Last
Sunday’s message at 9:45 a.m. (see this link) reflected not only the events of the past two
weeks and two months, but also two books I am currently reading, The Fear of the Lord by
John Bevere and The End of
America? by Jeff Kinley.
In 2 Thessalonians 2, Paul states that before the
antichrist is revealed, there will be a rejection of the truth by unbelievers,
followed by an “energy of delusion”, sent by none other than the Lord God
Himself.
Why would God “send” a strong delusion? That is a hard
question to answer. When people reject truth after truth and continually reject
it, the truth becomes an inoculation for the rejecters. They choose to believe
a lie; therefore, when truth comes from God, it is like they have a vaccination
against it and cannot receive it.
When God’s truth becomes a lie to those who refuse, the
more truth that is given, the stronger they are set firm in being deluded.
“Don’t bother me with the facts, my mind is made up,” some seem to say.
The truth is the death of George Floyd was WRONG, no matter
who perpetrated it, but especially
wrong when it came at the hands (and knee) of those sworn to
“protect and serve”. The truth is we need to reform a flawed system of training
that led to this and other deaths like it. Period.
The truth is the death of millions of unborn babies is
WRONG no matter who perpetrates it, but especially when perpetrated by mothers,
fathers, doctors, lawmakers and judges. They all should protect and preserve
lives, not destroy them. We don’t need to abolish all doctors and all parents
because some kill the unborn.
STOP.
Ask yourself this: “Have I, even
I, become inoculated to the TRUTH?” We, the church, can also be
deceived. How do you feel when you hear a sermon on evangelism? On faithful
tithing? On making disciples and being discipled? On loving others, especially
those who are different than you, and those who even hate you? On being kind?
Jesus told the parable about a Jewish man who was dying
and found by the Good Samaritan, whom the dying man would have otherwise seen
as his enemy. Meanwhile, the dying man’s own neighbors, the Levite and the
priest, did not see that their own fellow Jewish man’s life mattered. But the
Samaritan did.
If I claim
I am not a racist and I agree that I should love, pray for, bless and
forgive “my enemies”, then certainly then I must practice the truth by loving, praying
for, blessing and forgiving those whom I claim are NOT my enemies but indeed
are of a different race, political party, or religious background.
If we do not, you and I have been inoculated to the truth.
If we believe or practice things that are not truth, we are deluded.
Stop listening to lies, half-truths, false agendas and
ungodly talk. “This is My
beloved Son,” God says in Mark 9:7 and Luke 9:35, “Hear Him!” In John 10,
Jesus said, “My sheep hear
My voice, and I know them, and they follow Me. Yet they will by no means follow
a stranger, but will flee from him, for they do not know the voice of
strangers.” (verses 27 and 10).
The best way to know the difference between the truth and
everything else is to become so attuned with the real deal, that all else is
instantly recognized as from “the
devil … (who) was a murderer from the beginning, and does not stand in the
truth, because there is no truth in him. When he speaks a lie, he speaks from
his own resources, for he is a liar and the father of it,” (John
8:44).
Wednesday, June 10, 2020
When Fear Meets Grace and Truth Meets Delusion
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Key Principles of the Church
My goal is to join the hearts of people with the heart of the Father. For three decades now, I served in full-time vocational ministry, currently serving as senior pastor at GracePointe Church in Springtown, Texas. I continue to write, having published my first book, The Gospel of John, One Day at a Time. I am now working on my second book. As a Journalism graduate of Texas Tech University (Bachelor of Arts), I worked as a journalist and editor for several Texas newspapers for more than a decade. Prior to serving as pastor, I served at my alma mater, Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary (Master of Arts in Religious Education) as associate director for news and information. I continue to work as a free-lance writer for various Christian outlets.