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WHY DID DIRK WILLEMS TURN BACK TO SAVE HIS ENEMY? – BY JOSEPH LIECHTY [AT THE BATTLE FRONT 98]

April 3, 2012 by Marc 2 Comments

Brothers and sisters,

It was a time of great spiritual growth as God took me and a few others so inclined through the school of love. How? By learning to love your enemy. Doing good to those who despitefully use you. Turning the cheek. Walking the extra mile. Actually laying your life down.

I discovered them in 1989…the Anabaptists. Those who just wanted to live Matthew 5-7 and be left alone. Of course that infuriated the Pope, as well as Martin Luther the murderer, as their armies chased these precious people all over Europe in the 1560’s and killed them by the thousands.

If you have an interest in their fascinating history, write me and I’ll send the resources of their struggle that radically changed my life by giving me a historical example of how to live like Jesus. They weren’t flawless…but they were and are a great expression of love that King Jesus showed to Pilate and His murderers.

Here’s the story of one of them. I can’t wait to meet him in heaven. When my time comes to be chased and die in The Great Tribulation, I will remember Dirk…and Jesus Christ our Lord as examples.

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Why Did Dirk Willems Turn Back?

By Joseph Liechty, Originally Published in Anabaptism Today, Issue 6, June 1994

Late in the winter of 1569, Dirk Willems of Holland was discovered as an Anabaptist, and a thief catcher came to arrest him at the village of Asperen. Running for his life, Dirk came to a body of water still coated with ice. After making his way across in great peril, he realised his pursuer had fallen through into the freezing water.1

Turning back, Dirk ran to the struggling man and dragged him safely to shore. The thief catcher wanted to release Dirk, but a burgomaster – having appeared on the scene – reminded the man he was under oath to deliver criminals to justice. Dirk was bound off to prison, interrogated, and tortured in an unsuccessful effort to make him renounce his faith. He was tried and found guilty of having been rebaptised, of holding secret meetings in his home, and of allowing baptism there – all of which he freely confessed.

“Persisting obstinately in his opinion”, Dirk was sentenced to execution by fire. On the day of execution, a strong east wind blew the flames away from his upper body so that death was long delayed. The same wind carried his voice to the next town, where people heard him cry more than seventy times, “O my Lord; my God”. The judge present was “finally filled with sorrow and regret”. Wheeling his horse around so he saw no more, he ordered the executioner, “Dispatch the man with a quick death.”

A child’s perception of injustice

When I first encountered this story more than thirty years ago as a child, my attention was riveted on what happened to Dirk. For his great goodness he received in return imprisonment, torture, and death. That he should suffer such a fate violated my childish sense of justice and fair play. My notion of how the world worked was undone, and I needed to find a new understanding.

Trying to understand Dirk’s story as an adult, I have come to make some strong claims about its significance. I believe that in the Martyrs’ Mirror, a book filled with heroic examples of Christian obedience to Christ, the story of Dirk’s simple action is the embodiment of some of the great strengths of Anabaptism. I also believe Dirk transcended and healed some great weaknesses of Anabaptism. In this action he obeyed Jesus’ commandment to be perfect as his heavenly father is perfect – that is, to love fully and indiscriminately.

What would I do if … ?

1569 was a bad year to be an Anabaptist. The Martyrs’ Mirror lists a number of martyrs that year, some of whom lived close enough to Dirk’s home that he would surely have known of their deaths. I imagine the prospect of death was constantly with him, a steady part of his inner life. I imagine he frequently asked himself, “What would I do if …?” or, more likely in his circumstances, “What will I do when …?” His ruminations must have been shaped to a great extent by the teaching of the little Anabaptist fellowships, one of which met in his home. With arrest and death ever-present dangers, Anabaptists spent considerable time preparing one another to meet them.

One source of instruction was letters from prison. A young purse-maker and minister of the word named Hendrick Alewijns, after his arrest in 1568, wrote many letters to his wife, three small children, and fellow Anabaptists. “There is no fear in love,” he wrote, but “fearless ones run through patience … not out of, but into the conflict that is set before us, and look not at the dreadful tyranny, but unto Jesus, the Captain, the Author and Finisher of our faith.”

Alewijns and other Anabaptists did not mean they sought persecution, nor did they deny themselves the right to flee from it. But even so, this fearlessness was a difficult expectation. I imagine that when Dirk considered haw he might respond to capture, he conjured up an array of options, ranging from fleeing at one extreme to calm acceptance of arrest at the other.

I try to imagine what thoughts filled Dirk’s mind as he ran, followed closely by the thief catcher. Did fear and danger dull his mind or make it keen? In either case his thoughts must have been dominated by the effort to save his own life. In at least some small corner of his consciousness, he must have been considering what he had done in fleeing and what he might do if caught. Would he be able to brave torture? Would he renounce his faith?

Such tormenting thoughts must have reduced him to so great a fear that, when he came to a body of water, he ran across the thin ice. He risked immediate death by drowning rather than submitting to the prospect of capture, imprisonment, torture, and death. But having saved his own life, Dirk turned back across the ice to save his drowning pursuer.

As a child, my attention seized first on Dirk’s sad reward of death for virtue. But my focus soon turned to an earlier point, less dramatic but more mysterious, when Dirk turned back across the ice. It is this action I can hardly comprehend, that I return to time and again. I am surprised that Dirk even noticed his pursuer had fallen through the ice. I would have expected his desire to live was great enough to drive him forward, ears closed and eyes fixed ahead. Even if he heard cracking ice or a cry for help, I would have expected the desire to live to send him fleeing. Why did he turn back?

Intuitive response to evil

I believe that turning back was not a rational ethical decision, but an intuitive response. The properties of thin ice may almost have dictated intuitive action by leaving him little time to respond. Even if the thief catcher somehow caught hold of a piece of solid ice, and Dirk had a few moments to consider, I still believe his decision was more intuitive than rational. No combination of mental calculations was likely to take him back across the ice.

Perhaps Christianity, with its teaching on loving the enemy, comes closer than any other religious or ethical system to requiring Dirk to do what he did. But where would the command “love your enemies” have led Dirk? He had no reason to believe he could save the thief catcher. The more likely conclusion would have been two deaths, and loving the enemy does not demand futile suicide.

In those places where Jesus discusses loving the enemy, none of his examples comes close to requiring that one die for the enemy. If in fact there were others at the scene, the thief catcher’s compatriots, who could condemn Dirk if he had seen the man in distress as their business?

Perhaps chief among the considerations in Dirk’s mind would have been the doctrine of two kingdoms, a basic Anabaptist motif. “There were from the beginning of the world two classes of people, a people of God and a people of the devil,” wrote one Anabaptist martyr.

The children of God “have always been persecuted and dispersed, so that they have always been in a minority, and sometimes very few in number, so that they had to hide themselves in caves and dens … but the ungodly have always been powerful, and have prevailed.”

When Dirk looked back on the thief catcher in the water, he saw not just a man near death, but a devouring ravening wolf. He saw not just an individual, but a manifestation of the kingdom of darkness, an agent of the devil himself. Anabaptists also frequently took an image from the book of Revelation.

Martyrs, slain for the word of God, wait under the altar in heaven, crying to God, “how long will it be before you judge and avenge our blood on the inhabitants of the earth?” (Rev. 6:10) When Dirk looked back, he might have seen an answer to the martyrs’ question – God delivering justice here and now. Or, he could have drawn on the image of Israel’s deliverance from Egyptian captivity: his crossing of the ice was the Red Sea parted; the floundering thief catcher was horse and rider thrown into the sea.

Dirk had available to him sound biblical images to justify his running on and leaving the thief catcher to his fate. With the time he had gained, capture was far from inevitable. His crime in the Netherlands was not crime everywhere; he could have fled to other territories and reasonably hoped for a long and peaceful life.

Other examples of sacrificial love

Examining the usual range of sacrificial actions can take us some distance in explaining Dirk’s decision to rescue his pursuer. There are many examples of parents sacrificing for children. I recall the story of an American soldier in Vietnam who threw his body on a grenade, saving the lives of his comrades. Less frequent are accounts of people who gave their lives for someone unknown to them.

One example is Father Maximilian Kolb, who chose to die in place of another innocent man in a Nazi concentration camp. Examples of people risking their lives for enemies are scarce indeed. A few years ago the South African bishop Desmond Tutu risked his life to save a suspected police informer from an angry mob. That is remarkable, but it is still a case of the powerful acting to save the weak, and that is a long way from what Dirk did.

We may understand better how radical was Dirk’s action if we transpose the Tutu and Vietnam stories into parallels of Dirk’s situation. In the Tutu story, we would have to imagine that the informer, having almost reached safety, turned back to save one of his pursuers. We must imagine that the American soldier, fleeing what he expected to be torture in a POW camp, risked his life to save a Viet Cong soldier. These transpositions are difficult to imagine.

I am convinced that the only force strong enough to take Dirk back across the ice was an extraordinary outpouring of love. The only kind of love I know that extends to enemies is the love taught and lived by Jesus. When Jesus’ earliest followers struggled to understand the mystery of his death, they found themselves extending the definition of love: Jesus had died for them “when we were God’s enemies”.

We must allow that precisely this definition of love – a love that reaches so far as to die for enemies – had shaped Dirk’s character to such an extent that in circumstances of gravest personal danger he was able to express his love in an intuitive response.

Did the Anabaptists love their enemies? We may be sure they taught it; they were never ones to shirk Jesus’ hard sayings. They also had the example of Jesus in the way of the cross, which the Anabaptists generally understood as requiring the willing, nonviolent acceptance of suffering.

Their frequently cited experience of having been loved by God before they loved him must have reinforced the teaching and example of Jesus. At very least they had thrown away their swords, so they could not respond to their enemies in the conventional ways.

The enemy as wolf and lost lamb

Like a nation at war, Anabaptists needed to maintain identity and bind themselves together in unity through the stresses of conflict. To this end they had positive means: community, discipleship and pacifism. But the Anabaptists also had negative ways of maintaining group cohesion. Like civilians uniting behind a war effort, Anabaptists were inclined to dehumanise their enemies by identifying them as entirely evil.

They did this with the doctrine of two kingdoms: they were children of light, their enemies children of darkness; they were lambs, their enemies wolves. Today, when dualistic thinking is condemned as the root of many evils, the doctrine of two kingdoms has neglected merits. I would argue that without some form of a two kingdoms doctrine we are unlikely to understand fully Jesus’ teachings or the demands of discipleship.

Yet the two kingdoms doctrine on its own makes a sorely deficient world view. Christians in the Anabaptist’s position are called to do the nearly impossible: to see their persecutors as both wolves and lost lambs, as both servants of evil and confused neighbours. The contempt for enemies inherent in two kingdom thinking, coupled with bitter experience, must have stained the Anabaptists’ souls.

It must have seemed to Anabaptists that terms of life were being dictated to them, and they must simply respond as well and faithfully as they could. The battle could hardly have been less equal as the Anabaptists struggled against the combined forces of Church and State with nothing more than spiritual weapons.

When the weak attempt to love their powerful enemies, the results must be primarily passive and internal. Always hunted and sometimes on the run, they had no leisure to ask themselves, what can we do to express enemy-love in a positive way? If they could simply resist the spirit-deforming influence of hatred, they had accomplished much.

In these circumstances, the moment when Dirk stood poised between running on and turning back held a more than personal significance. The opportunity before him was a rare one, and he was choosing for all the Anabaptists who never had a choice either to run to freedom or to act on love for their enemies. The path Dirk took would be the testimony for a whole community of how deeply they had been penetrated by the love for enemies inherent in the cross they had chosen to bear.

In the next moment, when Dirk chose to turn back, he stood on holy ground, where things we normally hold apart were bound together. Dirk had accomplished the almost impossible: he had seen the thief catcher as both an agent of the devil and a helpless human brother. Only then was he free to fulfil the call to love his enemy – after all, lambs do not save wolves.

He had acted on his own, and yet, perhaps, for his Anabaptist brothers and sisters as well. I expect that if we could ask Dirk why he turned to save the enemy, we would hear “Not I, but Christ in me”. Yet if Dirk was simply obeying what could not be disobeyed, his act has little meaning. In my imagination I can only resolve it thus: as Dirk walked across the ice, he was sustained but not compelled by the hand of God.

When I search the scriptures to help me understand what Dirk did, I go where I have always gone -to the hard sayings of Jesus and to the cross. I search for other passages as well, ones that speak of extravagant praise. The gospel of Mark records the story of a woman who poured a jar of costly ointment over Jesus’ head.

The disciples were indignant at this appalling waste, but Jesus rebuked them, saying, “Let her alone; why do you trouble her? She has done a beautiful thing to me … And truly, I say to you, wherever the gospel is preached in the whole world, what she has done will be told in memory of her.” Like this woman, Dirk Willerns has done a beautiful thing for Jesus. Wherever the gospel is preached, it is goad that what he has done should be told in memory of him.

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Joseph Liechty has worked in Ireland for Mennonite Board of Missions since 1980. When this article was written he was lecturing in the history department of St. Patrick’s College, Maynooth, and at the Irish School of Ecumenics. His teaching and writing centre on issues of sectarianism in Irish history and society.

Notes

1. The story of Dirk Willems is from a 1660 Anabaptist martyrology compiled by Thieleman J. van Bracht, translated as Martyrs Mirror (Scottdale: Herald Press, 1950), 741-42. A longer version of Joseph Liechty’s article on Willems appeared in Mennonite Life 45, no. 3 (1990:18-23).

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Saints, we’re one day closer to Home, and Him! Love Him wholeheartedly!

You may view our Archives here: AT THE BATTLE FRONT – ARCHIVES;   Complete Archives; feel free to write and proclaim your leadings in the Spirit in an honorable fashion. May our Father richly bless you with His grace, through Jesus Christ our Lord, in order to walk worthy of His name.

Please comment on this post right below. Feel free to write and proclaim your leadings in the Spirit in an honorable fashion.

 

Filed Under: At The Battle Front - becoming victorious overcomers, Best of Walk Worthy - most popular, controversial, & convicting, Escaping the American Jesus - discovering & following the real God, Holiness - without living holy no one sees the Lord, Kingdom of God - the eternal purpose of our Father that He carried out through Jesus Christ, Love Your Enemies - are we a Christian or not?, The Devil's Schemes - we are not ignorant of them, Walking Worthy - loving God through obedience, Words of Jesus - the King of kings speaks Tagged With: agape love, christian truth, do good to them who despitefully use you, do not resist evil, escaping american christianity, holiness, jesus actions, love your enemy, separation from the world, turn the other cheek, walk worthy, words of jesus

HOW DID JESUS REALLY ACT IN THE GOSPELS? PART 2 [MONDAY MANNA ISSUE 122]

October 12, 2009 by Marc Leave a Comment

Grace today, saints!

Last time we saw how the first 32 events out of 251 total events in the Gospels are arranged to answer questions in at least 3 major areas of eternal interest:

  1. Do we need a deep relationship to speak into a person’s life?
  2. Is the gospel message primarily gentle and kind as defined by the West?
  3. Is it true there’s nothing propositional and/or conditional about the gospel?

In reflecting on these first two sections and the responses we received last week, we felt the Holy Spirit saying we should send a portion of the chart we used to tally the results so you may review it too.

After the chart, a sample of your responses is included, as they also tell a story.

But first, let’s reflect on the results we spoke of last time before the chart below:

“First, let’s look at the RELATIONSHIP the characters in the gospels, including Jesus, had with their audience. Of the 32 events, only 9 had a known relationship. Wow. That’s only 28%. Over 70%, or 23 events, reflect the fact that “NONE CERTAIN” was the most used term to describe this critical interaction of a relationship.

“Second, was the MESSAGE given by the characters mostly gentle, humble, kind, nice? Or was it more BOLD like a rebuke, admonishment, defense, exhortation, or a prophesy? Of the 32 events, only 3 (yes, only 3) could be even closely considered to be gentle as our modern culture defines it. The overwhelming percentage, or over 90%, were BOLD in content and style. Remarkable it seems.

“Third, and lastly, was the reflection needed to review if the message itself was PROPOSTIONAL AND/OR CONDITIONAL. That is, did the message REQUIRE SOMETHING SPECIFIC from the hearer? Did the messenger expect an action from his audience? Yes, he did. About 75% of the events, or 24 out of the 32, has propositional and conditional requirements. And most of the 8 events that did not were events dealing with the messenger rejoicing, prophesying, doing a miracle, or explaining a plain narrative relating basic information to the reader.

“The results of the data surprised us here, although we had surmised the trend was overwhelmingly in favor against what we had been hearing over the years. Jesus Himself shows up big time in Part B Preparation for Ministry. But his fellow messengers and those preparing His way in Part A also followed the same trend: the gospel so far proved to be very non-relational (in a very relational in-group/out-group mid-east culture), bold (where saving face is everything like we see in Iraq today), and propositional with conditions (which is very provocative in a in-group relational society).”

You may view and download the Gospel Events PDF chart here.

Filed Under: Escaping the American Jesus - discovering & following the real God, Monday Manna - new week equipping for the spiritual war, Words of Jesus - the King of kings speaks Tagged With: christian relationships, jesus actions, propositional gospel, true truth, walk worthy, words of jesus

PEACE I GIVE TO YOU – HIS VOICE OF REASON IN THE END TIMES [MONDAY MANNA 87]

December 15, 2008 by Marc Leave a Comment

Saints,

A dear sister in the Lord here in America recently sent me this post in regards to all the politically distracted, militant, Obama-fearing Christians that are caught up and away from real kingdom living. It bears repeating for it is a gem of coherence and simplicity:

“Brother, if ever we needed something to quiet the rampant hysteria “end-times doom” on the ‘net, it is now.  We need to remember to skip the Chicken Little mentality, do the best we can with the time we have left toward taking folks with us, and remember that He Who has begun a good work in us will complete it until the day of redemption and provide grace for what we face regardless of what it is.” 

She goes on to say:

“Not that I gleefully anticipate whatever doom might be coming but I do want to remember to keep that Ephesians 6 wardrobe polished up and on as it has and is seeing me through a good many unpleasant experiences and is none the worse for wear. I hope – that is – gleefully expect that it will continue to do so.” 

Amen, no? Well said.

But why are people who are called “saints” of Jesus, aliens and strangers in this world, so distracted from the task at hand: kingdom building for Him? Why, it’s our arch enemy’s job to distract. He’s really good at it, and he has about 6,000 years experience with human beings…

Why is there rampant hysteria as our sister has testified?

In short, those calling themselves believers are trying to save their lives from suffering. Saving their lives from obedience. Saving their lives from loving God. Not a good thing.

Jesus hates it when we practice disobedience. He does. If the Holy Scriptures teach one thing, it’s this eternal truth. And the Father commands His Son  to cast away from His throne all those who insulate themselves and put supreme value on their earthly, worldly, fleshly ease.

For whoever wishes to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for My sake, he is the one who will save it. Luke 9:24

But enter Jesus, the Voice of Reason. Praise the Father for this imperishable Gift of grace! Let these familiar words cascade again over and through our hearts like a cool, refreshing North Carolina summer waterfall:

“Peace I leave with you; My peace I give to you; not as the world gives do I give to you. Do not let your heart be troubled, nor let it be fearful. John 14:27

Peace. Shalom. Blessing.

To us from Him.

No persistent trouble or fear.

None.

We all get shook temporarily from time to time, as it should be in this vile, evil world if we’re truly living a truthful overcoming kingdom existence.

But perfect, persistent heartfelt peace should be the norm.

Do we have it now? No? Let’s go on until we do. He wants to give it more than we want to receive it. Do you want your children to be fearful and troubled? How much more does our heavenly Father give good gifts to His children.

Before we move on, please notice too that the world gives a “peace.” Much, much different. As in all things worldly, it panders to the flesh, looks good, feels great…and is a bold faced lie, an imposter.

It’s Satan’s underhanded brand that includes the blasphemous illusion of comfort in our circumstances but not in our souls. Just when a deceived and distracted person thinks all is well, Satan has them in the palm of his hand.

How unlike our Master and Savior’s peace.

When He returns after His resurrection a few scant chapters later from the verse a bit earlier, He blesses His dear friends “again” by proclaiming more peace:

So Jesus said to them again, “Peace be with you; as the Father has sent Me, I also send you.” John 20:21

Not to be missed, again He enters their lives, and again the King blesses His kingdom’s subjects:

After eight days His disciples were again inside, and Thomas with them. Jesus came, the doors having been shut, and stood in their midst and said, “Peace be with you.” John 20:26

Jesus want us in peace, beloved. He wants our souls at rest. And His kingdom is structured by divine design that it is resident only IN Him. Not around Him, or by Him, but in Him. And not in worldly trust in human institutions and ideas. What bankruptcy that turns out to be.

It’s like foreclosing on our heart and having to move out into the street. Agreed?

These crazy, bizarre times many of us live in are good for growing King Jesus’ worldwide reach. Why might that be? Now, at least in America, there’ll be hopefully an even more clear choice between light and darkness, righteousness and evil that schemes as an angel of light. Isn’t this what we want, really?

Or is it ease and comfort, smooth seas, sunny skies, the next generation of digital technology with even bigger screen TV’s, even more varieties of snacking chips and flavored organic drinks, with ever increasing big bank accounts that we’ll foolishly just leave behind to ruin our kids?

So…

How do we then gain, or regain, this all important peace, this shalom of God? The Spirit gives us abundant grace when we with bold confidence ask Jesus for His help at the throne of grace (Heb. 4:16). We have a clear and distinct path to follow: Jesus Himself and His Hebrews 11 roster of  examples:

Therefore, since we have so great a cloud of witnesses surrounding us, let us also lay aside every encumbrance and the sin which so easily entangles us, and let us run with endurance the race that is set before us, fixing our eyes on Jesus, the author and Perfecter of faith, who for the joy set before Him endured the cross, despising the shame, and has sat down at the right hand of the throne of God. Hebrews 12:1-2

The endurance here is literally abiding under pressure that brings about proven character through the development of ever increasing hope. Faith is the assurance of what?

The term “fixing our eyes” is a fascinating study.  The history of the term itself describes a forceful, deliberate, almost violent wrenching away from all else. Away from all that mars the beauty of the image of Jesus in us. Away from all else. Everything and anything. Even other human beings that cause us to veer off the path of holiness.

Hundreds of years ago a holy man lived that has greatly affected my life. As a child, he was quite sickly and never enjoyed robust health like many of us. At the mature age of 47 in 1721 and a half century before America’s rebellion against England, he penned these Holy Spirit words of enCOURAGEment for us of all generations. This is just one of his over 500 hymns of fruit that remains.

Our brother Isaac Watts from England lived some years prior to the Wesley brothers, John and Charles, from 1674 to 1748. 

You probably won’t hear this sung this Sunday. Why not? It’s about suffering. Those songs went out of favor when we started padding our life styles and singing mostly about our earthly comfort vs. God’s uniquely declared will for our lives.

We’re light years away from the live God requires us to live.

Here was a man who understood and lived the gospel, a life of surrendered obedient grace. We’ve much to learn from this song. This is as serious and sober as it gets….

It has an appropriate name for our days now: Am I A Soldier of The Cross?

Am I a SOLDIER of the Cross,

A follower of the Lamb?

And shall I FEAR to own His cause

Or BLUSH to speak His name?

 

Must I be carried to the skies

On flow’ry beds of  ease

While others FOUGHT to win the prize

And sailed thro’ BLOODY seas?

 

Are there no FOES for me to face?

Must I not STEM the FLOOD?

Is this VILE world a friend to grace

To help me on to God?

 

Sure I must FIGHT if I WOULD reign;

Increase my COURAGE, Lord!

I’ll bear the TOIL, endure the PAIN,

Supported by Thy Word.

 

Thy saints in all this glorious  WAR

Shall CONQUER though they DIE;

They see the TRIUMPH from afar

With faith’s discerning eye.

 

When that illustrious Day shall rise

And all Thine ARMIES  shine

In robes of VICTORY through the skies,

The GLORY shall be THINE.

 

So what now, brethren?

We must be certain to lose our life. And our spouse’s, children’s, other saints, and related family’s too. Everyone.

If you, your spouse, your children, or I don’t, we’ll all end up lost, lost, lost. And being cast into the lake of fire along with the evil one and his henchmen. That’s his goal. And God is altogether loving when He excludes those proven not to love Him by a lack of trustful peace.

We’re commanded in compassionate love to look to and trust only God and God alone for solace, comfort, and a secure future. He may or may not also use His people to dispense these graces.

And in the spiritual ghettos that many of us reside daily, we mostly hear false words of worldly, seducing comfort that keep the demonic status quo in place. The status quo is never the status quo. It’s always destroying souls, both yours and mine. It’s a terrible snare of great proportions. And that’s why, in our opinion, so many today are continuously upset, worried, irritable, anxious, on edge, and extremely fearful.

These people seldom, if ever, talk about and reflect on heaven, our real Home. That’s why our songs today don’t mention that blessed location. They did years ago. And traditional hymns and southern gospel music still do. But people have no intention, by and large, of really longing to depart and to be with our friend Jesus and His glorious Father. Well, maybe one reason. Unless it’s to just stop being so worried about losing their stuff and their political influence here.

Our only hope is in the Father Himself through Jesus. Our only power is in our circumstantial weakness through the overwhelming and overcoming strength of His given Holy Spirit. It’s the only way. The only way.  

Not in our circumstances.

Not in the stock market or retirement.

Not in politics. Especially.

Certainly not in America, a sinking ship morally, financially, and physically.

Let’s listen to the Voice of Reason. Our Truth and our Way. The Author and Finisher of our Faith. And return to our first Love. He calls us to suffering, not flowery beds of ease, as brother Watts so aptly wrote.

Again, Jesus’ words supernaturally give us what our hearts ache for:

Peace I leave with you; My peace I give to you; not as the world gives do I give to you. Do not let your heart be troubled, nor let it be fearful. John 14:27

For Jesus sake, be at peace and fully reconciled to God!

Your friend and brother in fighting the good fight,

Marc

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Saints, we’re one day closer to Home, and Him! Love Him wholeheartedly!

You may view our Archives here: MONDAY MANNA – ARCHIVES;   Complete Archives; feel free to write and proclaim your leadings in the Spirit in an honorable fashion. May our Father richly bless you with His grace, through Jesus Christ our Lord, in order to walk worthy of His name.

Please comment on this post right below. Feel free to write and proclaim your leadings in the Spirit in an honorable fashion.

 

 

Filed Under: Monday Manna - new week equipping for the spiritual war, The Devil's Schemes - we are not ignorant of them, Words of Jesus - the King of kings speaks Tagged With: christian truth, do not fear, do not store up treasures, holiness, Jesus, jesus actions, overcomers, words of jesus

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  • Holiness – without living holy no one sees the Lord
  • Jesus' Ancient Parables for Today – the Master's updated teachings for today
  • Kingdom Bible College: Video Series – the Word of God as the Life of Christ
  • Kingdom Briefs – short, concsise teachings and doctrines
  • Kingdom Definitions – understanding the doctrines and devil's schemes
  • Kingdom of God – the eternal purpose of our Father that He carried out through Jesus Christ
  • Kingdom Quotes – hastening "Your kingdom come"
  • Logic In The Kingdom – avoiding foolishness
  • Love Your Enemies – are we a Christian or not?
  • Marriage – building block for the family
  • MEAT – the Modern Expository Amplified Text
  • Men and Husbands – God's loving warriors
  • Mercy of God – His lovingkindness is upon all those who love and fear Him!
  • Monday Manna – new week equipping for the spiritual war
  • Money – Do Not Store Up Treasures on Earth – what part of "do not" is confusing?
  • Music Videos – songs to "muse" on the Lord God!
  • Names of God – the Creator is identified by 100's of wonderful names
  • Out Of The Depths – crying out to the Lord!
  • Poli-tricks and Christians – the bankrupcy & seduction of the political system
  • Prayer – speaking with God
  • Preparing for Great Tribulation – like no other time in human history
  • Prophets & Prophecy – God's calling to holiness
  • Raising Children – the top prize for God or Satan
  • Renovating the Spirit, Decorating the Soul
  • Resources – key help in loving God & living in His kingdom
  • Respecting Your Husband – the key to a man's heart
  • Rightly Dividing The Word – understanding basic eternal Bible truths
  • The Devil's Schemes – we are not ignorant of them
  • Travel – for God's missions
  • Understanding the Bible – living holy lives to bring Jesus pleasure depends on our understanding of His Word
  • Updates, Alerts, & Prayers – our communication to you, our ministry supporters and partners
  • Video List
  • Walking Worthy – loving God through obedience
  • Walking Worthy of Christ Daily – walking worthy is a requirement to enter the Kingdom
  • Weekend Works – a listing of works for enCOURAGEment
  • Women and Wives – God's respectful helpers
  • Words of Jesus – the King of kings speaks
  • Your Comments to Us – teach, proclaim, exhort, admonish, as iron sharpens iron