If God is pro-life, why did he command the slaughter of infants and children in the OT?

If we believe in freedom, why do we imprison our own citizens? If we believe in freedom of speech, why do people sue others for slander? If we believe in equal opportunity employment for all, then why would Democrats refuse to hire a Republican for a high-level staffer position? If people believe in tolerance, why do they suppress opposing viewpoints?

Every rule has exceptions. Every action has nuances and context. God is pro-life in that he places great worth on human life. Yet he has been willing to sacrifice the lives of the wicked that good lives may continue unharmed (that’s one reason why we put lawbreakers in prison, isn’t it?).

And though God is pro-life, yet he thought it worthy to sacrifice his unique son to save us all.

Yet can God justify killing infants who have harmed no one? First, let’s move away from the idea that the people in those days were like your next-door neighbor in a quiet suburban setting who whistles while he grills burgers in the back yard. Meanwhile, his children are splashing happily in the pool, tossing a beach ball while Fido barks joyously and the wife entertains her friends on the patio, shielded from the hot sun under an umbrella.

What really happened back then will make you flee town in terror. The population was accustomed to homosexuality and bestiality. From our enlightened perspective since the free love movement in the ’60s, we know that STDs must have abounded in man, woman, baby, and livestock in those days (especially since they had no concept of “safe sex”).

If that were not bad enough, the neighbor’s barbecue took a turn for the gross. The “grill” would be a huge metal statue of their god, turning red-hot from the bonfire around it. Of course, their god would demand a human sacrifice, and sure enough, the neighbor would toss your own baby alive into the arms of the figure (as happened in 2 Kings 23:10, Jeremiah 32:35).

With the prevalence of STDs, the resident Amaleks being sworn enemies of Israel, and the corrupting influence of a repulsive culture of death, it is no wonder why God commanded several entire communities to be eliminated (Deuteronomy 9:4).

Children were not always slain. In Deuteronomy 20:10-11, we learn that the Israelites were not to randomly destroy all people, but first propose peace to each city they encounter. If the city would surrender to serve them, the inhabitants were spared their lives. If they rejected the terms of peace, only the men were killed while the women and children were spared.

Anyway, the term pro-life has a specific context, which is protecting the life of the unborn, so this question is mixing apples (the unborn) with oranges (the born children).

What Do You Think?

a. If you love your terminally ill pet, would you take offense if someone called you evil if you put your pet to sleep?

b. Have you ever applied a label to someone, only to find that the person had enough individuality to show that the label was too restrictive?

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Are the recent natural disasters expressions of God’s wrath?

The 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami killed over 200,000 people. Suicide attacks by al-Qaeda upon the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001 caused the deaths of 2,973 victims and 19 hijackers. Hurricane Katrina flooded 80% of New Orleans, Louisiana, killing over 1,500 people. The Haiti 7.0 magnitude earthquake of 2010 resulted in a death toll of 170,000, with many more thousands dead in the rubble and outside the capital, and not including unreported bodies buried by relatives.

It’s difficult for us to imagine the scope of these disasters, but we try. One of the ways we make sense is to bring fairness and justice into play. “They must have done something really bad for that to happen.” That kind of reasoning leads one to think that God had a personal hand in the destruction, for who else would have this destructive ability? Were these events expressions of God’s displeasure toward the citizens?

We look to the biblical record and see the Flood destroying all but seven people, fire destroying Sodom and Gomorrah, and disaster striking Egypt’s firstborn in every family. In each case, we could not have known that the disaster was caused by God except when the Word of God says so.

The Bible is a consistent narrative. That is, it sticks to its story of man’s fall and redemption from beginning to end. Extraneous events are ignored. Thus, any disasters happening outside of the scope of the story are unrecorded, while those which God used in the course of the story are emphasized. Thus it may give the impression that nearly every natural calamity originates from God.

Abraham had misgivings when he heard that God was going to Sodom. He asked the Lord, “Wilt thou also destroy the righteous with the wicked?” (Genesis 18:23). God’s answer was clear: he rescued righteous Noah and his family from the rest of the unrighteous before the Flood first. He sent an angel to pull out Lot and his family before sending fire upon his city. God’s judgments are precisely targeted.

Sometimes a natural disaster helps. In Acts 16:26 an earthquake released two missionaries, Paul and Silas, from prison, and Paul used the opportunity to witness to the jailer, who then turned to Christ, then his family also. God was not directly mentioned as the agent, but the timing was too striking to be coincidental.

In many cases, the disasters used by God were preceded by warnings to repent. For instance, the Flood came after Noah and Enoch warned the people to repent. Before God sent judgment upon Nineveh, he sent Jonah to preach. (They repented at the preaching of Jonah, and this delayed judgment for a time.) God repeatedly sent prophets to the Israelites to warn them to repent before finally sending them war and disease.

The Bible chronicles other unfortunate events too, but they are not attributed to God. For instance, Jesus mentioned that Pilate was responsible for the deaths of several Galileans and their blood was “mingled with their sacrifices.” A tower of Siloam fell and killed eighteen people (Luke 13:1-5). He used those disasters to give a lesson that is worth repeating here: “Think ye that they were sinners above all men that dwelt in Jerusalem? I tell you, Nay: but, except ye repent, ye shall all likewise perish.” In this case, we understand that disasters do not always come upon us as a consequence of our evil deeds. God sees all of us in need of repentance.

I conclude that we cannot say that all disasters are of God because:

1. God often forewarns people before sending disasters as judgment.

2. We cannot know which events were of God unless he reveals his part.

3. I can accept some disasters as from God if they can be tied to deeds in ways that strain the bounds of coincidence.

4. If a disaster overtakes many reputable people, then I reject the calamity as from God because he does not destroy the good with the bad.

What Do You Think?

a. Are you angry with God over some recent disasters? Why or why not?

b. Have you uncovered some proof that God has caused one of the recent disasters? Will it hold up in a court of law?

c. Natural disasters have been called “acts of God” by some insurance companies. Has this phrase linked God to natural disasters unfairly? Why or why not?

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Why do Christians insist that life starts at conception?

The Bible is the first and last word when it comes to defining life, before birth and afterward. Here are several verses that indicate God’s handiwork early in the womb:

Thus saith the LORD, thy redeemer, and he that formed thee from the womb, I am the LORD that maketh all things … (Isaiah 44:24).

For thou hast possessed my reins: thou hast covered me in my mother’s womb. I will praise thee; for I am fearfully and wonderfully made: marvellous are thy works; and that my soul knoweth right well. My substance was not hid from thee, when I was made in secret, and curiously wrought in the lowest parts of the earth. Thine eyes did see my substance, yet being unperfect; and in thy book all my members were written, which in continuance were fashioned, when as yet there was none of them (Psalm 139:13-16).

A couple of verses tell us that God had chosen some people, like Jeremiah and Paul, for a task before they born!

Before I formed thee in the belly I knew thee; and before thou camest forth out of the womb I sanctified thee, and I ordained thee a prophet unto the nations (Jeremiah 1:5).

But when it pleased God, who separated me from my mother’s womb, and called [me] by his grace (Galatians 1:15).

In addition, God has plainly stated that he is against killing, purposely or accidentally, the fetus:

Thou shalt not kill (Exodus 20:13).

If men strive, and hurt a woman with child, so that her fruit depart [from her], and yet no mischief follow: he shall be surely punished, according as the woman’s husband will lay upon him; and he shall pay as the judges [determine]. And if [any] mischief follow, then thou shalt give life for life (Exodus 21:22-23).

Some people believe that a baby should be aborted if she is deformed or disabled in any way. What does the Bible say about that?

And the LORD said unto him, Who hath made man’s mouth? or who maketh the dumb, or deaf, or the seeing, or the blind? have not I the LORD? (Exodus 4:11).

But God hath chosen the foolish things of the world to confound the wise; and God hath chosen the weak things of the world to confound the things which are mighty (1 Corinthians 1:27).

The above passages give us a sound foundation for believing that valuing human life is important, back to the time of conception.

What Do You Think?

a. If human life should not be valued in the womb, then when does it become valuable?

b. If an infant’s life is not valuable in the womb because of a defect or abnormality, then shouldn’t older people’s lives be worth less because of frailties or defects? Why or why not?

c. What determines a person’s worth to you?


focusonthefamily.com

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If Jesus promises me peace, then why do I worry so much?

Peace is the heritage of the Christian. If that is so, why do so few experience it? I used to read self-help books because I wanted to better myself. I wanted more self-esteem, more inner strength, more peace. But I despaired of all the helps I read because I did not think I could follow through with the programs the authors promised would bring peace or whatever. Jesus promises a changed life with peace too, but with a difference – his promise tells us that peace is a real possibility, and something that God will provide. But it is not automatic. We need to turn from whatever rob us of peace. Here are a few to think about.
Freedom from guilt
“Therefore being justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ” (Romans 5:1). This verse concludes an argument begun earlier. There, Paul wrote that none of our good works could earn us a righteous standing before God. Having realized this, we have turned from our works to just trusting in God to provide the righteousness we need. That relieved our guilt. We may have forgotten this and, having done wrong again, are trying to make up for it by our works, by trying harder or by bargaining with God. But the way to peace is to realize that God just wants to forgive us and grant righteousness by faith alone, apart from works. Just come as you are and confess. Then thank him for sending his Son, who shed his blood to cleanse away our sin.
Freedom from anxiety
“These things I have spoken unto you, that in me ye might have peace. In the world ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have overcome the world” (John 6:33). Perhaps we are confused because we think peace means the lack of conflict or trouble. Yet here we find that Jesus promises peace in the middle of tribulation, not outside of it! Jesus is saying here that no matter what problem afflicts us, we can trust him, for he has overcome it and wants to teach us to do the same. We have real fears about the economy, our jobs, relationships, and a thousand other things that occupy our minds. We won’t have peace as long as we think that straightening out these things should be a priority. Jesus said we’ll have peace in him, not in the elimination of these other things. At one point in their missionary journey, Paul and Silas were unjustly beaten and tied up in the deepest part of a dungeon (Acts 16:25). Were they moaning loud and long? No, they sang hymns. Such was the power of trusting Christ for what they were going through. They did not know when they would get out; it was enough that Jesus was in charge, and somehow had triumphed over the situation.
Freedom from wants
“For to be carnally minded is death; but to be spiritually minded is life and peace” (Romans 8:6). When our tendency is to pamper ourselves, we can get tired from trying to fill a bottomless pit. We can’t be contented by pampering the flesh. The desires of the flesh never end. No matter what you get, you’ll always want more. That is the carnal way to live. The spiritual way to live is to consider how you can please the Lord, not yourself. As you continually try to fill the flesh, the natural outcome is death. As you continually desire to please God, the natural outcome is life – his life in you.
Before we were saved, it was normal to trust in ourselves, to minimize all troubles, and indulge our every desire. These were the very traits that were separating us from God and his life all along. We may have heard a watered-down version of the Gospel which did not tell us that our self-seeking ways were bad, but only certain of our deeds were bad and in need of forgiveness. So we continue our self-seeking ways after becoming Christians, and wonder why we still don’t have an abundant life. Sin has corrupted every aspect of our being. There is no way to reform it except to die to it and live by faith to the glory of God (Romans 6). Jesus’ promise of peace is conditional. This means that when we follow the condition, to trust in Christ for the problem, the peace is sure. The normal Christian life, at the beginning, is to forget or neglect this truth again and again. Have you forgotten? Christ and his willingness to take on your burden is still near.

What Do You Think?

a. In the answers above, we find that peace is found by acknowledging the truth in the scriptures. have you found any substitutes for the scriptures that worked? If so, did any of them bring you closer to God?

b. Have you had worries that were later unfounded – and you had worried for nothing? If so, was it because you had believed something that wasn’t even true?

c. When we worry, wouldn’t the truth of the situation help? Why or why not?

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Why is marriage so important?

When God created marriage (Genesis 2:20-25), he gave one of the reasons for it in Malachi 2:15b: “He seeks godly offspring.” Another goal was to express, through the relationship of husband and wife, the bond between Christ and his church (Ephesians 5:22-32). Too few books on marriage touch on these points. When these aspects are lost, marriage suffers (although the spouses may still enjoy one another’s company). Let’s look at these two aspects more closely.

In a holy marriage relationship, both husband and wife learn that how they maintain a relationship with one another is exactly how they maintain a relationship with God. When wrongdoing is not dealt with, spousal intimacy suffers. If either spouse hurts the other, confession and repentance are in order. So it is with us toward God.

As the church is to follow the leading of the Lord, so the wife, representative of the bride of Christ, learns to follow her husband’s lead. As we must put off pride and humble ourselves to obey the Lord, the wife learns to do the same for her husband.

As the Lord wants his followers to reach out to the lost and teach them his ways, so the husband and wife work in concert to train up godly offspring. Disciples (and godly offspring) are taught by modeling the traits of godliness as well as learning the word of God.

The church cannot do anything on its own. Without Christ we can do nothing of spiritual significance. Husbands and wives learn that they cannot train up godly children single-handedly – it’s a team effort. For example, when the child sees a loving husband supporting his wife, treating her with respect, and a wife in willing submission to her husband’s authority, the child understands how to respond appropriately to authority (police, teachers, boss, etc.), and work with another person. When the family prays together and reads the word (or a devotional) together, the child may learn that prayer and the word are the source of mom and dad’s strength and unity, and develops important spiritual disciplines early.

A marriage begins with vows of fidelity: “til death do us part.” It begins with a commitment to weather the coming storms. Even so it is with one’s relationship with God. God commits to us; he will never leave us nor forsake us. Only those who are committed to Christ come out ahead. Without commitment, the long-term work never gets off the ground. Great character traits such as empathy, endurance, faithfulness, compassionate care, and trust are formed over the long haul in a relationship where both partners are dedicated to mutual benefit.

Pride has no place in a healthy relationship with God; neither does it help any earthly marriage. In a marriage, we expose our weaknesses and vulnerabilities to another. In a holy marriage we learn of grace where we are loved in spite of ourselves. How true it is of Christians who openly confess to God all their weaknesses – and find their ministry enriched, not impoverished, by the act.

Marriage is great because the one who created it is great. Marriage has tremendous, life-changing, even world-changing potential, when we approach it with God’s goals in mind. Marriage is important because of the illustration it gives of the relationship between God and his believers.

What Do You Think?

a. Marriage is an “object lesson” to help us understand how to work on our relationship with God. If women puzzle over “Why do men do that?”, could it be that God’s ways are mysterious as well?

b. God has lofty goals for marriage. What are the only ways we can live up to them? (Does God have a part?)

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Why don’t Christians follow the laws in the OT about putting homosexuals to death?

When God delivered the Israelites from the Egyptians and brought them to Canaan, He gave them new rules to live by; he developed practically a whole new society. The rules he gave were so he, a holy God, could live amongst an unholy people. Those rules were for that community at that time. God did not place these legalistic or ritualistic rules on any other society. (However, the moral laws in the OT have continued in the NT and are for all believers.)

The rules in the OT reveal to us God’s likes and dislikes about morality and how people should relate to one another. We know from the OT laws that God sees homosexuality, and many other practices, such as adultery, as immoral. Today we follow our own nation’s laws, so we do not take it upon ourselves to stone people to death. We can, however, use legal means to pass laws to regulate the conduct we want reflected in our society.

What Do You Think?

a. How would you view Christians if they regularly put homosexuals to death by stoning them? If you view them negatively for doing so, then what should your view be if they did not?

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I did not ask to be created, so why should I owe God anything?

This question does not really make sense. Since you had no consciousness before you were born, you could not make any choices. You did not ask because you could not ask.

It is better to act in the real world because you are in it. Now is the time to make the best decisions you can with what you have. You did not ask to be born into a world of gravity, but you are still careful about stepping off the roof of tall buildings.

You probably did not ask to make the amount of money you earn per year, but you can change that by educating yourself for a higher-paying job or by making other decisions. You can likewise make a good decision for eternity by finding out more about the God of the Bible and coming to terms with what you learn.

What Do You Think?

a. People in the poorer third world countries did not ask to be born there. Do you think they are wondering if they owe anyone for that?

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Is it okay for Christians to wear tattoos?

When the Lord brought his people out of Egypt to bring them to a new land, he cautioned them against taking up any of their practices. “Ye shall not make any cuttings in your flesh for the dead, nor print any marks upon you: I am the LORD” (Leviticus 19:28). God did not want the ancient Israelites to mark their bodies with images, whether by cutting or printing. Sounds like tattoos, doesn’t it?

He also gave them a reason for the prohibition: “For I am the LORD that bringeth you up out of the land of Egypt, to be your God: ye shall therefore be holy, for I am holy” (Leviticus 11:45). God’s holiness means that he is not tainted by the many cultural mores and passing fads of our world. If holiness should motivate our choices, then how do we address tattoos? Well, why do people wear tattoos? For some, it’s fun. For others, it’s a way to be unique. Still others do it to belong to a group.

We belong to a holy God who is unimpressed by tattoos. Do we want to be different? Do we want to feel like we belong? Then we should live differently than the people around us – love them, serve them, thank God before meals in public places, be patient and kind in trials while others fly off the handle. In these ways we show that we belong to the Lord and desire to be holy as he is holy.

If this is not our aim in life – to be separated to the Lord as servants who are untainted by the world – then we might be asking about tattoos and other things merely to see what we can get away with. Instead of staining your body with tattoos, join him whose body was stained with blood to save us from this world.

What Do You Think?

a. If you wanted a tattoo, what reasons would you give to convince yourself to get one?

b. Why do church members sometimes try to cover their tattoos, which they obtained before they became Christians, with long-armed shirts?

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Why does God hate homosexuals?

You probably get the idea that God hates homosexuals from the many public radio and television figures and even street evangelists who have spoken against homosexuality using slurs and put-downs. You get the idea that God hates homosexuals because these individuals, who supposedly represent God, vilify them. I have read disturbing web site articles written by Christians who condemn homosexuals – and even other Christian groups – with harsh language.

But what does the Bible actually say? God abhors acts of bestiality, adultery, and homosexuality (Leviticus 18:20, 22, 23). He told the Israelites not to engage in these acts because for these acts God was using the Israelites to drive the inhabitants out of the land: “For the land is defiled; therefore I visit the punishment of its iniquity upon it, and the land vomits out its inhabitants” (see Leviticus 18:24-25). God is holy and wanted to dwell with the Israelites. If the Israelites wanted God to remain in their midst and bless and protect them, then they must accept these conditions of the covenant God made with them.

The moral parts of God’s covenant, which tell us how we are to behave before each other, continue with his believers today. Therefore, many believers are afraid that God will bring judgment on their nation if it accepts homosexuality, and a society’s acceptance of homosexuality will advance other immoral forms of sexuality. So, many conservative people are outspoken about homosexuality. Homosexuality is an unnatural form of the sex act, since it involves using the sexual organs in ways they were not designed. This creates revulsion among mainstream conservatives.

I see two factors in view here. First, if we as individuals want to be holy and enjoy a relationship with God, we must refrain from engaging in what God has forbidden, including adultery and homosexuality. Being tempted to engage in such relationships is not sin; practicing the behavior is sin. Are you a Christian considering engaging in homosexuality or adultery? Then you will compromise your walk with God. Unfortunately, Christians have lost credibility in their stand against homosexuality because of their own many cases of adultery and divorce. But this does not mean God has changed his mind regarding homosexuality or adultery! Both are still abhorrent to him.

Second, homosexuals are not being singled out by God today as meriting special disfavor. The Scriptures tell us that all of us have sinned and fallen short of God’s standard. As a result, God’s wrath rests upon all of us – unless we come to him in faith and repentance. Through faith in Jesus Christ, all sin will be forgiven, and through the power of the Holy Spirit sin can be resisted.

What Do You Think?

a. My wife has often thought that I hated certain foods because I preferred other foods to eat. I had to tell her that I do not hate the other foods; I just like these other foods better. Do you think God hates certain individuals just because he favors something else?

b. Have you ever been accused of hating because someone did not like you disagreeing with him or her? Have you ever noticed that people think it’s hatred if people disagree with their views, but not hatred if it aligns with their thinking?

c. Why do people equate hate with disagreement? Can people agree to disagree with a civil attitude?

d. If a heterosexual is against the practice of homosexuality, and a homosexual is against the heterosexual’s reasons for it, who is hating who?

e. Have you ever heard fiery rhetoric by homosexuals against heterosexuals? Aren’t such displays of “hatred” protected free speech?

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How could God accept slavery?

What comes to mind when you think of the word slavery?

Plantations. Back-breaking labor under the hot sun. Harriet Tubman. Whippings. Uncle Tom’s Cabin. Slave auctions. The Civil War. Abraham Lincoln and the Proclamation of Emancipation. Frederick Douglass. Chattel. Slave ships. Gone with the Wind. The Underground Railroad.

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Aren’t you dishonest in picking and choosing which laws in Leviticus to follow; for instance, regarding homosexuality, eating pork, and imposing capital punishment?

When God gave the laws to the Israelites, they were leaving Egypt. They were no longer under the laws of the Egyptians. So God gave them laws to help them see what a holy God they had, and through the laws he laid out the conditions by which he would live among them. God did not want his people to follow the practices of the nations around them, such as homosexuality, bestiality, and burning their children as offerings to false gods.

God desired that when Israel followed the laws, then surrounding nations would see how greatly their God blesses them, and people from those nations would come and desire to become Jews. This indicates that God did not expect other nations to take up his laws.

Since we are not in ancient Israel, but in a country that has laid down its own laws, we abide by our country’s laws. We don’t stone people for personal offenses; it is unlawful to do so. If anyone has broken the law, we tell the authorities.

The Old Testament is still valuable because in it we see God’s perspective regarding human relationships. We see that God abhors kidnapping, murder, homosexuality, adultery, theft, and other behaviors. He hasn’t changed His mind.

Paul in the New Testament warns against sexual sins in his epistles to the churches, so we know the homosexual and adultery prohibitions still stand. All laws dealing with how to treat one another with love and consideration still stand.

What Do You Think?

a. While you are still living in your own country, do you feel you must follow the laws of another country, even if their laws are not your own? Why or why not?

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Should Americans allow Muslims to practice their religion according to their holy book, including the Shar’ia laws?

America has a representative government. It is rule by the people, for the people. So if enough Muslims can get specific religious laws voted into civil law here, then they will certainly be lawful.

Look at what the homosexuals are doing. They are pursuing lawful means to make their sexual preferences acceptable. So if other people want to marry multiple wives lawfully, or apply laws in the Koran to their community, they must get enough votes to overturn existing laws.

As a Christian I would vote against such laws. But as an American, I must respect their right to pursue legal channels to make their voices heard, even as I want to be heard without discrimination. The will of the majority will rule.

What Do You Think?

a. Do you think the doctrine of separation of church and state will adequately limit what kinds of Muslim laws can be enacted?

b. Do you think the doctrine of separation of church and state will adequately limit a feared Christian theocracy?

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God that says homosexuality is unnatural and yet people insist it is a choice – so who is right?

In the OT God told the Israelites not to engage in the same homosexual lusts as the people in the land to which God was sending them. So we know God is against homosexuality. It is certainly possible that some people were born with desires for the wrong sex. To them, it feels natural. Some people were born deaf and to them, it feels natural. One girl in India was born with eight limbs. This was unnatural; it was not the norm for creation. The parents knew difficulty would lie ahead for her, so they had her operated on (successfully). So whether one is born homosexual or not is not the point. The point is, what was God’s natural, original intent for his creation?

When we see his original intent, that man is made for the woman, we can see more clearly how his creation has gone astray. It is God’s intention that we love one another. What if it feels natural for someone to love stealing? That’s not loving one another. That person has strayed from God’s ideal society, no matter whether his love of stealing is from birth or choice.

Whether one lusts for money, things, power, the same sex or different sex, the cure is the same – to be introduced to Jesus Christ and learn to live for him. Over time, one learns the horror of sin and the goodness of God, and will choose to say no to certain desires to live faithfully for God.

People let their desires (such as any sexual desires) get out of hand because they believe they will benefit from them. But when God gets in the person’s life, priorities change. Eternity becomes real. One denies certain desires through self-discipline in this life in order to gain greater rewards in the next life. One may suppress one’s desires and live miserably, or one may suppress the same desires, knowing that one is living a life that God will bless now and will reward forever.

Think of our soldiers fighting in another country. Consider what comforts they are giving up. They are living for what they believe is right. They are ready to lay down their lives for others. They have a sense of mission.

Athletes also give up much in their daily discipline to further their fitness and skill. I would not brand their strenuous activities as fun! A sense of accomplishment, of future reward, drives them to forego many things we take for granted.

I share these example of self-sacrifice to show you that denying one’s desires can still result in a good and meaningful life.

What Do You Think?

a. Children do what’s natural to them. Should adults therefore imitate children?

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Is America a Christian nation?

People have presented several perspectives on this question – because no one agrees on what a Christian nation is. First, some believe America is a Christian nation because it was founded by people who fled religious persecution, and brought their godly values to these shores. Their basic values permeated the society and raised up men who created its legal structure and the Constitution, both of which contain biblical roots. In this view, America is Christian because of its legal structure and general suffusion of Christian principles throughout the nation. Some people are working hard to make this a Christian nation by political means. Some point out that God moves more freely in a nation when it has a Christian President of the United States of America who prays.

Second, some look to the nature of the population itself and claim that America is not a Christian nation because it contains people of many faiths, or no faith. They also look to many other aspects for proof: packed prisons, abortion, general acceptance of homosexuality and prevalence of pornography, political corruption, excessive materialism (which is idolatry), and America’s early harsh treatment of the Native Americans and slaves. Can a population which accepted these practices be called a Christian nation?

Third, some point out a conversation between Pilate and Jesus which clarifies that Jesus did not see any current nation as his own. Pilate told him, “Thine own nation and the chief priests have delivered thee unto me.” Jesus answered, “My kingdom is not of this world” (John 18:35, 36). In this interchange, we see that Jesus is responding to Pilates’ use of “nation.” Jesus did not see those who rejected him as his nation. Jesus always had a coming kingdom in view, of taking his rightful place as ruler over this earth with all people willingly in subjection to him. But he was rejected and crucified, so his kingdom is on hold until he comes again. No nation on earth can substitute for his kingdom to come. At this point, only individuals are accepting Christ, not nations, so America is not ruled by Christ.

What Do You Think?

a. How would you define a nation Christian so you can defend your view?

b. Is a nation Christian based on its laws, its people, or … ?

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Is it wrong to be rich?

We may have pity on poor people because they have so little. Then we respect those who have done well for themselves. But once they start getting “filthy rich,” like movie stars and billionaire tycoons, we think they must have oppressed people or are too controlling with their massive holdings. Picking on millionaires seems to be fair game. But is it wrong to be rich?

I think most people will define “being rich” as having much more than what they possess now. If I were homeless and lived under a tarp or in a cardboard box, I’d envy the man who paid to live in someone’s dilapidated one-car garage. If I lived in someone’s garage (which I knew a friend to have done), I’d envy the person who owned his own mobile home. If I owned my own mobile home, I might wish I had a free-standing, two-story house like those down the block. If I had their home … well, you get the idea. Rich seems to be relative. Actually, we who are reading these words are richer than many others. I once read that if we owned our home, several changes of clothes, and had running water indoors, then we are richer than 97% of the world’s population!

The Bible has much to say about money and riches. So who was considered rich in those days? Abraham was considered rich. He had so much, including 318 trained servants to care for it all (Genesis 14:14). Job was considered rich, too – but these men were considered rich in livestock and flocks. They did not have two cars in each garage (two camels, maybe?), running water (they used a well), or even electricity. Yet they were rich. Most of us in developed countries would be considered “filthy rich” in their eyes!

Our wealth or lack of it has no relationship to our spiritual standing with God. That is, we cannot say that God loves us more when we find ourselves richer than others. Danger arrives when we let wealth dictate life rather than God. Let’s look at a few warnings about riches.

Jesus said, “How hardly shall they that have riches enter into the kingdom of God!” (Mark 10:23b). Why is this? Because the kingdom of God is a relationship of trust in and dependence on God, and the rich have a tendency to place their trust in bank accounts (Mark 10:24).

We learn more about the effect of riches on the soul in the story of the rich man and Lazarus, in which the rich man died and went into the flames, and poverty-stricken Lazarus died and was carried to Abraham’s bosom to rest peacefully (Luke 16:19-31). There, the rich man asks to let Lazarus rise from the dead to tell the rich man’s brothers about the torment that awaits them. Abraham’s response? “If they hear not Moses and the prophets, neither will they be persuaded, though one rose from the dead” (Luke 16:31). The rich, with their wealth, power, or influence, too often may shift God from his rightful place. God’s word goes unheeded, for the rich are used to getting their own way.

What happens when we make it our life’s ambition to be rich? “But they that will be rich fall into temptation and a snare, and into many foolish and hurtful lusts, which drown men in destruction and perdition” (1 Timothy 6:9). The “foolish and hurtful lusts” will come when pursuing opportunities for getting rich that hurt their relationship with God and family. It also means that they’ll be on the road to ever-accumulating goods that can never satisfy their desires. They pursue in the world’s passing pleasures more than God’s everlasting kingdom of boundless joy.

What direction does the Bible give to the rich? First Timothy 6:17-19 reveals potential pitfalls of being rich and how to be watchful:

“Charge them that are rich in this world, that they be not highminded, nor trust in uncertain riches, but in the living God, who giveth us richly all things to enjoy; That they do good, that they be rich in good works, ready to distribute, willing to communicate; Laying up in store for themselves a good foundation against the time to come, that they may lay hold on eternal life” (1 Timothy 6:17-19).

Let’s look at this passage line by line, knowing that I am writing about the rich in general. These points do not apply to everyone who is rich. At the same time, you don’t need to be rich to have the weaknesses addressed in this passage.
Be not highminded, or proud. Too often, being rich means being better than others, or in a loftier station in life. Yet at death the Vanderbilts of this life will lie in the same earth as the paupers.
Don’t trust in uncertain riches. God can do what wealth cannot. The rich may think of a monetary solution before thinking of asking God for his plan. This is the one who trusts in riches more than God. Also, we misplaced trust in riches when we hope that our much giving will manipulate God or make him favor us more. Only faith in Jesus gives righteousness, not trust in riches.
Be rich in good works. One of the reasons for being rich is to get to enjoy the things you want to do. That’s not a kingdom-minded person. Being rich in good works implies having a heart of compassion to others – which money does not endow.
Ready to distribute. Why does God prosper us? That he may bless others through us.
Willing to communicate. The rich are too busy with their various forms of enjoyments and amusements to fellowship with the body of Christ.

What Do You Think?

a. Jesus said that a poor widow putting in all she had had put in more than those who tithed their sacks of money. What does this tell you about the relationship between money and character before God?

b. How rich to you have to be to see the above faults in yourself?

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How should my Christianity help me cope with the day-to-day stresses of life?

 

Our Christianity is not just a set of beliefs, but a living interaction with the Almighty. That’s why it “works.” Christ living through us is not theory, but life and strength. The steps that follow express your trust in God. Do them as though in obedience to him.

The following steps assume you know how to study your Bible, pray, and you regularly meet with other believers for worship and the breaking of bread.
Start your day right. Know that God is to be honored above all. Praise God as a God who is more important than anything you have or are involved with. If you don’t have time for God, your priorities are crooked. Say it from the heart: “Not my will but your will be done.”
Know that sin is wickedness, not mere weakness. Confess known sin and deal with it. Be ready to cut off any sins the Lord brings to mind. If you want to continue in sin, you will prevent the blessings God gives only to the obedient.
Know that you are weak. Look ahead of the day and see where your buttons will be pushed and your weaknesses will surface. Will something trigger you to say, think, feel, or do wrong? Ask the Lord to give you strength for the situations you’ll face today.
Know that all things are working together for good to those who love God. All trials are to test your character, and therefore are not bad in themselves. Use the situations to examine yourself – Did you give in to temptation or weakness? Did you stand strong? Did you find God’s help? Knowing that God uses the trials for your good will help you face them with patience and wisdom.
Know that you have an enemy who wants you to arrive at the judgment seat dirty and shamed. Put on the armor of God. Put on the shoes of the gospel of peace. If you cannot tell yourself the glorious gospel, then you are liable to be fooled by the enemy with all kinds of substitutes for the life God came to give you.
Know that every person is made in the image of God. All of us are fallen. All of us need compassion and understanding. Love your neighbor the way you want to be loved.
Know peace. Use the small breaks in the day to commune with God and prepare for any coming trials. Turn off the TV, computer, radio, hand-held device, and phone for this time.
Know God’s care for you. Do not worry about tomorrow. Plan, but don’t fret.
Know the cross. If temptation comes, tell yourself that you have died with Christ and are risen with him, and sin no longer has power over you. Yield yourself to God, then get your mind and body busy honoring God. As often as temptation comes, is as often as you apply the cross.
Know gratefulness. At the end of the day, thank God for the day and all that went with it, whether it was enjoyable or not.

What Do You Think?

a. Do you know the difference between believing in your faith and taking steps to put it into practice?

b. For you, what is the hardest part about living the Christian life?

c. Which of the above steps will be the hardest for you to follow, and why?

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What fun is it in heaven if we’re going to be playing harps forever?

I see only three passages in the Bible dealing with people playing harps in heaven. Let’s look at them.

“And when he had taken the book, the four beasts and four and twenty elders fell down before the Lamb, having every one of them harps, and golden vials full of odours, which are the prayers of saints” (Revelation 5:8).

These figures are playing harps, but we don’t know how long they are playing. It’s my impression that they have erupted in spontaneous worship when the Lamb, Jesus, takes an important book from the hand of God. Also, these are just twenty-four people, not all the people who have died in the past. Let’s see the second passage.

“And I heard a voice from heaven, as the voice of many waters, and as the voice of a great thunder: and I heard the voice of harpers harping with their harps” (Revelation 14:2).

We are not told who is playing these harps, nor the duration of the playing. So we can’t draw the conclusion from here that everyone who dies will play harps in heaven forever. Let’s see if we can get that teaching from the third verse that mentions a harp.

“And I saw as it were a sea of glass mingled with fire: and them that had gotten the victory over the beast, and over his image, and over his mark, and over the number of his name, stand on the sea of glass, having the harps of God” (Revelation 15:2).

This is more promising, but still draws short. These people with harps are limited in number. Specifically, they have been taken from the earth, out of the clutches of the character popularly called the Antichrist because they remained true to their faith in God.

The Bible does not teach that all people who go to heaven will play harps. Other groups of people are mentioned in heaven, and none of them have instruments to play.

The Bible is the sole resource and authority for the issues of heaven and eternity. If this is all we can find there regarding all of us playing harps for eternity in heaven, then there is no basis for the belief.

In the Bible, harps and other instruments are frequently used to praise God. Will you play a harp for him forever? When you engage yourself in the will of God here and find God helping you and guiding you, then you can burst into spontaneous worship – because your love desires to show him appreciation in this way. I have no doubt that this attitude will continue after all of us have risen from the dead. Then we’ll find many more reasons to worship and praise him again and again.

What Do You Think?

a. Did you get the idea of playing harps all the time in heaven from the media? If so, is the media a reliable source of religious instruction?

b. When we were children, adults taught us simplified Bible truths. But the understanding is that the children would grow up reading the Bible on their own to grasp the nuances. Is your Bible knowledge being strengthened with personal study, or do you still rely on knowledge taught to children?

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If God rules Heaven and the Devil runs Hell, doesn’t that make you a pawn?

When you see images of Hell in the comics, what do you see? A devil with horns, tail, cloven hoofs, and a pitchfork, surrounded by flames in a cavern dripping with stalactites, ready to torture another soul with sadistic glee. Yet this scene never occurs in the Bible. Continue reading

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Would God accept believers of other faiths into heaven if they lived a good life?

The book of Romans is clear that God has concluded that “they are all under sin” (Romans 3:9). God has pointedly said, “There is none righteous, no, not one” (Romans 3:10). The faith one practices will have no bearing on being righteous before God. Just as a linebacker cannot make up his own rules for being a quarterback and immediately take over the role, so we can’t make up our own rules (spiritual practices) for righteousness and expect God to immediately accept us as his own.

God has set the example of his Son as the only one who has lived a life well-pleasing to him. Do you live to please God? If you have not lived to please God, you broke the first commandment, and you must suffer the consequences.

Just as you’ll pay a penalty if you are caught breaking a local civil law like running a red light, you’ll pay the penalty of death and @#!*% for breaking God’s law. Fortunately for us, God has provided a way out. He sent his Son to die in our place. That’s why Jesus was on the cross. You and I are supposed to die for our sins, but God decreed in the Bible that a substitutionary sacrifice was acceptable, but only if it were perfect. Jesus was the perfect one whom God accepted as a perfect substitute to die for the sins we’ve committed.

Now we may believe on Jesus and our sins will be transferred to Jesus. Then Jesus’ perfect righteousness will be transferred to us, and we’ll have the “goodness” we’ll need for eternity with God.

Do not trust in your own righteousness, for God has set the bar high. Instead, trust in Jesus and confess that you have fallen short of God’s righteousness, and God will forgive you and freely grant you the righteous standing you need.

What Do You Think?

a. If a person wants to try out for a football team, should his beliefs in chess make a difference? He would still have to go through the same tryouts as everyone else, right? The person’s chess life will have to be put off if it hinders the tryouts, right? Would a person have to put off their faith if it does not honor Jesus the way the Bible’s God wants them to?

b. Do you believe all the religious faiths are equally valid, although contradictory? How can you prove that? If Muslims, Jews and Christians are all worshiping the same God, then why do the fanatical Muslims try to kill Jews, and the ultra-orthodox Jews make the Christians second-class citizens in Israel?

c. Should God accept the faith of a people who are of a religion hostile to him and which persecutes Christians? Why or why not?

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Why would God give us free will and the promise of heaven or Hell if he already knows who’s going where?

You are confused because you are mixing things together that don’t belong together. When you mix the ingredients together improperly, you get a big stink! Here are your ingredients:

God gave man free will.

God promises heaven or Hell.

God already knows who is going where.

These three points don’t logically flow from one thought to the next. For instance, how does God giving us free will correlate with making us a promise for going to heaven? Let’s add some more ideas to these ingredients to make a satisfying meal. We begin by asking, “Why would God give men free will to choose for Heaven or Hell?”

God gives us the opportunity to join something that is bigger than ourselves. The “promise” of heaven (actually the kingdom of God on earth) is conditional: it is limited to those who want it badly enough to live daily by faith in Jesus. This kind of a life requires changes to our lifestyle over a period of years and decades. That’s why Jesus said to his contemporaries, “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.”

In the act of our choosing, our free will, we agree to the conditions on entering the kingdom of heaven, and we change our thinking, behavior, and priorities. We learn that our free wills are severely limited because of sin; but we also learn that we can will to serve God and live for him. This is something we in our sinful lives could never do because sin prevented us from making that choice. When we turn to Jesus for deliverance from sin, we are released to serve God willingly. Our free will capacity increases!

As we serve him, we discover his love and power operating in our lives – because he is real. Only then does the issue of God’s foreknowledge come into play with real meaning. When we see God’s hand at work in our lives to overcome sin, we have confidence about his promises regarding the kingdom of God. From our place of confidence, God’s foreknowledge becomes a comfort to us, not a quandary. Just as my child feels safe because I have everything all planned for a vacation trip, so the child of God feels safe knowing that God has his future all planned out for him.

What Do You Think?

a. Does the question change significance based on whether one trusts God? That is, if one trusts God, would the question have less relevance? Why or why not?

b. If a person hates God, does he have a free will to worship and serve him in a way that dignifies him? Why or why not?

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Some verses seem to indicate that Christians will live on earth, not in heaven. Is this true?

It seems that all the books and movies tell us about heaven with its winged angels and robed saints lounging on cloudy cushions strumming harps forever. This picture is unbelievably wrong. Christians will live forever on earth. Jesus said, “Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the earth” (Matthew 5:5).

In Revelation chapter 21 we find that the city of God comes down out of heaven to earth, and there God will dwell with his people. People who die and go to heaven are there only temporarily. Jesus will come again and reign on the earth with certain of his people for a thousand years. Afterward, he will remake heaven and earth, and we’ll all continue to live on earth.

What Do You Think?

a. Do you think that all Christians who died go to heaven? Why?

b. Why do so few know about the kingdom of God on earth? I think we learned easy-to-understand facts when we were young. We were expected to read the Bible to learn the full details. Why not make a list of spiritual truths you believe, then look up key verses in a concordance, and see what they have to say?

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Is it true that according to the Bible only 144,000 people are going to heaven?

Here are the very words in the Bible regarding the 144,000:

‘Do not harm the earth, the sea, or the trees till we have sealed the servants of our God on their foreheads.’ And I heard the number of those who were sealed. One hundred and forty-four thousand of all the tribes of the children of Israel were sealed (Revelation 7:3-4).

The verse clearly tells us that those who were sealed were Jews. They were sealed so the wrath of God would not come upon them in the end times.

Here is another group of 144,000:

Then I looked, and behold, a Lamb standing on Mount Zion, and with Him one hundred and forty-four thousand, having His Father’s name written on their foreheads (Revelation 14:1).

This group is noted as the “first-fruits to God and to the Lamb” (Revelation 14:4). That is, they are the best of the best, but not the only ones, in the kingdom. “First-fruits” implies the best of the crop. The crop remaining is still good.

So, how many people go to the kingdom of heaven? Here is exactly what the Bible says:

After these things I looked, and behold, a great multitude, which no man could number, of all nations, tribes, peoples, and tongues, standing before the throne and before the Lamb, clothed with white robes, with palm branches in their hands, and crying out with a loud voice, saying, ‘Salvation belongs to our God who sits on the throne, and to the Lamb!’ (Revelation 7:9-10).

So, how many make it to heaven?

What Do You Think?

a. Is it true that you are going to heaven? What scriptures do you use to prove it?

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How many angels can dance on the head of a pin?

The question is perplexing. Does this mean that people think angels are microscopic?

So before we can answer it, we need to determine an angel’s size. Hebrews 13:2 tells us, “Do not forget to entertain strangers, for by so doing some have unwittingly entertained angels.” Therefore angels are about our height. If you are unable to remain on a pin while you dance, then you already know the answer to this one!

What Do You Think?

a. You might ask, “Can God create a rock so heavy that he can’t lift it?” Would an answer of Yes or No make any difference to you?

b. Are theses types of questions based on real life situations? Why do people ask these questions?

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If there’s no time in heaven, then what is forever?

There is time in heaven. In Revelation 6:9-11, we find people who have been martyred for their faith. They asked how long until their deaths are avenged. They were told to wait a little longer. So they are aware of the passage of time, must have patience, and still must wait some more.

Revelation 8:1 tells us, “there was silence in heaven for about half an hour.” Again, people in heaven were aware of the time.

Revelation 11:18 tells about the twenty-four elders in heaven saying that the “time” of the dead, that they should be judged, is coming. In heaven, people acknowledge that there is an order of expected events to occur, and that each event will take time to transpire.

Elsewhere in Revelation there was silence in heaven for about an hour. Consciousness of the passage of time is present in heaven.

Don’t forget that when Christ returns to Earth, the saints will return with him. God will dwell with his people on Earth (Revelation 21:3). The heavenly Jerusalem will come to Earth (Revelation 21:1-2). God will transform the Earth and we will live on it.

There is nothing wrong with time on Earth now, and there will be nothing wrong with using time to schedule things in the new Earth, either.

What Do You Think?

a. Some people have theorized that since heaven is for ever, there must not be any sense of time there. The Bible has flatly shown us that the inhabitants of heaven experience the passage of time. Do you have any other ideas of the Bible that are based on theories that were not first checked against the Bible? How can you find out?

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Why isn’t it okay to exalt or worship angels?

The Bible assures us that Jesus is more excellent than any angel, and deserves all of our honor and worship. Look at these fascinating facts found in Hebrews 1-2:

Jesus has inherited a more excellent name that they – no angel is called a Son, only Jesus.

No commandment is given to worship angels, but the angels are pointedly commanded to worship the Son.

Angels are spirits created to minister, but Jesus has been exalted to reign on the throne. No angel has been told to sit at the right hand of God, only Jesus has that place.

When angels carried words of warning to the ancient Israelites, God followed through on their words. He will follow through in a greater way over the words of Jesus – especially if we neglect “so great salvation.” In that case, our judgment will be severe.

The world to come will not be subject to angels, but to the Son. It is Jesus who suffered and died for our sins, not angels. Jesus became like us, flesh and blood, and tasted death for every man, not angels.

We were created to have fellowship with God and be given as gifts to his Son, not to angels.

Jesus does not give aid to angels but to us who are of the seed of Abraham, of those who believe.

Jesus is superior to angels in every way. When Jesus healed a blind man, he worshiped Jesus (John 9:38). Jesus did not refuse the worship. But when John tried to worship an angel, he was rebuked when the angel told him, “See that you do not do that! I am your fellow servant, and of your brethren who have the testimony of Jesus. Worship God! for the testimony of Jesus is the spirit of prophecy” (Revelation 19:10b).

The Bible’s theme is Jesus. To worship the angels is to pervert the testimony of God and of angels.

What Do You Think?

a. If God is greater than his creation, and has all power to help us, then why would someone worship angels?

b. When Jesus tells his followers to pray to God (Matthew 6:9-13, John 16:23) and not angels, is it still okay to talk to angels? Why or why not?

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Do we have a guardian angel?

 

From time to time God has sent an angel to bear specific messages or perform timely works for certain people, but we seldom read of angels that remain for long periods of time with an individual. For instance, we find God sending an angel to speak to Mary. Evidently Mary did not have an angel on hand to speak to her immediately: “And in the sixth month the angel Gabriel was sent from God unto a city of Galilee, named Nazareth, to a virgin espoused to a man whose name was Joseph, of the house of David; and the virgin’s name was Mary” (Luke 1:26-27).

Repeatedly we find in the OT God sending angels to speak to his prophets. God sent an angel to guide Moses through the desert (Exodus 23:20). God sent an angel to hold the mouths of the lions lest they eat Daniel (Daniel 6:22). He sent another angel when Daniel prayed fervently. Several times angels were sent to punish Israel with death (1 Chronicles 21:15). Angels were sent to Mary, Joseph, and Zacharias to tell them about the coming of the Christ child (Luke 1:30, Matthew 1:20, Luke 1:11). Their being sent implies that Mary and the others were not already accompanied by any angels.

Based on the earlier verses, what doctrines of a guardian angel does the Bible develop? None. None of the angel visits were for the purpose of lifelong companionship with humans. Yet people usually claim the following verse supports the idea of guardian angels: “Take heed that ye despise not one of these little ones; for I say unto you, That in heaven their angels do always behold the face of my Father which is in heaven” (Matthew 18:10). Yet there are no doctrines about guardian angels in that verse. We know only that certain angels are looking at God. If they are looking at God, then they are in heaven, not on earth. Perhaps they are looking to God in a state of alertness, ready to act on his orders. We don’t have enough scriptural support to develop this further.

(Some Christians think they have a good angel on one shoulder and a bad angel on the other. Scripture does not support this view, but it does support the idea of internal fighting between the flesh and the Spirit.)

Hebrews 1:14 tells us that angels are to minister to us, although it stops short of telling us that they are always with us: “Are they not all ministering spirits, sent forth to minister for them who shall be heirs of salvation?” If the OT is any guide, any angels who minister to us would be sent by God at special times to do their work, then depart.

Many have taken comfort in the idea of angels taking care of them: “The angel of the LORD encampeth round about them that fear him, and delivereth them” (Psalms 34:7). Frequently, the phrase “the angel of the LORD” is speaking of the presence of God on earth. Scriptural teaches the idea of God dwelling in those who obey him (John 14:20-23), and the Holy Spirit dwelling in us (John 14:17).

Do we have a guardian angel? Scripture does not tell us that a particular angel has been assigned to us. However, we do know that God has sent angels to help his people in particularly trying times. Even better yet, we have the Holy Spirit, a member of the Godhead himself, dwelling in his people at all times!

What Do You Think?

a. Do you still believe in guardian angels after reading the above? If yes, why?

b. Why do people believe in guardian angels?

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Aren’t cherubim angels?

Here is a description of the cherubim as seen by Ezekiel the prophet:

And I looked, and, behold, a whirlwind came out of the north, a great cloud, and a fire infolding itself, and a brightness was about it, and out of the midst thereof as the colour of amber, out of the midst of the fire. Also out of the midst thereof came the likeness of four living creatures.

And this was their appearance; they had the likeness of a man. And every one had four faces, and every one had four wings. And their feet were straight feet; and the sole of their feet was like the sole of a calf’s foot: and they sparkled like the colour of burnished brass.

And they had the hands of a man under their wings on their four sides; and they four had their faces and their wings. Their wings were joined one to another; they turned not when they went; they went every one straight forward. As for the likeness of their faces, they four had the face of a man, and the face of a lion, on the right side: and they four had the face of an ox on the left side; they four also had the face of an eagle.

Thus were their faces: and their wings were stretched upward; two wings of every one were joined one to another, and two covered their bodies (Ezekiel 1:4-11).

The cherubim (plural for cherub) are always seen around the figure of God. Many people call them angels, but a cherub and an angel have distinct differences. Here are several reasons why they are not angels.

Cherubim are never called angels in the Bible.

Angels are messengers. They have delivered messages to men and women on behalf of God. Cherubim seldom have spoken to people.

Angels are called out from heaven to earth to do God’s work. Cherubim never go out from the presence of God.

Cherubim have wings. Angels are never described as having wings. Perhaps the early artists painted angels with wings because they figured cherubim were angels. Yet cherubim have four or six wings, not two.

These are some of the ways cherubim are different from angels.

What Do You Think?

a. We’ve all seen the cute images and statues of cherub figures. Do those images match up with the description of Ezekiel, who actually saw a cherub? Are those baby-like cherub figures real?

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Why do so many scientists believe in the Flood account?

Scientists study cause and effect. If there was a world-wide flood over the earth, then it would have left striking marks upon the earth. By piecing together many different discoveries over time, scientists have been able to construct a possible scenario of Flood events. In the Beginning, by Walt Brown, chronicles many of these studies. Here are a few memorable highlights.

According to the Bible, the “fountains of the deep” broke up. Water spurt out of the ocean with such force that it escaped our atmosphere and kept going. That’s where we get our comets, which have the same water type as our oceans. (No comets have ever been observed to come from outside our solar system – only from within.)

Much of that water rained back down, some as snow upon the north where the mammoths were snowed under, food still in their mouths and bellies, uneaten or undigested. No mammoth can live in snow – modern elephants must keep moving around to hunt for food in order to grow, so how much more an elephant-like mammoth? There is just not enough food in the frozen tundra to keep any mammoths alive, much less grow to such a great size. In the past, the far north was warm and food was plentiful for them.

The water escaping Earth’s atmosphere hit the moon, causing many of the craters you see today. Remember that there were no high mountains in Noah’s day. The mountains were formed during the great cataclysmic time of the Flood, and after.

Every major mountain range on earth contains fossilized sea life – far above sea level. The author has found fossils of sea life a few miles from Mount Ararat, more than a mile above sea level. Several states above the Grand Canyon were filled with water for some time after the Flood. A dam in the south finally broke, gushing gigantic torrents of water southward. That water plowed into ground still somewhat softened after the Flood, and easily carved its way south to form the Grand Canyon.

These findings and more are still accumulating as scientists pursue this fascinating subject of the Flood aftermath.

What Do You Think?

a. If a world-wide flood actually occurred, shouldn’t there be aftereffects to prove it’s existence?

b. If you were a scientist, would you be excited to find scientific evidences that prove your faith?

c. Should the Bible contradict science? Why or why not?

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Don’t reason and faith contradict each other?

People ask this question because they have an erroneous definition of faith. They think that faith means to believe something without proof. The Bible never uses that definition. On the contrary, the God who said, “Come, let us reason together,” left many proofs to build up our faith. Faith is knowing something is true. Biblical faith is not about hoping something is true, or wanting to believe something is true.

For instance, the first-century Israelites were not believing on Jesus as their Messiah without proof. The gospel of John (chapters 6-7) records people’s conversations as they compared scriptures to determine whether Jesus was the one God promised to send. God had given highly specific prophecies of the coming Savior to help them recognize him when he came. Reason led many to faith in Jesus.

Many Christians grow in their faith throughout their lifetimes. Their growth in faith parallels the way anyone develops a firm confidence in another person. When a friend keeps following through on her promises, then that background gives us the basis for confidence in her future promises. Similarly, when we obey the scriptures and find God following through, we grow in confidence. We even grow to trust his wisdom in areas that we don’t understand ourselves.

This faith grows because of experiences accumulated over time. When your mechanic successfully fixes your car over the years at a fair price, your confidence in his ability is strengthened. You learn to trust him with the more inexplicable workings of the car, or more difficult challenges. Other people who don’t have this confidence in their mechanic will claim that your faith has no proof. This is the accusation laid at the feet of Christians who are trusting in the wisdom of a God who has followed through over the years faithfully. Tragically, many church-goers never grow in faith over the decades. In too many cases, these individuals cannot point to any working of God in their lives, so their trust is in an institution. Instead of being able to give a personal testimony of God working in their lives (as Paul did in Acts 26), they merely point to their church institution, or declare that they belong to a particular denomination. Theirs is more of a culture of religion rather than biblical faith.

Faith does not contradict reason. The Creator who created our minds created us to use our reasoning faculties to understand him and grow in a relationship with him.

What Do You Think?

a. Faith is not the only word redefined by the world. Some other words are “priest,” “church,” and “saint.” Do you know the way the Bible defines these words?

b.If people tell you to reject Christianity because faith and reason are contradictory, would you still consider their claim true? Why or why not?

c. Is it refreshing to discover that God wants us to use our reasoning faculties to come to faith in him?

d. Do you know that God has given us enough proofs to bring us into full faith and trust in him?

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Since our chromosomes are similar to an ape’s, isn’t that enough evidence that humans and apes share a common ancestor?

Shared design is not the same thing as shared ancestry. An evolutionist naturally sees all life from the framework of evolution. He interprets data from that standpoint. He sees similar chromosomes in apes and humans and draws the conclusion of shared ancestry. The data itself is indisputable, but the conclusion is pure conjecture. Is that conclusion the only one?

The data also indicates shared design, not shared ancestry. For example, rival software makers share the same pull-down menu structure as the Windows operating system. Does that prove that Windows evolved into those programs? The similarity of design indicates that software programmers have found the design useful in their applications.

A similarity between apes and humans does not indicate evolution. It does infer a re-use of a perfectly good design element adapted in a different model. Honda continues to build it’s passenger vehicles on four wheels just like Toyota does simply because it’s good design.

What Do You Think?

a. When you find that two things are similar, do you automatically think they had the same source, like two cups of a different design, two plates of a different design, or two forks of different designs? Why or why not?

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