Truly I tell you,” Jesus replied, “no one who has left home or brothers or sisters or mother or father or children or fields for me and the gospel will fail to receive a hundred times as much in this present age: homes, brothers, sisters, mothers, children and fields—along with persecutions—and in the age to come eternal life. But many who are first will be last, and the last first.
Mark 10:29-31 NIV
Jesus called us to forsake all (Luke 14:33), and yet promises our needs will be met from above (Matthew 6:33). This parodox underscores the nature of the Kingdom. It is not of this world (John 18:36), but it is all sufficient to meet every need (Philippians 4:19). Read more…
Preach the word; be instant in season, out of season; reprove, rebuke, exhort with all longsuffering and doctrine.
2 Timothy 4:2
What’s the good word, they ask the preacher?
Be instant in season and out of season. Always be ready to give an answer for the hope that lies within you.
That day, there was a little bit of burning within me. We all want to see the floodgates of heaven thrown open, and revival sweep the land.
What’s the solution to getting it?
Well, there’s something that seems better than just getting the floodgates opened. It’s getting the dam out of the way.
That’s right, instead of just opening the doors to the thing, and letting all the water pour out, why not remove the whole dam, and see the river rush on for endless days.
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So then, just as you received Christ Jesus as Lord, continue to live your lives in him, rooted and built up in him, strengthened in the faith as you were taught, and overflowing with thankfulness.
Colossians 2:6-7
Paul explained the doctrine of Grace. He had a way of expressing things that got to the root of the matter, dividing one thing from another, by means of the Word and the Spirit. He often captured complicated things in such a way as to express and administer them to people so that there could be understanding of what was being taught so that people could come to the same place of agreement in faith concerning subjects as he had.
In speaking to the church at Colossae, Paul laid out the way of Grace through faith. Grace is the enablement of God, and faith is God’s gift.
When we consider the children of Israel, it says they perished in the wilderness because they did not mix their promises with faith. Although they had faith, they did not choose to use the free gift of God, and so enter into His Rest.
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Categories: Church of the Beyond, Featured, Kingdom, Revolution, Teaching Tags: Freedom, Gospel, Grace, Kingdom, Paul, Philosophy, Revelation, The Way
He who believes in the Son has eternal life; but he who does not obey the Son will not see life, but the wrath of God abides on him.
John 3:36 NASB
Martin Luther restored to the church at large the understanding of justification by faith alone with the divine inspiration of the verse, “the just shall live by faith” (Romans 1:17). Man was broken, and completely incapable of pleasing a perfect God, and needed the divine to descend and make a demarkation, an end of man’s corruption, and remake him anew.
It was faith, and faith alone, that Paul wrote about, that connected us to the saving Grace made available by Christ. By faith Abel had made a better offering, and by faith, Abraham was counted righteous when he believed, not wavering with unbelief.
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Categories: Church of the Beyond, Teaching Tags: Condemned, Faith, Fruit, James, Kingdom, Luther, Martin Luther, Obedience, Obey, Works
Be not deceived; God is not mocked: for whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap.
Galatians 6:7
The secret to the spiritual life is not in and of itself warfare, but rather in the Spirit Himself. Yes, we can learn the principles of warfare, and learn to bind and loose forces, yet if the reason that they are there, if there is some, is not dealt with, they will simply return, and often larger.
Consider for a moment Jesus’ life and ministry. He did have to confront satan in the wilderness, but, finding nothing in him, the devil left him for a more opportune time (Luke 4:13). The next time we read about the adversary directly opposing Jesus was at the end of his ministry, first speaking through Peter and then at the crucifixion, three and a half some years later.
What does this mean? It means that, unless there were other times in Jesus’ ministry where the enemy came to Him to test Him, Jesus spent most of ministry with the enemy driven back, not in open conflict with Jesus during His ministry.
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The Kingdom of God. Is it now, or is it yet to come? Jesus said that the Kingdom of Heaven suffers violence and the violent take it by force. This wasn’t a future statement, but rather it was fulfilled then. Compare this to a popular scripture from the book of Daniel.
But the saints of the most High shall take the kingdom, and possess the kingdom for ever, even for ever and ever.
Daniel 7:18, emphasis added
Clearly, the Law and the Prophets were until John (the baptist), and since that time the Kingdom of God is being preached (Luke 16:16).
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Categories: End Times, Kingdom, Teaching, Video Tags: Abyss, Chain, Daniel, End Times, Eschatolgy, Heaven, John the Baptist, Kingdom, Kingdom of Heaven, Millennium, Pit, Preterism, Preterist, Revelation, Revelation 20, Thousand Years
A look at the End Times from a largely fulfilled perspective begins, primarily, with the book of Daniel. Daniel sets the scene from the foundation of the enemies empire, Babylon, with Daniel’s interpretation of the king’s dream. Daniel 2 sets the case for Rome being Babylon, and is the best case for a mostly-fulfilled End Time paradigm. Plainly put, we see a kingdom/statue beginning with King Nebuchadnezzar, with that king as the head. It ruled over the entire Earth and, although it changed identities (metal) three times, four in all, it was a continuous one-world government from the time of that king until the Kingdom of God broke it, probably circa 313AD, when it’s emperor was converted. As we saw war and conflict from each subsequent kingdom, but the entire statue remained, so we see that it’s actual destruction was not a war in on the Earth, but a spiritual overthrow of the power of that kingdom in the spiritual realm, in which it was spiritually defeated, crushed, and overthrown. When the spiritual power (beast) of Rome was destroyed, its physical and nationalist elements could then no longer be maintained, and, quite literally, the wind scattered the pieces, being the “Decline of Rome”.
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Categories: End Times, Kingdom, Revolution, Teaching, Video Tags: Babylon, Daniel, Decline of Rome, End Times, Greece, Jesus, Kingdom, Media, Nebuchadnezzar, Persia, Preterism, Revived Roman Empire, Statue, Video
This brief look at Matthew 24 describes the 2-part layout of the Olivet Discourse. Focusing on the explanation of two separate events, the destruction of Jerusalem in 70AD, occurring in fulfillment of the words “this generation” (Matthew 24:34), and the second coming at the end of “this age”, as described by Jesus (Mark 10:30). Focusing especially on the translation of the first word in Matthew 24:29, “immediately”, which in the Greek does not always imply imminence of time, but rather sequence in narration, the case is laid out that the text clearly delineates between the two events, which, in Luke are described as being separated by the “times of the Gentiles”. Because the second coming, “that day” is clearly explained as being of a time unknown to Jesus Himself, known only to the Father, we see, textually and logically, that Matthew 24:34 cannot apply to the second coming events, but only Matthew 24:9-28. Matthew 24:29-31, then, are not under the restriction of “this generation”, being “that day” and not “these things”, as Jesus explains through Matthew 24:36, “that day”.
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Jesus saith unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me.
John 14:6
As Truth is a person, so is The Way. As surely as any understanding of who He was and what He taught could be expressed, it cannot be understood outside of the person of Who He Is, What He Did and Why He Did It. The Path of Life therefore, as it were, is following Jesus. For the original twelve apostles, this was through both observing who Him directly, as well as by hearing Him teach. Today, while we do not see exactly how He lived the words He preached, we have His Spirit within us to guide us into all truth.
But, most assuredly, His Words are to be obeyed. None of His Words can be fully embraced without the provision of His Spirit, but through Him, and His enabling power, we are able to overcome through faith.
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Categories: Church of the Beyond, End Times, Favorites, Teaching Tags: Beatitudes, Forgiveness, Happy, Jesus, Kingdom, Life, Path, Path of Life, Repentance, Revelation, Sermon on the Mount, Spirit
Having therefore these promises, dearly beloved, let us cleanse ourselves from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit, perfecting holiness in the fear of God.
2 Corinthians 7:1
You see, it is, at least in part, up to us, how we will walk this Christian walk. Verse after verse, command after command, the writers of the New Testament, in the shadow of the cross, call, exhort, and train us to live godly, after our example and High Priest of the faith, Jesus Christ.
Not one moment may we forget that it is the pure in heart that shall see God. Nor, let us falter into the way of unbelief and die in the wilderness. But, in the same way, let us not make this journey of our own effort, or of the devices of the flesh, but by the power of the Spirit, we do put to death the misdeeds of the flesh, and so live unto God!
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Categories: Favorites, Featured, Kingdom, Teaching Tags: Ananias, Blood, Body, Christ, Death, Faith, Flesh, Glory, Happy, Holiness, Joy, Kingdom, Life, Lose your Life, Pearl, Poor in Spirit, Poverty, Righteousness, Sapphira, Soul v Spirit, Spirit, Suffering, Tent