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The Hallelujah and The Wedding Feast | Revelation 19:10

The Revelation of Jesus Christ | The Hallelujah and The Wedding Feast – Revelation 19:1-10

On the heels of chapter 18, we see the response of the throne room of heaven.  Throughout the course of Revelation 19:1-10, there is cause for celebration.  Evil’s defeat is secure as the justice of God comes to its fullness.  The prayers of the saints from earlier has come to fruition and the finality of God’s judgments, the sorting between the wheat and chaff, is completed and those who have remained faithful to the One True God can celebrate in the victory of Jesus Christ.  This chapter, and the chapters that follow, look as if they are wrapping up the defeat of goodness over evil.  But to view it as the climax of the story would be to miss the point of the Gospel entirely.  The thrust of the Gospel is not evil is defeated (though this is certainly a central piece) but rather is that God’s glory surpasses all things as He reigns throughout eternity and we, as recipients of the love of God, enter into the fullness of God’s presence for all eternity.  Revelation is not the climax of evil’s defeat but the birth of the bride of Christ’s relationship that will last forever.

Christ in Colossians | Suffering For The Gospel

Christ in Colossians | Suffering For The Gospel – Colossians 1:24-29

At the heart of the problem in the church in Colossae doubted that divinity of Christ to be sufficient for all salvation. Paul, with fondness for the church, sought to bring the church to their fullness of understanding and life in the Gospel, struggle and toil for their sake. Paul had been imprisoned for his zeal for the Gospel and gladly endured the punishment for the sake of the Gospel. Yet, despite the oddly optimistic outlook we cannot overlook the bleak circumstances that Paul endures for the Gospel. Imprisoned, hungry, tired, poor, and in at least one occasion, almost killed, Paul’s suffering came as the direct result of the faith He held in Jesus Christ. As gentiles came to Christ, the theological and philosophical differences they brought would need to be brought into spiritual maturity by those, like Paul who pastor and teach the church and drive them to the fullness of relationship with Jesus Christ.

The Fall of Babylon | Revelation 18:1-24

The Revelation of Jesus Christ | The Fall of Babylon – Revelation 18:1-24

While the wrath poured out in Revelation 16 represents the spiritual victory of the Lamb of God over the world and the last attempt for people to return to the one true God, Revelation 17 and 18 detail the total defeat of the Satan and the kingdom of Babylon.  Throughout the course of Revelation 17, John employs imagery that would be easily identifiable to the modern day reader, where the interpretation and implication could easily be understood.  Yet, as with most scriptures and prophesy in the bible, there are likely dual meanings.  The immediate understanding and context and the much larger scope as time comes to a conclusion.  Ultimately, the hearts of man and the desires of the flesh have no fundamentally changed throughout history.  While the technology and context changes, the temptation remains the same; to sell ourselves and our identity to the prostitute for momentary pleasure at the cost of our spiritual well being.  

Christ in Colossians | The Preeminence of Christ

Christ in Colossians | The Preeminence of Christ – Colossians 1:15-23

The church in Colossee had lost their way, forgetting the place that Christ holds in their life. Paul, while not able to be there in person, sent his word to exhort and encourage them in their faith according to the Kingship of Jesus Christ over all creation. Paul’s message to the church resonates true even…
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The Revelation of Jesus Christ | Rise and Fall of the Prostitute – Revelation 17:1-18

While the wrath poured out in Revelation 16 represents the spiritual victory of the Lamb of God over the world and the last attempt for people to return to the one true God, Revelation 17 and 18 detail the total defeat of the Satan and the kingdom of Babylon.  Throughout the course of Revelation 17, John employs imagery that would be easily identifiable to the modern day reader, where the interpretation and implication could easily be understood.  Yet, as with most scriptures and prophesy in the bible, there are likely dual meanings.  The immediate understanding and context and the much larger scope as time comes to a conclusion.  Ultimately, the hearts of man and the desires of the flesh have no fundamentally changed throughout history.  While the technology and context changes, the temptation remains the same; to sell ourselves and our identity to the prostitute for momentary pleasure at the cost of our spiritual well being.  

Focusing On The Blessings in 2019

Focusing on The Blessings in 2019

As I started 2018, I found a hope that, from the previous years, remained highly elusive. Numerous persons had routinely told me “This is going to be your year!” Quickly, I formulated things to do and ways to improve my spiritual health and well being. I met the first few weeks with gusto, powering through the challenges, pushing my skills and abilities, while simultaneously working on some persistent habitual sins that seemed to find a home. To Ben honest, for  while, things were going pretty good. I felt like a super Christian.

Just an Ordinary Day | Jesus

Just An Ordinary Day | Jesus

We like to believe that Jesus and Satan actively battle for the souls and lives of mankind., each trying to beat the other in some divine spiritual competition. We share images of Jesus and Satan standing face to face as if they are preparing for a boxing match with the outcome largely unknown. Nothing could be further from the truth. For Jesus, there is no contest between the defunct fallen angel and the Son of God and ruler of all creation. Maintaining Divine rule over all creation requires nothing beyond the instrinsic personhood that He naturally exerts. Bringing salvation to mankind by becoming incarnate had been the plan from the beginning, not a plan B in response to sin. Rather, the work of Christ paved the only path for our return. While hugely momentous and the turning point of creation, for Jesus Christ, this event displayed the ordinary activities for a God incarnate who does the extraordinary for the unworthy.

Revelation 16:1-21 | The Seven Bowls of Wrath

The Revelation of Jesus Christ |The Seven Bowls of Wrath – Revelation 16:1-21

At the end of a harvest, everything in the field is harvested in some form or another.  The outcome a harvest is largely dependent on what identity the thing being harvested holds.  For harvesting, there is the physical act of removing everything from where it is and then the sorting by its identity.  As the elders and angels declare the victory of God over all the world, they mark the beginning of the season of harvest.  The angels herald the coming of the harvest as it passes over all the earth.  First, the wheat are harvested and then the grapes.  While both are harvested, their fates could not be more different, each facing a different outcome than the other.  One thing becomes clear from chapter 14; everyone will face the harvest in some capacity.  Up until this point, God reveals his sovereignty as the King of Heaven, the ruler of creation, and even dictating what the dragon and demons can and cannot do. At the end of human kind, everyone will experience the fullness of God.  Some will experience the fullness of God’s eternal presence and blessing.  Others will experience the fullness of the God’s wrath.  The difference comes from who the son of man claims as His own.

Just An Ordinary | Shepherds

Just An Ordinary Day | Shepherds

Shepherds, in that day, tended to not be the cleanest of people. They carried the reputation of dirty, inappropriate vagabonds who preferred the company of animals instead of mankind. They lived with the animals in the field to keep an eye on the animals. Their job consumed their life and this specific day, for all they knew, was just an ordinary day. Out of the ordinary, heavenly hosts appeared proclaiming the coming of the Savior. These outcasts of society received the proclamation of the presence of the King over all eternity. The Savior had arrived in lowly circumstances and the angelic hosts came to the lowliest of people. For the shepherds, they understood their unholiness and filthy ness, both externally and spiritually, and risked their livelihood to behold the face of the Savior.

Prelude to the Seven Plagues | Revelation 15:1-8

The Revelation of Jesus Christ | Prelude to The Seven Plagues – Revelation 15:1-8

At the end of a harvest, everything in the field is harvested in some form or another.  The outcome a harvest is largely dependent on what identity the thing being harvested holds.  For harvesting, there is the physical act of removing everything from where it is and then the sorting by its identity.  As the elders and angels declare the victory of God over all the world, they mark the beginning of the season of harvest.  The angels herald the coming of the harvest as it passes over all the earth.  First, the wheat are harvested and then the grapes.  While both are harvested, their fates could not be more different, each facing a different outcome than the other.  One thing becomes clear from chapter 14; everyone will face the harvest in some capacity.  Up until this point, God reveals his sovereignty as the King of Heaven, the ruler of creation, and even dictating what the dragon and demons can and cannot do. At the end of human kind, everyone will experience the fullness of God.  Some will experience the fullness of God’s eternal presence and blessing.  Others will experience the fullness of the God’s wrath.  The difference comes from who the son of man claims as His own.