Saturday, October 15, 2016

FOUR REASONS THE EARLY CHURCH DID NOT BELIEVE "HELL" LASTS FOREVER

Today, many people disagree on how guilty criminals should be treated. Is the purpose of punishment, the argument goes, to rehabilitate the criminal by reforming his character? Or, rather, is the purpose of punishment to inflict eye-for-an-eye retaliation on the wrongdoer? Put another way, is our motive for punishment revenge or rescue?

This same analysis can be applied to God's purpose for Hell. Is God's motive in allowing sinners to go to Hell a form of "revenge" upon the sinner, or is God's motive rather to ultimately "rescue" the sinner from his own fallen nature? Which purpose better aligns with the nature of God revealed in Jesus Christ?

Well, the majority of the early Church believed that Hell was place where God would rescue, reform and reconcile all lost sinners back unto Himself. The process of Hell was intense, thorough, critical, painful, agonizing and anguishing. But, it was ultimately restorative as each and every sinner was led through and past their own Hellish valley of sin and death, and into a deep and heartfelt place of Godly repentance.

The early Church had a significantly different view of Hell than much of the Church does today. Hell's purpose, for the majority of the Church fathers, was seen as purifying rather than punishing, restoring rather than torturing, healing rather than destroying. They believed Hell was "God's crisis-management for lost souls." Hell was for all those who did not authentically receive Jesus Christ as their Lord and Savior during their earthly lives.

The early Church believed God's Hell-fire was not inflicted to destroy the lost, but rather to ultimately save them. God's "fire" was WISE in that it revealed, cleansed and cured the lost soul of all the false identities accumulated during their fallen lifetimes. The "wood, hay and stubble" of these false identities would be "burned off" of the lost soul, but they themselves would "be saved, yet so as by fire." 1 Corinthians 3:13-15.

Hell, from this viewpoint then, was a rocky but redemptive journey to repentance and restoration. Hell was still seen as infinitely intense and unimaginably painful - - just not eternal.

Ebenezer Scrooge's nightmarish journey as described in the classic "Christmas Carol" would be an illustration of what such a redemptive journey through Hell might look like. For Scrooge, his journey was intensely revealing, painful and heart-breaking, but ultimately redemptive. Scrooge was not even aware that his own repentance and redemption was the Lord's endgame. He was too busy suffering at the realization of his past, present and future sins. And, in fact, Scrooge's journey appeared to be outside of time as we know it. His whole pitiful life was played out before him in just a few earthly hours, yet for him it appeared to last a very long time.

Would God not have the same type of cosmic "elbow room" to take our souls on such a "Scrooge-like" post-mortem journey to repentance?

Here is a quick historical survey of the EARLY CHURCH regarding their beliefs about HELL:

THE FIRST 500 YEARS: In the first five centuries there were six known theological schools. Four of them taught that all men would EVENTUALLY be rescued from Hell: these being the theological schools at Alexandria, Antioch, Caesarea and Edessa/Nisbis. One school, Ephesus, taught Annihilationism (that sinners are totally incinerated into nothingness in Hell). Only one theological school, Rome/Carthage taught eternal punishment. Source: The New Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge, Universalism Entry, p. 96, Baker Book House.

1ST CENTURY: PAUL. It is interesting to note that Paul never used the word Hell in any of his writings, though he was considered the theologian of the New Testament. He spoke of God's post-mortem purging fire in 1 Corinthians 3:11-15, but never of Hell per se. The Gospel of John, the disciple perhaps closest to Jesus' heart, never used the word Hell in his Gospel. It is also interesting to note that the Book of Acts never mentions the word Hell, except to speak of Jesus' liberation FROM it. Acts NEVER uses the word Hell to describe any part of the Christian message which established the Church. The following passages suggests Paul's seminal thinking on the eventual and ultimate salvation of all men: Romans 5:17,18; 10:9-17; 11:25-33; 14:11; 1 Cor. 3:11-15; 15:22-28; 1 Tim. 2:1-6; 4:10; Eph. 1:10; 4:1-10; Phil. 2:9-11; Col. 1:20, 23; Heb. 2:9.

2ND CENTURY: CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA. Clement was the first to speak of God's fire as a "wise fire" which purges the sinner unto salvation. "God's punishments are saving and disciplinary (in Hades) leading to conversions, and choosing rather the repentance than the death of the sinner, and especially since souls, although darkened by passions, when released from their bodies, are able to perceive more clearly because of their being no longer obstructed by the paltry flesh. We can set no limits to the agency of the Redeemer to redeem, to rescue, to discipline, is His work, and so will he continue to operate after this life." Clem. str. 5:14.90.4-91.2; see also 5.1.9.4; and hyp. (frg. In Stahlin, Clemens Alexandrians, 3:211).

3RD CENTURY: ORIGEN: "When the Son is said to be subject to the Father, the perfect restoration of the whole creation is signified, so also, when enemies are said to be subjected to the Son of God, the salvation of the conquered and the restoration of the lost is in that understood to consist."Origen, De Principiis, Book III, Chapter 5, Section 7, Anf, Vol. 4. Origen was the first Christian Systematic Theologian. A fundamental and essential element of his theology was the doctrine of the universal restoration of all fallen beings to their original holiness and union with God. Gods mercy and goodness are all-inclusive and ultimately irresistible. Hellfire is corrective and purgative, not punitive and eternal. This doctrine was called Apocatastasis,"the restitution of all things" per Acts 3:21. Origen was the greatest enemy of Gnosticism (per his Against Celsus) and is considered the greatest theologian of the early Eastern Church."There is hardly a major thinker who is not deeply indebted to Origen. From the middle of the Twentieth Century, focused scholarly symposia of the Greek and Latin Church have once again begun to study and critically expound the rich Origenian legacy." The Westminister Handbook of Patristic Theology, WJK.

4TH CENTURY: GREGORY OF NYSSA: "What therefore is the scope of Paul’s argument in this place [1 Cor. 15:28]? That the nature of evil, at length, be wholly exterminated, and divine, immortal goodness embrace within itself every rational creature; so that of all who were made by God, not one shall be excluded from his Kingdom. All the viciousness, that like a corrupt matter is mingled in things, shall be dissolved and consumed in the furnace of purgatorial fire; and every thing that had its origin from God, shall be restored to its pristine state of purity." Tract, in Dictum Apostoli, Tunc etiam ipse Filius subjicietur, and c.p. 137, and seqq. Gregory was one of the three great Cappodadocean Fathers who protected the doctrine of the Trinity from the Arians at the Councils of Nicea and Constantinople.

5TH CENTURY: Theodore of Mopsuestia. "They who have chosen the good, shall, in the future world, be blessed and honored. But the wicked, who have committed evil the whole period of their lives, shall be punished till they learn, that, by continuing in sin, they only continue in misery. And when, by this means, they shall have been brought to fear God, and to regard Him with good-will, they shall obtain the enjoyment of His grace." Assemani Biblioth. Orient. Tom. iii. Par. i. p.323.

Church history is fairly clear that this view of Hell was not just the view of a few, but rather was the majority view of the Church.

Basil the Great (329-379) said that, "The MASS of men (Christians) say that there is to be an end of punishment to those who are punished." De Ascetics.

Saint Jerome (347-420) said, "I know that MOST persons understand the story of Nineveh and its king, the ultimate forgiveness of the devil and all rational creatures." Homily on Jonah.

Lastly, even Augustine (354-430), who vehemently opposed Universalism, acknowledged, "There are VERY MANY in our day, who though not denying the Holy Scriptures, do not believe in endless torments." Enchirdion cxii. (The Latin for "very many" is imo quam plurimi, which can be translated "majority").

When the Church rejected this high view of God's goodness and replaced it with a view of God as an eternal torturer, the dark ages began, almost to the day. Ever since, there has remained a small, constant and stubborn strand of those imbedded in the Church who believe Hell is not an eternal torture chamber, but rather God's final crisis-center, a cosmic ER station where God performs complicated, intense and painful surgery on our souls in order to remove all our false sin-identities accumulated over our lifetime.

The belief that Hell is "ultimately remedial and restorative" rather than "eternally torturous" can withstand any Scriptural challenge if you accept four premises, the same four premises widely accepted by the early Church.



PREMISE #1- JESUS DID NOT PREACH "ETERNAL PUNISHMENT" IN THE ORIGINAL LANGUAGE OF THE NEW TESTAMENT!

"Eternal Punishment" is the term used in the English translation of the Bible on which most people base their view of eternal conscious torment in Hell. The term in the Greek is "kolasis aionios." If this term does indeed mean eternal punishment, then Hell would seem to be foreverrrrrrrrrr.

But, such is not the case. Let’s first consider the opinion of the great Greek scholar William Barclay, who was professor of Divinity and Biblical Criticism at Glasgow University and the author of many commentaries and books, including a translation of the New Testament and the very popular Daily Study Bible Series. Barclay discusses this point regarding Matthew 25:46 in his well-known autobiography:

"One of the key passages is Matthew 25:46 where it is said that the rejected go away to eternal punishment, and the righteous to eternal life. The Greek word for punishment is 'kolasis,' which was not originally an ethical word at all. It originally meant the pruning of trees to make them grow better. I think it is true to say that in all Greek secular literature 'kolasis' is never used of anything but 'remedial punishment.' The word for 'eternal' is aionios. It means more than everlasting, for Plato - who may have invented the word - plainly says that a thing may be everlasting and still not be aionios. The simplest way to put it is that aionios cannot be used properly of anyone but God; it is the word uniquely, as Plato saw it, of God. Eternal punishment is then literally that kind of remedial punishment which it befits God to give and which only God can give."

Aristotle supports Barclay on the meaning of "kolasis." The only word in the Gospels for "punishment" with regard to God punishing evildoers is "kolasis," which according to Aristotle, who knew Greek word meanings better than anybody who ever walked the planet, said that "kolasis" is the kind of punishment which "is inflicted in the interest of the sufferer," which means it is for the betterment or improvement of the person being punished. This is contrasted with "timoria," which Aristotle said is the kind of punishment which is "inflicted in the interest of him who inflicts it, that he may obtain satisfaction." (Rhet. 1369b13).

In addition to Barclay’s opinion above, let’s consider some other respected sources about the proper translation of “aionios:"

The Rotterham Emphasized Bible translates “kolasis aionios” in Matthew 25:46 as “age abiding correction.”

Young’s Literal Translation translates “kolasis aionios” in Matthew 25:46 as “punishment age.”

The Concordant Literal Translation translates “kolasis aionios” in Matthew 25:46 as “chastening eonian," or "chastening age" in other words. Our English word “eon” derives from the Greek word “aionios.” Eon, as we use the word, speaks of ages or cycles of indeterminate amounts of time. The term is often used in the plural form, such as “It’s been eons since we’ve talked,” or “Eons ago the universe was formed.” The point is that we don’t even use the term today to refer to “everlasting” in the sense of never ending. Think how silly it sounds to pluralize “everlasting” into “everlastings," yet "eon" is pluralized into "eons" all the time.

The best translators of the New Testament Greek text would be the Greek fathers of the church over the first 500 years. They were Christian. They were scholars. They lived nearest to the time the New Testament was written and would have a better grasp of grammatical nuances of recent generations. Koine Greek was a lost language for hundreds of years and it is somewhat presumptuous for modern scholars to think they know Biblical Greek better than the Greek-speaking Church fathers did.

The Church fathers and writers who used the term “aionios” in their writings to refer to an indefinite “age” and not to an “unending” or “everlasting” eternity are: Ignatius, Justin Martyr, Irenaeus, Hermogones, Origen, Eusebius, Gregory of Nyssa, and Avitus.

The Emperor Justinian in A.D. 540 tried to extinguish Origen’s teachings by defining Catholic doctrine at that time. “The Holy Church of Christ teaches an endless aionios (ATELEUTETOS aionios) life to the righteous, and endless (ateleutetos) punishment to the wicked.” Aionios was not enough in his judgment to denote endless duration, so he employed ateleutetos. The point is that “aionios” by itself did not mean “everlasting.” It needed to be strengthened with another word to in fact mean “endless,” like “ateleutetos.”

Jews who were contemporaries with Christ, but who wrote in Greek, show that “aionios” was not used to mean “everlasting.” Josephus the historian used “aionios” to refer to temples which were already destroyed (and thus not “everlasting”), indeterminate prison sentences and time lapses between historical events. He never used the word to denote “everlasting,” but rather to mean an indeterminate period or season. The Jewish writer Philo always used the words athanaton, ateleuteton or aidion to denote endless and aionion for temporary duration.

Augustine, who knew no Greek, claimed for years that the only meaning of “aionios” was “everlasting,” yet even he had to acknowledge his error when visited by the Spanish presbyter Orosius, who convinced Augustine of his error. Augustine relented, but only to the extent that “aionios” did not only mean “everlasting.” Augustine still believed it means “everlasting” with regard to Hell.

To summarize then, Greek word "Aionios," which is sometimes translated as "everlasting" in Scripture (as in "everlasting punishment"), does NOT in fact mean "unending or everlasting in quantity of time." Rather, "Aionios" speaks to an "indeterminate age set by God alone." The word refers to a certain quality (not quantity) of being - - whether it be "aionios life" or "aionios remedial-punishment." Aionios is always qualified by what it is describing.

For instance, the word "great," when applied to a merciful sentence imposed by a kind-hearted judge, might refer to a small amount of time in jail. Conversely, "great," when applied to an atrocious crime, for which the judge "throws the book" at the defendant, might refer to a life-sentence in jail.

Similarly, the nature and quality of aionios, applied to the life of God, is entirely different than when it is applied to the chastening or punishment of God. "GREAT life" in God is certainly unending, since death will have been completely defeated, but the unending length is not the primary essence of that "GREAT life." Rather, the limitless quality of love and peace which come from being totally at one with the Lord is the key aspect of this "GREAT life." On the other hand, "GREAT punishment" by God will not be unending since He punishes to correct and rehabilitate and He is not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance. 2 Pet. 3:9.

Life in God is not everlasting because it is aionios, but rather aionios is everlasting because it is referring to life in God. Conversely, aionios punishment is not temporary because aionios means temporary, but rather aionios is temporary in this context since God's chastening is curative and incapable of being eternally resisted. "For his anger is but for a moment; His favor is for a life-time: Weeping may tarry for the night, But joy 'cometh' in the morning." Psalm 30:5.

Aionios then, by itself, means an "indeterminate age," not an "unending age." Only the context of the passage provides guidance as to the actual quality and duration of the age.



PREMISE #2- HELL AND HEAVEN ARE "OUTSIDE OF TIME" AS WE DEFINE IT!

Time to God is not the same thing as time to man. "Kairos" is the Greek term generally used to describe God's perfect timing. It is not run by a clock, but by the heart of God. "Chronos," by contrast, is the Greek term used to describe man's fallen timing. Karios is measured by love and meaning. Chronos is measured by clocks and calendars.

Kairos is measured by relational events, renewed thoughts, repentant hearts and acts of love. Chronos,by contrast, is man's time measured apart from God. Chronos is linear clock time which is running down this fallen world like a time bomb waiting to explode.

Chronos is the sand of our lives slowly but surely emptying out our life force. Chronos is the process of dying. Chronos doesn't caress, doesn't change and doesn't forgive. Chronos ages us, disappoints us, crushes us and ultimately kills our bodies. Kairos, by contrast, cures us, restores our youth and allows us to be fully present in "the now" with our God.

The problem arises when men apply Chronos concepts to Kairos events. To label Heaven or Hell as "endless" means that it is being measured by man's time, which can't begin to grasp the Kairos reality involved.

Heaven is not Heaven because clocks will be ticking and ticking for all eternity without interruption. This Chronos concept that we will be sitting around stroking our harps forever and ever is not eternal life in the Kairos sense.

Eternal life in the Kairos sense means life of infinite quality and blessedness. It is life which has evicted death altogether. Chronos doesn't even exist anymore where Kairos life exists. This life doesn’t extend time, it transcends it altogether.

So too, with Hell, it is not a Chronos reality but a Kairos event which will be determined by God alone. That God doesn't view time from Chronos’ viewpoint is established by 2 Peter 3:8 which states, "But, beloved, be not ignorant of this one thing, that one day is with the Lord as a thousand years, and a thousand years as one day." In fact, Revelation 10:6-7 says that when the seventh angel declares that "the mystery of God should be finished,"that"there should be time (literally Chronos) no longer!

Isn't it clear that both Heaven and Hell exist outside of time and space as we know it? Eternity is just a term to describe the limitless life of God which operates apart from the constraints of time and space.

To use four dimensional terms (length, width, height and time) to describe 100 dimensional realities is completely inadequate. A Christian writer and theologian, Edwin A. Abbott, once wrote a book called "Flatland." It is a science fiction novel about a planet called Flatland where the inhabitants have only two dimensions - - length and width. Since they lack height, they all appear as lines to each other. Some have more sides than others, but all still appear as simple lines.

One day, a three dimensional being enters their world. He tries to explain three dimensional reality but the flatlanders can't understand it because all they know is two dimensions. Ultimately, the three dimensional messiah lifts one of the Flatlanders up and out of his two dimensional reality. The flatlander now is astounded with the Heavenly reality of height that has always existed both above and beneath him. The two dimensions the flatlander did know have now been blended with the Heavenly truth of height which now gives everything he knows limitless depth and beauty.

In this same way, we who live by Chronos can't grasp the eternal essences of Heaven and Hell until our Messiah lifts us up to spiritual realities which transcend the time and space limitations of our flatland. Do we really believe that when Jesus descended into Hell to lead captivity captive and disarm all the demonic principalities and powers (Eph. 4:8-10; Col. 2:15), that this was done in linear Chronos time?

No, Jesus died once for all. What He did was outside of time and space. He died for ALL men-- past, present and future. He preached (literally, evangelized) to all the dead in Hell - - past, present and future (1 Pet. 4:6). If Jesus had done all this in Chronos time, we could assume only that He paid for the sins of those who were in Hell as of 33 A.D. Since we know this can't be the case, we must toss Chronos considerations out of our definitions of Heaven and Hell.

As A.W. Tozer said in his book, The Knowledge of the Holy: "Because God lives in an everlasting now, He has no past and no future. When time-words occur in the Scriptures they refer to our time, not to His. When the four living creatures before the throne cry day and night, Holy, holy, holy, Lord God Almighty, which was, and is, and is to come, they are identifying God with the flow of creature-life with its familiar three tenses; and this is right and good, for God has sovereignly willed so to identify Himself. But since God is uncreated, He is not Himself affected by that succession of consecutive changes we call time."

The work of Jesus by and through the Cross began in man's time (Chronos), but ended in God’s time (Kairos). Jesus died once for all men for all times for all sins. Heaven and Hell are realms OUTSIDE of this present Chronos time.

When Jesus led captivity captive,He simultaneously rescued all men from every past Hell, every present Hell, and every future Hell. We must not apply terms of fallen time to describe God’s limitless time. Chronos terms of "quantity" of time, like unending or everlasting,simply do not properly define Kairos events like "aionios punishment" or "aionios life," both of which speak to "quality of time" rather than "quantity of time."



PREMISE #3- GOD'S FLAMES OF JUDGMENT SEEK TO HEAL US, NOT TORTURE US!

Like the fig leaves Adam and Eve wore to hide their nakedness from God, men wear sin-masks to keep their "real" naked selves covered and hidden from God. The ugly truth is that there is something rotten in our soul at a subconscious level that wants to ignore and avoid God.

Satan helps us here by providing demonically empowered masks to blind and deform our hearts and minds. Like the disturbed teenager who self-mutilates by knife cuts into the flesh, we self-mutilate our soul created in the image of God by disfiguring it. We do this by donning demonic masks lined on the inside with razorblades of fear, doubt and lust. God wants these sin-masks removed once and for all.

So, what becomes of our sin-masks, either in this life or the next? How are these masks dealt with, both in the short term and long term? Is there a way that in this lifetime we can rip all our masks off? Sure, this is what the Scriptures call sanctification.

Through the renewing of our minds by the Holy Spirit, we are able to progressively shed all our false selves, prideful pretenses and forged identities. Those who persist in achieving this authenticity in the Lord receive rewards in this life and the next.

But, what about those masks we never successfully cast away during this lifetime? What happens to our blindspots, the masks we never recognize and remove? What about the areas of hypocrisy that we never allow to be fully evicted? What happens in the hereafter to our masks? Are we, along with our masks, cast into the Lake of Fire to die the second death?

Or is there another solution? Can God in future ages somehow perform critical and extensive spiritual surgery on our souls? Can He burn off, cut out and cast away all our sin-masks which, all too often, have rendered us lying letches, fearful followers, and doubting disciples?

When we are judged after we die, is it all or nothing? If in any area of our lives, we have never dealt with a particular mask, does that doom our entire spirit, soul and body to eternal fire? What if we sanctified our souls to be "mask-less" at home, but still wore masks at work, or church, or with certain friends, or on certain occasions? Is this the way an all-powerful God deals with His children? Or is there a better way? A more divine way? A more loving way?

Do any Scriptures point to these sin-masks being removed by God's judgment WITHOUT the necessity of casting the entire person into the eternal flames as well? Oh yes! 1 Corinthians 3:10-15 is quite clear:

"According to the grace of God which is given unto me, as a wise masterbuilder, I have laid the foundation, and another buildeth thereon. But let every man take heed how he buildeth thereupon. For other foundation can no man lay than that is laid, which is Jesus Christ. Now if any man build upon this foundation gold, silver, precious stones, wood, hay, stubble; EVERY MAN'S WORK shall be made manifest: for the day shall declare it, because it shall be REVEALED BY FIRE; and THE FIRE SHALL TRY EVERY MAN'S WORK, of what sort it is. If any man's work abide which he hath built thereupon, he shall receive a reward. IF ANY MAN'S WORK SHALL BE BURNED, HE SHALL SUFFER LOSS, BUT HE HIMSELF SHALL BE SAVED; YET SO AS BY FIRE."

This passage above refers to the judgment of "Every man's work" (verse 13). The Revelation passage about the Lake of Fire in chapters 20-21 ALSO refers to the judgment of every man's works: "the dead were judged... according to their works" (Revelation 20:12). So, Paul and John were both describing the same event, the judgment of every man's works, but from their slightly different perspectives. Now, note what Paul says ultimately happens on the other side of every man's work being judged: "If any man's work abide which he hath built thereupon, he shall receive a reward. IF ANY MAN'S WORK SHALL BE BURNED, HE SHALL SUFFER LOSS: BUT HE HIMSELF SHALL BE SAVED; YET SO AS BY FIRE."

So, what exactly do we know about the Lake of Fire? I have heard theologians of all ilks agree to never build a firm dogma on just one passage in Scripture, particularly if that passage is in the smack dab middle of Jewish apocalyptic section of the Bible like the book of Revelation. The reason is that this form of literature, unlike the epistles and the Gospel, are full of heavily symbolic language and feverish activity. They are more poetic and visionary than they are doctrinal. There is only extended passage that ever even talks about the Lake of Fire, and that is in Revelation 19-21.

All we know about it is:
----the devil is cast into along with the beast and the false prophet(19:20)
----those that worship the image of the beast(19:20)
----that the devil (a false identity of Lucifer?) is tormented forever (20:10)
----death and an emptied Hell are cast into it (20:14)
----and whosever's not found written in the book of life is cast into it(20:15)
----and the fearful, unbelieving, etc. shall have their PART in it(20:8)

Curiously, no particular individual is named as being cast into it. Symbolic figures are cast into it, beasts and false prophets and the devil. Nobody by proper name is mentioned. Not Herod, not Pharaoh, not Hitler, not Nero. Some "part" of our sinful being is cast into it, but does other Scripture help us better understand what that is exactly? I say yes. Scripture helps interpret Scripture.

The reasons I believe 1 Corinthians 3:10-15 and Revelation 20:12-15 are referring to the same event is because of several factors.
----both are referring to a postmortem experience
---- both refer to themselves as "the judgment of men's works"
----both explicitly refer to "every man" man being so judged
----both use the imagery of "fire"
----both refer to some sort of dividing which includes "suffering and loss"

Do you see? The man himself shall be saved, yet he shall SUFFER LOSS, YET SO AS BY FIRE. But, WHAT EXACTLY is it that is "BURNED" off and in the process causes the man to "SUFFER" and experience "LOSS?" The answer is clear: THE MASKS ARE BURNED OFF AND AWAY FROM US! In this context, the "wood, hay and stubble" of 1 Corinthians 3:12-15 represents the various types of false masks we have co-created with Satan and worn as the primary motivating forces behind our actions and works. Instead of performing "righteous works" that will endure, works of "gold, silver, and precious stones" (v. 12), works done under the Holy Spirit's leading and anointing (Romans 8:14), we have masked the real motives for our works with that which is from below and not above--- motives which are false, demonic, and self-centered.

Each and every wood-mask, hay-mask and stubble-mask a man has wrongly allowed to be grafted onto his soul will have to be burned. The result is that he will experience the "wrenching and painful loss" of having huge parts of who he "thought" he really was over the course of his entire life completely burned away with white hot fire.

Like the most intense form of chemotherapy we know in the physical, yet multiplied a thousand times in painful intensity in the spiritual, every mask will be irradiated and destroyed with the fire of God. The man suffers a searing "identity crisis" which, though in the long term will bring great positive transformation, is in the short term painful beyond words. The length of time for the burning process may vary. "Wood" takes longer to burn than "hay" or "stubble," so wood-masks are the most dangerous.

These false identities caused the man during his time on earth to operate outside his authentic self, and instead assume the sin-identity of a lust-mask, or a pride-mask, or a legalism-mask. The man may have grafted on a "religious" mask and thereafter thought he was serving God, and that all his good works were in the service of the Lord, when in truth he was only serving his own self-righteousness (Matthew 7:22-23). Or, the man may have been serving his own fleshly desires while wearing a mask of "carnality." Finally, the man could just be wearing "the pride of life" mask which prevented him from humbly submitting to the Lordship of the Spirit by operating in self-will.

Regardless, these masks "warp" the core motive of every man and cause them to be someone they are not, someone they were never created or called to be by God. To the extent these masks corrupt the purity of our identities in Christ, they MUST go.

So, how are they removed? In this lifetime, by sanctification, repentance and the self-judgment that comes through prayer and communion. Paul said that if we judge ourselves NOW by removing every inner sin-mask, we will not be judged later. But, IF these sin-masks are still grafted onto our souls at the time of death, which means we never dealt with them fully during our lifetime, then the Lord deals with them at the judgment of every man's works, "yet so as by fire."

The Lord uses, what the church Fathers Clement and Origen called God's "WISE FIRE" to burn off and away all the false masks we have lived out of, the Satanic strongholds which have blinded, twisted and deformed us. The masks are the result of the MISUSE of our freedom combined with the Devil's temptations and lies.

Seen from this angle, judgment is a good thing, not a fearful thing. The Greek word for "judge" means "to separate or put asunder." God "separates" our true self from all our false selves. He "tears asunder" the masks from our true identity. And then what becomes of all our masked identities? THEY ARE CAST INTO THE LAKE OF FIRE, NEVER AGAIN TO BE PUT ON BY US OR ANYBODY ELSE!

This is a good thing, not a bad thing. I long for the day all my false selves (Richard the fearful, Richard the doubter, Richard the oppressed, Richard the lustful, Richard the liar) are FOREVER FAR REMOVED from my true self, my best self, my authentic self, my Christ self, my new man created in righteousness and true holiness.

God has a name for each one of us that only HE knows. This name is who we are called to be, who we WILL be for all eternity. These false selves CAN be burned off in THIS lifetime IF I submit myself fully to the Lord's sanctifying Spirit. But if my heart falls short, God is greater than my heart. He WILL see me delivered in the ages to come.

The great sculptor Michelangelo famously said, "The statue lies within the stone." He believed that all the sculptor does is chip away the exterior stone to reveal the interior truth. Or, put another way, the artist removes the masked false in order to reveal the naked real. For us, we have the chance to use this life to chip away all our false masks with our Spirit-led chisel of faith. But to the extent we fail in this lifetime, God will use the righteous chisel Himself in the ages to come to perfect and reconcile all things to Himself. As the greatest artist of all, He will chip away the masked false to reveal the naked real.

It seems that God is all about name changes, or what I like to call mask-removal through name-renewal. On the positive side, the ugly mask known as Saul was burned off to reveal a mask-less Paul created in righteousness and true holiness. Likewise, in Genesis 17:5, Abram was de-masked to reveal Abraham, the father of many nations.

Revelation 2:17 tells us that God has given to each man who overcomes all worldly and demonic masks a white stone with a name on it only the Lord knows. This name is our mask-less self which ONLY the Lord can reveal to us. On the flip-side, the angel Lucifer became the masked Satan. Satan as a "mask," certainly the deadliest and densest mask of all, will definitely be cast forever into the Lake of Fire. But, whether God will, at the end of all the ages, restore Lucifer back to his original God-created identity by wrenching away his devil mask is an open and intriguing question. Toward Satan, I have nothing but righteous hate and violent opposition on every level. But, towards the angel Lucifer who fell so very far, I must confess a stirring of pity.

Being a father of seven, I have often thought that if I were an all-powerful Father, I don't think I would ever give my children enough freedom to destroy themselves, not forever and ever and eeeeevvvvvvveeeeerrrrrr.

I would certainly give them enough freedom to learn real gain and loss, the nature of love and cost of evil, and the nature of faith and doubt. But, I would never give them the keys to a car which could destroy them eternally.

I would give them a lot of elbow room to learn and grow, but I would not create an environment where they could destroy themselves for all time. And I don't think God does either. He might allow these masks of rebellion to deform us for a season, but it is hard to conceive He would allow the masks to stay attached to us for an eternity in the Lake of Fire. On the contrary, I see Him using the Lake of Fire as the place where He separates from us all the enemies of our soul, and then destroys forever all the things that have harmed and deformed us.

Under this view, the Lake of Fire is not a torture chamber where anybody's essential self, spirit or body are cast into flames for eternity. Rather, the Lake of Fire is God's final deliverance of those souls who "neglected their so great a salvation" by not taking every thought captive to the obedience of Christ. These souls have allowed "enemy grafting" to occur in their heartland. And now they are in the crisis of Hell because of it.

But God will not pull them by up their roots and destroy them totally. GOD WILL INSTEAD PRUNE BACK WHATEVER BRANCHES ARE NOT OF HIM. He will then hurl these branches into the Lake of Fire. What will be left is a transformed man, a born-again man, a man with no mask. 1 Corinthians 3:13-15 clearly envisions such a separation.

For Christians who win the crown of an overcomer, there is little if any wood, hay and stubble to separate and burn by flame. However, for the lost, the burning will be intense and they will lose much, but they themselves will be saved. The lost will have their part in the lake which burneth with fire,but their part will be their wood, hay and stubble and not their "essential selves." Rev. 21:8.






PREMISE # 4: GOD OVERCOMES ALL EVIL ONLY ONE WAY-- WITH GOODNESS!

God's nature overcomes evil only one way-- with GOODNESS! Romans 12:21; Matt. 5:43-48. It simply could not be in His nature to eternally torture any of His children, no matter how prodigal they have become. Gods goodness will ultimately, irresistibly and totally overcome and reconcile all forms of evil.

As George MacDonald wrote, "Nothing is inexorable but love. . . .Love is one, and love is changeless. For love loves into purity. Love has ever in view the absolute loveliness of that which it beholds. . . There is nothing eternal but that which loves and can be loved, and love is ever climbing towards the consummation when such shall be the universe, imperishable, divine. Therefore, all that is not beautiful in the beloved, all that comes between and is not of love’s kind, must be destroyed." George MacDonald: Scotland’s Beloved Storyteller, by Michael Phillips, p. 201 (1987).

What then is Hell, where did it come from and how are we delivered from it? William Law's answer is simply this:

"There is no Hell but where the heart of the creature is turned from God, nor any heaven but where the heart of the creature worketh with God....Purification therefore is the one thing necessary, and nothing will do instead of it. But man is not purified till every earthly, wrathful, sensual, selfish, partial, self-willing temper is taken from him. He is not dying to himself til he is dying to these tempers, and he is not alive in God til he is dead to them.” Selected Writings of William Law, by William Law.

Hell, then, is the heart turned from God and Heaven the heart turned toward God. The crisis of Hell is God's "emergency rescue" of lost souls from their self-made and Satan-generated Hell which has hardened their hearts toward God.

But, they may run but they can't hide in Hell. God will go after and save them from themselves. It will be painful and agonizing, but it will ultimately lead to repentance, redemption and life.

As the Theologia Germanica states, "Nothing burneth in Hell but self-will." This echoes William Law’s statement, "Nothing separates us from God but our own self-will. Rather, our own self-will IS separation from God." George MacDonald famously said, "The one principle of Hell is, I am my own."

C. S. Lewis said, "Hell's gate is locked from the inside." But, praise God, Jesus has the keys to both death and Hell. He is truly the stronger one who enters Hell, binds Satan, and saves us from our own destructions (Matt. 12:28-29).

This is the HEROIC view of God which is most consistent with His revealed nature in Jesus Christ. John A.T. Robinson summed it up best when he observed that the idea of God's deliverance from Hell for all men "comes from insight rather than foresight."

In other words, an insight INTO God’s love makes the permanency of Hell impossible. It is not based on the foresight of what exactly Hell WILL be, but rather is based on an insight into what God's character IS as revealed in Jesus Christ. The early Church fathers had this insight and so can we. So MUST we!

Friday, October 14, 2016

"who" and "how" and "when" Jesus judges

It's important to know just "who" and "how" and "when" Jesus judges.
Let's start with "who" Jesus judges, and then move on to "how" and "when."
"You judge by human standards; I pass judgment on no one." Jesus in John 8:15.
“As for the person who hears my words but does not keep them, I do not judge him. For I did not come to judge the world, but to save it." Jesus in John 12:47.
"I judge NO man." Jesus in John 8:15.
"The Father judges NO man, but has committed all judgment unto the Son..." Jesus in John 5:22.
"Now IS the JUDGMENT of this WORLD; now the RULER of this world will be cast out." Jesus in John 12:31.
"...the ruler of this world IS judged." Jesus in John 16:11.
"For this purpose the Son of God was manifested, that He might destroy the works of the devil." 1 John 3:8.
The only judgment Jesus exercises HERE is against Satan, his toxic ideas and his oppressive power structures . We need to remember that Satan is the one we need to enforce God's judgment upon, not man. Remove Satanic darkness and influence, then all men will eventually come to the light.
"In whom the god of this world [i.e. Satan] hath blinded the minds of them which believe not, lest the light of the glorious gospel of Christ, who is the image of God, should shine unto them." 2 Corinthians 4:4.
BUT, God WILL judge all of us in the future to come. But, not in the same way Satan judges here and now-- by brutally destroying us, but rather God judges us by painfully purging our souls of the "evil work-identities" we have created for ourselves. Paul describes this process in the following passage:
"For no other foundation can anyone lay than that which is laid, which is Jesus Christ. Now if anyone builds on this foundation [with] gold, silver, precious stones, wood, hay, straw, EACH ONE'S WORK WILL BECOME CLEAR; FOR THE DAY WILL DECLARE IT, BECAUSE IT WILL BE REVEALED BY FIRE; AND THE FIRE WILL TEST EACH MAN'S WORK, of what sort it is. If anyone's work which he has built on [it] endures, he will receive a reward. IF ANYONE'S WORK IS BURNED, HE WILL SUFFER LOSS; but HE HIMSELF WILL BE SAVED, YET SO AS BY FIRE." 1 Corinthians 3:11-15.
This is exactly the same judgment described in in Revelation 20:12-13, where all men are judged "according to their works." Reading these two passages together, we get a clearer picture of God's future judgment. This fiery judgment results in the "false sin-identities" we have created for ourselves being "burned off us" ("he will suffer loss"), but with our essential self still being saved ("but he himself will be saved, yet so as through fire").
After Hell is forever emptied in Revelation 20:14, "death and Hell" are then thrown into the Lake of Fire. Then, all the "false identities" which are NOT written in the Book of Life, and which have been burned off of us are cast into the Lake of Fire as well--- our wood, hay and stubble "selves." BUT, BUT, BUT, we ourselves "shall be saved." It is crucial to read Revelation 20 together with the 1 Corinthians 3 passage quoted above.
I believe 1 Corinthians 3:10-15 and Revelation 20:12-15 are referring to the same incident of several factors.
----both are referring to a postmortem experience
----both refer to themselves as "the judgment of men's works"
----both explicitly refer to "every man" man being so judged
----both use the imagery of "fire"
----both refer to some sort of dividing of "suffering and loss"
The Corinthians passage above refers to the judgment of "Every man's work" (verse 13). The Revelation passage about the Lake of Fire in chapters 20-21 ALSO refers to the judgment of every man's works: "the dead were judged... according to their works" (Revelation 20:12). So, Paul and Revelation's author were both describing the same event, the judgment of every man's works, but from their slightly different perspectives.
Now, note what Paul says ultimately happens on the other side of every man's work being judged: "If any man's work abide which he hath built thereupon, he shall receive a reward. IF ANY MAN'S WORK SHALL BE BURNED, HE SHALL SUFFER LOSS: BUT HE HIMSELF SHALL BE SAVED; YET SO AS BY FIRE."
God's future judgments are corrective, restorative and purgative. He does NOT judge the way Satan judges. Satan judges to condemn and destroy ALL that we are. God judges to ultimately PURGE the core of who we are.
The only word in the Gospels for "punishment" with regard to God punishing evildoers is "kolasis," which according to Aristotle, who knew Greek word meanings better than anybody who ever walked the planet, said that "kolasis" is the kind of punishment which "is inflicted in the interest of the sufferer," which means it is for the betterment or improvement of the person being punished. This is contrasted with "timoria," which Aristotle said is the kind of punishment which is "inflicted in the interest of him who inflicts it, that he may obtain satisfaction." (Rhet. 1369b13).
The renowned Greek scholar William Barclay agrees: "The Greek word for punishment is 'kolasis,' which was not originally an ethical word at all. It originally meant the pruning of trees to make them grow better. I think it is true to say that in all Greek secular literature 'kolasis' is never used of anything but 'remedial punishment.'" Barclay was professor of Divinity and Biblical Criticism at Glasgow University and the author of many commentaries and books, including a translation of the New Testament and the very popular Daily Study Bible Series.
Bottom Line: don't confuse Satan's current destructive judgments with God's future restorative judgments. They are two VERY different things. The destructive judgments we see out in the world NOW are entirely from Satan. Jesus tells us to NEVER judge other men (Matthew 7:1), but Paul also informs us that we do have the authority to judge dark angels who currently serve Satan (1 Corinthians 6:3). So, in a way, we are called to judge the demons who are seeking to judge us. Or, perhaps better put, we are called to ENFORCE Jesus' past judgment of demonic powers which He already accomplished at the Cross.
So, do not yield to Satan's judgment on your life. It is not OF or FROM God. Resist it, rebuke it, overcome it. This is what spiritual warfare is all about. Resist the judgment of Satan with stedfast faith. Do not fall into "the condemnation of the devil" (1 Timothy 3:6). who accuses and judges all of us day and night. "Now is come salvation , and strength , and the kingdom of our God , and the power of his Christ : for the accuser of our brethren is cast down , which accused [judged] them before our God day and night . And they overcame him by the blood of the Lamb, by the word of their testimony, and they loved not their lives (their false identities) unto the death." Revelation 12:10-11.

Tuesday, October 11, 2016

WWJD. What would Jesus do?

Well, one thing is that He would never ask that kind of hypothetical question.

Jesus most assuredly did NOT base His conduct on what He thought anybody else on earth would do-- past, present or future.

He would not ask: "What would King David do?"
He would not ask: "What would Abraham do?"
He definitely wouldn't ask: "What would Job do?"

Nor would he ask, and I am saying this a little tongue in cheek, "What would I, Jesus, do?"
He didn't seek David's will, Abraham's will, Job's will, OR even His own self-will.
Jesus only and always sought the will of the Father.

Jesus didn't ask hypotheticals, but acted solely on unction, on direct relational input from His Father, on a flow of RHEMA impulses, the same RHEMA on which He said WE are to continually "live by" as it comes directly from the Lord's mouth. Matthew 4:4.

There are no need for "hypotheticals" because God is here to reveal the "actualities" of God.
Hypotheticals are for an absent God, not for a richly present One.
Jesus' question was not even, "What is the Father doing today, here and now!"
That last question sounds good at first, but it is missing the crucial element-- it is not phrased in the second person
Jesus' one question addressed the Father directly, "Father, what are YOU doing today, here and now?"

And so should ours. God wants YOU to vibrantly connect with HIM-- all the time abiding in relational interactions with Him.

The sons of God are those who are led, and led, and led BY the Spirit of God! Romans 8:14.
"Jesus therefore answered and said unto them, Verily, verily, I say unto you, The Son can do nothing of himself, but what he seeth the Father doing: for what things soever he doeth, these the Son also doeth in like manner....I can of myself do nothing: as I hear, I judge: and my judgment is righteous; because I seek not mine own will, but the will of him that sent me." John 5:19, 30.
Jesus did nothing without first seeing or hearing the Father do it.

Now, let me say there IS great benefit in knowing what the Lord would NEVER do. For instance, He would NEVER kill us, coerce us, forsake us, mislead us, oppress us or destroy us. Knowing these things keeps us from listening to the voice of the stranger who accuses God of unworthy things.
But, this is only a small part of the battle. Knowing what God would never do is NOT the same thing as discerning what He IS doing TODAY, HERE, AND NOW-- His RHEMA will in other words!
You may say, "Well, this sounds so mystical!"

I totally agree!! It is mysticism, but it's practical mysticism, it's vital mysticism, and it is promised mysticism.

Jesus promised that the Holy Spirit dynamically leads us into all RHEMA truth. And He meant it.
The Holy Spirit is the voice of God living within us, the indwelling projector of His truth onto all the screens of our consciousness.

Jesus rejoiced when Peter HEARD within his heart FROM the Father who Jesus really was-- the Son of the living God! Peter's "confession" isn't the rock on which Christ would build His church, but rather Peter's hearing from Heaven. It was Peter's RHEMA hearing directly from the Father RATHER than from mere flesh and blood.

Read this passage below carefully and it will hit you like a ton of golden manna-- we are the Church of those who are called live by every RHEMA which proceeds, and proceeds, and proceeds out of the mouth of the living God.

"And Jesus answered and said unto him, Blessed art thou, Simon Bar-jonah: FOR 'flesh and blood' hath NOT revealed it unto thee, BUT my Father who is IN heaven. And I also say unto thee, that thou art Peter, and upon THIS rock I will build my church; and the gates of Hades shall not prevail against it. I will give unto thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven: and whatsoever thou shalt bind on earth shall be bound in heaven; and whatsoever thou shalt loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven." Matthew 16:17-19.

Wednesday, September 28, 2016

DOES GOD EVER SAY "NO" TO HEALING PRAYER?

I have felt for quite awhile that we have allowed our misguided presumptions about God determine where we end up on most any topic. With regard to healing prayer, most presume that God actively grants some healing prayers while specifically denying or passively ignoring others. In other words, He refuses some (most perhaps) to be healed while granting healing to certain others. The apparent arbitrariness opens up many unflattering assertions as to His goodness.

I am unwilling to make that presumption based upon the New Testament statements made below. And while I don't propose a comprehensive or dogmatic answer, I do propose an alternate paradigm shift about prayer. Anyway, I hope we continue to allow each other some elbow room to explore these vital possibilities. The whole earth is groaning for the manifestation of the sons of God to awaken and engage in what the rabbis called "tikkun ha olam," the repair of the world.

WHAT IF there is a spiritual ecosystem of prayer, an organic network where God has already pre-known and pre-answered our every prayer of faith in the affirmative (as the New Testament seems to unrelentingly promise).

And, what if there is only ONE requirement for this ecosystem to release answered prayers of healing and blessing? Its inhabitants MUST "rely upon" and "be led by" the Spirt both "in" and "through" and "past" their prayers of faith. In other words, our praying must operate in what the Bible alternatively calls "the Spirit of faith" by which we both "believe and speak" our prayers (2 Corinthians 4:13), AND "the hearing of faith" which "works miracles among us "(Galatians 3:5). In other words, organic manifestation FROM healing prayers depends on organic participation and interaction with God's Spirit IN healing prayers.

If Jesus is our model (as opposed to a unattainable mirage in whose steps His church-bride can never hope to functionally walk), then we must look to His incarnation for the dynamic of successful prayer.

Did Jesus ever fail with a healing prayer? Not that we see, except perhaps in Mark 6:5-6 upon His return to Nazareth, where it states, "He could do no mighty works, save He laid His hands on a few sick folk, and healed them" (verse 5). And Jesus thereafter, "marveled because of their unbelief" (verse 6).

Their unbelief killed an organic opportunity for God's mighty works to be done then and there. But does this mean Abba explicitly said "NO" to Jesus prayer's for a "mighty works" demonstration? Or, rather, does it mean that Jesus was organically lead in WHAT to pray for Nazareth before, during and after His ministry there, of course taking into account all the factors present, including their individual and corporate levels of receptivity? I believe the latter option is correct.

In other words, Jesus "could do no mighty works" NOT because He tried and failed, but because the Spirit led and instructed Him on what their corporate and individual capacities and willingness to receive were at THAT juncture in time. Jesus always engaged in organic prayer, and made the repeated claim that He ONLY and ALWAYS did what He first SAW the Father's Spirit do, and SPOKE only what He first HEARD the Father's Spirit speak. John 5:19, 30. We too are called, both individually and corporately, into this "mutual participation" and joint-operation with the Spirit. Philippians 2:1. "The sons and daughters of God are those who are led (and led, and led, and led) by the Spirit of God." Romans 8:14.

Because Jesus was only and always Spirit-led, He batted a thousand with His prayers. His organic "hearing of faith" meant His prayers were malleable and always fluidly formed from first "listening to" and "participating with" the Holy Spirit's assessment and desire for every situation He encountered. Some of this "hearing of faith" came from devotional prayer, some from spontaneous on-the-go interaction, and some in the wake of a particular event's occurrence after the freewill response of others had been exercised.

But, I see no situation where Abba said "NO" to any of Jesus' prayers of faith. Jesus' prayer for the removal of the cup of suffering at Gethsemane doesn't apply here as He prefaced it, "If it's possible," which, when combined with Jesus' immediate willingness thereafter to embrace the Father's will, merely demonstrates Jesus' organic "hearing of faith" prayer, which here meant aligning His will into His Father's perfection.

SO...

--IF we have Jesus' same effectual Spirit of faith (Rom. 8:9-11; Gal. 2:20; 1 Cor. 12)
--IF we have been promised that healing prayer works (James 5:16; Mark 16:18)
--IF we affirm that all the promises of God are yes and amen (2 Cor. 1:20)
--IF we ask for anything in prayer, believing, we receive (Matt. 21:22; Mk.11:22-26)
--IF we have spiritual dominion over all creation (Gen. 1:26-28; Heb. 2:6-8)
--IF we have NOT because we ask NOT, OR we ask AMISS (James 4:3)
--IF we are equipped to do the same and greater works Jesus did (Jn. 14:12-14)

... then we are left with a startling conclusion. There is no such thing as unanswered prayer. There is only un-catalyzed prayer. There is only ineffectual prayer. There are only divine promises which have not yet been properly probated by organic participation with His Spirit. But, there is no promise for blessing and healing which has NOT already been kept by the Father. His eternal YES has not yet been catalyzed by the brides endorsed AMEN which can only come from organic interaction with His.

So, instead of figuring out why God appears to say "NO" to the vast majority of prayers, let's focus on the more profitable issue as how we can better catalyze and align ourselves with His eternal "YES." The better question is how we, as the church-bride, can individually and corporately catalyze His faithful "YES" with our effectual "AMEN."

The bottom line is that we are called in our prayer life to be relational, malleable, fluid, fervent and effectual. "The fervent prayers of a righteous man avail much." James 5:16. Conversely, the UN-fervent prayers from an unbelieving posture avail little. Again, the question is not why said God "NO" to a prayer, but, rather, how can we BETTER appropriate His "YES," what William Law called "God's unchangeable and immutable will-to-all-goodness." Our prayers must not only be Spirit-given but also Spirit-driven. One major reason for ineffective prayer comes from not praying organically with, from, and through the Holy Spirit. It is a bit of a lost art.

Solution:
1) Every part of the body of christ (chruch) must do only what he sees the Father doing. John 5:19


2) Abide under atmosphere of Grace.

3) God's voice gives you the right of possession and God's vision gives you the authority to accomplish it. So let your spiritual senses be open always.

.

Monday, September 5, 2016

concerning the killing of the Egyptian firstborn, who was the death angel?

Now, concerning the killing of the Egyptian firstborn, who was the death angel? We know from Jewish religious resources cited in previous link above that the Jews still believe to this day that the death angel was Satan. They believed it then. They believe it now. They are absolutely correct. Their only mistake is that they believe Satan was God's personal assassin fulfilling God's will rather than God's fiercest enemy opposing God's will.
We now know Satan steals, kills, and destroys, and that he has the power of death according to Hebrews 2:14-15, not God. So if God didn't kill the firstborn, what DID God do in all this? Simple. He saved the Israelites from the death angel. By instructing the Israelites to apply blood over all their doorstep as act of FAITH, God was now enabled to fully hedge them about with complete protection. God always longs to give His full hedge of protection to all men, including the Egyptians, but men harden, reject and refuse to receive it. This quenches the Lord's access to protect, instead allowing Satan access to attack.
I have always wondered why people think that the Lord is the one who SICS the devil on us whenever we displease God. No, we are the ones who SIC the devil on ourselves. Jesus is trying to save us from our self-SICCING (or self-seeking, excuse the pun). Jesus comes daily extending to us a gold-engraved invitation to experience the limitless life of God. Some receive that invitation gladly. Others spit at it and turn away immediately into Satan's waiting arms.
Poor Moses thought in Exodus 5:3 that God would actually punish Israel "with pestilence and sword" if they didn't immediately go into the desert and sacrifice to Him (see Exodus 3:18, where the Lord originally threatened no such thing). While it's certainly true that our failure to worship God does open us up to greater Satanic attacks, the culprit is our own neglect and not the vindictiveness of God to ever SIC Satan on us. "How shall we escape, if we neglect so great a salvation?" Hebrew 2:3.
To reject God's call is to enter Satan's domain. God doesn't unleash Satanic attacks toward us to show us who is boss. Instead, by us continuing to harden our hearts toward God, we turn ourselves over more and more to the power of the prince of darkness. God speaks only words of life, deliverance and blessing. If we harden our heart to spit at those words with our neglect and unbelief, then we have opened wide our gates to invite all kinds of demonic attack. When we ignore God, we empower Satan and diminish God's hedge around us. Repentance reestablishes and strengthens that hedge.
One last question needs to be addressed. The Red Sea crossing-- who parted the waves and who caused them to fall on and kill the Egyptians? Well, the parting is easy. God parted the waters to save the Israelites from the pursuing Egyptian army bent on killing them by the sword. That was Moses in the light cycle saving others in the pure power of God. But the falling waters is another matter.
Did you know that the Lord caused the Egyptians to get stuck in the mud as they were chasing the Israelites through the parted waters? Did you know that the Lord actually made all the Egyptian chariot wheels to fall off? Did you know that the Egyptians had actually decided to give up and started to flee back to their own shore? Exodus 14:24-25. Moses, in his own nature, lacked the divine patience and indefatigable mercy to keep his staff raised so that the Egyptians could retreat.
Jesus' patience is perfect. He offers divine protection without having to kill anybody. The Egyptians had given up and were returning home. There was no need to kill them to save Israel at this point. Do you think for a moment Jesus would have lowered His hand and commanded the waters to kill the Egyptians? No! He would have allowed the Egyptians to return home alive.
But what did Moses do in his dark cycle? He listened to wrath, to Satan, to revenge. Moses was the one who commanded the waters to fall and kill the Egyptian enemies-- not God, not Jesus, not Holy Spirit love that blesses and forgives enemies. People tried to kill, stone, and shove Jesus off a cliff at various points of His life. He NEVER harmed anybody. He just passed through their midst supernaturally. Anytime our enemies are harmed by us rather than blessed and forgiven, then rest assured the STROBE LIGHT EFFECT is responsible.
Apply THE BRACKET method demonstrated above and we can eliminate the STROBE LIGHT EFFECT. Our image of God will be forever purified and elevated. It will be so much easier to love Jesus with a sincere and unfeigned love, one not based on fear, threat, manipulation or intimidation. Remember, it is just not the Old Testament "characters" written about who suffer from the STROBE LIGHT EFFECT. It is also the Old Testament writers themselves, and even on occasion the New Testament characters and writers. Not nearly as much for sure, but still, from time to time, some slight STROBING will occur in the New Testament. We just need to be aware of this phenomenon and know how to quickly use THE BRACKET to rightly divide Scripture with the revealed nature of Jesus. It always comes down to Jesus. If our Spirit-enlightened conscience can't see Jesus doing horrible things described in Scripture, then we mustn't see the Father doing it either. If we have seen Jesus, we have seen the Father. Satan is the source of all destructive evil, not Jesus, never Jesus.

HOW DO WE TELL THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PAUL'S "PHILOSOPHY" AND PAUL'S "REVELATION" ?

The Apostle Paul was a great man. He had many "third heaven" revelations. He also had many "first heaven" educated opinions. We need to know the difference. "Third heaven" revelation from the "throne room" of God fills Galatians, Ephesians, Philippians and Colossians. "First heaven" opinions based on Paul's practical philosophy frequently appear in Timothy, Titus, Romans and Corinthians, even though these books also contain many "third heaven" insights as well.
Let me clarify. Jesus never talked philosophically about politics, slavery, women's rights, etc. However, Paul did. And without question, Paul's opinions on these issues certainly matter. They are a good place to start.
But, are Paul's opinions on philosophical issues the final word for all time? Are we forever chained to Paul's opinions? Are we unable to better develop them, respectfully disagree with them, or rigorously debate them? Do we stand on Paul's shoulders or does he stand on ours? If Paul stands on OUR shoulders, then we, as the low man on the totem pole, will never see the answers directly for ourselves, but will have to totally trust Paul's philosophic vision as the ONLY legitimate seer on these matters. But, if WE stand on Paul's shoulders, then we should be able to see higher and better and fresher and clearer than Paul did on these issues.
I can easily imagine Paul exhorting us in the cloud of heavenly witnesses to carry the baton of his opinions faster and farther than he did. He would WANT us to refine, improve and expand his personal philosophy to better honor the Lord. Paul's opinions in these areas might be part of the foundational "floor" we stand on for initial balance, but they are not the ultimate conceptual "ceiling" we grow to reach toward and beyond.
Let me give an example. Jesus NEVER talked about political systems, except perhaps when He said, "Render unto Caesar the things that are Caesar's and to God the things that are God's" (Matthew 22:21). This one statement is hardly a political manifesto with which to guide our Christian walk.
Jesus NEVER said ALL governments were ordained by God to execute the sword over evil doers or that government officials were ministers of God. And yet Paul said all these things in Romans 13:1-7. But, one could argue that this differed from Jesus' view because in the wilderness temptations it is revealed that all the kingdoms of the worlds are in the power of Satan to give to whom he pleased (Luke 4:5-6). 1 John 5:19 confirms that the whole fallen world lies in the power of the evil one -- Satan. Thus, one could make the Scriptural argument that earthly governments are unspiritual at best and demonically influenced at worst.
Yet, Paul had a higher view of government as a godly authority, or at least he did when he wrote the book of Romans. But let's think about that for a moment. Paul was a Roman citizen, a status which gave him a lot of protection. Time and time again, Paul was protected from death at the hands of the Judaizers BECAUSE he was a Roman citizen. To Paul, the government he was exposed to offered him and his ministry a level of protection.
But, would Paul have felt that Rome was "God's minister" when they sacked Jerusalem and killed thousands of Jewish men, women and children. Or, if Paul was given a prophetic foresight into the despotic governments of Hitler's Germany, Stalin's Russia, Mao Zedong's China, Pol Pot's Cambodia, Saddam Heusein's Iraq, Pavelic's Croatia, who, in total, harshly oppressed and brutally killed hundreds of millions during their rule, would Paul have written Romans 13:1-7? If Paul could have seen their future evil, would Paul call ALL government authorities "ministers of God" as he did in Romans 13? Surely not!
The point is that what Paul said about government was HIS philosophy, HIS best Christian opinion, and HIS best advice to a young church in need of practical counsel. BUT, what Paul said about government was NOT his "third heaven" revelation. Paul's "third heaven" revelations consisted of his transcendent epiphanies of the Lord's "SUPERNATURAL GRACE" and the matchless "IN CHRIST" realities available to all believers.
Paul acknowledged in Romans 14 that our respective maturity levels of faith might result in us having differing opinions on various practical matters such as diet, drink, calendars and festivals. The brother with weaker faith may have a different view than the brother with more mature faith, yet the freer brother should not be a stumbling block to the weaker brother by purposely doing anything which would be a stumbling block to the faith of the younger believer. Paul's point was that each believer could be on different sides of an issue, yet both still be right IF they both were acting from their respective levels of faith.
In 1 Corinthians 7:10-16, Paul also acknowledged that he had particular revelation which he was certain was from the Lord with regard to marriage, BUT that there were OTHER marriage-related issues in which he could only hazard his best opinion. Paul simply didn't have "throne room revelation"on every practical or philosophical question that came before him. And he was man enough to admit it.
Let's take other examples. Paul said women should NOT speak in church, should NOT teach men, and in fact should NOT exercise any authority over any men (1 Timothy 2:12; 1 Corinthians 14:34-35). Are we to be tightly and permanently bound to Paul's philosophical view of women espoused in the above verses? Certainly not. The body of Christ has, for the most part, left this primitive philosophy behind. Today, there are tons of anointed female teachers, prophets, pastors and minsters who, praise God, DON'T keep silent in church.
Paul likewise instructed slaves to be obedient to their masters (Ephesians 6:5; Titus 2:9). The church has violated this principle repeatedly by supporting anti-slavery activities of all kinds, including underground railroads during the Civil War which both encouraged and enabled slaves to disobey their masters by running away.
Do mature Christians planet-wide agree with Paul's philosophy which would have run away slaves always return to their masters to once again subject themselves to a yoke of bondage, JUST to comply with Paul's opinion? Paul did this very thing to the runaway slave Onesimus in Philemon 9-24. Here, Paul sent Onesimus back to his master Philemon, along with a written plea to free him.
Don't get me wrong. Paul's solution in Onesimus' case was beautiful and full of grace. His plea to Philemon brings tears to read it. However, does this mean that Paul's philosophy of slaves obeying their masters is a universal rule meant to apply for all times in all situations? Or, can we develop, modify and evolve Paul's thinking to discover a different "faith solution" for ourselves? Millions of runaway slaves over the last thousand years have done just that. Do I have the confidence to say that the Holy Spirit has NEVER led ANY oppressed slave to escape his oppression by running away? No!!!
And, bringing government back into it, Christians also have a long history of protest and refusal when it comes to "obeying" the authorities God has set "over us." From abortion to military service to unjust wars to capital punishment, Christians have long "resisted the ordinances and powers of government" when quickened to do so by their consciences. But Paul said that "whoever resists the power or ordinance (of government) resists the ordinance of God and shall receive to themselves damnation." Romans 13:2.
Dietrich Bonhoeffer, who is universally admired for his righteous lifestyle and ministry, is widely considered a martyr for conspiring to physically remove Hitler from power. He failed and was executed by Hitler's regime. Bonhoeffer would definitely disagree with Paul that ALL government "powers that be are ordained by God" ( Romans 13:1). There is just no way God ordained Hitler to rule Germany under divine unction.
Paul's gross oversimplification of complete political obedience was, as Albert Einstein famously said, "Simpler than possible." Nobody would seriously label Bonhoeffer's acts of "resisting the power and ordinance" of Nazi Germany as an offense which would bring him "damnation." If every great Christian who resisted government authority and power was "damned" for doing so, then heaven will be sparse indeed.
By the way, the Holy Ghost has definitely managed a few "technically illegal" jail breaks in his day, such as in Acts 5:19; 12:10; 16:26. If Paul's Romans 13:2 propositions were universally true, then the apostles, who frequently escaped numerous lawful prisons, along with the Holy Ghost Himself, would ALL be guilty of "resisting the power and ordinance of God." I wouldn't like to be the officer who tries to serve THAT arrest warrant on the Holy Ghost.
Aside from the issues listed above, it may also be that Paul's linked views on election, predetermination and the potter-clay analogy used in Romans 9-11 may all be influenced more by Paul's philosophies than by Paul's epiphanies.
Paul's pharisaical background so steeped in hyper-sovereignty and hyper-predetermination, combined with his ongoing vexation at his Jewish brothers' continuing rejection of the Messiah, may well have combined to push Paul a little too far over into his "vexed" opinion and away from his spiritual revelation. I say this because issues of predetermination and election never seemed to concern Jesus in His teachings or preachings.
Yet, Paul describes God as a sovereign potter who either predetermines humans to fail as instruments of wrath and dishonor OR succeed as instruments of glory and honor. This preformation of men occurs in the same way clay is manipulated by the hands of the potter. This image portrays God as an omnipotent potter PRE-forming and PRE-determining all our futures by EITHER giving us inborn "flaws to fail" or inborn "faith to succeed."
This analogy by Paul is not well thought out and is not fully consonant with the loving Father revealed by Jesus, a Father Who in NO way has any connection to putting evil flaws into us and Who gives only good gifts to His children (James 1:13-17; Matthew 7:11). Again, this questionable analogy may be more due to Paul's philosophical bent towards hyper-predeterminsm than it is to perfect "third heaven" revelation.
The point is that we must not treat Paul's personal philosophy the same way we treat his supernatural "third heaven" revelations which come straight from "the throne room of God." Jesus NEVER preached or taught on these specific topics listed above for a reason. He wanted US to be fluid, thoughtful and faithful in OUR generation by going BEYOND Paul's advice into greater and greater solutions for OUR day and OUR circumstance.
Paul's wisdom is certainly to be esteemed and understood from every angle, but it is not the only acceptable philosophy on these matters. Christians of different faith levels and giftings can disagree on these non-essential, tangential issues listed above and still be operating in faith that pleases God.
The point for us is to find and follow our OWN "faith" in these issues of conscience.

How does the Lord 's deliverance work

The below passage about Paul's "thorn in the flesh" is often cited for the following horribly wrong propositions:
1) "God sent Paul a thorn in the flesh."
2) "Paul's thorn in the flesh was some sort of sickness or disease."
3) "God repeatedly rejected Paul's prayers and refused to help him remove the thorn."
Before dismantling these three errors, let's first look at this challenging passage:
"And lest I should be exalted above measure through the abundance of the revelations, there was given to me a thorn in the flesh, THE MESSENGER OF SATAN to buffet me, lest I should be exalted above measure.
For this thing I besought the Lord THREE TIMES that it might depart from me.
And he said unto me, MY GRACE IS SUFFICIENT FOR THEE: for my strength is made perfect in weakness.
Most gladly therefore will I rather glory in my infirmities, that the power of Christ may rest upon me. Therefore I take pleasure in infirmities, in reproaches, in necessities, in persecutions, in distresses for Christ's sake: for when I am weak, then am I strong.
I am become a fool in glorying; ye have compelled me: for I ought to have been commended of you: for in nothing am I behind the very chiefest apostles, though I be nothing.
Truly the signs of an apostle were wrought among you in all patience, in signs, and wonders, and mighty deeds. For what is it wherein ye were inferior to other churches, except it be that I myself was not burdensome to you? forgive me this wrong.
Behold, the THIRD time I am ready to come to you . . . .
This is the THIRD time I am coming to you." 2 Corinthians 12:7-14; 13:1.
So, now let's revisit the three BOGUS propositions cited above which give rise to numerous CRUEL THEOLOGIES prevalent today. By cruel, I mean those wrong "thorn in the flesh" theologies which paint God as a harsh "control freak" who literally sculpts us using the knives of pain, sickness and affliction. These CRUEL THEOLOGIES portray God as a torturer rather than a healer.
This twisted image of God resembles a mean little boy experimenting on insects, who delights in tearing wings off butterflies so that he can see them struggle to survive. Except, in God's case, WE are the butterflies on whom He experiments. He tears our wings off with sickness and affliction, so that we will learn humility and learn to give Him glory in the process. How nauseatingly disgusting this image of God is! It is so dishonoring and incompatible with the the nature of God revealed in and by Jesus. Yet, millions of people worldwide still believe in this deformed image of God!
So, let's restate each of the three BOGUS propositions. After each, I will respond and refute the claim.
1) "God sent Paul a thorn in the flesh." WRONG!
This point is easily disproven. Paul calls his thorn in the flesh "the messenger of Satan" in verse 7, and NOT "the messenger of God." Case closed! The "thorn" was FROM Satan AGAINST Paul. Satan is NOT a servant of God. Satan is NOT fulfilling God's will, but OPPOSING it on every level. Scripture proclaims Satan a cosmic rebel, the accuser of the brethren, the tempter, a liar, a murderer from the beginning, the destroyer, a thief, a devouring lion, the god of this world, and the prince of the power of the air.
Jesus came to destroy Satan's works, not implement them (1 John 3:8). Concerning Satan's "thorny" attacks, the New Testament tells us to "resist them stedfast in the faith," to "quench all the fiery missiles of the devil," and to "cast out" all demonic influence. We have ALREADY been given the grace keys to "bind and loose" spiritual forces upon the earth, to bind all things Satan-empowered and loose all things Christ-empowered.
The bottom line? Don't let anyone tell you God sends "thorns in the flesh" to afflict men. This is Satan's work, not God's. Once we are resolute on this point, we can then wholeheartedly resist EVERY Satanic missile, thorn, attack and oppression. Honestly, if we have ANY doubt or suspicion that our "thorns" are FROM God rather than FROM Satan, we will NOT fervently resist, rebuke and remove the thorns of affliction from our lives. Instead, we will accommodate them by accepting sickness, affliction and oppression as the Lord's will for our lives. And this we must not do.
2) "Paul's thorn in the flesh was some sort of sickness or disease." WRONG!
There is not one clear indication in Scripture that Paul's thorn in the flesh was a sickness or disease of some kind.
In 2 Cor. 12:10, the word " infirmities " (Strong s #s769 and 770) means " weaknesses " and is used primarily by Paul to refer to natural limitations in man 's abilities. See Romans 4:19; 6:19; 8:3, 26; 14:1-2; 1 Corinthians 8:11-12; 2 Corinthians 11:30; 12:5, 9, 10; 13:4, where all these verses refer NOT to physical sicknesses, but rather to weaknesses in man 's natural ability to accomplish the righteousness of God. Where man 's abilities end is where God 's ability begins. As God is given free reign in our lives, He then re-energizes and renews our natural ability with His supernatural ability.
If Paul WERE referring to physical sicknesses, it surely seems he would have mentioned them a chapter earlier in 2 Corinthians 11:23-30, where he details exactly WHAT his infirmities were: "Are they ministers of Christ? (I speak as a fool) I am more; in labours more abundant, in stripes above measure, in prisons more frequent, in deaths oft. Of the Jews five times received I forty stripes save one. Thrice was I beaten with rods, once was I stoned, thrice I suffered shipwreck, a night and a day I have been in the deep; In journeyings often, in perils of waters, in perils of robbers, in perils by mine own countrymen, in perils by the heathen, in perils in the city, in perils in the wilderness, in perils in the sea, in perils among false brethren; In weariness and painfulness, in watchings often, in hunger and thirst, in fastings often, in cold and nakedness. Beside those things that are without, that which cometh upon me daily, the care of all the churches. Who is weak, and I am not weak? who is offended, and I burn not? If I must needs glory, I will glory of the things which concern mine infirmities." 2 Cor. 11:23-30.
On this list were labors, stripes, prisons, deaths of those around us, beatings, stoning, shipwreck, perils of water, perils of robbers, perils by countrymen, perils by heathen, perils in the city\wilderness\sea, perils by false brothers, weariness, painfulness, hunger, thirst, cold, nakedness and the care of all the churches. NOWHERE IS SICKNESS MENTIONED. Rather, these infirmities were all various types of Satanic and human RESISTANCE and PERSECUTION against the Gospel.
Most importantly, these infirmities were NOT to be accepted as God 's will. Paul rejoiced in these infirmities, NOT because they brought him continual defeat in his ministry, but because He knew God 's power was then free to be released in full measure to bring victory. "Nay, in all these things we are more than conquerers through him that loved us." Romans 8:37. God supernaturally delivered Paul OUT of each of these trials, each in a different way, but all bringing maximum impact of God 's glory in the situation. God gets NO glory from us meekly surrendering to the thorns of our flesh. Rather, God gets the glory when we utilize His all-sufficient grace to OVERCOME and REMOVE the thorns from our flesh altogether.
Paul 's suffering through these infirmities always led to a supernatural release of God 's power to deliver Paul from Satan, while at the same time fully delivering the gospel to the Gentiles. Paul didn 't give in or give up because of these infirmities: he resisted and resisted and resisted and resisted them with the power of God. He gloried in the affliction, not because of it: "In everything give thanks: for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus concerning you." 1 Thessalonians 5:19. We are to give thanks not FOR everything (including afflictions) but IN everything (including afflictions).
This is entirely consistent with James's view: "My brethren, count it all joy when ye fall into divers temptations; Knowing this, that the trying of your faith worketh patience. But let patience have her perfect work, that ye may be perfect and entire, wanting nothing." James 1:2-4. It is also consistent with Hebrews 6:12, "That ye be not slothful, but followers of them who through faith and patience inherit the promises."
So what WAS Paul's thorn in the flesh? Looking closely at the context of the passage, an amazing answer presents itself. The thorn may well have been the Corinthian church itself.
Paul prayed THREE TIMES for for the thorn to depart. Paul went out of his way to repeatedly say that he was about to visit the Corinthian church for the THIRD time. Was Paul's repeated use of the number three a mere coincidence, or was Paul giving the Corinthians a not-so-subtle hint on what the mysterious thorn in his flesh was? But how could the Corinthian church be a thorn in Paul's flesh? Well, we know the Corinthians had repeatedly challenged Paul's motives, standing and apostolic authority (2 Cor. 10:1-2; 11:21-28; 12:11-15; 13:3; 1 Cor. 3; 4:1-4; 9). We also know the Corinthians were carnal, divisive and often petty. They continually flooded and vexed Paul with bad reports, constant strife and ugly ingratitude.
So, perhaps this whole episode simply indicates that Paul's messenger of Satan, his thorn of the flesh, was the carnally minded Corinthian congregation itself. Nothing hurts MORE than having a group of people, for whom you have laid your life down, continually challenge your apostolic authority, doubt your motives, and ignore your cousel.
Perhaps Paul struggled with their sinful defiance to the point where he asked the Lord to remove their burden from his ministry. But, God responded to Paul that His grace was sufficient for Paul to STAY connected and committed to Corinth as an apostle, to clean out their sin stables, and in his manly weakness Paul would be made perfect in Godly strength.
Again, what could be more discouraging than ministering to people who doubt your motives, standing and authority - - who seem to only be able to know you after the flesh and not after the spirit?
But, even IF the above analysis is wrong and Paul 's thorn in the flesh was a continuing attack of some kind of physical affliction, this passage still can 't be used to claim such an attack is from God 's will. Again, Paul said the source was Satan, not God (2 Cor. 12:7). Moreover, as an alternate possibility here, consider Agnes Sanford 's view of Paul 's thorn in the flesh in the event it WAS a physical ailment:
"What about St. Paul and his thorn in the flesh? St. Paul s thorn in the flesh has become a veritable thorn in the spirit to thousands of Christians, who take St. Paul as an example for cherishing illness. In this they are not consistent. If St. Paul were really their example, they could raise the dead. For in seeing him as an example, of the invalid saint, they do the utmost violence to the Biblical picture of a man strong enough to endure shipwreck and exposure, stoning and imprisonment and still accomplish more than ten ordinary men could.
Behold the impressive roll-call of saints given in the eleventh chapter of Hebrews. Is there a weakling among them? Noah, who in his five hundredth year built an ark the size of a modern cargo ship; Moses, who at the age of one hundred and twenty stated that his eyes were not dim nor his natural strength abated; Elijah, who girded up his loins and outran the king 's chariot horses; David, who slew a lion and a bear with his bare hands. There is no record in the whole Bible of a holy man who remained an invalid. Stories of illnesses we find, but these stories are almost funny in the portrayal of a tremendous urge toward health. The prostrated holy men were outraged at illness, regarding it as a sign of being cut off from God 's love and cast out of His presence. From David (who made his couch to swim with his tears) to Job (who sat upon a dung-heap and cried unto the Lord till he recovered) we find no instance of an acceptance of illness as the will of God. . . .
St. Paul had been miraculously healed more than once. He had shaken off a deadly serpent and felt no sting whatsoever from its bite. He had been stoned and left for dead, and had risen from under a pile of stones and walked into the city. He had accomplished the most amazing of miracles, even the raising of the dead. Yet, toward the end of his ministry, he was troubled by a thorn in the flesh. He prayed about this matter and God said to him, My grace is sufficient for thee: for my strength is made perfect in weakness.
He did not receive an instantaneous healing. Instead of that, he received every day enough of the Grace of God for that day s needs. So do I. And if God 's perfect strength accomplished through me as much as it did through St. Paul, I would be well content. " THE HEALING LIGHT, by Agnes Sanford.
3) "God repeatedly rejected Paul's prayers and refused to help him remove the thorn." WRONG!
GOD NEVER TOLD PAUL "NO! I WON'T HELP YOU!" Paul prayed three times for the thorn to depart (v. 8). But, God 's answer to Paul was, " My grace is sufficient for thee: for my strength is made perfect in weakness (i.e. I've already given you the resources to deal with it. My ability begins where your ability ends).
God 's response was not, " No, Paul, I won t help you. " Rather, it was, " Paul, I have already given you the grace to deal with it in my perfect strength. You need only receive it by acknowledging your weakness in your own ability. As you embrace my ability by forsaking your own, then the perfect power of the anointing will rest on you. "
Whatever the thorn was, God knew that Paul wanted a super-quick fix, as do we all, by seeking God to kiss the "boo-boo" to make it quickly go away. But, God wanted a quality deliverance that soaked down deep into Paul s character. In fact, Paul stated that Satan 's access to afflict him came from Paul being in danger of becoming exalted above measure through the abundance of the [third heaven] revelations. "And lest I should be exalted above measure through the abundance of the revelations, there was given to me a thorn in the flesh, the messenger of Satan to buffet me, lest I should be exalted above measure." 2 Cor. 12:7.
Again, this seems to indicate an attack on Paul 's character by the carnal Corinthian church rather than an attack on his body, but regardless, Paul wanted to leave this battlefield behind. Whereas Paul was tired of this battle, God responded, " This is the battlefield I have called you. You don t need reinforcements. Just use the resources I have already give you. Your character, fortitude and anointing will all greatly benefit. And you will be a much better man for it because you know and depend on my spirit more than ever. "
The Greek word " thlipsis " is translated in the New Testament as affliction, but it literally means pressure. (Strong s #2347). Satan 's "pressure" on our lives through afflictions eventually renders our natural abilities useless. Satan seeks to destroy us in this state of weakness by crippling our faith, hope and love. But, God sees this state of weakness as a place of brokenness and trust where we can draw closer to Him and receive a fuller measure of grace. (1 Pet. 1:13). This process works patience (joyful endurance) in our character, so that we can rule and reign as champion sons of God. In our gritty and gutty resistance to Satan 's pressure (persecution, temptation, sickness, oppression, depression, failure), our character develops patience (joyful endurance) which, when mixed with our faith, releases the anointing of power.
But wasn t Paul a martyr? God didn t deliver him out of that affliction, did he? Doesn 't that mean it 's good to die young? Why didn t Psalm 91 work for Paul? All these questions misunderstand what a true martyr is. A martyr is not someone whose life is taken from him. A martyr is someone who voluntarily lays his\her life down by refusing to accept the Lord s deliverance in the situation because his\her death would have maximum impact at this point in time. Just as nobody took Jesus' life because He voluntarily laid it down, so too nobody took Paul 's life without his consent. The Holy Spirit gave him plenty of advance notice of what dangers awaited him at Jerusalem, yet Paul freely embraced the martyr 's death (Acts 21:10-14).
"And what shall I more say? for the time would fail me to tell of Gideon, and of Barak, and of Samson, and of Jeptha; of David also, and Samuel, and of the prophets: Who through faith subdued kingdoms, wrought righteousness, obtained promises, stopped the mouths of lions, Quenched the violence of fire, escaped the edge of the sword, out of weakness were made strong, waxed valiant in fight, turned to flight the armies of the aliens. Women received their dead raised to life again: and others were tortured, NOT ACCEPTING DELIVERANCE; that they might obtain a better resurrection." Hebrews 11:32-35.
Do you see? Paul had the faith to be delivered out of any peril, but he CHOSE to lay his life down for maximum impact at the time of greatest exposure (as revealed to Paul by the Holy Spirit). The Lord shows many of His beloved sons the point in time when their sacrifice can cause the most damage to Satan and bring the most glory to God. They then freely choose to lay their life down, NOT ACCEPTING DELIVERANCE as the above Hebrews passage says, and thereby obtain a better resurrection.
God doesn 't promise we won 't have affliction (demonic pressure). But He does promise we can always overcome it. "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 16:33. "Nay, in all these things we are more than conquerers through Him who loved us." Romans 8:37. "Ye are of God, little children, and have overcome them: because greater is he that is He that is in you, than he that is in the world." 1 John 4:4. "For whatsoever is born of God overcometh the world: and this is the victory that overcometh the world, even our faith." 1 John 5:4.
Jesus clearly taught that this life of an overcomer was to be experienced in THIS life, and not just in heaven. "Then Peter began to say unto him, Lo, we have left all, and have followed thee. And Jesus answered and said, Verily I say unto you, There is no man that hath left house, or brethren, or sisters, or father, or mother, or wife, or children, or lands, for my sake, and the gospel's, But HE SHALL RECEIVE AN HUNDREDFOLD NOW IN THIS TIME, houses, and brethren, and sisters, and mothers, and children, and lands, with persecutions; and in the world to come eternal life." Mark 10:28-30.
The Lord 's deliverances work in different ways at different times. Mark 16:18 promises poison and snake bites (i.e. afflictions) won 't harm us. Sometimes we are warned in advance of the snake or poison so we can avoid it. Other times, the snake bites us or the poison enters our system. At these times, our faith keeps us from being harmed by the poison\venom.
God didn 't promise we would never be bitten by affliction, but He did promise we would never be harmed by it IF we fight the good fight of faith. "Behold, I GIVE UNTO YOU POWER to tread on serpents and scorpions, and OVER ALL THE POWER OF THE ENEMY: and NOTHING SHALL BY ANY MEANS HURT YOU." Lk. 10:19. Therefore, NO Satanic "thorn of the flesh" has the power to defeat us IF we by faith exercise the overcoming grace ALREADY given to us by Christ. In other words, don't pray for more grace but instead use the grace we already have. Christ has already given us more than enough grace to make us more than conquerers.