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Month: August 2023

In Tribulation Times, You Need to Be Patient, Persevering, and Preaching

By Steven J. Hogan

~ A Saturday Morning Post #283 ~

It won’t be long before Jesus Christ, the Son of God, comes back to rapture the church, judge the world, and begin His 1000-year reign on earth. But these days and years leading up to Christ’s return are becoming increasingly difficult and dangerous. Thankfully, our loving Father gives us all the grace we need. Not only that, but He told us what will be taking place, and how we are to live for Him during these turbulent times. Today, I’m focusing on how we are to live, specifically that we are to be patient, persevering, and preaching.

James 5:7-9 – “Be patient, brethren, until the coming of the Lord. The farmer waits for the precious produce of the soil, being patient about it, until it gets the early and the late rains. You too be patient, strengthen your hearts, for the coming of the Lord is near.” Christ’s 1st coming took place about 2000 years ago, and that we’re now living in the end-times means His 2nd coming is very, very near (Heb. 10:37). And God wants you to be preaching and patient until the coming of His Son.  

What does it mean to be patient? A patient person has a long temper, he is willing to suffer for a long time. This word patience usually has to do with people, not events or circumstances. You are wronged by someone, you are discriminated against, you are taken advantage of, or you are being persecuted, and you don’t get angry, you don’t retaliate, but instead you endure. Being patient with unsaved and unrighteous people is a godly and loving response. “Love is patient.” 1 Cor. 13:4

Why should you be patient? Because God is still saving people, and He wants you to be patient until that last soul is saved, until Christ comes back to rapture the church. Being from Iowa, I understand what James says about farmers being patient until the harvest. Did you know that corn is planted in April but it’s not harvested until October, six months later? Like farmers, we must patiently wait until it’s just the right time to reap the harvest, when Christ returns to rapture the church.  

A key to being patient is to be spiritually strong. In the tribulation days of the end-times, there will be opposition, hardships, and persecution like you’ve never seen before. You will need God’s strength to not only endure, to persevere, but to encourage the saints, to be sharing the gospel, to keep going for Jesus until you see Him coming in the clouds. “… encouraging one another, and all the more as you see the day drawing near.” Heb. 10:25  

Then there’s the example of the prophets “who spoke in the name of the Lord”, who suffered and patiently persevered. God gives us His promise – “We count those blessed who endured. You have… seen the outcome of the Lord’s dealings, that the Lord is full of compassion and is merciful” (James 5:10-11). God is compassionate and merciful towards you as you suffer for Him in the last years of this evil age, and then in the ages to come, He will give you great glory and blessings. 2 Cor. 4:17

2 Peter 3:9 – The Lord is not slow about His promise, as some count slowness, but is patient towards you, not wishing for any to perish but for all to come to repentance” (2 Pet. 3:9). Like James 5:5-7, this is also in the context of Christ’s coming. In the end-times, unbelievers will mock us and sneer at us – “Where is the promise of His coming?” In view of their unbelief, God wants you to know two things: 1) The flood destroyed the world in the days of Noah and, so too, the world will be judged and destroyed in the day of Christ. 2) God is patient and delays His justice, for He knows many people will repent of their sins and turn to Christ for forgiveness in the final years leading up to His coming.

Before Christ comes to judge the world, He will be rescuing the lost. So until He returns, be patient like God is patient, pray for unbelievers, and share the gospel with them in hopes that some will be saved from their sins. “What sort of people ought you to be in holy conduct and godliness, looking for and hastening the coming of the day of God?” 2 Peter 3:11-12

Matthew 24:9-14 – “… You will be hated by all nations… many will fall away and betray one another… Many false prophets will arise… lawlessness is increased… the one who endures to the end will be saved… This gospel of the kingdom shall be preached in the whole world.” Jesus summarizes what will be taking place during these super-trying, great-tribulation days. So-called believers will defect, evil will be running rampant, and Christians will be greatly hated, betrayed, and killed for their faith in Christ. How are you to respond to all this? You are to endure, to persevere, to keep preaching the gospel. And “… then the end will come,” at which time those Christians still alive on earth will be raptured.

Luke 21:12-19 “They will lay their hands on you, and persecute you… It will lead to an opportunity for your testimony… I will give you utterance and wisdom… you will be betrayed even by parents, brothers, relatives, and friends, and they will put some of you to death… By your endurance you will gain your lives.” This too is in the context of the end-times. And we learn the same things as the previous passages, that you will be persecuted, that you are to share the gospel, and that you are to endure, to patiently persevere until you are with Jesus, whether that’s by martyrdom or rapture. 

The message in these four end-times’ passages is purposely repeated, and for good reason. Because these three points, patience, perseverance, and preaching, are keys to successfully living for the Lord. But it’s not just when times get really tough – this lesson is relevant today. “Do this, knowing the time, that it is already the hour for you to awaken from sleep; for now salvation is nearer to us than when we believed. The night is almost gone, and the day is near.” Rom. 13:11-12

We have been witnessing the rapid spiritual decline of the world these past few years. I know I’ve been surprised by how fast this world is going dark, is going down. There is no doubt that the day is near. Most of you can see that Christians are increasingly being hated and would say that full scale persecution is coming soon. Yes, many of us will be treading the valley of the shadow of death before we see the Lord (Ps. 23:4). And what does God tell us? Now is the time to preach the gospel, to be patient, and to persevere, all the way until the coming of Christ. “Go make disciples of all the nations… lo, I am with you always, even to the end of this age.” Matt. 28:19-20

P.S. I have shared on three things that God wants us to be doing during these tribulation times, but God has told us much more. Here is a post and an article that summarizes what God wants us to do – “How Then Should We Live in the End-Times?”, and “What Does God Want Me to Do in the End-Times?”

Now Is Not the Time for Justice, But for Mercy

By Steven J. Hogan

~ A Saturday Morning Post #282 ~

This world is full of criminals and crime – and as you know, God has tasked the governing authorities with the job of pursuing justice with lawbreakers (Rom. 13:1-7). A recent and continuing problem in this country is the government’s increasing lack of dealing with crime and carrying out true justice. Conservative newscasts and podcasts give numerous examples of an unrighteous justice system, of gross injustice, and of criminals running free.

Sinful / criminal behavior is ignored, excused, and even promoted by individuals, groups, and governments (Rom. 1:32). Many are calling evil good, and good evil (Is. 5:20). And many are targeting Christians and Christian nationalists, saying they are “the problem”. More than ever before, they are being mocked, cancelled, persecuted, and arrested. It’s insane, it’s crazy, it’s of the devil.

What is a Christian to do? We can hope for justice in the courts. We can ask politicians to carry out existing laws or pass new ones. We can spend time promoting a candidate for the next election, in hopes that he will bring about change. But the real answer isn’t found in the government, a politician, or a judge. “Do not put your trust in princes, in mortal men… How blessed is he whose help is the God of Jacob, whose hope is in the Lord… who executes justice for the oppressed…” Ps. 146:3-7

I’m not saying we shouldn’t want justice to prevail, for the government to do their job, but that’s not our primary purpose. And it’s surely not pushing some political agenda or placing some person in office. It’s reaching out to the lost, it’s telling them the gospel, that they have sinned, but that Jesus Christ died to pay for their sins and then was raised from the dead, and that they can be forgiven of their sins if they repent and believe in Christ.

Isn’t this what Jesus said in John 3:16-17? He told us that His Father sent Him into the world, not to judge the world but “that the world might be saved through Him.” Jesus is offering salvation and eternal life to whoever believes in Him. Isn’t this your mission too, to tell people how they can be saved and become children of God? Yet we get caught up into thinking this country needs the justice of man when what this country really needs is the mercy of God.

Why spend so much time thinking about someone possibly being indicted for a few of his crimes against man? Again, the real and greatest problem is a person’s innumerable sins against the living and holy God, resulting in an eternal and painful punishment (Rom. 6:23, Eph. 2:1-2, Matt. 25:41, 46). Again, the only answer to this problem is Jesus Christ. So shouldn’t we focus our energy on telling people that God wants to grant them mercy for their many and terrible sins against Him? Yes, yes, yes, for this is the gospel message, the most important message in the world!!! Matt. 24:14, John 1:12-13, Acts 20:24, Eph. 2:8-9

Here are some key points on this subject of justice and mercy:
1. Remember Jesus’ purpose when He was on earth. He didn’t go around judging sinners, but He loved them and shared the gospel with them – He wanted them to experience His mercy, and not His wrath. Hear what Jesus said about unbelievers on this earth – “If anyone hears My sayings and does not keep them, I do not judge him, for I did not come to judge the world, but to save the world.” John 12:47, Mark 1:15, John 5:24, Luke 19:10
2. Be like Jesus, and don’t be judging people. Pray for them, with hopes that God will grant them repentance and faith (2 Tim. 2:24-26). Love those who are lost and look for open doors so you can share the gospel with them. Col. 4:2-6

3. Pray for those in authority to be saved, and that they would be “an avenger who brings wrath on the one who practices evil.” 1 Tim. 2:1-2, Rom. 13:4
4. Don’t be angry when there’s a lack of justice. Trust God and do good. Ps. 37:1, 8
5. During this church age, God delays justice for sinners in general because He wants to save sinners in particular. So be patient. James 5:7-9, 2 Pet. 3:9

6. Imperfect, man-made governments are to punish evildoers, but no matter what happens, God will, in due time, perfectly carry out true justice towards all unrepentant sinners. For example, there’s the Day of the Lord at the end of this age – Rev. 16:4-7, and the lake of fire at the end of the millennial kingdom age – Rev. 20:11-15
7. Aspects of God’s justice are recorded in the Bible to keep us sober and to remind us that God is holy and that He judges sin. Numbers 16:1-50, the Prophets, Acts 12:20-23, Rom. 1:18
8. God raises up evil people and rulers, often withholding justice for a period of time, so that His divine and eternal purposes are fulfilled. Pharaoh greatly persecuted God’s people, but finally he was killed. “For this very purpose I raised you up, to demonstrate My power in you, and that My name might be proclaimed throughout the whole earth.” Rom. 9:17-18

9. True justice is dealt out by God at different times, but the full measure of His justice does not take place on earth, but in Hades (Luke 16:23), and then in the lake of fire. “Death and Hades were thrown into the lake of fire.” Rev. 20:13-15. Note Rev. 19:20 with respect to the Antichrist and the false prophet.
10. Don’t be like Jonah. He wanted justice, but God wanted mercy. Jonah was mad that the wicked Ninevites didn’t get the justice they deserved, but he should have been glad that God showed them undeserved mercy. Jonah 3-4

It’s vitally important that you understand this message. We are living in the end-times and from now until the coming of Christ, injustice will gradually and increasingly get worse for Christians. More and more we will be hated, arrested, persecuted, and even killed (Matt. 24:9, Rev. 6:9-11). But you must have hope, you must know that what you go through for Jesus Christ will be infinitely worth it, for “momentary light affliction is producing for us an eternal weight of glory far beyond all comparison.” 2 Cor. 5:17

P.S. You can’t live rightly for God if you don’t properly understand sin and how you are to think of it with regards to your life and the lives of others. Here are three more posts about sin and salvation: “In a Wicked World, You Have to Have Hope”, “A Sin-Wrecked World and the Coming of Christ”, “Living with Evil in the End-Times.”