Proving The Bible

So often, in relation to God’s existence and His Word the Bible, we get the challenge of “Prove it”!

But so often the ones asking that fail to properly understand what they’re asking. Mostly they want you to recite a sentence or two that miraculously opens their eyes to a truth that they currently reject and desperately don’t want to know.

There’s a misunderstanding about what proof actually is.

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Proving The Bible – Transcript

So, what is “Proof”?

If we want to prove anything — in science, in history, in a courtroom, or in everyday life there’s only one method that can be used:  Evidence.

Not feelings. Not opinions. Not traditions. Not what someone “thinks” or “wishes” were true.

All proof rises and falls on the evidence for or against it.

If the evidence is strong, the claim stands.  If the evidence is weak, the claim falls.

Without evidence there is no proof.

This’s true whether you’re proving who committed a crime, who wrote a letter, who won a battle, or whether a certain event really happened.

To “prove” that the Bible is the Word of God we need evidence, and the Bible stands alone because it presents verifiable, historical, testable evidence, especially in the form of perfectly fulfilled prophecy and the many infallible proofs of Jesus Christ as stated in Acts 1:3.

Acts 1:3 is the apostle Peter speaking about Jesus Christ and Who He was and how He rose from the dead, proving through irrefutable evidence that He was God. Peter says,

To whom (that’s to the apostles and others), To whom also he shewed himself alive after his passion by many infallible proofs, being seen of them forty days, and speaking of the things pertaining to the kingdom of God:  

 

The resurrection of Jesus Christ is the most powerful evidence, that Jesus Christ is Who He said He is, God in the flesh. God’s the only One Who can perform resurrection from the dead.

And, since He is God, and since His birth, death, burial and resurrection was so minutely detailed in the Bible we have today, that’s the highest  evidence by which we can prove the Bible is, in fact, God’s Word to mankind.

The Bible — unlike any other religious book on earth — does not ask us to “just believe.”

It presents evidence.  It invites, even commands, examination and it welcomes testing.

It challenges the world to check the facts.  The Bible’s not afraid of investigation, it’s built on it.

Most religions say, “Just have faith.” but the Bible says something very different.

In 1 Thessalonians 5:21 it says to “Prove all things”

Isaiah 1:18 invites to “Come now, let us reason together”.

Jesus said in John 5:39 to “Search the scriptures” in relation to evidence of who He was.

In 2 Peter 1:16 the apostle Peter states, “We have not followed cunningly devised fables”.

The Bible invites the same kind of testing you’d use in a courtroom.

It presents:

– eyewitness testimony

– written records

– historical details

– names, dates, and places

– fulfilled prophecy

– archaeological confirmation

– and above all, the resurrection of Jesus Christ

No book, religious or otherwise does this and none even tries.

What is the foundation of Christian evidence?

As we’ve already pointed out, Acts 1:3 says,

To whom (that’s the 12 apostles) also he shewed himself alive after his passion by many infallible proofs, being seen of them forty days, and speaking of the things pertaining to the kingdom of God:

 

This is one of the most important verses in the Bible.

It tells us that Christianity is not built on blind faith. It’s built on proof gained by evidence — and not just proof, but many infallible proofs.

What makes these proofs infallible? Evidence!

“Infallible” means:

– undeniable

– certain

– unbreakable

– cannot be overturned

Luke, the writer of Acts, was a medical doctor, a historian, and one of the most careful writers of the ancient world and he says Jesus gave many such proofs.

What were these proofs?

– He appeared alive to His disciples

– He appeared to over 500 people at once as 1 Corinthians 15:6 states

– He ate food with them

– They touched Him

– They talked with Him

– They saw Him ascend into heaven

– They preached His resurrection in the very city where He was killed

If the body of Jesus were still in the tomb, Christianity would have died in Jerusalem very quickly.  But the tomb was empty — and nobody, not even His enemies, could deny it.

The resurrection is the central evidence of the Christian faith, proving that what the Bible says about Jesus Christ being God in the flesh, the son of God, God with us, was true.

But it’s not the only evidence.

The strongest evidence for the Bible — outside the resurrection — is fulfilled prophecy. Fulfilled prophecy is God’s signature of proof.

Prophecy is God telling the future in advance, with details, and with perfect accuracy. And not only that but providing many past evidences of prophecy being given and fulfilled.

No other religious book contains prophecy like this.

Not the Quran.

Not the Hindu writings.

Not the Buddhist texts.

Not the Book of Mormon.

Not the writings of Confucius.

Not the sayings of philosophers.

Only the Bible.

Why?

Because prophecy requires supernatural knowledge. Knowledge outside and above natural, human knowledge.

It requires the one making the prophecy to be able to see the future as clearly as He sees the present or the past.

And this is not by some crazy human hit and miss medium or crystal or palm reading. The fulfilled prophecy of the bible can only be by the One making the prophecy existing outside our dimensions of energy, matter, time and space.

God, Who made those prophecies, is eternal, which means He’s not a being with a lot of time, it means He exists outside our time dimension altogether.

Only God knows the future.  So when God tells the future in advance — and it happens exactly as He said — that’s evidence. It’s evidence that proves not only the reality and existence of God, but the authenticity of His Word that He gave to man, the Bible.

God states this about Himself in Isaiah 46:9-10,

Remember the former things of old: for I am God, and there is none else; I am God, and there is none like me, Declaring the end from the beginning, and from ancient times the things that are not yet done, saying, My counsel shall stand, and I will do all my pleasure:

 

God says, “I will prove Myself by telling you the future before it happens.”

And He does.

He spoke prophesies about Jesus centuries before His birth.

The Old Testament contains over 300 clear prophecies about the Messiah and countless shadows and types of Him.

These were written hundreds, and in some case thousands of years before Jesus was born.

Here’s just a few:

  1. Born in Bethlehem. Prophesied in Micah 5:2 – written 700 years before Christ. Fulfilled in Matthew 2:1
  2. Born of a virgin. Isaiah 7:14 – written 700 years before Christ. Fulfilled in Matthew 1:23
  3. He would come from the tribe of Judah. Genesis 49:10 — written 1400 years before Christ and fulfilled in Luke 3:33
  4. A descendant of David Prophesied in 2 Samuel 7:12–13 — written 1000 years before Christ and fulfilled in Luke 1:32
  5. Betrayed for 30 pieces of silver. Written in Zechariah 11:12–13 — written 500 years before Christ and fulfilled in Matthew 26:15
  6. Hands and feet pierced. Psalm 22:16 — written 1000 years before Christ and fulfilled in John 20:25–27
  7. Crucified with criminals. Isaiah 53:12, 700 years before Christ and fulfilled in Luke 23:32
  8. Buried in a rich man’s tomb. Isaiah 53:9 , again 700 years before the event. Fulfilled in Matthew 27:57–60
  9. Risen from the dead. Psalm 16:10 100 years before and fulfilled in Matthew 28
  10. The exact timing of His death. Daniel 9:24–26 — written 500 years before Christ and predicts the exact year the Messiah would die. Fulfilled in the crucifixion

These’re not vague predictions.

They’re specific, detailed, historical, and verifiable.

The odds of one man fulfilling even eight of these prophecies by chance is 1 in 10^17 — a number so large it’s considered in many scientific fields as “effectively impossible”, but Jesus fulfilled over 300 prophecies and they’re just the obvious ones. There’s a shadow or type of Christ on almost every page of the bible.

This doesn’t even begin to take into account prophecy relating to Israel and it’s earthly kingdom.

So the 1 in 10^17 chance of this happening randomly is one chance out of 1 with 17 zeros after it or a 1 in 100 quadrillion chance.

To compare the chances of that, being struck by lightning in your lifetime is a 1 in 15,000 chance. Winning a major lottery jackpot is a 1 in 300 million chance. Finding a specific grain of sand on all the beaches on earth is still much more likely than 1 in 10^17.

That’s not chance. That’s evidence. Of course a person can have every possible morsal of evidence put before them and still reject that proof if they will themselves not to see it.

The resurrection is the central proof of all history with the greatest evidence in all of history.

Why?

Because if Jesus rose from the dead, then:

– He is who He said He is

– His words are true

– His claims are true

– His promises are true

– His warnings are true

– His gospel is true

– The Bible is true

If Jesus rose from the dead, everything else falls into place.

And the resurrection is supported by:

– eyewitness testimony

– written records

– hostile witnesses

– the empty tomb

– transformed disciples

– the explosion of the early church

– the conversion of Paul

– the conversion of James

– the survival of Christianity under persecution

– the inability of enemies to produce a body

This is why Acts 1:3 says Jesus showed Himself alive by many infallible proofs.

Christianity’s not built on blind faith.  It’s built on historical evidence where archaeology has confirmed the Bible again and again.

Just a few of thousands of examples are:

– The Hittites — once thought mythical — were discovered exactly where the Bible said.

– The pool of Bethesda — once mocked — was found with five porches, exactly as John described.

– The city of Jericho — long doubted — was found with walls fallen outward, exactly as Joshua said.

– King David — once called a legend — is now confirmed by multiple inscriptions.

– Pontius Pilate — once denied — is now confirmed by stone inscription.

Every time archaeology digs, the Bible’s proven right.

Not once has archaeology disproved the Bible.

Of course those of us who’ve already long ago accepted the evidence and therefore have proved the bible’s authenticity for ourselves, look at the archaeological evidence a little differently. We say the bible proves the archaeology not the other way round.

The Bible was written:

– over 1500 years

– by 40 different authors

– on three continents

– in three languages

– in different cultures

– by kings, fishermen, shepherds, prophets, soldiers, and doctors

And yet it tells one story, with one message, pointing to one Savior.

And, despite what sceptics have claimed over thousands of years, there are no contradictions, no corrections and no revisions.

This is impossible unless the Bible has one Author behind the human writers — God Himself.

Evidence is not only historical.  It’s also personal.

The Bible changes lives:

– drunkards become sober

– addicts become free

– broken homes are restored

– sinners are forgiven

– the guilty find peace

– the hopeless find purpose

– the dead in sin find life

No other book, no other message and no other religion does this.

Romans 1:16 declares that the gospel, God’s Word, is the power of God.

The Bible’s preservation is further evidence.

For thousands of years, kings, governments, empires, and atheists have tried to destroy the Bible.

They burned it, they banned it, they outlawed it, they mocked it and relentlessly attacked it.

Yet still the Bible stands, secure in what it’s always said, unchanged.

Jesus said in Matthew 24:35:

Heaven and earth shall pass away, but my words shall not pass away.

 

And they haven’t.

The Bible is the most printed, most translated, most read, most attacked, and most proven book in history.

The Bible stands on evidence and when we put all that evidence together:

– fulfilled prophecy

– historical accuracy

– archaeological confirmation

– eyewitness testimony

– the resurrection

– internal unity

– transformed lives

– supernatural preservation

We’re left with the conclusion that the Bible is true.  Jesus is Lord, God and the gospel is real.

And God Himself has proven it.

Christianity is not a leap in the dark.

It’s a step into the light — the light of evidence, the light of truth, the light of the many infallible proofs of Jesus Christ.

When we study the Bible to understand a doctrine, we have to look at the whole picture—not just one verse here or there.

If we pull a single verse out of its setting, we can easily misunderstand and misrepresent what God meant.

The Bible is one united book with one integrated message, so we need to pay attention to the verses around the verse we’re studying, and in particular, who it was written to, and why it was written. That’s how we find solid evidence for what we believe.

It also helps to look at the Bible through the different dispensations, the different periods in God’s plan where He dealt with people in specific, but different ways.

Each dispensation shows how God worked with humanity at that time in history and that changes. God Himself, His character and Who He is never changes but the way He deals with humanity has and does change.

This helps us understand why certain commands, promises, or prophecies were given, and who they were meant for.

When we recognise these differences, the Bible becomes much clearer, and we avoid mixing things together that don’t belong together. We avoid taking an instruction meant for someone other than us today. For example reading an instruction that was given to the nation of Israel in the dispensation of Moses’s law and trying to fit it into the church age that we live in today in the dispensation of grace.

When we put these two things together—studying the context and understanding the dispensations—we get a fuller, more accurate understanding of Scripture.

This approach gives strong proof, not only for our doctrines but adds to all the other evidences of the whole Bible

What Is “The Fellowship of the Mystery”? – Part 2

Although this mystery is spoken of often by Paul it’s easy to just gloss over it without really paying much attention to it.
But if we’re to know where our position in Christ is today, not in times past or times future, but today, we need to understand what Paul is clearly teaching. We need to know what it is, how it came into being and what it means for you and me today.

Adapted from various teaching material from Grace Ambassadors.

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Comparison Between the Old Covenant, The New Covenant and the Fellowship of the Mystery

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Old, New and Mystery Comparison

 

What is the Fellowship of the Mystery? Part 2 – Transcript

In this second part of our study of what this Fellowship of the Mystery is, that the Apostle Paul talks about throughout his 13 epistles, we get to learn exactly what it is, how it came into being and what it means for you and me today.
We’ll see how it’s one of the most important doctrines in the Bible for us the Body of Christ, the church, today.

In part 1 of this short series on What is the Fellowship of the Mystery, we did a brief summary of the history of the nation of Israel, because Israel is a major key in understanding this mystery that was revealed to the apostle Paul for us.

We need to see that it was through Israel’s continued disobedience to God and rejection of His Word that the nation fell, and that fall meant that now, God’s grace would be focused on the Gentiles and no longer Israel as a nation.

We start in Paul’s epistle to the Romans.

In Romans chapters 9, 10 and 11, Paul tells his audience what happened to Israel, and he describes Israel is fallen.

In Romans chapter 9:31 to 33 we read this,

What shall we say then? That Gentiles, who did not pursue righteousness, have attained to righteousness, even the righteousness of faith; but Israel, pursuing the law of righteousness, has not attained to the law of righteousness. 

Why? Because they did not seek it by faith, but as it were, by the works of the law. For they stumbled at that stumbling stone. 

As it is written: “BEHOLD, I LAY IN ZION A STUMBLING STONE AND ROCK OF OFFENSE, AND WHOEVER BELIEVES ON HIM WILL NOT BE PUT TO SHAME.” 

That stumbling stone, that rock of offense, Is Jesus Christ, Israel’s Messiah and the Saviour of the world.

This is a quotation from Isaiah chapter 8 verses 14 and 15 and we won’t read that but just for your own knowledge you could go back to Isaiah and see the quote.

Now let’s look at Romans chapter 10:3, and we read,

For they (Israel) being ignorant of God’s righteousness, and seeking to establish their own righteousness, have not submitted to the righteousness of God. 

Skip down to verse 16,

But they (Israel) have not all obeyed the gospel. For Isaiah says, “LORD, WHO HAS BELIEVED OUR REPORT?” 

Then verse 21,

But to Israel he (God) says: “ALL DAY LONG I HAVE STRETCHED OUT MY HANDS TO A DISOBEDIENT AND CONTRARY PEOPLE.” 

Israel has fallen and that’s what Paul’s describing in these chapters and there are 90 verses in Romans chapters 9, 10 and 11 which give highly detailed evidence of how and why this fallen state of Israel came about.

But God had a plan, a plan that He kept secret from before the beginning of the world and that was that Israel’s fall was the salvation of, and to, the Gentiles.

Look at Romans 11:11,

I say then, have they stumbled that they should fall? Certainly not! But through their fall, to provoke them to jealousy, salvation has come to the Gentiles. 

And in verse 25,

For I do not desire, brethren, that you should be ignorant of this mystery, lest you should be wise in your own opinion, that blindness in part has happened to Israel until the fullness of the Gentiles has come in. 

Look at Romans 11:12

Now if their (Israel’s) fall is riches for the world, and their failure riches for the Gentiles, how much more their fullness! 

The riches of the Gentiles came through Israel’s fall.

Now, Israel may be fallen at this time, however God made promises to Israel, to the nation, and we saw that in the last episode. He promised a land, a kingdom, a nation and that was to be forever, and it was to be here on Earth.

God will save national Israel!

Ok, so we’ve seen the history of Israel and we’ve seen that it’s fallen today but that God will save them in the future. So, what does that all have to do with the Fellowship of the mystery that Christ revealed to Paul?

Everything actually, as we’ll see.

Now what do we clearly see in all this?

Israel is fallen and Israel will be saved in the future. We can see that Israel fell 2000 years ago. When will it be saved?

In the coming Great Tribulation as we see in Jeremaiah 30:7,

Alas! For that day is great (the day of the Lord, the tribulation), So that none is like it; And it is the time of Jacob’s trouble, But he (who? Israel is the subject here.) But he shall be saved out of it.

Then in Zechariah 13:8 and 9,

And it shall come to pass in all the land (the land always refers to Israel),” Says the LORD, “That two-thirds in it shall be cut off and die, But one-third shall be left in it: 

I will bring the one-third through the fire, Will refine them as silver is refined, And test them as gold is tested. They will call on My name, And I will answer them. I will say, ‘This is My people’; And each one will say, ‘The LORD is my God.’ ” 

Again, we see in Revelation 12 verses 13 to 17. The woman in this passage is Israel. She is protected and nourished in the wilderness during the tribulation and God preserves her from the serpent (Satan) who seeks to harm her.

Then in Romans 11:25 to 27 we read,

For I do not desire, brethren, that you should be ignorant of this mystery, lest you should be wise in your own opinion, that blindness in part has happened to Israel until the fullness of the Gentiles has come in. 

And so, all Israel will be saved, as it is written: “THE DELIVERER WILL COME OUT OF ZION, AND HE WILL TURN AWAY UNGODLINESS FROM JACOB; 

FOR THIS IS MY COVENANT WITH THEM, WHEN I TAKE AWAY THEIR SINS.”

And Paul here is quoting the prophecy of Isaiah 59:20.

Of course, there’s many other prophecies relating to this ultimate salvation of Israel.

But that hasn’t happened yet! Israel’s not saved today. They bear no resemblance to the nation that will finally accept Jesus Christ as the Messiah and turn to God. This is yet future.

So, the question is what’s happened in the 2000 years that’ve past between Israel’s fall and today?

Well, there’s an interlude in the great timeline of prophecy. It’s as if the prophetic clock’s been stopped, and this is exactly how it is.

In this interlude to prophecy God’s done an almost inconceivably great work, and He’s revealed it to us, primarily but not exclusively, through the ministry of the apostle Paul.

God has “slotted into history” a period of time, a dispensation, an age, which we know of today as the Dispensation of Grace.

Paul calls it the Dispensation of the Grace of God in Ephesians 3 verse 2. Sometimes this age is called “The Church Age” or even sometimes, “The Age of the Gentiles”.

It’s this disruption, this interlude to God’s great prophecy timeline which has made God’s Grace freely available to all people, both individual Jew and individual Gentile today. And, unlike the other ages, the vehicle is not Israel and their covenants and laws.

The vehicle now is faith!

We’re now saved by God’s Grace, through faith, plus nothing. We believe God’s Word, the Gospel of Salvation, that Christ died for our sins according to scripture, was buried and rose again from the dead according to scripture, and based on that belief we’re saved. We have eternal life and we become members of the Body of Christ and partakers of all the riches of God, in Christ.

Paul was chosen by God in spite of being an intensely committed unbeliever in Jesus Christ and His claim as the Jewish Messiah.

He had an intense hatred for “The Way”. That was the movement that was gathering momentum in Pauls day that had, as its core belief, the death, burial and resurrection of Jesus Christ and that Jesus was the Christ, the Jewish Messiah and the Saviour of the world.

Paul was uniquely saved by God, not by his murderous works, nor by the covenant promises made to Israel, but freely by God’s grace.

We see in Titus 3:3 to 7 Paul describing his salvation,

For we ourselves were also once foolish, disobedient, deceived, serving various lusts and pleasures, living in malice and envy, hateful and hating one another. 

But when the kindness and the love of God our Savior toward man appeared, not by works of righteousness which we have done, but according to His mercy He saved us, through the washing of regeneration and renewing of the Holy Spirit, whom He poured out on us abundantly through Jesus Christ our Savior, that having been justified by His grace we should become heirs according to the hope of eternal life. 

Paul was a unique apostle. He was the chief persecutor of the twelve apostles, and he calls himself the chief of sinners. We see him before he was saved in Acts 8 and verse 1 being a willing participant in the stoning of Stephen,

Now Saul (his name was changed later to Paul) was consenting to his death (that was the stoning of Stephen).

At that time a great persecution arose against the church which was at Jerusalem; and they were all scattered throughout the regions of Judea and Samaria, except the apostles. 

Then, Paul was called by God to be an apostle of God’s grace.

Romans 1:1,

Paul, a bondservant of Jesus Christ, called to be an apostle, separated to the gospel of God…

And in Romans 15:15 and 16,

Nevertheless, brethren, I have written more boldly to you on some points, as reminding you, because of the grace given to me by God, that I might be a minister of Jesus Christ to the Gentiles, ministering the gospel of God, that the offering of the Gentiles might be acceptable, sanctified by the Holy Spirit. 

And also 1st Timothy 1:15 and 16,

This is a faithful saying and worthy of all acceptance, that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners, of whom I am chief. 

However, for this reason I obtained mercy, that in me first Jesus Christ might show all longsuffering, as a pattern to those who are going to believe on Him for everlasting life. 

The Lord Jesus Christ appeared to Paul on the road to Damascus where he was on his way to wreak havoc on the church some more. The Lord Jesus appeared many times after that to reveal what was “from the beginning of the world… hid in God”, that is, this fellowship of the mystery.

Ephesians 3:8 and 9,

To me, who am less than the least of all the saints, this grace was given, that I should preach among the Gentiles the unsearchable riches of Christ, and to make all see what is the fellowship of the mystery, which from the beginning of the ages has been hidden in God who created all things through Jesus Christ; 

Paul calls this revelation the “mystery of Christ”, the “mystery among the Gentiles”, and the “dispensation of the grace of God”.

This mystery of Christ is different from what “was spoken of by the mouth of the prophets since the world began” concerning Christ, as Acts 3 verse 21 says,

…whom heaven must receive until the times of restoration of all things, which God has spoken by the mouth of all His holy prophets since the world began.

Paul continues to explain how he came to minister this mystery in Romans 16:25,

Now to Him who is able to establish you according to my gospel and the preaching of Jesus Christ, according to the revelation of the mystery kept secret since the world began

And in Ephesians 3:1 to 3,

For this reason I, Paul, the prisoner of Christ Jesus for you Gentiles— if indeed you have heard of the dispensation of the grace of God which was given to me for you, how that by revelation He made known to me the mystery (as I have briefly written already, 

So, what is this mystery revealed to Paul?

The mystery revealed affected both the message of salvation and sanctification (which is God’s separation of a people for his service).

The mystery regarding salvation is the gospel of Christ: how any man can be justified freely by God’s grace through faith in Christ Jesus as our propitiation. Propitiation is the act of appeasing or satisfying God’s wrath or anger. It’s closely associated with atonement—the reconciliation between God and humanity through Christ’s sacrificial death on the cross.

We look at Romans 3:20 – 26,

Therefore by the deeds of the law no flesh will be justified in His sight, for by the law is the knowledge of sin. 

But now the righteousness of God apart from the law is revealed, being witnessed by the Law and the Prophets, even the righteousness of God, through faith in Jesus Christ, to all and on all who believe. For there is no difference (difference between Jew and Gentile he means) ; for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God, being justified freely by His grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus, whom God set forth as a propitiation by His blood, through faith, to demonstrate His righteousness, because in His forbearance God had passed over the sins that were previously committed, to demonstrate at the present time His righteousness, that He might be just and the justifier of the one who has faith in Jesus. 

The mystery revealed to Paul is the identity of a new creature called the church, the one Body of Christ.

Nowhere does this Body of Christ appear in prophecy, a Body with Christ as it’s head and every other joint and cell made up of all who have received the grace of God, redemption and salvation, through nothing else but faith. Simply believing what God said in His Word.

We see that in Romans 12:5,

so we, being many, are one body in Christ, and individually members of one another. 

And we also see it in Ephesians 4:4,

There is one body and one Spirit, just as you were called in one hope of your calling; 

The church, this Body of Christ in which we are all members if we’ve believed, is to practice and preach the gospel of Christ and all its blessings which are free in Christ to all men through faith.

In Romans 5 to 8, Paul lays this out in great detail.

Also in Ephesians 1:3,

Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places in Christ, 

And Ephesians 3:1 – 9,

For this reason I, Paul, the prisoner of Christ Jesus for you Gentiles— if indeed you have heard of the dispensation of the grace of God which was given to me for you, how that by revelation He made known to me the mystery (as I have briefly written already, by which, when you read, you may understand my knowledge in the mystery of Christ), which in other ages was not made known to the sons of men, as it has now been revealed by the Spirit to His holy apostles and prophets: that the Gentiles should be fellow heirs, of the same body, and partakers of His promise in Christ through the gospel, of which I became a minister according to the gift of the grace of God given to me by the effective working of His power. 

To me, who am less than the least of all the saints, this grace was given, that I should preach among the Gentiles the unsearchable riches of Christ, and to make all see what is the fellowship of the mystery, which from the beginning of the ages has been hidden in God who created all things through Jesus Christ; 

The most important thing we can learn in discerning God’s will in the Bible is to rightly identify and divide the mystery of Christ from what was spoken by the prophets concerning Christ, the nation of Israel and the Gentiles.

What God had spoken of by the mouth of His prophets since the world began is not what God kept secret since the world began.

Act 3:21,

whom (that’s Jesus Christ), whom heaven must receive until the times of restoration of all things (this is the kingdom come), which God has spoken by the mouth of all His holy prophets since the world began.

We put that verse up against Romans 16:25,

Now to Him who is able to establish you according to my gospel and the preaching of Jesus Christ, according to the revelation of the mystery kept secret since the world began.

See the difference? Spoken of by the prophets since the world began, kept secret since the world began!

Mixing mystery truth with the message prophesied to Israel has led to a great deal of confusion of doctrine.

Without understanding the mystery Christ revealed to Paul we can’t be faithful stewards of those mysteries, nor, actually, faithful ministers of Christ.

1st Corinthians 4:1 & 2,

Let a man so consider us, as servants of Christ and stewards of the mysteries of God. 

Moreover it is required in stewards that one be found faithful.

More importantly, if we don’t understand the mystery of Christ revealed to Paul, we can’t obey the Lord’s greatest commission, “to make all men see what is the fellowship of the mystery” with its unsearchable riches and we look at Ephesians 3 verses 8 to 9,

To me (that’s Paul), who am less than the least of all the saints, this grace was given, that I should preach among the Gentiles the unsearchable riches of Christ, and to make all see what is the fellowship of the mystery, which from the beginning of the ages has been hidden in God who created all things through Jesus Christ;

It’s not difficult to see that there was a mystery ‘hid in God’ ‘kept secret since the world began’ and then revealed to Paul.

We see this clearly in Romans 16:25, and Ephesians 3:3 and other places we’ve just looked at.

Yet there seems to be difficulty among many sincere Christians with identifying what this mystery is.

Some claim that this mystery is something that we can’t know. It’s about the nature of God. After all, they say, ‘God works in mysterious ways’.

Yet the scripture says that the mystery is now ‘known’ and ‘revealed’. Though it was once a secret it’s not hidden any more.

Others say that the mystery is simply Gentile salvation. But, there’s evidence of Gentile salvation in the both the Old and New testaments before the mystery was revealed to us through Paul.

One purpose of the nation Israel being established was to be a blessing, a light, and the ‘Priests of the Lord’ to the Gentiles. The blessing of the Gentiles couldn’t be a mystery or a secret if it was told about so often in the prophecies to Israel.

Another belief says the mystery is Gentiles becoming part of Israel and their covenants. This is a dangerous misunderstanding because it leads to confusion about both Israel and the church, which are very clearly separate throughout the Bible.

This view requires us to replace most of the prophecies given to Israel with prophecies supposedly referring to a Gentile church. The prophecies and commandments of Jesus himself concerning Zion, Israel, Jacob, Jerusalem, and ‘my people’ would need to be replaced with commandments to ‘the church today’.

This is pretty much impossible to do and still keep the verses in their correct context.

Unfortunately, many denominations and pastors believe at least one of these views of the mystery.

What leads to a mistaken view of the mystery is ignoring the revelation of the mystery which was first given to Paul.

Paul was the first to explain that Israel has fallen from their special status with God. Through this fall, salvation is no longer the covenant possession of Israel alone but is being given to the Gentiles.

It’s not until Paul that we read about salvation apart from the law and the covenants based on faith alone in the death, burial and resurrection of Jesus Christ.

Those who’re saved do not become Israel or remain heathen Gentiles; instead, they become part of the body of Christ, which is the church today.

Our hope today lies in our heavenly position reigning forever with Christ in heaven, but for now we’re left on earth to represent the Lord and the message of his reconciliation to God by grace through faith alone to a world that’s entirely rejected God.

It’s a good thing for us to understand the differences between the Old Covenant, The New Covenant, and the Fellowship of the Mystery which, as we’ve seen, all describe different ways in which people receive God’s blessings throughout different ages.

If we ignore the differences, or we’re not aware of them, we can claim blessings or curses belonging to someone else and miss blessings belonging to us.

So, what are the differences between the old covenant, new covenant, and the fellowship of the mystery? We’ve got a chart included below this episode list to help see these differences.

As a sidenote, we do have a covenant called the Abrahamic Covenant which is found in Genesis chapter 15 where God makes a formal agreement, a covenant, with Abraham that He would do what He’d said. Interestingly, Abraham had no part in this, he was put to sleep, showing that this was God’s responsibility to ensure it was fulfilled and didn’t rely on anything Abraham would or wouldn’t do.

We also have another covenant known as the Davidic covenant where, in 2 Samuel 7:12 God makes this promise to King David,

“When your days are fulfilled and you rest with your fathers, I will set up your seed after you, who will come from your body, and I will establish his kingdom.

But we’re concerned here with the two main covenants that we know as the Old Covenant and the New Covenant.

We’ll start with the Old Covenant.

The law was given to Israel, by God, through Moses in the exodus out of Egypt.

This law was intended to be a blessing to the world through Israel’s separation and obedience.

God declared to Israel, “You will be my people, and I will be your God.”

The covenant outlined specific terms for Israel’s relationship with God.

The law was the basis of this Old Covenant, and the terms were that if Israel was obedient to the law it would lead to blessings, prosperity, and them remaining in the land.

But disobedience would result in curses, judgment, and potential exile from the land.

It was this latter condition of the covenant that Israel would learn the hard way throughout their history. They couldn’t keep the law and they required a multitude of sacrifices to cover their sin. And, into the bargain they constantly suffered for their disobedience as we saw in part 1 of this series.

However, and this important, Israel as a channel of God’s blessing was not done away by their failure to keep the law.

God had made promises to the fathers of Israel to make Israel the nation through which the world would be blessed. Those promises of God cannot be cancelled out because they were given to the fathers before the law. Israel did not fulfill them by their own power to keep the law.

So, to summarise the Old Covenant we have:

  • Israel must perform on their own, by their own works of obedience
  • Israel is a nation separate from the Gentiles
  • The law given to obey
  • It was a Covenant to make Israel the channel of blessing to the world

Now we come to the New Covenant.

Israel was given promises from God to be the nation through which the world would be blessed. The old and new covenants were both intended to fulfill this promise. This is why both the old and new covenants are made with the house of Israel and Judah. It’s hard to see why most modern-day churches regard the New Covenant as for the church today.

We see Jeremaiah 31:31,

“Behold, the days are coming, says the LORD, when I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel and with the house of Judah— not according to the covenant that I made with their fathers in the day that I took them by the hand to lead them out of the land of Egypt, My covenant which they broke, though I was a husband to them, says the LORD. 

But this is the covenant that I will make with the house of Israel after those days, says the LORD: I will put My law in their minds, and write it on their hearts; and I will be their God, and they shall be My people.

Then we see Hebrews 8:10 & 11,

FOR THIS IS THE COVENANT THAT I WILL MAKE WITH THE HOUSE OF ISRAEL AFTER THOSE DAYS, SAYS THE LORD: I WILL PUT MY LAWS IN THEIR MIND AND WRITE THEM ON THEIR HEARTS; AND I WILL BE THEIR GOD, AND THEY SHALL BE MY PEOPLE. 

NONE OF THEM SHALL TEACH HIS NEIGHBOR, AND NONE HIS BROTHER, SAYING, ‘KNOW THE LORD,’ FOR ALL SHALL KNOW ME, FROM THE LEAST OF THEM TO THE GREATEST OF THEM.

Both the old covenant and the new covenant include the law, priests, a kingdom, and sacrifices for sin. Both were intended to provide blessing to the world through Israel.

Both are the subject of prophecy, and were not part of God’s mystery kept secret since the world began.

The new covenant was made better for Israel in that God would perform all that they couldn’t do on their own. He would be the better priest, he would give the Spirit to cause them to keep the law, and he would send Christ to establish the kingdom.

The new covenant is merely the old covenant blessing, the promises to the fathers, made possible through the provision of God.

John 1:17,
For the law was given through Moses, but grace and truth came through Jesus Christ.

Whereas the old covenant emphasized man’s performance, the new covenant was God performing for Israel what they could not do. The old covenant failed to fulfill the promises because of that inability of Israel to perform, but the new would not fail.

Hebrews 8: 7 – 8,

For if that first covenant had been faultless, then no place would have been sought for a second. Because finding fault with them, He says: “BEHOLD, THE DAYS ARE COMING, SAYS THE LORD, WHEN I WILL MAKE A NEW COVENANT WITH THE HOUSE OF ISRAEL AND WITH THE HOUSE OF JUDAH—

and then we go into the remainder that we’ve already read.

So, to summarise the New Covenant and compare it to the old we see this:

  • In the Old Covenant Israel must perform on their own, by their own works of obedience, whereas in the New Covenant God gives His grace for Israel to perform by the Spirit.
  • In The Old Covenant Israel is a nation separate from the Gentiles and it’s the same in the New Covenant.
  • In the Old Covenant the law given for Israel to obey in their own strength whereas in the New Covenant God’s law would be written on their hearts and minds as we saw in Jeremaiah 31 verse 33.
  • The Old Covenant was to make Israel the channel of blessing to the world, and in just the same way the New Covenant was to make Israel the channel of blessing to the world.

Now we want to compare The Fellowship of the Mystery.

Because the new covenant describes God’s performance on behalf of Israel, many people get confused by the difference between the new covenant and the fellowship of the mystery. People think that because they both require God’s grace they must be talking about the same thing.

But we can’t make a decision based on similarities. Both a Ford car and a Toyota have wheels, doors an engine and steering wheels, but does that make them the same? Of course not! It’s the differences that define them.

And the differences are critical for us to see here.

The new covenant is God’s blessing of grace through Israel, through their covenants, and their law written in their hearts.

The fellowship of the mystery is God’s grace given to all, Jew and Gentile freely, without the nation of Israel, without their earthly covenants, and without their law written in hearts.

Whereas under the old covenant God was the law giver, and under the new covenant God in Christ was the law keeper, under the fellowship of the mystery, God in Christ is the law remover. We see that in Romans 6:14,

For sin shall not have dominion over you, for you are not under law but under grace.

We also see it in Colossians 2:14,

…having wiped out the handwriting of requirements that was against us, which was contrary to us. And He has taken it out of the way, having nailed it to the cross. 

Whereas the old covenant was given to Israel, and the new covenant was given to believing Israel, the fellowship of the mystery is for all that believe the gospel of Christ: Jew or Gentile.

2Corinthians 5:17,

Therefore, if anyone (Jew or Gentile) is in Christ, he is a new creation; old things have passed away; behold, all things have become new. 

Ephesians 2:15,

…having abolished in His (Jesus’s) flesh the enmity, that is, the law of commandments contained in ordinances (or regulations), so as to create in Himself one new man from the two, thus making peace,

Colossians 3:11,

…where there is neither Greek nor Jew, circumcised nor uncircumcised, barbarian, Scythian, slave nor free, but Christ is all and in all. 

See, there is no place in the one body, revealed through the mystery, for a separation between Israel and Gentile.

Whereas the old and new covenants are the subject of prophecy to fulfill God’s promise of blessing through Israel, the fellowship of the mystery was not revealed in any promise from God since the world began.

Romans 16:25,

Now to Him who is able to establish you according to my gospel and the preaching of Jesus Christ, according to the revelation of the mystery kept secret since the world began 

The fellowship of the mystery is not the fulfillment of any covenant, prophecy, or promise given to Israel. The dispensation of grace was hid in God until revealed to the apostle Paul for the church today.

Ephesians 3:1 – 2,

For this reason I, Paul, the prisoner of Christ Jesus for you Gentiles— if indeed you have heard of the dispensation of the grace of God which was given to me for you…

Ephesians 3:9 – 11,

…and to make all see what is the fellowship of the mystery, which from the beginning of the ages has been hidden in God who created all things through Jesus Christ; to the intent that now the manifold wisdom of God might be made known by the church to the principalities and powers in the heavenly places, according to the eternal purpose which He accomplished in Christ Jesus our Lord, </strong

Once the differences between the old covenant, the new covenant, and the fellowship of the mystery are understood, then the riches of God’s grace according to the revelation of the mystery will be better valued.

Grace and faith were always necessary to receive blessings from God, but today, through the fellowship of the mystery, grace stands alone without Israel, the law, or covenants. This is the way God blesses the world today.

Today , in the body of Christ, in this dispensation of grace that has temporarily interrupted the great timeline of prophecy, Grace stands alone because of the differences between the old and new covenants and this fellowship of the mystery of Christ.

What Is “The Fellowship of the Mystery”? – Part 1

In this episode we look at one of the most important doctrines in the Bible for us the Body of Christ, the church, today.
The Apostle Paul talks throughout his 13 epistles about something called the Fellowship of the Mystery.
Since Paul was given the position of Apostle to the Gentiles by Jesus Christ Himself and because the 13 epistles he wrote are the instructions and the doctrine for the church today, we need to know what this Fellowship of the Mystery is.

Adapted from various teaching material from Grace Ambassadors.

“Speed Slider”

Summary of Israel’s History

Click or press image to enlarge it

Timeline of Israels History

 

What is the Fellowship of the Mystery? Part 1 – Transcript

In this episode we look at one of the most important doctrines in the Bible for us the Body of Christ, the church, today.

The Apostle Paul talks throughout his 13 epistles about something called the Fellowship of the Mystery.

Since Paul was given the position of Apostle to the Gentiles by Jesus Christ Himself and because the 13 epistles he wrote are the instructions and the doctrine for the church today, we need to know what this Fellowship of the Mystery is.

Although this mystery is spoken of often by Paul it’s easy to just gloss over it without really paying much attention to it.

But if we’re to know where our position in Christ is today, not in times past or times future, but today, we need to understand what Paul is clearly teaching. We need to know what it is, how it came into being and what it means for you and me today.

The natural place to begin to understand what Paul’s teaching is to look at the verses in the Bible where this mystery is presented to us.

We’re going to take these verses in the order that the epistles of Paul appear in our Bibles, realising that this is not the chronological order in which the epistles were written.

Romans 11:25,

For I do not desire, brethren, that you should be ignorant of this mystery, lest you should be wise in your own opinion, that blindness in part has happened to Israel until the fullness of the Gentiles has come in. 

Romans 16 verses 25 and 26,

Now to Him who is able to establish you according to my gospel and the preaching of Jesus Christ, according to the revelation of the mystery kept secret since the world began but now made manifest, and by the prophetic Scriptures made known to all nations, according to the commandment of the everlasting God, for obedience to the faith

1st Corinthians 2 verses 6 and 7,

However, we speak wisdom among those who are mature, yet not the wisdom of this age, nor of the rulers of this age, who are coming to nothing.

But we speak the wisdom of God in a mystery, the hidden wisdom which God ordained before the ages for our glory,

1st Corinthians 15:51,

Behold, I tell you a mystery: We shall not all sleep (that means die), but we shall all be changed—

Ephesians 1 verses 7 to 9,

In Him we have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of sins, according to the riches of His grace which He made to abound toward us in all wisdom and prudence, having made known to us the mystery of His will, according to His good pleasure which He purposed in Himself,

Ephesians 3 verses 1 to 5,

For this reason I, Paul, the prisoner of Christ Jesus for you Gentiles— if indeed you have heard of the dispensation of the grace of God which was given to me for you, how that by revelation He made known to me the mystery (as I have briefly written already, by which, when you read, you may understand my knowledge in the mystery of Christ), which in other ages was not made known to the sons of men, as it has now been revealed by the Spirit to His holy apostles and prophets:

Ephesians 3 verse 9,

and to make all see what is the fellowship of the mystery, which from the beginning of the ages has been hidden in God who created all things through Jesus Christ.

Ephesians 6 verses 18 and 19,

praying always with all prayer and supplication in the Spirit, being watchful to this end with all perseverance and supplication for all the saints— and for me, that utterance may be given to me, that I may open my mouth boldly to make known the mystery of the gospel,

Colossians 1 verses 25 and 26,

of which I became a minister according to the stewardship from God which was given to me for you, to fulfill the word of God, the mystery which has been hidden from ages and from generations, but now has been revealed to His saints.

Colossians 1:27,

To them God willed to make known what are the riches of the glory of this mystery among the Gentiles: which is Christ in you, the hope of glory.

Colossians 2 verses 2 and 3,

that their hearts may be encouraged, being knit together in love, and attaining to all riches of the full assurance of understanding, to the knowledge of the mystery of God, both of the Father and of Christ, in whom are hidden all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge.

Colossians 4:3,

meanwhile praying also for us, that God would open to us a door for the word, to speak the mystery of Christ, for which I am also in chains,

1st Timothy 3:9,

holding the mystery of the faith with a pure conscience.

There are other passages where Pauls refers to the mystery as well but some of these are, if could put it like this mystery within the mystery, so we’ve not included them.

Mystery! How come a mystery? How come God kept it a secret from the foundation of the world? Why was it revealed at that time to the apostle Paul?

What is it? Is it important that we, the church, the Body of Christ know this today?

These are questions we hope to satisfactorily answer.

We’ll make a bold claim here that without understanding this mystery, now revealed, our attempts to understand the Bible, particularly that which relates to us today, and the coming events of the end times, will be confusing and leave us with more questions than answers.

Let’s start by understanding that although this mystery was kept secret by God from the foundation of the world, the vast majority of God’s revealed Word, The Bible, was not kept secret.

In fact, one of the many ways, we can be sure that our Bible is the Word of God, that it was inspired by Him, is through hundreds of prophecies that were given by God long before the events actually happened, in some cases, centuries and even thousands of years before they were perfectly fulfilled.

This shows that that author was from outside of our time dimension.

Prophecy is the major portion of the Bible, and it was God revealing His plan and His will to mankind over time. He spoke through many prophets, inspired by the Holy Spirit, and these prophets wrote all these prophecies down.

So, in these prophecies God has told man about His plan and His will.

  • He would send a Saviour Who would willingly pay for the price for the sin of Adam and, by His death and His spilled blood, would take away the sins of the world.
  • He would create a special nation, separated from the rest of the world for His own purposes. That nation is Israel.
  • He told us how that nation, Israel, would continually reject Him and go their own way and how they would pay a very heavy price when they did, but how when they did do God’s will, He would bless and prosper them. As a result of their rejection, they would be enslaved and be taken captive by other nations, but that God would deliver them.
  • He told us how that nation would be a nation of priests to where the other nations of the world would come to learn of God and His ways.
  • He told how He would send a Messiah, The Saviour, to Israel through Whom they could be saved, and He told us that the Saviour would die and how the nation would reject Him and the salvation He bought.
  • He told us about a great and glorious Kingdom that would come to earth and be the inheritance of His separated nation and how this Messiah, this King would rule this kingdom for 1000 years.
  • He told us about a terrible period of time that would come upon the earth before the setting up of this glorious kingdom, where God would pour out His wrath on all the unrighteous and all the unbelievers on earth. This would happen because no unrighteous or unbelieving person could ever enter this earthly kingdom.
  • He told us how through this terrible period, a remnant of His beloved nation of Israel would finally turn from their rejection of the Messiah and accept Him.
  • He told us how the earth would be restored after that awful period of tribulation.
  • He told us about the end of sin on earth permanently.
  • He told us about a final judgement where every person who ever lived will be judged and how every person who had not trusted in the way He Had made whereby man could become righteous, at an awesome cost to Himself, would be judged to eternal damnation.
  • He told us that the current heaven and earth would pass away, and a new heaven and a new earth would replace them and how a magnificent city, called the New Jerusalem, would come down from heaven and from there God would dwell and His King, the Messiah would rule for ever and sin, death tears and sorrow would never be again.

All of this and much, much more was revealed to mankind through the prophets.

But what was never revealed to mankind, what was kept secret by God, since before the foundation of the world, told to no man, was this mystery that was finally revealed to mankind by Jesus Christ Himself to the apostle Paul.

At the same time this mystery was revealed to Paul he was given a ministry to preach this mystery to mankind both Jew and Gentile. But his main ministry was preaching it to the Gentiles.

So, the difference with this mystery revealed to Paul, is that completely opposite to prophecy, which was God revealing His plans and His will to mankind, this mystery was not revealed. It was kept secret by God until Christ revealed it to Paul.

There’s one more foundation that we’re going to need to firmly stand on as we look at these things.

That foundation is the knowledge that God deals with different people, in different ways, in different ages.

Hebrews 1 verses 1 and 2 tell us,

God, who at various times and in various ways spoke in time past to the fathers by the prophets, has in these last days spoken to us by His Son, whom He has appointed heir of all things, through whom also He made the worlds.

See God at one time, in the past, spoke through the prophets. However, in the last days He’s spoken by His son. See different methods of speaking to people at different times.

Common sense tells us that although God instructed Noah to build an ark, He’s not instructing you and I to do that today.

Likewise, God, in a test of faith, instructed Abraham to offer his beloved only son as a sacrifice. Are we to do that as a test of faith today?

All through the Gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John we see Jesus Christ coming to the nation of Israel, proving He was the long-promised Messiah by fulfilling prophecy to the letter and yet we see enormous contrasts in what Jesus taught to Israel and how we, the modern-day church, live today.

So, it’s of the highest importance that we recognise that there are differences in the way God deals with mankind through the ages, and we need to know what God’s doing today so that we can understand what he requires of us today.

It’s also important to realise that God Himself never changes, scripture tells us that, but the way he deals with mankind does.

Although the Bible shows us clearly how God dealt with man down through the ages, we cannot try and select things that God did in the past, or will do in the future, and relate them to us today.  It’s vital for us to know what God’s doing today! If we don’t, if we try and mix these ways that God’s dealt with mankind so that we apply bits of what God’s done in the past, with bits He’s going to do in the future and then try and understand what’s happening today, we’re opening ourselves up for a heap of confusion, a mish mash of bits and pieces that don’t fit.

In order to guard against this confusion, we must understand the whole story, the whole plan of God, in order to understand our place today in that plan.

Scripture bears this out in 2nd Timothy 3:16 and 17,

All Scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness, that the man of God may be complete, thoroughly equipped for every good work.

And we’re instructed to understand scripture. In 2nd Timothy 2:15 we read,

Be diligent (or study) to present yourself approved to God, a worker who does not need to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth.

Notice the emphasis on “rightly dividing” the Word of truth?

See we’re to understand these division between how God worked with man in the past, how He’s dealing with man today and how He will deal with man in the future, and those big differences are vital to you and me if we’re to know God and His purpose for us.

One word of warning!

As these differences become more and more familiar we can easily find ourselves questioning traditional church teachings and doctrines, many of which are passed down and distributed as truth without any real questions being asked.

Often they’re the product of misunderstandings about context and the reliance on single, or limited, passages of scripture that tend to become regarded as doctrine.

When we ask ourselves simple questions like who is speaking, who are they speaking to, and what is the age or dispensation they’re living in and referring to, we can see these passages in an entirely different light.

One other thing we must keep in mind is that the vast majority of the Bible is written to and about Israel, God’s separated nation, not us Gentiles.

We mustn’t try and put ourselves, as the church today, in place of Israel.

That’s not only wrong but dangerous as it’ll completely hide the truth of God’s plan and our part in it.

Israel is the key focus of the Bible even though, as we’ll see, Israel is in a fallen state in this day we’re living in now.

So, to understand this “Fellowship of the Mystery” we need to go back in time to past ages, past dispensations and understand how and why this nation of Israel has such a huge influence on what’s happening to us today.

Let’s look at some terms that relate to these past ages so when they appear we know what they mean.

These terms are parts of God’s program through the ages.

We have the promises, the Covenants and the law.

Understanding the promises, the covenants, and the law, all given to the nation Israel, is another key to understanding this mystery.

The Promises.

When we talk about the promises we’re talking about both unconditional and conditional promises that God made the nation of Israel.

We see that in Genesis chapter 12 and God’s unconditional promises to Abram who would later be Abraham. Then in Exodus chapter 19 we see the conditional promises made to the nation of Israel which had grown from Abraham.

The Law

This is the mosaic law, the law given to Israel, by God Himself, through Moses. The 10 commandments were just a sort of table of contents because there’re 613 laws.

We see the start of these laws in Exodus 20 and the details throughout Deuteronomy and many come from the Hebrew Bible, the Tanakh.

The Covenants.

The covenants are agreements that God made with the nation of Israel. There were two. The Old covenant, and the New Covenant.

The Old Covenant, which Israel did not, and could not keep their part of, relied on them keeping the law that God had given to them through Moses.

The New Covenant that God made with Israel was that, at the correct time, He would put His laws into their hearts and into their minds so they would do what God required of them as a natural instinct.

There’d be no need for them to be taught the things of God because they’d all know Him and His ways in their hearts and minds.

We see the old covenant in Exodus 20 and the New Covenant prophesied by Jeremaiah in Jeremaiah 31:31 and confirmed in Hebrews 8:10.

Then, last but certainly not least, we need to understand a person. The promises, the law and the covenants along with everything else in the Bible revolves around a hub and that hub is a person.

We’re talking, of course about The Lord, Jesus Christ.

He’s a part, a member of the Godhead, the triune God, God the Father, God the Son and God the Holy Spirit.

He was the Word of God Who was in the beginning with God, and was God.

All things were made through Him, and without Him nothing was made that was made.

And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us, and we beheld His glory, the glory as of the only begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth.

The Word became flesh in the town of Bethlehem some 2000 years ago, born of flesh through the body of a virgin, human woman. Born apart from the seed of Adam which carried the sin nature from person to person, every person who’d ever been born, except this One. The seed of this person was not from man but from God, making Him fully God and fully man both at the same time.

He was given the name Jesus, according to prophecy, which means saviour.

Jesus came to His own, to the nation of Israel, as the long-prophesied Messiah who would save Israel, though Israel did not receive Him. They rejected Him and crucified Him, all according to prophecy.

He came to Israel in the flesh to fulfill prophecy. We see this in Matthew 5 verse 17 and 18, Jesus Himself speaking,

Do not think that I came to destroy the Law or the Prophets. I did not come to destroy but to fulfill.

For assuredly, I say to you, till heaven and earth pass away, one jot or one tittle will by no means pass from the law till all is fulfilled.

Then we see in Matthew 15:24 Jesus speaking to the Syrophoenician woman,

But He answered and said, “I was not sent except to the lost sheep of the house of Israel.”

The prophecies and the prophetic dates that were given through prophets like Daniel made certain that there was no puzzle about this coming Messiah or the time He was due.

The nation should have known and there was no excuse for them.

But we’re jumping ahead of the story.

What exactly happened to Israel? Let’s look at a brief history.

Below this broadcast list is a timeline showing this history to make it easy to follow.

From the creation we see mankind continually rejecting God, and outliving the sin which is in every person’s heart, inherited from the fallen first humans. We see that sin and wickedness get so bad that God wipes out the population of the earth except for eight people, Noah and his family. As Noah and His family repopulate the earth we see that population continue in evil and disobedience to God and His plan through the account of the Tower of Babel at which point God disperses the population by separating their language, forcing them to spread over the earth.

But then we get to a man named Abram, whose name would be later changed by God to Abraham, and wife Sarai whose name would also be changed to Sarah.

God chooses this man to make a promise to and we see that in Genesis 12 verses 1 to 3,

Now the LORD had said to Abram: “Get out of your country, From your family And from your father’s house To a land that I will show you. 

I will make you a great nation; I will bless you And make your name great; And you shall be a blessing. 

I will bless those who bless you, And I will curse him who curses you; And in you all the families of the earth shall be blessed.”

God has promised that a great nation would emerge from this man and that this nation would be a blessing to all the earth. That promise was passed on to Abraham’s son Isaac and then to Isaac’s son Jacob.

Jacob’s name was changed to Israel, and he had the 12 sons that would become the 12 tribes of the nation of Israel.

One of those 12 sons, Joseph, was despised by the other brothers who were jealous of him, and the brothers sold him into slavery and told their father Jacob, Israel, that he’d been killed by a wild animal.

However, Joseph, through one of the most amazing life journeys ever, becomes a ruler in Egypt where he’d become a slave.

In a background of high drama, which can be found in Genesis chapters 37 to 50, there came a great worldwide famine which ended up with this fledging tribe of Israel, 70 people at this stage, coming to Egypt for food and through Joseph, who bought them to live in Egypt, they survived as a nation.

In Genesis chapter 15 God tells Abraham that this would all happen.

Let’s look at Genesis chapter 15 verse 13 and 14,

Then He said to Abram: “Know certainly that your descendants will be strangers in a land that is not theirs, and will serve them, and they will afflict them four hundred years. 

And also the nation whom they serve I will judge; afterward they shall come out with great possessions.

That happens. The nation of Israel goes into Egypt and as they’re in Egypt they increase greatly and the Egyptians fear that they may grow to be more powerful than them, so they put them into harsh slavery.

God hears their cries for deliverance from this slavery and raises up a person who would lead them out of captivity, Moses.

In Exodus 12 verses 35 and 36,

Now the children of Israel had done according to the word of Moses, and they had asked from the Egyptians articles of silver, articles of gold, and clothing. 

And the LORD had given the people favour in the sight of the Egyptians, so that they granted them what they requested. Thus, they plundered the Egyptians. 

It was God’s way of simply collecting back wages for their years of slave labour in Egypt. The Egyptians owed the Israelites so much in back wages that the children of Israel plundered them and left with much of Egypt’s wealth.

Then we go down to Exodus 12:41,

And it came to pass at the end of the four hundred and thirty years—on that very same day—it came to pass that all the armies of the LORD went out from the land of Egypt. 

They go from Egypt into the Wilderness where they got God’s law. The fathers weren’t perfect people, and we can read a lot about Abraham, Isaac and Jacob’s failures in life, but the nation also learned all sorts of incorrect customs while in Egypt. They served other gods and as they came out they had to get rid of those idols and things.

So, God gave them a law.

And what did they do? Moses goes up to Mount Sinai to receive the law and the very first thing the nation does is build a golden calf, an obscene idol.

It’s the same as the story of the Earth. From the beginning sin entered by one man Adam, ruining the thing that God had created.

Now, God has created this special nation, and their fall begins right away. They start a history of tripping and falling that continues to this day.

Now out of Egypt, it’s God’s intention for them to go in and possess the land that He’d given them through His promise to Abraham.

When they get there, probably after a few weeks, they’re too afraid to go in. They’re afraid of the people who’re in the land at the time.

What they’re really saying is, “We can’t trust God to give us our land, we don’t believe His promise.”

So, God punishes them and says, “Well you’re going to wander in the wilderness until all of this current generation are dead.”

After forty years wandering in that wilderness, they finally get into their promised land, led by the only two people of that unbelieving generation who did believe, Joshua and Caleb.

As usual, they mess up very quickly. God tells them to get rid of the native peoples and they don’t, and so those people remain and cause them problems for the rest of their history.

Then, as soon as God’s man, Joshua dies the nation of Israel disobeys God.

They followed God’s statutes while Joshua was alive and as soon as he died they chucked out those statutes.

In the law that they were given God clearly told them what He would do when they disobeyed

and what they He would do when they obeyed that law.

However, its vital to point out what Paul makes clear in Galatians chapter 3 verse 16 to 18 and we read,

Now to Abraham and his Seed were the promises made. He does not say, “And to seeds,” as of many, but as of one, “AND TO YOUR SEED,” who is Christ. 

And this I say that the law, which was four hundred and thirty years later, cannot annul the covenant that was confirmed before by God in Christ, that it should make the promise of no effect. 

For if the inheritance is of the law, it is no longer of promise; but God gave it to Abraham by promise. 

What Paul’s saying is that the requirement for Israel to be obedient came with the law. However, the promise to Abraham was made 430 years before the law was even given. This means that the promise of the land made to Abraham was not annulled or cancelled out by the nation’s disobedience to the law.

Let’s move to Judges now and look at Judges chapter 2 verse 14 and 15,

And the anger of the LORD was hot against Israel. So, He delivered them into the hands of plunderers who despoiled them; and He sold them into the hands of their enemies all around, so that they could no longer stand before their enemies. 

Wherever they went out, the hand of the LORD was against them for calamity, as the LORD had said, and as the LORD had sworn to them. And they were greatly distressed. 

The Lord raised up these judges which delivered them out of the hand of those that spoiled them. Let’s keep reading in verses 17 to 19,

Yet they would not listen to their judges, but they played the harlot with other gods, and bowed down to them. They turned quickly from the way in which their fathers walked, in obeying the commandments of the LORD; they did not do so. 

And when the LORD raised up judges for them, the LORD was with the judge and delivered them out of the hand of their enemies all the days of the judge; for the LORD was moved to pity by their groaning because of those who oppressed them and harassed them. 

And it came to pass, when the judge was dead, that they reverted and behaved more corruptly than their fathers, by following other gods, to serve them and bow down to them. They did not cease from their own doings nor from their stubborn way.

This is the continuing story of Israel. They didn’t just fall at the end; they were tripping up all along the path of their history.

Israel gets to a point that God said in the law that they would, they look around at the other nations and decide that what they need a king, a man to lead them.

That was wrong because God was their King, and they should have been looking to God for their leadership. However, God then began appointing them Kings and it’s in this time period of the Kings where they get punished some more because their Kings aren’t good.

They end up messing up yet again and God, according to the law, punishes them.

Now let’s look at 2 Samuel chapter 7 and a very important promise that God makes to King David, a man of whom God said was quote, “A man after my own heart”,

“When your days are fulfilled and you rest with your fathers, I will set up your seed after you, who will come from your body, and I will establish his kingdom. 

He shall build a house for My name, and I will establish the throne of his kingdom forever. 

Here’s a prophecy talking about the Kingdom of Israel being forever.

God will eventually raise the Kingdom of Israel regardless of how they mess up and fall, and, of course, they did mess up.

David had issues with BethSheba, and his son Solomon had issues with his 700 wives and 300 concubines.

We just saw David getting promised the throne in the Kingdom forever, but still, it didn’t take long before the problems of the nation continued and compounded.

In 1 Kings 11 starting verse 9 to 13 we see,

So, the LORD became angry with Solomon, because his heart had turned from the LORD God of Israel, who had appeared to him twice, and had commanded him concerning this thing, that he should not go after other gods; but he did not keep what the LORD had commanded. 

Therefore, the LORD said to Solomon, “Because you have done this, and have not kept My covenant and My statutes, which I have commanded you, I will surely tear the kingdom away from you and give it to your servant. 

Nevertheless, I will not do it in your days, for the sake of your father David; I will tear it out of the hand of your son. 

However, I will not tear away the whole kingdom; I will give one tribe to your son for the sake of my servant David, and for the sake of Jerusalem which I have chosen.”

After King Solomon’s death his two son’s Jeroboam and Rehoboam (who was Solomon’s rightful successor) cause a civil war in Israel resulting in the nation being split in two.

Israel split into the 10 kingdoms referred to as Ephraim or the house of Israel in the north of the land and only the tribes of Judah and Benjamin remained loyal to Rehoboam in the new kingdom of Judah in the south.

We read about it earlier when God was telling Solomon what was going to happen for his disobedience.

Jeroboam the first king to the 10 tribes, didn’t want those tribes returning to Jerusalem so he set up his own Temple and he set up his own idols, calves made of silver and gold, just like they did in the wilderness.

After this split in the time of the Kings, Hosea prophesied. This is when there’s still a nation, so Israel’s not fallen at this time but they’re making mistakes.

In the future, when Israel goes again into captivity, other nations came in and lived in that area and the Samaritans, who we hear a lot about in the Bible are a mixture of those peoples.

This was in the northern part of the promised land that God had given the nation, and the Samaritans originated there.

In 2nd Kings chapter 17 verse 24 we read,

Then the king of Assyria brought people from Babylon, Cuthah, Ava, Hamath, and from Sepharvaim, and placed them in the cities of Samaria instead of the children of Israel; and they took possession of Samaria and dwelt in its cities. 

Then in 22nd Kings 17:29,

However, every nation continued to make gods of its own, and put them in the shrines on the high places which the Samaritans had made, every nation in the cities where they dwelt. 

The idolatry and spiritual adultery were almost universal.

As the nation of Israel continued to disobey God He did what he said in the law. The punishment for that disobedience was that they were taken out of the land.

This is the period of captivity that Hosea is prophesying about. He’s says you lot are going to get punished and the kingdom is going to end, and you’ll be carried away to Egypt and to Assyria and you won’t live here anymore in your promised land.

Well, after this split occurs, they keep messing up, and eventually they fall into captivity.

The prophet Jeremiah prophesied that after the 70th year of their captivity, Israel would return back to the land.

This happens during the rule of Cyrus who, despite not being a follower of the God of the Bible, played a pivotal role in God’s plan for His people.

He decrees that they should go back to their land.

This is the tribes of Judah and Benjamin, or the nation of Judah and it’s to Jerusalem to where they’re returning.

The prophet Daniel reads the book of the prophet Jeremiah and in Daniel chapter 9 verse 2 we read,

in the first year of his reign I, Daniel, understood by the books the number of the years specified by the word of the LORD through Jeremiah the prophet, that He would accomplish seventy years in the desolations of Jerusalem. 

Go to Jeremiah chapter 29 verse 10 and 11,

For thus says the LORD: After seventy years are completed at Babylon, I will visit you and perform My good word toward you, and cause you to return to this place. 

For I know the thoughts that I think toward you, says the LORD, thoughts of peace and not of evil, to give you a future and a hope.

We clearly see in Jeremiah that Daniel is speaking of the 70 years of punishment that God gave the nation of Judah for their sins and disobedience of the Covenant.

It talks about their return to that land.

Take a look at Jeremiah 25 verse 11 and 12,

And this whole land shall be a desolation and an astonishment, and these nations shall serve the king of Babylon seventy years.

‘Then it will come to pass, when seventy years are completed, that I will punish the king of Babylon and that nation, the land of the Chaldeans, for their iniquity,’ says the LORD; ‘and I will make it a perpetual desolation.

Then, Cyrus, king of Persia, (the Persians had by now conquered Babylon), issues a decree and sends those from the nation back to rebuild the city of Jerusalem in the land of Judah and to rebuild the temple.

That’s described in the books of Ezra and Nehemiah, which detail the actual people. It even gives a list their names and how many there were that returned to Judah and Jerusalem and how they rebuilt the wall and then rebuilt the temple.

After that there’s nothing that God says to this nation any longer.

He’s punished them with captivity away from their promised land and then some of them returned to Jerusalem and Judah.

Then God is silent.

Then one day a prophet named John the Baptist came along.

His appearance is prophesied about in the book of Malachi, the last prophetic book in the so-called Old Testament.

Look at Malachi 3 verse 1,

“Behold, I send My messenger, And he will prepare the way before Me. And the Lord, whom you seek, Will suddenly come to His temple, Even the Messenger of the covenant, In whom you delight. Behold, He is coming,” Says the LORD of hosts. 

We also see this in Isaiah 40 verse 3,

The voice of one crying in the wilderness: “Prepare the way of the LORD; Make straight in the desert A highway for our God. 

In Mark chapter 1 verse 2 we read,

As it is written in the Prophets: “BEHOLD, I SEND MY MESSENGER BEFORE YOUR FACE, WHO WILL PREPARE YOUR WAY BEFORE YOU.” 

“THE VOICE OF ONE CRYING IN THE WILDERNESS: ‘PREPARE THE WAY OF THE LORD; MAKE HIS PATHS STRAIGHT.'” 

It’s here that God begins to speak to the nation of Israel again.

God spoke to the fathers previously and gave the nation prophets and here’s John, another prophet, and then God Himself comes to the nation in the form of humanity.

What did Israel do in that time?

They did what they’d done since the beginning of their history. They disobeyed God. They didn’t do what He said.

Jesus, who was God Himself came and they rejected him. They nailed him to a cross and crucified him. They rejected the kingdom that he preached was coming. This was their promised kingdom which now The Lord Himself was there to bring to fulfillment.

They rejected Christ Himself and they rejected the Apostles Christ sent to herald the coming kingdom.

Let’s look at that in Matthew 21 verses 42 and 43 where Jesus is telling his disciples what’s going to happen,

Jesus said to them, “Have you never read in the Scriptures: ‘THE STONE WHICH THE BUILDERS REJECTED HAS BECOME THE CHIEF CORNERSTONE. THIS WAS THE LORD’S DOING, AND IT IS MARVELOUS IN OUR EYES’?

“Therefore, I say to you, the kingdom of God will be taken from you and given to a nation bearing the fruits of it. 

And whoever falls on this stone will be broken; but on whomever it falls, it will grind him to powder.”  

That stone is Jesus. Jesus is also referred to by Paul as The Stumbling Stone or what Israel tripped over and we read that in Romans chapters 9, 10, and 11 where Israel failed to receive that Kingdom because of their disobedience.

Their disobedience continued even after God punished them and sent them out of their land.

They continue to reject God.

Look at Matthew chapter 16 verse 15 to 18 where Jesus talks about how he would be rejected. He’d already asked the disciples, “Who do men say I am.” and they answered telling Him that some say John the Baptist, some Elijah, and others Jeremiah or one of the prophets.,

He (Jesus) said to them (the disciples), “But who do you say that I am?” 

Simon Peter answered and said, “You are the Christ, the Son of the living God.” 

Jesus answered and said to him, “Blessed are you, Simon Bar-Jonah, for flesh and blood has not revealed this to you, but My Father who is in heaven. 

And I also say to you that you are Peter, and on this rock I will build My church, and the gates of Hades shall not prevail against it. 

Here we see a play on words by Jesus. Peter means rock and “on this rock” Jesus says. On Peter did He mean?

No! Don’t fall into the Catholic trap. This is not the rock of Peter! The rock is who? Jesus!

The nation of Israel rejected that Cornerstone which became the chief Stone.

Jesus is talking about Himself, Who He is, and it’s upon believing Who He is that He’s going to build his church and the Gates of Hell will not Prevail against it.

Of course, true to form, the nation of Israel rejected that stone. They stumbled over that stone which was Jesus.

They didn’t have faith in God and all God had promised but instead they sought to establish their own righteousness through the works of the law.

This is, in fact, has the opposite result, proving them unrighteous through their lack of faith in Who Jesus was, The Messiah.

Right back into the dawn of mankind faith in what God had said was accounted to man as righteousness as we see in Romans 4 verse 3,

For what does the Scripture say? “ABRAHAM BELIEVED GOD, AND IT WAS ACCOUNTED TO HIM FOR RIGHTEOUSNESS.”

So, the nation rejects Jesus and crucifies Him, and His Apostles preach at Pentecost that thank God He was resurrected. He rose again from the dead and lives.

There’s still hope for our kingdom they say, just repent, or turn from your rejection of God.

The apostles continue to preach that message until we get to the stoning of Stephen in Acts chapter 7.

It’s at this time that the nation falls for the final time. They’ve rejected the prophets which the Father sent, they rejected the Son and now they’re rejecting the Holy Spirit, who the apostles at Pentecost were preaching under the influence of. Jesus Himself said there’s no forgiveness for that rejection or blasphemy of the Holy Spirit.

In God’s great prophetic timeline, what should have happened was that Israel would receive their Messiah with overwhelming joy and then, after a short but horrific time of tribulation, where God would pour out His wrath on all unbelievers and all those that had rejected the Messiah, the promised kingdom would be set up on earth and Christ would rule over that kingdom from Jerusalem and from King David’s throne, again in full accordance with prophecy.

In the next episode, part 2 of What is the Fellowship of the Mystery, we’ll see what did happen and we’ll see why this brief summary of the rise and fall of Israel was key to our understanding of that Mystery.

 

How Do I Pray – Part 2

We’re continuing our study looking at prayer and trying to understand just what it is and how we’re supposed to approach it under the dispensation of grace in we live in today and what should we expect in response to prayer.
We’re trying toclear up some of the confusion about prayer by knowing God’s will for the age we currently live in and learning to pray according to that will.

“Speed Slider”

How Do I Pray – Part 2 Transcript

We’re in a series about prayer and we’re just trying to deal with some Elementary lessons about prayer under grace.
Last episode was simply the idea that it’s normal not to know how to pray. Romans 8:26 says,
…For we do not know what we should pray for as we ought…

There’s reasons for that and we’re trying to uncover them in our study here.
It’s very natural for people to pray to God for things, but it’s not natural to understand the things of God and to know what to pray for as we ought. Those things have to be learned.
We learned last time that a good prayer might be, “Lord teach me to pray.” Teach me to pray so I can pray knowing what you’re doing.
It’s natural for people to pray prayers saturated with requests, a laundry list of things to ask God for relating to the life they’re trying to live, but there’s gaps and holes and questions and uncertainties.
Last episode we tried to change the perspective a bit to the perspective of knowing all that God’s already done for us. That change in our prayer perspective should move us from constantly praying to get to praying to give as Paul tells us in 1st Thessalonians 5:18,
In everything give thanks: for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus concerning you.
That’s a result of knowing what God’s done. If we don’t know what God’s given us, what He’s done for us, it’s hard to say thank you.
Not everyone in the Bible was able to pray prayers of thanksgiving. Many didn’t receive the same things God’s given us which puts us in a unique position in this dispensation to pray certain prayers of thanksgiving.

It’s normal not to know how to pray according to God’s Will and how His will affects our prayers in this dispensation.
It’s normal not to know how to pray and we’ve covered that before.
It’s normal to make requests in prayer. Paul even instructs us to in Philippians 4:6,
Be careful for nothing; but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known unto God.

It’s also normal to think that prayer is something that should work for us.
We say prayer is a tool God’s given us to submit our requests and suggestions and things because I need help and it’s all about my needing help.

But, what if it wasn’t entirely about that?
Now we wouldn’t know this unless God has revealed things in the scripture about what He’s doing and what His will actually is.

This is what we’ll explore today.
Prayer does not come naturally. We’re born with a spirit, we’re born with a conscience, we’re born with the knowledge that there is a Creator, and so praying to that creator for things is natural.
But prayer is not about making our voice heard before God even though some people think of prayer that way. They even talk about the number of people who join in prayer having a higher chance of getting that prayer heard by God. Almost like making a petition to the government or something, but that’s not how prayer functions, or how God wants it to work, especially in this dispensation of grace that we live in today.
If there’s just one person praying, God hears their prayer just fine.
It’s much less about how many people want a thing or what it is that we want and more about what God wants.
However, if we say prayers about God’s will and not ours then people tend to turn off. It’s not what they want to hear. They say well then what’s the point of me praying?
Well, now our heart is exposed for what it really is which is us wanting things according to our will.

God will hear our prayers, especially in this dispensation where we have access to God through Christ and everything we pray He hears. And that’s different from how it was before.
Prayer has the purpose of aligning our will with God’s will, that’s what prayer’s purposes is and when we go into prayer with that thinking then we’ll understand it instead of thinking that prayer is trying to get God to align with our will.
That’s how most people naturally pray and that’s normal for people to pray that way until we learn differently.

So, rather than thinking that I’m going to pray to tell God what’s up with me so that he can get on board with what I’m doing and help me out, we begin to realise it’s the opposite.
We pray so that the wills that we’re constantly using to do the things we do in life can be aligned in those moments of prayer with what God’s doing. That’s what prayer’s supposed to do.

When we do that, what tends to happen is our own will becomes very diminished. the things that we thought were problems don’t seem as big as before, because now we know what God’s will is.
So, having that perspective about prayer being about God’s will is important. We’ve already learned that God instructs us to pray in this dispensation, so we pray by the will of God, and we pray according to the will of God, with knowledge of that will, and then we pray for the will of God to be done.
We pray as God’s instruct us to pray and we pray with the knowledge of what He’s doing according to His will.
What do we pray for as we ought? Well, that requires us to learn some things and the thing we need to learn is exactly what the will of God is, so we know what to pray for. We’re going to pray for His will to be done.

People talk about prayer and how prayer it didn’t work for them and usually it’s because they want God to do something that they want, and it doesn’t matter whether it’s God’s will or not.
But that’s not what prayer is!
Prayer is us aligning with God’s will. Prayer will work for the will of God, but we have to know what the will of God is. If we don’t know the will of God we’re going to be stuck praying prayers that’re trying to get God to know our will and
it just doesn’t seem like He’s hearing us. He is but prayer doesn’t have that function. Prayer is trying to align us with His will and if we don’t know His will what are we being aligned with? It simply doesn’t work that way.

Let’s look at some men from the Bible who prayed in this way, prayed God’s will in their prayers. There’s a pattern in these scriptures that we should notice.
First, we should notice how they’re praying according to the will of God and for the will of God and secondly how what they’re praying for and how they’re praying according to the will of God changes in different dispensations.

Before the cross of Christ and before Grace, Grace being something that God’s dispensing right now, God operated through the law. He operated through Covenants and He operated through Israel, and this is the way God operated even through the day of the cross through to Pentecost as he was promising a future Kingdom.
And then we have this revelation of a mystery given to Paul by Jesus Christ Himself. It was never prophesied but was kept secret by God before the foundation of the world and then it was revealed to Paul.
It’s a new dispensation that would interrupt prophesy because of the nation of Israel’s rejection of the Messiah.
In this dispensation called the dispensation of Grace, God pours out grace, saving grace, to a wicked world and He’s no longer working through the law, Israel or Israel’s covenants. So, the way God’s operating now, or the will of God today has changed from what God was doing before. Before the law was given God was operating with people in a different way again, without the law and without covenants.
Remember, Abraham back there was not an Israelite. Israel hadn’t even been created yet until Jacob, whose name was changed to Israel. It was his twelve sons that became the tribes of Israel. Abraham was not under Israel’s covenants like the Davidic covenants, or the Mosaic covenants and he was not under the law. He wasn’t even circumcised at one point in his life when God made His unconditional promise of the land to him. The apostle Paul takes great pains to point that out in his epistle to the Romans.
And so, we have God operating with Abraham differently than how he’s operating here today.
And we can easily see this in the scripture and reflected in the prayers of men living in these different times of God’s operation.

Let’s look at Genesis chapter 20. We’ll start with Abraham and by this time, Abraham is circumcised, and he’s given a promise that he would have a seed, a son and his son would be a blessing and Abraham would be a blessing among the Nations, and if anyone blessed him they’d be blessed and if anyone cursed him they’d be cursed. It’s important to realise that this promise given to Abraham at this time is not with Israel being present.
This is for this man and his family. So, in Genesis 20 verses 1 and 2 we see this,
And Abraham journeyed from there to the South, and dwelt between Kadesh and Shur, and stayed in Gerar. Now Abraham said of Sarah his wife, “She is my sister.” And Abimelech king of Gerar sent and took Sarah.
This causes an ordeal. Abimelech thinks well she’s a pretty woman, I think I’ll take her to be my wife. Then God appears to him in a dream down in verse 3,
But God came to Abimelech in a dream by night, and said to him, “Indeed you are a dead man because of the woman whom you have taken, for she is a man’s wife.”

What’s interesting here is that many people come to the scripture and read these stories and they say well this must be how God deals with everybody.
But, it isn’t how God deals with everybody. These people we’re reading about are the exceptions to how God deals with people.
God gave Abraham a unique promise and Sarah was special because he gave her a promise as well to have a son, Abraham’s son, and so this is a big problem for God’s will being done.
This king of Gerar is going to take Sarah to be his wife. God interrupts and says you’re dead. Now that’s how you change the course of history!
So, Abimelech says whoa, hold on!
Genesis 20 verses 4 to 6,
But Abimelech had not come near her; and he said, “Lord, will You slay a righteous nation also?
Did he not say to me, ‘She is my sister’? And she, even she herself said, ‘He is my brother.’ In the integrity of my heart and innocence of my hands I have done this.”
And God said to him in a dream, “Yes, I know that you did this in the integrity of your heart. For I also withheld you from sinning against Me; therefore I did not let you touch her.

From down in verse seven God tells Abimelech to restore Abraham’s wife to him He’s a prophet and he’ll pray for you, and you’ll live. But if you don’t restore her you’ll die and everyone who is associated with you will die.

Abimelech then wakes up and calls Abraham and said, “Why’d you do this to me? Why’d you lie to me? God threatened me.
He goes back and rebukes Abraham, then down at the end of the chapter in verse 16 he tells Sarah behold I’ve given your brother a thousand pieces of silver, go and be at peace and leave me alone. Now in verse 17 we read and here’s the part that we want to see, it’s Abraham’s prayer,
So Abraham prayed to God; and God healed Abimelech, his wife, and his female servants. Then they bore children; for the LORD had closed up all the wombs of the house of Abimelech because of Sarah, Abraham’s wife.
You see, God gave a promise to Abraham.
Abraham and Sarah had a special Covenant with God and God actually intervenes to make sure His will gets done.
Abraham prays to God and God healed Abimelech so that his household could again bear children.
So, we see the healing of Abimelech’s household after Abraham prays.
He prays for the healing of Abimelech’s household, and it works, let’s look at how this occurs.
This praying for healing isn’t Abraham coming out of the blue saying you’re sick and I’ve got power from God, so let’s heal you.
It’s God having a purpose with Abraham, Abimelech’s interrupting this purpose and God’s the one that actually caused the sickness here, the barrenness in the wombs. Then he tells Abimelech that Abraham will pray for you.
What’s God’s will here? God’s will is that Abimelech gives Sarah back and for Abraham to pray for him Abimelech obeys the will of God.
Abraham obeys the will of God and says the prayer.
The passages don’t even tell us what Abraham prayed but God heals Abimelech’s household.
Does it even have anything to do with what Abraham prayed? It’s that he prayed in obedience to God and God’s will was already stated. He was going to heal Abimelech when Abraham prayed. That’s what he said!
So, this isn’t some desire of Abraham, it was God’s will for Abimelech’s household to be healed.
It was written in Scripture. Abraham did it and God’s will was done.
That’s how this prayer worked!

Now let’s go to Psalm 37 and we’ll see this pattern over and over again in the scripture, where people, men of faith, pray according to the will of God that’s already known to them and then God’s will’s done.
People tend to think they’re going to pray for their own will when prayer is really about God’s will being done.
People often use Psalm 37 to justify praying for what they themselves want.
Psalm 37 verses 4 and 5,
Delight yourself also in the LORD, And He shall give you the desires of your heart.
Commit your way to the LORD, Trust also in Him, And He shall bring it to pass.

Well, there it is in scripture! We take that verse and put it on a bookmark or a sticker on the fridge. But sadly, most people take the verse completely out of the context. When that happens, we see the verse as whatever the will of your heart is just pray and the Lord’ll give it to you.
Well, firstly, scripture cuts to the chase when speaking of the heart of man.
Jeremaiah 17:9,
The heart is deceitful above all things, And desperately wicked; Who can know it?
So, knowing that the heart is desperately wicked and knowing that we don’t know what to pray for as you ought. Knowing that we might desire things God doesn’t want us to desire it’s good advice to follow our heart.
But Psalm 37 verses 4 and 5 say God will give us the desires of our heart if we delight ourselves in the Lord.
So, what does it mean to Delight yourself in the lord? What does the Bible say about delighting in the Lord?
Is it that God gives me the desires of my heart and I really want the desires of my heart?
Well, David says in verse 5, commit your way to the Lord!
Now, David’s operating under the law covenants that God gave to Israel. Those covenants were that if you obey, I (God) will bless your field and bless your children and give you prosperity.
Everything that was part of the Covenant was already written down, and it’s the will of God.
So, God is saying here that He’ll give you the desires of your heart after he’s already told you to circumcise your heart and love God with all your heart.
Deuteronomy 10:16,
Therefore circumcise the foreskin of your heart, and be stiff-necked no longer.

Deuteronomy 30:6,
And the LORD your God will circumcise your heart and the heart of your descendants, to love the LORD your God with all your heart and with all your soul, that you may live.

See how it fits with the good will of God already?
So, us saying well this is the desire of my heart even though I don’t love God very much, that’s breaking the Covenant.
Verse 5’s instruction to, “Commit your way to the Lord” means that your way has to be the Lord’s way. If our way is not the Lord’s way we’re not going to get anything. But what’s the Lord’s way? What’s the lord’s will?
He declared in the covenants keep my Commandments, and so verse five, “Trust also in Him and He shall bring it to pass”, does not in any way mean God’s going to do what I want. No! He’s going to do what He wants and when we get on board with what He’s doing, what He wants, that’s when Psalm 37 becomes a reality.
Let’s drop down to verse 9 of Psalm 37,
For evildoers shall be cut off; But those who wait on the LORD, They shall inherit the earth.
We can’t rip these verses out of context. The land was given to Israel. They had land covenants, earth covenants and by the way this this type of language here that they shall inherit the earth sounds familiar doesn’t it?
Look at Verse 11,
But the meek shall inherit the earth, And shall delight themselves in the abundance of peace.

Remember someone else saying this in the Bible? Jesus said it. He didn’t invent it, apart from the fact that He’s God and He did say it in this Psalm as well!
Jesus said this in Matthew Chapter 5 and 6 repeating prophecy about Israel’s land covenant and it’s fulfillment on the Earth. They’re going to inherit the earth is what God promised to them going right back to Abraham’s promise.
God’s will was known. It was in the law and the covenants. So, the promise God’s going to fulfill for them is what He’s already made known to them.
When they pray to inherit the earth and obey the terms of God’s covenant, God’s going to do what He wills to do. He’s going to keep His promise.

This is not willy-nilly stuff like someone saying, “I like that beachfront property on the Gold Coast, so God give it to me please.”
That’s just not the promise here. There’s nowhere where God said it’s His will for that.
But it was His will for Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and Israel to have a certain specific measured out piece of land.
Meanwhile in this same Psalm 37:23 David writes,
The steps of a good man are ordered by the LORD, And He delights in his way.
This is in the same chapter about delighting in the Lord. We shouldn’t read this like whatever I’m going to do he’s going to lead me mystically to do it.
God has given 613 Commandments to Israel from everything about what they wear to what they eat to where they go to what days they celebrate.
He’s ordered everything in Israel and in their society and how they’re to live.
The steps of a good man order by the Lord is that if you’re a good man in Israel you will keep the law. It wasn’t simply love your neighbour, even though that was the second Chief commandment, it was a whole range of very specific details.
They’re ordered by the Lord it says and He Delights in His way.
You see what that’s saying? Delighting yourself in the Lord in Psalm 37’s context is doing the law.

God already revealed what He wanted them to do and what it means to Delight in Him.
Then in Psalm 37:29,
The righteous shall inherit the land, And dwell in it forever.
There it is again. The righteous shall inherit the land! There’s a half a dozen times in this chapter it talks about the land the land the land. This is Israel! The righteous shall inherit the land and dwell therein forever.
Well, there goes Heaven if you’re going to be on the Earth forever. This is Israel!
Then down in verse 31,
The law of his God is in his heart; None of his steps shall slide.
The law of his God is in his heart. Delight yourself in the Lord and He’ll give you the desires of your heart. Well, what’s in his heart? The law of God!
What’s the law of God say? You’ll get the land forever.
Well, that seems like God’s only going to do what He wants. We come to prayer thinking we’re going to manipulate and change God to get him to do what we want. That’s not how prayer works.
We might say, “Well, God, a lot of us down here want something different than what you’re doing.”
However, it’s not going to convince Him.

Go to Psalm 40 verse 8,
I delight to do Your will, O my God, And Your law is within my heart.”
David’s talking about how to condition your heart under the law.
Delight yourself in the Lord’s law. They had to understand that the law of God wasn’t a suggestion or just something that ruled an earthly nation, it was divinely given. It was God’s will for them to do it.
It’s different from the laws of our country which were Man created. Even though many of them were originally influenced by the Bible they were not given from Heaven on Mount Sinai.
We follow laws in our society for various reasons and motivations but it’s not because God gave them from Heaven.
But the law of God that Moses was given was God given from Heaven.

See, the scripture’s clear about what’s the desires of the person’s heart in Psalm 37? The law of God! They delight in the Lord’s will. So, you see where we’re going here?
The prayer it’s not, “Oh goodie, I get to finally make my own request. God says you be good for a week I’ll give you whatever you want.”
No, it’s God saying, “I want to change your heart to do My will because although you don’t know it, My will is better than yours.”
That’s what the Bible’s trying to teach in a nutshell.
God knows better than us, but we think otherwise.

Now let’s look at Solomon.
Go to 2nd Chronicles chapter 7 verse 14,
…if My people who are called by My name will humble themselves, and pray and seek My face, and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin and heal their land..
God’s people here are of course the nation of Israel.
Humble themselves and Pray. In that context it says to Humble yourselves which means we’re not saying me, me, me.
First we have we have the “if” and then we have the “then”.
The “if” is humble themselves, pray seek God’s face, turn from their wicked ways.
The “then” is I will hear from heaven, forgive their sin and heal their land.
Question. Does God hear from heaven when they don’t turn from their wicked ways? Not according to this verse! If they’re not turning from their wicked ways God will not hear from Heaven.
This is why we don’t use this verse as a prayer in this dispensation today, because the unique thing about prayer in this dispensation is that if we’re in Christ, God hears all our prayers by Grace.
We’ve done nothing to be saved by grace. Nothing we’ve done or not done gets us access to God. Therefore, anything we utter in prayer God receives, unlike under the Covenant program and the law where God would only hear their prayers when they obeyed his Covenant. Obey first then I’ll listen to you says God.
Under grace today it’s, “I’ve saved you by My grace. You’re my child in Christ. Pray.” What an amazing privilege and benefit to have.

But back there with Solomon, God says forgiveness and healing of their land is received through humbling themselves, praying and seeking God’s face and turning from their wicked ways.

Forgiveness in this dispensation of grace we live in today is through the shed blood of Jesus Christ.
Colossians 1 verse 14,
…in whom we have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of sins.
You see using this verse in 2nd Chronicles as a prayer denies the grace blessings you’ve been given by Christ today.
Forgiveness then was not yet being offered based on Christ’s shed blood.
They were under a covenant program which said you need to do the law then
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God’ll hear and then respond, and that’s what God promised. He’ll hear from heaven and forgive their sin and heal their land.

God’s talking about Israel in 2nd Chronicles 7:14. God’s speaking to Solomon privately in Solomon’s house in response to Solomon’s Prayer.
So we should go back and see exactly what Solomon prayed, because if Solomon can get a private response from God and some sort of prayer promise even though it’s not the dispensation you and I live in today, then maybe we should learn how Solomon prayed.
2nd Chronicles 6 verse one,
Then Solomon spoke: “The LORD said He would dwell in the dark cloud.
The context of what’s going on here is that Solomon is dedicating the temple that he built for God.
The prayer to which God is responding to in chapter 7 is this prayer of Solomon’s.
2nd Chronicles 6:2,
I have surely built You an exalted house, And a place for You to dwell in forever.”
He’s talking to God there saying I built you a house to dwell in forever.
2nd Chronicles 6:3,
Then the king turned around and blessed the whole assembly of Israel, while all the assembly of Israel was standing.

The notice what Solomon says next in 2nd Chronicles 6:4,
And he said: “Blessed be the LORD God of Israel, who has fulfilled with His hands what He spoke with His mouth to my father David,
See, Solomon is praying according to what God’s already said He’s going to do. look at verse 5,
Since the day that I brought My people out of the land of Egypt, I have chosen no city from any tribe of Israel in which to build a house, that My name might be there, nor did I choose any man to be a ruler over My people Israel.

Now verse 6,
Yet I have chosen Jerusalem, that My name may be there, and I have chosen David to be over My people Israel.’
This is what God promised David!

Verse 7,
Now it was in the heart of my father David to build a temple for the name of the LORD God of Israel.
Remember, David wanted to do that. He wanted to build a house. What did God say to David? No!
But what did he say to David instead?
Verse 9,
Nevertheless you shall not build the temple, but your son who will come from your body, he shall build the temple for My name.’
When David wanted to build God’s house, God said no but his son, Solomon would build it.
Now Solomon’s built the temple and He’s dedicating it.
See how all this was God’s will. Solomon’s prayer is that we did God’s will and he’s now praying according to that will!
You see a lot of background knowledge in all these verses. Solomon’s not just praying something like, “Well I built something for you God, even though you didn’t ask for it and I hope you can bless it even though you never promised you would, and I hope that if anyone comes in this building that you know they’ll have spiritual fulfillment even though you’ve never said that.”
That’s how many of us Christians pray.
We pray about things we do when there’s no biblical justification for it.
Solomon built this because God said to!
God made a promise to do it and to bless him for doing it. And he’s is praying to fulfill what God said he wanted him to do.
In verses 10 and 11, Solomon goes on,
So the LORD has fulfilled His word which He spoke, and I have filled the position of my father David, and sit on the throne of Israel, as the LORD promised; and I have built the temple for the name of the LORD God of Israel. And there I have put the ark, in which is the covenant of the LORD which He made with the children of Israel.”
So over and over again he’s talking about God’s fulfilling of what He promised Down in verse 17 and 18 he says,
And now, O LORD God of Israel, let Your word come true, which You have spoken to Your servant David. “But will God indeed dwell with men on the earth? Behold, heaven and the heaven of heavens cannot contain You. How much less this temple which I have built!
Solomon turns his attention to speak to God directly and this is in front of the congregation of Israel.

Do not make this house the house you go to for church.
This is a house God told Solomon to build specifically for Him.
No church organisation ever received that instruction.
Solomon goes on for the remainder of the chapter praying about the temple according to the will of God.

God responds to Solomon privately as Solomon goes home and tells him that he has heard his prayer and that, quote, “I will be in this house and if my people who are called by my name shall humble themselves and pray then I will heal their land I’ll forgive their sins.”

People don’t know what to pray for because often they’re not interested in learning what God will is.
That’s why it’s not easy to know what to pray for in this dispensation of today because knowing God’s will requires us to understand how His will has been revealed and how it has changed and now been revealed in this dispensation.
Christians, not understanding that not all the Bible is written to them and about them, take prayers from everywhere.
Whenever we hear Christians taking verses out of context and asking for
things contrary to God’s will, a red flag should go off in our mind.
If it’s not God’s will as clearly given tin the Bible, then there’s no way we can walk in that information or participate in it. It’s just simply outside God’s will and we should back away.
We saw Jesus in the last episode is teaching the disciples to pray in the so called Lord’s prayer and it was easy to see from prophecy that it was all according to God’s will, and the disciples knew that.

And as we pointed out last time also, to think that the church is to pray this prayer, especially as frequently as they do, is to say that in this prayer is the will of God for the church today and there’s a problem with that.
If this prayer is the will of God for the church today it doesn’t include the cross at all, or seeing all men saved, or the body of Christ, the creating of that new creature, or the church anywhere for that matter!
It’s eating every day to survive, being led on the earth to a kingdom come and forgiving others so you might receive forgiveness.
That is actually for the 12 tribes of Israel, it’s simply not the will of God for you and me today in this dispensation of grace.
But what that prayer does include, as Jesus taught it, was the will of God for Israel.
Jesus knew the will of God. Jesus knew He was God, but he also said He came to do the will of His father. That’s why He came to Earth to do the will of His father, to confirm the promise made in the covenants and also to die on the cross.
See the pattern of prayer? God’s will, God’s will, God’s will, not our partitions for things, for health, wealth and happiness that emerge from our own desires.

In Luke 18 verse 31 to 33 we hear Jesus say,
Then He took the twelve aside and said to them, “Behold, we are going up to Jerusalem, and all things that are written by the prophets concerning the Son of Man will be accomplished.” For He will be delivered to the Gentiles and will be mocked and insulted and spit upon.
They will scourge Him and kill Him. And the third day He will rise again.”

What He just said was that whatever God said before that He was going to do; He’s going to do. Is it a mystery here what Christ is going to do? No, it’s been revealed even though the disciples are kind of ignorant of it.
We see this in the next verse, verse 34,
But they understood none of these things; this saying was hidden from them, and they did not know the things which were spoken.
Like a lot of us Christians today, they just don’t know what the Bible actually says, but that doesn’t mean God hasn’t said it.
Now the disciples were not taught to pray about the situation, for Jesus’s work to die on the cross for the sins of the world.
That wasn’t even in that prayer the Lord taught them.
The disciples don’t understand anything he says here.
They didn’t know about his death and Resurrection, but Jesus did know. He
Knew He’d come to this earth to die. He also knew why.
In Luke 22, the night of His betrayal, and remember the disciples don’t understand anything about it, Jesus says this,
Likewise He also took the cup after supper, saying, “This cup is the new covenant in My blood, which is shed for you.
He hasn’t died yet. No one there that night understood the gospel preaching of the Cross, but Jesus says I’m going to shed My blood for the New Testament, I’m going to shed my blood for sins, I’m going to shed my blood for Israel’s promises being fulfilled.
Jesus knew what God’s will was for Him and why.
Now drop down to Luke 22 verse 42. It’s after the meal and they go out and sing a song then go to the Garden of Gethsemane. Peter, James and John are with Him and He’s told them to pray that you may not enter into temptation.
Jesus then prays saying,
“Father, if it is Your will, take this cup away from Me; nevertheless, not My will, but Yours, be done.”
Jesus knows why He came. It was to die. He knew He’d come to fulfill the promises and the prophets. He knew He’d come to die for the sin of the world. He knew even what was not yet revealed according to God’s will, which is that His death on the cross would accomplish something far greater, the creation of a new creature in the body of Christ. To perform His will for the ages and that’s why He says, “Nevertheless not My will but yours be done.”
Whatever pain and suffering and sorrow He’s feeling, whatever the resistance and temptation to not perform this thing, it needs to be accomplished because it’s God’s will, incidentally, the will He Himself purposed with the Father.
That’s Jesus’s prayer to the father. Should our prayers be any less according to God’s will?
However, for us to pray God’s will we need to know His will!

1st John 5 verses 14 and 15 is a popular prayer today, taught by Jon who was there in the Garden with Jesus on that dreadful night. John says,
Now this is the confidence that we have in Him, that if we ask anything according to His will, He hears us.
And if we know that He hears us, whatever we ask, we know that we have the petitions that we have asked of Him.

That’s what we’re trying to get across from the scripture.
When we pray it should be according to God’s will.
Then we have to recognise that God’s will relating to how he deals with mankind changes from age to age. God Himself never changes of course, but the way he deals with His human creation does.
John writes in this epistle of 1st John as a member of the remnant of Israel. One of those who’ve been promised a kingdom come.
He says we know we have confidence in him that whatever we ask we have the petitions we desired of Him.
That sounds like Psalm 37 which said,
Delight yourself also in the LORD, And He shall give you the desires of your heart.
As we saw at length He’ll give you the desires of your heart because your heart contains God’s will.
God’s not waiting for us to have a good idea. He has His will. We’re the ones that need to know it, for us to align with His will. In the circumstances of our lives, where sometimes it’s hard to see God’s will, we do our own thing anyway, but to do the things we need to do we must align ourselves, in that moment of prayer, to say God has a will and I’m supposed to be aligning with it. That helps us in how we walk day to day in this world.

According to Romans 8, we don’t know what to pray for, but the Holy Spirit helps but His words are not given to us in a supernatural inner voice today, they’re given to us in the scripture, which means we’ve got to open up the book and read and understand these things.
If we go back to 1st John 5 we see in verse 16 why they could ask anything according to His will and He hears, and they have the petitions they asked of Him.
See they’re talking about forgiving sins. The things that they’re asking God to do is forgiving sins.
In 1st John 1 verse 9 we see,
If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.
That’s what they’re ask Him. That’s why verse 16 says there’s some sins you shouldn’t pray for, which is another issue for another day, but they’re praying specifically for forgiveness.
Do we need to pray for forgiveness today? Is it our job to pray for forgiveness of someone else? No! Christ has shed his blood for all men’s forgiveness. Our pray today is that mankind, including the people we know and love, trust His completed work for the forgiveness of their sins.

In every prayer that we’ve just covered, and there are many, many more throughout the Bible, all these men prayed the will of God and their own will aligned with it.
None of them said, “Well that’s a good idea God but I have a better thought on how to do it.”
How do we get prayer to work? We need to know how God is working and what He wants. When we align ourselves with God’s will and His work then we see God working more clearly. Now we’re praying the same thing that God’s doing, His will for today.
Prayer works today according to how God works, what He’s doing in this dispensation, knowing full well that what He does changes throughout the scripture. Of course, God Himself never changes. Jesus is the same yesterday, today and forever, but how he deals with His precious creation, mankind, does change from age to age.
What He’s doing today is not what He’ll do in the future on the earth.
It’s not what He was doing at Pentecost or during Israel’s wilderness wanderings or when Israel conquered the land. And, when God changes his mode of operation with man, then prayer must change as well.
We know that The Body of Christ is not Israel. The body of Christ is neither Jew nor Gentile. We’re not under the law. As Romans 6:14 says,
For sin shall not have dominion over you, for you are not under law but under grace.
The body of Christ is a new creature created to serve God outside of the law.
2nd Corinthians 5:1,
Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; old things have passed away; behold, all things have become new.
Then in Galatians 6:15,
For in Christ Jesus neither circumcision (the Jew) nor uncircumcision (the Gentile) avails anything, but a new creation.
That doesn’t mean that we’re walking in sin. It means the law’s not the motivation for us to do right. We have a greater motivation which is God’s grace explained to us in the incredible book of Romans.
Not only are we not under the Mosaic law, we’re also strangers from the covenants relating to the earthly Kingdom.
Ephesians 2 says that we’re strangers from Israel’s covenants and when we join to God we don’t join to God through Israel’s covenants We join to God through the new man that he’s made, the new creature, the Body of Christ.

To fully understand God’s will for us today we need to understand the dispensation of grace that we’re now living in today.

We look to Romans 16 verses 25 to 26,
Now to Him who is able to establish you according to my gospel and the preaching of Jesus Christ, according to the revelation of the mystery kept secret since the world began but now made manifest, and by the prophetic Scriptures made known to all nations, according to the commandment of the everlasting God, for obedience to the faith—

Now, it isn’t just knowing that there was a mystery that was kept secret even though that’s important. It’s knowing that this mystery that God kept secret from the foundation of the world has now been revealed. It was revealed by Jesus Christ Himself through the apostle Paul.
The point of this verse is that Jesus Christ will establish us in the will of God that’s the point of the verse.
It’s so we might know God’s will according to that mystery.
How did this mystery period, which is the dispensation of grace come into being?
Ephesians 3 verses 1 to 7,
For this reason I, Paul, the prisoner of Christ Jesus for you Gentiles— if indeed you have heard of the dispensation of the grace of God which was given to me for you, how that by revelation He made known to me the mystery (as I have briefly written already, by which, when you read, you may understand my knowledge in the mystery of Christ), which in other ages was not made known to the sons of men, as it has now been revealed by the Spirit to His holy apostles and prophets: that the Gentiles should be fellow heirs, of the same body, and partakers of His promise in Christ through the gospel, of which I became a minister according to the gift of the grace of God given to me by the effective working of His power.

It’s hard to imagine that the apostle Paul, before he met Jesus Christ on the road to Damascus and was saved, was a violent and unrelenting persecutor of all who believed in Jesus Christ.

If you go through some of our other material you can find a more detailed explanation of the mystery revealed.
This dispensation that was revealed to Paul after being kept secret by God before the foundation of the world came into reality as an interruption, if you like, to the timeline of prophecy. This timeline included all the things that happened throughout Israel’s history and during Jesus’s earthly ministry when He came to earth to fulfill prophecy and the law to the letter. It also included the events of the day of Pentecost after the Lord had ascended back to heaven after His resurrection.
This is where the apostle Peter quotes the prophet Joel and refers to this time as the time that those events spoken of in Joel are actually happening. This certainly would have been the case but for one major factor, Israel rejected Jesus Christ, the Messiah. They rejected Him when He was on earth, and they continue to reject Him after He returned to heaven. The last straw for Israel was when they stoned Stephen in Acts chapter 7.
They had Rejected the Messiah, they’d rejected God and rejected the Holy Spirit and, as a result God rejected them, and Israel fell.
All that they were promised, the New Covenant, the Kingdom and the restoration of the nation to its former glory under King David and King Solomon were postponed and Israel entered a state of blindness which lasts right up till today.
So, in place of what should have happened, according to prophecy, God introduces this interlude that He knew about and knew would come, but kept it secret.
Every promise and prophecy relating to Israel was now on hold.
This period, this dispensation of grace, would be a time where God offered free Grace to a rebellious and wicked world. Grace that would be bestowed no longer through Israel, their priests and their religious systems, but directly from God by no other vehicle than faith in God’s Word, the gospel of grace. This gospel and salvation by grace is now open to every human, no matter how bad or good or whether he’s a Jew or a Gentile. The nation Israel has been temporarily sidelined as God’s priesthood that brings all nations to the knowledge of God. They’re sidelined until a day comes, which it will during the great tribulation, when they turn and realise that Jesus was the Messiah all along and they accept Him.
This incredible dispensation of grace has so far lasted for 2000 years.

So, now God has once again changed the way He deals with mankind. Now salvation is by grace alone, through faith, without works of the law or works of any kind. It’s through believing and nothing else!
Where do we find our instruction, our doctrine and what God’s will is for this incredible dispensation of grace today?
We find it in the 13 epistles written by the apostle Paul. The interesting thing with Paul is that in those 13 epistles Paul gives us both instruction in prayer and examples. He continually uses his own prayer life as an example of the instruction to pray.

In 1st Timothy 2 verses 3 and 4 we read about God’s overall will and therefore a baseline for our prayers,
For this is good and acceptable in the sight of God our Savior, who desires all men to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth.

So, we have salvation by the gospel of grace of God as Paul preaches and then coming to a knowledge of the truth. The truth of what? Of whom we are and what God’s doing today and what He’s accomplished by the cross and through his grace today.

In 1 Thessalonians 4 verse 1 and 2 Paul writes concerning our walk,
Finally then, brethren, we urge and exhort in the Lord Jesus that you should abound more and more, just as you received from us how you ought to walk and to please God; for you know what commandments we gave you through the Lord Jesus.
He says very clearly that this is the will of God concerning us that we should abound more and more. In what?
In the knowledge of God and His will as we see in Colossians 1 verses 9 and 10,
For this reason we also, since the day we heard it, do not cease to pray for you, and to ask that you may be filled with the knowledge of His will in all wisdom and spiritual understanding; that you may walk worthy of the Lord, fully pleasing Him, being fruitful in every good work and increasing in the knowledge of God;
When we read what Paul wrote in Romans and Corinthians and Galatians and his other epistles we’re reading what Paul taught these churches and we can
receive from Paul what they received from Paul, and we can know how we ought to walk.
If we don’t know we go back and learn. It’s that learning process that takes us from not knowing how or what to pray for as we ought to knowing what and how to pray.

1st Thessalonians 4 verse 3,
For this is the will of God, your sanctification:
Our sanctification or our purity is God’s will. To be who God made us to be, set apart for His purpose which means we have to know His purpose, which is Grace today.
Part of that’s, in fact a very big part, is being grateful. In 1st Thessalonians 5 verses 17 and 18 we’re told,
pray without ceasing, in everything give thanks; for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you.

We’ve covered these verses before. Knowing the will of God is clear in these passages. In everything give thanks. That’s a prayer verse but what we’re talking about today is praying knowing the will of God and then praying for the will of God.
If we struggle praying from this perspective of grace today, maybe we need to pray to God to change our perspective.
If we constantly think that the only thing we can pray for is something that we need and we don’t respect what God’s already given us in abundance then maybe our prayer might be, “God please help me to be thankful because I know that’s your will.” See we’d no longer praying our will we’re praying His will.
We can pray, “Lord teach me what it means to be a member of the body of Christ and to be sanctified. What does it mean to walk according to what you told Paul because I’m still trying to learn that, but I know that’s your will because I can see it clearly in scripture.”
See, we’re praying according to His will and that should help inform our Prayers.
It’s sometimes easier to read these verses about God’s will and know the will of God than it is to practice the will of God in prayer.
It requires a heart change.

We have to believe that what God’s doing today is the best thing for today.
We can’t pray to God to ask Him to act like He did in another age, like start healing the masses or bring that Kingdom in because we think that’d be better. What God is doing today is what He wills to do today, and it will work when we pray according to His will.
We can clearly know the ministry God’s doing today and it’s different than what He was doing before. He’s dealing with the spiritual today. He wants to see Souls saved and be spiritually strengthened in our inner man.

Paul prays in Colossians 1 verses 9 to 12,
For this reason, we also, since the day we heard it, do not cease to pray for you, and to ask that you may be filled with the knowledge of His will in all wisdom and spiritual understanding;
that you may walk worthy of the Lord, fully pleasing Him, being fruitful in every good work and increasing in the knowledge of God; strengthened with all might, according to His glorious power, for all patience and longsuffering with joy; giving thanks to the Father who has qualified us to be partakers of the inheritance of the saints in the light.

This is God’s will for us.
Colossians 4 verse 2 to 4 is a great prayer of Pauls,
Continue earnestly in prayer, being vigilant in it with thanksgiving; meanwhile praying also for us, that God would open to us a door for the word, to speak the mystery of Christ, for which I am also in chains, that I may make it manifest, as I ought to speak.
This is for all those who strive to bring the whole counsel of God to people.

We’re trying to see how all these prayers even in the old Testament were patterned according to the will of God. We just have to discern what the will of God is for today.
The Colossians 4 prayer works by understanding what God’s doing then we pray accordingly and then we watch because when we know God’s will we know what to look for and as we pray according to God’s will we’re participating in that will.

We change our will to recognise we want God’s will being done not ours.
A good prayer to start with may be, “Lord, your will be done not mine.” And then go and learn his will and our prayers will align us with that will.
There’s reasons for that and we’re trying to uncover them in our study here.
It’s very natural for people to pray to God for things, but it’s not natural to understand the things of God and to know what to pray for as we ought. Those things have to be learned.
We learned last time that a good prayer might be, “Lord teach me to pray.” Teach me to pray so I can pray knowing what you’re doing.
It’s natural for people to pray prayers saturated with requests, a laundry list of things to ask God for relating to the life they’re trying to live, but there’s gaps and holes and questions and uncertainties.
Last episode we tried to change the perspective a bit to the perspective of knowing all that God’s already done for us. That change in our prayer perspective should move us from constantly praying to get to praying to give as Paul tells us in 1st Thessalonians 5:18,
In everything give thanks: for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus concerning you.
That’s a result of knowing what God’s done. If we don’t know what God’s given us, what He’s done for us, it’s hard to say thank you.
Not everyone in the Bible was able to pray prayers of thanksgiving. Many didn’t receive the same things God’s given us which puts us in a unique position in this dispensation to pray certain prayers of thanksgiving.
It’s normal not to know how to pray according to God’s Will and how His will affects our prayers in this dispensation.
It’s normal not to know how to pray and we’ve covered that before.
It’s normal to make requests in prayer. Paul even instructs us to in Philippians 4:6,
Be careful for nothing; but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known unto God.

It’s also normal to think that prayer is something that should work for us.
We say prayer is a tool God’s given us to submit our requests and suggestions and things because I need help and it’s all about my needing help.

But, what if it wasn’t entirely about that?
Now we wouldn’t know this unless God has revealed things in the scripture about what He’s doing and what His will actually is.

This is what we’ll explore today.
Prayer does not come naturally. We’re born with a spirit, we’re born with a conscience, we’re born with the knowledge that there is a Creator, and so praying to that creator for things is natural.
But prayer is not about making our voice heard before God even though some people think of prayer that way. They even talk about the number of people who join in prayer having a higher chance of getting that prayer heard by God. Almost like making a petition to the government or something, but that’s not how prayer functions, or how God wants it to work, especially in this dispensation of grace that we live in today.
If there’s just one person praying, God hears their prayer just fine.
It’s much less about how many people want a thing or what it is that we want and more about what God wants.
However, if we say prayers about God’s will and not ours then people tend to turn off. It’s not what they want to hear. They say well then what’s the point of me praying?
Well, now our heart is exposed for what it really is which is us wanting things according to our will.

God will hear our prayers, especially in this dispensation where we have access to God through Christ and everything we pray He hears. And that’s different from how it was before.
Prayer has the purpose of aligning our will with God’s will, that’s what prayer’s purposes is and when we go into prayer with that thinking then we’ll understand it instead of thinking that prayer is trying to get God to align with our will.
That’s how most people naturally pray and that’s normal for people to pray that way until we learn differently.

So, rather than thinking that I’m going to pray to tell God what’s up with me so that he can get on board with what I’m doing and help me out, we begin to realise it’s the opposite.
We pray so that the wills that we’re constantly using to do the things we do in life can be aligned in those moments of prayer with what God’s doing. That’s what prayer’s supposed to do.

When we do that, what tends to happen is our own will becomes very diminished. the things that we thought were problems don’t seem as big as before, because now we know what God’s will is.
So, having that perspective about prayer being about God’s will is important. We’ve already learned that God instructs us to pray in this dispensation, so we pray by the will of God, and we pray according to the will of God, with knowledge of that will, and then we pray for the will of God to be done.
We pray as God’s instruct us to pray and we pray with the knowledge of what He’s doing according to His will.
What do we pray for as we ought? Well, that requires us to learn some things and the thing we need to learn is exactly what the will of God is, so we know what to pray for. We’re going to pray for His will to be done.

People talk about prayer and how prayer it didn’t work for them and usually it’s because they want God to do something that they want, and it doesn’t matter whether it’s God’s will or not.
But that’s not what prayer is!
Prayer is us aligning with God’s will. Prayer will work for the will of God, but we have to know what the will of God is. If we don’t know the will of God we’re going to be stuck praying prayers that’re trying to get God to know our will and
it just doesn’t seem like He’s hearing us. He is but prayer doesn’t have that function. Prayer is trying to align us with His will and if we don’t know His will what are we being aligned with? It simply doesn’t work that way.

Let’s look at some men from the Bible who prayed in this way, prayed God’s will in their prayers. There’s a pattern in these scriptures that we should notice.
First, we should notice how they’re praying according to the will of God and for the will of God and secondly how what they’re praying for and how they’re praying according to the will of God changes in different dispensations.

Before the cross of Christ and before Grace, Grace being something that God’s dispensing right now, God operated through the law. He operated through Covenants and He operated through Israel, and this is the way God operated even through the day of the cross through to Pentecost as he was promising a future Kingdom.
And then we have this revelation of a mystery given to Paul by Jesus Christ Himself. It was never prophesied but was kept secret by God before the foundation of the world and then it was revealed to Paul.
It’s a new dispensation that would interrupt prophesy because of the nation of Israel’s rejection of the Messiah.
In this dispensation called the dispensation of Grace, God pours out grace, saving grace, to a wicked world and He’s no longer working through the law, Israel or Israel’s covenants. So, the way God’s operating now, or the will of God today has changed from what God was doing before. Before the law was given God was operating with people in a different way again, without the law and without covenants.
Remember, Abraham back there was not an Israelite. Israel hadn’t even been created yet until Jacob, whose name was changed to Israel. It was his twelve sons that became the tribes of Israel. Abraham was not under Israel’s covenants like the Davidic covenants, or the Mosaic covenants and he was not under the law. He wasn’t even circumcised at one point in his life when God made His unconditional promise of the land to him. The apostle Paul takes great pains to point that out in his epistle to the Romans.
And so, we have God operating with Abraham differently than how he’s operating here today.
And we can easily see this in the scripture and reflected in the prayers of men living in these different times of God’s operation.

Let’s look at Genesis chapter 20. We’ll start with Abraham and by this time, Abraham is circumcised, and he’s given a promise that he would have a seed, a son and his son would be a blessing and Abraham would be a blessing among the Nations, and if anyone blessed him they’d be blessed and if anyone cursed him they’d be cursed. It’s important to realise that this promise given to Abraham at this time is not with Israel being present.
This is for this man and his family. So, in Genesis 20 verses 1 and 2 we see this,
And Abraham journeyed from there to the South, and dwelt between Kadesh and Shur, and stayed in Gerar. Now Abraham said of Sarah his wife, “She is my sister.” And Abimelech king of Gerar sent and took Sarah.
This causes an ordeal. Abimelech thinks well she’s a pretty woman, I think I’ll take her to be my wife. Then God appears to him in a dream down in verse 3,
But God came to Abimelech in a dream by night, and said to him, “Indeed you are a dead man because of the woman whom you have taken, for she is a man’s wife.”

What’s interesting here is that many people come to the scripture and read these stories and they say well this must be how God deals with everybody.
But, it isn’t how God deals with everybody. These people we’re reading about are the exceptions to how God deals with people.
God gave Abraham a unique promise and Sarah was special because he gave her a promise as well to have a son, Abraham’s son, and so this is a big problem for God’s will being done.
This king of Gerar is going to take Sarah to be his wife. God interrupts and says you’re dead. Now that’s how you change the course of history!
So, Abimelech says whoa, hold on!
Genesis 20 verses 4 to 6,
But Abimelech had not come near her; and he said, “Lord, will You slay a righteous nation also?
Did he not say to me, ‘She is my sister’? And she, even she herself said, ‘He is my brother.’ In the integrity of my heart and innocence of my hands I have done this.”
And God said to him in a dream, “Yes, I know that you did this in the integrity of your heart. For I also withheld you from sinning against Me; therefore I did not let you touch her.

From down in verse seven God tells Abimelech to restore Abraham’s wife to him He’s a prophet and he’ll pray for you, and you’ll live. But if you don’t restore her you’ll die and everyone who is associated with you will die.

Abimelech then wakes up and calls Abraham and said, “Why’d you do this to me? Why’d you lie to me? God threatened me.
He goes back and rebukes Abraham, then down at the end of the chapter in verse 16 he tells Sarah behold I’ve given your brother a thousand pieces of silver, go and be at peace and leave me alone. Now in verse 17 we read and here’s the part that we want to see, it’s Abraham’s prayer,
So Abraham prayed to God; and God healed Abimelech, his wife, and his female servants. Then they bore children; for the LORD had closed up all the wombs of the house of Abimelech because of Sarah, Abraham’s wife.
You see, God gave a promise to Abraham.
Abraham and Sarah had a special Covenant with God and God actually intervenes to make sure His will gets done.
Abraham prays to God and God healed Abimelech so that his household could again bear children.
So, we see the healing of Abimelech’s household after Abraham prays.
He prays for the healing of Abimelech’s household, and it works, let’s look at how this occurs.
This praying for healing isn’t Abraham coming out of the blue saying you’re sick and I’ve got power from God, so let’s heal you.
It’s God having a purpose with Abraham, Abimelech’s interrupting this purpose and God’s the one that actually caused the sickness here, the barrenness in the wombs. Then he tells Abimelech that Abraham will pray for you.
What’s God’s will here? God’s will is that Abimelech gives Sarah back and for Abraham to pray for him Abimelech obeys the will of God.
Abraham obeys the will of God and says the prayer.
The passages don’t even tell us what Abraham prayed but God heals Abimelech’s household.
Does it even have anything to do with what Abraham prayed? It’s that he prayed in obedience to God and God’s will was already stated. He was going to heal Abimelech when Abraham prayed. That’s what he said!
So, this isn’t some desire of Abraham, it was God’s will for Abimelech’s household to be healed.
It was written in Scripture. Abraham did it and God’s will was done.
That’s how this prayer worked!

Now let’s go to Psalm 37 and we’ll see this pattern over and over again in the scripture, where people, men of faith, pray according to the will of God that’s already known to them and then God’s will’s done.
People tend to think they’re going to pray for their own will when prayer is really about God’s will being done.
People often use Psalm 37 to justify praying for what they themselves want.
Psalm 37 verses 4 and 5,
Delight yourself also in the LORD, And He shall give you the desires of your heart.
Commit your way to the LORD, Trust also in Him, And He shall bring it to pass.

Well, there it is in scripture! We take that verse and put it on a bookmark or a sticker on the fridge. But sadly, most people take the verse completely out of the context. When that happens, we see the verse as whatever the will of your heart is just pray and the Lord’ll give it to you.
Well, firstly, scripture cuts to the chase when speaking of the heart of man.
Jeremaiah 17:9,
The heart is deceitful above all things, And desperately wicked; Who can know it?
So, knowing that the heart is desperately wicked and knowing that we don’t know what to pray for as you ought. Knowing that we might desire things God doesn’t want us to desire it’s good advice to follow our heart.
But Psalm 37 verses 4 and 5 say God will give us the desires of our heart if we delight ourselves in the Lord.
So, what does it mean to Delight yourself in the lord? What does the Bible say about delighting in the Lord?
Is it that God gives me the desires of my heart and I really want the desires of my heart?
Well, David says in verse 5, commit your way to the Lord!
Now, David’s operating under the law covenants that God gave to Israel. Those covenants were that if you obey, I (God) will bless your field and bless your children and give you prosperity.
Everything that was part of the Covenant was already written down, and it’s the will of God.
So, God is saying here that He’ll give you the desires of your heart after he’s already told you to circumcise your heart and love God with all your heart.
Deuteronomy 10:16,
Therefore circumcise the foreskin of your heart, and be stiff-necked no longer.

Deuteronomy 30:6,
And the LORD your God will circumcise your heart and the heart of your descendants, to love the LORD your God with all your heart and with all your soul, that you may live.

See how it fits with the good will of God already?
So, us saying well this is the desire of my heart even though I don’t love God very much, that’s breaking the Covenant.
Verse 5’s instruction to, “Commit your way to the Lord” means that your way has to be the Lord’s way. If our way is not the Lord’s way we’re not going to get anything. But what’s the Lord’s way? What’s the lord’s will?
He declared in the covenants keep my Commandments, and so verse five, “Trust also in Him and He shall bring it to pass”, does not in any way mean God’s going to do what I want. No! He’s going to do what He wants and when we get on board with what He’s doing, what He wants, that’s when Psalm 37 becomes a reality.
Let’s drop down to verse 9 of Psalm 37,
For evildoers shall be cut off; But those who wait on the LORD, They shall inherit the earth.
We can’t rip these verses out of context. The land was given to Israel. They had land covenants, earth covenants and by the way this this type of language here that they shall inherit the earth sounds familiar doesn’t it?
Look at Verse 11,
But the meek shall inherit the earth, And shall delight themselves in the abundance of peace.

Remember someone else saying this in the Bible? Jesus said it. He didn’t invent it, apart from the fact that He’s God and He did say it in this Psalm as well!
Jesus said this in Matthew Chapter 5 and 6 repeating prophecy about Israel’s land covenant and it’s fulfillment on the Earth. They’re going to inherit the earth is what God promised to them going right back to Abraham’s promise.
God’s will was known. It was in the law and the covenants. So, the promise God’s going to fulfill for them is what He’s already made known to them.
When they pray to inherit the earth and obey the terms of God’s covenant, God’s going to do what He wills to do. He’s going to keep His promise.

This is not willy-nilly stuff like someone saying, “I like that beachfront property on the Gold Coast, so God give it to me please.”
That’s just not the promise here. There’s nowhere where God said it’s His will for that.
But it was His will for Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and Israel to have a certain specific measured out piece of land.
Meanwhile in this same Psalm 37:23 David writes,
The steps of a good man are ordered by the LORD, And He delights in his way.
This is in the same chapter about delighting in the Lord. We shouldn’t read this like whatever I’m going to do he’s going to lead me mystically to do it.
God has given 613 Commandments to Israel from everything about what they wear to what they eat to where they go to what days they celebrate.
He’s ordered everything in Israel and in their society and how they’re to live.
The steps of a good man order by the Lord is that if you’re a good man in Israel you will keep the law. It wasn’t simply love your neighbour, even though that was the second Chief commandment, it was a whole range of very specific details.
They’re ordered by the Lord it says and He Delights in His way.
You see what that’s saying? Delighting yourself in the Lord in Psalm 37’s context is doing the law.

God already revealed what He wanted them to do and what it means to Delight in Him.
Then in Psalm 37:29,
The righteous shall inherit the land, And dwell in it forever.
There it is again. The righteous shall inherit the land! There’s a half a dozen times in this chapter it talks about the land the land the land. This is Israel! The righteous shall inherit the land and dwell therein forever.
Well, there goes Heaven if you’re going to be on the Earth forever. This is Israel!
Then down in verse 31,
The law of his God is in his heart; None of his steps shall slide.
The law of his God is in his heart. Delight yourself in the Lord and He’ll give you the desires of your heart. Well, what’s in his heart? The law of God!
What’s the law of God say? You’ll get the land forever.
Well, that seems like God’s only going to do what He wants. We come to prayer thinking we’re going to manipulate and change God to get him to do what we want. That’s not how prayer works.
We might say, “Well, God, a lot of us down here want something different than what you’re doing.”
However, it’s not going to convince Him.

Go to Psalm 40 verse 8,
I delight to do Your will, O my God, And Your law is within my heart.”
David’s talking about how to condition your heart under the law.
Delight yourself in the Lord’s law. They had to understand that the law of God wasn’t a suggestion or just something that ruled an earthly nation, it was divinely given. It was God’s will for them to do it.
It’s different from the laws of our country which were Man created. Even though many of them were originally influenced by the Bible they were not given from Heaven on Mount Sinai.
We follow laws in our society for various reasons and motivations but it’s not because God gave them from Heaven.
But the law of God that Moses was given was God given from Heaven.

See, the scripture’s clear about what’s the desires of the person’s heart in Psalm 37? The law of God! They delight in the Lord’s will. So, you see where we’re going here?
The prayer it’s not, “Oh goodie, I get to finally make my own request. God says you be good for a week I’ll give you whatever you want.”
No, it’s God saying, “I want to change your heart to do My will because although you don’t know it, My will is better than yours.”
That’s what the Bible’s trying to teach in a nutshell.
God knows better than us, but we think otherwise.

Now let’s look at Solomon.
Go to 2nd Chronicles chapter 7 verse 14,
…if My people who are called by My name will humble themselves, and pray and seek My face, and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin and heal their land..
God’s people here are of course the nation of Israel.
Humble themselves and Pray. In that context it says to Humble yourselves which means we’re not saying me, me, me.
First we have we have the “if” and then we have the “then”.
The “if” is humble themselves, pray seek God’s face, turn from their wicked ways.
The “then” is I will hear from heaven, forgive their sin and heal their land.
Question. Does God hear from heaven when they don’t turn from their wicked ways? Not according to this verse! If they’re not turning from their wicked ways God will not hear from Heaven.
This is why we don’t use this verse as a prayer in this dispensation today, because the unique thing about prayer in this dispensation is that if we’re in Christ, God hears all our prayers by Grace.
We’ve done nothing to be saved by grace. Nothing we’ve done or not done gets us access to God. Therefore, anything we utter in prayer God receives, unlike under the Covenant program and the law where God would only hear their prayers when they obeyed his Covenant. Obey first then I’ll listen to you says God.
Under grace today it’s, “I’ve saved you by My grace. You’re my child in Christ. Pray.” What an amazing privilege and benefit to have.

But back there with Solomon, God says forgiveness and healing of their land is received through humbling themselves, praying and seeking God’s face and turning from their wicked ways.

Forgiveness in this dispensation of grace we live in today is through the shed blood of Jesus Christ.
Colossians 1 verse 14,
…in whom we have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of sins.
You see using this verse in 2nd Chronicles as a prayer denies the grace blessings you’ve been given by Christ today.
Forgiveness then was not yet being offered based on Christ’s shed blood.
They were under a covenant program which said you need to do the law then
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God’ll hear and then respond, and that’s what God promised. He’ll hear from heaven and forgive their sin and heal their land.

God’s talking about Israel in 2nd Chronicles 7:14. God’s speaking to Solomon privately in Solomon’s house in response to Solomon’s Prayer.
So we should go back and see exactly what Solomon prayed, because if Solomon can get a private response from God and some sort of prayer promise even though it’s not the dispensation you and I live in today, then maybe we should learn how Solomon prayed.
2nd Chronicles 6 verse one,
Then Solomon spoke: “The LORD said He would dwell in the dark cloud.
The context of what’s going on here is that Solomon is dedicating the temple that he built for God.
The prayer to which God is responding to in chapter 7 is this prayer of Solomon’s.
2nd Chronicles 6:2,
I have surely built You an exalted house, And a place for You to dwell in forever.”
He’s talking to God there saying I built you a house to dwell in forever.
2nd Chronicles 6:3,
Then the king turned around and blessed the whole assembly of Israel, while all the assembly of Israel was standing.

The notice what Solomon says next in 2nd Chronicles 6:4,
And he said: “Blessed be the LORD God of Israel, who has fulfilled with His hands what He spoke with His mouth to my father David,
See, Solomon is praying according to what God’s already said He’s going to do. look at verse 5,
Since the day that I brought My people out of the land of Egypt, I have chosen no city from any tribe of Israel in which to build a house, that My name might be there, nor did I choose any man to be a ruler over My people Israel.

Now verse 6,
Yet I have chosen Jerusalem, that My name may be there, and I have chosen David to be over My people Israel.’
This is what God promised David!

Verse 7,
Now it was in the heart of my father David to build a temple for the name of the LORD God of Israel.
Remember, David wanted to do that. He wanted to build a house. What did God say to David? No!
But what did he say to David instead?
Verse 9,
Nevertheless you shall not build the temple, but your son who will come from your body, he shall build the temple for My name.’
When David wanted to build God’s house, God said no but his son, Solomon would build it.
Now Solomon’s built the temple and He’s dedicating it.
See how all this was God’s will. Solomon’s prayer is that we did God’s will and he’s now praying according to that will!
You see a lot of background knowledge in all these verses. Solomon’s not just praying something like, “Well I built something for you God, even though you didn’t ask for it and I hope you can bless it even though you never promised you would, and I hope that if anyone comes in this building that you know they’ll have spiritual fulfillment even though you’ve never said that.”
That’s how many of us Christians pray.
We pray about things we do when there’s no biblical justification for it.
Solomon built this because God said to!
God made a promise to do it and to bless him for doing it. And he’s is praying to fulfill what God said he wanted him to do.
In verses 10 and 11, Solomon goes on,
So the LORD has fulfilled His word which He spoke, and I have filled the position of my father David, and sit on the throne of Israel, as the LORD promised; and I have built the temple for the name of the LORD God of Israel. And there I have put the ark, in which is the covenant of the LORD which He made with the children of Israel.”
So over and over again he’s talking about God’s fulfilling of what He promised Down in verse 17 and 18 he says,
And now, O LORD God of Israel, let Your word come true, which You have spoken to Your servant David. “But will God indeed dwell with men on the earth? Behold, heaven and the heaven of heavens cannot contain You. How much less this temple which I have built!
Solomon turns his attention to speak to God directly and this is in front of the congregation of Israel.

Do not make this house the house you go to for church.
This is a house God told Solomon to build specifically for Him.
No church organisation ever received that instruction.
Solomon goes on for the remainder of the chapter praying about the temple according to the will of God.

God responds to Solomon privately as Solomon goes home and tells him that he has heard his prayer and that, quote, “I will be in this house and if my people who are called by my name shall humble themselves and pray then I will heal their land I’ll forgive their sins.”

People don’t know what to pray for because often they’re not interested in learning what God will is.
That’s why it’s not easy to know what to pray for in this dispensation of today because knowing God’s will requires us to understand how His will has been revealed and how it has changed and now been revealed in this dispensation.
Christians, not understanding that not all the Bible is written to them and about them, take prayers from everywhere.
Whenever we hear Christians taking verses out of context and asking for
things contrary to God’s will, a red flag should go off in our mind.
If it’s not God’s will as clearly given tin the Bible, then there’s no way we can walk in that information or participate in it. It’s just simply outside God’s will and we should back away.
We saw Jesus in the last episode is teaching the disciples to pray in the so called Lord’s prayer and it was easy to see from prophecy that it was all according to God’s will, and the disciples knew that.

And as we pointed out last time also, to think that the church is to pray this prayer, especially as frequently as they do, is to say that in this prayer is the will of God for the church today and there’s a problem with that.
If this prayer is the will of God for the church today it doesn’t include the cross at all, or seeing all men saved, or the body of Christ, the creating of that new creature, or the church anywhere for that matter!
It’s eating every day to survive, being led on the earth to a kingdom come and forgiving others so you might receive forgiveness.
That is actually for the 12 tribes of Israel, it’s simply not the will of God for you and me today in this dispensation of grace.
But what that prayer does include, as Jesus taught it, was the will of God for Israel.
Jesus knew the will of God. Jesus knew He was God, but he also said He came to do the will of His father. That’s why He came to Earth to do the will of His father, to confirm the promise made in the covenants and also to die on the cross.
See the pattern of prayer? God’s will, God’s will, God’s will, not our partitions for things, for health, wealth and happiness that emerge from our own desires.

In Luke 18 verse 31 to 33 we hear Jesus say,
Then He took the twelve aside and said to them, “Behold, we are going up to Jerusalem, and all things that are written by the prophets concerning the Son of Man will be accomplished.” For He will be delivered to the Gentiles and will be mocked and insulted and spit upon.
They will scourge Him and kill Him. And the third day He will rise again.”

What He just said was that whatever God said before that He was going to do; He’s going to do. Is it a mystery here what Christ is going to do? No, it’s been revealed even though the disciples are kind of ignorant of it.
We see this in the next verse, verse 34,
But they understood none of these things; this saying was hidden from them, and they did not know the things which were spoken.
Like a lot of us Christians today, they just don’t know what the Bible actually says, but that doesn’t mean God hasn’t said it.
Now the disciples were not taught to pray about the situation, for Jesus’s work to die on the cross for the sins of the world.
That wasn’t even in that prayer the Lord taught them.
The disciples don’t understand anything he says here.
They didn’t know about his death and Resurrection, but Jesus did know. He
Knew He’d come to this earth to die. He also knew why.
In Luke 22, the night of His betrayal, and remember the disciples don’t understand anything about it, Jesus says this,
Likewise He also took the cup after supper, saying, “This cup is the new covenant in My blood, which is shed for you.
He hasn’t died yet. No one there that night understood the gospel preaching of the Cross, but Jesus says I’m going to shed My blood for the New Testament, I’m going to shed my blood for sins, I’m going to shed my blood for Israel’s promises being fulfilled.
Jesus knew what God’s will was for Him and why.
Now drop down to Luke 22 verse 42. It’s after the meal and they go out and sing a song then go to the Garden of Gethsemane. Peter, James and John are with Him and He’s told them to pray that you may not enter into temptation.
Jesus then prays saying,
“Father, if it is Your will, take this cup away from Me; nevertheless, not My will, but Yours, be done.”
Jesus knows why He came. It was to die. He knew He’d come to fulfill the promises and the prophets. He knew He’d come to die for the sin of the world. He knew even what was not yet revealed according to God’s will, which is that His death on the cross would accomplish something far greater, the creation of a new creature in the body of Christ. To perform His will for the ages and that’s why He says, “Nevertheless not My will but yours be done.”
Whatever pain and suffering and sorrow He’s feeling, whatever the resistance and temptation to not perform this thing, it needs to be accomplished because it’s God’s will, incidentally, the will He Himself purposed with the Father.
That’s Jesus’s prayer to the father. Should our prayers be any less according to God’s will?
However, for us to pray God’s will we need to know His will!

1st John 5 verses 14 and 15 is a popular prayer today, taught by Jon who was there in the Garden with Jesus on that dreadful night. John says,
Now this is the confidence that we have in Him, that if we ask anything according to His will, He hears us.
And if we know that He hears us, whatever we ask, we know that we have the petitions that we have asked of Him.

That’s what we’re trying to get across from the scripture.
When we pray it should be according to God’s will.
Then we have to recognise that God’s will relating to how he deals with mankind changes from age to age. God Himself never changes of course, but the way he deals with His human creation does.
John writes in this epistle of 1st John as a member of the remnant of Israel. One of those who’ve been promised a kingdom come.
He says we know we have confidence in him that whatever we ask we have the petitions we desired of Him.
That sounds like Psalm 37 which said,
Delight yourself also in the LORD, And He shall give you the desires of your heart.
As we saw at length He’ll give you the desires of your heart because your heart contains God’s will.
God’s not waiting for us to have a good idea. He has His will. We’re the ones that need to know it, for us to align with His will. In the circumstances of our lives, where sometimes it’s hard to see God’s will, we do our own thing anyway, but to do the things we need to do we must align ourselves, in that moment of prayer, to say God has a will and I’m supposed to be aligning with it. That helps us in how we walk day to day in this world.

According to Romans 8, we don’t know what to pray for, but the Holy Spirit helps but His words are not given to us in a supernatural inner voice today, they’re given to us in the scripture, which means we’ve got to open up the book and read and understand these things.
If we go back to 1st John 5 we see in verse 16 why they could ask anything according to His will and He hears, and they have the petitions they asked of Him.
See they’re talking about forgiving sins. The things that they’re asking God to do is forgiving sins.
In 1st John 1 verse 9 we see,
If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.
That’s what they’re ask Him. That’s why verse 16 says there’s some sins you shouldn’t pray for, which is another issue for another day, but they’re praying specifically for forgiveness.
Do we need to pray for forgiveness today? Is it our job to pray for forgiveness of someone else? No! Christ has shed his blood for all men’s forgiveness. Our pray today is that mankind, including the people we know and love, trust His completed work for the forgiveness of their sins.

In every prayer that we’ve just covered, and there are many, many more throughout the Bible, all these men prayed the will of God and their own will aligned with it.
None of them said, “Well that’s a good idea God but I have a better thought on how to do it.”
How do we get prayer to work? We need to know how God is working and what He wants. When we align ourselves with God’s will and His work then we see God working more clearly. Now we’re praying the same thing that God’s doing, His will for today.
Prayer works today according to how God works, what He’s doing in this dispensation, knowing full well that what He does changes throughout the scripture. Of course, God Himself never changes. Jesus is the same yesterday, today and forever, but how he deals with His precious creation, mankind, does change from age to age.
What He’s doing today is not what He’ll do in the future on the earth.
It’s not what He was doing at Pentecost or during Israel’s wilderness wanderings or when Israel conquered the land. And, when God changes his mode of operation with man, then prayer must change as well.
We know that The Body of Christ is not Israel. The body of Christ is neither Jew nor Gentile. We’re not under the law. As Romans 6:14 says,
For sin shall not have dominion over you, for you are not under law but under grace.
The body of Christ is a new creature created to serve God outside of the law.
2nd Corinthians 5:1,
Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; old things have passed away; behold, all things have become new.
Then in Galatians 6:15,
For in Christ Jesus neither circumcision (the Jew) nor uncircumcision (the Gentile) avails anything, but a new creation.
That doesn’t mean that we’re walking in sin. It means the law’s not the motivation for us to do right. We have a greater motivation which is God’s grace explained to us in the incredible book of Romans.
Not only are we not under the Mosaic law, we’re also strangers from the covenants relating to the earthly Kingdom.
Ephesians 2 says that we’re strangers from Israel’s covenants and when we join to God we don’t join to God through Israel’s covenants We join to God through the new man that he’s made, the new creature, the Body of Christ.

To fully understand God’s will for us today we need to understand the dispensation of grace that we’re now living in today.

We look to Romans 16 verses 25 to 26,
Now to Him who is able to establish you according to my gospel and the preaching of Jesus Christ, according to the revelation of the mystery kept secret since the world began but now made manifest, and by the prophetic Scriptures made known to all nations, according to the commandment of the everlasting God, for obedience to the faith—

Now, it isn’t just knowing that there was a mystery that was kept secret even though that’s important. It’s knowing that this mystery that God kept secret from the foundation of the world has now been revealed. It was revealed by Jesus Christ Himself through the apostle Paul.
The point of this verse is that Jesus Christ will establish us in the will of God that’s the point of the verse.
It’s so we might know God’s will according to that mystery.
How did this mystery period, which is the dispensation of grace come into being?
Ephesians 3 verses 1 to 7,
For this reason I, Paul, the prisoner of Christ Jesus for you Gentiles— if indeed you have heard of the dispensation of the grace of God which was given to me for you, how that by revelation He made known to me the mystery (as I have briefly written already, by which, when you read, you may understand my knowledge in the mystery of Christ), which in other ages was not made known to the sons of men, as it has now been revealed by the Spirit to His holy apostles and prophets: that the Gentiles should be fellow heirs, of the same body, and partakers of His promise in Christ through the gospel, of which I became a minister according to the gift of the grace of God given to me by the effective working of His power.

It’s hard to imagine that the apostle Paul, before he met Jesus Christ on the road to Damascus and was saved, was a violent and unrelenting persecutor of all who believed in Jesus Christ.

If you go through some of our other material you can find a more detailed explanation of the mystery revealed.
This dispensation that was revealed to Paul after being kept secret by God before the foundation of the world came into reality as an interruption, if you like, to the timeline of prophecy. This timeline included all the things that happened throughout Israel’s history and during Jesus’s earthly ministry when He came to earth to fulfill prophecy and the law to the letter. It also included the events of the day of Pentecost after the Lord had ascended back to heaven after His resurrection.
This is where the apostle Peter quotes the prophet Joel and refers to this time as the time that those events spoken of in Joel are actually happening. This certainly would have been the case but for one major factor, Israel rejected Jesus Christ, the Messiah. They rejected Him when He was on earth, and they continue to reject Him after He returned to heaven. The last straw for Israel was when they stoned Stephen in Acts chapter 7.
They had Rejected the Messiah, they’d rejected God and rejected the Holy Spirit and, as a result God rejected them, and Israel fell.
All that they were promised, the New Covenant, the Kingdom and the restoration of the nation to its former glory under King David and King Solomon were postponed and Israel entered a state of blindness which lasts right up till today.
So, in place of what should have happened, according to prophecy, God introduces this interlude that He knew about and knew would come, but kept it secret.
Every promise and prophecy relating to Israel was now on hold.
This period, this dispensation of grace, would be a time where God offered free Grace to a rebellious and wicked world. Grace that would be bestowed no longer through Israel, their priests and their religious systems, but directly from God by no other vehicle than faith in God’s Word, the gospel of grace. This gospel and salvation by grace is now open to every human, no matter how bad or good or whether he’s a Jew or a Gentile. The nation Israel has been temporarily sidelined as God’s priesthood that brings all nations to the knowledge of God. They’re sidelined until a day comes, which it will during the great tribulation, when they turn and realise that Jesus was the Messiah all along and they accept Him.
This incredible dispensation of grace has so far lasted for 2000 years.

So, now God has once again changed the way He deals with mankind. Now salvation is by grace alone, through faith, without works of the law or works of any kind. It’s through believing and nothing else!
Where do we find our instruction, our doctrine and what God’s will is for this incredible dispensation of grace today?
We find it in the 13 epistles written by the apostle Paul. The interesting thing with Paul is that in those 13 epistles Paul gives us both instruction in prayer and examples. He continually uses his own prayer life as an example of the instruction to pray.

In 1st Timothy 2 verses 3 and 4 we read about God’s overall will and therefore a baseline for our prayers,
For this is good and acceptable in the sight of God our Savior, who desires all men to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth.

So, we have salvation by the gospel of grace of God as Paul preaches and then coming to a knowledge of the truth. The truth of what? Of whom we are and what God’s doing today and what He’s accomplished by the cross and through his grace today.

In 1 Thessalonians 4 verse 1 and 2 Paul writes concerning our walk,
Finally then, brethren, we urge and exhort in the Lord Jesus that you should abound more and more, just as you received from us how you ought to walk and to please God; for you know what commandments we gave you through the Lord Jesus.
He says very clearly that this is the will of God concerning us that we should abound more and more. In what?
In the knowledge of God and His will as we see in Colossians 1 verses 9 and 10,
For this reason we also, since the day we heard it, do not cease to pray for you, and to ask that you may be filled with the knowledge of His will in all wisdom and spiritual understanding; that you may walk worthy of the Lord, fully pleasing Him, being fruitful in every good work and increasing in the knowledge of God;
When we read what Paul wrote in Romans and Corinthians and Galatians and his other epistles we’re reading what Paul taught these churches and we can
receive from Paul what they received from Paul, and we can know how we ought to walk.
If we don’t know we go back and learn. It’s that learning process that takes us from not knowing how or what to pray for as we ought to knowing what and how to pray.

1st Thessalonians 4 verse 3,
For this is the will of God, your sanctification:
Our sanctification or our purity is God’s will. To be who God made us to be, set apart for His purpose which means we have to know His purpose, which is Grace today.
Part of that’s, in fact a very big part, is being grateful. In 1st Thessalonians 5 verses 17 and 18 we’re told,
pray without ceasing, in everything give thanks; for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you.

We’ve covered these verses before. Knowing the will of God is clear in these passages. In everything give thanks. That’s a prayer verse but what we’re talking about today is praying knowing the will of God and then praying for the will of God.
If we struggle praying from this perspective of grace today, maybe we need to pray to God to change our perspective.
If we constantly think that the only thing we can pray for is something that we need and we don’t respect what God’s already given us in abundance then maybe our prayer might be, “God please help me to be thankful because I know that’s your will.” See we’d no longer praying our will we’re praying His will.
We can pray, “Lord teach me what it means to be a member of the body of Christ and to be sanctified. What does it mean to walk according to what you told Paul because I’m still trying to learn that, but I know that’s your will because I can see it clearly in scripture.”
See, we’re praying according to His will and that should help inform our Prayers.
It’s sometimes easier to read these verses about God’s will and know the will of God than it is to practice the will of God in prayer.
It requires a heart change.

We have to believe that what God’s doing today is the best thing for today.
We can’t pray to God to ask Him to act like He did in another age, like start healing the masses or bring that Kingdom in because we think that’d be better. What God is doing today is what He wills to do today, and it will work when we pray according to His will.
We can clearly know the ministry God’s doing today and it’s different than what He was doing before. He’s dealing with the spiritual today. He wants to see Souls saved and be spiritually strengthened in our inner man.

Paul prays in Colossians 1 verses 9 to 12,
For this reason, we also, since the day we heard it, do not cease to pray for you, and to ask that you may be filled with the knowledge of His will in all wisdom and spiritual understanding;
that you may walk worthy of the Lord, fully pleasing Him, being fruitful in every good work and increasing in the knowledge of God; strengthened with all might, according to His glorious power, for all patience and longsuffering with joy; giving thanks to the Father who has qualified us to be partakers of the inheritance of the saints in the light.

This is God’s will for us.
Colossians 4 verse 2 to 4 is a great prayer of Pauls,
Continue earnestly in prayer, being vigilant in it with thanksgiving; meanwhile praying also for us, that God would open to us a door for the word, to speak the mystery of Christ, for which I am also in chains, that I may make it manifest, as I ought to speak.
This is for all those who strive to bring the whole counsel of God to people.

We’re trying to see how all these prayers even in the old Testament were patterned according to the will of God. We just have to discern what the will of God is for today.
The Colossians 4 prayer works by understanding what God’s doing then we pray accordingly and then we watch because when we know God’s will we know what to look for and as we pray according to God’s will we’re participating in that will.

We change our will to recognise we want God’s will being done not ours.
A good prayer to start with may be, “Lord, your will be done not mine.” And then go and learn his will and our prayers will align us with that will.

How Do I Pray – Part 1

In this episode we’re looking at prayer to try and understand just what it is and how we’re supposed to approach it under the dispensation of grace in we live in today and what should we expect in response to prayer.
There’s a lot of discouragement about prayer because many of us don’t understand it’s purpose.
Frustration also comes by not understanding how prayer can change in the Bible from one dispensation, one age, to the next.
Let’s try and clear up some of the confusion about prayer by knowing God’s will for the age we currently live in and learning to pray according to that will.

“Speed Slider”

How Do I Pray – Part 1 – Transcript

There’s a lot of discouragement about prayer because many of us don’t understand it’s purpose.
Frustration also comes by not understanding how prayer can change in the Bible from one dispensation, one age, to the next.

Additionally, when we talk to God, He doesn’t really talk back to us, so is he really listening?
So, prayer can be confusing and there’s a lot of ignorance associated with it.
Talking to the Eternal Creator, our maker Who’s in heaven and all around us is a difficult concept to get hold of. He’s invisible, a spirit and, into the bargain, we’re not even worthy of talking to Him.

Now, if you’re struggling with prayer and really don’t know what to pray for or how to pray, how to approach God, you’re normal!
You and I have to accept the fact that our struggle with prayer is the normal situation for Humanity.
Even us Christians who’re saved by God’s grace find it difficult to pray. It’s normal! We need to accept that and realise that the Bible actually says we need to be taught how to pray because we don’t know how.
That’s both comforting to know we’re normal and discouraging at the same time, especially when we realise there’s such a thing in the Bible as praying wrong.

We’re certainly told by Jesus Himself that we can pray wrongly.
In Matthew chapter 6 verse 5 for example, Jesus said this,
And when you pray, you shall not be like the hypocrites. For they love to pray standing in the synagogues and on the corners of the streets, that they may be seen by men. Assuredly, I say to you, they have their reward.
To pray like the hypocrites would be wrong according to Jesus.
A hypocrite here means a stage player, an actor, a pretender, a moral or religious counterfeit or fraud.

How do the hypocrites pray? Jesus tells us in this verse. They put on a public spectacle to draw attention to themselves, to their own importance. Jesus said that’s the sum total of their reward, they get that recognition, and their self-importance is satisfied.

There’re so many passages on prayer in the Bible, much more than we could study here, however there’s not a lot of instruction or specific detail on how to do it.
Despite that, prayer is something God wants us to do, so we’re left with a question mark.

We learn in the scripture that prayer is something very personal between an individual and God. It’s something that we pray out of our inner man.
But these hypocrites are making a performance out of it and so they’re making it about their flesh and that’s the hypocrisy.
In Matthew 6:6 Jesus goes on to say,
But you, when you pray, go into your room, and when you have shut your door, pray to your Father who is in the secret place; and your Father who sees in secret will reward you openly.
So basically, the Lord’s saying rather than pray like the hypocrites do it in secret.
There’s another way to pray that’s wrong.
Matthew 6:7,

And when you pray, do not use vain repetitions as the heathen do. For they think that they will be heard for their many words.

Saying the same thing over and over and over again like a chant doesn’t affect God any more or less.
He says the Heathen, those who don’t have knowledge of God, pray that way.
They think if they repeat these incantations God’s going to hear them.

Jesus says no He doesn’t hear them.
There are religious dominations that do that, just chanting the same thing over and over again, and it’s nonsense. So’s the idea that we just pray whatever jibber jabber we want.
There’s a right way to pray and a wrong way to pray.
The difficulty surrounding prayer is partly to do with that because we’re trying to learn how to talk to our maker to the Holy God of the universe and none of us want to do it wrong.

Luke 11 verse 1 we see the disciple after ministering with Jesus and seeing all that He did and listening to Him pray. Here’s what happens,
Now it came to pass, as He was praying in a certain place, when He ceased, that one of His disciples said to Him, “Lord, teach us to pray, as John also taught his disciples.”
Jesus follows up with the so-called Lord’s Prayer, which we’ll look at closer shortly, but the fascinating thing is that if prayer was something natural, something we were born knowing, then it was a silly question they asked Jesus.
Instead, Jesus said, “When you pray say this.”
He was teaching and they were listening. So, learning how to pray is something we to do. We need to learn how and what God says about how to pray to him.
There’s good news and bad news here.
Romans 8 verse 26 says this,

Likewise the Spirit also helps in our weaknesses. For we do not know what we should pray for as we ought, but the Spirit Himself makes intercession for us with groanings which cannot be uttered.

Paul’s talking here about us, the body of Christ, in this current dispensation of grace.
Romans 8:26 describes us as not knowing what to pray for.
The good news is that God knows that, and this verse says the Holy Spirit helps our infirmities making intercession for us with groanings that cannot be uttered.
Contrary to the belief of many charismatic Christians that’s not tongue talking or us groaning. It’s the things that cannot be said and the Holy Spirit who dwells in you in this dispensation can intercede between us and God with things that we need when we don’t know what to say.

I mean, that’s a very comforting verse. When we come to prayer not knowing what to pray for, God knows the mind of the Holy Spirit, Who dwells in us, and that even though you don’t know what to even request, He knows what we need.
That he can give us what we need is helpful.
Of course, we need to deal with what we think we need, and we’ll get to that, but it’s helpful to know that God knows what we feel and think and what’s in our mind and heart.
That’s interesting way to pray just like that. “God, I don’t know how to pray. You know better than me what I need. Help!”
It might not seem real eloquent but the good news is that God knows that we don’t know, and He’s provided help for us.

Another part of the reason why people don’t know how to pray is that prayer concerns the spiritual. When we talk to each other we can have a sort of two-way conversation about things in the world, but is there anything God doesn’t know? No!
It’s a bit awkward sometimes in prayer when God knows everything. What’s left for me to say?
And, it’s not easy for us to engage with someone that’s seemingly not in the room, even if God’s omnipresent, everywhere, all the time.
When we talk to other people our conversation is geared around the mutual interest of the things you have in common or the things we’re discussing, but with God, we’re dealing with His mind. How much do we know about God? When we pray to God, how do we know Him? Who is He? What and how does He think?
Well, of course we learn this from scripture of course, but how much of that have we really studied? Not as much as we should have right?
So, it’s hard to enter prayer when we don’t know the mind of God and especially when we request things of God.
Paul tells us to make our requests known to God so He can help, and He can intervene.
But what we’re talking about here is what is God’s will.
Jesus prayed in Mark 14:36 just before going to the cross,

“Abba, Father, all things are possible for You. Take this cup away from Me; nevertheless, not what I will, but what You will.”

Not my will! But what is the will of God? This is also a big question for Christians and it’s why a lot of people pray in ignorance and don’t know how to pray, because they simply don’t know what God wants, what His will is.

As the charismatic movement influences the church more and more, many churches turn to the idea that God will do anything that we ask and intervene in any way that He has throughout the Bible.
In so doing they destroy any dispensational changes in God’s operation. We’re talking about God’s divine intervention you see and who are we to know how God intervenes.
When we’re talking about God’s Will and God’s intervention that’s a big subject. A lot of the prayer ignorance today is because there’s generally ignorance about God and particularly in what He’s doing today as opposed to what He was doing in the past or future dispensations.
If you don’t know that we won’t know how to pray correctly, and the result is frustration and confusion. We want to communicate to God. We want to talk to Him, and we need His help. We want to depend on Him, but we simply don’t know what He’s promised and what He’s doing now, what His mind is now, and so we’re confused.
We might try to offer up a prayer thinking God may be doing this or we read a verse in the Bible thinking maybe He’s doing that, and you pray, and it doesn’t seem to work out, or it doesn’t work out the way you thought or hoped. So, confusion and frustration.
Each of us need to simply acknowledge when we’re ignorant about something. That’s the first step to learning. We can’t learn if we think we already know. If we think we know it, we’re not going to learn anything.
We need to change what we think.

So, if you’re coming to prayer and you think you already have this sorted, you already know how to pray, then good for you. But we’re dealing with people who don’t know how to pray as we ought.
Now we combine this idea that we don’t know what to pray for as we ought with the Bible’s instruction that we’re to pray, then we’ve got a real issue.
I don’t know how to pray but God says pray!

Even outside Christianity there are pagan religions where people pray to their gods based on what they believe. They come because of faith. When you pray, you pray because of Faith, believing that there’s a God who’ll hear you.

Many pray to Saints and even to different beings in the universe claiming that they can hear them.
People pray to God because of fear. It’s like the no atheists in a Foxhole idea. People pray because they’re desperate. There’s nowhere else they can turn.
“I’m afraid so God if you’re listening, I need help”.
People pray out of a desire for something. “God, I really, really, really, want this, so pretty please give it to me”.
People pray because they need help even when they don’t know anything about God or His Word or what He’s doing today.
It’s a good thing to pray, but we shouldn’t pray in ignorance and yet we’re all ignorant of how to pray in the beginning.

Prayer usually stops when people think they don’t need God anymore or that prayer doesn’t work. “I prayed about it, and it didn’t work”.
Sometimes prayer stops or slows down amongst those who learn the Bible and start to understand what God is and is not doing in the age in which we live.
Before that, we assumed that all the Bible is written to us and we could just open the Bible at any place, wherever it falls open, and there’ll a promise there for us.
So, God will do anything today that He’s done anywhere else in the Bible.
For example, I can pray Gideon’s prayer in Judges 6:36 and we read,

So Gideon said to God, “If You will save Israel by my hand as You have said look, I shall put a fleece of wool on the threshing floor; if there is dew on the fleece only, and it is dry on all the ground, then I shall know that You will save Israel by my hand, as You have said.”

Or Jabez’s prayer in 1st Chronicles 4:10,

And Jabez called on the God of Israel saying, “Oh, that You would bless me indeed, and enlarge my territory, that Your hand would be with me, and that You would keep me from evil, that I may not cause pain!” So God granted him what he requested.

Or Elisha’s prayers in 2nd Kings 6 verses 17 and 18,

And Elisha prayed, and said, “LORD, I pray, open his eyes that he may see.” Then the LORD opened the eyes of the young man, and he saw. And behold, the mountain was full of horses and chariots of fire all around Elisha.
So when the Syrians came down to him, Elisha prayed to the LORD, and said, “Strike this people, I pray, with blindness.” And He struck them with blindness according to the word of Elisha.

Or Revelation 6:10,

And they cried with a loud voice, saying, “How long, O Lord, holy and true, until You judge and avenge our blood on those who dwell on the earth?”

We could go on and on, but it’s pretty obvious that these types of prayers would not be answered by God today.
Through the understanding that God works through different people at different times in different ways we begin to rightly divide the Word and we start to learn that God’s doing that particular thing for Israel according to His covenant with them and that not everything God said is talking to you and me today.

So, when we begin to see that God works through different people at different times in different ways, we tend to stop praying at all.
Why? Because we’re left not knowing how to pray.

God tells us to pray so at the very least it’d be good to try and learn how.
In the prophecies relating to the New Covenant made to Israel and the House of Judah there’s a huge advantage in that the Holy Spirit comes, and He guides into all truth, but the benefit of the period that you and I are living in now, the dispensation of grace where we’re members of Christ’s body is that we’re given clear information that we can understand and put into practice.
We need to be aware that as many of God’s ways of dealing with humanity change from age to age, dispensation to dispensation, prayer changes as well!

We don’t want to waste our time with things that don’t work today and unfortunately a lot that’s preached today doesn’t work and quite often it doesn’t work because we’ve not understood how things change from age to age. We try and do things today that simply aren’t for the current age.

So, can we talk to God? Sure, we can, but praying rightly requires information that we need to learn.
We might ask, “Isn’t God just happy that we’re talking to him?”
Well, He tells us to pray. And, the Holy Spirit’s in us if we’re saved in order to intercede for us, but God wants us to know and to do his will and we get that by learning.

We look at Job.
Job who existed and lived at a time long before there was a written Bible. He lived without the Revelation that we have today of all scripture.
Even the Book of Job wasn’t written to Job.
So, job didn’t have a book and he was a bit frustrated because he’s living his life, upright before the Lord and he was being blessed in prosperity and physical blessings until all this was removed because of the deal Satan had with God and God was silent towards Job.
If God had said, “Okay Job there’s going to be some trouble going on but don’t worry I’m still here and I know what’s going on,” Job could have understood but God didn’t say that.
Suddenly Job loses his children his wealth, everything, and he’s left frustrated. His friends are trying to defend God trying to tell him how he should speak to God and apologise to God and how to pray to God, and Job says this in
Job 31 verse 35,

Oh, that I had one to hear me! Here is my mark. Oh, that the Almighty would answer me, That my Prosecutor (God Himself) had written a book!

Oh, that God would hear me. He’s not talking to me. I don’t know what He’s doing. If only the almighty would answer me.
This sounds like many Christians today when it comes to prayer.
I want to pray and oh that God would just tell me something, even if he just verbally said no! But he doesn’t even do that.
We just assume it’s NO when he doesn’t respond. Or maybe it’s a YES but I’ve got to be patient. We don’t know.
But Job says oh I desire the almighty would answer me and that my prosecutor, meaning God in this situation, had written a book. We Christians pray as if God never wrote a book, but He did and it’s about what He’s done before, what He’s doing now and what He’ll do in the future, and it needs to be understood.
The trouble is when we have a book, what’s that require? Study, and who likes doing that?
We’re back to study again, because God has spoken through these words, they’re God’s words to us. It’s his revelation and if we don’t understand this revelation, we’re no better off than Job.
Things can happen to us for better or worse and we don’t know why and all we desire is that God answers us, and He doesn’t.
Job says in Job 31 verse 36 about this book he wishes he had,
Surely I would carry it on my shoulder, And bind it on me like a crown;
Job says just tell me what’s going on and why and I’ll gladly endure anything for you.
Most of us don’t have that heart to endure anything like Job did, but it doesn’t excuse us. Job had an excuse. He didn’t have a book. We do have one.

The disciples in Luke 11 verse 1 had Jesus, the Son of God, right there with them and it’s a fair question for them to ask, teach us to pray.
It’s recorded in scripture which shows us they didn’t know how to pray and here’s the Lord right here, so why wouldn’t you ask Him?

Did you know that in the law of Moses there’s no commandment to pray?
If you look up the word prayer it doesn’t show up as a commandment in Deuteronomy, Exodus, Numbers or Leviticus, yet Moses prays, and Israel prays.
When we need help in life we want to communicate with God.
But the big challenge for us is to know and understand what God’s doing today.
Is what we’re asking Him for according to His will?
And what is His will for the age we live in today?
What He’s doing today in this present age may be, and most certainly is, entirely different than what He was doing in Moses, or David’s day. Even what He did when Jesus walked the earth may be different than this church age we live in today.
We need to know how God is dealing with mankind today in order to know if what we’re asking is even His will, remembering that the most pointless prayer would be asking something that’s not His will.

The person who writes more about prayer than anyone else is King David.
Many of the Psalms are prayers from David. However, they’re written under the law and Israel’s covenants so, if we’re praying David’s prayers we’re praying Israel’s covenants. Clearly this is not the way for us to pray today.

The one whose writings are filled with more instruction on prayer for you and me today than anyone else in the scripture is the apostle, Paul.
Every epistle Paul writes it’s filled with instructions and examples of Prayer.
In the dispensation of Grace that we live in today, it’s Paul’s Epistles where we find the instructions stating the will of God for today, this present age, and how to pray.
In 1st Timothy 2 verses 1 and 2 Paul says this,

Therefore, I exhort first of all that supplications, prayers, intercessions, and giving of thanks be made for all men, for kings and all who are in authority, that we may lead a quiet and peaceable life in all godliness and reverence.

First, before anything else, prayers should made for all those that be in authority.
This is Paul’s instructions to Timothy on how to respond to those that’re in authority and why. That we may lead a quiet and peaceable life in all godliness and reverence.
The in the next two verses of 1st Timothy 2, verse 3 and 4 we read Paul further explaining why,

For this is good and acceptable in the sight of God our Savior,
who desires all men to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth.
We’re praying for all men to be saved and come knowledge of the truth.

Then in 1st Thessalonians verses 16 to 18 Paul writes this to the Thessalonians,

Rejoice always, pray without ceasing, in everything give thanks; for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you.

This is perhaps the most popular prayer instruction in the scripture and it’s very clear.
Rejoice always!
Christians, those who have believed in Christ and His completed work on the cross, can rejoice always because their joy isn’t based on circumstances, but in God. Circumstances change constantly, but God doesn’t.
In the midst of the worst that this world can dish up to us we know our Saviour and we know we’re saved by His grace, and permanently secure in Him by the Holy Spirit. We know our ultimate destiny!
This is why we can rejoice always.
Pray without ceasing.
We don’t find anything like that in the law of Moses, but we find it here in Paul’s Epistles, under the age of grace.
What does it mean to pray without ceasing?
Surely Paul here doesn’t mean prayer without stopping.

To stop eating, sleeping, and working in the place of praying all the time would be silly. Paul himself says he does not ‘cease to pray’ for the Colossians in Colossians 1:9, yet in 2nd Thessalonians 3:8 he says that he quote, “worked with labour and toil night and day.”
The idea is that we shouldn’t give up on prayer and chuck the process of praying into the bin.
However, we shouldn’t spiritualise this verse either by saying that our whole life is a perpetual prayer to God. We simply ought to walk in continuous attitudes of prayer by being aware of God’s existence in our everyday lives and knowing our destiny through the blood of Christ.
The passage refers to regular prayer communication with God faithfully and without failing.
Paul says pray without ceasing and in everything give thanks for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you.
So, what’s the will of God?
In everything give thanks and pray without ceasing!
This is the will of God Paul’s talking about here.
We say we want to know God’s will for our life? Well, it’s in black and white in the scripture.
We might say, “But that’s not specific to my situation”. But, yes, it is!
Pray without ceasing in everything give thanks in Christ Jesus.

Why is prayer so important in this dispensation of grace today?
One reason may be because under grace, unlike any other dispensation, we don’t see God intervening in the way He did back then.
So, we need to know how God intervenes today, and to learn how God operates today and then act according to that.

Even though we don’t know how to pray there is a way we ought to pray, and the Holy Spirit can help us.
But then we’re stuck because we don’t know how to do that.
This is why people are discouraged about praying but the instruction’s clear.

In Philippians chapter 1 Paul tells the Philippians how he thanks God for them and how they’re in every prayer of his as he makes requests for them with joy. Joy because of their fellowship in the gospel and for how God has begun a good work in them and will complete it until the day of Jesus Christ.

Paul gives us more instruction on prayer and the results if we do it, by what he says to these Philippians in Philippians 4 verses 6 and 7,

Be anxious for nothing, but in everything by prayer and supplication, with thanksgiving, let your requests be made known to God; and the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and minds through Christ Jesus.

The word “anxious” in the King James is “careful” meaning don’t take the care of the world and the circumstances of everyday life on board.
Paul gives an example of this in his own life a bit later in verses 12 and 13 of the same chapter, Philippians 4,

I know how to be abased, and I know how to abound. Everywhere and in all things I have learned both to be full and to be hungry, both to abound and to suffer need.
I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me.

What are the “all things” he’s talking about? Being able to live and rejoice in whatever circumstances he finds himself in because of his knowledge of God.

He says stop being careful for everything. Pray to God make your request be made known to him and the peace of God which passes all understanding shall keep your hearts and Minds through Christ Jesus.
See the instruction here? In everything, by prayer, let your requests be made known.
But hold on! We still don’t know what to pray for because it doesn’t tell us what to request does it?
So, we’re going to have to learn.
In Colossians 4:2 Paul says,

Continue earnestly in prayer, being vigilant in it with thanksgiving;

Notice he says “continue” in prayer, so they must have started already. Being vigilant in it. The King James has the word “watch” instead of vigilant.
Watch in the same with Thanksgiving.
There’s thanksgiving again.
Then in the next two verses Colossians 4:3 – 4 Paul tells them what to pray for,

…meanwhile praying also for us, that God would open to us a door for the word, to speak the mystery of Christ, for which I am also in chains, that I may make it manifest (to make it known or apparent), as I ought to speak.

What should the Colossians pray for?
That God would open to us a door of utterance, for the word, to speak the mystery of Christ.
To speak what? The mystery of Christ!
Have you heard of the mystery of Christ? Well, we sure need to because this is what Paul says we should pray for. Our prayer won’t help Paul now. He’s been with the Lord for 2000 years but there’re ministries now popping up everywhere that have had a revelation of this mystery period, this age that we now live in called the dispensation of grace and they’re boldly preaching it and, just like Paul did, they’re challenging traditions that the Body of Christ has accepted without sound bible foundations. We need to pray this same prayer that Paul told the Colossians to pray for him, for these ministries.

In Colossians 1 verse 9 Paul describes his prayer for the Colossian Christians,

For this reason we also, since the day we heard it, (heard of their love in the Spirit) do not cease to pray for you, and to ask that you may be filled with the knowledge of His will in all wisdom and spiritual understanding;

 

You see the people he tells to pray need wisdom and understanding.
When we don’t have wisdom and understanding what are we? Ignorant!
The Colossians were ignorant just as we all are. So, the very people Pauls telling to pray are the people he says need to grow in understanding.
When we start to learn to rightly divide the Bible it starts becoming clearer, much clearer. We start seeing things we didn’t see before even though they were always there in black and white.
Our understanding goes up really quick but sometimes we miss the connection of how that understanding helps our prayers.
We can even think that don’t need to pray anymore, but the opposite’s true. We need to be taught how to pray. First comes the teaching then comes the praying.
Paul explains this in the next verses Colossians 1 verses 10 to 12,

That you may walk worthy of the Lord, fully pleasing Him, being fruitful in every good work and increasing in the knowledge of God; strengthened with all might, according to His glorious power, for all patience and longsuffering with joy; giving thanks to the Father who has qualified us to be partakers of the inheritance of the saints in the light.

When we get this understanding of the Bible it’s time to start walking worthy of the Lord, pleasing Him.
Well, how do I do that exactly?
How about in everything give thanks or pray without ceasing, learning to implement what God’s taught us.
Then, we can increase more in the knowledge of God. Some things we can only learn after we put into effect what God’s already taught us.

Prayer’s not something that saves us, and it’s not something we know how to do naturally.
When we learn the Bible it helps inform our prayers but often we kind of forget why we’re praying in the first place.
For example, maybe we prayed that we didn’t understand God’s will, but we wanted to know His will.
Then we learn God’s will as we study and then it’s, “great, prayer answered, no need to pray ever again because I now know what God’s will is.
Well now it’s time to try doing His will.
Prayer’s not the magic tool that gets you God’s answer. The Bible is God’s revelation it’s not something that gets you saved. Christ did that on the cross and when you put your trust in that it’s something that you use in your walk every day.
To not be interested in that walk, often results in the knowledge we’ve gained making us puffed up with pride, knowing things without actually doing them.
God wants us to do!
The instruction to pray is very clear in scripture but at this point we know that we don’t know how to pray. We know we need understanding but we don’t have it and yet we have to pray because the Bible tells us to. So, the conclusion we come to is that prayer must be taught to us.

It’s very interesting that in Jesus’s earthly ministry, His disciples came to Him and asked Him to teach them to pray. Although they were Jews, bought up on the law and the Jewish scriptures, they didn’t know how to pray!
When they asked, Jesus didn’t treat them as idiots who should have known. On the contrary, Jesus responded with the most famous Prayer in the Bible, popularly called The Lord’s Prayer in Matthew 6 from verse 5 to 13.
It’s a weird title and Jesus certainly didn’t call it that. Jesus himself would never have prayed that prayer for Himself because the prayer asked to forgive your sins. Jesus didn’t have any sins. He was the sinless Son of God.
To see a prayer that Jesus did pray for Himself we look at the entire chapter of John 17.
We’re not going to study that prayer right now, but it’s Jesus praying to the Father. What’s not in Jesus’s prayer in John 17, is anything in the so-called Lord’s Prayer.

So, the disciples ask Jesus to teach them how to pray and Jesus gives them just three verses. But then he Himself prays 26 verses to the father!

Our reaction might be, well teach me how to pray those long prayers the glorious ones.
Jesus says pray this. Compared to His prayers it’s like He’s talking to Children. Look at Luke 6 verse 12,
Now it came to pass in those days that He went out to the mountain to pray, and continued all night in prayer to God.
This records Jesus praying.
There are many, many books written about prayer, and they often talk about how much Jesus prayed. The motive is often to exhort us to pray as much.
I mean we’re talking hours here! How many hours did you spend in prayer last week? See, guilt starts rising.
Many books use this verse to tell us we’ve got to get somewhere where we can see the glory of God, like in the mountains. That’s how this verse is often preached. He continued all night in prayer.
So, you have the International House of Prayer where they pray all night and all day. 24/7 in praise and prayer.
What did Jesus pray all night? Maybe that’s the secret to accessing God’s power?
When Jesus’s disciples asked Him how to pray Jesus was patterning something a little different, at least in the length of time that he prayed.
Turn to Luke 11 verse 1, and we’re trying to get an understanding of the basic truth that we don’t know how to pray, and we have to acknowledge that before we can learn anything about it. So, Luke 11 verse 1,
Now it came to pass, as He was praying in a certain place, when He ceased, that one of His disciples said to Him, “Lord, teach us to pray, as John also taught his disciples.”

Now, we already know that here in Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, is not instructions for the Body of Christ in today’s dispensation of grace, so when Jesus is instructing his disciples here He’s instructing men that would reign over the tribes of Israel in the coming Earthly Kingdom.
He’s teaching Israel how to pray through that tribulation to come before their earthly kingdom. We know that because down in verse 10 to 13 Jesus says,

For everyone who asks receives, and he who seeks finds, and to him who knocks it will be opened.
If a son asks for bread from any father among you, will he give him a stone? Or if he asks for a fish, will he give him a serpent instead of a fish?
Or if he asks for an egg, will he offer him a scorpion?
If you then, being evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit to those who ask Him!”

You see He’s talking here about the Holy Spirit. These are going to be Holy Spirit filled Israel, who will know what to pray by the unction of the Holy Spirit telling them the words.
In fact, later in Luke Jesus’ll say the Holy Spirit will give you the words to say. People then go and teach prayer like that saying, “Well to pray you just sit down wait for the Holy Spirit to give you the words. You wait and you wait and sometimes you just force it out.
Sometimes you need to help the Holy Spirit, maybe open your mouth move your tongue a little bit, you know make a noise or groan and then the prayer’ll come.
But that’s not the instruction to pray here. The Holy Spirit giving these people words to speak is not what God’s doing today!
We’re members of the Body of Christ today.
Romans 8:26,

Likewise the Spirit also helps in our weaknesses. For we do not know what we should pray for as we ought, but the Spirit Himself makes intercession for us with groanings which cannot be uttered.

We’ll cover this shortly.
In Luke 11 and Matthew 6 Jesus is talking to people who receive the New Covenant Holy Spirit before this prophesied tribulation period after which they’ll enter their Kingdom. They can ask and they’ll receive because they’ll know what to speak because the Holy Spirit, given to them under the New Covenant, will be the One saying it.
Every word Peter said at Pentecost was Holy Spirit inspired.
He didn’t prepare that sermon!
Let’s go back to the lesson Jesus taught to the disciples in response to their request to teach them to pray.
Luke 11:2,

So He said to them, “When you pray, say: Our Father in heaven, Hallowed be Your name. Your kingdom come. Your will be done On earth as it is in heaven.

As we said this prayer is given to New Covenant Israel going to their Kingdom and so in the context of Luke 11, when Jesus tells his disciples, who are Jews, “Our Father” God is the father of Israel.
A gentile wouldn’t pray that. He’s not talking here about the fact that He’s our Creator and so He’s everyone’s Daddy and we’re all children of God. No!
You get to be children of God through Israel’s covenants. That’s how that is in Luke 11.
There’s another way you and I are the children of God which is explained in Paul’s epistles written specifically to you and me, the Body of Christ today but that’s not the audience here in Luke 11. Paul hadn’t even been saved at this time and the mystery of the dispensation of grace certainly had not been revealed. It was still kept secret by God since the foundation of the world at this time.
So the Father here’s the Father of Israel. Jesus starts with the acknowledging who He is, Our Father, and where He is, in heaven.
Hallowed, holy, be thy name. So there’s an acknowledgement of who God is and how holy He is.
Now, even though this prayer’s not even given to us to pray, we need to learn who God is! If we’re not praying to God or the right God, we’re doing it wrong. We can all agree I think that if we’re praying to a stone figure we’re doing it wrong.
If we’re praying to the birds we’re doing it wrong. If we’re praying to Poseidon the god of the sea, who never existed, we’re doing it wrong. If we’re praying to a god that we think is God but is not what the Bible describes as God, that’s idolatry and we’re doing it wrong.
How do I know I’m praying to the right God? I can’t see Him! Well, have to be informed from the scripture who the true God is.
We must know who God is and when we don’t we just vainly throw up a prayer with the question, “If there’s a God there, hear me.”
When you teach our children we have to teach them who God is before they know who they’re talking to.
So, there’s step one of the things you have to be taught.
Jesus goes on and says our Father which art in heaven, Hallowed be thy name thy kingdom come thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven. On Earth as in Heaven!
Jesus is saying thy kingdom come now. Where did he get that idea, the kingdom come? Is this just a desire he has? “God I really want a kingdom.”
No! This is something that’s been promised and prophesied since the world began to the nation of Israel, that He would bring his kingdom to the earth. Something we must learn, along with who God is, is what He’s doing. What’s His will? Right after Jesus says, “thy Kingdom come”, He follows it up with, “Your will be done.”
You see God’s already promised Israel this earthly Kingdom and said that it would come, and Jesus is telling the Disciples of Israel here as he’s preaching of the nearness of the Kingdom, to pray for God’s kingdom come to Earth for the fulfillment of those prophecies about the earthly Kingdom. Thy kingdom come. God bring your kingdom down.
We have to know what God’s will is behind “thy kingdom come” and understand what God has promised already and what He’s doing now.
That inform our prayers so we can pray for what God’s will is.
For example, “God I pray that I’d be more thankful. You tell me to be thankful and I’m not feeling it but I want to be more thankful according to Your will.” That’s a good place to start!
We can pray for that right now. “I pray your will be done, Lord.” If we know his will and we certainly can through His Word, we can pray it.
Jesus goes on to say, “Give us day by day our daily bread.” Matthew 6 says give us this day our daily bread.
The famous Daily Bread verse that took a swift change from thy glorious Kingdom from the heaven down to earth to I’m hungry and give me bread. Israel needed daily bread when they were wandering through the Wilderness. Until they get to their promised land they had no land to bear food to eat and they were in a desert that God led them to, and they had nothing to eat. God gave them bread every day.
Behind this part of the prayer is knowing what God provides, what He has provided, and what He will provide.
We need to know that in the context of the time.
Jesus says to the disciples, you’ll go to the kingdom. The kingdom will come. But before you get there you’ll need provision and God will provide your daily bread.
So, in Luke 11 and Matthew 6, give us day by day our daily bread is speaking of what God is providing for them.
We need to know what God is providing for us today also. How do we know that? How do we know what God’s giving us?
It helps to learn what the scripture says God has done before and what He’s doing now.
To learn what God’s provided for you informs your prayers.
Jesus goes on to say, “and forgive us our sins for we also forgive everyone that is indebted to us.”
We need to learn what God requires of us. The forgiving of sins is something that a sinner, before God, would recognise, that He’s holy and they’re not. How are our sins forgiven today? Is it because you forgave other people their debts? Many people don’t see it, but Jesus is teaching very clearly here, as he does in Matthew 6, that if you do not forgive others their sins God in heaven will not forgive your sins. Your forgiveness of sin, according to Jesus’s teachings in this instruction to pray, is dependent upon your forgiving others. God requires them to forgive other people before He will grant them the request of forgiveness.
This is opposite to Colossians 2:13 and 14,

And you, being dead in your trespasses and the uncircumcision of your flesh, He has made alive together with Him, having forgiven you all trespasses, having wiped out the handwriting of requirements that was against us, which was contrary to us. And He has taken it out of the way, having nailed it to the cross.

So, if we’re going to make a request to God if we’re going to pray to God we need to know what He requires and what His will is for today, not what His will was in past dispensations or what it will be in the future.
We can pray till we’re blue in the face but if we’re not meeting what God requires today, in the time in which we live, nothing’s going to happen.
What does God require today? What kind of work does God require for our salvation? Nothing, only believe His Word, The Gospel. What works does God require before you engage with him in prayer? Nothing!
What does God require before you get forgiven? Faith in Jesus Christ and nothing more! This informs our prayers, you see. We can say, “Thank you Lord for forgiving me on my faith in the gospel, even if I haven’t forgiven my neighbours. That teaches me what forgiveness looks like so that I can forgive my neighbours.”
That’s a very good prayer. We’re not talking about how you can speak, with the wisdom of men.
We must learn what God provides and what He requires of us.

The Lord’s teaching the disciples here that they’re to forgive other people to get their sins forgiven. So, you see, no one. no disciple could actually pray forgive me my sins as I forgive my neighbour unless they actually did that.

Jesus goes on to say, “and lead us not into temptation but Deliver Us from Evil” Again, we need to learn Who God is, what His will is, what He provides for us and what’s required of us.
We’ve also got to learn how God leads us.
The request here is lead us not into Temptation. But what if God wants to lead you there? How do you know? We need to know what God’s leading is, which has to do with His will.
What’s the path, what’s the ladder look like for me?
Is it just it I’m saved and now I’m stuck here the rest of my life, grateful I’m saved? Or, is there a means of growth and a purpose and a mission God’s given that he’s leading me somewhere and to do something? And what is that?
Jesus is talking about His audience going to the tribulation, and being tempted not to face that suffering but instead, take the mark of the beast and everything else.
“Deliver Us from Evil.” We live in a present evil world. How do we get delivered from evil? Well, we die, and we go to heaven! That’s how we’re delivered from this present evil world.
But, we don’t want to go through the evil, do we? Or maybe we need help to get through the evil.
But, we need to know how God leads us now, in our present day.
We’re going through what Jesus taught his disciples to pray, which they didn’t know.
Jesus gave these men an example, so should we pray that way also?
No. Because Jesus’s example has a different context. When we study the bible through a dispensational lens we recognise who is speaking and to whom. Jesus is speaking obviously, and to whom is He speaking? Israel. To the 12 disciples of the 12 tribes of Israel.
We recognise what God is doing and how what He’s doing changes from age to age, or dispensation to dispensation.
When we study the Bible recognising the changing instructions of God throughout the scripture, so we also see man’s responsibility changing accordingly.
When God instructs Noah to build an ark, no one before him or after him had to build an ark, but Noah did.
When God told Moses and Israel to keep these Commandments they had to. When he tells us that we’re not under the law but under grace, guess what, our responsibility is to walk with the knowledge that we’re under grace not under the law.
So as God’s instructions change, as he progressively, over time reveals new information, it’s our responsibility to learn that information and put it to use. So, we’re talking about how we don’t know how to pray so isn’t that a different thing from realising God’s changing instructions to mankind through the different ages? No! They’re connected.
If we think that prayer is simply the same throughout the Bible we’re wrong! What we do in response to those changing ages and changing instructions has everything to do with the way we pray.
Because prayer is our responsibility, and we’re instructed to pray, how do I pray? Well, that’s going to change according to God’s instructions. Does that mean we’ve got to learn how to pray? Yes, because we don’t know until we learn what God’s revealed.
If we don’t know what God’s doing today, we don’t know what we need to do. We talk to God knowing what He’s said for us today, His progressive revelation.
We could say, “Lord I know you created the world with Your Word and that you spoke to Moses and You parted the waters and You spoke to David and gave him promises, and I know what you’re doing now.
That’s an important prayer! Prayer changes with God’s progressive revelation. None of us know how to do it in the beginning. We need to learn.
We have to learn how to use the scripture as a tool, as a weapon, as a sword. We have to learn to use it and it’s the same with prayer.
We learn it through personal Bible study.
We should never leave it to the so-called experts to tells us what God has said to mankind so we can just close the book and don’t even consider it any further, just listen to the high and mighty priest or minister who knows it better than us anyway.
That’s not what God intended. He wants us to learn and part of that learning is opening up the book so the book can teach us what God said and what we should do.
God wrote the Bible for you and me to understand. It just requires us to engage with it so we can teach one another, and we can show each other how the scripture tells us to study it and rightly divide the Bible.

People get concerned about their lifetime struggle with prayer. They think it’s impossible to ever learn how to pray but we can if we can learn what God’s doing. We have the Bible to inform us and that’s more than Job did.
Even without a book, Job would not blaspheme God, knowing that God knew what he was doing.
God still knows what he’s doing, but unlike Job, you and I can now know too if you read the scripture and rightly divide it.

So how do we pray under grace, under this present dispensation of the Body of Christ?
First, we realise, and accept, that as we learn under grace, and learn to study and rightly divide the Bible, we will fail. We’re all going to do it wrong and that’s okay. But pray anyway.
There’s examples in the Bible of people praying wrong.
Peter’s a great example. Poor old Peter’s the guy who fails over and over again. He’s got so much zeal, and he longs to do it right. He jumps out of the boat, and he actually walks on the water but drops into the water. He gets blamed for not having faith but those other guys in the boat never stepped out. Would we?
Peter took his sword out and cut Malchus’s ear off, and Jesus says no Peter, put it up. Failed again. The guy was going to fight for his Messiah.
It’s a good thing to have zeal and to fail. At least you can learn some things from it.
Paul himself, though different than Peter, also failed when he prayed specifically in 2nd Corinthians 12:8 to 9.
Paul didn’t know but this is the thing, even when we fail it’s only because we don’t know.
If we have the heart to pray and we’re not trying to lie to God and we want to pray rightly and talk to him, Hebrews 4:12 says that the Word of God knows the thoughts and intents of our heart and the spirit who’s in us knows. God knows the mind of the spirit.
Paul got it wrong in 2nd Corinthians 12 verse 8,

For this thing I besought the Lord thrice, that it might depart from me.
And he said unto me, My grace is sufficient for thee: for my strength is made perfect in weakness. Most gladly therefore will I rather glory in my infirmities, that the power of Christ may rest upon me.

Jesus actually responded to Paul’s prayer and this’s not a common thing. Jesus is speaking to teach Paul so that you and I can learn something from Paul’s failure.
Jesus doesn’t say no to Paul, He says my grace is sufficient. I’ve given you what you need. He tells Paul to acknowledge what I’ve given you what I provided for you, Grace.
And then Jesus gives the reason why His grace is sufficient. “For my strength, Christ’s strength, is made perfect in weakness.
Paul’s learning something and he changes from thinking, “I need to remove this thorn In the flesh,” to “Now therefore will I rather glory in the thorn in my flesh.”
He went from remove this thorn in the flesh, to I’m going to glory in this thorn in my flesh.
What changed? Paul learned something and this is how it’s going to work for us too.
When we pray with sincerity and with a heart to do right with God, to communicate with Him for His will to be done, and we do it selfishly and wrong, We can learn.

Romans 5:8 says God committed his love toward us that while we were yet sinners Christ died for us.
Christ died for Sinners who didn’t pray and could not pray.
Oh, maybe they were praying Pagan prayers or maybe they were praying to another god or maybe they were praying to what they knew was the true God but not according to His will, either way they didn’t have to pray. How could they? They’re unsaved! If you don’t know God’s grace and don’t know what he’s doing then that’s us folks.
Christ died for our sins when we didn’t know how to pray. He died for our sins when we didn’t know how to walk rightly.
Do you think our inability to pray is going to somehow hinder our relationship to God or our salvation? No!
We’ve seen already in Romans 8:26 that the Holy Spirit dwells in us. He seals us in Christ. He dwells in us and intercedes for us when we don’t know what prayers and help that we need.
That’s a relief but it’s still left to us to learn what the fruit of the spirit is and how to walk after the spirit and what God has done. Under grace the spirit’s not given to you to judge our prayers and whether we’re doing it right and if we’re not He’s going to leave us. He dwells in us.

A very wise man once said about prayer, “Don’t frame a saviour out of your prayers. Don’t think that praying is going to save you or that praying rightly is somehow going to make you a better Christian. You are who you are because Christ made you that way.”
Paul didn’t say pray and be saved. He didn’t even say pray so that we’ll be mature Christians. Prayer, he says, is the utterance of a living soul, the breathing of a child’s desire to our heavenly Father. We are the children of God by faith in Christ Jesus, not by faith and prayer.
We mustn’t think prayer is going to do something that it doesn’t actually do. Many Christians give too much power to prayer, but the power is in Jesus Christ through the Holy Spirit that dwells in us. Prayer is how you talk to God to engage Him in His will. We need to learn how to do that.
Galatians 3:26 says,

For you are all sons of God through faith in Christ Jesus.

We’re children of God by faith alone. No one that tells us that we must pray to make God merciful can tell us how long we must pray to be make God merciful because we can’t make God merciful or make Him save us by our lengthy prayers.
We’re saved by grace through faith. It’s a gift of God not of works (or prayer) lest any man should boast.
That means ignorant selfish prayers do not save us and rather righteous holy prayers don’t save us. Neither do they change our standing with God.

In this dispensation of Grace, we’re made a child of God by virtue of God’s grace, justified by faith. We’re put into his son, into the body of Christ and so praying wrongly or ignorantly or selfishly doesn’t change our standing with God.
It wasn’t always like that! In 1 John 1:9 there’s forgiveness of sins and confessions of sins to get back a right standing with God, but that’s not the case for us who’re in the Body of Christ.
That’s written for Israel under their Covenant program. We’ve been crucified with Christ, and we’re resurrected in Him.
That access to God through Christ cannot change by what we do which includes our prayers.
So how do we pray under grace? With that understanding! We’ve got to learn and know some things so that when we pray we’re not praying, fearful that we’ve somehow lost fellowship with God because we forgot to pray for three months. We haven’t lost anything with Christ if we’re saved by God’s grace.
So, we’re learning here that we don’t know how to pray be we should pray according to Paul’s instructions.
The disciples themselves asked Jesus to teach them and we also have to be taught how to pray in this dispensation we live in and when we pray it has to be with the knowledge of what we have in this dispensation.
If we struggle praying a good prayer might be, “Lord teach me to pray.”

The Last Days – Part 9 – Christ as King

In this episode we continue to define this period known as the end times or the last days and we see Christ in the Kingdom that He’ll set up on earth in those times.

“Speed Slider”

The Last Days – Part 9 – Chris as King – Transcript

In this episode we’re discussing the Kingdom and Christ as it’s King.

If you recall when Christ died 2000 years ago Peter stood up at Pentecost filled with the Holy Spirit saying all the prophecies relating to the last days were being fulfilled now.

He quoted from Joel chapter 2. Joel 2 spoke about the last days in which tribulation and wrath will come from the Lord and the kingdom would be set up.

Well, it’s been 2000 years since that happened, so where are those last days prophesised so long ago.

As we read in the Bible continuing past Acts chapter 2, we see that Christ saved the apostle Paul in a completely unprecedented and unprophesied event. Christ revealed to Paul a mystery dispensation where not only could mankind be saved by grace alone through faith in the completed work of Jesus Christ on the cross, but that He’s creating a new creature that’s not Jewish or Gentile. It wasn’t a fulfillment of prophecy, but it was a mystery that was kept secret since the world began.

It was something that concerned a new creature that would reign and rule with Christ in Heavenly places as part of God’s universal plan and purpose for the ages.

This revealed mystery was different from what God had purposed for the earth in prophecy.

We’ve seen in this series that when we rightly divide the Bible, this mystery, now revealed, this dispensation of the church, the Body of Christ, from the tribulation, the Bible begins to take on a simple clarity.

Where people get confused with the end time prophecies is when they think we live in this time of tribulation, or that the catching away of the church is a tribulation event.

When we rightly divide this mystery period from prophecy, we see that the tribulation was prophesied throughout the Bible but what God’s doing today is not.

So, when we separate these periods, it’s called rightly dividing as 2 Timothy 2:15 says in a direct instruction from Paul to us today

Be diligent to present yourself approved to God, a worker who does not need to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth.

It’s very important to see this distinction between prophecy and mystery, Israel and the church, law, and grace.

If we don’t make that simple distinction, we’re going to have trouble with these end time events because we’re going to mix in prophesied events with what God’s doing today and we’re going to get confused and possibly lead people into error.

People may take these verses about the Tribulation or these Kingdom verses and apply them to their salvation today and may even get the idea that they’re enduring till the end to be saved, or that they’ve got to keep those commandments to be saved. They may think they’ve got to build this Kingdom.

The Gospel of grace in 1 Corinthians 15:3 – 4,

For I delivered to you first of all that which I also received: that Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures, and that He was buried, and that He rose again the third day according to the Scriptures, 

Studying end times and for that matter the whole Bible according to God’s dispensations is critical to understanding. By dispensations we simply mean taking into account the different ways that God deals with mankind through different ages and seeing where we are today in those ages.

There’s so much we could talk about relating to prophecy, but we simply want to get the foundation right first, so we’re not talking about the antichrist, the 144,000 Witnesses, or the mark of the beast.

When we talk about the end of the world, we’re not talking about the annihilation of everything. It’s not that a comet’s going to hit us and suddenly humanity is extinct. That’s not it at all.

We understand that God created the world out of nothing. He created man from the dust of the earth, and He has a purpose and a plan for the ages and so when we talk about the end of the world, as the Bible’s talking about, it’s the end of the world system as we know it, the end of the present evil of the world’s institutions where sin and rejection of God are the foundations.

In Ephesians 2 – 3 Paul explains this,

And you He made alive, who were dead in trespasses and sins, in which you once walked according to the course of this world, according to the prince of the power of the air, the spirit who now works in the sons of disobedience, among whom also we all once conducted ourselves in the lusts of our flesh, fulfilling the desires of the flesh and of the mind, and were by nature children of wrath, just as the others.

We were born unsaved and before we were saved in this present world we walked according to the things of this world, according to the prince of the power of the air, the spirit that now works in the children of Disobedience.

That Prince of the power of the air is not the Lord Jesus Christ.

Many people think Christ is King now, that He’s reigning now with his rod of iron and He’s currently running this world. Not so!

He has every right to be King and we’ve covered that. Because of his death on the cross He’s been set in a position where He’s going to possess that Kingship in the future, but He’s not possessed it yet.

The prince of the power of the air here has to do with Satan.

2 Corinthians 4:3 – 4 says this about the God of this world that blinds people’s minds,

But even if our gospel is veiled, it is veiled to those who are perishing, whose minds the god of this age has blinded, who do not believe, lest the light of the gospel of the glory of Christ, who is the image of God, should shine on them. 

In Galatians 1:4 we read about Christ,

who gave Himself for our sins, that He might deliver us from this present evil age, according to the will of our God and Father.

We battle today against spiritual wickedness in high places according to Paul in Ephesians 6:12,

For we do not wrestle against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this age, against spiritual hosts of wickedness in the heavenly places. 

We’re also in a battle of doctrine, a battle where the enemy tries to twist, and distort the Words that God’s spoken to mankind.

2 Corinthians 11:3,

But I fear, lest somehow, as the serpent deceived Eve by his craftiness, so your minds may be corrupted from the simplicity that is in Christ. 

We’re not fighting against people, we’re fighting against the bad Doctrine and the wrong teaching that keep people from salvation and from trusting Jesus Christ.

Ephesians 2:3 says,

Among whom also we all once conducted ourselves in the lusts of our flesh, fulfilling the desires of the flesh and of the mind, and were by nature children of wrath, just as the others.

When we talk about the end of the world, we’re talking about that right there.

About the children of Wrath that’ll be dealt with during this time of tribulation and Judgment of the Nations.

We’ve seen that in the tribulation Christ returns and tears down the institutions and kingdoms of this world and sets up His own kingdom. That’s when the children of wrath get dealt with.

We’re talking about the rise of the Kingdom of God on Earth, Christ’s Kingdom, where Christ returns and says I’m the King and I’m here to claim My kingdom.

It’ll be a great day because no longer will we talk about the prince of the power of the air or the God of this world or this present evil world because during this time Christ will be on His throne reigning.

Look at Zechariah 14 verses 7 to 9.

It shall be one day Which is known to the LORD Neither day nor night. But at evening time it shall happen That it will be light. And in that day it shall be—That living waters shall flow from Jerusalem, Half of them toward the eastern sea And half of them toward the western sea; In both summer and winter it shall occur. And the LORD shall be King over all the earth. In that day it shall be “The LORD is one,” And His name one. 

That tells us that we’re not living in the time of the prophesied Kingdom at the moment and yet that’s what some people believe.

They think when Christ came and died and rose from the dead, His kingdom began and all those prophecies, one of which we’ve just read, is now fulfilled and we’re now living in the Kingdom.

Christians pray for the furtherance of God’s kingdom, to further build his kingdom out and that’s what they honestly believe the church’s job is today.

They think we’re living in this Kingdom and that we are the kingdom, and we need to build institutions to reform our world.

But this world is lost.

God’s already condemned it. That’s why we’re called by the scripture ambassadors in 2 Corinthians 5:20,

Now then, we are ambassadors for Christ, as though God were pleading through us: we implore you on Christ’s behalf, be reconciled to God. 

For He made Him who knew no sin to be sin for us, that we might become the righteousness of God in Him.

We’re sent into an evil world where Christ currently has no rule and influence because everyone’s rejected Him.

However, there will be a time when He’s no longer offering those terms of peace that we’re here to tell of. The ambassadors are gone, caught up together with the Lord after which time He comes back in wrath and judgement before he sets up his kingdom.

The world will see the salvation of the Lord and his righteousness, and they’ll no longer be able to say, I don’t believe anything I can’t see. They’ll see Him alright!

This’ll be a time when Jesus is actually there, where they’ll see Him not only as He was once before, but he’ll be reigning and ruling.

We’re looking for the hope of this change, Christ as King as government and as judge.

Today we listen to politicians of all parties of government trying to convince us that this or that policy will work better but it’s not an internal change. It’s a mental calculation done in minds that are completely unable to see the entire picture.

But to preach salvation and trust in the gospel will change a person by putting their hope in the right thing, Christ coming as King and ruling in absolute righteousness and justice.

Christ came the first time as a servant, as a minister and his ministry lasted three and a half years and, in that time, He changed the world. What’ll happen when he comes and reigns for a thousand years.

Look at Psalm chapter 2. This is a Messianic Psalm that talks about Christ, and it says in Psalm 2: 6 – 8,

“Yet I have set My King On My holy hill of Zion. I will declare the decree: The LORD has said to Me, ‘You are My Son, Today I have begotten You. ” 

Ask of Me, and I will give You The nations for Your inheritance, And the ends of the earth for Your possession. 

That’s God the Father speaking to Jesus, God the Son and He’s talking about this time of the Kingdom.

Paul talks about this same prophecy in Acts 13:33. Let’s see that,

God has fulfilled this for us their children, in that He has raised up Jesus. As it is also written in the second Psalm: ‘YOU ARE MY SON, TODAY I HAVE BEGOTTEN YOU.’ 

Christ was begotten to sit in the position as the Son of God in heaven when he rose from the dead and ascended to heavenly places and He hasn’t yet possessed the kingdom.

When he comes back it’s time to possess it and He’s going to take it. It’ll be His and it says in Psalm 2:9 and 10,

You shall break them with a rod of iron; You shall dash them to pieces like a potter’s vessel. Now therefore, be wise, O kings; Be instructed, you judges of the earth. Serve the LORD with fear, And rejoice with trembling. Kiss the Son, lest He be angry, And you perish in the way, When His wrath is kindled but a little. Blessed are all those who put their trust in Him. 

This is an Earthly Kingdom friends, not spiritual or heavenly that’s somehow in our hearts.

Notice the warning in these verses? It says when Christ comes and possesses His kingdom beware you judges and kings on the Earth. You’d better kiss the Son, that’s the Son of God, or Trust in the Son. You’d better fear the Lord or else He’ll judge you face to face right there on the Earth.

We’re talking about that Kingdom on the earth when Christ is King and what that’s going to be like.

Will that be different than today? Very much so. The name of Christ’s become an insult for a lot of people today in this world. It won’t be then when He’s the King over all the earth and everyone’ll know Him.

Romans 14:11, quoting prophecy from Isaiah 4:23,

For it is written: “AS I LIVE, SAYS THE LORD, EVERY KNEE SHALL BOW TO ME, AND EVERY TONGUE SHALL CONFESS TO GOD.” 

Then Philippians 2:10 & 11,

that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of those in heaven, and of those on earth, and of those under the earth, and that every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father. 

Now let’s go to Romans 11:25 – 27 and we read,

For I do not desire, brethren, that you should be ignorant of this mystery, lest you should be wise in your own opinion, that blindness in part has happened to Israel until the fullness of the Gentiles has come in. 

And so all Israel will be saved, as it is written: “THE DELIVERER WILL COME OUT OF ZION, AND HE WILL TURN AWAY UNGODLINESS FROM JACOB; 

FOR THIS IS MY COVENANT WITH THEM, WHEN I TAKE AWAY THEIR SINS.”

Paul’s again quoting prophecy, this time Isaiah 59, explaining Israel’s place in this dispensation of grace today and why Israel and their promises aren’t being fulfilled today.

He explains that Israel is not finished. Israel will be saved because of those prophecies that have yet to be fulfilled. Every Word of every prophecy God has given must and will be fulfilled.

Paul explains this mystery unless, as he says, you should be wise in your own conceits, or opinions, that blindness in part has happened to Israel until the fullness of the Gentiles comes in.

That’s after this current mystery dispensation that was kept secret since before the foundation of the world but is now revealed. Israel’s blind in part currently. Israel’s fallen today, but they’re only blind in part until a future time and that’s when Paul says in verse 26 here, that all Israel shall be saved, as it is written in Isaiah 59.

Remember how in previous episodes we saw how ever since Israel was taken to captivity back there in Daniel that Gentiles have reigned over the world and Israel’s not been in their position that God promised them as a nation and how Christ called this time, “the time of the Gentiles”, because of that.

However, when the time of the Gentiles is done, and Christ comes back and destroys the kingdoms of this world and sets His own kingdom up, what happens?

Israel’s going to be saved and put in the position that God promised them since Abraham.

All the world’ll be blessed through Israel at that time. People will look at Israel and say the Lord’s with them. They’ll say salvation is in Zion. That’s a lot different than now. When Israel’s talked about today, we only hear about bombs and armies and guns and struggle and hatred.

But not then.

They’ll be in a position above all Nations and all the world’ll come to them as Romans 11:25 – 26 says.

Israel is no longer blind in those days. They get saved to be the priests and ministers of the lord, to bless the nations of the world.

In Romans 11:12 Paul writes,

Now if their fall is riches for the world, and their failure riches for the Gentiles, how much more their fullness! 

If their fall led to Salvation being sent to Gentiles by Grace what incredible things will come from their fulness?

Romans 11:32 says,

For God has committed them all to disobedience, that He might have mercy on all.

That’s the reason why God’s giving grace to the world, Jews, and Gentiles, because the Jews, as a nation, fell when they rejected Christ their Messiah.

As a result, they no longer have a position anywhere close to what they had before they fell.

They’re no different than the Gentiles that’ve rejected Christ.

So, since both Jew and Gentile are fallen, God can offer salvation to all of them freely by grace and that’s what he’s doing today.

The problem is that, today, we’re still in our sinful flesh.

We have salvation by grace through faith and hope in the Lord Jesus Christ, and yet we have to constantly deal with our flesh not being healed.

We struggle with things in this present evil world.

When Christ Reigns as King we won’t have to deal with that anymore. No more present evil in this world.

How much more their fullness the salvation of Israel.

That’s the hope that God has for the Earth.

Romans 11:15 says,

For if their being cast away is the reconciling of the world, what will their acceptance be but life from the dead? 

I mean if we get reconciled through grace freely today what will it be like when Israel actually rises to power, and this world is no longer evil with everyone in unbelief?

Look at Jeremiah 23:3 and it’s God speaking through Jeremaiah,

But I will gather the remnant of My flock out of all countries where I have driven them, and bring them back to their folds; and they shall be fruitful and increase. 

Everywhere we see that word “flock” in the Bible it deals with Israel.

Israel are God’s sheep so it shouldn’t surprise us to see in Psalm 23 the shepherd leading through the valley and the green pastures, talking about Israel in that tribulation time of trouble, the shadow of darkness and death, and leading them into that Kingdom Psalm 24 depicts.

Jeremaiah 23:4,

I will set up shepherds over them who will feed them; and they shall fear no more, nor be dismayed, nor shall they be lacking,” says the LORD. 

Many people think that Israel’s fulfilling these prophecies of Jeremiah 23 today.

They think that the Balfour Declaration of 1917 was God bringing them back to the land. But does Israel today lack nothing and is the Lord their Shepherd over them?

As a nation, they reject the Lord Jesus Christ today just as they’ve always done.

Prophecy says Israel will return in a certain way and God’ll do it and when they return the world’ll know that God did it and that surviving remnant of them will finally accept the Lord Jesus Christ.

Jeremiah 23:5,

Behold, the days are coming,” says the LORD, “That I will raise to David a Branch of righteousness; A King shall reign and prosper, And execute judgment and righteousness in the earth. 

Is that a picture of unbelieving Israel today?

See this is talking about a kingdom that God establishes after he’s knocked down the kings of this world. This’ll be a King who’ll execute judgment and Justice in the whole earth.

There’d be a huge political problem with that right now if you preached God’s Kingdom on the earth following the justice and Judgment of Jesus Christ.

It’s ridiculous for Christians to think they’re helping bring God’s Kingdom to earth by donating to the building of the next temple.

We live in a present evil world where even Bible believing Christians either reject the whole counsel of God or fail to learn it.

In Jeremaiah 23:6 God says,

In His days Judah will be saved, And Israel will dwell safely; Now this is His name by which He will be called: THE LORD OUR RIGHTEOUSNESS.

Is that what we see in today’s headlines? Israel dwelling safely?

Some say, well, they’ve got the Iron Dome missile protection system, so there it is, fulfillment of Prophecy! Hardly!

He shall be called the Lord our righteousness. Is that Israel’s current prime minister?

Jeremiah 23 verse 6 is talking about Jesus Christ as King in Israel and He’s going to protect them.

We’ll see later in Revelation 21 how He protects them with fire from heaven and it’s not the Iron Dome system.

He’ll just burn them up. That’s how he protects them. No need for missiles. Won’t it be great when the people living at the time in that Kingdom no longer need to use the brains that God gave them to create missile defence systems? How many unknown and awesome things will they turn their intelligence to?

Today Israel observes their holidays, and those holidays hearken back to when God delivered them out of Egypt. So, they do Passover, and they do the feast of unleavened bread and all to remember what God did for them in Exodus.

But God says in Jeremaiah 23:7 and 8,

“Therefore, behold, the days are coming,” says the LORD, “that they shall no longer say, ‘As the LORD lives who brought up the children of Israel from the land of Egypt,’ 

but, ‘As the LORD lives who brought up and led the descendants of the house of Israel from the north country and from all the countries where I had driven them.’ And they shall dwell in their own land.” 

They’ll say the Lord brought them back, not out of Egypt but out of the countries, to their own land.

The world will say this. They won’t need a church to explain it to them, they’ll all know the Lord. That’s what the Bible says.

Look at Jeremiah 33:14 to 16,

Behold, the days are coming,’ says the LORD, ‘that I will perform that good thing which I have promised to the house of Israel and to the house of Judah: ‘In those days and at that time I will cause to grow up to David A Branch of righteousness; He shall execute judgment and righteousness in the earth. In those days Judah will be saved, And Jerusalem will dwell safely. And this is the name by which she will be called: THE LORD OUR RIGHTEOUSNESS.’

Is that what we ought to call Israel today? The Lord our Righteousness?

These are questions we all need to ask if we think the Kingdom’s happening today.

Of course, it isn’t but what a time that’ll be when there’s actually a nation that’s proclaiming the Lord Jesus Christ and He’s the King.

Jeremaiah 33:17,

“For thus says the LORD: ‘David shall never lack a man to sit on the throne of the house of Israel; 

Never shall there not be a king from the house David on the throne of Israel and so the promises that God made to David will be fulfilled in this Kingdom.

It’ll be a Son of David as the King.

Jeremaiah 33:18,

nor shall the priests, the Levites, lack a man to offer burnt offerings before Me, to kindle grain offerings, and to sacrifice continually.’ ” 

Today Israel can’t offer sacrifices because the Kingdom’s not here and the temple’s torn down.

Jews today want to rebuild their Temple to offer sacrifices. What’s stopping them? Money? No, it’s not money it’s politics. They don’t have the authority. They’re fighting a political battle. There’s Muslims over there. There’s Palestinians over there. There’s Jews over there who all but a few reject Christ outright.

The issue is political, and it’ll be solved when this Kingdom comes with Christ as King.

In Jeremiah 33 we can read down to verses 25 and 26 where God explains this promise He made to them and how He made a covenant with them that will not be taken away.

He considers the things in the heaven and in the skies as a covenant. He’s saying that if I can break my Covenant of the day and my Covenant of the night then there should not be day and night in their season. Then may also my Covenant be broken with David my servant.

He says similar in Jeremiah 3.

Look at the sun, the Moon, and the stars. The sun comes up every day and the moon has its Circle every month. If you can stop the Sun from shining and stop the Moon from doing what it’s doing and the stars from shining, then Israel will cease to be able to claim the promise I made with him.

That’s what God says in Jeremiah 31.

Those things are there because I put them there for times and seasons and if you can stop that then you can stop the kingdom coming back to Israel.

The point being that nothing can stop what God’s going to do. He’s going to make it happen. He’s got a covenant with Israel. He made a promise to them.

The Kingdom come to Earth means the rise and salvation of Israel.

For Christians today to preach that the Kingdom on Earth is theirs is only one step away from claiming to be Israel.

Christians cannot build the Kingdom and it won’t be set up without Israel being present.

Isaiah chapter 11 verse 1 and 2, was fulfilled in Jesus’s Earthly Ministry, now he’s going to be the judge of all the earth.

In verse 3:4 we read,

His delight is in the fear of the LORD, And He shall not judge by the sight of His eyes, Nor decide by the hearing of His ears,

But with righteousness He shall judge the poor, And decide with equity for the meek of the earth; He shall strike the earth with the rod of His mouth, And with the breath of His lips He shall slay the wicked. 

See, with righteousness He’ll judge the poor and with equity or fairness He’ll judge the meek, the humble of the Earth.

Look down at verse 9,

They shall not hurt nor destroy in all My holy mountain, For the earth shall be full of the knowledge of the LORD As the waters cover the sea. 

It says nothing will hurt or destroy. There won’t be people hurting each other at this time.

When the Gentile powers are destroyed and Israel is set up as that Kingdom, and Christ is ruling, the Gentiles will come to Israel and Israel’ll give them blessings. They’ll come to learn the law of God. No more debates about the best system of government or the best form of economics or the best political rules. You go to Jerusalem to learn the law of God and that’s how it’s done all over the Earth. What a great time.

Isaiah 11:11 and 12,

It shall come to pass in that day That the Lord shall set His hand again the second time To recover the remnant of His people who are left, From Assyria and Egypt, From Pathros and Cush, From Elam and Shinar, From Hamath and the islands of the sea. 

He will set up a banner for the nations, And will assemble the outcasts of Israel, And gather together the dispersed of Judah From the four corners of the earth. 

This is what will happen in this Kingdom after the tribulation is over.

It’s time to gather in His people. Building the kingdom begins here when Christ returns.

Look at Isaiah 46:13,

I bring My righteousness near, it shall not be far off; My salvation shall not linger. And I will place salvation in Zion, For Israel My glory.

The glory of God on the earth will be that Nation, and it’s where people get saved.

We wouldn’t send someone to Israel today to be saved, but at that time that’s where they, the nations, will go for salvation.

They’ll hear about salvation and God’s blessings in Israel.

Look at Isaiah chapter 60 verses 1 and 2,

Arise, shine; For your light has come! And the glory of the LORD is risen upon you. For behold, the darkness shall cover the earth, And deep darkness the people; But the LORD will arise over you, And His glory will be seen upon you.

Who’s this? Israel! The darkness over the face of the Earth is the tribulation where there’s flames and fire and smoke and dead people. That’s darkness. But what happens? The light that comes out of this Darkness is saved Israel.

He says rise from the ashes Israel. I’ll resurrect you; I’ll make you this nation and you’ll be my glory on the Earth.

Isaiah 60:3 and 4 now,

The Gentiles shall come to your light, And kings to the brightness of your rising. 

Lift up your eyes all around, and see: They all gather together, they come to you; Your sons shall come from afar, And your daughters shall be nursed at your side.

So, you see all the nations come to them and they won’t need to be convinced.

God makes that happen.

This certainly doesn’t describe Israel today, does it?

However, at that time the world will be so desperate for salvation from this destruction that when they see a nation with the power of God on them that’s where they’ll go.

To Isaiah 62:1 and 2.

For Zion’s sake I will not hold My peace, And for Jerusalem’s sake I will not rest, Until her righteousness goes forth as brightness, And her salvation as a lamp that burns. 

The Gentiles shall see your righteousness, And all kings your glory. You shall be called by a new name, Which the mouth of the LORD will name. 

This is the Word of God, where God Himself is speaking by the Holy Spirit through Isaiah the prophet. It’s very plain.

Isaiah 62:3 and 4,

You (Israel) shall also be a crown of glory In the hand of the LORD, And a royal diadem In the hand of your God. 

You shall no longer be termed Forsaken, Nor shall your land any more be termed Desolate; But you shall be called Hephzibah, and your land Beulah; For the LORD delights in you, And your land shall be married. 

There’s a famous old Christian church hymn called Sweet Beulah Land, but it’s not for the church today, it’s about Israel and their land. This is the only place where Beulah shows up, and it’s clearly about Israel.

In Biblical Hebrew Beulah means “married”, and applies to the land that Israel will marry, the land promised by God to Abraham, Issac, and Jacob.

We’re not Israel and we don’t have a land promise so us singing about this Beulah land somehow relating to the church today is very odd.

By the way this gives a whole different perspective on Revelation 21 and the Bride of the Lamb which many if not most Christians think is the church.

Where does the church get that from? But that’s a discussion for another day.

In Zechariah 8:22 and 23 we read,

Yes, many peoples and strong nations Shall come to seek the LORD of hosts in Jerusalem, And to pray before the LORD.’ 

“Thus says the LORD of hosts: ‘In those days ten men from every language of the nations shall grasp the sleeve of a Jewish man, saying, “Let us go with you, for we have heard that God is with you.” ‘ ” 

People will flock to Israel to learn of God.

We’re going now to Revelation 19 to see what this is all going to look like according to the revelation of Christ.

The Book of Revelation is not a confusing book. It’s very clear if we take it literally.

Revelation 19 is where the Lord Jesus Christ comes back to judge and make war and to set up his Kingdom.

Revelation 19 down in verse 19 and 20 we read,

And I saw the beast, the kings of the earth, and their armies, gathered together to make war against Him who sat on the horse and against His army. 

Then the beast was captured, and with him the false prophet who worked signs in his presence, by which he deceived those who received the mark of the beast and those who worshiped his image. These two were cast alive into the lake of fire burning with brimstone. 

Christ comes back and destroys the armies of the world, and he takes that false Christ and that false prophet, those dictator leaders of the world at that time, and casts them into the Lake of the fire.

They’re done, finished. He doesn’t compete with them. They’re simply finished off.

Verse 21,

And the rest were killed with the sword which proceeded from the mouth of Him who sat on the horse. And all the birds were filled with their flesh. 

Remember last episode we spoke of this sword being a symbol of the Words that Jesus speaks. Words of Judgment in this case.

Now look at what happens in Revelation chapter 20 verses 1 and 2,

Then I saw an angel coming down from heaven, having the key to the bottomless pit and a great chain in his hand. 

He laid hold of the dragon, that serpent of old, who is the Devil and Satan, and bound him for a thousand years; 

So, we’re here at the beginning of the kingdom and Christ has just destroyed the armies of the earth and He’s destroyed the antichrist and the false prophet by casting them into the lake of fire.

Then he turns to Satan, the third member of that Unholy Trinity.

He casts him into a bottomless pit, and he binds him for a thousand years.

We can’t bind Satan today, contrary to what most in the charismatic movement believe.

When the kingdom comes Christ will bind Satan and he’s not going to be unbound for the 1000-year span of the Kingdom.

Can any of us imagine this earth with Christ ruling and Satan and his evil influence bound from anything to do with the operations of this world?

Revelation 20:3,

and He (Christ) cast him (Satan) into the bottomless pit, and shut him up, and set a seal on him, so that he should deceive the nations no more till the thousand years were finished. But after these things he must be released for a little while. 

You see, at this time in the Kingdom, when Christ first sets it up, this isn’t to get rid of sin and death.

This is simply to set up his Kingdom and He’s going to show the whole world what the reign in righteousness is like.

Sin and death are still there.

Satan’s in the bottomless pit and he’s just bound up at this time, but then, when this thousand-year period is up, Christ will let him out!

Why would He do that?

Well, this Thousand-Year Millennium as people call it, this Millennial reign of Christ is going to be a time where Christ enters into this cursed world and reigns Himself showing people how righteousness can reign and how from that we’ve been for the last six thousand some years. He’ll show firsthand the incredible way the earth functions with sin bound and Christ ruling.

But even then, even at the end of this Thousand Years there’s going to be people who oppose Him.

How could that be?

Sinful man! Sin still exists!

There ‘ll be people in this thousand-year long Kingdom, generations in fact, who weren’t born before Christ set up this Kingdom.

All they know is Christ on the throne.

Their parents’ll tell them stories of old about before Christ came and how He was rejected and how He destroyed all the unrighteous people of the earth, but the kids don’t know that, or at least it’s just an old story to them. They’ve been born in this Kingdom, and they don’t know anything else.

There’ll be plenty of them who’ll say, “I don’t like the way Christ’s doing things”, even though they don’t know anything different.

It’s like kids today complaining they’re bored, even though they have smartphones and TVs and video games and every toy and gadget imaginable. It’s like, “Really? We used to have a stick!”

That’s how it’ll be in this time. People are born and at the end of this thousand years there’ll be an uprising again against Christ.

The Lord’s response is quick and sharp.

I’m the King of the earth. You’re in rebellion, poof. With fire they’re gone.

That’s the end of all things. That’s the end of the world. We talk about the end of the world, that’s the end of it.

He, The Lord Jesus Christ, comes back to conquer and possess the world, but this is the end of it.

There’s no more sin and death after that, after the thousand years.

In Revelation 20:7 and 8 we read,

Now when the thousand years have expired, Satan will be released from his prison and will go out to deceive the nations which are in the four corners of the earth, Gog, and Magog, to gather them together to battle, whose number is as the sand of the sea. 

Though it says in verse 2 that Satan is bound for a thousand years here we see where he’s unbound after the Thousand Years.

So much is written about Gog and Magog today, but do you know that this is the only time in the entire New Testament it shows up?

In what context do we find it? In the millennium, at the end of the thousand-year reign of Christ.

Why is there such a fascination with Gog and Magog today?

Even if you think we’re living in the tribulation, they’re not mentioned in the tribulation at all. They’re mentioned here at the end of the millennium and only here.

The only people who could possibly be looking for Gog and Magog are people who don’t take their Bible literally and who think we’re living in the Kingdom now, otherwise it’s not important to us today.

There’ll be a thousand-years where whole Nations will be built. Gog and Magog will be there. Generations will be born, and Gog and Magog show up to gather them together to battle.

The number of them is as the sand of the sea.

Revelation 20:9,

They went up on the breadth of the earth and surrounded the camp of the saints and the beloved city (that’s Israel and the city of Jerusalem). And fire came down from God out of heaven and devoured them.

Revelation 20 verse 10,

The devil, who deceived them, was cast into the lake of fire and brimstone where the beast and the false prophet are. And they will be tormented day and night forever and ever.

That right there is the end of all things sin.

Now, let’s jump back a moment to Revelation 20 verse 4 which is after Satan is bound for a thousand years. Who’s going to reign in these thousand years?

We know Christ is on the throne, but John says here, and we read,

And I saw thrones, and they sat on them, and judgment was committed to them. Then I saw the souls of those who had been beheaded for their witness to Jesus and for the word of God, who had not worshiped the beast or his image, and had not received his mark on their foreheads or on their hands. And they lived and reigned with Christ for a thousand years. 

There’s going to be people who had died Martyrs deaths during the tribulation and were resurrected to be rulers in this Kingdom.

That’s an amazing thing because today, only Christ has been resurrected. Christ is the first of the Resurrection.

But during this time, these people will be raised from the dead to Reign on Earth with Christ.

As Revelation 20:5 says,

But the rest of the dead did not live again until the thousand years were finished. This is the first resurrection. 

There’s going to be both people who’re resurrected from the dead and people who are living for the first time during this Kingdom.

It seems strange, but that’s what the Bible says.

There’re going to be children being born during this time and we’ll get to that in a moment.

There’re also going to be people dying during this time. You’d better be dying in the Lord because Revelation20 verse 6 says,

Blessed and holy is he who has part in the first resurrection. Over such the second death has no power, but they shall be priests of God and of Christ, and shall reign with Him a thousand years.

Paul, in the epistles to the church today, never once uses the word priest to describe members of the Body of Christ.

We’re not Priests of God! We’re his ambassadors and we’re members of his body.

The priests of God mediate between two parties, that’s what a priest is.

During the kingdom there’ll be Israel who’ll be priests mediating between the Gentiles and God.

In Israel there’ll be great rejoicing.

Psalm 98 is the song they’ll be singing and it’s a song about all the nations coming to Jerusalem and praising God for the works that He can do. It’s a great Psalm that confirms all we’ve been discussing here.

Isaiah 49:6 deals with this Kingdom and talks about the restoration of people during this time,

Indeed, He (God) says, ‘It is too small a thing that You should be My Servant To raise up the tribes of Jacob, And to restore the preserved ones of Israel; I will also give You as a light to the Gentiles, That You should be My salvation to the ends of the earth.’ ” 

Then Isaiah 49:7,

Thus says the LORD, The Redeemer of Israel, their Holy One, To Him whom man despises, To Him whom the nation abhors, To the Servant of rulers: “Kings shall see and arise, Princes also shall worship, Because of the LORD who is faithful, The Holy One of Israel; And He has chosen You.”

Isaiah’s talking about the day of salvation and the restoration of Israel.

God’s going to remember Israel and He’s going to bring them back.

Ezekiel chapter 40, which you can read on your own, talks about priests and temples.

Israel had a religion that God established and he’s going to set it up in this Kingdom, in this time during the thousand years where there’s still sin and there’s still death.

Christ is the king and he’s judging righteously, and Israel is resurrected and they’re reigning with him and they’re going to be ministers to the world ministering God’s righteousness.

Ezekiel 40 describes a temple that has never been built in the past. It can only be built in the future.

People might say that’s crazy. You’re saying they’re going to reinstitute the sacrifices? Yes!

Jesus Christ is the atonement for sins and during this time sin has not yet been destroyed.

How many times did Israel sacrifice for atonement of the sins of the nation?

Once a year? How many times do they offer other sacrifices? All the time!

There are offerings and sacrifices that have nothing to do with the atonement of sins. There’re burnt sacrifices that have to do with praising God. It’s a testimony given to God.

People are disgusted by sacrifices. They say, see God’s going to kill animals. But hold on.

What about your steak on the grill, your hamburger patties, or the roast cooking in the oven?

We tend to disconnect from where our food comes from.

There’s going to be sacrifices.

Ezekiel 40-48 explains how that Temple will be rebuilt and how The Lord will actually be sitting there.

In the Old Testament there was the glory of God in the Holy of Holies.

No one could go in there except the chief priest once a year.

But that changed when the veil, the curtain, that separated the Holy of Holies was supernaturally torn when Christ died. We see this in Matthew 27:51, Mark 15:38 and Luke 23:45.

But in this Kingdom day Jesus Christ will be sitting in the temple.

There’ll be a table of the Lord and the priests, as described in Ezekiel 40, will bring their sacrifices to Him and they’ll eat these sacrifices with Him.

In the Old Testament the priest would eat the sacrifice. The burnt ones are all burned up but the other ones they’d eat.

That’s what the priest’s privilege was and so in the Kingdom come the priest will take the sacrifices for the sins of the people.

They’ll come to that table of the Lord, and Christ’s priests’ll sit and eat with Him.

In this amazing picture the whole world comes to Jerusalem and what are they doing? Bringing sacrifices to the King of all the earth.

You and I are not going to be on the Earth but that’s what’s going to happen. Read Ezekiel 40 through 48 and you’ll read more about that temple and the temple worship before the table of the Lord and how they’ll follow that law.

Isaiah 66 says that they’ll observe the Sabbaths, Passover, and the new moons and all those holy days.

They won’t celebrate their deliverance out of Egypt at Passover, but Jesus Christ and his shed blood.

They’re going to observe those holidays and those Sabbath days as they were then in the past shadows of the things to come which is this Kingdom on the earth.

The millennial reign’ll be an institution of perfect worship on the earth which is why they pray “thy kingdom come, thy will be done, in earth as it is in heaven”.

There’ll be a final judgment after the thousand years, after Christ’s reign of righteousness and judgment, after Israel’s rise.

There’ll be an uprising when Satan’s released, as we’ve seen, and Christ, the King, will put that uprising down very quickly as Revelation 20 says.

Fire comes down and devours the rebellious just like in the Old Testament, and immediately after this happens there’s a judgment.

Revelation 20:11 and 12,

Then I saw a great white throne and Him who sat on it, from whose face the earth and the heaven fled away. And there was found no place for them. 

And I saw the dead, small and great, standing before God, and books were opened. And another book was opened, which is the Book of Life. And the dead were judged according to their works, by the things which were written in the books. 

Are you and I going to be there?

The answer is no!

If we’re saved by God’s grace, we’re not saved by works, we’re not judged by works.

We’re saved in Christ Jesus and we’re in Heaven at this time.

These are all the dead who have been in Hades as verse 13 says,

The sea gave up the dead who were in it, and Death and Hades delivered up the dead who were in them. And they were judged, each one according to his works. 

This resurrection of the dead is not for believers.

For believers who died during the tribulation, the resurrection of the just has already happened and, of course, the dead from our age today, the dispensation of grace, were resurrected at the catching away of the Body of Christ, the rapture, along with those that were alive at the time.

This is the resurrection of the unjust.

Death is not the end of the story.

Those dead who’re not saved throughout the ages will see Jesus Christ.

In Revelation 20 verse 11 there’s the final judgment. All the unbelieving world’ll be judged, you see. All those throughout the ages who’ve rejected God and the salvation He paid such an incredible price to give us.

This includes Hitler along with every filthy dictator like him. The politically correct, self-serving unjust judges and politicians, the war and terror merchants, every killer and thief, every unbelieving, God rejecting person who ever lived.

This is why we read in Deuteronomy 32:35,

Vengeance is Mine, and recompense; Their foot shall slip in due time; For the day of their calamity is at hand, And the things to come hasten upon them.’ 

And in Romans 12:19,

Beloved, do not avenge yourselves, but rather give place to wrath; for it is written, “VENGEANCE IS MINE, I WILL REPAY,” says the Lord. 

They’ll all be resurrected and stand before the Lord Jesus Christ, King of all the earth and answer for their sins and their works.

As believers we’re judged righteous. Not for our good works, we have none, but because Jesus was judged on our behalf all those years ago at Calvary’s cross.

But these people have rejected what Jesus did in taking our place, so judgment can only be carried out on their own works and there’s no righteousness in those works.

At the end of this judgment, we have Revelation 20 verse 14 saying,

Then Death and Hades were cast into the lake of fire. This is the second death. 

No one will ever go to Hades, to hell, anymore after that because it, along with death has been destroyed forever.

Then verse 15 says,

And anyone not found written in the Book of Life was cast into the lake of fire. 

That’s when we move to Revelation chapter 21, and in verse 1 John says,

Now I saw a new heaven and a new earth, for the first heaven and the first earth had passed away. Also there was no more sea.

To the Jewish mind, the sea meant a place of separation and evil.

In verse 2 John says,

Then I, John, saw the holy city, New Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God, prepared as a bride adorned for her husband.

Then in verses 3 and 4,

And I heard a loud voice from heaven saying, “Behold, the tabernacle of God is with men, and He will dwell with them, and they shall be His people. God Himself will be with them and be their God.

And God will wipe away every tear from their eyes; there shall be no more death, nor sorrow, nor crying. There shall be no more pain, for the former things have passed away.” 

Then in verse 5,

Then He who sat on the throne said, “Behold, I make all things new.” And He said to me, “Write, for these words are true and faithful.”

God’s intention throughout all mankind’s history is to first show this world what righteous reign looks like in a sinful world, then get rid of sin, get rid of death, and make everything new.

Believers are here for eternity with Christ. They’re serving Christ with no pain, no death, and no sorrow and they’re reigning with him forever.

You and I as believers are part of that reign but not on the earth. We’re in Heavenly places. We’re part of God’s great purpose to reign with him forever in perfect righteousness, but we’re not part of Israel on the Earth.

Ephesians 2:4 to 7 make this clear as it says,

But God, who is rich in mercy, because of His great love with which He loved us, even when we were dead in trespasses, made us alive together with Christ (by grace you have been saved), and raised us up together, and made us sit together in the heavenly places in Christ Jesus, that in the ages to come He might show the exceeding riches of His grace in His kindness toward us in Christ Jesus.

We’ve been given a Heavenly place, so when we talk about this everlasting Kingdom and how great it’s going to be, where all things are new, we see that we’re part of the Heavenly purpose of God.

We have a hope that Jesus Christ, as King will reign both in heaven and earth and we’ll be subject to him.

This is the great hope. It’s why we see in Revelation 22:0,

He who testifies to these things says, “Surely I am coming quickly.” Amen. Even so, come, Lord Jesus! 

So, when we read these things about the Kingdom, we can understand it’s for Israel and it’s for the Earth. We see in this preaching of the Kingdom, God’s plan to reign in righteousness.

It also should give us hope for the heavenly places as well, because that’s how he’s going to reign there, with righteousness, and justice. We’re going to be with him in glory in heaven.

May all who have the opportunity to be saved and come to knowledge of the truth do so today.

The Last Days – Part 8 – The Kingdom Come

In this episode we look at the Kingdom come. What is it.  How will it come to pass and what will be the result?

“Speed Slider”

The Last Days – Part 8 – The Kingdom Come – Transcript

In the last few episodes, we’ve discussed this coming Tribulation Period and last episode we dealt with salvation during the tribulation period so we could see if that’s what God’s doing on the earth now, today, is the same as during that Tribulation and, of course, it’s not.

By the way, it’s important to note a couple of things when reading the book of Revelation.

The visions that were given to the apostle John are not what the people alive at that time will see. They’re representations, symbols of events that’ll be happening at the time. The people won’t see a white horse with a rider with a sword galloping through the sky!

Instead, there’ll be an almost unrecognisable change on the planet where this antichrist will sweet talk the population of the earth and take over power and control in a way that the average person’ll probably not even realise, much like totalitarian governments have always done, in ways that don’t alarm people to their intentions.

Also, we should be aware that these ancient languages are much more descriptive that English and there’re many things that are much more easily understood by the original speakers of those languages.

Our Bible has everything we need but we know that the original words and phrase often mean more that we can express in the English.

OK, so, there’ll be people on the planet after the horrors of the tribulation and we saw that in order for those events to happen, there has to be a complete change in God’s ministry on the earth.

That change’ll happen when this current dispensation of grace ends with the church’s catching away in the air. Then God’ll dramatically change the way He deals with the world. He’ll start to reclaim his right as the possessor of heaven and earth.

When the kingdom comes you have the kings of this world knocked down and replaced by the kingdom of God being established in Israel. And that’s where we are at this time where Christ returns at the end of the great tribulation.

 

We’ve seen that the purpose of the Tribulation is not just God delighting in punishing people, it’s to take the kingdoms of the world that have been set up by man and knock them down, while at the same time restoring and regathering Israel.

This period is of course, a lead up to God establishing a Kingdom on earth over which Christ will reign for a thousand years.

There’ll be people in the world that’ll oppose him. Sin will still be present, and yet Christ will be visible, and He’ll be reigning and ruling as King.

At the end of this period we know as the Millenium, Christ will get rid of death and sin and pain and tears. There’ll be no more sin. Sin itself will be destroyed.

So here we’re talking about that time that his Kingdom comes and what that looks like.

We won’t go through all the details of the kingdom, so there’ll probably be questions about things that we’ve heard from prophecy teachers or read in books about the Kingdom or the Millennium that won’t be here.

It’s not that we shouldn’t study them or think about those details, but we need to first get the big picture of what God’s doing during that Kingdom time and why He’s doing it.

We finished last time in Revelation 19 where Christ returns with that sword in that final battle against the kingdoms of this world where they finally get the deathblow. They’ll get knocked down and Jesus Christ will institute’s His kingdom.

 

James, who was one of the Twelve Apostles, wrote his epistle to the twelve tribes of Israel who were expecting these prophetic events to happen at the time they were alive, maybe even within days or weeks.

They were expecting these times of trouble and then the kingdom coming because of the massive weight of prophecy that they were well familiar with.

So, in James 5:7 we read,

Therefore be patient, brethren, until the coming of the Lord. See how the farmer waits for the precious fruit of the earth, waiting patiently for it until it receives the early and latter rain. 

James is talking about the harvest and the rain at the end of the season and he’s waiting for that latter rain that harvest when believing Israel, cleansed of sin by the blood of the Messiah, would rise back to its former glory and finally receive God’s promise to Abraham, Issac, and Jacob.

And so, James is saying here to these Jewish Saints, “be patient”.

This is an instruction purely for these people who are expecting this move of God at any moment, this precursor to the kingdom.

James is preaching the gospel of the Kingdom, which is the Kingdom is at hand.

Peter preaches the same thing at Pentecost in Acts chapter 2, that these are those last days, and that Christ is the fulfillment. He’s the King he’s going to bring in the kingdom.

These people are all seeing that Kingdom coming at any time. They’re looking for it right then. So, James tells them to be patient.

Now 2,000 years have passed and that’s sort of beyond patience, wouldn’t you say?

There’s doubt arising as to whether or not these disciples, Peter, James, Jude, and John were even telling the truth about the Kingdom coming.

That’s exactly what Peter deals with in his epistle of 2nd Peter.

People were doubting Peter’s message that the Kingdom was at hand, you see, because it still hadn’t come. Over at Pentecost, Peter had preached that the last days were here.

So, he writes in 2nd Peter verses 14 to 16 and says yes, the Kingdom is not here yet.

He says I wasn’t wrong, and he wasn’t. He says to listen to what Paul wrote.

Let’s read what he writes,

Therefore, beloved, looking forward to these things, be diligent to be found by Him in peace, without spot and blameless; and consider that the longsuffering of our Lord is salvation—as also our beloved brother Paul, according to the wisdom given to him, has written to you, as also in all his epistles, speaking in them of these things, in which are some things hard to understand, which untaught and unstable people twist to their own destruction, as they do also the rest of the Scriptures.

He explains the long-suffering of the Lord and explains that God’s trying to save more people now. Peter preaches that something changed from Acts 2 when Peter stood up there filled with the Holy Ghost on the day of Pentecost and you and I should understand that change which was the complete rejection of Jesus Christ, the Messiah, by the nation Israel.

So, James is writing here in James 5 verse 4 about this time period and says to be patient.

If we were to remove 2,000 years of human history since the day of Pentecost and Peter’s sermon in Acts 2, like everyone else, we’d be expecting the last days, the tribulation period of judgment spoken of by many prophets, and then, after surviving that tribulation, the setting up to the long-promised Kingdom.

The problem for so many Christians today is what’s happened in those two thousand years since Peter preached the last days.

It’s only answered in Paul’s epistles. If we take Paul’s epistles out of the Bible, we have no idea of that period of the last 2000 years. It would be easy to think all scripture is just an allegory, a symbol of some spiritualised happening. And, of course a great many do believe that’s what scripture is.

Jews mostly don’t take their Bible literally today because they realize that too much time has passed for prophecy to be fulfilled correctly.

So, you have allegorical or spiritualised interpretations of the Kingdom and of the Messiah.

But we can take the Bible literally, all of it and it will fit perfectly into the timeline of history and prophecy.

Even amongst Christians who tend to take the Bible literally, if you asked them whether or not they’re selling all they have, according to Luke chapter 12, or if they’re actually doing what Jesus said in the red letters of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, you’d soon see that they’re not.

They spiritualise those things.

When they pray to God, give us this day our daily bread are they really waiting for God to give them daily bread?

They say, “Well that daily bread just means the devotion I get in the mail every month, that’s daily bread. It’s my daily bible verse.”

But No!

That prayer that Jesus taught the disciples when they asked Him to teach them to pray in Matthew 6:5, was actual physical daily bread.

Just like God gave to Israel in Exodus when He gave the bread, the manna, every morning, and they couldn’t collect two days of it, only one day.

This daily bread can be taken literally because they were anticipating going through that same wilderness trouble period just like in Exodus, the tribulation period before the setting up of the Kingdom.

There’s this time coming where God would provide for that remnant, the remnant of Israel, who’re going through this terrible tribulation, and so He tells them to pray for their daily bread because then they’re not going to be able to buy bread when they haven’t got the mark of the beast and they’ve got destruction and judgment all around them and almost everyone they meet wants to tear them apart.

We’ve covered some of the destruction that God sends on the earth, and we saw it’s in order to destroy the kingdoms and the institutions of this world that humans filled with sin have instituted.

God’s going to purge it and purify it. He’s going to make it right.

And so, he not only destroys the kingdoms of this world, but he preserves and protects his Saints of Israel and those Gentiles that come to those saints of Israel for salvation.

James is part of that. He says be patient as you see these things happening around you during that time.

James chapter 5:8 says,

You also be patient. Establish your hearts, for the coming of the Lord is at hand. 

See James is not talking about just general patience like when we get frustrated at people and powers generally in the world, or frustrated that our chosen party didn’t win the election.

That’s not the patience Jame’s talking about.

Yes, we ought to be patient, but this is far beyond that.

See to them at that time, the coming of the Lord is near. So why would they need to be patient? The coming Lord is near so that’d be great news.

If you and I knew the Lord was coming in a year or two it’d be easier to be patient, wouldn’t it?

Well, this patience has to do with the trouble, the tribulation coming before the Lord comes.

Be patient, endure to the end.

Look at what Jesus says to the disciples in Mark 13 verses 10 to 13,

And the gospel must first be preached to all the nations. 

But when they arrest you and deliver you up, do not worry beforehand, or premeditate what you will speak. But whatever is given you in that hour, speak that; for it is not you who speak, but the Holy Spirit. 

Now brother will betray brother to death, and a father his child; and children will rise up against parents and cause them to be put to death. 

And you will be hated by all for My name’s sake. But he who endures to the end shall be saved.

Endure to the end in order to be saved. In this whole tribulation and kingdom era, according to prophecy, salvation comes to Israel when the Lord comes to set up the Kingdom.

In James 5:10 James is talking to My brethren. James is a Jew you see. His brethren are Jews. In James 1:1 He opens with this,

James, a bondservant of God and of the Lord Jesus Christ, To the twelve tribes which are scattered abroad,

So, in James 5:10 he says,

My brethren, take the prophets, who spoke in the name of the Lord, as an example of suffering and patience. 

The prophets were a part of Israel. You read the prophets back there and they were ministering in Israel, to Israel, when Israel itself was not following God. That was the point of the prophets. God sent prophets to declare to Israel to get back on track to repent to correct the wrongs.

Those prophets were in the wilderness, they were isolated.

They suffered affliction and with patience endured as a remnant. They were a persecuted and afflicted minority.

Then in James 5:11 we read,

Indeed we count them blessed who endure. You have heard of the perseverance of Job and seen the end intended by the Lord—that the Lord is very compassionate and merciful. 

Job! That’s the pattern? Really?

He lost everything, his kids, his material goods, everything was gone. He was diseased, I mean his wife told him to curse God and die.

Is that our pattern today?

We can learn a great deal from Job spiritually. We can say if that’s what he went through I can surely go through my petty challenges.

But, quite literally here, these people’s homes are being destroyed and they’re suffering the loss of all their things and being heavily persecuted.

All they have to hope for is the coming of the Lord Who’ll make restitution and restore all these things.

So, we need to be careful not to strip this out of its context and just spiritualise it by applying it to life in the last 2,000 years.

Our message in the current age, the dispensation of grace, is to preach salvation by grace through faith. We have a different operation.

We point out this patience issue because it’s so obviously relating to a group of people that’s not us, the Body of Christ, today. If we mix ourselves, the church today, together with these people we’ll get a distorted, confused view of God’s ultimate plan and we’ll fail to see where each group fits into that timeline.

These Saints are the remnant of Israel, believers who are surviving, somehow, through this tribulation period and are going into this Kingdom, their earthly long ago covenanted promise from God. That’s the goal.

The goal is salvation in this kingdom. God’s wrath being poured out is just the means to get to here.

Remember, they had no idea at the time that this was going to be 2000 down the track. That period of time, that age that would interrupt the prophesied timeline had not yet been revealed to anyone.

We, the church today, have no covenant promise of a Kingdom, in fact we have no earthly promise at all. Our promise is a heavenly promise, and our home is heaven, and we’re promised that we won’t see that wrath of God.

 

In Daniel 2:44 we read this prophesy of the stone from heaven that comes and destroys the kingdoms of the world and from this stone rises a mountain and that kingdom of God will be forever and ever.

Mountains in the Bible symbolize strength, stability, security, power, faith, authority, and greatness.

They represent the majesty of God and His unshakable nature.

Therefore, when the Bible talks about mountains, it’s talking about deeper spiritual truths beyond their physical presence.

Well, that’s what’s going on here. An actual physical earthly Kingdom that God promised Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. A land that He gave them. A promise that He made to them.

Revelation 13 is in the midst of this destruction in the tribulation and in verse 10 it talks about the patience of the Saints saying,

He who leads into captivity shall go into captivity; he who kills with the sword must be killed with the sword. Here is the patience and the faith of the saints.

Here is the patience in the faith of the saints.

Now if you’ve studied Revelation before you’ll know that this chapter is the chapter that talks about the mark of the beast and the famous 666 which people try to calculate and put in our dispensation today.

You need have no fear of taking the mark of the beast because if you were alive in that time and if you believed you would be marked by God first.

The mark of the beast is given to oppose God.

God’s trying to destroy the system that’s why the marks given.

There’s a battle going on here where God is actively opposing the kingdoms of this world.

The kings of this world resists and they say, “Well, we’re going to draw the line so if you don’t have this mark, you’re against us and you’re with God, so you’re our enemy like God is.”

If you find yourself alive and living in this period, you won’t want to take that mark under any circumstances.

In fact, Revelation 14:9 to 11 an angel says,

Then a third angel followed them, saying with a loud voice, “If anyone worships the beast and his image, and receives his mark on his forehead or on his hand, he himself shall also drink of the wine of the wrath of God, which is poured out full strength into the cup of His indignation. He shall be tormented with fire and brimstone in the presence of the holy angels and in the presence of the Lamb. And the smoke of their torment ascends forever and ever; and they have no rest day or night, who worship the beast and his image, and whoever receives the mark of his name.”  

In James chapter five, they that keep the commandments of God in the faith of Jesus need this patience to go through this time of economic and political turmoil more than the world has ever seen. Nothing that’s ever happened on earth can compare with these times.

These things need to happen for the world to be overturned.

This mark here is another desperate attempt at opposing God’s laws, and God’s nation, Israel.

Look at Hebrews chapter 10 verse 36 again, remembering that Hebrews is written to Israel, to the Hebrews. Contrary to what a lot of believe, Hebrews is not a book written to the church today. It’s describing Israel’s New Testament.

It’s describing Israel’s future city, the law, and the priesthood.

Hebrews 10:36,

For you have need of endurance, so that after you have done the will of God, you may receive the promise: 

This is talking to the whole group of Israel. That you may receive the promise. The Promise of what?

Well, the promise God made since the world began, the Kingdom.

And why is it you have to do the will of God before you see the promise? I thought we were saved by grace through faith not of works?

Yes, we’re saved by hearing the gospel of our salvation trusting it and then, as Ephesians 1:13 says, we’re sealed, and we’re saved.

We’re not saved by a covenant. We’re not saved by the promise that God gave to Israel. We’re not saved by the Kingdom come.

We’re saved by Christ’s finished work, Grace by faith plus nothing.

These Jewish believers, on the other hand, are saved by faith in the completed work of the cross PLUS works. The nation of Israel still needs to be obedient to the law you see in order for that land inheritance to be completed!

Why would they be obedient now, at this tribulation period, when they couldn’t be throughout the rest of history?

Because of the New Covenant. The covenant Jesus sealed in His own blood when He was on earth. The covenant of Jeremiah 31:31 and Hebrews 8 which promises that God’s law will be written on their hearts and minds.

They won’t be thinking, “Maybe we shouldn’t do this? Or maybe we shouldn’t do that?”

They’ll do those laws just as naturally and automatically as a fish swims or a bird flies, without thinking of each action. It’ll be perfectly natural.

You and I realise that we cannot maintain righteousness in our own strength, We’re unrighteous and the only way for God to forgive humanity is not by the blood of bulls and goats but by a perfect atonement that’s provided and pictured by the Old Testament.

Jesus Christ is that atonement that pays for the sins of the world and that’s what Hebrews describes. In His resurrection, He gives us proof that we have justification and eternal life.

If you’re identified in Christ, you’re identified with his death for sins and his resurrection unto life. That’s the gospel.

But Hebrews chapter 10 here is talking about after you’ve done the will of God you might receive the promise.

Isn’t this putting the cart before the salvation horse?

Of course, that’s correct for Israel as a nation and Israel’s program.

Their hope lies in the next verse, Hebrews 10:37,

 “FOR YET A LITTLE WHILE, AND HE WHO IS COMING WILL COME AND WILL NOT TARRY. 

That’s Christ and He’ll not tarry.

Verses 38 and 39,

NOW THE JUST SHALL LIVE BY FAITH; BUT IF ANYONE DRAWS BACK, MY SOUL HAS NO PLEASURE IN HIM.” But we are not of those who draw back to perdition, but of those who believe to the saving of the soul. 

Doesn’t that verse teach that if you fall back, if you don’t endure to the end and to Christ’s coming, you’re not going to get saved?

That’s exactly what those verses teach. That’s what 1st Peter 1 says when he said to receive grace and salvation at the coming of the Messiah the coming of the Lord Jesus Christ.

That’s what the Jews teach today, that salvation comes at the coming of the Messiah, who they believe has not yet come.

What differentiates Judaism from Christianity is that Christianity teaches Christ already came once and He’s going to come again.

But Hebrews 10 talks about these people not getting salvation until the coming of the Lord, so they require patience to endure to the end.

In Luke 21:28 Jesus tells His disciples,

Now when these things begin to happen, look up and lift up your heads, because your redemption draws near.

He says when you see these signs in heaven in the earth that are just before the return of the Lord, when you see those terrible things, He says look up for your redemption draws near.

Well, I was redeemed through the blood of Jesus Christ and so were you if you believe.

Ephesians 1:7 says,

In Him we have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of sins, according to the riches of His grace.

Colossians 1:14 says,

In whom we have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of sins. 

That was 2,000 years ago.

That was where my redemption was, and yours if you believe.

That’s not the redemption and salvation of Israel according to their prophecies, according to the promise God made to them. Salvation will come when God brings His Kingdom that He promised them.

That’s when salvation happens to them. That’s when God fulfills his promise to them.

So, Luke 21:28 then talks about their redemption being near. This is when things happen. The Kingdom come, the Lord Jesus Christ’s return to the earth.

This is a fundamental of Christianity.

Israel over the last 2000 years and right now, today, missed that there wasn’t just one coming of the Messiah, there were two comings.

So, a lot of Christian scholars look back at Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John and say well the disciples were wrong because they thought that Christ is going to come physically to conquer and bring a kingdom and they were wrong because it hasn’t happened. The Jews would say the same thing.

Many other Christians say well they were wrong because it was all spiritual and the Kingdom prophecies were just talking about spiritual things, that the Kingdom of God is in your heart.

Other groups of people around the world try to unite to love each other. We’re all children of God and we can all learn how to love each other from Jesus’s example. This is the Kingdom of God that we live in today and it’s all spiritual, not literal.

When we take our Bible literally, we realise that Christ is going to literally set up the Kingdom as He explained to His disciples in all of his parables. Don’t you know that I’ve got to go away and come back, he said.

We saw an Acts chapter 1 how when Jesus ascended to heaven, He said I’ve

got to go to heaven to fulfill the prophecies to send the Holy Spirit.

There are things that had to happen between His first coming and the setting up of the Kingdom.

Well, if Christ had to go to heaven before the kingdom comes that means He’s going to come again, and all that’s in prophecy.

So, the return of Christ is a fundamental of Christianity. If we don’t believe in Christ’s return, we can’t call ourselves a Bible believing Christian who takes the Bible literally.

Look at Hebrews chapter 9 verse 28. Hebrews was written to the Hebrews as we’ve said,

So Christ was offered once to bear the sins of many. To those who eagerly wait for Him He will appear a second time, apart from sin, for salvation. 

If that verse in Hebrews is accurate for today, why are we preaching salvation at all?

We should be saying well salvation will come when Jesus comes back.

Instead, we have a present salvation as we know from Paul’s epistles to the Body of Christ today.

Hebrews here says that Jesus will come back again the second time unto salvation.

He came the first time to bear sins, a second time to redeem His right.

We covered last time about how that blood was needed to pay for that new covenant and that land title for Him to justly reclaim the earth and the promises he gave to Israel.

Otherwise, what basis does He have to fulfill the things which He promised He would do if Israel sinned so repeatedly against God?

Well, the answer would be because He died for their sins. His shed blood!

When Hebrews 9 says Jesus will come again the second time unto salvation, what salvation is being talked about?

Obviously, it’s not talking about the salvation you and I hear in the gospel of Christ’s finished work 2,000 years ago, that we have salvation and atonement now.

To find a definition of what Hebrews is talking about turn to Luke 1 verse 68.

Zacharias, John the Baptist’s father and a priest, describes here the coming Messiah and said,

Blessed is the Lord God of Israel, For He has visited and redeemed His people, 

Why?

Verse 69 and 70,

And has raised up a horn of salvation for us In the house of His servant David, (talking here about Jesus) as He spoke by the mouth of His holy prophets, Who have been since the world began.

That tells us that the Book of Luke is not talking about the Mystery of Christ that was kept secret since the world began and revealed to us by Christ through the apostle Paul.

Verse 71 of Luke 1,

That we should be saved from our enemies And from the hand of all who hate us, 

So, there it is. A horn of salvation in the house of David that we should be saved. A horn is a symbol of strength and courage.

How will they be saved?

From the hand of their enemies. From the hand of all that hate them.

On to verses 72 to 73 of Luke chapter 1,

To perform the mercy promised to our fathers And to remember His holy covenant, The oath which He swore to our father Abraham: 

Luke is talking about the salvation Israel hopes for. It’s the salvation God promised to Abraham and Isaac and Jacob.

What did God promise Abraham in Genesis 12 verses 2 and 3 and we read,

I will make you a great nation; I will bless you And make your name great; And you shall be a blessing. 

I will bless those who bless you, And I will curse him who curses you; And in you all the families of the earth shall be blessed.” 

They will be that nation.

Luke 1:74 and 75,

To grant us that we (Israel), Being delivered from the hand of our enemies, Might serve Him without fear, In holiness and righteousness before Him all the days of our life. 

That sounds like peace on earth, doesn’t it?

That sounds like goodwill towards man? Like Kingdom Come? Serving him without fear every day of their lives. That’s Israel’s rise. That’s the kingdom that we’re talking about, the Kingdom come.

John the Baptist came as a fulfillment of Malachi 3 and John the Baptist preaches baptism, which was a Jewish ceremony. Washing with water. They did it to anoint priests. They did it to clean people.

They have ritual baths even today, though they don’t call it baptism. This is a very Christian word, but it’s part of the Jewish system and John the Baptist came as a priest baptising people in water for the repentance and the cleanliness of their sins, remission of sins.

And he says in Luke chapter 3:4,

as it is written in the book of the words of Isaiah the prophet, saying: “THE VOICE OF ONE CRYING IN THE WILDERNESS: ‘PREPARE THE WAY OF THE LORD; MAKE HIS PATHS STRAIGHT. EVERY VALLEY SHALL BE FILLED AND EVERY MOUNTAIN AND HILL BROUGHT LOW; THE CROOKED PLACES SHALL BE MADE STRAIGHT AND THE ROUGH WAYS SMOOTH; AND ALL FLESH SHALL SEE THE SALVATION OF GOD.’ ” 

That’s John the Baptist’s message 2000 thousand years ago when he said the kingdom was at hand.

He was talking about this (Kingdom coming).

What’s he say in verse 5,

every Valley shall be filled, the low places are filled up and every mountain and hill will be brought low.

That’s a theme repeated in the prophecies talking about the kings of this world being knocked down and the low things being brought up. As we’ve already said mountains symbolize strength, stability, security, power, faith, authority, and greatness. In this context here it’s talking about the existing power and rule that’ll be overturned.

Why did Jesus repeatedly say in His ministry the first will be last and the last be first?

He was quoting the prophecies that if you’re on that high tower, if you’re the ruling kings of this world you’re exactly what Christ is coming to destroy.

It’s the humblest there in lowly places, the meek that inherit the earth.

Matthew chapter five and the so-called Beatitudes that we looked at in our Mattew 5 study is according to prophesy.

So, in Luke chapter 3, John the Baptist came preaching the gospel of the Kingdom. He was talking about this right here.

He says this is going to happen and then all flesh shall see the salvation of our God.

Can we say today that the world sees the salvation of God today? Even if the church, every person who claimed to be a Christian, stood outside, and said Christ is King, most of the world that would say No, He’s not. So how is Luke chapter 3 verse 6, (AND ALL FLESH SHALL SEE THE SALVATION OF GOD.) be true of today in any way today?

This Kingdom we’re talking about is a time in which all flesh will see the salvation of God, even though they still won’t all accept it.

You won’t have to ask for proof that Jesus Christ is raised from the dead because He’ll be right there. You’ll see Him reigning! He’s ruling with a rod of iron! You see Him fulfilling the prophecies.

You see the salvation of our God, and you have a choice. You’re going to listen to what He says or not.

Of course, this all happens after this time of destruction that we know of as the tribulation.

That’s why you’ve got to get right here, now while salvation is offered today freely by God’s grace through faith alone, nothing else required.

Christ won’t come and enter into the political campaigns of the world and run for election. He doesn’t become part of what’s currently existing.

He destroys those things, and sets Himself up.

So that’s how God’s going to operate and that’s what John the Baptists preaching about here.

In Luke 3, that’s why John’s baptising these people, for the repentance, remission of their sins. To be identified with the Messiah so that when this happens, instead of destruction, they get provision and protection. And always keep in mind that everyone expected this to happen within a very short space of time.

John the Baptist came preaching as the prophets prophesied of him, and Malachi’s the Prophet that he’s talking about.

In Malachi chapter 3:1,

Behold, I send My messenger, And he will prepare the way before Me. And the Lord, whom you seek, Will suddenly come to His temple, Even the Messenger of the covenant, In whom you delight. Behold, He is coming,” Says the LORD of hosts.

The Lord’s way needed to be prepared when the Lord comes to dwell with Israel, and so John the Baptist came as that messenger.

In Mark 1: it says,

As it is written in the Prophets: “BEHOLD, I SEND MY MESSENGER BEFORE YOUR FACE, WHO WILL PREPARE YOUR WAY BEFORE YOU.” 

Notice in Malachi 3 verse 1 however, that the first part of that verse was fulfilled in John the Baptist, but the second half of this verse was not fulfilled!

There’s two comings here in Malachi 3:1.

You see this happen over and over again in the scripture. We’ll see it again in Isaiah 8:59. In the same verse you have two comings of the Lord so from the perspective of the prophets looking in the future they see the same events. Christ’s coming to die, Christ coming to set up the kingdom.

They don’t see the valley of this present time period, the dispensation of grace, between them.

They just saw the mountain peaks so to speak.

But now with the benefit of hindsight we can look in the past and say that’s how it was fulfilled.

So, in Malachi 3:2 and 3 we see,

But who can endure the day of His coming? And who can stand when He appears? For He is like a refiner’s fire And like launderers’ soap. He will sit as a refiner and a purifier of silver; He will purify the sons of Levi, And purge them as gold and silver, That they may offer to the LORD An offering in righteousness. 

This is all about the Levites and about their impure offering of sacrifices. It’s saying that when the Messiah comes, He’s going to make Israel pure again.

He’s going to bring salvation. He’s going to purge out the drawers. He’s going to make them right, which is, by the way, what Paul says in Romans 11 when he says that the salvation of Israel will happen.

So, you see in Malachi 3 here the talk about this second coming when Christ returns. There was no refining fire the first time he came as a baby in a manger.

Here he comes with fire and vengeance as Paul says.

Then in Malachi 3:4 we read,

Then the offering of Judah and Jerusalem Will be pleasant to the LORD, As in the days of old, As in former years. 

This talks about as in the days of old, offerings will be made in Judah and Jerusalem. There’s going to be a restoration of Israel and their system of religion that God gave to them.

These are verses that really have an impact on our understanding of what God’s doing today.

In Acts 1 verse 6, Jesus is telling the twelve apostles how He must ascend to heaven and how He’s going to send the Holy Spirit according to the prophecies.

Verse 6 reads,

Therefore, when they had come together, they asked Him, saying, “Lord, will You at this time restore the kingdom to Israel?” 

Why would they ask that question? Because God promised to restore the Kingdom to Israel, and, by this time, after Jesus’s death and resurrection, they understood that He had to go back to heaven.

He’d already explained in John 14 and in Matthew that He had to go back to fulfill prophecies.

So, they said, okay, we get that. So, when is this restoration going to happen?

Jesus doesn’t say yes or no. He says, “It’s not for you to know.”

He doesn’t say, “No you guys misunderstand entirely, there’s no restoration of the Kingdom. You live in it now. Isn’t it great?” That’s not what he said. Neither did he say, “Yes I’m going to restore it next Tuesday.”

He said, in verse 7,

“It is not for you to know times or seasons which the Father has put in His own authority. 

Malachi 3 talks about the restoration of Israel’s program and their Kingdom on the earth. This’s something that will happen. It’s the Kingdom come.

We shouldn’t put the words of our Bible through a blender and mix them all together. We do this when we see the Bible speak of the gospel of the Kingdom and we read that and say, “Well that must be talking about the gospel we preach today.”

To do that you take that Kingdom that God’s clearly said would come, and totally change it to be something else.

Christians today try to further God’s kingdom themselves and bring it to earth through the church.

But what if that’s not the message to preach here?

What if God’s not doing that yet?

What if you and I have something else to perform on the earth?

As ambassadors, which we are according to 2nd Corinthians 5:20, we’re not native to this planet any longer. God’s made us citizens of heaven and so we’re in foreign territories while we’re ambassadors. This is not our land. God’s using a different approach today.

There’s a literal Kingdom that’ll come to Israel that the Prophets spoke about.

We’re dealing with passages in Matthew Mark, Luke, and John here that most churches take as their doctrine.

These are the red letters. A lot of Christianity would be offended by what we’re saying here.

They’d resist it almost violently because to them, Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John is what’s going on today. If we say any different, they feel where somehow blaspheming and dishonouring Jesus. Actually, failing to divide God’s Word rightly is doing exactly that.

Most think Israel had the Old Testament and Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John is the New Testament but that’s not so.

In Matthew 6, Jesus gives the most famous prayer of all Christianity, The Lord’s Prayer.

If we say that it’s not our prayer for the church today, we’re in trouble and to a lot of people we’re no longer a Christian. Not in the sense that some people think anyway.

Matthew chapter 6 when Jesus teaches them how to pray, the first thing He says in verse 9 is,

“Our Father which art in heaven, hallowed be thy name.

When he says, “Our Father” He’s talking about Israel and God being the father of Israel. God never promised the Gentiles a thing, except through Israel.

At verse 10 He asks of God in the prayer after the introduction, “thy Kingdom come”.

Jesus told this to His apostles, who were anticipating the last days, to pray thy Kingdom come.

Jesus also taught in Matthew 6:33,

But seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things shall be added to you.

If you’re going to seek the things of the world Jesus taught, you’re going to lose everything, and we teach that spiritually, but Jesus is not talking to us.

He’s talking about these people who’re going to have to give up all they have. If they pursue the things of the world that’s it.

The tribulation’s purpose here is to knock down those institutions and kingdoms of the world, and so, if they’re climbing the ladder of worldly success that’s the same ladder Christ’s going to knock down.

Is he knocking down those ladders today? No!

Jesus is telling them to seek first the kingdom and all these things will be added unto them because they’re not going to get them from the world system that Christ’s going to knock down at that time to come.

Let’s go back to Matthew chapter 6. Thy kingdom come; Thy will be done. Where is “Thy will” supposed to be done?

According to this prayer, on earth!

Today people say this means a spiritual kingdom of heaven.

Then why does Jesus teach them to pray for it to come on earth?

Well, they say, thy kingdom come means it comes in my mind. I can understand spiritual realities.

I mean, really! How do people come up with this. It’s much easier and much less confusing to accept what these verses actually say.

The only way to understand that is to accept that they’re praying for God’s provision in the tribulation and for the kingdom to come to the earth, which is what God promised.

As far as God’s will being done is that happening now on earth as it is in heaven? Is he reigning on earth? Is this earthly system of government by sinful humanity and the devil God ruling? How is this on, “earth as it is in heaven” today. Hardly!

God’s not on the earth today except in the sense that he’s omnipresent.

When Christ comes to the earth to reign on the throne, on the earth, everything’s different and that’s what we’re going to see in the Kingdom, His rod of iron, His righteous rule.

Matthew 6:11,

Give us this day our daily bread.

We saw this earlier, about how this is actual daily bread because they’re going through a time of wilderness just like in the Exodus and they need food.

They can’t buy or sell. They can’t eat or drink. They’re enemies of the vast majority of the population who’ve identified with the antichrist through the mark of the beast, and they don’t have that mark to buy food.

Jesus’s done this before. Remember the loaves and fishes?

This’s not the Christian Church today.

Here’s a salvation verse, verse 12.

Forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors.

Or Do unto others as you would have them do to you, the golden rule for Christians.

This is not the gospel of the grace of God.

The golden rule is that if I do good, God’ll do good back to me.

The gospel of grace is you can’t do good. We’re all sinners and God gave us salvation through trusting His goodness in Christ. Salvation by God’s grace.

So, this verse here is contrary to our gospel today where we’re forgiven through the blood of Jesus Christ. Here, forgiveness comes conditional upon us forgiving others.

Jesus amplifies this in verse 14 and we read,

For if you forgive men their trespasses, your heavenly Father will also forgive you. 

But if you do not forgive men their trespasses, neither will your Father forgive your trespasses. 

If you don’t do right first, God won’t do right to you.

Nothing there was the blood of Christ. Everything’s about us forgiving other people.

Matthew 6 is a Kingdom prayer for people hoping and waiting for this Kingdom come.

God’s law will be instituted and then righteousness will reign finally on the earth, and it certainly never has before or now.

This is what Peter preached at Pentecost in Acts 3:19 to 21.

Repent therefore and be converted, that your sins may be blotted out, so that times of refreshing may come from the presence of the Lord, and that He may send Jesus Christ, who was preached to you before, whom heaven must receive until the times of restoration of all things, which God has spoken by the mouth of all His holy prophets since the world began.

He says Christ is in heaven. He rose from the dead after you Jews crucified our Messiah after seeing clear evidence of Who He was, the prophesied Christ.

He’s telling them to repent, to turn from the unbelief that caused them to carry out that act. He told them to prepare so that the times of refreshing can come.

Times of refreshing from what?

From every injustice and every corrupt thing that’s not of God in this present world.

The Jews knew about this time of refreshing and Peter’s preaching repent that your sins may be blotted out when those times of refreshing come from the presence of the Lord.

Jesus Christ is going to reinstitute His institutions, not the world’s.

The times of restitution of all things which God has spoken by the mouth of all the prophets through Israel since the world began.

When Israel rises, finally they won’t be the object of the world’s persecution and hatred, but instead they’ll be the object of God’s glory. And the world will turn to them for blessing.

That’s what Judaism is. That’s what Israel is, and the Bible says that’s going to happen.

When we talk about end time events, that’s what we’re talking about, the restoration of God’s Kingdom to the earth, Christ’s rule over it, and the reinstatement of the nation Israel to where God always intended them to be.

When Christians talk about the end of the world events, according to the scriptures, according to prophecy, they don’t often know it but they’re not talking about church, Body of Christ, end time events. They’re talking about the future time of Israel.

We simply cannot understand these events unless we rightly divide the mystery of this dispensation of grace, this interlude in the prophecy timeline, that we’re living in now.

If we mix them, we’re taking from Israel what’s not ours to take.

We’re saying we’re part of Israel’s restoration and we’re not.

When we rightly divide these two things, suddenly we understand what’s part of prophecy and what’s part of the mystery that was never prophesied.

Today, you and I are going to heaven if we believe, but to Israel the description and detail of their coming Kingdom was given in multiple books and multiple prophecies.

There’re sinners and wicked people everywhere today, but we’re still to preach grace and salvation to them in spite of so much evil today. God’s offering grace to them just like He did to you and me.

In Revelation 19 though, we’re talking about this time at the end of this trouble where the final nail will be driven into the coffin of the kingdoms of the world by Christ himself coming back on this white horse.

Here’s the picture.

You see the clouds rolling back and the white horse with the Lord on it and it says His eyes were a flame of fire and on his head were many crowns and he had a name written that no man knew but He Himself.

He was clothed with a robe dipped in blood. His name is called the Word of God. This is the Word from John 1:1.

In the beginning was the Word and the Word was with God and the Word was God.

Revelation 19:14 and 15,

And the armies in heaven, clothed in fine linen, white and clean, followed Him on white horses. 

Now out of His mouth goes a sharp sword, that with it He should strike the nations. And He Himself will rule them with a rod of iron. He Himself treads the winepress of the fierceness and wrath of Almighty God.

Out of this mouth goes forth a sharp sword.

We say to take the Bible literally? So, do we think there’s a physical mouth out of which a metal sword comes?

No, There’s no actual metal blade coming out of His lips.

We all understand figures of speech, and the Bible often tells when symbols are being used. We all surely see that these symbols are a way of showing in word pictures, what will happen in reality.

We can read back in Revelation chapter 1 where it describes this sword coming out of his mouth and Revelation chapter 2 when it talks about the church is there and how if they don’t listen, they’re going to be slain by the sword coming out of the Lord’s mouth. Of course, this tells us we’re not the church in Revelation chapter 2.

If you look at Ephesians chapter 6:17, for example, you can see a definition of the sword,

And take the helmet of salvation, and the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God; 

So, if there’s a sword coming from the commander’s mouth, smiting the nation’s, what’s He’s doing? Speaking! At the sound of his voice.

How can you fight people with words? The same way you create things with words.

In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth. And he said let there be light.

God spoke and creation came together. He can also speak and destroy. He’ll say it and it’ll be done.  And, in case you believe the word of faith preachers, your words don’t have that power.

In Revelation 19 He comes back, and He starts speaking words of righteousness. And His judgment burns up things, burns up the enemies. It burns up the mountains, the earthly kingdoms. It burns up everything that He doesn’t want to be there, and He smites the nations, and rules them with a rod of iron.

Not a message we would preach today if we’re preaching grace to the nations.

In Revelation 19 verse 16 we read,

And He has on His robe and on His thigh a name written: KING OF KINGS AND LORD OF LORDS. 

We have here the return of the Lord Jesus Christ to the earth to set up the Kingdom after he destroys the kings of the nations of the world.

Look at Isaiah 9:6,

For unto us a Child is born, Unto us a Son is given; And the government will be upon His shoulder. And His name will be called Wonderful, Counsellor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace. 

This is another prophecy about the coming Messiah to Israel.

It’s often sung in Christmas songs, talking about Jesus’s birth in Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, but the key to this verse is in Verse 7,

Of the increase of His government and peace There will be no end, Upon the throne of David and over His kingdom, To order it and establish it with judgment and justice From that time forward, even forever. The zeal of the Lord of hosts will perform this. 

This isn’t just a temporary rule here.

This is an Eternal Ruler upon the throne of David in His Kingdom.

The Messiah’s born but this is actually speaking about this Kingdom being set up with everlasting righteousness.

Look at Isaiah 11:1,

There shall come forth a Rod from the stem of Jesse, And a Branch shall grow out of his roots. 

That’s the son of David coming through the line of David through Jesse, David’s father.

Isaiah 11:2,

The Spirit of the LORD shall rest upon Him, The Spirit of wisdom and understanding, The Spirit of counsel and might, The Spirit of knowledge and of the fear of the LORD.

Verses 3 to 5 are all speaking prophecy relating to the coming of Christ,

His delight is in the fear of the LORD, And He shall not judge by the sight of His eyes, Nor decide by the hearing of His ears. But with righteousness He shall judge the poor, And decide with equity for the meek of the earth; He shall strike the earth with the rod of His mouth, And with the breath of His lips He shall slay the wicked. Righteousness shall be the belt of His loins, And faithfulness the belt of His waist. 

When Jesus came teaching the meek will inherit the earth, he was claiming He was fulfilling these prophecies in Isaiah 11.

He’s this King that’ll judge righteously and fulfill these prophecies.

In Christ’s Kingdom on the earth there won’t be the free reign of wicked people. The world doesn’t understand God’s righteousness because it functions on a sort of collective evil heart. People of the world today generally think they’re in pretty good shape spiritually, after all most don’t murder or commit adultery, so they make a critical error! They compare themselves to other, more bad, people and they see themselves as rather deserving of a pat on the back from God. However, the critical error is they’re making the wrong comparison!

The comparison they need to make is between their righteousness and God’s. When any of us do that, we immediately realise that we come up impossibly short. God’s righteousness is the only standard of righteousness that we can judge ourselves by and as we’ve said a number of times, we only need to read the Sermon on the Mount in Matthew 5 to see just how dismally short of that standard we all are.

But Isaiah 11 says the world, the earth, will have the judgment of God upon it. We’ll have the righteous judgment and dominion of the Lord.

That’s a wonderful time that we can’t even imagine and it’s certainly not describing the time in which we live today.

Isaiah 11:6 to 9 give us this,

The wolf also shall dwell with the lamb, The leopard shall lie down with the young goat, The calf and the young lion and the fatling together; And a little child shall lead them. 

The cow and the bear shall graze; Their young ones shall lie down together; And the lion shall eat straw like the ox. 

The nursing child shall play by the cobra’s hole, And the weaned child shall put his hand in the viper’s den. 

They shall not hurt nor destroy in all My holy mountain, For the earth shall be full of the knowledge of the LORD As the waters cover the sea. 

This is talking about the removal of the curse on the earth and the sea and all nature, from the fall of man in Genesis.

Now look at Isaiah 11:11,

It shall come to pass in that day That the Lord shall set His hand again the second time To recover the remnant of His people (Israel) who are left, From Assyria and Egypt, From Pathros and Cush, From Elam and Shinar, From Hamath and the islands of the sea. 

Part of the setting up of this Kingdom is the regathering of Israel. The King of Israel gathers into that Kingdom the remnant of the nation of Israel who have faith in Jesus Christ.

Isaiah 2 verse 2 talks about this, and we read,

Now it shall come to pass in the latter days That the mountain (strength, stability, security, power, faith, authority, and greatness) of the LORD’s house Shall be established on the top of the mountains (or earthly rules and rulers), And shall be exalted above the hills (every other minor area of earthly rule); And all nations shall flow to it. 

That’s the difference between prophecy and the mystery period we’re living in today.

Nations are not flowing to Israel today!

The nations hear the gospel from almost anywhere except Israel!

What’s going on in Isaiah 2 verse 2 hasn’t been fulfilled yet.

When is the time of Isaiah 2?  When the nation’s flow unto Jerusalem in Israel to learn about God.

In Isaiah 2:3 we see,

Many people shall come and say, “Come, and let us go up to the mountain of the LORD, To the house of the God of Jacob; He will teach us His ways, And we shall walk in His paths.” For out of Zion shall go forth the law, And the word of the LORD from Jerusalem. 

Isaiah elsewhere says that the glory of God is in Israel. Israel’s My glory God says. That’s what the Kingdom is. Israel being established.

It’s not happening today, but it will happen and when Israel’s finally established, we’ll see Isaiah 2:4 happen,

He shall judge between the nations, And rebuke many people; They shall beat their swords into ploughshares, And their spears into pruning hooks; Nation shall not lift up sword against nation, Neither shall they learn war anymore. 

How many times have we heard politicians say they’ll bring peace, equity and justice to the world. Then what happens? No matter how good intentioned they are, they fail.

Imagine when the whole world won’t need to make weapons of war.

The wicked powerbrokers and warmongers, drunk with their own pride, will be eradicated in that day.

The people will finally live in joy and peace and happiness on the earth.

Until next time friends may you find the answers to this life in God’s Word.

Take it while it’s still being offered.

The Last Days – Part 7 – Tribulation Salvation

In this episode we continue to define this period identified in prophecy as the tribulation and we’re going to look at who’ll be saved in this period and how. Once the dispensation of grace has come to an end and this period of tribulation begins, will the method of salvation change?

“Speed Slider”

The Last Days – Part 7 – Tribulation Salvation – Transcript

In the last episode we uncovered the purpose for the tribulation and what God’s going to bring about through it, and how there could be no other way for a perfectly just God. Everything must be done according to His laws and His justice and righteousness.

We saw that the purpose is to finish the transgression, to make an end of sins, to make reconciliation for iniquity, to bring in everlasting righteousness, to seal up vision and prophecy, and to anoint the Most Holy.

Then we looked at how the tribulation will achieve these things and we saw that included in the process is the redeeming of Israel’s land grant that God promised unconditionally to Abraham.

In this episode we’re going to look at salvation in this period. We know many people will be saved in this very dark time, but how?

People tend to think that the study of the end of the world events is about studying every detail in the book of Revelation, but the main point is understanding why we believe in the return of the Lord and the fulfillment of prophecy and what the difference is between the end times and us today.

This is what rightly dividing scripture means in 2nd Timothy 2:15

Be diligent, or study, to present yourself approved to God, a worker who does not need to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth. 

If you and I don’t understand the difference between the mystery of Christ given to Paul, the time we live in now, the dispensation of grace, and God’s purpose to Israel, or if we try to mix these times, we’ll not grasp the reality of end time events.

We should understand that today is called the day of salvation by Paul in 2nd Corinthians 6 verse 2,

For He says: “IN AN ACCEPTABLE TIME I HAVE HEARD YOU, AND IN THE DAY OF SALVATION I HAVE HELPED YOU.” Behold, now is the accepted time; behold, now is the day of salvation.

Paul’s using the prophecy of Isaiah 49:8 here.

We’re saved today by what Christ did for us in suffering death on the cross in our place.

We’re sinners deserving of just punishment, but He took it for us that we might be saved from it.

So, God has this world today, a world full of sinners, a world that’s entirely rejected Him.

Gentiles had rejected God for centuries in the past, but his own people Israel had rejected him also.

So, what should God do?

Well, the just way for our Righteous Holy God would be to judge the sinners and then save the righteous, but instead of this God reveals the mystery of salvation and the mystery of the gospel to this man named Saul whose name is later changed to Paul.

He wrote 13 epistles in our Bible and in them Paul describes this gospel of salvation, not by our righteousness or our works of the law or because of who we are, if we’re of the nation of Israel or not, but by grace through the hearing of and the acceptance of, the gospel of grace.

We don’t do anything to be saved other than believe.

Christ did everything required for our salvation when he died and shed his blood on that cross and rose from the dead. It was fully complete works and we can add nothing to it.

If we believe that, it’s called faith and  we’re saved freely by His grace, through that faith.

That’s how God sees the world today, a world of sinners that, potentially, can be saved by God’s grace if they accept it by believing the Gospel of grace.

We, who are Christians, are His ambassadors according to 2nd Corinthians 5:20,

Now then, we are ambassadors for Christ, as though God were pleading through us: we implore you on Christ’s behalf, be reconciled to God.

To those who are saved God gives the role of ministers of the gospel and we make this gospel known to others and more are saved and the church, the Body of Christ is built and continues on and that’s why we do what we do.

God’s not pouring out judgment today, He’s offering salvation. Believe the gospel and be saved. How long will he wait? Only as long as His grace is still available.

In this dispensation of God’s grace that we live in today, salvation is different to the time of the prophesied tribulation, the day of the Lord’s wrath, the time of Jacob’s trouble.

This is the time God pours out judgment and wrath to the people on the earth who’ve rejected Him.

That change is so important to grasp.

In Romans 11:32 we read speaking of Israel,

For God has committed them all to disobedience, that He might have mercy on all. 

The reason God can offer salvation freely to all sinners today is because His own people, Israel, rejected Him.

That’s why He offers grace to all individuals today, Jew and Gentile. We’re not being dealt with as Gentile nations or a Jewish nation anymore, but as individuals who make up a body, the Body of Christ.

Israel as a nation is counted into unbelief.

We’re looking at salvation in the tribulation and how it works.

Though there’s a change in the method of salvation between now and then, this does NOT mean that Christ’s blood isn’t still the bases of salvation. It’s on Christ’s death, burial, and resurrection that all men are saved and it’s always by God’s grace.

But God’s attitude towards humanity’s going to change when He stops dealing with the world according to His grace alone.

It’s time for judgment then and we understand more why Paul said now is the day of salvation. Now is the time when God’s not pouring his judgment on the earth. Now is the day to be saved when it’s offered freely.

In Roman’s 6, Paul explains how we’re free from the power of sin over us and how, not being under the law, we’re dead to sin and dead to the law.

Romans 6:11,

Likewise, you also, reckon yourselves to be dead indeed to sin, but alive to God in Christ Jesus our Lord. 

He also explains how we’re free from the penalty of sin, which is death. Verse 23 of Romans 6,

For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord. 

Then there’s a third thing called the presence of sin.

Romans 7:18,

For I know that in me (that is, in my flesh) nothing good dwells; for to will is present with me, but how to perform what is good I do not find. 

For the good that I will to do, I do not do; but the evil I will not to do, that I practice.

We’ll it’s this presence of sin that’s exactly what Christ is coming to eradicate, temporarily before the Kingdom is set up during the tribulation and permanently after the Kingdom has existed for 1000 years.

To save the world from the presence of sin is going to take a major overhaul!

That’s why the cataclysmic events that occur in Revelation are justified and need to happen on such a grand scale, because sin is so entrenched in people and institutions and governments in the kingdoms of this world that they cannot stand.

Simply reforming them won’t work.

We see that time and again through the Bible. Israel would occasionally get a good king and times would be good for the nation only for the whole thing to fall miserably with the next appalling king. It’s no different than governments today except they get continually worse. It all needs to be overturned and started anew.

In this we see the justification in what God’s going to do in this coming tribulation.

We’ve all heard about the horrors that’ll happen during the tribulation, the water poisoned, people being killed by the millions, the oceans turning to blood, horrific sores over people’s bodies, and we think, how can anybody get salvation from this.

When you and I talk about salvation we’re talking about how to be saved from the penalty of sin. How can we, as individual humans, be saved from eternal death and get eternal life? How do we get justified before God? How do we get forgiveness? And we know all is answered in the gospel of Jesus Christ.

But for Israel as a nation to who God promised would be a nation above the nations, a nation of blessing over the earth with physical prosperity, they’re looking for salvation from the oppression of their enemies.

That’s what Zacharias, John the Baptists father prophesied about regarding Jesus in Luke chapter 1.

He says here’s a child that will deliver Israel from its enemies and allow them to live peacefully in this world. He’s talking about worldwide peace and salvation, physically, on the earth, not just a spiritual peace with God.

So, the salvation that we’re talking about here is different.

Let’s look at Hebrews 9:26 to 28,

He then would have had to suffer often since the foundation of the world; but now, once at the end of the ages, He has appeared to put away sin by the sacrifice of Himself. 

And as it is appointed for men to die once, but after this the judgment, so Christ was offered once to bear the sins of many. To those who eagerly wait for Him He will appear a second time, apart from sin, for salvation.

This is where we get the phrase “second coming” and we’re not talking about Him returning to Paul which He did after he ascended to heaven, and we’re not talking about the rapture where He’ll meet the Body of Christ in the air.

We’re talking about a second time the Messiah comes to the earth according to prophecy, in the Hebrew Scriptures.

And when He appears the second time it’ll be apart from sin.

Now I’m sure you all realise that doesn’t mean He sinned the first time. It means He won’t come to pay the price for sin. He did that when he came the first time, he bore the sin of man in His own body on the cross, but here in Hebrews He’ll come the second time bringing salvation.

We’ve really got to get what’s going on here.

Hebrews 9:28 talks about a future salvation. So, are we saved now or are we not?

Well, only in Paul’s epistles do we hear that we’re saved now, but in the Hebrew epistles, in prophecy, they’re hoping for salvation and salvation’s going to come when the Messiah returns to the earth the second time and brings it.

He came the first time to pay for the penalty of sin and to send the Holy Spirit to help us break the power of sin in our lives, but salvation isn’t complete until the presence of sin is destroyed.

For Israel, for prophecy, there’s a different attitude towards salvation and, in Hebrews 9:28, Jesus comes a second time to bring salvation.

Look at 1st Corinthians 1:18,

For the message of the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing, but to us who are saved, it is the power of God.

This is the language in Paul’s epistles, that Christ died in the cross and when we believe we’re crucified with Him. Our sin is paid for in full.

We’re not Israel hoping for a future salvation. We’re not under Israel’s covenants or its law which would require something of us to do.

If it’s by grace, we can be saved completely right now. If it’s by grace, if God does all the work, there can’t be anything we have to do or anything on the earth that needs to be done.

The message of the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God.

See that phrase?

We’re saved if we trust the cross of Christ. Thats the gospel for our salvation we are saved by the power of God.

We should point out that this verse, 1st Corinthians 1:18, in the New King James Bible says, “to us who are being saved!” The King James is more correct here and reads, “For the preaching of the cross is to them that perish foolishness; but unto us which are saved it is the power of God.

So, in the New king James it infers a process. How do we know when that process is complete?

We shouldn’t allow these changed words to confuse our understanding of God’s salvation.

Romans 5:11 says,

but we also joy in God through our Lord Jesus Christ, by whom we have now received the atonement.

See how different this is than future salvation?

It all comes down to whether or not we’re Israel under law and covenant or we’re under grace.

If we have earthly promises from God attached to our salvation, then our salvation isn’t complete until those things’re accomplished.

If we have no earthly promise, if we don’t have an earthly destination, and we’re not under a law that requires us to perform some sort of works, then we don’t have to wait for it. God’s offering it to us now.

Now look at 1st Peter.

Peter is one of the Twelve Apostles who ministered at the events on the day of Pentecost. He’s writing to people who he said himself were living in the last days and he’s warning about the coming tribulation.

When he preached at Pentecost he stood up and said this is that which Joel spoke about.

Joel prophesied about what would happen during the “day of the Lord”, this period of tribulation before the Kingdom is set up.

Peter prepares them for that in Acts chapter 2 because that’s the next event prophesied to happen, after which Christ will return a second time to set up the kingdom.

Peter also writes the epistle of 1st Peter where he’s talking to people who’ll go through the tribulation.

If you want to know what salvation’s like during the tribulation read the Hebrew epistles, Hebrews to Revelation. They speak about Christ and salvation in the tribulation according to prophecy.

1st Peter 1:1 to 5 says,

Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who according to His abundant mercy has begotten us again to a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, to an inheritance incorruptible and undefiled and that does not fade away, reserved in heaven for you, who are kept by the power of God through faith for salvation “”ready to be revealed in the last time””. 

He’s talking to people who have a hope renewed through faith for salvation which will be revealed in the last times, the last days.

 

Remember that according to their program they needed a King to set up a Kingdom and when their King died all hope was lost in that program.

When Christ rose from the dead it’s all back on again because now the King’s alive again.

1st Peter 1:3 says,

He (God the Father) has begotten us again to a living hope. A hope of what? The Kingdom come.

That’s the gospel they preached! A lively hope by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead to an inheritance incorruptible and undefiled, that does not fade away, reserved in heaven for you.

See, it’s all on layby until it comes.

Verse 5 refers to those who’re kept by the power of God through faith for salvation ready to be revealed in the last time, the last day.

In verse 7 Peter encourages them and tells them not to be discouraged about the trial of their faith.

What trial? Tribulation!

This isn’t talking about the guy down the street that pokes fun at Christians.

This is talking about the prophetic tribulation where Peter’s warning that there’s very bad times coming. He talks about the fiery trial.

Again in 1st Peter 1 in verse 7 Peter says,

that the genuineness, the trial, of your faith, being much more precious than gold that perishes, though it is tested by fire, may be found to praise, honor, and glory at the revelation of Jesus Christ. 

Peter says when Christ appears again, He’s coming with salvation.

So, you see these verses in the Hebrew epistles dealing with Israel going into the tribulation talk about salvation in the future when Christ comes again.

It all makes sense when you separate this from Paul’s writings.

It’ll be confusing if you try to push these Hebrew epistles in together with Paul’s epistles.

Paul talks about present salvation while the Hebrew epistles talk about future salvation.

1st Peter 1:13,

Therefore gird up the loins of your mind, be sober, and rest your hope fully upon the grace that is to be brought to you at the revelation of Jesus Christ; 

See the difference?

He’s saying gird up the loins of your mind because you’re going to have to tough it out until the end, the end of the events that we’re talking about.

That’s when salvation is brought to you, at the revelation of Jesus Christ.

He’s not talking about the revelation of the mystery, the dispensation of grace, given to Paul, he’s talking about the appearing of the Lord Jesus Christ when he comes again from heaven and brings salvation.

When Christ comes at that time, He’s got a bloody sword, bloody garments and there’s smoke coming out from cities on the earth. Is that our picture of salvation today? No, it’s not.

We might say, “Well that sounds kind of wicked.”

No! The world’s wicked. God’s righteous. He’s talking about the judgement of every corrupt system and person on earth and salvation and grace being brought to Israel and the bringing of the promised Kingdom on earth.

It’s a very different mindset than what we have today.

If we’re preaching grace today what’re we trying to do to our enemies? Get them saved! Preach the gospel to them! It’s a very different approach to enemies in what God’s doing today.

It really matters to rightly divide scripture.

Now look at 1st Peter 4:12,

Beloved, do not think it strange concerning the fiery trial which is to try you, as though some strange thing happened to you;

Same book, same apostle, same last times context.

Then in 1st Peter 4 in verse 13,

but rejoice to the extent that you partake of Christ’s sufferings, that when His glory is revealed, you may also be glad with exceeding joy. 

So, when Christ’s comes back in flaming fire and vengeance, Peter say that’s the day you can rejoice. That’s the day that Jesus said look up because your redemption is nigh.

When you see these signs, Christ returning, well, you’ll get redeemed.

Today, we’re not looking for signs of redemption we’ve already got it, and when the Lord comes back for the church, in the twinkling of an eye, we’ll be with Him forever and there’re no signs that herald that moment in time.

For the people Peter’s talking to, Israel, they’re looking for signs.

They see tribulation, and they shouldn’t worry about it and give up. They should stick it out through the fiery trial because when the Lord appears in glory, when He comes back and He’s revealed to the earth, then they get glorified.

Look down to verse 17,

For the time has come for judgment to begin at the house of God; and if it begins with us first (Israel), what will be the end of those who do not obey the gospel of God? 

Paul preaches Grace and peace from God dispensed to the earth but Peter’s saying here the time has come for judgment.

The only way they can both be right is that they’re talking about different times, different dispensations or ages, a different group of people.

God changes from what He’s doing from today in the tribulation.

It’s like when we get a new government. The way things happen changes, a new dispensation begins. Our world changes.

Peter says in this verse that the time has come that judgment must begin at the house of God. Who’s the house of God? Israel!

In verse 18 of 1st Peter chapter 4 Peter says,

Now “IF THE RIGHTEOUS ONE IS SCARCELY SAVED, WHERE WILL THE UNGODLY AND THE SINNER APPEAR?

Romans 4:5 says that God justifies the ungodly by faith in his gospel.

The ungodly can be saved, but at that time of judgement, the tribulation, God’s pouring out fire from heaven and you want to be saved from that. And the “you” we’re talking about are those in the tribulation.

So, Peter says here if the righteous scarcely be saved where shall the ungodly and the sinner appear? Friends that’s not describing the gospel today.

Today it’s not our righteousness at all, it’s what Christ did, and ungodly people can be saved freely by God’s grace but there’ll be a time where God changes his operation and how He deals with ungodly people.

God says, “Yes, I was offering them salvation, but they rejected it! Now it’s time to judge them.” And we understand that a perfectly righteous God must judge unrighteousness.

Better to be saved now through His righteousness and His shed blood, by grace, while we still have the opportunity.

Let’s look at Romans 11:11,

I say then, have they (Israel) stumbled that they should fall? Certainly not! But through their fall, to provoke them to jealousy, salvation has come to the Gentiles. 

What God is doing today is that salvation, which was once of the Jews, and is now being offered to Gentiles without Israel. The Gentiles salvation and the knowledge of God was always intended to come through Israel, the nation of priests.

Through Israel’s fall salvation has come to the Gentiles directly.

In verse 12 we see,

Now if their fall is riches for the world, and their failure riches for the Gentiles, how much more their fullness!

Pauls saying that if salvation can be offered today to the people of the world without Israel, how much more will God bring salvation to this world when Israel rises again, when Israel’s restored, when Israel’s saved, when all the prophecies are fulfilled.

The world longs for this salvation of Israel, knowingly or unknowingly, because that’s finally when this present world turns into a righteous world and things will be run differently when Christ brings in His Kingdom.

A saved Israel will fulfill the prophecies in the Bible, making the high places low and bringing up the lowly things that this world mocks.

Those low things are Israel and the reason for the tribulation is to turn the world upside down and destroy the institutions of wicked, unjust, corrupt, and unrighteous Gentile rule and then, from the ashes, bring in a righteous and just Kingdom of salvation.

Last time we saw Jesus in heaven opening the seals of a scroll and we saw why there’s a scroll and why the seals, and why Christ is the only one that can open it.

When Christ starts opening those seals God’s focus is back on his covenant people. So, when that very first seal is opened God has changed the way he thinks about and deals with the world.

He was offering grace to a world of people who rejected Him but when that first seal is opened, He’s reclaiming His right on the earth through His chosen people Israel according to His covenant with them.

That first seal in Revelation 6 is where we have that white rider, the antichrist, coming in the image of the Messiah.

He conquers the world and tries to bring in peace just like the Messiah promised. He’s going to claim that he’s bringing in that new covenant God promised Israel and Israel’s going to believe him.

They deny Christ came in the flesh the first time and because of that they fall for this false Christ at this time.

The church, the Body of Christ is not even there.

There’s not a word about God operating through his ambassadors anymore, offering grace to the world.

Instead, He’s looking at the world differently now, changing the way He operates with a world that’s rejected His Gospel of Grace.

Gentile nations have ruled the world since Israel fell from their heights during the rules of Soloman and David. They fell because of their rejection of God’s laws and disobedience and became captive to Gentile nations.

Gentiles will reign over Israel until prophecy is fulfilled, and that Kingdom of heaven comes and then it’ll be the time for Israel to rise back up to power.

What’s that mean for the Gentile rule that’s been reigning ever since Israel’s captivity?

They’re going to fall, be knocked down and Israel saved.

Israel’s going to be restored out of this into their Kingdom where they’ll reign over the nations. That’s what prophecy talks about, when Christ will come back and make the high places low and the low places (Israel) high.

He’ll completely overturn and reorder things.

During this time of the Gentiles, He’s allowed them to rule in their wickedness until finally He’ll judge everything. Who’s righteous? Who’s wicked?

The wicked will get a sword and that’s when He comes in Revelation 19 fulfilling Jeremiah’s prophecy with a sword bathed in blood. That’s the righteous judgment on the wicked.

In Hosea chapter 12 God says a similar thing only this time instead of the Gentile nation’s, He talks about Judah.

Just because they’re circumcised Jews and of the nation of Israel through genealogy, doesn’t mean they don’t have a problem with God.

In Hosea 12:2 we read,

“The LORD also brings a charge against Judah, And will punish Jacob according to his ways; According to his deeds He will recompense him. 

See, the Lord will punish them according to their ways also.

Ezekiel 21:27,

Overthrown, overthrown, I will make it overthrown! It shall be no longer, Until He comes whose right it is, And I will give it to Him.” ‘ 

Give what? The land. Whose right is it? Christ’s, as it is Israel’s through the promises of old.

Christ will be the King over Israel whose right has come when He comes.

When we ask about salvation in the tribulation it’s the same as if we were asking how people got saved in Exodus.

Israel were slaves to Gentile powers, similar to the tribulation, under the rulership of Pharaoh, a pagan unbeliever, against the God of Israel.

God had made a promise 400 years earlier to these people, who were enslaved to the Gentiles, that He would deliver them out from the hand of their enemies.

Then God sent Moses a deliverer and what did Moses do?

He sent plagues upon the Egyptian powers and knocked those high powers down.

At the end of the story in Exodus, Israel walks on out of slavery to freedom. They’re singing praise to God, because they’ve been saved, delivered from Egypt.

How did that happen? By God’s power!

The picture of the plagues in Egypt is a shadow of what’s going to happen in the future in the tribulation.

Prophecy tells us that what happened before, God’ll do again. He parts waters back there, He’ll part waters over here. He turns the waters to blood over there He turns water to blood over here. Revelation is an echo, it’s a shadow of the past that’s going to happen again.

In Exodus, if you were an Egyptian how could you get saved?

You would need to go to Israel, to the Jews.

The last plague in Egypt, was a shadow of the cross of Christ. The innocent lamb dying with its blood painted on the lintels and the posts of the doors. What happened to those who didn’t apply that blood over the door?

They died!

It was a horrific time of trouble even for Israel. They’re in their houses trusting in that blood while the Angel of Death came. That’s the tribulation.

That’s the picture here.

Will there be salvation available? Yes.

Is it like the day of salvation we live in now? No!

God always makes a provision but it’s not going to be the day of free grace that He’s offering today.

It’s not God’s purpose in Revelation to send His ambassadors like He has today and evangelise the world. He’s going to overturn everything and make the wrongs right.

In spite of that and because of His mercy, salvation will be available.

Look at Revelation 6:9

When He opened the fifth seal, I saw under the altar the souls of those who had been slain for the word of God and for the testimony which they held. 

Next verse, Revelation 6:10,

And they cried with a loud voice, saying, “How long, O Lord, holy and true, until You judge and avenge our blood on those who dwell on the earth?”

These are those that turned their trust to Jesus Christ in this tribulation period and were killed by a wicked and corrupt people, from a wicked and corrupt system that’s rejected God.

Their souls are in heaven and they’re asking God how long must they wait for Him to judge these people. They’re saying get it over with and let’s bring in the kingdom.

At this fifth seal these martyred saints cry out in heaven for their blood to be avenged.

The next verse, verse 11,

Then a white robe was given to each of them; and it was said to them that they should rest a little while longer, until both the number of their fellow servants and their brethren, who would be killed as they were, was completed. 

Does that sound like how God’s dealing with the world today, a world of sinners being offered grace and salvation?

You see God’s attitudes changed.

They’re crying out how long must we wait for judgement and vengeance and God tells them to wait a bit longer until more people of this corrupt world system die. Judgment has to occur.

It’s too late for the day of free salvation and grace as we have today.

Many of the people who turn to the Messiah are going to die at the hand of the people in the world.

Then in Revelation 6 verses 12 to 15,

I looked when He opened the sixth seal, and behold, there was a great earthquake; and the sun became black as sackcloth of hair, and the moon became like blood. 

And the stars of heaven fell to the earth, as a fig tree drops its late figs when it is shaken by a mighty wind.

Then the sky receded as a scroll when it is rolled up, and every mountain and island was moved out of its place. 

And the kings of the earth, the great men, the rich men, the commanders, the mighty men, every slave and every free man, hid themselves in the caves and in the rocks of the mountains, and said to the mountains and rocks, “Fall on us and hide us from the face of Him who sits on the throne and from the wrath of the Lamb! 

The world’s kings, the rulers, the dictators, and every corrupt person in power on the earth, these people that were high and lifted up, are going to be knocked down and will run for their lives.

Verse 17 says,

For the great day of His wrath has come, and who is able to stand?”

The kings of the earth, the rulers, are saying this. They’re terrified and their underground bunkers and their money isn’t going to save them from this terrible time.

In Revelation chapter 7 verse 1 to 8 we have 144,000 men of Israel who’re sealed with the seal of God on their foreheads. Apparently, they’re going to be there on the earth with God’s supernatural protection.

There are twelve thousand from each of the 12 tribes of the nation of Israel which at this time has a small remnant restored.

In verses 9 and 10 we read,

After these things I looked, and behold, a great multitude which no one could number, of all nations, tribes, peoples, and tongues, standing before the throne and before the Lamb, clothed with white robes, with palm branches in their hands, and crying out with a loud voice, saying, “Salvation belongs to our God who sits on the throne, and to the Lamb!” 

Here we see the people who’re saved in the tribulation. How do we know?

John asked who these people are, and we get the answer in verse 14 when the angel says to John,

“These are the ones who come out of the great tribulation, and washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb. 

This isn’t the church on the earth crying out, it’s these people in heaven crying out thank God they’re saved!

What about these robes?

They are the righteousness of the saints. They’re wearing their righteousness.

They’re before the throne of God in verse 15.

People think that when they see some disaster on the earth today it’s a sign of the tribulation. Nothing like it. No person living today can compare any hardship or catastrophe they may be confronting or anything that’s ever happened before on the globe with this time of tribulation.

Revelation chapter 9 gives us an account of the absolute horror of this period, far beyond anything the earth has ever experienced or ever will again.

Wouldn’t you think that in the midst of this horrific judgment from God, the people would cry out for a salvation?

But look at Revelation 9:20 and 21,

But the rest of mankind, who were not killed by these plagues, did not repent of the works of their hands, that they should not worship demons, and idols of gold, silver, brass, stone, and wood, which can neither see nor hear nor walk.

And they did not repent of their murders or their sorceries or their sexual immorality or their thefts.

People may say this is a reason not to believe because God kills all these people in the tribulation and they say, “I don’t want to serve a God Who does such things.”

Why is this God of love judging and killing all these people?

Well, the message of the cross, that Christ paid for our sins, and we can be saved through His shed blood is everywhere today and it’s also ignored everywhere.

There’s simply no other choice. Judgement must come because unrighteousness must be judged, and the free gift of salvation has been almost universally rejected.

In this present dispensation of grace, God’s holding back judgement, but He can’t and won’t hold it back forever.

Hebrews 2:3 says,

how shall we escape if we neglect so great a salvation?

People think a righteous God would just let them live on acting out whatever an evil heart can conceive.

They’ll not repent of their works. They’ll continue to worship devils, idols of gold silver, brass, and stone.

They’ll not repent of their murders, their sorceries, their fornication, their thefts, or anything else.

In Revelation chapter 11 verse 11, God resurrects two ancient witnesses who He gave power to be witnesses to Him.

They have miraculous abilities and they’re going to preach a gospel of fear of God and how people must repent, or turn. Also make no mistake that these witnesses will be somehow seen and heard all round the world.

Some will listen, the majority don’t. They don’t like the idea of God threatening them.

Well for 2,000 years now God’s love and grace has been preached and people didn’t like that either. They’ve largely rejected anything to do with God.

These two witnesses of Revelation 11 have power.

As we read down through the verses, we see it’s the same power that Moses had in Exodus to bring plagues on Egypt.

Why did God, through Moses, bring those plagues on Egypt?

To change Pharaoh’s mind. To show Pharaoh that this is the true God and to fear him. God said to Pharoah, “Let my people go,” but because of the hardness of his heart Pharaoh says, “No,” over and over again.

What do they say on the earth? “No, I won’t repent.”

Eventually they’ll be overcome just like Pharoah in Exodus. And like Moses was the messenger to Paharoah, the two Revelation 11 witnesses will be to the world in tribulation.

In Revelation 11:15 we read,

Then the seventh angel sounded: And there were loud voices in heaven, saying, “The kingdoms of this world have become the kingdoms of our Lord and of His Christ, and He shall reign forever and ever!”

The kingdoms of this world become the kingdoms of Christ.

When Christ comes back, He’s coming to take what’s His right, and He’ll take it by force.

In Revelation 14:6 and 7 we see an angel sent to the earth. John writes,

Then I saw another angel flying in the midst of heaven, having the everlasting gospel to preach to those who dwell on the earth to every nation, tribe, tongue, and people saying with a loud voice, “Fear God and give glory to Him, for the hour of His judgment has come; and worship Him who made heaven and earth, the sea and springs of water.” 

The gospel this angel preaches is not the gospel you and I preach today.

It’s a gospel of fear and judgment.

Here’s another opportunity for them to repent but, unfortunately, Revelation tells us that not many will.

We do see multitudes in heaven that do, but we also see that most on the earth don’t.

In Revelation 14:8 – 10 we read,

And another angel followed, saying, “Babylon is fallen, is fallen, that great city, because she has made all nations drink of the wine of the wrath of her fornication.” Then a third angel followed them, saying with a loud voice, “If anyone worships the beast and his image, and receives his mark on his forehead or on his hand, he himself shall also drink of the wine of the wrath of God, which is poured out full strength into the cup of His indignation. He shall be tormented with fire and brimstone in the presence of the holy angels and in the presence of the Lamb.

 

You see, if any man worships the Beast, the antichrist and His image and receives his mark in his forehead or his hand, the same shall drink of the wine of the wrath of God.

God marked 144,000 witnesses and the devil answers with his own mark. We know it as the mark of the beast.

There’s no need to be afraid of the mark of the beast today because none of these things are going to happen while God has His ambassadors on earth preaching grace.

But if you’re alive during that time simply don’t worship a false Christ. What if a person accidentally gets a chip in the hand? Do not worship the false Christ, it’s very simple.

If they do, they’ll drink of the wrath of God.

Some may say, “I don’t believe in a God like that, I believe in a loving God.”

Yes, we do As well. That’s what He’s doing now and that’s what He’s going to do in the future.

But He’s also a God of justice. Failing to recognise that side of God gives us a false picture of Who He really is.

Revelation 14:11 and 12,

And the smoke of their torment ascends forever and ever; and they have no rest day or night, who worship the beast and his image, and whoever receives the mark of his name.” 

Here is the patience of the saints; here are those who keep the commandments of God and the faith of Jesus. 

The saints here are they that keep the commandments of God and the faith of Jesus.

It required of them to do Christ’s commandments, to do good things during this tribulation or else they’re going to be judged.

The patience of the saints is that if you’re alive and you’re saved on the earth during this time you have to hope for death or the end of the age to know if you’re saved.

We have salvation now! We don’t need to die to know it. We’re crucified with Christ and dead in Him. We’re not Israel and we’re not in their covenants or under their law.

Revelation 14:13 says,

Then I heard a voice from heaven saying to me, “Write: ‘Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord from now on.’ ” “Yes,” says the Spirit, “that they may rest from their labours, and their works follow them.” 

That’s the patience of the Saints, to endure to the end and they shall be saved.

Works, Labor’s, patience. Salvation in that day relies on you waiting, enduring and being patient until the end.

That’s why the kings of the earth are trying to die, and they can’t.

Friends this is real horror and it’s all unnecessary in light of the free salvation that’s offered today by grace, salvation that we’re 100% certain of.

Hebrews 10 verses 36 to 39 says this, written to the remnant saints in that period,

For you have need of endurance, so that after you have done the will of God, you may receive the promise: 

“FOR YET A LITTLE WHILE, AND HE WHO IS COMING WILL COME AND WILL NOT TARRY. 

NOW THE JUST SHALL LIVE BY FAITH; BUT IF ANYONE DRAWS BACK, MY SOUL HAS NO PLEASURE IN HIM.” 

But we are not of those who draw back to perdition, but of those who believe to the saving of the soul. 

You can fall away if you don’t endure.

Today, God’s given us grace and all spiritual blessings. You and I who believe have been freely guaranteed it by the cross of Christ and through the sealing of the Holy Spirit. We have a place in heaven guaranteed for us.

That’s the opportunity every person has today.

Take it while it’s still being offered.

The Last Days – Part 6 – The Tribulation Purpose

In this episode we continue to define this period of time that’s spoken of in prophecy as the tribulation and we want to see its purpose. Why is this period of God’s terrible wrath and judgment necessary?

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The Last Days – Part 6 – The Tribulation Purpose – Transcript

We left off last time looking at some small bites of prophecy relating to this coming period known as the Tribulation. We saw how the timeline of prophecy, particularly in the prophesy known as the Seventy Weeks of Daniel, was interrupted by this period that we live in today known as the dispensation of grace.

We should realise that an in-depth study of the prophecies relating to this period of time would take us to virtually every book and almost every chapter of the Bible so we’re trying to get a bird’s eye view in order to see what’s on our horizon from the Bible’s perspective.

Today we want to explore God’s purpose in bringing this awful time of wrath and judgement onto the earth and to mankind and we want to see how God’s love fits together with this period of time.

We know that a saved nation of Israel is one purpose of the tribulation and we’re going to explore this further and see what, if anything, is its purpose for us today, the Body of Christ.

To see the purpose of the tribulation we need to go back in time to Daniel’s Seventy Week Prophecy again, specifically Daniel 9 verse 24. But to set the scene we should see how and why this was all revealed to Daniel.

We go to Daniel 9 verse 20 to 23 where we see that Daniel had read in the Book of Jeremiah that the present captivity of Israel was about to end so he prays that God would reveal to him how He was going to fulfill these promises to the nation. We read,

 Now while I was speaking, praying, and confessing my sin and the sin of my people Israel, and presenting my supplication before the LORD my God for the holy mountain of my God, yes, while I was speaking in prayer, the man Gabriel (that’s the angel Gabriel), whom I had seen in the vision at the beginning, being caused to fly swiftly, reached me about the time of the evening offering. 

And he informed me, and talked with me, and said, “O Daniel, I have now come forth to give you skill to understand. 

At the beginning of your supplications the command went out, and I have come to tell you, for you are greatly beloved; therefore consider the matter, and understand the vision:

Now we see God’s purpose for the tribulation in His answer to Daniel’s prayer, spoken through this angel, Gabriel.

Daniel 9:24,

“Seventy weeks are determined For your people and for your holy city, To finish the transgression, To make an end of sins, To make reconciliation for iniquity, To bring in everlasting righteousness, To seal up vision and prophecy, And to anoint the Most Holy. 

The purpose then is To finish the transgression, To make an end of sins, To make reconciliation for iniquity, To bring in everlasting righteousness, To seal up vision and prophecy, And to anoint the Most Holy.

Now in reading this through quickly we might lose the impact of just what this means.

To finish the transgression.

Notice it’s singular, THE transgression. Taken literally, this means setting up an entirely new order on earth, with an end to man’s rebellion against God, the rebellion that goes right back to the Garden of Eden. Every sin, every sickness, every death, every act of hatred and malice goes back to this rebellion. The impact of the statement to finish the transgression is overwhelming and the implications of it are far beyond our ability to understand, we who have known nothing but the transgression, the rebellion against God.

To make an end to sins.

This means not only the end of the guilt of sin, but an end of sin itself. It means to “seal up” or to “restrain” sins. This looks to a new, redeemed world, a world without sin. Who of us can really imagine that world?

To make reconciliation for iniquity.

Man’s iniquity, or his evil and perversity, must be reconciled to God’s justice and holiness. God cannot just shrug off or turn a blind eye to iniquity. This work of reconciliation was accomplished by Christ through His completed work on the cross.

 

To bring in everlasting righteousness.

Here we see not only righteousness as the goal, but everlasting righteousness. Righteousness that will last forever. This means an end to the corruption in leadership, injustice by courts and authorities, the ladder climbing over the rights of others and the abuse of power.

To seal up vision and prophecy.

This is bringing all prophecy, and all the visions God’s revealed to mankind to perfect fulfilment, every jot and title of it. It’s the final stage of human history and that history comes to perfect completion with the eternal reign of the Son of God. Every word of prophecy and every vision will be sealed and marked completed in full, so to speak.

And to anoint the Most Holy.

This last event is the anointing of “the most holy”. Most believe that to be the Lord Jesus, the Messiah. Because the verse begins with, “Seventy weeks are determined For your people and for your holy city, it’s possible that the anointing or consecrating of the Most Holy refers to the city of Jerusalem after the millennium or a temple to come or maybe the New Jerusalem rather than the person of Christ, who was already anointed as we see in Acts 10:38 and Luke 4:18.

This is one of those places where God’s not fully revealed the meaning and therefore what we come up with is speculation, however whatever it is it’s something that’s vitally important to God and it’ll have a special place in God’s eternal realm of peace.

In order for this purpose to be fulfilled there’s another vital piece that must be completed. God doesn’t change His mind on a promise and part of the fulfillment of all these things is the completion of the promise of the land that God made unconditionally to Abraham.

This is what we’ll see completed in the book of Revelation.

To see how this’ll unfold let’s go back to Daniel 9 verse 26 and we read,

“And after the sixty-two weeks Messiah shall be cut off, but not for Himself; And the people of the prince who is to come shall destroy the city and the sanctuary. The end of it shall be with a flood, And till the end of the war desolations are determined. 

This prince that shall come is referring to the antichrist, but it’s the people of the prince that shall come that’s talked about here, that world Empire that will exist at the time of these days is the revived Roman Empire.

The people of that Prince will destroy the city and Sanctuary. Jerusalem was destroyed in 70 A.D by the Romans. These are the people of the prince that shall come.

A lot of people say that this was the end of Daniel’s prophecy right there. That was the beginning of everlasting righteousness and the beginning of the end as far as the Kingdom Come. Clearly not!

They say that the sacking of Jerusalem was the greatest tribulation that had ever occurred and fits with the description of it given by Jesus in Matthew 24:21,

For then there will be great tribulation, such as has not been since the beginning of the world until this time, no, nor ever shall be. 

This may have been the greatest tribulation that had happened in Jerusalem, but it clearly doesn’t fit what Jesus said.

As much as you try you can’t find a scenario in the history of the world that matches this event.

If Christ put an end to all sins at that point in history, why do the events of Daniel 9 verse 26 happen AFTER the Messiah is cut off, and of course all we need to do is look around us to notice that sin, iniquity, and unrighteousness hasn’t ended at all.

The 70th week is not done yet that’s why in verse 27 we see,

Then he shall confirm a covenant with many for one week; But in the middle of the week He shall bring an end to sacrifice and offering. And on the wing of abominations shall be one who makes desolate, Even until the consummation, which is determined, Is poured out on the desolate.” 

When we understand the purpose of this tribulation it really helps us understand it’s detail.

In Matthew 24:15 Jesus’s disciples asked when will these things be and Jesus says,

Therefore, when you see the ‘ABOMINATION OF DESOLATION,’ spoken of by Daniel the prophet (that’s Daniel 9 verse 27), standing in the holy place then let those who are in Judea flee to the mountains.

Now, for the sacrifices and offerings to cease as per Daniel 9:27, there needs to be a temple here for this sacrifice to cease in, and it can’t be referring to the temple that the Roman’s destroyed in 70 A.D., because the prince who is to come, the antichrist, hasn’t come yet, and the covenant he’ll set up hasn’t happened yet just as the breaking of that covenant couldn’t have happened yet. Neither are any of the many other events associated with this prophecy to be found at that point in history.

Now we want to look closer at the rest of this verse, Daniel 9:27,

It says on the wing of abominations shall be one who makes desolate or there’ll be an over spreading of abominations by that one who makes desolate.

This is an abomination that will lead to destruction, God’s judgment on the most horrible idolatry that’s ever happened where this prince that will come will set himself up as the Christ who has finally come.

Until the consummation, which is determined.

What does consummation mean?

It simply means the finishing of all things. The completion. It’s the end when things are wrapped up.

Which is determined. Determined, in advance, by God.

It’s determined judgment, punishment against those who make desolate God’s land, God’s Temple, and God’s people.

Was the Everlasting righteousness happening here when God promised to bring judgment upon those who desolate God’s people? It hasn’t happened yet. Daniel’s 70th week is still in the future.

We’ve only gone through Daniel’s prophecy very briefly here.

There’s been lots of books written about this and lots of people talking about it and it’s not our goal to clear up all the questions about it but rather to just show the purpose of the coming 70th week, that coming time of tribulation and the Kingdom.

What’s left to finish in this prophecy is Judgment from God and the establishment of His kingdom. That’s what’s still future.

We’ve had the temple and the city rebuilt, as we see in Ezra and Nehemiah, in the first 49 years from when the prophecy started.

We’ve had the Messiah cut off, or killed. We’ve even had the temple and the city destroyed again.

But what we haven’t had happen is what was determined upon his (Daniel’s) people (Israel).

Neither have we had the judgment and that everlasting righteousness. They just haven’t happened yet.

As we’ve said, Daniel’s 70th week is yet to happen.

Now let’s look at something else to see the purpose of the tribulation and the coming Kingdom and the future that God purposed since the world began.

That’s to finish all the punishment and judgment for sin, to end the transgression, the rebellion and man’s fall into sin, and to bring in righteousness and salvation to the Earth.

Revelation 4 is a key to this.

Revelation 1, 2 and 3 is a vision that John the apostle sees of Jesus Christ, and he’s given information to send in letters to seven churches. By the way we shouldn’t see that word church and immediately associate it with the church, the Body of Christ today. A study of these churches will show big differences to how God deals with the Body of Christ today, by grace alone and not by works. These Revelation churches are works based churches, different in many ways.

After that you don’t read the word Church in revelation anymore after chapter 3 until the last verse.

The word church doesn’t appear when Revelation starts talking about this tribulation period.

Some people like to say that the Rapture is referred to in Revelation 4:1 which we’re coming to but there’s nothing in the verse that leads us to believe this.

What we do have in the Book of Revelation is a description of the Fulfillment, the consummation of God’s purpose that’s been clearly prophesied throughout the Bible.

So, Revelation 4 verse 1 begins,

After these things I looked, and behold, a door standing open in heaven. And the first voice which I heard was like a trumpet speaking with me, saying, “Come up here, and I will show you things which must take place after this.” 

“After these things”. What things? The dictating of the letters to the seven churches as given by Jesus to John.

“And the first voice which I heard was like a trumpet speaking with me, saying, “Come up here and I will show you things which must take place after this.”

This is where some put the rapture. If you didn’t see it, it’s in between the words when John goes up to heaven. That’s when some say the church is being caught up to heaven.

Verses 2 to 4,

Immediately I was in the Spirit; and behold, a throne set in heaven, and One sat on the throne. 

And He who sat there was like a jasper and a sardius stone in appearance; and there was a rainbow around the throne, in appearance like an emerald. 

Around the throne were twenty-four thrones, and on the thrones I saw twenty-four elders sitting, clothed in white robes; and they had crowns of gold on their heads. 

There was a rainbow round about The Throne.

Rainbows in the Bible are God’s symbol of promise. He set the rainbow in the sky in Genesis chapter nine after he promised salvation and not to flood the world again.

So, this is the image, the vision that John sees of the Throne of God.

Around the throne were twenty-four thrones, and on the thrones, I saw twenty-four elders sitting, clothed in white robes; and they had crowns of gold on their heads. 

People seem to be fascinated by those guys and books have been written about them, but the reality is, we don’t know!

So many people speculate but there’s not a verse that tells us exactly who they are and it’s not the point of what we’re trying to do here.

People get distracted by these details and they forget the big picture of what’s going on here.

The Bible doesn’t specifically tell us, so we move on rather than spend half a lifetime trying to define who the 4 and 20 elders are.

So, what’s going on here?

They’re up there in this Throne Room, there’s 24 Elders, there’s other creatures there and yet more strange creatures all around and there’s a crystal sea and everything else.

They start praising God in verse 11 saying,

You are worthy, O Lord, To receive glory and honor and power; For You created all things, And by Your will they exist and were created.

But what’s going on starts in chapter five.

Revelation 5:1 says,

And I saw in the right hand of Him who sat on the throne a scroll (or a book) written inside and on the back, sealed with seven seals. 

Then in verse 2,

Then I saw a strong angel proclaiming with a loud voice, “Who is worthy to open the scroll and to loose its seals?” 

Now that’s a strange scroll or book!

Why do you have to be worthy to open it?

Because this is not your normal book, friends.

You don’t have to be worthy to open your Bible, even though it’s named the “Holy Bible”. In fact, you can’t be saved without opening the Bible or without hearing the message in it.

So, what is this scroll, this sealed book, that they don’t know the contents of and you have to be worthy to open it?

Well, this scroll, this book is going to be incredibly important to our understanding of what’s going on here.

Many people skip over this chapter and go to the seals and the trumpets and the viles and look at all the exciting stuff happening which movies and countless books are written about and they forget the sealed scroll.

However, that has everything to do with the purpose of all that God’s going to accomplish.

God is sitting on the throne, and he’s got a scroll which is sealed and apparently, HE can’t even open it!

What? God can’t open it? Surely God can do all things, and yet, there’s something about this scroll and we’re going to find out what it is, and it has something to do with the purpose of the tribulation!

Revelation 5:3 says,

And no one in heaven or on the earth or under the earth was able to open the scroll, or to look at it. 

So I wept much, because no one was found worthy to open and read the scroll, or to look at it.

Now, why is John weeping?

Well, apparently there’s something they know about.

Something, that in order for things to be complete for the consummation the end of all things to happen, this scroll must be opened!

This book concerns God’s purpose for the Earth.

We know that because as we read the rest of the Book of Revelation, as each of the seals are broken, things happen on the Earth.

And then what happens after the seals are broken and this scroll is opened? Christ comes back to the Earth and reclaims the Earth.

This scroll concerns God’s purpose for the Earth.

We’ll also see that this scroll’s not for us, the church, the Body of Christ. today. We, the church, don’t have a book with seals on it that we must wait to be opened before we have what God promised us.

Colossians 2:10 tells us,

and you are complete in Him, who is the head of all principality and power. 

We have a position right now complete in Christ in Heavenly places and that’s a glorious thing. There’s nothing we, as Christians, have to wait for.

However, Israel have prophecies that need to be fulfilled, signs that need to occur. They have tribulation and a kingdom and then there’s this sealed scroll that’s keeping them from getting there, but nothing needs to happen for us today to claim salvation and eternal glory with God.

That’s because of what Christ did for us and gave to us freely and made it known to us through the preaching the gospel.

This scroll concerns God’s purpose for the Earth.

Let’s look at Genesis 14:22 to get some background. Now, if you were a Jew 2000 years ago and understood Israel’s laws as most did, or, if you were John the Apostle, you’d probably understand what’s going on with this scroll and you may have been weeping over it like John.

Genesis 14:22 tells us,

But Abram said to the king of Sodom,

I have raised my hand to the LORD, God Most High, the Possessor of heaven and earth, 

Here we learn that God is the possessor of Heaven and Earth. See all things are his and Abram knows this, and he knows The God Who possesses all things. Now look at Exodus 19:5,

Now therefore, if you will indeed obey My voice and keep My covenant, then you shall be a special treasure to Me above all people; for all the earth is Mine. 

This is on Mount Sinai where God speaks to Moses and to his people, the sons of Abraham and Isaac and Jacob, and he tells them his purpose for them, which is this Covenant of the law, and if they agree to keep it God’ll bless them but if they break it, He’ll curse them.

If they obey God’s voice and keep this Covenant, then they’ll be a peculiar treasure to God for all the Earth is His.

God makes it plain. All the Earth Is His.

God created the Heaven and the Earth, and he talks about the Earth for many chapters in the Bible. He doesn’t even talk about who goes to heaven until the Apostle Paul when he talks about giving you a seat in heaven, it’s all about the Earth in Exodus 19.

To his Earthly people, to a nation picked out by God, on the earth He promises a land on the earth. He says all the Earth is mine and I promise to give it to you above all the nations of the Earth.

Let’s look at Genesis 12:7,

Then the LORD appeared to Abram and said, “To your descendants I will give this land.” And there he built an altar to the LORD, who had appeared to him.

If the Earth is the Lord’s he has the right to give it to whoever he wants and he told Abram, “I’ll give it to you.” Notice it’s a promise that has no conditions. This is before the law. It’s not if you obey my Commandments, it’s I’m going to give it to you.

Then, in Genesis 13:15 to 17, God says to Abraham,

for all the land which you see I give to you and your descendants forever.

And I will make your descendants as the dust of the earth; so that if a man could number the dust of the earth, then your descendants also could be numbered. 

Arise, walk in the land through its length and its width, for I give it to you.” 

God owns the land he gave it, entrusted it to man.

To the first man he said, “have dominion on the Earth” and what did Adam do? He started serving Satan, God’s enemy.

Then he calls Abraham, Abram at that time, and says, “I’ll give you this land”. Then it’s the same story over and over again. What happens when God gives things to people? They mess it up.

We’re going into this because this knowledge is vital to our understanding of the tribulation.

So, here God tells Abraham, “I will give you this.” Then in Exodus 19 He makes a covenant with them if you keep my law, I will give you this land.

Why did God add that law? He already made a promise.

Well, there’s many reasons for the law. We know that the law brings the knowledge of sin. So, God’s trying to get through to man that he’s a sinner and God’s the Saviour.

The law was going to show that. There’s another reason why God gave the law to Israel.

The law’s going to explain God’s rights!

If we think about that for a moment, the law is God’s righteousness. It’s the Declaration of the righteousness of God.

Deuteronomy 6:25 says,

Then it will be righteousness for us, if we are careful to observe all these commandments before the LORD our God, as He has commanded us.’ 

Of course they can’t, but if they did, they’d be righteous.

The law declares God’s right, not just in his righteous works but also His right to things. His right to judge for example. He’s the judge of all things.

He created us but we rebel against that and say God has no right to judge me. Really? He’s holy, righteous, and good. We’re guilty sinners. The law condemns us. The law condemned Israel.

What right does God have to rule the planet? Well, He made it! But we resist that and sort of claim squatter’s rights because we’re here. It’s my land. Really? Well, the law explains God’s right to the land He gave, and it explains that if they don’t use it for God’s intended purpose, He can redeem it back!

Leviticus chapter 25 talks about the law of someone called the Kinsman Redeemer.

Many of you know of the Kinsman Redeemer through the beautiful book of Ruth.

Ruth’s husband, who died, had land in Israel.

Boaz had legal right under the law to marry this lady Ruth and assume the property that was her right.

They had to go through a process of the law that’s kind of confusing to us gentiles, especially today, but that’s what the law required.

It had to do with a legal ceremony of Boaz redeeming this land through his marriage to Ruth. The whole story is quite amazing but the short of it is that Boaz is taking these rights of the Kinsmen Redeemer from Leviticus 25.

Leviticus 25 verse 23 explains that the land shall not be sold forever.

This was God explaining to Israel that they were not supposed to sell their land. Remember, God gave the land to Israel and at this time they’re in the land. God’s divided up the land among the 12 tribes and they were not to sell it.

It was against the law. They were to keep it. It was their land right forever.

However, God knows what men are going to do. They’re going to break the law.

In Leviticus 25:24 and 25 we read,

And in all the land of your possession you shall grant redemption of the land. ‘If one of your brethren becomes poor, and has sold some of his possession, and if his redeeming relative comes to redeem it, then he may redeem what his brother sold.

So, if someone were to happen to sell or lose the land somehow, maybe gambling it away, God has this law of redemption allowing for the land to be redeemed back. It can be purchased back by a brother, a member of the same tribe.

This is the law of the Kinsmen Redeemer.

Under the law the land was supposed to stay with Israel even if it did happen to be sold. And even then, the land was to stay within the tribe that it was originally given to.

You couldn’t sell the land to another tribe. Each tribe had their allotment and the land stayed in that tribe.

If someone was poor and because they needed money, they sold the possession, there had to be a clause to redeem the land by a Kinsman someone of the original tribe of the person who owned it.

That Kinsman could come and say well I’m of their tribe and I have the money. I’m going to buy back this land, and there was supposed to be a clause in every land deal that covered that.

The Kinsmen Redeemer had to be someone who was a relative of the person who originally owned the land and they had to have the means to pay for it.

So hopefully you’ll soon see how important this is not only to see the purpose of the tribulation but to better understand another facet of our Lord, Jesus Christ who was the ultimate Kinsman Redeemer because God manifests in the flesh and became a relative to us, like us, in human flesh, and he paid the price needed to pay for our sin, so he is the ultimate Kinsman Redeemer of humanity. That’s what he did here he redeemed Humanity, but not just humanity, but the Earth.

The crown of thorns he wore on the cross attest to that. He came to redeem the Earth and specifically for Israel. Today salvation’s offered freely to all but to the Nation Israel He came to redeem that which he promised to them, their salvation on the earth and their land on the Earth and Then, Leviticus 25 verse 26 to 28 says,

Or if the man has no one to redeem it, but he himself becomes able to redeem it, then let him count the years since its sale, and restore the remainder to the man to whom he sold it, that he may return to his possession. 

But if he is not able to have it restored to himself, then what was sold shall remain in the hand of him who bought it until the Year of Jubilee; and in the Jubilee it shall be released, and he shall return to his possession.

Again, He’s talking about what price you could sell it for. It had to be the price paid for the debt that was owed. It couldn’t just be any price. They had to pay for the debt.

Again, we have Christ’s sinless blood being able to pay the price for what was owed by Sinners and the blood needed for their redemption. The wages of sin is death you see. Christ had to die.

So, you have in the law here a description of what the Kinsman Redeemer had to do in order to redeem the land.

Now, what does that have to do with Revelation you might ask?

What’s it got to do with the seals and the scroll we talked about?

Well, let’s look at Jeremiah 32 to see a missing link here.

When the Kinsmen Redeemer came and made the payment for the land, they would draw up documents just to declare who owned it like a mortgage contract or a title deed. They’d make two documents; one would be unsealed and public for everyone to know who had redeemed this land and the other one would be sealed.

In case someone meddled with the public, unsealed document, they could always go back and open the sealed document to see who the rightful owner was.

In Jeremiah 32:8 we see an example of this. Jeremiah is in prison for prophesying for God and the Babylonians are coming and they’re taking over Israel. So, people are selling their property.

Enemies are coming into the land and they’re destroying things and some people in the land are getting out while the going’s good.

So, Jeremiah’s sitting in prison, but one of his relatives, his uncle’s son, his cousin, comes to him and says, I got some land and you’re the Kinsmen, you’re the next in line so you have the right to buy this land so how about buying it from me.

Jeremiah says okay. He agrees.

Why does he buy it when everyone’s selling? He buys it because he knows that God says they, Israel, will come back to the land.

When they come back into the land, Jeremiah’s got a nice block of land.

We’ll read the passage because it’s important to see,

Jeremiah 32:8 to 15,

Then Hanamel my uncle’s son came to me in the court of the prison according to the word of the LORD, and said to me, ‘Please buy my field that is in Anathoth, which is in the country of Benjamin; for the right of inheritance is yours, and the redemption yours; buy it for yourself.’ Then I knew that this was the word of the LORD. 

So, I bought the field from Hanamel, the son of my uncle who was in Anathoth, and weighed out to him the money—seventeen shekels of silver. 

And I signed the deed and sealed it, took witnesses, and weighed the money on the scales. 

So, I took the purchase deed, both that which was sealed according to the law and custom, and that which was open; and I gave the purchase deed to Baruch the son of Neriah, son of Mahseiah, in the presence of Hanamel my uncle’s son, and in the presence of the witnesses who signed the purchase deed, before all the Jews who sat in the court of the prison. 

Then I charged Baruch before them, saying, ‘Thus says the LORD of hosts, the God of Israel: “Take these deeds, both this purchase deed which is sealed and this deed, which is open, and put them in an earthen vessel, that they may last many days.” 

For thus says the LORD of hosts, the God of Israel: “Houses and fields and vineyards shall be possessed again in this land.” ‘

He’s bought the land and got together two documents or deeds proving it. One’s sealed and one’s not.

So, he instructs that the deed be put in a safe deposit box because he knows God’s going to bring Israel, and him, back to the land and he’s going to have the rightful documents of ownership for that land.

Hopefully you’re starting to see a picture unfolding.

Now, in Revelation chapter five, we see a scroll in the hand of God as he’s preparing to reclaim His land on the earth, His possession of the earth and here’s the document, the deed with seals on it.

The seals that were put on it were the Seals of the Kinsmen Redeemer, and nobody can open that scroll but the Kinsmen Redeemer who was not only a Kinsmen of the people who were in the land originally but was the Redeemer who paid the price!

In Revelation 5 then, who’s worthy to open this scroll? Noone could be found. We’re not the Kinsman Redeemer and so who is worthy?

Why are we telling about this Jewish legal process? Because people don’t understand this and instead, they’re looking to eclipses and world events. They want signs.

However, there was this immovable law and God dealt with Israel according to it, and he dealt with the land according to it, and he wrapped up his possession of the Earth in this law so that you and I can go back and read how he’s going to claim it.

It’s not just slap dash. God doesn’t do it by force like a bully. He has a legal right, and he proves it. God is a God of perfect Justice, you see.

When we left John, he was weeping because no one was worthy to open the scroll. then in Revelation 5:5 we read,

But one of the elders said to me, “Do not weep. Behold, the Lion of the tribe of Judah, the Root of David, has prevailed to open the scroll and to loose its seven seals.”

We know Who the Lion of the tribe of Judah is. We know Who the root of David is. That’s Jesus Christ. That’s the Messiah. Why is He opening the scroll here? Why didn’t he do it back when He was here?

Because if your right to ownership is disputed, where do you go? The sealed scroll. If someone else is squatting in your land and claiming it as theirs, the owner can say, NO! I bought and paid for it.

Well, how do you settle that claim in court? With the sealed document! You can corrupt an open document, but one that’s sealed with the seal of the Kinsmen Redeemer can only be opened by that Kinsman Redeemer.

Then, when it’s opened it up, everyone can see what was originally written because it was sealed when it was purchased.

When Christ, The Kinsman Redeemer comes back thousands of years from when He purchased the possession with his blood, He’s going to say well it’s time to open this document and he starts cracking these seals open.

Immediately things start happening in the earth in order for him to reclaim his title.

What does this have to do with our study of Prophecy?

We need to understand why these things are happening in the tribulation.

It’s because God’s reclaiming his right to the Earth and that’s not what God’s doing today.

Today, He’s sending his ambassadors to preach the gospel of the mystery of this current dispensation of grace that we’re all living in.

He’s not coming back to the Earth to reclaim it now, today, but when he starts breaking these seals He’s saying, “Now’s the time I’m going to claim my right to the Earth!”

This’ll be the time that He’s finished preaching grace to the world. That’ll be the end of the dispensation of grace and the removal of the church, the Body of Christ so this next event, the continuation of God’s dealing with Israel, can begin again.

When we realise this all the little details matter much less. We can study and use all of our time trying to piece together every detail, but now we know what the greater picture is.

God, at that time, is reclaiming the Earth, that’s why he’s opening those seals. In Revelation 5, verse 9, as Jesus starts loosing the seals, here’s what happens,

And they sang a new song, saying: “You are worthy to take the scroll, And to open its seals; For You were slain, And have redeemed us to God by Your blood Out of every tribe and tongue and people and nation, And have made us kings and priests to our God; And we shall reign on the earth.” 

By the way that Kings and Priests, that’s the same thing you find in Exodus 19 verse 5 and 6,

Now therefore, if you will indeed obey My voice and keep My covenant, then you shall be a special treasure to Me above all people; for all the earth is Mine. 

And you shall be to Me a kingdom of priests and a holy nation.’

Israel are the Kins and Priests, not us, the Body of Christ today.

Now we see in Revelation chapter six the seal is being opened. God’s beginning to reclaim his land and it’s very different to what God’s doing today.

In Revelation chapter 11, the Lord starts unsealing this scroll, unleashing the events that happen during this tribulation is a result of the Lord doing these things.

If He never opened those seals, those things wouldn’t happen. It all begins because Jesus, the King, the rightful owner, starts to do it.

In Revelation 11:15 we read,

Then the seventh angel sounded: And there were loud voices in heaven, saying, “The kingdoms of this world have become the kingdoms of our Lord and of His Christ, and He shall reign forever and ever!”

We just can’t sing that now friends and we couldn’t sing that back then when Jesus was born in the manger. The kingdoms of this world are not God’s kingdom at this time.

We can only sing that after Revelation 11 when the seals are opened, and he’s reclaimed the land, and the kingdoms of this world are become the kingdoms of our Lord over which He’ll reign forever and ever.

Who’s squatting on the kingdoms of the world today?

The prince of the power of the air!

In Matthew 4:8 and 9,

Again, the devil took Him up on an exceedingly high mountain, and showed Him all the kingdoms of the world and their glory. 

And he said to Him, “All these things I will give You if You will fall down and worship me.” 

That’s when Jesus says, “Away with you, Satan! For it is written, ‘YOU SHALL WORSHIP THE LORD YOUR GOD, AND HIM ONLY YOU SHALL SERVE.’ ”

The devil tempts Jesus with the kingdoms of the world, and he can because he’s in current possession of them. He’s got squatters rights. Rights that Adam gave to him.

Then, Israel gave up their rights when they broke God’s law.

God’s whole purpose for the Earth is to reclaim it back rightfully and legally. He becomes the Kinsmen Redeemer and He seals that scroll; He intervenes with the dispensation of Grace in order to save the world by developing a new creature called The Body of Christ.

When he’s finished with all that, He unseals that scroll, reclaims his right and eventually the devil’s cast out of those positions and He says the kingdoms of this world are become the kingdoms of our God. That’s the end that’s the consummation.

That’s the finishing of Daniel’s 70th week. That’s the kingdom established, the Everlasting righteousness bought in and the anointing of the Most Holy.

Israel will be saved. The documents will be unsealed, and everyone will know that Christ is the King, the rightful owner.

Couldn’t Jesus have gone through all this when He was on earth the first time?

Jesus had to ascend back to heaven in order for the Holy Spirit to come.

He knew that prophecy would be interrupted by this mystery of the Body of Christ. There were things that had to be accomplished before the opening of these seals.

 

When Peter said in Acts 2 that these are the last days He was speaking truth. That was what should have happened. The next prophecy event should have been the tribulation. The thing that stopped the unsealing of the scroll and all that went with that was Israel’s rejection of the Messiah and their rejection of Peter’s gospel when he said to repent for the restitution of all things is at hand. They didn’t repent of that rejection as Peter urged them to. Instead, they stoned Stephen to death, and they persecuted the apostles and so Israel fell.

As a result, God revealed the Revelation of this mystery to Paul, this interlude to prophecy, never revealed before.

So, this dispensation of Grace, which was the mystery revealed, is what intervened in prophecy. That interlude has lasted 2000 years.

We in the church today are not a part of that land deed on which those seals’ll be broken.

We’ve got no part in reclaiming the land. We’re going to heaven.

We’re living in the time of God’s grace, through Christ, freely available to all. We have no earthly land that was promised and no covenant.

We’re sealed with the Holy Spirit in the body of Christ till the day of redemption and how great that is.

So, that’s the purpose of the tribulation events and the kingdom come.

Next time we’ll explore the question of who will be saved during the tribulation.

Until then may God richly bless you.

The Last Days – Part 5 – The Tribulation Prohesied

In this episode we continue to define this period of time that spoken of in prophecy as the tribulation. We should realise that this is a period of time in which the Bible says more about than any other period of time in history, including the times in which Jesus ministered on earth. But we should also realise that unless we divide this period correctly in context of the entire Word of God we’ll be hopelessly confused.

“Speed Slider”

The Last Days – Part 5 – The Tribulation Prophesied – Transcript

We left off last time with Paul talking in Romas 11 about how God would keep his covenant with Israel and deliver them out of this tribulation. Saved Israel is one purpose of the tribulation.

We saw some of the names that this tribulation period is called through prophecy and that one of those names is “the Time of Jacob’s trouble”.

We realised again that this is Jacob’s, Israel’s troubles. Jacob is Israel. His name was changed to Israel in Genesis 32:22-31 and confirmed in Genesis 35:9.

He’s the father of the 12 tribes of Israel. This period of time is Jacob’s, Israel’s trouble and it will save Israel as a nation.

We asked how does trouble do that?

We’ll see that soon, but we should look at what kind of things we’re talking about.

We’re talking here about things that have never happened before and they’re certainly not the things that are happening as we prepare this episode.

Look at Revelation chapter 6 and we must realise that if we don’t understand what the prophets have said in the rest of the Bible, the Book of Revelation is a very confusing book. We don’t really have any idea what’s going on here unless we’re aware of what’s been said by the prophets in the rest of the Bible.

The Bible is an integrated message, and the book of Revelation is just that, a revelation.

It reveals what God was talking about through the prophets of old.

If we don’t get the Book of Revelation, it’s because we’re not aware of all the other prophecies.

Prophecy is what Revelation is revealing and if we don’t know prophecy Revelation makes no sense.

But if we know what prophecy’s said, Revelation ties it all together. It reveals.

So, it’ll help our understanding if we go back and study the prophecies before the Book of Revelation.

So, Revelation chapter 6 is a popular chapter among prophecy students because here’s where it talks about the four horsemen and the seals.

But to avoid falling into confusion and error, we need to build some foundation first.

Revelation 6 begins with the Lamb (Jesus) opening the seals to a scroll. The King James Bible translates this word “Biblion” as a book.

Let’s ask a question that many people never really ask.

Why are there seals on this scroll and what’s in it?

Well, this scroll or book with these seals has to do with Israel. It’s a promise that God made with Israel that has to do with the land. It’s a land deed.

Jesus, Who in Revelation is the only One worthy to open the scroll, is bringing to reality what God promised Israel, which was this land, this Dominion on the earth, and that’s what happens when this scroll gets unscrolled.

If we can understand this, we can easily see that the church can’t be a part of this period. It’s all Israel. But we’ll get to that soon.

In Revelation chapter 6 we’re trying to figure out what kind of things we’re talking about in this time of trouble. Just how bad do things need to be before we can say this is the greatest catastrophe of all time?

Revelation 6:1 says,

Now I saw when the Lamb opened one of the seals; and I heard one of the four living creatures (or beasts in the King James) saying with a voice like thunder, “Come and see.”

Like thunder. The day of the Lord will be identified by thunders and lightnings and things in the skies, in the heavens.

Revelation 6:2 says,

And I looked, and behold, a white horse. He who sat on it had a bow; and a crown was given to him, and he went out conquering and to conquer. 

We’ll talk about this a bit later on. This is the Antichrist. He’s going to come conquering the world.

Verse 3,

When He opened the second seal, I heard the second living creature saying, “Come and see.”

Verse 4,

Another horse, fiery red, went out. And it was granted to the one who sat on it to take peace from the earth, and that people should kill one another; and there was given to him a great sword. 

These are things that John, the guy who’s writing the Book of Revelation, sees. These are representations of corresponding events happening on the earth.

The first thing is the white horse which will be the false Christ, the Antichrist. Verse 4 says there’ll be a Red Horse and power was given to him that sat on it to take peace from the earth, that people should kill one another and there was given him a great sword.

So, we’ve got the Antichrist, we’ve got lots of killing happening and then in verse 5,

When He opened the third seal, I heard the third living creature say, “Come and see.” So I looked, and behold, a black horse, and he who sat on it had a pair of scales in his hand. 

Verse 6,

And I heard a voice in the midst of the four living creatures saying, “A quart of wheat for a denarius, and three quarts of barley for a denarius; and do not harm the oil and the wine.” 

The point here is inflation, hyperinflation, and not only economic trouble, but there’ll be also a problem just getting food.

Verse 7 and 8,

When He opened the fourth seal, I heard the voice of the fourth living creature saying, “Come and see.”

So, I looked, and behold, a pale horse. And the name of him who sat on it was Death, and Hades followed with him. And power was given to them over a fourth of the earth, to kill with sword, with hunger, with death, and by the beasts of the earth. 

The fourth part of the earth! 25%! Currently there’s 8 billion people on earth. Two billion dead?

A quarter of the earth dies by war, hunger, disease, and wild beasts and that’s just some of what’s on the horizon!

No living soul who understands this would ever want to be here at this time.

Right now, is the day of salvation, not then. That’s the day of judgment. Those who get by in that day are really going against the odds.

We need to take the Lord’s offer of salvation now and not put it off thinking that this dispensation of Grace will just keep going on indefinitely.

We haven’t got to the parts yet where it talks about the oceans being poisoned or about beasts coming out and stinging and torturing to death, or about the Serpent’s, the worldwide lightning, the great earthquakes, the Devils. All this is happening in Revelation. Everything you can imagine the apocalypse being that’s what’s in Revelation here.

Look at Mark 16 verse 16. Now we should by now understand the division between prophecy or what was made known to man and the mystery that was kept hidden from man until Paul. It gives us a have a huge advantage because we know that Paul describes what God’s doing today, with the Church, and it’s very different to what Peter and the Twelve Apostles were commissioned to do for the coming kingdom.

When Christ taught the Apostles about the coming kingdom, he gave them power to get there.

Let’s, just for a moment, pretend that this mystery period, the dispensation of grace, did not occur, it’s not included at all in God’s great timeline.

When Christ was resurrected from the dead, he taught his 12 apostles for 40 days and told them to preach the kingdom come. But as we look at the kingdom coming, what comes before it? Tribulation and the apostles knew that. They knew prophecy.

Jesus told them, the Apostles, to prepare for it. He gives them power to cope with these things.

In Mark 16:17 we read,

And these signs shall follow them that believe; in my name they shall cast out demons.

These signs shall follow them that believe! These are the ones that believe and accept this message, this Gospel in the tribulation period.

Today we find a kid acting up and we think they have a demon but, in that day, there will be demons possessing people.

Revelation talks about the Devils and the warfare that’ll be going on at that time and these people who’re in this pre kingdom group in Israel will have the power to cast them out.

They’ll not have to fear the devil or demonic forces that’re trying to attack and destroy them. They’ll have the power and the authority to cast them out as Jesus did.

They shall speak with new tongues,

which, of course, is very helpful when they’re trying to communicate with each other from a wide variety of locations during the tribulation.

144,000 Jews are sealed with the sign of God on their forehead, and they’re told to go preach to the world in this tribulation. They’re able to speak in more than just Hebrew as many of these people being preached to at this time will speak many different tongues, or languages. That’s in Act’s 2 when Peter quoted Joel’s end time prophecy.

In verse 18,

they will take up serpents.

What’s going on here? Serpents?

The book of Revelation makes things clear as prophecies like Ezekiel 14 talking about wild beasts as part of the judgment and Revelation talks about these creatures that look like serpents and they’re part of the judgment.

Well, these signs will follow these people who believe the gospel and are baptized, and they’ll be able to take up serpents and not get hurt. They’ll be protected if they trust Christ. Of this group, it says,

and if they drink anything deadly, it will by no means hurt them;

Well, when a third of the waters are poisoned and you can’t drink unless you die it’s very helpful to be able to drink deadly things. You see, God gives powers to these people going through this time of trouble that the world’s never seen before.

By the way, these verses never say these people will be protected from persecution like people cutting their heads off. It does say they’ll lay hands on the sick and they shall recover, which again is helpful.

A lot of these people, these believers, will die and they go to heaven and John sees them there.

Revelation 7:13 and 14,

Then one of the elders answered, saying to me, “Who are these arrayed in white robes, and where did they come from?” 

And I said to him, “Sir, you know.” So, he said to me, “These are the ones who come out of the great tribulation, and washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb. 

They died in and for their faith in Jesus Christ.

So, these powers are going to be helpful in saving Israel out of this tribulation. Huge numbers will die. It’s called a time of trouble friends.

This is not the church’s activity today it’s very different.

The question is when will these things be?

That’s the big question when it comes to prophecy, when!

People read about these things, and they know what the trampling of the wine vat is. They know bad things will happen in the tribulation before the kingdom comes, but when will it happen.

That’s exactly the question the Apostles asked Jesus in Matthew 24 verse 3 as he sat upon the Mount of Olives. We read,

Now as He sat on the Mount of Olives, the disciples came to Him privately, saying, “Tell us, when will these things be? And what will be the sign of Your coming, and of the end of the age?”

The disciples came to him privately asking Him about the end of the world.

How do we know if we’re going to the kingdom and how are these things going to happen.

How do we know when the end is happening, I mean it’s pretty nice to know when you’re done with all this judgment so we can have a more positive view.

In verse 4 the first thing Jesus says is,

Take heed that no one deceives you.

There’s so much deception around the question of when Christ will return, and we’ve already covered some of those things like mixing prophecy with the mystery of the dispensation of grace.

Matthew 24:5 says,

For many will come in My name, saying, ‘I am the Christ,’ and will deceive many.

What was the first seal that was released that we just read about in Revelation 6?

There was a white horse, and many will believe the rider is Christ.

So, if you’re here in the tribulation and someone comes as the Christ, You’d know to say, “No, you’re not.”

How would you know those things? Because these many things have got to happen first. There’s prophecies that need to be fulfilled. We see in verse 6,

And you will hear of wars and rumours of wars. See that you are not troubled; for all these things must come to pass, but the end is not yet. 

These things must come to pass but the end is not yet.

We talk about all the wars all the death and all the things that’re to happen, but Jesus says, “Don’t be troubled”. How can you not be troubled?

He says the end isn’t yet. That’s how you know the end is not yet.

So, the one thing that people say are signs of the end times, well that’s the one thing Jesus says that they’re not signs of.

Mattew 24:7 and 8,

For nation will rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom. And there will be famines, pestilences, and earthquakes in various places. 

All these are the beginning of sorrows.

What’s Jesus listing here?

Pestilences, earthquakes, famines. Just what we’ve seen Revelation 6.

People hungry, people dying, people sick. And what powers were given to the apostles and the remnant believing group of Israel at that time?

Heal the sick and to get their daily bread. All these things match together and God’s going to work with His people during that time but He’s going to judge the world.

In Matthew 24 verses 10 to 15 Jesus lists some things that will happen.

False prophets and false Christ’s will rise up and people will betray one another the love of many will grow cold. Verse 13 says he who endures to the end shall be saved.

And this gospel of the kingdom shall be preached in all the world for a witness unto all nations and then shall the end come.

We today in this dispensation of grace don’t preach the gospel of the kingdom, we preach the gospel of the grace of God.

Look what Jesus says in verse 15 and 16,

“Therefore when you see the ‘ABOMINATION OF DESOLATION,’ spoken of by Daniel the prophet, standing in the holy place” (whoever reads, let him understand), “then let those who are in Judea flee to the mountains.

There’s a specific event that happens here called the abomination of desolation that was spoken of by Daniel the prophet.

So, there’s got to be a Holy Place first, something that can be abominated. We are the temple today in this dispensation. Can we abominate ourselves, except for our bad behaviour of course.

Verse 15 talks about this abomination of desolation and Jesus gives us a reference. He says go back and read Daniel. Daniel speaks of something that needs to happen that will tell us when these end things are going to happen.

In Daniel chapter 9 and verse 24, another name’s given to this time period. Here it’s Daniels 70th week.

Daniel was in captivity. He was a faithful Israelite. Israel had received the judgment of God and had been taken out of their land which they’d been promised since Abraham, Issac and Jacob, and God gave a prophecy to Jeremiah before they were taken out.

He says, “I know the plans I have for you,” and it’s another popular verse people always take out of context. He was talking about Israel, and he says in 70 years you’ll return from captivity.

Well 70 years is over in Daniel 9 and Daniel prays to God and says, in effect, “God it’s been 70 years and I read this in Jeremiah 29:10,

‘For thus says the LORD: After seventy years are completed at Babylon, I will visit you and perform My good word toward you, and cause you to return to this place.’ 

So, what are you going to do, Lord?”

When he prays this prayer, Daniel, being the faithful one that he is, God sends an angel to him.

The angel communicates to him what God’s going to do and in this communication is this prophecy in Daniel 9 verse 24.

It describes how long it will be until the Messiah comes and until the end of all things. Daniel prayed and God answered!

Daniel 9:24,

“Seventy weeks are determined For your people and for your holy city, To finish the transgression, To make an end of sins, To make reconciliation for iniquity, To bring in everlasting righteousness, To seal up vision and prophecy, And to anoint the Most Holy. 

A lot of things have to happen you see, but the good thing is there’s a time reference. Seventy weeks.

As we read down through here, we understand a couple things.

One is that the week’s here are not actual weeks of days they are weeks of years. The word “week” simply means seven. We use it most often to mean seven days, one week, but it could mean any length of time and here it’s weeks of years. So, there’s seventy weeks or seventy sevens of years.

So, we have the calculation of 490 years.

W’re still in Daniel 9 and Daniel 9:25 – 26, says,

“Know therefore and understand, That from the going forth of the command To restore and build Jerusalem Until Messiah the Prince, There shall be seven weeks and sixty-two weeks; The street shall be built again, and the wall, Even in troublesome times. 

“And after the sixty-two weeks Messiah shall be cut off, but not for Himself; And the people of the prince who is to come Shall destroy the city and the sanctuary. The end of it shall be with a flood, And till the end of the war desolations are determined. 

This is one way the Jews could know that the time of the Messiah’s appearance was due.

The wise men from the east knew when the Messiah would come. The Jewish nation could read this also, in fact by and large they already knew this prophecy well.

They could read Isaiah and say yes that’s the right place, that’s the right time. Jesus in fact held them accountable to know the time.

So, we have seventy weeks here and it says in verse 25 that after 69 of those weeks the Messiah, the Prince will be cut off, killed.

This countdown of 70 weeks begins with what’s known as the decree to restore and rebuild Jerusalem.

There were actually three decrees and the story behind them is fascinating in itself but the one that Daniel’s prophecy refers to would be the authority given to Ezra by Artaxerxes in the 7th year of his reign (457 B.C) and spoken of in the books of Ezra and Nehemiah.

This decree was for Jerusalem and the temple to be rebuilt, that had both been levelled by the Babylonians, led by King Nebuchadnezzar.

During this devastating siege, the temple, which had been built by King Solomon, was torched, and the Judean leadership was exiled to Babylon.

The street shall be built again and the wall even in troublesome times refers to the rebuilding of the streets and the walls within 49 years, seven weeks of years, from this date but there were many troubles in and around this rebuilding.

Daniel 9 verses 25 and 26 tells us that there are 69 weeks from the decree to the Messiah.

Within the first 7 of those weeks of years, 49 years, the city, and the temple would be rebuilt. Then 62 weeks of years later, 434 years, the

Messiah would be cut off, killed, but not for himself, and the people of the prince who is to come, the people of the nationality of the Antichrist, the Romans, will come and destroy the city and the temple again.

Another prophecy in Daniel talks about how the Antichrist will come out of a revived Roman Empire.

So, we have a prophecy 483 years beforehand of the Messiah’s death. The Messiah that will come and will die.

This angel is telling Daniel in Daniel 9:24,

“Seventy weeks are determined For your people and for your holy city, To finish the transgression, To make an end of sins, To make reconciliation for iniquity, To bring in everlasting righteousness, To seal up vision and prophecy, And to anoint the Most Holy. 

It would be seventy weeks of years until all things are finished.

So, looking back we see the cross of Christ after the 69th week but, what about the last week the 70th week?

Well, looking at verse 26, it says in the second half of the verse that the people of the prince shall come and destroy the city and the sanctuary and in 70 AD this is exactly what happened.

The Romans came and destroyed Jerusalem and killed over one million inhabitants and destroyed the temple.  Then, like a flood the Roman army would overspread the land, and carry all before it turning into devastation anything that stands against them.

This antichrist who arises from this revived Roman empire will confirm the covenant with many for one week, seven years, the 70th and last week of Daniel’s prophecy.

Daniel 9:27,

Then he (the antichrist) shall confirm a covenant with many for one week; But in the middle of the week, He shall bring an end to sacrifice and offering. And on the wing of abominations shall be one who makes desolate, Even until the consummation, which is determined, Is poured out on the desolate.” 

In the middle of this last week, 31/2 years in, he’ll cause the sacrifice and offerings to cease.

Here we have the temple, naturally rebuilt again, with sacrifices and offering being made as of old.

This prince, the antichrist, will make this sacrifice stop and destroy the sacrificial system.

We’ve got this Antichrist, this prince that shall come, who actually declares himself to be Christ, making a covenant confirmed with many people that he’ll break 31/2 years in, and then we’ve got an abomination of desolation happening.

The point here is not to go into all the details of Daniel 9 but to point out that the time of Jacob’s trouble aligns with Daniels 70th week, that prophecy in which all these things’ll be fulfilled. But before those things are fulfilled at the end of the seventy weeks you have this time of desolation this time of trouble, this Great Tribulation.

Now we know that something has happened between this 69th week and this 70th week. That’s this interlude to the prophetic timeline that was a mystery that was never revealed to man through prophecy. It was a mystery right up to the time it was revealed to Paul by Jesus Himself.

When Peter stood up at Pentecost, he said these are the last days and they absolutely were the last days according to Daniel’s prophecy. They were the last days according to what needed to happen. The next thing that was going to happen according to prophecy was this Great Tribulation, but instead Christ poured out and revealed a mystery to Paul. What He revealed interrupted prophecy, and that interruption has so far lasted 2000 years. We know we don’t live in the tribulation at the moment because we live in this time of the mystery, the dispensation of grace.

If we don’t live in this time, and there was no mystery revealed to Paul, and you’d need to rip out the most important books of the Bible that relate to us today to believe that, the tribulation would have been over 2,000 years ago. Some Christians even believe this is the case, that the 70th week happened 2,000 years ago.

Really? So, this world we’re in now has already gone through the tribulation and the 1000-year reign of Christ where sin was bound up and no unbelievers could exist?

And after the millennial reign of Christ the new Jerusalem must have come down from heaven and God must have wiped away the old heavens and earth and replaced them with new heavens and earth.

Come on! Look around! Is this the case? We couldn’t be further away from that picture!

The 70th week of Daniel concludes God’s work with Israel and included in it is the Great Tribulation.

What’s the point of all this judgment? Because of sin!

We already know that God made a promise to Israel to bring a kingdom on the earth.

He made a promise that he would bring that kingdom in righteousness, it wouldn’t come to sinners, so he’s going to judge the world. He’s going to come back and make the high places of the world low. He’s going to conquer the Gentile nations and set up his own Kingdom.

Daniel 2:44 says,

And in the days of these kings the God of heaven will set up a kingdom which shall never be destroyed; and the kingdom shall not be left to other people; it shall break in pieces and consume all these kingdoms, and it shall stand forever. 

He’s going to restore Israel and that was the question Peter asked Jesus before he ascended to heaven in Acts 1:6,

“Will you at this time restore the kingdom to Israel?”

Jesus tells him in Acts 1 verse 7,

It is not for you to know times or seasons which the Father has put in His own authority. 

Jesus doesn’t tell him the Kingdom wasn’t coming. In fact, He said it would come, Peter just wouldn’t know when.

Jesus knew something was going to interrupt the progression of prophecy and it wasn’t for Peter to know what it was, not at that time anyway. He would know before his death.

Isaiah 4 is an interesting chapter that talks about the salvation of Israel through and out of tribulation and how the purpose of the tribulation is to make the high places low and to make those low places, Israel, make them high.

Israel will be purged from all their sins to make them clean once again and God will save them. He’ll judge the world’s wickedness to end the time of the Gentiles so that God’s power can now be in Israel as that one nation above all the nations. That’s time of tribulation, the restitution, the refreshing of all things that Peter presents in Acts 3:19.

This time of restitution and refreshing is when all things are made right putting Israel in the right place and the Gentiles in their right place.

That’s the time of tribulation. That’s why it’s there and when we realise that purpose and that function, there should be no question in our mind as to whether the church is there, because we’re not.

That’s not our ministry it’s not what God’s doing today through us.

We’re not part of a nation.

God’s building a body today and we have a Ministry of the gospel of the grace of God not the rise of the Kingdom. That’s another kind of judgment and there’s no mention of the Church, this mystery Body of Christ in any of these prophetic passages we’ve read.

Neither is there any mention of the church as in the Body of Christ in the prophetic passages in Revelation. The churches Jesus refers to in Revelation 2 and 3 is not the Body of Christ of today’s dispensation of grace.

We must be careful not to associate every word in the Bible with just one meaning only. There are a number of churches spoken of in the Bible and you can do a search on and see the differences.

We’re not going derail this end times study here to fully explain this but just one clear indication that these are not the Body of Christ churches is Jesus’s constant reference to their works and how He’s displeased by them.

This is not how God relates to the church, the body of Christ today.

He graciously bestowed salvation and justification freely upon us through Jesus’s death on the cross and his resurrection and all of those bad works and sinful activity have been crucified on the cross.

Works and our lack of them is not the basis of our salvation today in the age of grace.

Ephesians 2:8 and 9,

For by grace you have been saved through faith, and that not of yourselves; it is the gift of God, not of works, lest anyone should boast.

We, the Body of Christ, are just not there friends.

So, until next time as we learn about these sobering times of judgment on sinners, which is well deserved, I pray that you have received the salvation freely offered by God through the completed work of Christ.