Tuesday, 17 June 2014

Filling Holes

I was disturbed to read comments by Lana Del Rey in an interview she gave to The Guardian, a UK newspaper. According to the artiste, there is something glamourous about dying young. She also stated that she wasn't enjoying the success she had achieved from her music. According to her, her life was in a terrible state and she couldn't understand the people who thought she had an enviable life. I haven't heard anything from her issuing a disclaimer with regards to those comments or saying it was some sort of publicity stunt so I'll accept that those comments reflect her state of mind at this present moment in time. For one so young and successful with the world at her feet, the words are definitely surprising. Also, the words are not so surprising.

I honestly believe that success and accomplishments are not meant to define us or to bring us joy and lasting fulfilment. While success might make us temporarily happy, they are not meant to bring about lasting joy. The mantra being pushed today tells us to push as hard as we can to attain and achieve. While attainment and achievement are good, without great relationships with those around us, achievement and attainment can be a little flat. Attainment and achievement should be measured by the metric of us having achieved our goal. If we look to achievement and attainment to determine our joy, we will be left with a flatness because if we look around long enough, we will always find someone who has achieved and attained more than we have. That is the swift road to depression. While there is nothing wrong with seeking to achieve or attain, it should be tempered with the knowledge that life is more than achieving or attaining.

I believe relationships are very important. I also believe a relationship with the one who loved us and sent his son to die for us is the most important relationship we can ever have. I believe there is a God-sized hole in each and every one of us and only God can fill it. We live in a fallen world which brings pain, despair and heartache. Some people try to fill the whole with drugs, sex and any other thing that comes to mind and they call it pleasure. In the end, there are those who can no longer bear the emptiness that attainment and achievement bring and end up taking their own lives. There are those who continue, feeling the emptiness but able to keep it under control.


I understand that a belief has become unfashionable and will probably soon be illegal if some had their way. C. S. Lewis was the one who said that the pain we go through in life is God’s megaphone through which he calls out to us. Everyone wants to be loved by the people they love. God is no different. He wants to be loved and fill the ache and emptiness in our lives. Every day he calls out to us, watching for our response, hoping to have the chance to heal our hurts and soothe our pains. If only we could hear him and turn to him. There is nothing glamourous about death, whether at a young age or not. And death with knowing God is not something I want for anyone. Not the New Age god being peddled about but the God who is strong, mighty, powerful, yet still loving. I wish Lana all the best. Even more, I wish she could hear the voice of the God who loves her through her pain.  






JC Cruz is the author of DECEPTIO published by WestBowPress, a division of Thomas Nelson publishers, http://bookstore.westbowpress.com/Products/SKU000194087/Deceptio.aspx and LOST, BUT FOUND available at http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00DPLLEUQ/. You can follow him on Twitter @Cruz_JCReal.  

Friday, 13 June 2014

AMAZING GRACE

Judas Iscariot was one of Jesus twelve original disciples. From the accounts in the Bible, he was also something of the treasurer who kept the purse of the group. We are told in accounts of the story of the woman who broke the contents of her alabaster box on Jesus feet even as she wept on them and wiped them with her tears how Judas was offended by the act. According to him it was a waste of money. People have deduced from the account that he was probably skimming from the money but the Bible says nothing about that. He probably just a skinflint and couldn’t bear to see such waste. However Judas was one of the twelve and he followed Jesus for three and a half years and saw all the miracles and wonders that Jesus did. However in Luke 23:2 we are told “Then entered Satan into Judas surnamed Iscariot, being of the number of the twelve.”

A few months ago, I got into conversation with Bart Millard, the lead singer of the Christian group, MercyMe on Twitter. They were about to release their latest album Welcome To The New and he was twitting about his new understanding of grace. I follow him and the band on Twitter so I get his words first hand. I must confess that I was disturbed by his words which is what made me start a conversation with him. I wasn’t the only one who felt disturbed by his comments and I was disturbed by the way he dismissed words from the Bible that didn’t fit the narrative he was pushing. According to him, once you become a Christian you can’t draw back or backslide because of grace. In the end, I cut to the chase and asked him if what he was saying is that once saved, always saved. He said yes.

I believe that grace is powerful. I believe that grace is powerful enough to keep us from falling. The Bible says God works in us to will and to do of his good pleasure. Simply it means God works in us so that we desire and want to do his will. Therefore God works in us so that we desire to do his will. Does it mean that God overrides our will? No. He just works in us so that we know and desire to do what is right. Even when we know what is right to do because of God’s spirit in us, he still will not force us to do it. Knowing the right thing to do and doing it are two different things.

Grace cannot force. The Bible tells us that it is God’s desire that all men be saved. But do we see all men being saved? Paul said he would glory in his infirmities so that the power of God would be more at work in his life. That meant that more grace would be available to him. The book of Proverbs tells us that God gives more grace to the humble while he resists the proud. Therefore I believe while grace is powerful, we have a part to play for grace to work in our lives. While even when we walk in rebellion grace is made available to us. However we cannot make use of the grace available until we leave our rebellion behind. We need to receive the grace and accept it to work. I have never heard of a situation where you can use something you have not received. While in rebellion grace will keep calling us back to God but it will not force. That is not in God’s nature. Jesus never forced men rather he persuaded men. The Holy Spirit does the same.

Just like most things in life, I believe that salvation can be lost. Jesus said his soul would have no pleasure in any man who puts his hand on the plough and looking back. We are asked to work out our salvation with fear and trembling. If it was something that could not be lost, why would the Bible ask us work out our salvation? Why would the Bible ask us to watch and pray? Why would the Bible ask us to watch lest we fall? God loves us and he wants us to love him back. He wants us to be involved in our own salvation. The idea that we have no part to play while the grace us God just takes us to our salvation I believe is wrong. I do not believe in once saved, always saved. Grace does not exclude responsibility.






JC Cruz is the author of DECEPTIO published by WestBowPress, a division of Thomas Nelson publishers.http://bookstore.westbowpress.com/Products/SKU000194087/Deceptio.aspx and LOST, BUT FOUND available at http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00DPLLEUQ/. You can follow him on Twitter @Cruz_JCReal 


Wednesday, 11 June 2014

LOST, BUT FOUND (EXCERPT)

“Mr. Carlisle asked if you could please join him in the meeting room,” his secretary said.
“Did he say now?” Greg asked, thinking about all that he had to do. He didn’t think he could take out time to attend a meeting. But he had to of course.
“Yes, he did.”
“Did he say anything about what the meeting is about?”
“Of course not.” His secretary’s tone said that it was none of her business and that she didn’t concern herself with things that were none of her business.
Greg sighed. “Thank you Gloria,” he said before hanging up.
A few minutes later he was walking down the corridor toward the meeting room with the report he had been reading in his hand. He might still get a chance to read it while the meeting was going on. He raised his hand and turned the knob and pushed the door in. The door opened and he looked into the room and stopped in his tracks.
Sitting around the rectangular table that took up most of the space in the room, were all the members of the board of trustees. The only vacant seat was opposite Bob Carlisle who sat at the head of the table.
“I’m sorry,” Greg said, standing at the door, “I didn’t know I was supposed to attend a meeting today. I don’t remember being told about a meeting.”
“Don’t worry about it Greg, just come on in,” Bob Carlisle said, a slight smile on his face.
Greg walked slowly into the room and closed the door behind him. He wondered why he suddenly felt uneasy about the whole meeting thing. In the past few months, he had rarely got to meet with the members of the trustees’ board and now here they all were looking at him and trying to pretend they were engrossed  with the papers on the table in front of them.
“Sit down Greg,” Bob said pointing to the vacant chair, looking at some papers on the table before him.
Greg sat down in the chair. He looked round the room at the other men sitting around the table but it seemed no one wanted to look at him. Bob Carlisle cleared his throat and Greg looked at him.
“We understand that you seem to be doing quite well in getting up to speed about your responsibilities at the church,” Bob began. “We are quite pleased at how you seem to have fitted in so easily into the way things are done here. We know that you probably have your own ideas about how things need to run and we are grateful that you’ve adapted to the way things run and not tried to rock the boat. Bill Wilkinson speaks quite highly of you,” Bob added with a slight smile.
Instead of making him feel relaxed, the compliment actually made him feel more nervous. It was like the gift before you were stabbed between the shoulder blades. “Thank you,” he said. “I think quite highly of him too.”
“As you know, Bill will be retiring in a couple of month’s time,” Bob continued, wiping sweat from his face with a thick towel, “and you will be taking over from him. We have always believed that out of the people we interviewed, you were the person best suited for the job of pastor here and that position has not changed. However, we have come to believe that there needs to be something more.”
Greg couldn’t be absolutely certain but if anyone had asked him, he would have said that his heart stopped for a few seconds after that. Thoughts and pictures began going through his mind. Were they saying that the job was no longer his? Were they saying that after nearly four months of telling him that he was the person they wanted, they no longer thought he was the right person? If they had been having second thoughts, why had they let him waste his time?
Trying to suppress the thoughts, he shook his head. Moistening his dry lips with his tongue to tried to focus on the issue at hand. He shifted in his chair, trying to get more comfortable. “I thought you just said that I was the best person for the job? I don’t understand. What has changed?” he asked, trying to keep his voice calm.
“We believe that while a person might have a calling to be a pastor and the gifts to go with it but that is not enough.”
Greg turned to look at Prentiss Marshall’s sallow face. “So what else is needed?”
“As Paul told Timothy, one of the qualities of a man who desires the office or bishop or deacon must be that he is a man who has control over his family,” Prentiss said.
“Yes,” Greg said, still not understanding where this was all going.
“Therefore would you say that you are a man who has control over his family?” another person asked.
Greg couldn’t remember the name of the person who had just asked the question but remembering his name was the least of his concerns. “I don’t understand what you mean by “control”,” he said.
“Do your wife and your daughter obey you?” Prentiss Marshall asked. “Does your wife submit to you? Or does she believe in women’s rights and believes you can’t tell her what to do? Is your daughter unruly and does she believe she doesn’t need to obey your commands?”
The questions came at him quickly without giving him a chance to answer the previous one. “You make it sound as if I’m supposed to be some kind of dictator who goes about issuing orders everyone has to obey,” he said, trying to stay calm. “I don’t think that is the way Paul meant it.”
“Are you aware that your daughter has been going out with an undesirable boy by the name of Peter Carver for the past 3 or 4 months?” Peter Reed asked.
To say Greg was stunned was an understatement. Jessie had a boyfriend? To be honest, the only friend he knew that his daughter had was Anna and that was because she had been to the house a few times. This was the first he was hearing that Jessie had a boyfriend. And it wasn’t nice hearing about it from other people.
“No.”
“So, don’t you think that who your daughter goes out with should be something that you are concerned about?” Thomas Reed continued. “Especially since cannot be too careful in this age of sexual permissiveness.”
“Are you implying that my daughter is sleeping around?” Greg asked him through gritted teeth.
“I am not implying anything,” the other man said. “But the fact is that the boy isn’t even saved and we all know what boys his age are capable of.”
“Does your wife know about this relationship?” Bob Carlisle asked.
Greg was immediately about to answer “no” but he stopped himself. He couldn’t really be sure if she did or not. “I don’t know.”
The men all looked at each other. “So, what you’re saying is that your wife knows about your daughter’s boyfriend but she refused to tell you about it?” Prentiss Marshall asked.
Greg wanted to deny immediately that Ruth knew anything about it. Again he was stopped by the fact that he wasn’t sure. He couldn’t vouch that she didn’t know anything about it. “I don’t know if she knows about it.”
“So you admit that there is a possibility that you wife knows about it and is keeping that fact from you?” the other man questioned.
“You make it sound like a fact,” Greg complained.
“I didn’t say it was a fact,” the other man said with something close to a smug smile on his face. “I only asked if there was a possibility that your wife knew about your daughter’s undesirable relationship and was keeping it from you.”
“You need to answer the question Greg,” Bob Carlisle said.
“There is a possibility,” Greg answered reluctantly. He would be the first to confess that he was ashamed. He was ashamed that he had been so caught up in his work and what he thought God wanted him to do that he had neglected his own daughter. He couldn’t remember the last time they had really talked. He had left everything to Ruth because he had felt that what he was doing was more important. Now he was finding out that other people knew more about his family than he did.
“What does your wife have against Bill Wilkinson?” Bob Carlisle asked.
“Excuse me?” Greg said.
“I asked what Bill Wilkinson had done to offend your wife?” he said, repeating the question.
“He hasn’t done anything to her....,” Greg began.
“Then why does she dislike him almost to the point of hatred?” Thomas Reed asked cutting him off.
Greg shook his head as he tried to clear it. “She doesn’t hate him ...,” he denied.   
“Then why does she refuse to talk with him?” Thomas Reed said, cutting him off again. “He said that he had made efforts to talk to her to resolve whatever differences there might be between them but she has rebuffed him.”
“I haven’t heard anything about that,” Greg said truthfully. “We went to their place for lunch some months back and I know that my wife was angry about something she heard from someone about Bill but I never knew that there had been any moves to settle issues between them.”
“Tell us about this story your wife heard,” Prentiss Marshall asked. “What was it all about?”
“I really don’t know much about it,” Greg said lying. “It was something to do about what a former member of the church said about Bill.” He wasn’t going to be the one to tell them about the allegation that Bill had referred to the woman’s unborn child as a bastard. Especially when there was no proof.
“So your wife decided to believe the word of a former member who might be bitter over an imaginary slight?” Prentiss Marshall concluded. “So she thinks that Bill could have done what this woman accused him of without hearing his own side of the story? So she decided to act as judge and jury and find him guilty? That doesn’t sound very Christian to me.”
This whole thing was getting out of hand Greg thought. Going by the questions and the revelations, it seemed he was the only one in his family the men had a good opinion of. Actually, they had a terrible opinion of him as well. While they thought he had the qualities of a great pastor, they also thought he was ineffectual as a husband and father and that he was someone who did not have “control” over his family. They thought his wife was not submissive and not worthy of being called a Christian. And worst of all, they thought his daughter was sleeping around.
Bob Carlisle coughed. “As I said at the start of this meeting, we believe that you are the best person to be the pastor of the church. However, we feel that there are certain issues that need to be resolved with your family before we can in good conscience recommend you for the job permanently. You do understand don’t you?”
Greg nodded. “I understand.”




JC Cruz is the author of DECEPTIO published by WestBowPress, a division of Thomas Nelson publishers.http://bookstore.westbowpress.com/Products/SKU000194087/Deceptio.aspx and LOST, BUT FOUND available at http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00DPLLEUQ/. You can follow him on Twitter @Cruz_JCReal

Monday, 9 June 2014

CALLED TO BE GODLY


In the book I Samuel Chapter 8, we see a familiar story. The prophet Samuel had ruled the nation of Israel as a judge. He was God’s representative to the people of Israel. He was the visible representative of an invisible God. He was the one who relayed God’s mind and heart to the people of Israel. In Chapter of I Samuel, the people gather together in something of a coup. They tell Samuel that they no longer want him to rule over them but that they want a king like the other nations round about them. One could say that a mitigating factor in all this was the fact that both of Samuel’s sons, one of whom could be expected to take over from him, were totally unfit for the job. Samuel took the decision hard and he went to God. He wondered why the people were rejecting him. But God told him that it wasn’t really a rejection of Samuel as it appeared on the face of things but it was actually a rejection of God. The nation of Israel didn’t want to be different from the nations around them by being ruled by a righteous and holy God. They didn’t like different. They wanted same.

I read this article (http://www.esgetology.com/2014/06/04/baccalaureate-vespers-2014/) a few weeks ago thanks to Mollie Hemingway (@MZHemingway). I really enjoyed the article not just because it spoke the truth, but I realised it spoke present truth. The story of Samuel and the Israelites is familiar because it is a story that is sadly still been played out today in Christianity. A few years ago, a lot of preachers kept saying that the Church was growing worldlier while it seemed the world was becoming more like the Church (but not like Christ). Today it is no more a saying but a fact. Christ likened the Church to a city on a hill, to salt but we have abandoned that role. We don’t want to be different. We want to be the same with the world around us. We don’t want to stand out, be different. We are scared, afraid that people will look at us and point and laugh in ridicule. We don’t want that. We want to be like the people around us. We just can’t stand to be different. So we neglect the Holy Spirit and instead of relying on Him to show Jesus to us, we rely on our own finite, depraved minds.

When Jesus was leaving after his resurrection, he promised he was going to send the Holy Spirit to us. According to Jesus, one of the things the Holy Spirit would do was that he would point us in the direction of Jesus. He would not speak of himself but he would speak of Jesus. However we have chosen to neglect him and his work in order to fit it. We have exchanged the Spirit of God for the spirit of the world. How do I know this? We have exchanged what we know to be godly with what seems to be reasonable. We have rationalised with our fallen minds the laws of God and scorned his grace in order to follow our own agenda. An agenda set for us by the spirit of the age. We have forsaken truth in order to be popular, in order to be seen to be on the side of men. While God has promised to never leave nor forsake us, we have forsaken him at the first sign of resistance.

Every day God is calling out to us through his Holy Spirit, asking us to come back. The more he calls us, the more we ignore him even as we chase after reasonable and the adulation of men. Jesus promised us troubles, tribulation, trials and tests if we followed him. It seems we are just not cut out for all that so we have taken the easy way out. We have decided not to be led by the invisible God by the reality of our five senses. I believe the call of God is always counter to the spirit of the age no matter that you dress it in the robe of reasonableness. I have looked at this world and all it has to offer. And I have made up my mind. I will not be led by the spirit of this age or this world. I have chosen to follow God and all that is godly. I have taken up a commission in the army of the Lord of hosts and there will be no desertion. I will live for him, I will be different. I will endure the scorn and ridicule of men. I will endure insults, abuse and if necessary death for the sake of him who loved me and gave himself for me. That is my solemn promise.





JC Cruz is the author of DECEPTIO published by WestBowPress, a division of Thomas Nelson publishers.http://bookstore.westbowpress.com/Products/SKU000194087/Deceptio.aspx and LOST, BUT FOUND available at http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00DPLLEUQ/. You can follow him on Twitter @Cruz_JCReal


     

Friday, 11 April 2014

It's Not For Us To Wonder How

“How shall this thing be seeing that ….”

When Mary the mother of Jesus was told by the angel Gabriel that she was going to give birth to a child that would save the world from sin, she wondered how it was going to happen. She wanted to believe but to her there were several reasons why it was not going to happen. She was looking at the facts that would negate this promise of God. The normal process of life is that for a woman to get pregnant, she would normally have to have sex with the proposed father of the child. However here was God telling her that she didn’t need to be with any man to see the fulfilment of God’s promise to her. All she needed to do was to believe. God would make the rest possible by the power of the Holy Spirit.

In the book of Joel, specifically Chapter 2 verse 28, God promises to pour out his spirit upon all flesh and promises that his spirit will cause the opening of eyes so that men and women will see visions and dream dreams. We all have dreams and visions for our lives and there are some of us who think we need psychiatric help due to the dreams we have envisaged. Like Mary, we ask ourselves, “How shall this thing be?” We seem to be looking for one excuse or the other to let God know that the dream or vision he has impressed upon our hearts are just too impossible to accomplish. The fact is that even when we see dreams about what we are going to be, we want to understand the process. Our finite minds desperately try to grasp and understand how God is going to make it happen. But can I say that understanding how is not really our role.

The story is told in the book of 2 Kings 7 about a famine in the land of Israel. Elisha brought a word from God telling the king about what God was going to do in the land. However the king’s adviser scoffed. Elisha promised him he was going to see what God would do but he wasn’t going to partake of it. Somewhere else there were four lepers outside the gate of the city. They were impoverished men who had no hope. However they reached a decision about their future and they acted on that decision. God used their decision to bring deliverance both to them and their nation.

It’s really not our role to worry about things like how. Ours is to walk in obedience to the vision or dream God has given us. When we do that, the power of the promise keeping God will come to help us become all that he has called us to be. What vision or dream do we have or have we seen? Now is the time to act on it. 




JC Cruz is the author of DECEPTIO published by WestBowPress, a division of Thomas Nelson publishers, http://bookstore.westbowpress.com/Products/SKU000194087/Deceptio.aspx and LOST, BUT FOUND available at http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00DPLLEUQ/. You can follow him on Twitter @Cruz_JCReal.  

Monday, 7 April 2014

I Would Die For You


It is well established that the Old Testament is a shadow of God’s great promise and plan for mankind and that he had promised came into fulfilment in the New Testament. However the Old Testament is not redundant with regard to how we are to live our lives. Just because the new covenant has come which is better with regard to the promises and the fulfilment of those promises, it doesn’t mean we still can’t glean something from it. The Apostle Paul tells us that ALL Scripture is inspired by God for correction, instruction, reproof. There for the Old Testament definitely still has a lot of lessons for us with regards to the life we live in Christ.

In the book of Genesis we see the first marriage between Adam and Eve. The relationship is great and going on well until we see the Devil through the serpent enter the picture. He beguiles her, playing on her desire to be more than she is, to be like God. She doesn’t realise that she is already like God. In the end, she takes the fruit God had commanded them not to eat. Not only does she eat it, she gives it to her husband as well. When God calls Adam and ask him what happened, Adam lays the blame for the whole fiasco on Eve, even though he also eat the fruit in spite of the fact that God gave the commandment to him. As a result of their disobedience, God curses them and ejects them from the Garden of Eden. However, he makes a promise to them that Christ would come to save them from the effects of their sin.

Several prophets like Isaiah prophesied about the coming of the Messiah, the one who would save his people from their sin. When Jesus finally came, he said that he had come to take away the sins of the world. He came not to impute people sins on them but that as long as they believed on him and in him, he would not only save them from the effects of their sin but from sin itself. In the end, he hung on a cross to fulfil the word earlier spoken that cursed is anyone who hangs on a tree. He took your sins and my sins on the cross and subsumed and erased them in himself. He did condemn anyone who came to him but he accepted all men as they are as long as they would allow him to make them.

Myles Munroe says that if you want to know how a thing is supposed to work, then you need to read the manual from the manufacturer. In the life of Christ we find a great pointer with regards to marriage. There are several new-fangled ideas about marriage. I must confess that I am amused by those who think that new ideas about ancient customs are the best. To best understand marriage we need to look at the relationship Christ has with the Church. We understand that marriage is a mystery and is similar to the relationship Christ has with us, his body. The first thing we see is that unlike Adam who blamed his wife for his failings and therefore died alongside her, Christ does not impute our sins on us and took them upon himself and died for the Church. He took our punishment, our pain, our exclusion and separation from God on himself and made everything right between us and God. Unlike Adam who did not seek the mercy of God but rather decided to take the path of blaming, Jesus took upon himself the role of mediator between God and men thereby bringing peace between both.

There are so many things we can learn from the life of Christ and the relationship between him and the Church as it pertains to marriage. Like Christ, a husband should “die” for his wife; protect her, as much as lies within his power keep her from hurt, pain and shame. He should not only be a mediator between her and God but also between her and men in that he has a role to play when she falls out with friends or others. Like Christ expects and believes the best about us, knowing that we can be more than we presently are, so the husband should be. Equality in marriage is all about being your own person and standing alone. If equality is what a wife seeks then she shouldn’t be surprised when as the first sign of trouble, the man takes off and leaves her to fend all by herself. You can’t be equal and expect help or support when trouble comes.

The Apostle Paul said men were to love their wives while wives were to respect their husbands. It wasn’t that he didn’t want wives to love their husbands or husbands to respect their wives but he understood that respect is what a man needs most while love is what a woman wants the most.  This is seen in our relationship with Christ. He showed his love by dying for us while we show our respect by first acknowledging him as Lord. When we model our marriages on the relationship Jesus has with his Church, we will have storms and trials but I believe we will come through them.




JC Cruz is the author of DECEPTIO published by WestBowPress, a division of Thomas Nelson publishers, http://bookstore.westbowpress.com/Products/SKU000194087/Deceptio.aspx and LOST, BUT FOUND available at http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00DPLLEUQ/. You can follow him on Twitter @Cruz_JCReal.  

Monday, 31 March 2014

The Gates of Hell Cannot Prevail

I believe that there is something in man that wants to worship God as his Creator, his God and sustainer. When we refuse to give in to that desire or refuse to recognize it, we end up worshipping other things. We end up worshipping cars, houses, sex, and status. All these things only give momentary pleasure or happiness but can never satisfy. I also believe that there is something in all of us that tends toward depravity and we can go either way. In God’s word we not only find hope for our souls as the Word points to God, we also find strength to fight off the demons that seek to lead us to the dark side.

Apart from having an on-going relationship with God, I believe one of the greatest things ever to happen to us is the Bible. In the thousands of years since the Old and New Testament were written, the sacred words in them have given hope, strength, peace and joy to those who adhere to the words written there. Not just the letter of the words but the spirit. The words were not written for our comfort but they are a template for us to live our lives by. The words are light which show us the state of our heart and lives in relation to God and how they should be. Thanks to the fall in the Garden of Eden, man has developed a great aversion to light. The natural tendency of man is to hide from the light and pretend that all is well.

The words written in the Bible were those men like Paul the Apostle, John Knox, Charles Spurgeon, Smith Wigglesworth, Charles Finney, John Wesley and Watchman Nee all lived by and they found God and lived great and fruitful lives. These men did great wonders and saw great revelations of God’s power as a result of these wonder. It is therefore no wonder that I marvel at the arrogance of the men of this age who say they are “Christian” but hide from the light of these words. These people say the sacred words are outdated and we should jettison them and look for other words that agree with our predilections and proclivities. We should look for words that agree with our depravities and which do not show us the wrong that we do. Because they are condemned in their hearts by the sacred words, they want to away with the words. In this they have as allies those who hate God. Those that say they as Christian do not see any wrong in the alliances they have formed because they are moved by their senses.

Ever since the birth of Christianity, several people have risen up with the stated aim of killing it. In the intervening period, they are the ones who have died and the Church has gone on. I am convinced above all that the Church can never die. Jesus declared that the gates of hell would never prevail against the church. I believe this with all my heart. Therefore when I see hell rising up against the Church, while it worries me because I remember the persecution the Church will suffer before Christ returns, I am consoled and strengthened in knowing the Church has prevailed.



JC Cruz is the author of DECEPTIO published by WestBowPress, a division of Thomas Nelson publishers, http://bookstore.westbowpress.com/Products/SKU000194087/Deceptio.aspx and LOST, BUT FOUND available at http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00DPLLEUQ/. You can follow him on Twitter @Cruz_JCReal.