AY Program Idea: Why do Christians suffer?

Source: The Brook Dried Up, Joe Crews

For the creature was made subject to vanity, not willingly, but by reason of him who hath subjected the same in hope, Romans 8:20

Some of the most dramatic and adventurous stories in the Bible revolve around the meteoric rise of Elijah the prophet. Like a shooting star, he flashed out of obscurity and changed the character of a whole nation in a very short time.

Little is known about the background of this colorful reformer of Israel. Called of God from the rugged mountains of Gilead, he walked into the palace of King Ahab while apostasy was at its darkest point. Fired by a holy indignation, he confronted the wicked ruler of Israel with words of judgment, “There shall not be dew nor rain these years, but according to my word.” 1 Kings 17:1.

After delivering his inspired message, the courageous prophet was commanded by God to hide himself in the eastern wilderness by the brook Cherith. There, God arranged providentially for ravens to deliver food to the isolated fugitive during the predicted years of famine.

As the land baked and cracked under the withering heat of the sun, every green plant died for lack of water. But Elijah was well supplied, morning and evening, by the miraculous ministry of the ravens. In addition to the bread and flesh brought by the birds, God provided plenty of refreshing water from the splashing brook which flowed nearby.

What a perfect picture of God’s power and willingness to care for the physical needs of His faithful servant! With pleasure, we contemplate that scene of restful abundance. The prophet had no problems. Everywhere else the people were suffering from the terror of the draught, but God would not let His obedient child lack for anything. Without fail, the ravens flew in twice a day with their fare of food, and the brook was always yielding its life-giving supply of water.

ACTIVITY

Questions for the classes to answer in a group discussion:

  1. What kind of providence, God sends us daily in our life today?
  2. Why is it sometimes, even when walking in the center of God’s will, we encounter trials like the dried up brook of Elijah?
  3. What should we do when our faith is being tested? What promises do you personally hold close at times?
  4. Is worry, anxiety, depression, fear and other mental health conditions a sign of lack of faith?
  5. How to strengthen faith daily?

Points to Highlight:

Let’s read on in the biblical account: “And the ravens brought him bread and flesh in the morning, and bread and flesh in the evening; and he drank of the brook. And it came to pass after a while, that the brook dried up.” 1 Kings 17:6, 7.

Can’t you picture the shock and disappointment as Elijah walked out to the brook to get his daily water supply? He looked down upon the dry, brown stones of the brook-bed and could scarcely believe what he saw. Not a drop of water remained. A terrible tragedy had overtaken him – THE BROOK HAD DRIED UP!

We have no way of knowing how long God tested His prophet by the barren brook. For a time, at least, Elijah had to wait in faith. It probably seemed that all the promises were failing. God had abandoned him to an agonizing death in the parched wilderness. But as he lingered and listened, God spoke these words, “Arise, get thee to Zarephath, which belongeth to Zidon, and dwell there: behold, I have commanded a widow woman there to sustain thee.” 1 Kings 17:9.

Don’t you see how God closed one door so that He could open another one? Elijah had been there long enough. God had another experience waiting for him in Zarephath. God provided the brook, and God dried it up. It would have been a tragedy for the prophet to remain longer in the wilderness. Life was moving on. In the dynamics of divine Providence, Elijah was scheduled to experience another miracle in another place. Had the brook not dried up, he would have stayed there. He would have relaxed in the satisfying fullness of material blessing. But he would have missed the widow’s cruse, the Carmel experience, and Elisha plowing in the field.

Listen, God’s brooks always dry up. He doesn’t want us to stay in the same place all the time. That is our great problem. We get by our comfortable brook, surrounded by peaceful plenty, and want to rest there the remainder of our days. Then when God allows the brook to dry up, we often weep and blame God for afflicting us.

Let me ask you, was Elijah backsliding when the brook dried up on him? No, he was growing spiritually. Zarephath was many times more wonderful than Cherith. But please take note that God closed up Cherith before He revealed Zarephath. Faith had to be tested. There is always the time when everything looks absolutely hopeless. It happened with Elijah and it will happen to us.

Almost daily I stand with people beside their dried-up brooks trying to help them see that the world has not come to an end. One of the hardest questions for a minister to answer is “Why?” Why did my baby die? Why did I lose my job? Why are my children so unconcerned about spiritual things? Why did my companion abandon me for another?

Under the emotional stress of our loss we tend to blame God for making some terrible mistakes in dealing with our lives. It is so human to do this because we have no way of seeing the future.

I can still remember weeping, as a child, when I read the story of Joseph for the first time. He had been so happy and carefree. Then, suddenly, his brook dried up. He was on the way to Egypt as a slave. How Jacob grieved for that lost boy! We can hear him moaning, “Simeon is not and Joseph is gone. Now you want to take Benjamin from me. Everything is against me.” Genesis 42:36.

How familiar it sounds. Poor Jacob couldn’t see through the “whys” any more than we can. But a little while later we see him on his camel, hurrying toward Egypt. His heart was overflowing with joy. Another brook had broken forth in his life. And then we hear Joseph saying to his brothers, “Ye thought evil against me: but God meant it unto good.” Genesis 50:20.

It is so easy to look back as Joseph did that day and confess that the disappointments have really been His appointments. Why can’t we have the faith to stand by our dried-up brooks and make that confession? Someday in the future every redeemed soul will do it in retrospect. God delights in those who will take Him at His word and claim the promise of Romans 8:28 even while the heart is breaking with sorrow. “All things work together for good to them that love God, to them who are the called according to his purpose.”

The Bible is laced with texts about the spiritual benefits of suffering. Peter said to “think it not strange concerning the fiery trial which is to try you, as though some strange thing happened unto you.” 1 Peter 4:12. Paul assures us that “all that will live godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer persecution.” 2 Timothy 3:12. And James makes the incredible statement, “Count it all joy when ye fall into divers temptations; Knowing this, that the trying of your faith worketh patience.” James 1:2, 3.

In the light of these and many more similar statements, we must confess that there are mysterious blessings associated with trials and suffering. James indicates that they develop the very character traits which mark those who will be candidates for the Kingdom. In Revelation the saints are described in these words: “Here is the patience of the saints: here are they that keep the commandments of God, and the faith of Jesus.” Revelation 14:12.

Obviously, patience is a requirement for those who are redeemed out of this world. James says that patience is developed by tests and trials. This clearly teaches us that suffering may indeed be a necessary molding process in our preparation for heaven.

David, who also suffered much, came to this amazing conclusion: “It is good for me that I have been afflicted; that I might learn thy statutes.” Psalms 119:71. Again, he wrote, “Before I was afflicted I went astray.” Psalm 119:67.

Until a Christian learns this simple Bible principle, he will live in a ferment of doubt and uncertainty. Every experience of disappointment will raise fresh questions concerning God’s justice and love. Many Christians hold the childish view that because we have accepted Jesus and because He loves us, therefore, He will use His mighty power to preserve us from every pain and trial.

The inspired record reveals that because He loves us, He will often permit us to pass through the fires of affliction. Why does He do it? Because He sees that this is the only way to prepare us to be with Him for eternity. God is actually answering the prayers of those who have asked for purification of life. When we pray for God to eradicate sin from our life, we must be ready to accept His ordained method of accomplishing that work. Grinding trials appear to be part of the machinery by which sanctification is effected.

It is very likely that more Christians have lost their faith over this issue than any other. Every pastor has watched and prayed with his suffering people as they struggled with the “why” of their dried-up brook.

Not even the most consecrated Christian can be insulated from shock and grief when loved ones are taken by death. But they can be prepared ahead of time so that their faith will not give way under the stress of loss.

The secret is to rest upon the assurance that God will not permit any circumstance that is not for our best good. This requires faith, but it is not difficult to trust the One who died for us. We must keep on reminding ourselves that God will allow many situations which will seem to us like terrible tragedies. We will not be able to discern any logic or reason behind the events. Our human faculties may rebel at the very thought that any good could ever result from such circumstances.

Here is where we must cling to the Word of God and nothing else. This is the dividing place between the mature and immature Christian. The loss will either drive us closer to Jesus, or cause us to turn from Him. At this point, everything depends upon the personal relationship which has been developed prior to the crisis. Those who have understood and accepted the principle that God’s love will not allow any trial which is not for our best good – only they will be able to relate properly to the experience.

We have said that faith alone will hold us in this kind of traumatic test. Nevertheless, our faith is not blind or unreasonable. We have a fabulous reservoir of experiences with God which prove His unfailing love and concern for us. Why should this one be any different? Even though I can’t understand it, I can trust Him who has promised. If His Word has never failed before, how could it fail in this situation? Then, like Job, we can say, “Though he slay me, yet will I trust in him.” Job 13:15.

Here we may learn a lesson from the trustful manner in which parents surrender their children into the hands of a surgeon. How can they submit that beloved child to the cutting of that knife and the throbbing pain which inevitably follows? Two factors make it easy for them to place such confidence in the doctor. They trust his skill and ability to operate successfully, and they have faith in his wisdom to do the right thing at the right time for the good of their child. They also know that after the temporary suffering is past that the child will be better off than it was before the pain.

If we can trust a human physician who often fails, why is it so hard to trust a divine One who never fails? Probably none of our children would ever choose to be operated on, no matter how serious the condition. It is only because of our greater knowledge of their case that we submit them to the surgery. In the same manner, we would never choose to experience the trials and afflictions which our heavenly Father often allows to come upon us. He understands the case completely and knows that after the passing pain we will be better prepared for a happier future.

And here is a beautiful parallel in that illustration: Even though I know my child will be greatly improved as a result of the cutting, I still suffer right along with him. I sit up during the long hours of the night, holding his hand and ministering to every possible need.

Don’t think for one moment that our wonderful Father in heaven doesn’t do the same thing for us. Like a small child we may cry over the pain and blame our Father for allowing the cutting to be done. And like a human parent, God must weep because He has no way to communicate His reason for subjecting us to the pain. It is just as impossible for us to understand God’s decision for our lives as it is for our children to comprehend our decisions for them.

I think it would be an overwhelming revelation to see ourselves without God’s mysterious permissions, painful though they be. Only when we see Jesus face to face and reason on the plane of immortality will we be able to thank Him for allowing things to be just exactly as they were.

I can look back upon certain shattering experiences in my past and recognize how they altered the entire direction of my life. It is easy for me to see how any significant change in those disappointing events could have sent me in a totally opposite direction. I tremble to think what my life might now be had God not measured out to me those bitter experiences.

If indeed the hardships are necessary to prepare us for entrance into heaven, then they should be looked upon as a part of God’s great election plan for our salvation. Isaiah wrote, “Behold, I have refined thee, but not with silver; I have chosen thee in the furnace of affliction.” Isaiah 48:10.

What a difference it makes in our attitude if we can see suffering as a sign of God’s special choice for us to spend eternity with Him. He loved us before we were born, and according to Paul, “He hath chosen us in him before the foundation of the world, that we should be holy and without blame before him in love.” Ephesians 1:4.

Can you fathom the exciting reality of that truth? You are one upon whom the eye of God has rested from eternity. Through all those eons of time, divine Wisdom has been perfecting a detailed plan for your sanctification and ultimate salvation. As you submit to Him, He will certainly perform only what has been determined as absolutely essential to carry out His plan for your life. If that plan allows for heartaches here and there, and even apparent disasters from time to time, God will never permit more than we can bear. He will be there to measure and temper the furnace according to our strength and according to our need.

Does that sound like a contrived explanation for the problem of pain and affliction? It will, no doubt, to the person who does not believe in the existence of God. He scoffs at the idea that a loving, omnipotent Deity would not intervene to spare His followers from all trouble and pain. Often the believer is hard-pressed to justify the apparent arbitrary manner in which some suffer and some are spared. How can we respond to the accusation that a just God would protect all His people from all trouble at all times?

First of all, let us concede that God could do that very thing. He has the power to prevent accidents. He could commission angels and the Holy Spirit to override the law of cause and effect in the lives of all Christians. They would not get bad colds, stub their toes, or contract cancer.

What would be the effect of such a program? The answer is obvious. Everyone would rush into the Christian camp in order to be protected from trouble in the flesh. The world would literally be compelled to follow Christ for purely physical reasons. God doesn’t build His kingdom upon appeals to such motives.

It seems logical that God had to allow the natural laws to operate equally upon all to demonstrate the unconditional nature of His love. Christians do inherit the same genetic weaknesses as others who have no faith. They have accidents, and often die of the very same diseases which assail the unbeliever.

Physically, then, is there any difference in the way Christians suffer, and the way non-Christians suffer? The answer to that question must be carefully qualified. God reveals no partiality in the way He permits natural law to affect all mankind. Any difference which enters the picture must be based upon the individual’s response rather than any difference God makes between categories or classes. This is another way of saying that no one in the world can prevent troubles coming into his life, but he can decide what those troubles do to his life after they happen.

The Christian meets trouble by surrendering to the will of God and praying for a spirit to profit from whatever God permits. Such a trusting faith can not only bring power to bear the suffering with less trauma, but also, in some cases, to be healed of the affliction as well. This response of God to the faith of an individual has nothing to do with favoring a class of people. God is still operating within the framework of law, but this time spiritual law instead of natural. That law is not limited to any nationality, race, or religion. All who approach Him in faith will tap into the same reservoir of divine power. Even though God’s love is unconditional, His healing power is not. Nevertheless, the conditions are the same for all, and He delights to set the spiritual laws of asking, believing, and receiving into operation for anyone.

Here, then, lies the most understandable human explanation for the mysterious way some are afflicted and others are not. Some are delivered and healed, while others suffer and die. God has to deal with each individual on the basis of that person’s faith and the kind of prayer he offers. If his greatest concern is for God to mold him and prepare him for heaven, his prayer will be for God to shape all the circumstances of his life to that end. In order to answer such a prayer of faith, God may have to permit experiences of pain or affliction.

Again, God will have to answer that prayer according to His omniscient knowledge of the future of that individual. Only One who accurately foresees the consequence of every act can safely be trusted to control the circumstances of life.

Is it hard to submit to a God who does not always explain His omniscient actions? Indeed, it would be impossible to trust Him if we had no other subjective evidences of His commitment to our happiness. But anyone who believes that Jesus was willing to die in his place would have to believe also that Jesus would always work for his best good. God would have to deny His own nature to do anything against the one He loved more than His own life.

This is the assurance that sustains those who suffer under unexplainable circumstances. Even though they can’t understand why God allows their condition, they know it would be totally contrary to God’s nature to permit anything against their highest interests. Their faith dares to believe that if they could see the future as God sees it, they themselves would choose no other way than He chooses.

Is there evidence that obstacles and hardships are sometimes necessary for the highest achievement? Nature itself bears witness that it is so. Certain migratory birds must wait for strong, opposing winds before they can achieve the heights necessary for their long-distance flights. There are some fruits which cannot ripen until they have been nipped by the frost.

Can Hardships Help Us?

Are there souls who cannot mature until they have been buffeted by hardships and opposition? Undoubtedly. We think of Moses spending forty years in the wilderness before God could use him for leading Israel out of bondage. We marvel at the years John was isolated and imprisoned on Patmos before he could become the writer of Revelation. And Paul experienced torture and imprisonment before he could write, “Godliness with contentment is great gain.” 1 Timothy 6:6.

I believe Paul was ripened for the Kingdom during those seasons of solitary confinement. I think John needed the rest from constant, wearying oversight of the churches. It is almost impossible for human beings to recognize the limits of their physical endurance. They seldom stop in time to prevent damaging collapse. A Cambridge naturalist released a pigeon that had been born in a cage. For the first time the bird used its wings to fly around the laboratory room. Around and around went the pigeon, excited and panting. Finally, in utter exhaustion, the frantic bird crashed into a wall and fell to the floor seriously injured. Only then did the scientist realize that the pigeon had inherited the instinct to fly but not to stop its flight. Had it not been willing to risk the shock of a crash landing, the bird would have died of stress in midair.

Sometimes God has to stop people from their furious pace before they destroy their own usefulness. The trauma of a sudden stop may be hard to understand and accept. Sickness, loss of job, or even tragedy may be necessary in order to provide time for physical and spiritual recuperation. “Be still, and know that I am God.” Psalms 46:10. In the thoughtful hours and days of slow recovery from surgery, many have found the secret of life in Christ.

Perhaps only God understands why pain is often the only thing which can get the attention of human beings. Never should we blame God for utilizing the one device which will ultimately draw us to Him. Strange as it may seem, prosperity, good health, and smooth sailing do not attract the soul to God. A man was imprisoned in a tower and was trying to alert passersby of his dilemma. They could not hear his cries, so he began to drop gold coins from his pocket to attract their attention. But although they scrambled about to recover all the falling money, not one pedestrian looked up to see the plight of the prisoner. Finally, he managed to break off a chunk of mortar from the crumbling wall and dropped it out the window. It struck a man on the head, injuring him. Only then did the man look up and get the message from above.

In the same way all manner of blessings are taken for granted. Instead of looking to the source, we are busily gathering more from the world around us. It is only when we are hurt that we look up and begin to listen to the message God has been trying to communicate.

Looking for the Reasons

After a period of test, will God always reveal the reasons for His divine permissions in our lives – His dried-up brooks? Eventually, yes. But not necessarily in this life. Our faith may have to hold us steady until God can explain to us, face to face, why it had to be. Paul finally came to know why God allowed his thorn in the flesh. It was to keep him from feeling exalted over the abundance of revelations granted him. I may have to wait until Jesus comes to understand why my little eight-year-old son suffered so long before dying of a brain tumor.

It took a few years for the citizens of Coffee County, Alabama, to understand why the boll weevil invaded their fields, devastating the cotton industry completely. After turning to diversified farming and eventually doubling their income from growing peanuts, the farmers of Coffee County erected a monument to the boll weevil. In the memorial inscription, credit is given to the boll weevil for forcing the change of crops, creating unprecedented prosperity for that area.

Christians should look for the reason when trials appear. Usually, a new door will open when one brook dries up. But if the years bring no satisfactory explanation of tragic loss, then we should trust Him still. Someday He will make it plain to us. In the meantime, we are sustained by the comfort of the One who fully understands our griefs and sorrows. Jesus became one of us so that He could experience every pain and be a faithful Intercessor for us. Only those who have passed through the same suffering can truly sympathize and communicate with our hearts. When one grief-stricken father cried out, “Where was God when my son was killed in that car accident?” the answer quietly came back, “He was exactly where He was when His Son was tortured and killed on the cross.”

Isn’t there a tremendous lesson in that answer? If God would not intervene to save His own Son’s life because He saw that great good would eventually result, then He must have seen some future good when He allowed my son to die also. And is that not the reason I could feel the sweet, personal touch of the Father upon my life during those dark hours of grief? He knew exactly how I felt. He could minister to me as no human friend could do. Has not my own ability to provide healing comfort been greatly strengthened because I have shared a similar sorrow with those who have lost children?

Christians should have no illusions about the source of afflictions. Sin is the cause of all suffering in the world today. God is often blamed for doing the devil’s work. Not one cancer has ever been caused by God. In the experience of Job we have a perfect picture of Satan’s mischievous program to afflict God’s faithful children. Up to certain limits God allowed Job to be tested by the great adversary, and the triumphant conclusion of the story reveals why God permitted things to go as far as they did. Job emerged from the devastating trials with a stronger faith and greater prosperity than he had before.

There may be many reasons that God allows Satan limited access to His followers, but one of the chief positive effects is to keep Christians constantly on guard against sin. Through the exercise of a wide-awake conscience, the first approach of our cunning enemy can be recognized and repulsed. The knowledge that he is apt to attack at any moment or place develops a healthy spirit of alert defensiveness.

The story is told of one old Cape Cod fisherman who always hauled in the most sought-after catch of the entire fleet. Because his fish were so lively and healthy, they invariably commanded the highest prices in the marketplace. In vain did the other fishermen try to uncover the secret of his success. Only after his death was the formula revealed by his son, and it was as simple as it was effective. After securing his load of fish safely in the holding tank, the old fisherman would loose several pugnacious catfish into the tank. The constant fear of attack kept all the commercial fish in agitated motion, preserving them from the normal lethargic state brought on by prolonged captivity. Their obvious alertness made them the most desirable in the eyes of the buyers.

Can we not see in this story a possible reason for our own harassment by the wily Satan? Does God allow him to threaten us so that we might be constantly in a protective stance? Perhaps this provocation is exactly what we need to produce a necessary attitude of vigilance.

Living in a world that is often obscured by tears and human misunderstanding, we do not always have access to the whole truth. We are not able to see past the apparent tragedies of His interrupted message. When the fog of unbelief is lifted and the veil is completely taken away, we will recognize for the first time that there was no defeat at all. It had been victory from the very beginning, but we just didn’t have the rest of the message. The whole message will be understood only when Jesus Himself speaks to us beyond the mist of our limited human view.

In the meantime, what is the solution? The solution, my friend, is simply to trust the promise of One who has never failed us yet. “And we know that all things work together for good to them that love God, to them who are the called according to his purpose.” Romans 8:28.

AY Program Idea: A love that transforms

Source: Amazing Facts Bible Study Guide

Being in love changes everything. Love transforms us. Likewise, many today find Scripture boring,
oppressive, and unappealing. But that all changes when you fall in love with the author.

Activity:

Group the congregation into different classes and give time to discuss the answers to the following questions.

Questions:

  1. What is Jesus/God’s attitude toward the people of earth?
  2. Why should we love Jesus?
  3. In what aspects are a successful marriage and the Christian life similar?
  4. Why does Jesus give us specific principles for Christian living?
  5. Give examples of principles on Christian Living.
  6. What solemn warnings does Jesus give us about the example and influence of our lives?
  7. How can I adopt and follow these Bible guidelines without appearing pharisaical, judgmental, or legalistic?

Highlights:

Jesus loves us all with an indescribable, unfailing love that passes understanding. “For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.” John 3:16.

“We love him, because he first loved us.” 1 John 4:19. “While we were yet sinners, Christ died for us.” Romans 5:8. We should love Him because He loved us enough to die for us–while we were yet His enemies.

In a good marriage, certain things are imperative, such as faithfulness to one’s spouse. Other things may not seem major, but if they please a spouse, they are necessary. If they displease, they should be discontinued. So it is with the Christian life. The commands of Jesus are imperative. But in Scripture, Jesus has also outlined for us principles of conduct that please Him. As in a good marriage, a Christian finds it sheer joy to do the things that make Jesus, the One he loves, happy. He also avoids things that displease Him.

Principles for Christian Living are for:
A. Are for our own good always (Deuteronomy 6:24). As good parents teach good principles to their children, so Jesus teaches good principles to His children.
B. Set for us a safeguard from sin (Psalms 119:11). Jesus’ principles protect us from entering the danger zones of Satan and sin.
C. Show us how to follow in Christ’s footsteps (1 Peter 2:21).
D. Bring us true happiness (John 13:17).
E. Give us an opportunity to express our love for Him (John 15:10).
F. Help us be the right example to others (1 Corinthians 10:31-33; Matthew 5:16).

“Whatsoever things are true, whatsoever things are honest, whatsoever things are just, whatsoever things are pure,
whatsoever things are lovely, whatsoever things are of good report; if there be any virtue, and if there be any praise, think on these things.” Philippians 4:8.

Christian Living Principles

Christians must separate themselves from all things that are not true, honest, just, pure, lovely, and of good report. They will avoid:
A. Dishonesty of every kind—cheating, lying, stealing, being unfair, intent to deceive, slander, and betrayal.
B. Impurity of every kind. This includes fornication, adultery, incest, homosexuality, perversion of all types, pornography, profanity, filthy conversation, off-color jokes, social dancing, degenerate songs or music, and most of what is shown on television and in movie theaters.
C. Places where we would never invite Jesus to accompany us, such as nightclubs, taverns, gambling casinos, racetracks, etc.

Principles given about music and song, dancing, TV, videos and the theater, clothing and jewelry.

Obedience and Christian conduct are the proof, or evidence, that I have been saved by Jesus Christ (James
2:20-26). The fact of the matter is that unless one’s lifestyle changes after conversion, the conversion most likely was not genuine. A converted person will find his greatest joy in discovering Jesus’ will in everything and in joyously following where He leads.

Everything we do should be with one thought in mind: to express love and esteem for Jesus (1 John 3:22).
When Jesus is lifted up and shown to people (John 12:32), they will be drawn to Him. Our one question should always be, “Will this honor Jesus? Would I listen to this, sing this, do this, watch this, drink this, buy this, read this, say this, or go there if Jesus were here, in person, with me?” Jesus is with you and me (Matthew 28:20), and He sees everything we do.

I must sense Jesus’ presence in every facet and activity of life. When I consciously spend time with Him, I
become like Him (2 Corinthians 3:18). Then when people are with me, they will respond as they did to the disciples of old: “They marvelled; and they took knowledge of them, that they had been with Jesus.” Acts 4:13. Christians who live like that will never become pharisaical, judgmental, or legalistic. In Old Testament days, God’s people were in almost constant apostasy because they chose to live as their heathen neighbors rather than follow the distinctive lifestyle God outlined for them (Deuteronomy 31:16; Judges 2:17; 1 Chronicles 5:25; Ezekiel 23:30).

It is true yet today. No one can serve two masters (Matthew 6:24). Those who cling to the world and its lifestyle will be slowly molded by Satan to adopt his feelings and desires and, thus, be programmed to be lost. Those who follow Jesus’ principles for Christian conduct will be changed into His image and prepared for heaven. There is no middle ground.

Yours in prayer,

Chummie


AY Program Idea: No Turning Back

When a skydiver steps to the edge of the aircraft door and leaps away from the plane, he knows there is no turning back. He’s gone too far, and if he should forget to strap on his parachute, nothing can save him, and he will certainly plummet to a frightening death.

What a tragedy! But there is something even worse that can happen to a person. Indeed, it is far worse to come to the point of no return in your relationship with God. Yet millions are approaching this point and have no idea! Is it possible that you are one of them? What is the awful sin that could lead to such a fate?
Why can’t God forgive it? For a clear and penetrating answer, yet also full of hope, take a few minutes with this fascinating study and program idea.

ACTIVITY

Group into classes and answer the following questions through a discussion with the group. A group representative can share the answers to the rest of the congregation at the end of the allotted time.

Questions:

  1. What is the sin that God cannot forgive?
  2. What does the Bible say about sin and blasphemy?
  3. What is the work of the Holy Ghost, or Spirit?
  4. When the Holy Spirit convinces me of sin, what must I do to be forgiven?
  5. What happens if I do not confess my sins when convicted by the Holy Spirit?
  6. What solemn warning does God give about the pleading of His Holy Spirit?
  7. At what point does the Holy Spirit stop pleading with a person?
  8. God, through His Holy Spirit, brings light (John 1:9) and conviction (John 16:8) to every person on earth. What must I do when I receive light from the Holy Spirit?
  9. Can any sin become the sin against the Holy Spirit?
  10. Cite an example of unpardonable sins committed based on the Bible.

Points to Highlight:

“All manner of sin and blasphemy shall be forgiven unto men: but the blasphemy against the Holy Ghost shall not be forgiven unto men.” Matthew 12:31.

The sin God cannot forgive is “blasphemy against the Holy Ghost.” But what is “blasphemy against the Holy Ghost”? People have many differing beliefs about this sin. Some believe it is murder; some, cursing the Holy Ghost; some, committing suicide; some, killing an unborn child; some, denial of Christ; some, a heinous, horrible, extremely wicked act; and others, worshipping a false god!

The Bible clearly says that all kinds of sin and blasphemy will be forgiven. So none of the sins listed in the
previous answer is the sin that God cannot forgive. No single act of any kind is the unpardonable sin.

Yes, it sounds contradictory, but both of the following statements are true:
A. Any and every kind of sin and blasphemy will be forgiven.
B. The blasphemy or sin against the Holy Ghost will not be forgiven.


Jesus made both statements in Matthew 12:31, so there is no error here. To harmonize the statements we must discover the work of the Holy Ghost. By the way, the word “ghost” comes from “ghast”, the Old English word for “spirit”.

“He [the Holy Spirit] will convict the world of sin, and of righteousness, and of judgment.” “He will guide you into all truth.” John 16:8, 13, NKJV.*

The work of the Holy Spirit is to convict me of sin and to guide me into all truth. The Holy Spirit is God’s
agency for conversion. Without the Holy Spirit, no one feels sorrow for sin, nor is anyone ever converted.

“If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.” 1 John 1:9. When convicted of sin by the Holy Spirit, I must confess my sins in order to be forgiven. When I confess them, God not only forgives me but He also miraculously cleanses me from all unrighteousness. God is waiting and ready to forgive me for any and every sin I may commit (Psalms 86:5), but only if I confess and forsake it.

“He that covereth his sins shall not prosper: but whoso confesseth and forsaketh them shall have mercy.” Proverbs 28:13. If I do not confess my sins, Jesus cannot forgive my sins. Thus, any sin that I do not confess is unpardonable until I confess it, because forgiveness always follows confession. It never precedes it.

Resisting the Holy Spirit is terribly dangerous because it so easily leads to rejection of the Holy Spirit, which is the sin God can never forgive. It is passing the point of no return. Since the Holy Spirit is the only agency given to bring me conviction, if I permanently reject Him, my case is thereafter hopeless. This subject is so important that God illustrates and explains it many different ways in Scripture.

The Bible says:
A. “As soon as they hear of me, they shall obey me.” Psalms 18:44.
B. “I made haste, and delayed not to keep thy commandments.” Psalms 119:60.
C. “Behold, now is the accepted time; behold, now is the day of salvation.” 2 Corinthians 6:2.
D. “And now why tarriest thou? arise, and be baptised, and wash away thy sins, calling on the name of the Lord.” Acts 22:16.

The Bible repeatedly states that when I am convicted of sin, I must confess it at once. And when I learn new truth, I must accept it without delay. “My spirit shall not always strive with man.” Genesis 6:3. God solemnly warns that the Holy Spirit does not indefinitely continue pleading with a person to turn from sin and obey God.

“Therefore speak I to them in parables: because … hearing they hear not.” Matthew 13:13.
The Holy Spirit stops talking to a person when that individual becomes deaf to His voice. The Bible describes it as hearing, but hearing not. There is no point in setting the alarm on a clock in a deaf person’s room. He won’t hear it. Likewise, a person can condition himself to not hear an alarm clock ring by repeatedly shutting it off and not getting up. The day finally comes when the alarm goes off and he does not hear it.

Don’t Shut Off the Holy Spirit
So it is with the Holy Spirit. If I keep shutting Him off, one day He will speak to me and I will not hear Him. When that day comes, the Spirit sadly turns away from me because I have become deaf to His pleadings. I have passed the point of no return. What a solemn, disquieting warning against resisting the Spirit’s voice!

Conclusion:

“The path of the just is as the shining light, that shineth more and more unto the perfect day. The way of the wicked is as darkness.” Proverbs 4:18, 19. “Walk while ye have the light, lest darkness come upon you.” John 12:35.

The Bible rule is that when the Holy Spirit brings me new light or conviction of sin, I must act at once–obey without delay. If I obey and walk in the light as I receive it, God will continue giving me light. If I refuse, even the light that I have will go out, and I will be left in darkness. The darkness that comes from a persistent and final refusal to follow light is the result of rejecting the Spirit, and it leaves me without hope.

If I steadfastly refuse to confess and forsake any sin, I will eventually become deaf to the Holy Spirit’s
pleading and thus pass the point of no return. Following are a few Bible examples:
A. Judas‘ unpardonable sin was covetousness (John 12:6). Why? Was it because God could not forgive it? No! It became unpardonable only because Judas refused to listen to the Holy Spirit and confess his sin of covetousness. Eventually he became deaf to the Spirit’s voice.
B. Lucifer’s unpardonable sins were pride and self-exaltation (Isaiah 14:12-14). God can forgive these sins. Lucifer could have been pardoned and cleansed, but he refused to listen until he could no longer hear the Spirit’s voice.
C. The Pharisees‘ unpardonable sin was refusal to accept Jesus as the Messiah (Mark 3:22-30). They were convinced repeatedly with deep, heartfelt conviction that Jesus was the Messiah–the Son of the living God of heaven. But they hardened their hearts and stubbornly refused to accept Him as Saviour and Lord. Finally they grew deaf to the Spirit’s voice. Then one day, after another great miracle by Jesus, the Pharisees told the multitude that Jesus received His power from the devil. Christ at once told them that attributing His miracle-working power to the devil indicated they had passed the point of no return and had blasphemed the Holy Ghost. God could have, and joyfully would have, forgiven them. But they refused until they were stone deaf to the Holy Spirit and could no longer be reached.


I Cannot Choose the Consequences
When the Spirit makes His appeal, I can choose to respond or refuse, but I cannot choose the consequences. They are fixed. If I consistently respond, I will become like Jesus. The Holy Spirit will seal, or mark, me in the forehead as a child of God (Revelation 7:2, 3), and thus assure me of a place in God’s heavenly kingdom. If I persistently refuse to respond, I will grieve the Holy Spirit away and He will leave me forever, thus sealing my doom. What a solemn warning against ignoring the Holy Spirit!

Take not thy holy spirit from me.” Psalms 51:11.


David pleaded with God not to take the Holy Spirit away from him. Why? Because David knew if the Holy Spirit left him, he was doomed from that moment. He knew that only the Holy Spirit could lead him to repentance and restoration, and he trembled at the thought of becoming deaf to His voice. The Bible tells us in another place that God finally left Ephraim alone because he was joined to his idols (Hosea 4:17) and would not listen to the Spirit. He had become spiritually deaf. The most tragic thing that can happen to any person is for God to have to turn away and leave him alone. Don’t let it happen to you!

“Quench not the Spirit.” 1 Thessalonians 5:19.
The Holy Spirit’s pleading is like a fire that burns in a person’s mind and heart. Sin has the same effect on
the Holy Spirit as water has upon fire. As I ignore the Holy Spirit and continue in sin, I pour water on the fire of the Holy Spirit. Paul’s awesome words to the Thessalonians also apply to us today. Don’t quench the fire of the Holy Spirit by repeatedly refusing to heed the Spirit’s voice. If the fire goes out, I have passed the point of no return.


Any Sin Can Quench the Fire

Any unconfessed or unforsaken sin can ultimately snuff out the fire of the Holy Spirit. It could be refusal to keep God’s holy seventh-day Sabbath. It could be use of tobacco. It could be failure to forgive one who has betrayed or otherwise injured you. It could be immorality. It could be keeping God’s tithe. Refusal to obey the Holy Spirit’s voice in any area pours water on the fire of the Holy Spirit. Don’t put out the fire. No greater tragedy could take place.

“And with all deceivableness of unrighteousness in them that perish; because they received not the love of the truth, that they might be saved. And for this cause God shall send them strong delusion, that they should believe a lie: That they all might be damned [lost] who believed not the truth, but had pleasure in unrighteousness.” 2 Thessalonians 2:10-12.

What powerful, shocking words! God says that those who refuse to receive the truth and conviction brought by the Holy Spirit will (after the Spirit departs from them) receive a strong delusion to believe that error is truth. Talk about a sobering thought!

“Many will say to me in that day, Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in thy name? and in thy name have cast out devils? and in thy name done many wonderful works? And then will I profess unto them, I never knew you: depart from me, ye that work iniquity.” Matthew 7:22, 23.

Those who are crying “Lord, Lord” will be shocked and stunned that they are shut out. They will be absolutely positive that they are saved. Jesus will then doubtless remind them of that crucial time in their lives when the Holy Spirit brought new truth and conviction. It was crystal clear and obviously true. It kept them awake nights, troubled and wrestling over a decision. How their hearts burned within them! Finally, they said, “No!” And they refused to listen further to the Holy Spirit. Then came a strong delusion that caused them to feel saved when they were lost. Could a human being face any greater tragedy?

“Not every one that saith unto me, Lord, Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of heaven; but he that doeth the will of my Father which is in heaven.” Matthew 7:21.

Jesus solemnly warned that not all who have the feeling of assurance will enter His kingdom, but rather, only those who do His will. All of us desire assurance of salvation. It is a divine imperative. However, there is a false offer of assurance sweeping Christendom today that promises people salvation while they continue living in sin and manifest no changed lifestyle whatever.


Pastors Alarmed
More and more prominent church leaders are alarmed that so many church buildings are packed with people who have the feeling of “assurance”, yet really have not been changed by Jesus Christ. Nor do they obey Him.

Jesus Clears the Air
Jesus says that true assurance is only for those who do His Father’s will. When I accept Jesus as Lord and Ruler of my life, my lifestyle will change radically. I will become a completely new creature (2 Corinthians 5:17). I will gladly keep His commandments, do His will (John 14:15), and joyously follow where He leads (1 Peter 2:21). His fantastic resurrection power (Philippians 3:10) transforms me to His image (2 Corinthians 3:18). His glorious peace floods my life (John 14:27). With Jesus dwelling in me through His Spirit (Ephesians 3:16, 17), “I can do all things” (Philippians 4:13) and “nothing shall be impossible” (Matthew 17:20).


Fabulous True Assurance Versus Counterfeit Assurance
As I follow where the Saviour leads, He promises that no one can take me out of His hand (John 10:28) and that a crown of life awaits me (Revelation 2:10). What amazing, glorious, genuine security Jesus gives His followers! Assurance promised under any other conditions is counterfeit. It will lead people to heaven’s judgment bar, feeling certain they are saved when they are, in fact, lost (Proverbs 16:25).

What is God’s blessed promise to His faithful followers who crown Him Lord of their lives?
“He which hath begun a good work in you will perform it until the day of Jesus Christ.” “For it is God which worketh in you both to will and to do of his good pleasure.” Philippians 1:6; 2:13.

Praise God! Those who make Jesus the Lord and Ruler of their lives are promised the miracles of Jesus that will see them safely through to His eternal kingdom. Nothing could be better than that!

“Behold, I stand at the door, and knock: if any man hear my voice, and open the door, I will come in to him, and will sup with him, and he with me.” Revelation 3:20.

Jesus promises to enter our lives when we open the door to Him. It is Jesus who knocks on the door of your heart and mine through His Holy Spirit. He–the King of kings, the Saviour of the world–takes time from superintending the universe to come to you and me for regular loving visits and friendly, caring guidance and counsel.

What folly, what an unbelievable calamity, that we should ever be too busy or too disinterested to form a warm, loving, lasting friendship with Jesus. Jesus’ close friends will be in no danger of being rejected on the judgment day. Jesus will personally welcome them into His kingdom (Matthew 25:34).

Will you decide to always open the door as Jesus knocks at your heart and be willing to follow where He
leads you?

We hope that you will walk closer to the Master every day and will soon join that joyous group who will be translated into His blessed kingdom at His appearing. If we do not meet on this earth, let us agree to meet in the clouds on that great day.


Source: Amazing Facts

Communion and Being Alone with God

COMMUNION is to listen while He speaks and speak while He listens.

The Saviour’s life on earth was a life of communion with nature and with God. In this communion He revealed for us the secret of a life of power. Ministry of Healing, p.51

Do you want power to overcome sin? Do you want power to help others?

He studied the word of God, and His hours of greatest happiness were found when He could turn aside from the scene of His labors to go into the fields, to meditate in the quiet valleys, to hold communion with God on the mountainside or amid the trees of the forest. The early morning often found Him in some secluded place, meditating, searching the Scriptures, or in prayer. Ministry of Healing, p. 52

What is COMMUNION? In the early morning…
Jesus was meditating or praying:
He was talking to God.
Jesus studied the Scriptures:
God was talking to Him.

The same power that Christ exercised when He walked visibly among men is in His word. Ministry of Healing, p. 122.1

The Scriptures are to be received as God’s word to us, not written merely, but spoken. Ministry of Healing, p. 122.2

“So with all the promises of God’s word. In them, He is speaking to us individually, speaking as directly as if we could listen to His voice.” Ministry of Healing, page 122.

ACTIVITY:

Group the congregation into different classes and allot a few minutes for discussion and answer the following questions:

  1. How do you commune with God in your alone time?
  2. Give tips on effective communion and meditation.
  3. Share testimonies and experiences on the benefits of individual communion and meditation.
  4. How does individual communion and meditation differ from devotional time with other people?
  5. How to be not distracted and set ample time for communion and meditation?

Highlights:

Every individual has a life distinct from all others, and an experience differing essentially from theirs. God desires that our praise shall ascend to Him, marked with our own individuality. Ministry of Healing, p.100

Never make any change in your life in diet, dress, music, reading, association, recreation, and the way you spend your time or money without finding out personally what Jesus wants you to do.

Take your Bible and kneel down alone with God. Close your eyes and in your own words and in your own way say, Dear Lord, speak to me through Thy word. I not merely want to read a letter. I want to hear You speaking to me.

All who are under the training of God need the quiet hour for communion with their own hearts, with nature, and with God. In them is to be revealed a life that is not in harmony with the world, its customs, or its practices; and they need to have a personal experience in obtaining a knowledge of the will of God. We must individually hear Him speaking to the heart. {MH 58.3}

When every other voice is hushed, and in quietness we wait before Him, the silence of the soul makes more distinct the voice of God. He bids us, “Be still, and know that I am God.” Psalm 46:10. This is the effectual preparation for all labor for God. Ministry of Healing, p.58

Amidst the hurrying throng, and the strain of life’s intense activities, he who is thus refreshed will be surrounded with an atmosphere of light and peace. He will receive a new endowment of both physical and mental strength. His life will breathe out a fragrance, and will reveal a divine power that will reach men’s hearts. Ministry of Healing, p.58

You will never find in Christ all He is and wants to be until everything else is put aside, and this becomes the one quest of your life.

Where do we find all the time to commune with nature, to talk with God in prayer and Bible study? Where do we find time to get tanked up and our batteries re-charged? Where do we find time for exercise and rest?

We are dealing with life. One aspect of life is time, one minute after the other. What we do with time affects what happens to us in eternity.

There is only one way to get the benefit of this. It is to do what the man did who was seeking pearls. He took all the pearls he had gotten and laid them down in order to get the one pearl.

We must turn away from a thousand topics that invite attention. Ministry of Healing, p. 456

Suggestions to Find Time to be Alone with God

Give up time spent in:
Reading the newspaper and magazines
Keeping up with the latest books/movies
Watching TV
Listening to music/the radio
Hobbies
Visiting (gossip and chitchat). Standing around talking to this one and that one.

I don’t think any of the things the merchant man sold were bad. He was seeking a goodly pearl. Someone says, don’t you think we ought to be sociable? Yes, friends. But do you want the pearl? Are you looking for some time to be alone with God? This is my question.

Standing before the mirror.

Someone says, don’t you think we should look well groomed? “The time that you spend standing before the glass preparing the hair to please the eye, should be devoted to prayer and searching of heart.”
Testimonies for the Church, Vol. 1, page 162.

Yes. But my subject is not well grooming. It is not reading. It is not TV. My subject is how to find time to get the pearl.

Writing letters/SOCIAL MEDIA

Someone says, don’t you think we ought to be in touch with others? Yes, friends. But seek ye first the kingdom of God and His righteousness.

Music (Instrumental, vocal, theory, practice.)

But we need music, right? Yes. We need a lot of things. But first, we need what? The Pearl.

With the youth today and the world full of distractions, it will require focus and attention and a great will to be able to conquer ourselves and keep away from the snares of Satan. Look at the heaven. Think about the pearl that we are looking for. Drop everything and prioritize time for God.

Marantha.

-Chummie