don’t.” You can’t miss that.

 

God chose words. Words can be copied. They can be copied exactly. Words can be translated. Words can be memorized. Words can be defined. Words can be understood. Words can be told to others. So, with all the forms of communication, God chose words. “The word of God,” is a significant expression in the Bible. “Thus saith the Lord,” is another oft repeated expression in the Bible. It is important that we understand this. The modern church is moving rapidly toward a “Feeling based,” form of communication. People talk about “feeling” saved. Some say, “I feel God.” Some talk about knowing something is right based upon their feelings. This form of thinking and authority moves people away from an absolute standard. What you feel may not be what I feel. You may feel something is right and I may feel something is wrong. In a feeling based religion, both of us would be right. What is right for you may not be right for me. This leads to each person doing and believing whatever they feel like. This leads away from passages that teach us to be of “one mind,” or “intent on one purpose.” Faith becomes a feeling and church is a gathering of those who do not see things the same, believe the same nor want the same. It’s a hodge– podge of whatever. This is the landscape of the modern church. Members of the same church do not agree nor believe in the same simple doctrinal principles. What a mess. This is where feeling based religion takes you.

 

God chose words. Words that would be preached. Words that would be written and read. It is important for us to keep teaching the words of God. When questions arise, it is to the word of God that we turn. They were can find exactly what God says. There we can find the answer. The more of the Bible that is in us, the more clear God’s will becomes.

 

Words—God’s words. Read them. Repeat them. Live them.

 

Roger

 

07

Jump Start # 1699

Jump Start # 1699

Luke 16:22 “Now the poor man died and was carried away by the angels to Abraham’s bosom; and the rich man also died and was buried.”

 

This week we have been looking at the topic of angels. Folks have a fascination with angels. You find collectable angels in china cabinets. You find sculpted angels in cemeteries. There are a lot of ideas and theories about angels. Many of them are not founded upon what the Bible teaches. When angels visited Abraham, he didn’t know who they were. Obviously, they didn’t have wings, glowing faces or halos. They appeared “human” to Abraham.

 

There seems to be an order or ranking system among the angels. Michael is referred to as the “archangel” in Jude. In the Thessalonian letter we learn that the Lord will descend from Heaven with a shout, with the voice of the archangel. “Arch” carries the idea of chief or high. The archangel was in a higher position than the other angels. Now, dozens of questions come out of this, which we do not know. Not from the Bible, at least. Was Michael the only “chief” angel? How did he become that? How long had he been that? Could he lose that position? What all was involved with being the chief angel? Questions, questions, questions. No answers. We just have to let our minds rest with the fact that Michael is the archangel. He is because God said so.

 

Have you ever considered how many times in your life angels are involved? This thought may surprise you. We might conclude that angels are found in Bible times and only in the Bible times. They are not. You have them in your life and you may not even realize this. Consider:

 

1. The angels rejoiced when you repented of your sins (Lk 15:10). They were aware of what you did. They know of your faith and commitment to Christ. What you did was known in Heaven. What you did brought happiness and joy to the angels. They knew of your faith and your coming to the Lord. You did something that brought joy to Heaven. That is amazing. I doubt the President knew of your commitment to the Lord. I doubt your neighbors knew. But the angels did.

 

2. When you pass away, as a righteous person, the angels will carry your soul to paradise. This is what happened to Lazarus. Poor Lazarus was left at the rich man’s gate. Abandoned. Alone. Forgotten. Forsaken. His condition looked hopeless and helpless. It doesn’t seem like he had a friend in the world. However, God was watching him. When he died, the angels were there. They carried that righteous soul to comfort. He was not forgotten. He was not alone. God was with him. What a great thought for each of us. It doesn’t matter where or how we die, for Lazarus, it was at a stranger’s gate. God knows where we are. God will take care of us. The angels will carry us home. I have been in the presence of several Christians, including my own mother, as they drew their last breath. It’s not like the movies. It’s not dramatic. There is no music. They just stop. It’s over. And I realize at that moment, angels are in the room. You can’t see them. You can’t reach out and touch them. But by faith we know that. The angels carry that precious soul to a rest that God has awaiting them. In the presence of angels.

 

3. When Jesus comes, He will come with the angels. In some of the Lord’s parables, it is the angels who separate the wheat from the tares at the end. Matthew tells us, “When the Son of Man comes in His glory, and all the angels with Him…” All the angels. The sky will be filled. There are a lot of angels. The living righteous will be changed in an instant when Jesus comes. The dead in Christ will be raised. We will see the angels. What a glorious sight that will be.

 

4. We will praise God with the angels in Heaven. Revelation 7 gives us a picture that surrounds the throne of God. There, with the angels, we are praising God. Together with angels. What a glorious sight that will be.

 

5. There may have been other times that we simply were not aware of. For instance, angels are referred to in Hebrews as “ministering spirits sent out to render service for the sake of those who will inherit salvation.” That’s God’s people. That’s Christians. Has there been angels who served us? Probably. I doubt we know the occasion. In fact, when this life is over, I think we will be amazed at how involved God was in our lives. Things happen and we don’t see what was behind the scenes. We don’t see God moving things, opening doors, helping out. We might call it luck. Some may even see it as a blessing. God may see it as angels serving. Just what have the angels done? I don’t think we can know.

 

6. Hebrews tells us, borrowing from Abraham’s experience, that some have entertained angels without knowing it. The question is often asked, can that happen today? Can I look at someone and think it’s just some person, when it is actually an angel? The point of this passage is to be nice and hospitable to everyone. If you knew someone was a real angel, you’d treat him extremely nice. Abraham didn’t know, and he still treated them extremely nice. That’s the way we ought to be. If angels did come to us unaware, we would never know it. Abraham’s angels didn’t drop any clues. Could it happen to us? I suppose. I’d think there would be a reason for their presence, more than just dropping in to chit-chat for a while. Maybe it has already happened in our lives.

 

Angels in our lives. What a powerful thought. What an encouragement. What comfort. And what’s behind the angels is a God who sent them. A God who is watching out for you. A God who loves you.

 

Roger

 

06

Jump Start # 1698

Jump Start # 1698

2 Peter 2:4 “For God did not spare angels when they sinned, but cast them into hell and committed them to pits of darkness, reserved for judgment”

  We continue on with our thoughts about angels. We now come to a very interesting passage that leads to many questions of which are not answered. God doesn’t write a section on “angelology” for us. Passages, such as our verse today, brings to light things that we would never know. It tells us a bit about angels. The purpose was an illustration for us. This isn’t about angels. It’s about us. The point being, God doesn’t play favorites. Sinful angels were judged. The sinful world in Noah’s day was destroyed. Sinful Sodom was reduced to rubble. The false prophets who were spreading their poisonous messages were going to face God and the meeting wouldn’t be pretty. God would judge them. He didn’t spare the world. He didn’t spare Sodom. He didn’t spare sinful angels, and he won’t spare these false prophets. That’s what the context is about.

 

Peter begins this historical section of God’s judgment by telling us about angels. It’s angels, the flood, and Sodom. The last two are in historical order. So, does that mean the sinning angels took place before the flood? Many think so. There are two theories that many believe Peter is drawing from.

 

First, some believe very early on, there was a rebellion in Heaven. An angel tried to take over. He was kicked out and eventually became Satan. That is the most common explanation for the origin of Satan, a angel that went bad. Isaiah 14 is generally used to defend this thought. There it says, “How thou art fallen from Heaven, O Lucifer, son of the morning! How art thou cut down to the ground, which didst weaken the nations” (v. 12). It sure sounds like someone got kicked out of Heaven. The problem with this theory is that the context tells us that this is a taunt that Israel would use against the king of Babylon  (v. 4). Babylon wouldn’t last. This is not talking about Satan, angels or any of those things.

 

Our verse in Peter presents a challenge to the angel gone bad theory of Satan. If Satan was a rebellious angel, why was he not committed to the pits of darkness like the others? Where did Satan’s angels come from? Are only some bad angels locked away and others were allowed to go to the “dark side,” using a Star Wars expression? Questions which we do not nor can not know the answers to. We have our theories. We have our ideas. We lack Biblical support to prove those theories.

 

Second, others believe the sinful angels were the ones in Genesis 6, before the flood, “when the sons of God came to the daughters of men, and they bore children to them.” The “sons of God” is thought to be the angels. It is believed that angels came to earth and had sexual relations with women and a race of people were formed. Interesting. Many problems with that theory. Angels are spirits. So, they took on flesh, had sex and reproduced? Was this a heavenly and earthly mixture? What happened to that race?  The first of the chapter tells us that the sons of God married these daughters. So, the angels didn’t just come down here and have sex and leave. They married? They built homes, had jobs, became daddies and lived down here on earth? Did these daughters know that these men were not men, but actually angels? Did their babies look and act differently? This passage most likely is talking about spiritual people connecting with non spiritual people. Noah’s line seems to be righteous. Everyone else seems to be unrighteous. It got to a point when only Noah and his immediate family remained righteous. Every thought was evil continually. God destroyed the world because of sin. That seems to be the consistent theme running through these verses.

 

There are many angel theories that we just do not understand. Jude tells us that Michael, the archangel, disputed with the devil about the body of Moses. One little statement late in the N.T. Nothing is said about this in the O.T. It would have never been known, except God pulled this out, again, as an illustration for His people. The context tells us that the false among them were reviling “angelic majesties.” The dispute between Satan and Michael is brought up to show that not even Michael, not even to the devil, did he present a railing judgment against him.

 

Angels sinned. That’s sad. It’s sad when anyone sins. It shows that they chose a path other than what God had intended for them. It shows that they have a free will. They are not robots. They can rebel. When they do, they face the consequences.

 

There is no indication that sinful angels have a Savior. There is no concept of a sacrifice or the offer of forgiveness for those angels. Do angels continue to sin today? I don’t know. Was this a one time incident? I don’t know. Do we know what they did wrong? No. Peter doesn’t tell us. Jude says, “Angels who did not keep their own domain, but abandoned their proper abode, He has kept in eternal bonds under darkness for the judgment of the great day” (6). Do we even know what the proper abode of angels is? It’s hard to guess what they did wrong, when we are not sure what “right” looks like. What is the domain of angels? Heaven? God has sent angels to serve His people. We are down here, not up there.

 

The sinning angels are used to remind us that God will judge. If He doesn’t give an angel a free pass, He won’t give us one either. We must obey God. We must not rebel against God. We must humble ourselves in His presence.

 

There is a lot of things that we do not know about angels. What God tells us is to help us. Our hope and our place is with God.

 

Roger

 

05

Jump Start # 1697

Jump Start # 1697

Matthew 18:10 “See that you do not despise one of these little ones, for I say to you, that their angels in Heaven continually behold the face of My Father who is in Heaven.”

  This week, we are looking at the subject of angels. In nearly every great event in the Bible, angels were present. They rescued righteous Lot from Sodom. They visited Abraham and stopped him from sacrificing Isaac. They protected Daniel from the lions. They announced the birth of Jesus. They rolled the stone away from the tomb of Jesus. The Lord used angels in several of His parables. When Jesus returns, it will be with angels. An angel rescued Peter from prison. In the book of Revelation, we find angels pouring out the bowls of wrath and being the instruments of God’s justice upon the wicked.

 

Our verse today is where the “guardian” angel concept comes from. This is a big one. So many believe that this is true. More than half of Americans believe that they are personally protected by a guardian angel. Third Century writer, Origen, claimed, “Each of us, even to the least who are in the church of God has a good angel, an angel of the Lord, who guides, warns and governs.”

 

What is interesting about this passage is the tiny transition that takes place. It’s easy to miss it. The chapter begins with the disciples asking Jesus, “Who is the greatest in the kingdom of Heaven?” It’s hard to believe that they were bold enough to ask that. What were they expecting? It’s like kids asking their parent which one is their favorite? Did Peter raise his head, expecting his name to be said? Instead of answering this question, which seems dumb and unimportant to us, Jesus called a child to Himself. He tells the audience to become converted and become like this child. Jesus was drawing upon the humbleness of a child. In verse six, Jesus says, “whoever causes one of these little ones who believes in Me to stumble,” which is a transition. It wasn’t the child that believed in Him, but the humble disciple. Jesus is not talking about nor talking to children. He was addressing the snooty attitude of these disciples. The greatest, in their thinking, would have little to do with “the lowest.” Kings rode horses and servants walked. Honor came to the greatest. The best seat in  the house was reserved for the greatest. That’s the thinking. It was then and it still is today. “These little ones,” expressed in both verse 6 and verse 10, are not children, but the “poor in spirit.” These are the humble disciples. They are not to be walked upon, avoided nor despised. Be one of them. Be like them.

 

Here’s why:

First, God desires “these little ones” to be saved. He does not want any of them to perish (v. 14)

Second, Jesus came to seek and to save that which is lost (v. 11). Jesus values the “little ones.”

Third, angels in Heaven are concerned about their welfare (v. 10)

 

This is not so much teaching about guardian angels, as it is an attempt to get the disciples to see the value of “little ones.” Those who are humble and meek. They are not aggressive, arrogant and demanding. They don’t use power to push their ways. They love the Lord and serve Him the best that they can. If the angels in Heaven are concerned about the wellbeing of these “little ones,” shouldn’t the apostles likewise be concerned  and see the need to be like them?

 

Do we have a personal angel that is just assigned to us? I’m not sure. The Scriptures teach that God uses angels to serve His people. Does that mean I might get any angel or only one designated just for me? Does it matter? Will I know?

 

Here are a few things that we do know:

  • An angel is not going to keep me from making wrong choices. If that happened then I have lost my free will. When I do make a poor choice, it would not be my fault, but my angel, who let me down. Lots and lots of problems with this line of thinking.
  • God never promised to shelter his people from trouble. Job, the best man in God’s trophy case, had the bucket of turmoil poured upon him. There were lion’s dens and prisons, and storms, and fiery furnaces and God’s preachers were killed. Where were their guardians? Suffering is part of this world. So is dying.
  • Are we to think that everyone has an angel, even the wicked? The wicked whose prayers God won’t hear, yet they have an angel? That doesn’t seem right? If we all have an angel, do we lose that angel if we go bad? Then does that angel come back if we do right? What about the prodigal? Where was his angel when he was with the pigs? Many questions and very little Biblical teaching on this.
  • The Matthew passage, our verse, says their angel continually beholds the face of God. How can my angel take care of me when he is not even looking at me? He’s looking at God. That’s interesting.
  • God never promised an “anytime, anywhere, any place” angel insurance.
  • Angels are not going to reveal God’s will to us. That is the purpose of the Bible. When ole’ Origen taught that angels “guide, warn and governs” us, he has simply replaced the need for the Bible. Why read and follow the Bible, when I have an angel who will tell me what I need to know? It is scary how many people  would line up believing this. They would put more trust in what they think an angel is saying that what the Word of God actually says. Go preach, was God’s word to the apostles.
  • Angels can’t forgive us. Only God can do that.
  • Very few people in the Bible actually saw an angel. Not every appearance of angels involved wings and I doubt halos were ever used.
  • Our confidence is in the Lord. Our trust is in the Lord. It is the Lord who is our present help.

 

So, do I have an angel? I don’t know. I honestly don’t care. I’m more interested in having the Lord. My hope is in the Lord. My walk is in the Lord. It is the Lord who will saved me, not an angel. Angels are God’s tools to accomplish what He wants. Stop putting faith in angels and put your hope in the God of Heaven and earth.

 

Much of what folks believe about this subject comes from movies, books and superstition. There just isn’t much in the Bible that talks about this. And while we are on this, we might as well mention the angels to the churches found in Revelation 2-3. Does each congregation have an angel? Was John writing a letter to a spiritual angel or did the term “angel” refer to a messenger of that congregation? How would a letter written on earth, get up to Heaven in the first place? Then that letter had to come back to earth to be read by the seven congregations. How did John’s letter get from the island to those churches? Messengers. They came and carried them back. Maybe, just maybe, that’s who would carry them and then read them aloud to the churches. They were angels in the sense of being God’s messengers and instruments.

 

God loves you and wants you in Heaven.

 

Roger

 

04

Jump Start # 1696

Jump Start # 1696

Revelation 5:11 “Then I looked, and I heard the voice of many angels around the throne and the living creatures and the elders and the number of them was myriads of myriads, and thousands of thousands”

  Yesterday, our Jump Starts noticed how God made man “lower than the angels.” That expression, led us to a discussion about angels. One thing about angels that I do not think we fully grasp is how many there are. The number is well beyond dozens and dozens. Look at the words in our verse today. We understand the term “thousands of thousands.” College football stadiums are full of thousands every Saturday afternoon. I don’t know what a “myriad” is. It must be more than a thousand. There were “myriads of myriads” of angels.

 

We remember at the arrest of Jesus in the garden, that at His command twelve legions of angels would come and rescue Him. A legion is a part of the Roman military. It was made up of 600 soldiers. Twelve legions would be 72,000 angels. Jesus didn’t need that many. We remember one angel, back in 2 Kings 19, that killed 185,000 Assyrians. One angel.

 

All of this leads us to a few simple conclusions.

 

First, there are a lot of angels. Why? Why does God need so many angels? If one angel can defeat a vast army, why are there myriads of myriads of angels? I don’t think we know. Is it so that each person has his own angel. Are we assigned an angel at birth? Some seem to think so. The “guardian” angel concept is built around that idea. We’ll have something to say about guardian angels in another Jump Start. I think it’s comforting to know that there are so many. Angels are God’s tools to help His people. God made them to announce His will, bring about His justice, and help His people. Angels carried the soul of Lazarus to Abraham’s bosom. It’s great to think that God has so many angels available. There is nothing to think that God continually creates angels as He needs them. It seems that the angels were created at the beginning. God knew what He needed. There will never be a time when all the angels are tied up in one project and a need slips through the cracks because of a lack of angelic availability. Throughout the Bible, God’s people have called upon God for help. They didn’t call for angels. They didn’t pray to angels. They didn’t feel that they were saved by angels. It was God. I think some have put more stock into theories about angels than what the Scriptures teach us about the Lord. People are counting upon “their angel” to get them out of a mess rather than turning to the Lord. At the end of the season, it’s not the shovel nor the tractor that gets the praise for the hard work of farming, but rather, it’s the farmer. He couldn’t have done it without his tools, but he was the one who used them. It’s the same way with the Lord. He may use angels to help us, but they are merely His instruments and tools to accomplish what He desires. The praise goes to the Lord.

 

Second, our verse today along with Revelation 7, which takes place around the throne of God, identifies a great multitude of saved which no one could count. People from every nation and every tongue. Thousands and thousands of saved people surrounding the throne and praising God. John has been able to count several things in the book of Revelation. He counted seven churches, and seven bowls and seven seals. He counted a thousand year reign. He counted 144,000. But here, at this occasion, the number was so great that he couldn’t count them. So, we have myriads of myriads of angels and a massive crowd of saved which no one can count, all in Heaven. Heaven will be filled. There will be a huge crowd in Heaven. This is impressive. Can you imagine the praise to God in such an assembly?

 

This needs to be thought about. I have preached at many small congregations before. I have preached to audiences of five. I held a meeting for a church of seven people. When we think about the Matthew passage where Jesus says that a few will be saved, it is easy to conclude that there might be about a dozen in Heaven. Some would like that. Some don’t like crowds. Some like small churches and some do all that they can to keep a church small. “You get lost in a crowd,” they proclaim. “You can’t know everyone,” they believe. So, small they remain. They like it that way. I wonder how these same folks think about the true picture of Heaven, with thousands and thousands and myriads of myriads of angels and a massive crowd of saved that is so large that no one can count? What a crowd. All there because of God. All doing right. All focusing upon the One sitting upon the throne. I doubt the singing would be pitiful. Can you imagine? Can you imagine seeing such a crowd? So many that love the Lord. So many that sacrificed for the Lord. So many that gave their all for the Lord.

 

And there with angels. Lots and lots of angels. I don’t know if every angel has a name. We know two of them do. I don’t know if we would run into an angel that actually helped us in our life? I wonder if we would even know how many times God has been there for us, helped us and even sent angels for us. I think we would look past the angels and look to the Lord. I think we would be overwhelmed with how much God cares for us and is there for us.

 

Angels are not divine. They are not eternal. There has not always been angels. They were created, Psalms tells us, like everything else. They are not “little gods.” They are not to be worshipped. We don’t pray to angels. We don’t even ask for angels. They are God’s servants. He determines if, when and where the angels are used. Since angels are a spirit, they may pass through our day and we not even know it. When prayers are answered, it is God who is thanked, not angels. If we are protected from harm’s way, it is God who is praised, not angels. Without God, angels wouldn’t be doing anything for us. They are His. They come at His beckoning.

 

It is interesting to note, Jesus tells us that Hell is prepared for the devil and “his angels.” The devil has angels. They most likely serve his twisted and evil purposes. Not much is said about Satan’s angels. They are spirits. Were they created that way? Did they go bad? Were they once good angels that took a wrong turn in life? We hope to write some things about that later in the week.

 

But one final thought all of this leads us to is that there are many unseen things that fills our world. We can’t see spirits. We can’t see angels, good or bad. We can’t see souls being taken from the departed to paradise. Our sight is limited. There are many things going on that we do not see nor understand. God moves kings. God is active in this world. It is so easy to think that the work of God is finished. That He sits on the sidelines simply watching us play out our lives. This is so untrue. Just as we can’t see radio waves and wireless communication and waves going to satellites and back to earth, many passing through our homes and probably even through our bodies, we can’t see spirits. We must wonder, without knowing the answer, how many angels are sent to earth each day. God is busy. He is trying to save you. He is trying to help you. There are many ways He does this. Angels are just one of His tools.

 

Myriads of myriads of angels—that’s a great reminder for us.

 

Roger