A BORN-AGAIN BELIEVER

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TO BE HONEST

CAMPBELLTON, New Brunswick, June 21, 2023 – Jesus teaches us that we need to be converted and become like little children to enter into the Kingdom.

What does he mean by that? Conversion, as a spiritual process, we can understand, but how can we become like little children again if we’re already adults? Should we put on kids’ clothes and wear pigtails?

I am not and have never been a game-player or manipulator, even though I’ve been surrounded by such people all my life. I’ve come to see game-playing and manipulating as standard adult behavior that people start to learn when they enter their “tween” years. I guess I must have missed that memo on how to gameplay and manipulate because I was always a terrible liar and I tended to take people at their word, finding out too late that they didn’t really mean what they’d said.

It was confusing for me as a young teen and older to find that people I’d grown up with were starting to use words as bargaining tools rather than statements of fact. The more I was betrayed by alleged friends, the more I retreated into my own world that grew smaller and darker as the years passed. I learned to make do without friends and only had short-term relationships with men. I had no interest in getting involved in anyone’s life because my experience had been that as soon as I got involved, that person would in some way betray me. They would say one thing and do another, as their words meant something different to them than they did to me.

Most children are not like that. Most kids, if they say they’re going to do something, they do it. If they say they feel something, they feel it. Most kids use words as a means of communicating their genuine thoughts and feelings rather than as bargaining chips or chess pieces. They play games, but just for fun. Some children do learn to manipulate, but only when they’re a bit older. Most young kids still take people at face value, still take them at their word. That’s why you have to be very careful about what you say around little children. They’re like sponges, soaking up every syllable they hear and processing it for meaning. They have to learn, over time and by watching older kids and adults, to use words deceptively, to say one thing and mean something else, as using words as tools of deception doesn’t come naturally to them.

I think this is part of what Jesus meant when he said we need to become like little children. He didn’t mean we should dress like kids and play hopscotch, but that we should take words at face value and also use them as such. We shouldn’t manipulate or lie. We should trust those who have been proven trustworthy and assume they’re acting in good faith. This should be our default position with God.

In the Bible, God goes out of his way to let us know that he’ll never leave us or betray us. I feel as a born-again believer that I can invest everything in God and not worry about him feigning affection or talking about me behind my back. I would never make such an investment in most humans, even born-again ones.

Other traits of young children that I believe Jesus was referring to is their ability to forgive and forget, to move on without looking back, to share what they have cheerfully, and to wear their heart on their sleeve. Children also love to learn what they love to learn, are constantly expanding their interests, easily accept guidance, nearly as easily accept correction, and enjoy helping out. These are all good traits for the Kingdom.

Conversion is a process that’s initiated by God and depends on him, but becoming like little children is something you can accomplish on your own. You can start by saying what you mean and meaning what you say and by letting your true feelings show rather than hiding them. You can start by being honest about everything and by not only saying that you’re willing to help out but actually being willing to help out wherever and whenever help is needed. These are baby steps on the way to becoming like little children again, but they’re a good place to start. The rest, if your heart is in the right place, will follow in good time.

And if people object to your Jesus-approved approach to life, they’re the problem, not you.

“Except ye be converted, and become as little children, ye shall not enter into the Kingdom of Heaven.”                                                                                                

Matthew 18:3

PRAY FOR HAMISH HARDING AND HIS FAMILY

CAMPBELLTON, New Brunswick, June 20, 2023 – I do text editing and proofreading for my daily bread (Paul fixed tents; I fix tenses lol groan).

One of my clients years ago was a search and rescue (SAR) helicopter pilot who wrote articles for military journals about his rescues. It was fascinating to read his “insider scoops” about his missions. Many of the rescues were of people who’d done things they shouldn’t have done, such as gone skiing in locations that were off-limits due to avalanche dangers or headed out to sea in an approaching storm in a flimsy boat. Still, as a SAR operative, my client always had to put his personal feelings aside about the foolhardiness of the people he was attempting to rescue. He had to put his personal feelings aside and conduct a rescue mission, even if he personally believed it was a lost cause and even if it meant he had to put himself in harm’s way. Regardless of his personal opinions on the matter, he had to conduct a rescue mission. That was his job.

There’s no shortage of people doing things they’ve been warned not to do who then get themselves in a pickle they need rescuing from. But the time of rescue efforts is the not the time for giving up hope or for wagging your finger or for saying “I told you so.” The time of rescue efforts is to do everything in your power to bring the distressed people to safety. After they’re safe, then you can lecture them.

I mention this because a big part of our job as born-again believers is to pray for people. If people request our prayers, we pray for them. Our prayers are our spiritual SAR. We offer our prayers regardless of our personal feelings about the people who’ve asked for them or the reason they’ve asked for them. When people ask for our prayers, we go into spiritual SAR mode and conduct the requested mission.

As of the time of writing this article, a billionaire adventurer has gone missing during a trip in a submersible to the Titanic wreck in the North Atlantic. His family has requested prayers. And because his family has requested prayers, we need to pray for the safe rescue of the billionaire and everyone else on board the submersible. Regardless of our personal feelings about the man’s adventures (or now misadventures), we need to pray for him. That’s our job.

So please pray for him. The man’s name is Hamish Harding. Please pray for Hamish Harding, at the request of his family. Please pray for his safe rescue and the safe rescue of all those on board the Titan.

Hamish Harding’s stepson, Brian Szasz, confirmed his stepfather was on board the vessel when it went missing.

‘Hamish Harding, my step father, has gone missing on submarine. Thoughts and prayers,’ he wrote on Facebook, sharing family photos and articles.

‘Thoughts and prayers for my Mom and Hamish Harding,’ he added.

In a follow-up post, he added: ‘Thoughts and prayers for my stepfather Hamish Harding as his submarine has gone missing exploring Titanic. Search and rescue mission is underway.’

British billionaire Hamish Harding missing on Titanic submarine gave eerie weather warning in Instagram post before dive | The Independent

*****

tldr: When people ask for your prayers, you give them your prayers.

That’s a non-negotiable request.

Regardless of your personal feelings towards the people making the request or the reason for their request, you pray for them. You ask God to help them.

That is your duty as a Christian.

If you choose not to do your duty, you’ll have God to answer to.

PRAYERS FOR THE ALPHABET-RAINBOW

CAMPBELLTON, New Brunswick, June 18, 2023 – The provocations of the alphabet-rainbow agenda have been legion this year, and for a reason.

The reason is to provoke you to respond with anger rather than prayer, protest rather than prayer, disgust and outrage rather than prayer. Christians have even been provoked to join ranks with people whose faith dictates they throw their enemies off a roof. How can Christians align themselves with such a belief system? And absent – glaringly absent – in all this shouting and outrage is the call for much-needed prayers.

If we don’t pray for the alphabet-rainbow contingent, who will?

If we don’t see their issues as spiritual, who will?

I’ve written before HERE, HERE, HERE, and HERE about the primacy of prayer over protest. Christians aren’t called to protest: Jesus never protested, and we’re to do what Jesus did, not what the world does. Protesting was a popular pastime during the days of Jesus’ ministry, but Jesus never once participated in them. How do we know that? Scripture tells us he never raised his voice in the streets. He was never involved in insurrections against either the Roman or the Jewish powers-that-be. He instead focused his energy on the task at hand, which was preaching and teaching the Word and PRAYING for those who hated him, not throwing them off a roof.

If you’re a Christian and you’ve been caught up in the heady backlash against the alphabet-rainbow agenda, please reconsider what you’re doing. We Christians are to respond with prayers, not protests. At the same time, we cannot align ourselves with a belief system that advocates for violence against those they consider enemies. If we align ourselves with such a belief system, we’ll be tarred with the same brush in the eyes of the world, and in the eyes of God we’ll be hypocrites.

If non-Christians want to protest, let them; it’s not our business to tell them what to do. Our business is to follow Jesus’ example, which is to pray for and bless our enemies, not ridicule, malign, and threaten them.

Prayer is the most powerful force in the universe. The best – absolutely best – thing you can do in response to the alphabet-rainbow provocation is to pray. Satan is using these people to provoke you into hatred. He wants you outraged; he wants you protesting. Don’t give into him. Don’t fall for his tricks.

Love your enemies.”

Please take this to heart.

I BET: A CALL TO SPIRITUAL ARMS

CAMPBELLTON, New Brunswick, June 18, 2023 – I bet, were someone so inclined, he or she could chart the steep decline of the developed world (or what used to be known as “the West” or the now politically incorrect “first world” or the even more politically incorrect “Christendom”) – I bet that someone so inclined could chart the steep and swift decline of former Christendom by connecting the falling away or death of each believer to an uptick in evil.

That is, for every believer’s death or turning away from God, evil would show an increase.

I bet it can be charted, this correlation between the withdrawal of God’s Spirit and the inrush of demonic forces. I bet it can be charted and I bet the devil is already doing it, because for every light that dims and/or goes out, God permits Satan to extend his reach. When the devil extends his reach, wildfires burn out of control, endless wars erupt, government corruption flourishes, people run out of money, families break apart, kids don’t know if they’re male or female, and killing your own child is as simple as swallowing a pill.

No, Charlotte, you’re wrong, sniffs the world. It’s White supremacy. It’s colonialism. It’s systemic racism. It’s socioeconomics geared towards the ruling oligarchy. It’s insufficient diversity and inclusion. It’s insufficient equity. It’s cis genderism.

It’s climate change.

I bet, if you had the right instruments, you could measure evil. You’d need very special instruments to do that, though, because evil doesn’t always look like we think it should look and you’d have to find it first before you could measure it. And you might have a hard time finding it. Evil shrouds itself so you look right past it, so “you don’t see it coming”. That’s how evil has gotten away with being evil for so long. It flies under the radar. It pretends it doesn’t exist. Sometimes it even pretends it’s your friend.

It’s not a balance, the favourable measure of good and evil. It’s more a percentage, like 33.333% falling from Heaven and 66.666% not, or a fixed number, like 10 righteous souls holding back Sodom’s destruction. Balance implies compromise and God never compromises. He would rather have only one committed soldier fighting the good fight than thousands who are only in it for the payout. He saved Noah and his family and let everyone else die. He wanted to give everything to Moses and kill all the rest of the children of Israel in the wilderness. For God, it’s not about balancing out the good with the bad, but about sifting and panning until he finds a gold nugget; if he finds only one, God will make do with that and dump the rest.

I bet, were someone so inclined, they could chart the fall of the standard of living in former Christendom with the decline in faith, they could chart the rise in crime with the decline in faith, they could chart the rise in hopelessness and divorce and suicides with the decline in faith, because there is your real correlation for standard of living, crime levels, and happiness – the level of faith within a community. And when I say “faith”, I mean faith in God as a follower of Jesus. The greater the faith, the higher the living standard, the lower the crime, and the greater the happiness. This is the real reason why the first world became the first world in the first place.

But again, you don’t need a lot of people to have a lot of faith. Even just one person of strong faith can have the righteousness to cover many. God would have been pleased to spare Sodom had there been just ten righteous souls among hundreds of thousands, but there weren’t. Truth be told, there might not have been even one righteous soul, considering how Lot treated his daughters (and how his daughters treated him). Scripture tells us that God spared Lot and his family as a favour to his righteous uncle, Abraham. Whether or not Lot was actually righteous himself is for God to know.

The obvious antidote to the rising levels of evil in former Christian nations is to increase the amount of faith in the people living there. But getting more people to believe is an uphill battle that we may not win. The only alternative is for us born-again believers to increase our faith, so that while we may be few in number, we’ll be counted as many for righteousness. Whereas previously 9 out of 10 in a family believed, there may now only be 1 in 10, but that 1 will be strong in faith, maybe even strong enough to cover for the whole family. This is what we need and this is what we must pray for – that our faith be increased along with the faith of our spiritual brothers and sisters.

This is how we stop the steady uptick in evil – not by reparations or “equity” or electric vehicles or regime change, but by building our faith strong enough to move mountains.

And this, my fellow born-again believers, is up to us.

ON PROVOCATIONS

CAMPBELLTON, New Brunswick, June 18, 2023 – Our example on how to deal with provocations (also known also as tests or temptations) is always Jesus.

Jesus knew precisely how to respond.

When provoked, he didn’t engage: He instructed. He didn’t invite a response to his instruction, he simply left it there for the recipient to chew on.

And when he wasn’t directly or personally provoked, he ignored the provocation. It wasn’t his business.

Provocations are designed to test your spiritual mettle. God permits provocations because he wants to see who really wants what he’s offering and who’s just saying they want it. He also wants to give us a chance to move up in his Kingdom by giving us a larger share of his Spirit. Many Christians say they want what God’s offering, but most of those fail when put to the test. In other words, they may claim to want what God’s offering, but when provoked show they’re not actually willing to do what’s required.

Jesus was tested on a daily basis. The most famous of these provocations took place in the desert after his 40-day/40-night fast, but Jesus faced tests every day during his ministry years. We read about those in the Gospels. Sometimes he was tested by his sworn enemies, sometimes by his own followers, and sometimes by strangers. In every instance, God permitted the test. When God said that he was “well pleased” with Jesus, he was stating his approval of Jesus’ test results.

Like Jesus, we also are tested on a daily basis. The tests may not look like Jesus’ temptations in the wilderness, but they come from the same tempter and are meant to trip us up. Here are some of the standard everyday provocations employed by the devil and permitted by God:

  • Temptation to be outraged by something.
  • Temptation to break the Commandments.
  • Temptation to express tolerance for something you know is wrong.
  • Temptation to condemn your enemies rather than to pray for them.
  • Temptation to “name and shame” your enemies rather than to pray for them.
  • Temptation to protest.
  • Temptation to focus on end-times “spiritual porn’.
  • Temptation to be sustainedly curious about demons.
  • Temptation to complain about your circumstances.
  • Temptation to blame others for your circumstances.
  • Temptation not to forgive (hardheartedness).
  • Temptation to think or speak uncharitably of someone.
  • Temptation to put someone or something before God.
  • Sexual provocations.
  • Financial provocations.
  • Temptations to misuse or misallocate resources God has put into your care, including your God-given talents.

Obviously, this list of provocations could go on for pages, and I’m sure that even off the top of your head you could easily rattle off a few dozen more. My point in listing them here is to hammer home the reality that nearly every minute of every day we’re tempted to act in opposition to God. Provocations are not a one-off thing or a rare event but an ongoing process of spiritual refining. This process involves learning, testing, failing, relearning, retesting, etc., a specific spiritual principle (e.g., pray for your enemies) until we get it consistently right and it becomes our default position.

All born-again believers are immersed in the refining process from the instant of their rebirth. We can’t avoid it. In fact, if we genuinely want what God is offering us, we welcome the provocations because when we successfully pass them, we gain a bigger share of God’s Spirit and so move up higher in the Kingdom. A higher position in the Kingdom means moving closer to God. Without successfully passing our tests, we can’t move closer to God.

We should never pray to avoid being tested. The only temptation we should pray to avoid is the one Jesus explicitly told us to pray to avoid, which is the test of the tribulation. We should pray not to have to go through that, but every other test we should patiently accept, knowing it’s for our ultimate benefit.

Provocations are a test of our spiritual mettle that, when successfully passed, bring us closer to God. I don’t know about you, but I want to be as close to God as I can be. So while I’m not foolishly going to say to the devil: “Bring it on!”, I will pray for the strength and guidance to respond like Jesus did to whatever provocations God does permit.

PRAY FOR YOU

CAMPBELLTON, New Brunswick, June 17, 2023 – In praying for others (which I know you do every day, even several times a day), don’t forget to pray for yourself. We often overlook our own prayer needs in focusing on the needs of others, but God wants us to let him know what we need. He invites us to let him know. He urges us to let him know. In fact, he stops just short of making it a Commandment. Jesus says: “Ye have not because ye ask not.” We need to ask God not only to protect and strengthen those we pray for, but also to protect and strengthen us. We should never presume God’s protection; we need to pray for it, just as we need to pray to God to protect others.

Jesus says that, in praying for ourselves, we should ask God to take us Home before the “test”, which most people call the tribulation. So, in following Jesus’ advice, we pray to God to take us Home before the tribulation starts. In case he chooses not to take us Home but rather to let us go through the test, we also need to pray for his protection and strength to endure it. We should never presume God’s protection, not now nor during the tribulation; we should always pray for it.

So today, and tomorrow, and the day after that and so on, when you pray for others, take a moment to pray for yourself, too. Pray for God’s continued guidance and protection and pray for him to strengthen you to endure whatever he sees fit for you to endure, which you know ultimately will be for your benefit.

Never presume God’s protection, but always – ALWAYS – have faith that he will provide it, even before your prayers leave your lips.

ON PRIDE, SATAN, AND AI

CAMPBELLTON, New Brunswick, June 10, 2023 – Wisdom without humility is pride, and pride will send you down the wrong path, as Solomon found out maybe too late. Maybe when he asked God for wisdom, he should also have asked for humility to temper the pride that is the natural outflow of too much wisdom.

Pride was also the fall of Satan and of all those who sided with him against God. Likewise, pride was the fall of Sodom and of Gomorrah and of every kingdom that once was but is now either nothing or a pale shadow of its former self.

Pride is the final stage of what the world calls “greatness” before the greatness falls. Pride accumulates like dirt and debris in the crevices of a sole. The dust wraps around the depth of the sole and embeds itself between the sole and the skin of the shoe. There it continues to accumulate and in so doing to break down the connection between the skin and the sole. Over time, the dust-into-dirt solidifies and becomes a presence in and of itself that demands place, but place can only be given it if the sole and skin part company. This they finally do, and the dirt reigns fully from the bottom to the top of the sole and all around. But the reign of the filth-encrusted sole means that the shoe has lost its purpose and is no more a shoe.

This is what happens to kingdoms.

Daniel’s vision of the fourth and final kingdom was of a composite of various materials, some precious, some semi-precious, and some common. The mixing of the precious with the semi-precious and common weakened the kingdom whose sole purpose appears to have been to destroy, after which it itself was destroyed.

Pride has its place. It serves like mold on old bread or like bacteria on rotting meat. The host is long past its prime and has become unpalatable and in fact poisonous.

Pride should not be celebrated any more than mold or bacteria is celebrated. Pride should instead be acknowledged for what it represents in the life cycle: the end stage, the dissolution, the turning of something good into something foul and rotten. Jeremiah in a vision compared this stage to “naughty figs” that were so “naughty”, they couldn’t be eaten and had to be thrown away.

What so beguiled Solomon that he turned his back on God? At the end of his days, he began to worship the demonic entities his hundreds of wives and concubines worshiped. How could he have done this? How could he have turned his back on God?

The same question could be asked of Satan and has been asked. How could Satan have turned away from God? The answer usually given is that pride blinded him. Yet pride didn’t blind the other holy angels. They remained holy and clean and intact while Satan grew dirty and moldy and “naughty” until he finally fell apart from his skin, forevermore to be only a filth-encrusted disembodied soul who’d lost his purpose. So God gave him another purpose – to destroy. God repurposed Satan as a destroyer, and so he remains to this day and until such a time as his time is finally up.

There is nothing to celebrate in pride, only an acknowledgement by its presence and expansion how far we’ve fallen and our destruction that surely lies ahead.

Wisdom without humility brought us here, the same wisdom that grew on a tree in the Garden of Eden.

Pray for wisdom – by all means, pray for wisdom – embrace wisdom – but at the same time pray for the humility to handle the wisdom. Without humility (that is, without willing submission to God), wisdom will be your undoing as it has been the undoing of countless souls and kingdoms throughout the ages.

There’s nothing wrong with wisdom that a little humility can’t fix.

TURN BACK, O MAN!

CAMPBELLTON, New Brunswick, June 4, 2023 – When I was 16, God in his wisdom had me play Mary Magdalene in the musical Godspell. It was a high school production with all the missed cues, corniness, nerves, and occasional flashes of brilliance that characterize such productions. The lanky, long-haired cool guy who played Jesus was 19 and in a heavy metal band at the time (he’s a preacher now) and most of us in the troupe were either hard-core or closet atheists.

So there I was, playing Jesus’ closest female disciple while not even believing in God, let alone Jesus. But God, of course, knew exactly what he was doing in placing me in that role. I thought I was chosen to play Mary Magdalene because the character’s solo was more spoken than sung (I’m not a talented singer, to put it mildly) and God let me believe that at the time. Now I know otherwise.

Our conversions, when they happen, are sudden and monumental. The day I was born-again, I woke up an atheist and went to bed a Jesus freak. The actual instant of conversion occurs outside of time, in the eternal realm of God’s Kingdom, and involves the exorcising of the world’s spirits (demons) and the inrushing of God’s Holy Spirit. For me, the conversion happened while my body was lying dead on a beach in Australia and my soul was communing with God. As instantaneous and definitive as my conversion was, it was the fulfillment of a process that had started many years before and of which I was only made aware after I was reborn.

In the musical “Godspell”, Mary Magdalene sings (actually, kind of purrs) a song called “Turn Back, O Man”. I knew all the words to that song even before I auditioned for the part, because when I was 10 years old, I’d won a “Godspell” album as a prize on the radio (for being Caller Number 4! Yay!). I used to play the album on my little brown and white portable record player and then when I got older, I’d play it on my parent’s big wooden floor-model stereo, full blast. I knew all the songs in “Godspell” by heart, which you may or may not know is based on the book of Matthew, with a few of David’s psalms thrown in for good measure.

God must have had a good laugh watching me sing his Word off-key but enthusiastically as I warbled along with the album. He must have smiled the kind of smile that only God can smile, because I was a proud hard-core atheist at the time, having been removed from religion class when I was 7 after so disturbing the nun by something I’d said to her, she didn’t want to teach the class anymore with me in it. But there I was, a little nun-disturbing self-professed atheist, reciting Jesus’ teachings verbatim without realizing what I was reciting. Like I said, it must have made God smile to see me singing his Word, and then a few years later to watch me playing Jesus’ friend, Mary Magdalene. By exposing me to “Godspell”, God wasn’t so much priming me for my later conversion as he was providing me with a radically different perspective of Jesus than the mainstream church and society were offering.

And he was planting his seeds.

As farmers and gardeners well know, not every seed that’s planted germinates. And of those seeds that do germinate, not every sprout survives, and of those sprouts that do survive, not every plant makes it to fruition, and of those plants that do make it to fruition, not every fruiting plant continues to bear fruit. Farmers and gardeners also know about weeds and pests and watering and fertilizing, and about the heartache of frost and drought and blight. Some even know that some seeds take a long time to germinate – sometimes years, hidden away in the dirt and dung – and then yet more years, post-germination, to grow to strength and maturity. I was such a seed, trodden down and covered in filth and sludge, but God knew I was there and he never stopped watching over me. He never stopped moving things thisaway or thataway (though never interfering with my free will), all the time time betting I’d some day say “YES!” to him, while the devil kept on betting I’d say “No”.

From this blog, you can see who won that bet.

I took “Godspell” with me in spirit during my hitchhiking travels in my late teens and early twenties, singing God’s Word as a comfort (without realizing I was singing God’s Word) when things got really bad, which you can imagine they did with increasing frequency for an atheist who believed she was a law unto herself.

What I mean to say here is that we start our journey toward turning back to God long before we actually turn. And it may look like we’re moving farther and father away from God, when in fact we’re starting to go through the refining process. Refining involves burning, sometimes with heat and flames, sometimes with chemicals. It’s a crude and dangerous process that leaves enormous amounts of waste behind. But it’s how God makes us fit for his Kingdom by sloughing off all the worldly impurities we’ve accumulated living life our way rather than his.

But I’m here now, in God’s Kingdom. I turned back. I’ve arrived. It took a lot of behind-the-scenes shifting and digging and weeding and sloughing on God’s part, but I turned back. I finally said “YES!” to God. The song that I sang all those years ago as Mary Magdalene in my high school’s production of “Godspell”, I now know I was singing to myself. I was preaching to myself. I was begging myself.

I was warning myself.

I now sing that song to you.

____________________________________

Turn back, O man

Forswear thy foolish ways

Old now is earth

And none may count her days

Yet thou, her child

Whose head is crowned with flames

Still will not hear

Thine inner God proclaim

Turn back, O man (mmm, I like that)

Turn back, O man (Handle with care)

Turn back, O man (can you take it?)

Forswear thy foolish ways

************

Earth might be fair

And all men glad and wise

Age after age their tragic empires rise

Built while they dream

And in that dreaming weep

Would man but wake

From out his haunted sleep

Turn back, O man…

Turn back, O man…

Turn back, O man…

Forswear thy foolish ways

************

Earth shall be fair

And all her people one

Not till that hour

Shall God’s whole will be done

Now, even now

Once more from Earth to sky

Peals forth in joy

Man’s old undaunted cry

Earth shall be fair

And all her people one

************

C’mere Jesus, I got sump’n to show ya!

Turn back, O man

Forswear thy foolish ways

Old now is earth

And none may count her days

Yet thou, her child

Whose head is crowned with flames

Still will not hear

Thine inner God proclaim

Turn back, O man

Turn back, O man

Forswear thy foolish ways!

BINGEING ON THE END TIMES

CAMPBELLTON, New Brunswick, June 4, 2023 – Jesus rarely taught about end-times prophecies. He mentioned them on occasion, and three of the four gospels devote a chapter to them, but they weren’t his focus. More important to Jesus was that his followers understand the necessity of having a strong faith foundation (building on rock rather than sand) and of being born-again. Everything else would flow from that.

Contrast Jesus with today’s self-professed prophets, whose entire ministries revolve around end-times prophecies. This is a red flag of spiritual danger right there, as such prophecies tend to lead Christians away from the basics of having a strong faith foundation and being born-again. They instead stress “visions” and prepping and private revelations, so that being a Christian is no longer about loving your enemies, but about hoarding food and guns and ammo that you have no intention of sharing with your neighbours, let alone your enemies.

Focusing on end-times prophecies is spiritually unhealthy. Perpetually and breathlessly rehashing John’s book of Revelation to see if this or that world event aligns with this or that prophesied sign is little more than a Bible game based on current events if the inspiration doesn’t come from God’s Holy Spirit. Jesus tells us to “watch” for signs, not to binge watch.

Ultimately, fixating on the mark of the beast or the identity of the anti-Christ becomes fear- and ego-driven spiritual porn that has nothing to do with Jesus’ teachings or God’s Kingdom and everything to do with pride and caving to the devil’s seductions.

We need to be very, very careful when we approach the topic of end-times prophecies, especially prophecies based on John’s Revelation. We need to let God lead us by his Spirit, not allow ourselves to be led by random YouTube prophets whose sole purpose appears to be riling up their viewers for clicks, likes, and donations. Elijah, Jeremiah, and other prophets dealt with the same issues during their time on Earth. False prophets are not a new phenomenon, and neither is their focus on end-times prophecies. The only thing that’s new about this latest batch of false prophets is their high-tech method of delivering their lies.

But why are people so drawn to the topic of the end times? For some people, it’s curiosity; they simply want to know what may be coming down the pipeline. For others, there’s an element of escapism in fixating on eschatology (anything to do with the end times) that gives them the feeling they don’t have to deal with issues at hand (since those issues are going to be meaningless once the bombs start dropping, right?). These people use end-times signs as an excuse not to live in the present and deal with their problems. Then there are those who believe that Jesus is coming back soon to set up a worldly kingdom, and they’re rightly looking forward to such a time, if only they weren’t so wrong about Jesus doing that.

Jesus tells us that we should pray to God to take us away before the final cataclysms begin. Why would he tell us to pray to God to take us away if he’s coming back to set up a kingdom? Wouldn’t he instead have told us us to find a nice little hidey-hole to hunker down in and wile away the time until his return? But that’s not what he says; he says we should pray to God to take us Home before the storm begins.

I am not a specialist in eschatology and I don’t focus on it. Still, I’m relatively knowledgeable about it simply by being a follower of Jesus who reads God’s Word daily. I have a believer’s knowledge of the end times. My understanding is based not only on the book of Revelation and chapters in the gospels, but on other books in the Bible, including Daniel, Isaiah, and some of the so-called minor prophets. They all speak of a time when the world will undergo simultaneous cataclysms across every sphere (geological, economic, physical, social, spiritual, etc.) that will be so horrendous, nothing and no-one will survive. It will be a mass extinction event from which there will be no coming back. It will be the end of the world not only as we know it, but the end of the world altogether.

For a Christian, this is a not something that you should pray to happen soon. For a Christian, the focus should be on following Jesus’ example of teaching about God’s Kingdom and doing whatever is necessary to bring people to “repent and believe the Gospel”. Christians should not be praying for the worst of the worst to happen on the off chance that Jesus may be dropping by at the same time.

If you find yourself unduly attracted to end-times prophecies and those who are pushing them, especially on social media, maybe now’s a good time to remind yourself that Jesus didn’t focus on end-times prophecies and didn’t spend much of his ministry teaching about them. It was more important to him that we live our lives day by day by day as he instructed that we do, that we make godly choices, and that we unfailingly treat others as we would want to be treated, including our enemies. These teachings might not have the same thrill and attraction as speculating who the anti-Christ might be or whether we’ve entered the tribulation years, but they are critically important to our eternal soul.

That we learn to love our enemies under every circumstance and temptation is the meat and veggies of our spiritual education, whereas figuring out end-times prophecies is more like dessert. And we all know what happens to our body if our diet consists mostly of dessert.

“Let them eat cake” was never intended as nutritional advice.

ITCHING FOR A JIM JONES-STYLE REVIVAL: A WORD ON CHRISTIANS AND SUICIDE

CAMPBELLTON, New Brunswick, June 4, 2023 – Someone sent me a YouTube video yesterday featuring a pastor telling his flock it’s OK to commit suicide as long as you have faith in Jesus, because faith in Jesus is all you need to get into Heaven. It was cartoon video, and I thought at first it was a parody of Jim Jones, the guy who counselled his followers to kill themselves by drinking a Kool-Aid-like concoction laced with cyanide. But no, the video wasn’t a parody. The pastor was teaching his flock that God is fine with them killing themselves.

But here’s what God actually has to say about Christians and suicide.

First of all, Jesus tells us not to judge, which in this case would mean not to say whether someone who commits suicide will or won’t get into Heaven. A soul’s final destination is determined by God, not by man, and certainly not by doctrines of men. To say that all those who have “faith in Jesus” automatically have a ticket to Heaven is a form of judging. It’s as much judging to claim that someone will get into Heaven as to say someone won’t. Both claims are judging, and we’ve been warned not to do that.

At the same time, Jesus also taught us that, at the Judgement, we’ll be held accountable for everything we do and say during our time on Earth, and Paul tells us to work out our salvation with fear and trembling. These lines from scripture don’t in any way indicate that anyone has an automatic ticket to Heaven, no matter how strong their faith in Jesus.

In any case, how can people claim to have faith in Jesus and at the same time want to kill themselves? The two positions – faith in Jesus and suicidal intentions – cancel each other out. If we have faith in Jesus, we’ll want to be like Jesus, and Jesus was in no way suicidal.

The pastor on what I now think of as the “Jim Jones video” also trotted out Paul’s statement that we’re saved by grace, not by works. However, what the pastor didn’t mention was that the works Paul was contrasting to grace in that particular verse were the works of the law (the 600+ statutes and ordinances given to the children of Israel by Moses), not the 600+ choices we make every day with our free will. Jesus and Paul and others throughout the Bible are abundantly clear that our works (that is, everything we choose to say and everything we choose to do, including the thoughts we choose to think) are being monitored and recorded in the spiritual realm. We’ll be held accountable for those at the Judgement.

It’s also worth noting that the pastor didn’t define grace. Had he defined grace, it would have upended his argument about suicidal people getting into Heaven, which I guess is why he chose not to define it. Grace is the state of living with God’s Holy Spirit with you 24/7. It is a gift that God confers through conversion. Jesus’ sacrifice on the cross reconciled us to God not by default but only if we willfully submit to God like little children, repent, and are genuinely converted. Again, first comes the willful submission and repentance, then comes the conversion, and then comes God’s Holy Spirit into our soul.

When we’re converted, Jesus and God come to live with us through the Holy Spirit. This is the state of living in grace. But after conversion we still have free will and so still need to make godly and righteous choices for the rest of our time on Earth or we’ll push God and Jesus out of our soul. Grace can be lost, as the fallen entities well know and as Jesus warned us in the parable of the man who was “swept clean” and then later became so full of evil that his end was worse than his beginning. Anyone who claims that grace cannot be lost is dead wrong. God and Jesus cannot live in a soul where sin has command, and the potential for sin to have command in a soul persists (due to free will) as long as that soul, whether converted or not, remains on Earth.

Furthermore, and this needs to be said loud and clear – someone who contemplates committing suicide is not by definition a Christian. The definition of a Christian is someone who is born-again and so lives under God’s grace and has the companionship and guidance of God and Jesus 24/7. Entertaining (that is mulling over) the possibility of suicide is A BIG RED FLAG that the soul is not under grace. Such a soul urgently needs to submit to God, repent, and be converted. No genuine born-again follower of Jesus would under any circumstance entertain thoughts of suicide (including assisted suicide), let alone actually do it.

As I mentioned, a genuine Christian has God and Jesus with him or her 24/7. When you have the constant presence of God and Jesus with you, contemplating suicide never comes to mind, or if it does, it’s knocked back so fast, your head spins. Any problems you encounter, you take them immediately to God and Jesus and they help you work them out. That’s God’s promise to you and that’s their job. As a born-again believer for over 23 years, I can vouch for this. Before I was born-again, I constantly thought about killing myself, but since my rebirth, I have never again thought about suicide.

Most people contemplate suicide as a way out of their spiritual (emotional) pain. Spiritual pain is a sign that a soul is in sin. Souls that are in sin cannot get into Heaven, not because God is keeping them out, but because their sin, as evidenced by their spiritual pain, is keeping them out. Scripture reminds us over and over that it is sin that separates a soul from God. That is a basic spiritual fact.

Again, we’re not to judge – God is the judge – but God’s given us enough rules and examples in his Word, along with a Spirit of Truth and wisdom and understanding, that we can easily discern right from wrong. Any pastor who teaches that it’s OK for a Christian to commit suicide because “once saved, always saved” and that it’s all about “faith in Jesus” rather than our relationship with God and what we choose to think, say, and do during our time on Earth – well, such a pastor will find out the hard way, I guess, what happens to you when you teach lies. “It’s a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God.”

To sum up, Jesus tells us not to judge, which means not to claim that this or that particular soul will or won’t go to Heaven. God is the Judge. Also, there’s no such thing as a suicidal Christian. People who are contemplating committing suicide are in a state of sin. They need to get right with God and then they’ll actually become Christians and live under God’s protective and healing state of grace. Under grace, all thoughts of suicide automatically stop, including thoughts of assisted suicide. Those thoughts will not come back as long as that person remains under grace.

Jesus invited us to drink the water of life, not the dregs of death, and definitely not the Kool-Aid.

__________

For the time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine;

but after their own lusts shall they heap to themselves teachers, having itching ears;

And they shall turn away their ears from the truth, and shall be turned unto fables.

2 Timothy 4:3-4