Monday, July 26, 2010

Christmas in July?

From http://el-paso.ucg.org/

What's Behind the Magnetic Pull of the Christmas Season?
Millions observe Christmas because it's a feel-good time with holiday music filling the air, brightly decorated trees, Santa Claus for the children and family togetherness. But does the Christmas season have a strong, commercially motivated magnetic pull that goes unnoticed by most?
by Jerold Aust
Justin and Dena were married shortly before Christmas. They had grown up in families that celebrated the Christmas holidays. This was a special time for them with thoughts of falling snow, a glowing fireplace, holiday songs and colorful gifts placed around the well-decorated tree. The winter holiday season was exciting and alluring, as it is to millions.
They badly wanted to invite their families for a sumptuous Christmas Day dinner and the traditional exchanging of gifts. Everything seemed to work out all right except they were short of money to pay for the obligatory gifts. So they went shopping armed with their credit cards.
As they shopped around from store to store, the atmosphere of the music, colorful gifts and inviting decorations lured them into spending much more than they could reasonably afford.
Then in late January, the bills started coming in. They had precious little money set aside to pay them. They struggled to keep enough food on the table, pay the house rent and make the car payment. They realized too late they had succumbed to all the Christmas advertising—ending up with a painful financial hangover.
Could this story also describe your circumstances?
Christmas is big business
Those Christmas bells chiming during the holiday season might be likened to cash registers ringing up millions of dollars in retail sales. Christmas is very big business and is thought to be great for the national economy. But has anyone thought to ask whether this type of wild spending is really in people's best interests, either now or, more importantly, for their long-term spiritual well-being?
Should we be buying gifts others frequently don't want or need with money we don't have? It's a logical question.
Yet people will defend observing Christmas by countering that it's a celebration honoring Jesus' birth. If that's true, why buy gifts for others and not Jesus Christ? Is Christendom behind the presumptive trappings of a pre-Christmas season or is it being promoted by secular businesses for their own gain?
Purdue University professor Richard Feinberg understands the commercial value of the Christmas shopping season. He found the retail forecast of the 2004 Christmas season to be at least 75 percent of yearly profits. He predicted that 2006 Christmas holiday shopping would total an incredible $450 billion or more in America. Barring an economic downturn, it could be even higher this year.
Ironically, Christmas is so popular that millions of atheists and people of other religions celebrate the holiday. Why don't people, those who claim to be Christians or otherwise, resist the commercial aspect of the season?
What's behind the magnetic pull of Christmas?
Clearly the Christmas season has a strong magnetic pull, but most people don't fully realize it or know how powerful it is. Every year a Christmas advertising onslaught tries to influence the public to spend, spend and spend some more.
Some sociologists and social critics research and analyze why groups unknowingly do what they do. We'll focus on two.
Noted American journalist and best-selling author Vance Packard wrote a number of thoughtful books about how business advertisers motivate and manipulate the public. His groundbreaking 1957 book The Hidden Persuaders explores the use of consumer motivational research and other psychological techniques, including what he calls depth psychology and subliminal tactics by advertisers to induce desire for products.
As Packard explains, his book is about "the large-scale efforts being made, often with impressive success, to channel . . . our thought processes by the use of insights gleaned from psychiatry and the social sciences. Typically these efforts take place beneath our level of awareness" (p. 3). Packard was ahead of his time in describing advertising methods still commonly used today.
His book continues: "The use of mass psychoanalysis to guide campaigns of persuasion has become the basis of a multimillion-dollar industry. Professional persuaders have seized upon it in their groping for more effective ways to sell us their wares—whether products, ideas, attitudes, candidates, goals, or states of mind . . .
"The sale to us of billions of dollars' worth of . . . products is being significantly affected, if not revolutionized, by this approach . . . Two thirds of America's hundred largest advertisers have geared campaigns to this depth approach by using strategies inspired by what marketers call ‘motivation analysis' . . .
"What the probers are looking for, of course, are the whys of our behavior, so that they can more effectively manipulate our habits and choices in their favor" (pp. 3-4).
Writing about a Chicago research firm that conducted psychoanalytically oriented studies for merchandisers, Packard states: "Motivation research . . . employs techniques designed to reach the unconscious or subconscious mind because preferences generally are determined by factors of which the individual is not conscious . . .
"Actually in the buying situation the consumer generally acts emotionally and compulsively, unconsciously reacting to the images and designs which in the subconscious are associated with the product" (pp. 7-8).
With far more technological advances than Packard could imagine in 1957, marketers and advertisers have a much greater capacity for influencing people to unthinkingly buy more and more during the Christmas season and at other times.
Manipulating our behavior
Dr. Robert Cialdini, a professor at Arizona State University, may be the most cited social psychologist in the world today. His book Influence: Science and Practice (1993) is a staple text in the academic world.
Cialdini writes: "It is odd that despite their current widespread use and looming future importance, most of us know very little about our automatic behavior patterns. Perhaps that is so precisely because of the mechanistic, unthinking manner in which they occur . . . They make us terribly vulnerable to anyone who does know how they work" (p. 9).
Do we imagine that today's advertising gurus don't know about human behavioral patterns?
Cialdini states: "Our automatic tapes usually develop from psychological principles or stereotypes we have learned to accept. Although they vary in their force, some of these principles possess a tremendous ability to direct human action. We have been subject to them from such an early point in our lives, and they have moved us about so pervasively then, that you and I rarely perceive their power. In the eyes of others, though, each such principle is a detectable and ready weapon, a weapon of automatic influence" (p. 10).
Observing Christmas because "everyone does it" is a trigger feature. Other triggers include the music, the lights, the decorations and the sentimental store displays, each of which can cause us to respond automatically—rendering us nearly helpless as we part with our money. But do we really honor God by uncontrolled spending during the Christmas season?
How should we honor Christ?
You can research the entire Bible and nowhere will you find Christ instructing His followers to remember His birthday. (However, He did teach them to remember His death through observing the annual Passover service—see Matthew 26:26-30 and 1 Corinthians 11:23-26.)
The Bible itself never mentions Christmas, nor does it instruct Christians to observe the holiday.
The reason becomes obvious when we understand the holiday's distinctly non-Christian origins. "Christmas has its origin in two ancient pagan festivals, the great Yule-feast of the Norsemen and the Roman Saturnalia. The Saturnalia involved the wildest debauchery. Naturally it came under heavy censure from the early Church and despite the fact that Jesus Christ and the saints gradually replaced pagan deities, it was long considered completely out of character with the Christian ideal.
"However, the festival was far too strongly entrenched in popular favour to be abolished, and the [Catholic] Church finally granted the necessary recognition, believing that if Christmas could not be suppressed it should be preserved in honour of the Christian God.
"It was only in the 4th century that 25 December was officially decreed to be the birthday of Christ, and it was another 500 years before the term Midwinter Feast was abandoned in favour of the word Christmas" (Man, Myth & Magic, 1983, Vol. 2, "Christmas," p. 480). Even secular history speaks the truth about the origins of Christmas.
God gave ancient Israel His annual Holy Days and festivals to observe (Leviticus 23). Though few realize it, they embody God's spiritual blueprints for the salvation of all humankind.
Jesus showed how people could act "righteously" without being truly righteous: "These people draw near to Me with their mouth, and honor Me with their lips, but their heart is far from Me. And in vain they worship Me, teaching as doctrines the commandments of men" (Matthew 15:7-9). This clearly applies to much of modern Christianity.
Jesus Christ honors those who honor Him: "If anyone serves Me, let him follow Me; and where I am, there My servant will be also. If anyone serves Me, him My Father will honor" (John 12:26; compare 1 Samuel 2:30).
The Father honors Christ's disciples with eternal life: "Blessed are those who do His commandments, that they may have the right to the tree of life [eternal life], and may enter through the gates into the city [the New Jerusalem from heaven]" (Revelation 22:14).
If you still choose to observe Christmas apart from Christ and the Bible's injunctions, then know that vested commercial interests have already planned to use your deeply embedded associations with Christmas, working the trigger features already conditioned in you over many years.
Indeed there is a great magnetic pull during the Christmas season, but it has nothing to do with the real Jesus Christ. GN

Related Resources
To learn how the pagan holiday celebrations were passed down to today and how they pale into insignificance when compared to the truth of God, request or download Holidays or Holy Days: Does It Matter Which Days We Keep? Discover the truth about Jesus Christ and His practices in our free booklet Jesus Christ: The Real Story. Both booklets are yours free for the asking!

Christmas Before Christ: The Surprising Truth!If you discovered that Christmas had nothing to do with Christ's birth and actually predates that event by centuries, would you still celebrate the holiday? Most people don't understand the real facts, but you can!
The Real Nativity Story: Surprising Truths You May Not Know!The biblical accounts of Jesus Christ's birth present some surprising differences from popular ideas and traditions. Do you know the facts from the fiction?
What's Behind the Magnetic Pull of the Christmas Season?Millions observe Christmas because it's a feel-good time with holiday music filling the air, brightly decorated trees, Santa Claus for the children and family togetherness. But does the Christmas season have a strong, commercially motivated magnetic pull that goes unnoticed by most?
The Top 10 Reasons Why I Don't Celebrate ChristmasIt’s that time of year again! You’ll soon be barraged by the sights, sounds and smells of Christmas. Shoppers will soon go into spending overdrive, and when the bills arrive, some will wonder if it’s really worth it. Here’s a perspective from one who kicked the Christmas habit.
Christians Who Don't Celebrate Christmas: Here's WhyWhy do some Christians not celebrate Christmas? Here are the reasons some gave for kicking the Christmas habit
4,000 Years of Christmas'Tis the season for mistletoe and decorating the tree. But the origins of Christmas may surprise you. Did you know one of the American colonies outlawed observance of this holiday in 1659?
Where Did Christmas Symbols Originate?An enormous number of traditions we now associate with Christmas have their roots in pre-Christian pagan religious traditions. Some of these have social, sexual, or cosmological connotations that might lead educated, culturally sensitive moderns to discard the traditions once they have understood their roots more clearly.
Was Christ Born on Christmas Day?Do you observe Christmas because you think it's Christ's birthday? Was He born on or anytime near Dec. 25? If Jesus lived on earth today, would He celebrate Christmas at all?

Friday, July 23, 2010

The Purposes of Prophecy

The Purposes of Prophecy
Does God use prophecy to punish humanity out of some perverse sense of enjoyment? Of course not! But if there are positive purposes to prophecy, what are they?
by Jerold Aust
Why do some people think that God gets enjoyment out of prophetic punishments? Does God have a fundamentally cruel streak that He randomly satisfies, targeting people who can't defend themselves?
Historically, writers of apocalyptic literature promote this satanic notion, as Dante Alighieri did in his Divine Comedy. Why would anyone perpetuate this concept? Your Bible makes clear that there are purposes for prophecy; and those purposes, contrary to conventional wisdom, serve us.
Defining prophecy and classic examples
Prophecy is a divinely inspired prediction of the future, and there are many examples of fulfilled prophecy in Scripture.
A classic example is when God promised a revival of His true religion under a king named Josiah (1 Kings 13:2). This amazing prophecy was fulfilled 300 years later when God restored the rebellious kingdom of Judah by installing young Josiah as king (2 Kings 22:1). Josiah's grandfather was the infamous evil King Manasseh who ruled Judah for 55 years.
Josiah had a different heart, and God used him to turn the nation around. It worked, but not for long. God also predicted that Judah would go into captivity for 70 years (Jeremiah 25:8-12), which He fulfilled to the letter.
After Josiah's premature death, Judah went right back into following false religious practices and, as God had prophesied, the nation went into captivity under the king of Babylon (2 Kings 24).
While the Bible records prophecies that have been fulfilled, it also lists prophecies yet to be fulfilled. A classic case is that of the coming Beast and False Prophet who are predicted to rise to power in the future (Revelation 13; 17). Today, significant signs show this prophecy will come to pass by the rising power of the European Union, the coming king of the North, and the rising power of a great Muslim confederation power, the coming king of the South (Daniel 11:40).
Let's look at some purposes for prophecy.
Cause and effect
One purpose of prophecy is to teach mankind that terrible consequences result from disobeying God. This is a great key to understanding prophecy. Most view prophecy as God sitting around contemplating how He can make the lives of human beings miserable. Instead, humans incur their own prophetic punishments through disobedience to God's law and through their own poor conduct (Deuteronomy 30:19).
God's laws are automatic (Romans 2:11-12); that is to say, they are designed so that our good actions eventually lead to good results and our evil actions lead to bad results. God's spiritual laws are like His physical laws. For example, when we throw an object into the air, we know it must eventually fall back down to the ground. We depend on those laws every single day.
God's automatic laws directly affect human life. Leviticus 26 and Deuteronomy 28 reveal the cause and effect of either obeying or disobeying Him. Obey God and be blessed. Disobey and bring curses on yourself. These polar opposites help determine the effects of prophecy. Indeed, they embody prophecy.
A good example of doing good and being blessed for it can be found in the prophecy regarding the New Testament Church, in part, at the very end time. There will be relatively few who keep God's commandments, honor Christ as the Head of the Church and endure to the very end (Revelation 3:8, 10).
God prophesies to them that they will escape the Great Tribulation, "I also will keep you from the hour of trial which shall come upon the whole world" (verse 10). This is a blessing, a direct application of choosing to do what's right and being blessed for obeying God's laws.
God allows human beings free moral agency, to choose and make decisions to receive an abundant life now and live forever later, or to choose and make decisions to curse themselves now and to die (Deuteronomy 30:19). Clearly mankind determines his own destiny, either for bad or for good.
God is in control
A second purpose of prophecy is to show that God controls events throughout history for the purpose of fulfilling His plan. Ultimately, God will see His plan through, no matter what people do.
There are prophecies that turn out for good even though humans are ignorant of them. For instance, God said He would bless Israel and the world at Christ's return based on His covenant with Abraham (Genesis 12:1-3). In this case, good for modern Israel comes through a promise God made to Abraham thousands of years ago.
God highlights this kind of prophecy to those who are ignorant in Ezekiel 36:22-24. At the time of the end, modern Israel will be in captivity, scattered among the nations, as God prophesied. When Christ returns, He will free Israel from captivity and bring them again to the Holy Land.
Here's a case of prophetic blessings to an ignorant Israel, which happen in spite of, not because of, anything Israel did. The key to this prophecy is that God is doing this for Himself, not Israel. They profaned His name, and He will restore His good name through them:
"Therefore say to the house of Israel, 'Thus says the Lord GOD: "I do not do this for your sake, O house of Israel, but for My holy name's sake, which you have profaned among the nations wherever you went. And I will sanctify My great name, which has been profaned among the nations, which you have profaned in their midst; and the nations shall know that I am the LORD," says the Lord GOD, "when I am hallowed in you before their eyes"'" (Ezekiel 36:22-23).
In a sense, the initial fulfillment of this prophecy eclipses choice. Once freed and restored to the Promised Land, Israel will then have to choose to do what's right in God's eyes.
Interloper behind prophecies of punishment
Prophecy is also directly tied to the great interloper. Christ's spirit-led disciples know this, but the world doesn't. America and the Christian West have willingly closed their eyes to God's revealed truth.
"And in them the prophecy of Isaiah is fulfilled, which says: 'Hearing you will hear and shall not understand, and seeing you will see and not perceive; for the hearts of this people have grown dull. Their ears are hard of hearing, and their eyes they have closed, lest they should see with their eyes and hear with their ears, lest they should understand with their hearts and turn, so that I should heal them'" (Matthew 13:14-15).
Behind this willing blindness, there lurks Satan the devil whose avowed purpose is to dupe people into doing his dirty work. He strives to motivate mankind to destroy itself, for God won't allow Satan to do this evil deed directly.
Human beings are Satan's competition. He knows that we will one day judge angels (1 Corinthians 6:3) and constantly tries to tell God that His redemptive plan to save mankind is a lost cause (Revelation 12:10).
The interloper, Satan the devil, the god of this world, affects how prophecy works in the worst of ways. Isaiah writes about the heinous cruelty of Satan, who "made the world as a wilderness and destroyed its cities, who did not open the house of his prisoners" (Isaiah 14:17).
This verse summarizes Satan's wicked rule on this earth and over mankind. From the time of Adam to Christ's second coming, he has and will continue to peddle, traffic and merchandise his lies, which is precisely how he changed himself from Lucifer to Satan the devil (Ezekiel 28:15-19).
Prophecy warns, punishes and blesses
Prophecy is a prediction of the future under divine inspiration. It shows us that human beings cause their own troubles.
Prophecy regarding punishment shows us that God simply predicts how uncontrolled human nature reaps its own sown seeds of destruction (Galatians 6:7-8).
Prophecy regarding encouragement and blessings shows us how faithfully obeying God brings on blessings in this life and the blessing of life eternal. For prophetic blessings to come about, we must keep God's laws of love (1 John 5:3).
Prophecy also shows God's ultimate control over history as He completes His plan of salvation for everyone.
These are the purposes of prophecy, which contrast the false notion that God is cruel or that He sits in heaven all day figuring out novel ways to make humankind experience fear and suffering. This type of behavior describes the god of this world, as depicted in Dante Alighieri's Divine Comedy. Satan is the one that influences the world and well-meaning Christians with such aberrations.
Prophecy is a helpful, encouraging and merciful tool in the hands of an all-loving Savior, given for the good of mankind. We should use it wisely. WNP

Thursday, July 22, 2010

A Vaccine for Stress?

From http://el-paso.ucg.org/

A Vaccine for Stress?
A commentary by Mike Bennett United Church of God editorial content manager

"While listless, oil-soaked pelicans may be the most memorable images of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, the fishermen and business owners marooned along the Gulf Coast already are proving just as big a challenge for the mental health workers dispatched from Louisiana to Florida to help vaccinate against the fast-growing epidemic of despair," reported The Los Angeles Times (Kim Murphy, "Oil Spill Stress Starts to Weigh on Gulf Residents," June 20, 2010).
Although the reference to vaccination was metaphorical, there are researchers working on ways to literally block the deadly effects of stress on the human brain. Whether they will be successful is in question, but the long-term harmful effects of stress are clear.
Stress increases the risk of heart attack, stroke, adult-onset diabetes, Alzheimer's disease, major depressive disorder, back pain and much more.
What are mental health workers expecting from the Gulf oil spill? "The symptoms are well-documented: The Exxon Valdez oil spill in 1989 touched off a wave of suicides, domestic violence, bankruptcies and alcoholism in Alaska," according to the LA Times article.
Stress from every side
Of course, the oil spill is only one of the many sources of stress in our lives: accidents and illnesses, relationship problems, money problems, toxic workplaces, frustrating bureaucracies and a general feeling of helplessness in the face of the bad news that bombards us every day.
For example, consider unemployment and how it affects not only the jobless person, but his or her family. U.S. News' HealthDay column reported:
"‘Whenever there's a downturn, it's the kids who suffer a significant burden,' said Dr. Christopher Bellonci, an assistant professor of psychiatry at Tufts University School of Medicine in Boston. ‘When families are doing well, they can buffer some of this stress. When they can't, it bleeds through to the kids.'
"Nationally, one in seven children (10.5 million kids) has an unemployed parent" (March 25, 2010).
A stress vaccine?
The August 2010 Wired magazine has the cover line: "The Search for the Stress Vaccine," based on the research of Robert Sapolsky and others. A study published in Nature Neuroscience way back in 2004 outlined some of the promise of this research. Their work on rodents "reversed the outcome of the stress response by rendering glucocorticoids protective rather than destructive. Our findings elucidate three principal steps in the neuronal stress-response pathway, all of which are amenable to therapeutic intervention."
But the research is still years away from clinical trials on humans. As Dr. Sapolsky said, "It's not going to help anybody soon, but we've proved that it's possible. We can reduce the neural damage caused by stress."
There are many hurdles to overcome, including the fact that you can't just eliminate the offending chemicals, "because they are involved in all sorts of important functions, like helping you run for your life" (Jonah Lehrer, "Under Pressure," Wired, August 2010).
Solving stress with a vaccine is not only fraught with possible side effects and unintended consequences, it is also a long way off. What can we do in the meantime?
Stress reducers
The Wired article (which has not been uploaded to Wired.com yet, but probably will be next month) highlights a number of widely accepted stress reducers:
Make friends.
Drink in moderation.
Get enough sleep.
Don't fight.
Confront your fears.
Meditate.
Don't force yourself to exercise. (Here they point out that exercise is a great stress reducer, but only if you want to do it.)
Coping techniques for Christians
Jonah Lehrer explained that some of the most dangerous stress involves "feeling that nothing can be done" and a sense of hopeless "existential despair." Stress reducers and medicines can't deal with these fundamental issues of meaning, purpose and faith. Thankfully, our Creator provides the answers to these, the most important questions of life.
God has a purpose for your life. He wants you to enjoy eternity with Him achieving a potential even greater than we can imagine. This great purpose, and the fact that nothing is outside God's control, helps us to deal with the stresses of this life. God's plan helps give us the positive perspective that allows us to confidently cope with our trials and stresses. It gives us the peace of mind and contentment that are the ultimate antidote to stress.
To learn more about what the Bible teaches about this and other mental health issues, see "The Bible's Keys to Mental Health." It provides practical help and real hope.

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Same-Sex Marriage: Does It Meet With God's Approval?

From http://el-paso.ucg.org/

Same-Sex Marriage: Does It Meet With God's Approval?
The gay agenda is steadily gaining ground in Western nations, with same-sex marriage finding acceptance. But what does the Bible say—and why? And what's at the root of same-sex attraction?
by Melvin Rhodes
The U.S. Supreme Court's June decision striking down state laws banning homosexual acts between consenting adults was the latest victory in the cultural war between those advocating full acceptance of homosexuality in public life and those opposed on various grounds.
It followed decisions announced earlier in the month from Britain that a law banning the promotion of homosexuality in schools would be repealed and a stunning announcement from Canada that an Ontario appeals court had ruled that refusing same-sex couples the rights of marriage was discriminatory.
A similar decision is now pending in the Massachusetts Supreme Court, with major implications for the other 49 American states —which are constitutionally obligated to recognize the actions of all other states. With two European countries already allowing it, and several others allowing civil unions, same-sex marriage is a major and growing issue.
Nor is this only a secular issue. In August the U.S.-based Episcopalian Church shocked many of its members by approving its first openly homosexual bishop and giving local dioceses the option of deciding whether to perform same-sex marriages.
How did marriage begin?
Marriage is a constant theme throughout the Bible, as we might expect it to be. After all, the Bible is largely about human relationships, and none is so fundamental as marriage.
At the beginning, when God created Adam, the first man, He said: "It is not good that man should be alone" (Genesis 2:18). God created for him a female companion, Eve, meaning "life" or "living," for "she was the mother of all living" (Genesis 3:20).
God's plan for the male and female sexes is then clearly instituted: "Therefore a man shall leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife, and they shall become one flesh" (Genesis 2:24). In joining them as man and wife, the Creator of mankind instituted marriage. In the next verse Adam and Eve are clearly described as a married couple: "And they were both naked, the man and his wife, and were not ashamed" (verse 25).
Thousands of years later we see the covenant relationship between God and the nation of Israel, whom He had chosen, likened to the marital relationship (Isaiah 54:5; Jeremiah 3:14).
In the New Testament, Jesus Christ reinforces the special relationship between a husband and wife: "Have you not read that He who made them at the beginning ‘made them male and female,' and said, ‘For this reason a man shall leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife, and the two shall become one flesh'? So then, they are no longer two but one flesh. Therefore what God has joined together, let not man separate" (Matthew 19:4-6).
He stated further: "Moses, because of the hardness of your hearts, permitted you to divorce your wives, but from the beginning it was not so" (verse 8). Clearly, marriage between a husband and wife was intended to be for life.
Following the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ, the apostle Paul wrote extensively on marriage. In his epistle to the Ephesians, chapter 5, he compares the marital union of a husband and wife to the relationship between Christ and the Church.
He writes: "For the husband is head of the wife, as also Christ is head of the church ... Husbands, love your wives, just as Christ also loved the church and gave Himself for her ... that He might present her to Himself a glorious church ... So husbands ought to love their own wives ..." (verses 23-28).
Later we see, at the very close of the Bible, a time still ahead when Jesus Christ returns and marries His Bride, the Church (Revelation 19:7). In these scriptural references we see a totally committed relationship between Jesus Christ and His true followers, the Church.
The Western crisis in marriage
Today we live in an age in which commitment within marriage has become rare, especially in the richer Western world. For centuries the laws of Western nations relating to marriage were very strict. Divorce was not usually permitted.
In the last century, however, we have seen dramatic changes in laws relating to marriage. Among the most significant were the no-fault divorce laws passed in most of the Western democracies a little over 30 years ago. These laws contributed greatly to the trivialization of marriage, making it easier for a husband or wife to walk away from that commitment.
At the same time, the availability of the birth control pill made it quite acceptable for unmarried couples to live together, as supposedly there were now no negative consequences to sex outside of marriage. These major societal shifts further diminished the marital relationship even as they encouraged a vast rise in premarital sex and adultery.
In turn, these were—and still are—promoted as "alternative lifestyles," with mass media constantly depicting temporary relationships without commitment as fun and faithful marriage as tedious. The tragic result was an explosion of terrible consequences—broken homes, abandoned children, depression, crime, substance abuse and sexually transmitted diseases that remain with us today.
Another major shift in sexual attitudes
In the "anything goes" atmosphere of the 1960s and 70s, it was only a matter of time before other lifestyles would become accepted.
Before 1973 American psychiatrists considered same-sex attraction (homosexuality) as abnormal behavior and offered treatment accordingly. But a decision that year reversed this long-held stand. No longer was same-sex attraction classified as abnormal.
Similar decisions had already been made in other Western nations. In a span of 30 years, people practicing homosexual acts would go from being considered criminals by society to being accepted, if not fully embraced, by much of the heterosexual community.
In recent years same-sex couples have increasingly pressed for the legal option of entering a full marital union. Two European countries, Belgium and the Netherlands, already have laws permitting such marriages. Several other European countries allow civil unions, which give same-sex couples the same rights as heterosexual couples without a legal marriage. The American state of Vermont also permits same-sex civil unions.
Following the June Ontario appeals court decision that ruled in favor of same-sex unions being equal to heterosexual unions, the Canadian government announced that it would legislate same-sex marriages into law in the near future. In the United States, Massachusetts appears likely to make a similar decision in favor of same-sex marriages. It seems only a matter of time before the whole country follows suit.
It should be noted that, in the United States at least, it is the courts that have made these changes possible rather than the voters, as polls consistently show that a majority of Americans do not support same-sex marriage. Federal and state lawmakers wouldn't risk the ire of voters on this issue, and even Canada is simply following a decision of the court.
As with so many of the liberal social reforms of the last four decades, the courts have played a leading role in changing society, with activist judges sometimes arbitrarily creating new rights and law where none were previously spelled out.
While many on both sides of the argument will claim that this is a worldwide issue, the fact remains that this is essentially a Western phenomenon, thereby further widening the gap between the rich Western democracies and the poorer nations.
The fault lines are also spreading throughout the Western religious world, with major international church denominations facing increasing division over this issue and that of the ordination of homosexual clergy.
Does the Bible offer guidance?
Why doesn't the Bible mention same-sex marriages? The answer is simple—no such institution existed when it was written! No matter how bad some of the societies described in the Bible were, they never went so far as to have same-sex marriages.
Make no mistake, the Word of God approves only one sexual relationship: that between a husband and wife within marriage. You can search the Scriptures from Genesis to Revelation looking for the existence or approval of such alternative relationships as living together and same-sex marriage, but there is none. Certainly there are accounts of fornication, adultery and same-sex relationships, but they are always in the context of sin, which is the breaking of God's law (1 John 3:4).
And yes, some of God's most faithful servants committed sins in the sexual area—and the Bible duly records the painful consequences their actions had on them and others. These servants of God allowed themselves to be unduly influenced by the society around them, just as Christians can be today.
So why does our Creator forbid all sexual relationships outside of marriage? Does He not want us to have what some consider to be fun? Does God not want those who are attracted to the same sex to have the same happiness, commitment and sense of fulfillment that is achievable within a committed, lifelong, heterosexual marriage?
In John 10:10 Jesus Christ states, "I have come that they may have life, and that they may have it more abundantly." God wants us to be happy, to live fulfilled and joyful lives.
That is precisely why He gave us the Ten Commandments, some of which deal with the family relationship. It is also part of the reason He instituted marriage. Within the framework of a stable, committed marriage, people can find a sense of loving security. Children especially need this when they are brought into the world.
So why can't gay couples have it too? Some argue that they also deserve the happiness of a stable and committed marriage. And in this age of AIDS and many other terrible diseases, shouldn't we encourage same-sex partners to remain faithful to one another, just as we do heterosexual couples through the institution of marriage?
Sex and the Bible
In the Bible, marriage is always between a husband and wife. There are no scriptural accounts of same-sex marriages, even though homosexual relationships were common and sometimes encouraged in the Greco-Roman world of early New Testament times (although an exclusively homosexual orientation was considered an aberration even in that society, which understood the necessity of heterosexual marriage for the production and raising of children).
Pagan gentile society notwithstanding, both the Old and New Testaments of the Bible clearly condemn sexual acts between members of the same sex. "You shall not lie with a male as with a woman. It is an abomination," says Leviticus 18:22.
Why does the Bible forbid such behavior? God created the first two human beings male and female, bound them as husband and wife in a sexual union and instructed them to have children (Genesis 2:24-25; 1:28). The biblical account of our first human parents makes it clear that God ordained the marriage of Adam and Eve, creating the family union of a man and a woman.
God designed this union to stabilize and protect male-female and parent-child relationships with love and security. It was also designed to serve as a pattern or model of the relationship God wants to have with His people (Ephesians 5:23-33).
There is no question that male-female attraction is God's intended design. Homosexuality, on the other hand, is a developmental disorder that leads to actions and lifestyles diametrically opposite to the male-female design.
When Adam and Eve rejected God's instructions and determined to do things their own way, they set humanity on a course that every human being since has chosen to follow. Consequently, as a result of man's rejection of God, men and women are experiencing an array of confused or conflicted interpersonal relationships—including homosexuality. Although homosexuality may feel "natural" to people who have same-sex attraction, it in fact reflects a yearning that God intended to be met within the natural male-female family context, with parents providing the proper natural affection and approval their children need.
Man and woman: A perfect creation
When God created Adam and Eve, "they were both naked, the man and his wife, and were not ashamed" (Genesis 2:25). Additionally, we read that "God saw everything that He had made, and indeed it was very good" (Genesis 1:31).
This tells us that God's creation was "very good," including His creation of the first man and the first woman, Adam and Eve. Even their naked bodies were physically perfect, created differently, but also perfectly, to complement each other and to bring additional human beings into the world, in the image of God (Genesis 1:26-28). Adam was pleased with his new companion, to whom he remained married for a very long time, until death. He was clearly attracted to her—they gave birth to many children.
What we learn from these passages is that a man should naturally be attracted to the female body. As Adam and Eve were the only two people living at this time, they could walk around unclothed without any sense of shame or embarrassment.
God intended men to be attracted to women, and vice versa. When a man is not attracted to women, something has gone wrong in the natural development of his mind, as this is not the way God intended things to be.
Causes of same-sex attraction
It is common today for men who consider themselves gay to say that they were born that way, but there is no convincing evidence for this. Homosexuality is not caused by a "gay gene," or identical twins would always both be gay—and they usually aren't.
What is the truth? As most homosexual males and some lesbians can only remember same-sex attractions, even when very young, we can conclude that their early development was affected in some way that led to a different sexual orientation.
Research has shown that the basic common cause of homosexuality, whether male or female, is an emotional detachment from the parent of the same sex (see interview with Dr. Joseph Nicolosi, page 20). This causes insecurity about the child's own masculinity (or femininity) and makes the forming of friendship bonds with those of the same sex much more difficult, frequently leading to painful rejection. Often added to this in the case of boys is a mother who overly compensates, giving the son too much female affection and fawning over in the early stages of his life.
Deprived of normal male love and affection, the boy starts out in life with a desperate longing for what is a legitimate unmet need. The inevitable attraction to the same sex in itself is not a sin. Later on, however, that need often becomes sexualized—leading to sinful homosexual acts with other boys and men. At the same time, the smothering love and affection he received from his mother often will have contributed to a rejection of women as a source of love.
This developmental tragedy often takes place within the first two or three years of childhood. Typically, in the first year, a baby bonds with the mother as she gives birth to the child and then breastfeeds and generally nurtures him. After the child is weaned, the father must play a more prominent role.
This is the time when sexual identity is formed. If the father is absent, or unwilling or unable to fulfill his role, then the child will feel rejection—and the basis on which homosexual feelings can develop will have been laid.
Note the importance of perception—either of the lack of loving affection or of rejection. In some cases a father truly may be affectionate and loving to his son, but the boy may not perceive it and instead develops feelings of rejection.
Or, in a family of several boys where the father is so busy with work or other things that he fails to spend any time with them, all are neglected, but only one may turn out to have homosexual tendencies. This is the one who perceived rejection, perhaps because he was more sensitive than the others.
Struggle for those dealing with same-sex attraction
Sadly, these tendencies and unmet needs remain. Because this lack becomes a part of one's mental and emotional makeup at such an early age, it should be understood that exclusively same-sex attraction is seldom a voluntary, conscious choice.
Homosexual acts, however, just like heterosexual acts, are a voluntary choice. While the attraction may be there in a way that is not a matter of choice, it is one's choice to dwell on or entertain thoughts that can lead to sin. Jesus Christ pointed out that mentally entertaining thoughts of illicit sexual acts is itself a sin (Matthew 5:27-28).
Paul urged Christians to be aware of the spiritual struggles in which all of us are engaged, emphasizing our need to discipline our thoughts and bring "every thought into captivity" (2 Corinthians 10:4-5). James, Jesus' half-brother, wrote that mentally dwelling on temptations typically leads us into lust and sin, so we must short-circuit the process before sin results (James 1:14-15; compare 4:8).
Some give in to their same-sex attraction later on in life and enter the gay lifestyle. Others, often due to religious beliefs, try to fight their desires and overcome them. These people are often called strugglers, reflecting the reality that it is a lifetime struggle. Another term increasingly used is healers, recognizing that they are seeking emotional healing for their condition. A combination of both terms (struggler-healer) is appropriate.
Many people with same-sex attraction experience social isolation and emotional pain as they struggle to cope with their lives. Some endure a struggle between coping with their homosexuality and remaining faithful to their religious beliefs. For many, it is a lonely, secret struggle that can sometimes involve excruciating pain.
Some give in to their same-sex attraction and enter the gay lifestyle. Others, in spite of their pain, continue to struggle, often in isolation, to remain faithful to their religious beliefs. In recent years, a number of social and religious organizations have recognized the need to help and support these individuals who struggle to be faithful to their religious convictions, although the work of these organizations has often been viewed as controversial.
This is where churches and individual Christians can help. Those who struggle with same-sex attraction not only battle with their unnatural sexual desires every day of their lives, they also have to do so in secret. Sometimes they seek help from others. Typically, they will either go to their church pastor or priest, seek psychological help or talk to a close friend. All three choices are problematic. Seeking help from the wrong person can lead to even greater withdrawal and a deepening fear of sharing with anyone.
Some church pastors may overreact when the problem of same-sex attraction is brought to them. This can push the person seeking and needing help into further isolation, even to the point of feeling rejected by God. Some people have made things worse by betraying the confidence of the individual out of misguided concern for others in the congregation.
Seeking professional psychiatric help can also be a problem for struggler-healers. Since the American Psychiatric Association's change of policy on homosexuality 30 years ago, most of those seeking help today will not be encouraged to change, but rather to reaffirm their same-sex feelings and embrace the gay lifestyle.
Sharing the problem with a friend can often end a friendship, as most men cannot handle a confession of homosexual feelings. Another obvious complication is the possibility of physical feelings developing toward the friend. While this is a problem that will need to be resolved, it should not rule out helping someone struggling with same-sex attraction.
Since the root cause of such attraction is rejection causing emotional detachment, someone struggling with this problem will find further rejection devastating. Not having had a close, loving relationship with the father in early childhood, there is a great need for such a relationship with another male. This need should be met in a nonsexual relationship with a heterosexual male who wants to help.
The apostle James wrote: "Confess your trespasses to one another, and pray for one another, that you may be healed. The effective, fervent prayer of a righteous man avails much" (James 5:16). It should be possible for Christians to share their problems with other Christians, expecting help and encouragement in return, even when their problem is one of unresolved homosexual desires and feelings.
Sadly, most people who struggle with this problem will say that the response to sharing is usually negative. They soon learn to shut up and keep their problem a secret. Many, through discouragement, have even given up on trying to live God's way and have sought solace and acceptance in the gay community.
However, this is never the answer for a Christian. Christians realize that God gave us His laws because He cares for us. Certain sexual relationships are forbidden because they can never satisfy and lead to great emotional pain from which God wants to spare us.
The apostle Paul wrote: "Flee sexual immorality. Every sin that a man does is outside the body, but he who commits sexual immorality sins against his own body" (1 Corinthians 6:18). This is not just a warning against sexually transmitted diseases. It is also a warning against all the emotional damage that results from unfulfilling relationships based on sex, whether heterosexual or homosexual. Sadly, this lack of fulfillment for homosexuals often leads them into more and more sin, in a desperate and futile attempt to find the love they never thought or felt they received as a child.
Encouraging lessons from ancient Corinth
We learn from the apostle Paul's letters, preserved in the New Testament, that some people in the Corinthian church had come out of this homosexual lifestyle to become truly converted Christians.
Corinth was a port city in which all kinds of sexual and other vices were all too common, and notice that Paul warns the Church members there against slipping into such sins. "Do not be deceived," he wrote. "Neither fornicators, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor homosexuals, nor sodomites ... will inherit the kingdom of God" (1 Corinthians 6:9-10). The separate references to "homosexuals" and "sodomites" in Greek refers to different roles taken in homosexual couples.
We should note that in Paul's writings here, he condemns not only homosexual acts, but fornication and adultery as well. Too many Christians are quick to turn a blind eye to their own heterosexual sins while quickly condemning homosexual acts on the part of others.
It cannot be emphasized enough: All sexual acts outside of a biblically sanctioned marriage are a sin. The apostle James put it well when he wrote, "For whoever shall keep the whole law, and yet stumble in one point, he is guilty of all" (James 2:10). So gay-bashing—attacking gays or singling out homosexual behavior as the worst sin—is unjustified.
In the following verse of 1 Corinthians 6, those struggling with same-sex attraction can read some very encouraging words from Paul: "And such were some of you," he notes. "But you were washed, but you were sanctified, but you were justified in the name of the Lord Jesus and by the Spirit of our God" (verse 11).
"And such were some of you" is in the past tense. The implication of this is clear: There were people in this Greek-speaking congregation, in a part of the world where homosexual acts were typically considered normal, who came out of their homosexual practices upon repentance and were able to overcome their desires.
What happens when society rejects God?
Although homosexuality is common to all cultures, it is in the Western democracies that the gay movement is most vocal. This was not the case even 50 years ago. This could mean that there are more people with homosexual leanings today than there were then, although militant gays would argue that it simply reflects progress made by them in gaining societal acceptance.
The truth, however, is that the greater numbers can easily be explained by the fact that the traditional family has progressively broken down in the last four decades with easier divorce and greater promiscuity. Absent or distant fathers are more common now than ever before, creating conditions in which the factors that may lead to homosexuality can flourish.
Writing to the church in Rome, Paul wrote a passage of Scripture that is quite applicable today. He showed a certain progression that takes place in human thinking that flows from man's rejection of God.
"... Although they knew God, they did not glorify Him as God, nor were thankful, but became futile in their thoughts, and their foolish hearts were darkened. Professing to be wise, they became fools, and changed the glory of the incorruptible God into an image made like corruptible man—and birds and four-footed animals and creeping things. Therefore God also gave them up to uncleanness, in the lusts of their hearts, to dishonor their bodies among themselves ...
"For this reason God gave them up to vile passions. For even their women exchanged the natural use for what is against nature. Likewise also the men, leaving the natural use of the woman, burned in their lust for one another, men with men committing what is shameful, and receiving in themselves the penalty of their error which was due. And even as they did not like to retain God in their knowledge, God gave them over to a debased mind, to do those things which are not fitting" (Romans 1:21-28).
What this passage shows is that man progressively moves farther and farther away from God's way of thinking when he rejects the Bible. Our societies testify to this fact. Since the theory of evolution gained popularity a century and a half ago, Western nations have progressively distanced themselves from God. Now the thinking of most people is warped, not based on and often not even taking into consideration godly values or biblical teaching.
The theory of evolution—and its attendant arguments that there is no such thing as a Creator and that the Bible is merely a collection of myths—has affected man's thinking to the point of acceptance of gay marriage. It has taken a long time, yes, but the link is there. When people believe that human beings are nothing more than highly evolved animals, there is no basis for saying "no" to same-sex marriage—and many other things as well.
When God's Word has been rejected by government and banished from schools and public life, anything is acceptable. After gay marriage, can we expect to see pressure to legalize group marriage, incest and pedophilia? After all, the same rationale the U.S. Supreme Court used in striking down state laws against sodomy also applies to these sins.
Collectively, Western society is heading down the same road as ancient Sodom and Gomorrah, two cities that God destroyed for their varied sins—one of which was homosexuality, Sodom giving its name to sodomy. Yet individually, everyone has the opportunity to repent and come out of this society's sliding standards and morals, to embrace God's way and fight, with His help, against any tendencies that do not conform to His law. This is the only way to true happiness and fulfillment. GN

Recommended Reading
Our Creator, in His Word, repeatedly tells us that His laws are given for our good, that they will bring blessing when obeyed and prevent the painful consequences that come from ignoring and flaunting them. To learn how these laws could transform our world and show us the way to truly abundant living, request our free booklets The Ten Commandments and Making Life Work.
Related Articles
Saving Marriage: Beyond Constitutional AmendmentsIn response to same-sex marriages in some states, many are pushing constitutional amendments to preserve the traditional marriage relationship. But it will take much more if marriage is to be saved.
The Gay Rights BattleIs there a logical and biblically supportable solution to the gay rights battle?
Is Homosexuality Acceptable to God?The acceptance of homosexuality as an equally valid lifestyle is rapidly growing in Western culture. Yet God tells us that sex was designed for only one relationship—within marriage, exclusively between a man and a woman.
Hope for HomosexualsInterview with Dr. Joseph Nicolosi a clinical psychologist. He is the president of NARTH, the National Association for Research and Therapy of Homosexuality, a 1,000-member organization. Dr. Nicolosi has successfully treated thousands of patients to help men transition from homosexuality to heterosexuality.
Marriage and Family: The Missing DimensionThe joy of a happy marriage blessed with loving, respectful children is a dream of most men and women. Traditionally, marriage has been an exclusive bond between a man and a woman. Yet in recent years this pattern has been changing. Looking at the state of marriage today leaves no doubt that the institution is under serious attack. A crisis in child rearing has developed in part because of the crisis in marriages. So what are the keys to a happy, successful marriage and family? Inside this booklet, you will explore the path God reveals and steps you can take to enjoy the universal dream of a happy, successful marriage and family.

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Tisha B'Av: Fall of the Temples

From http://el-paso.ucg.org/

Introduction to Lamentations (Lamentations )
The author of Lamentations is not named in the book, but it is traditionally attributed to the prophet Jeremiah. "In fact, some copies of the ancient Greek Septuagint translation begin the book with these words: 'And it came to pass, after Israel [i.e., the remnant of Israel—Judah] had been carried captive, and Jerusalem became desolate, that Jeremiah sat weeping, and lamented this lamentation over Jerusalem.' Crediting Lamentations to Jeremiah is based on the following considerations: (1) Jeremiah was known as a composer of laments (see 2 Chr. 35:25). (2) Jeremiah was the prophet who mourned, 'Oh, that my head were waters, and my eyes a fountain of tears, that I might weep day and night for the slain of the daughter of my people!' (see Jer. 9:1). (3) In [Lamentations] 3:1, the author seems to identify himself with Jeremiah when he says, 'I am the man who has seen affliction by the rod of His wrath.' (4) There are many linguistic similarities between Lamentations and Jeremiah" (The Nelson Study Bible, introductory notes on Lamentations.)
"In the Talmud (Baba Bathra 15a), this book is called qinot ('Lamentations')... The name commonly used in Hebrew, however, is ekah ('How'), the first word of the first, second, and fourth laments [that is, chapters 1, 2 and 4]. In the Hebrew canon it stands in the Writings as the third of the Megilloth, or Scrolls, between Ruth and Ecclesiastes" (Expositor's Bible Commentary, introductory notes on Lamentations). We are reading it now to keep it in the context of its writing in the wake of the destruction of Jerusalem and the temple.
"The five chapters of Lamentations are five poems with ch[apter] 3 as the midpoint or climax. Accordingly, the first two chapters build an 'ascent,' or crescendo, to the climax, the grand confession of 3:23, 24: 'Great is your faithfulness. The Lord is my portion.' The last two chapters are a 'descent,' or decrescendo, from the pinnacle of ch[apter] 3... The poetry of the book enhances its purpose and structure. Chapters 1 through 4 are composed as acrostics of the twenty-two letters of the Hebrew alphabet. Each verse or group of verses begins with a word whose initial letter carries on the sequence of letters in the Hebrew alphabet. This would be similar to an English poem in which the first line begins with A; the second begins with B, and so on. One purpose of this device was probably to aid in memorization of the passage. The acrostic also suggests that the writer has thought things through and is giving a complete account of the subject" (Nelson Study Bible, introductory notes on Lamentations).
While chapter 1 is a perfect acrostic, chapters 2-4 are slightly imperfect, and oddly enough for the same reason. In each case the 16th and 17th letters of the Hebrew alphabet (ayin and pe) are swapped—for what significance we don't know. The acrostic in chapter 3 comes in groups of three—that is, each of the first three verses begins with the first Hebrew letter aleph, each of the second three with the second letter beth, etc. (see Expositor's, introductory notes on Lamentations). And then there is the mysterious chapter 5, intriguingly not an acrostic even though it still seems to divide up into 22 verses. "That chapter 5 has twenty-two verses has caused some to suggest that the laments were first written in normal verse and then rewritten to include the acrostic. This idea is ingenious but unprovable" (same note).
Other laments are written in various books like the book of Psalms, but this is the only book solely devoted to lamenting. Orthodox Jewish custom requires that this book be read aloud on the fast of Tisha b'Av, the ninth day of the Hebrew month of Ab—the traditional day on which the temple of Solomon was destroyed in 586 B.C. and on which the second temple was destroyed by the Roman army in A.D. 70. Jeremiah was present at the destruction of Solomon's temple as Jerusalem was overrun and sacked by the Babylonian armies. He saw the horrifying imagery described in the book. And yet the terrible suffering portrayed seems to reflect even more than what occurred at that time. It evidently anticipates suffering that was, and still is, yet to come—for the judgment described here is what is to befall "all the dwelling places of Jacob...every horn of Israel" (Lamentations 2:2-3), not just Judah. The book, as we will see, calls for the coming of the Day of the Lord and the final judgment on Israel's enemies. Yet there is no question that the ancient anguish and suffering of Judah is also vividly revealed in the pages of this deeply emotional account.
In its introductory notes on the book, The Bible Reader's Companion (Lawrence Richards, 1991) states: "Lamentations does maintain a consistent theological outlook: Judah's [and later all Israel's] loss can be traced to God's sovereignty, His justice, and His commitment to a morality which His people abandoned. Yet Lamentations is primarily a book that plumbs the depths of human sorrow, not from an individual's perspective, but from the perspective of an entire people. Reading the book we experience something of the overwhelming sense of despair that can grip communities and even whole nations. Even the prayers recorded in Lamentations are desperate prayers; cries of anguish rather than affirmations of hope. It is terrible as well as wonderful to be human. It is terrible indeed if we surrender to our human bent to sin. The day must come when we will look back on our lost opportunities, and realize that the misery we endure now is a consequence of our own chronic craving for sin. If nothing else, reading the Book of Lamentations reminds us the pleasures of sin are at best momentary, the painful consequences lasting and deep."

Coninued here

Friday, July 16, 2010

The Ten Commandments: Have They Passed Their Sell-by Date?

From http://el-paso.ucg.org/

The Ten Commandments: Have They Passed Their Sell-by Date?
A commentary by Gerhard MarxUnited Church of God elder, United Kingdom
Posted July 15, 2010
An ancient Middle Eastern king defined them as "perfect" and "enlightening" to guide him as a ruler of his people some 3,000 years ago (King David, as recorded in Psalm 19:7-8).
A 20th-century European dictator called the Ten Commandments "the curse from Mount Sinai" and set out to destroy the very people identified with these laws (Adolf Hitler, quoted in The Ten Commandments, edited by A.L. Robinson, preface by Hermann Rauschning, p. vii).
Two rulers. Two contrasting views.
Written with the finger of God?
What's the truth about the Ten Commandments that the Bible tells us were "written with the finger of God" (Exodus 31:18)? Were they intended for the Israelites only and thus no longer binding on Christians today? Justin Martyr, considered an early church "father," thought so. In a letter to the Jewish community he stated, "For the Law promulgated at Horeb [Mt. Sinai] is now old and belongs to yourselves alone" (Alexander Roberts and James Donaldson, editors, Ante-Nicene Fathers, vol. 1, p. 100).
From the early history of the Christian Church there was a concerted attempt to reject the Ten Commandments as a fundamental moral code by defining them as Jewish. After the New Testament apostles died, the biblical Sabbath and Holy Days in particular became casualties, being wrongly identified as purely Jewish rather than days to be observed by Christians.
Faith and obedience
Centuries before the Exodus God appeared to Abraham with these words, "I am Almighty God; walk before Me and be blameless" (Genesis 17:1). How was the patriarch to lead a blameless or upright life? God's answer is given in Genesis 26:5 where Abraham is praised for his obedience to God's laws: "Abraham obeyed My voice and kept My charge, My commandments, My statutes, and My laws."
This scriptural reference makes it clear that the spiritual father of the faithful expressed faith like a Christian must and at the same time guided his life by God's laws. Both were required in walking uprightly before the Creator.
The New Testament speaks the same message in the words of the apostle John. He defines true Christians as "those who keep the commandments of God and [express] the faith of Jesus" (Revelation 14:12). As was true with Abraham, both are required.
Who's the source of moral standards?
A thousand years earlier king David was inspired to write, "The law of the Lord is perfect" (Psalm 19:7). The Creator God is best equipped to tell His creation how to walk uprightly before Him. He has given us laws and statutes that define what is right and what is wrong. "For all Your commandments are righteousness," we are told in Psalm 119:172. It is the Almighty who decides the moral standards we are to live by.
Embracing God's laws doesn't in any way lessen our need for Jesus Christ's atoning sacrifice. Since we all fall short of living by the standards that Jesus taught, forgiveness of our imperfect state is an essential part of living righteously before the Creator.
Are they in force today?
Are the Ten Commandments still in force today? Certainly! It wouldn't make sense had God required people in Old Testament times to live by His laws but then allowed people since New Testament times to disregard them. When it comes to what is morally right and wrong, God doesn't change (Malachi 3:6).
Imagine how much better, happier, just and peaceful the world would be if humanity were to embrace the morality of the Creator as revealed in His Word!
Children respecting their parents (Fifth Commandment).
No murdering one's fellowman (Sixth Commandment).
No illicit affairs with their devastating consequences (Seventh Commandment).
No stealing of what belongs to another (Eighth Commandment).
No bearing false witness in order to damage reputations (Ninth Commandment).
And no coveting of what is someone else's (Tenth Commandment).
What a happy world that would be!
The Ten Commandments haven't passed their sell-by date. They never will because they serve as divine laws applicable at all times and for all occasions.
Why not make God's laws an integral part of your life, for your own well-being as well as your fellowman? Read online or request a printed copy of our in-depth booklet The Ten Commandments, which thoroughly explains each of them. It will show you how to get the best out of keeping each of the commandments "written with the finger of God."

Monday, July 12, 2010

Is Liberty a God-Given Right?

From http://el-paso.ucg.org/

Is Liberty a God-Given Right?
By Don Hooser
Is every individual born with great personal freedom as a gift from our Creator God? It’s a topic that most people have not tried to analyze, and it is a little confusing. (This is the first article in a series on the God-given rights of “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.”)
he American Declaration of Independence, adopted on July 4, 1776, contains these famous words: “We hold these truths to be self-evident: That all men are created equal; that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights; that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness” (emphasis added).
Today, many other countries have similar statements in their governing documents. If these are “truths,” they are true for everyone, not just Americans. But if these are “truths,” what evidence supports them?
Some people deny that these are truths, and even more people deny that they are “self-evident,” which means so logically and obviously true that no proof or explanation is required.
And how should we understand the phrases “all men are created equal” and “unalienable rights”?
“Truths” are derived from the Bible
Stating that every individual has unalienable rights further emphasizes the importance of the individual as compared to the importance of the state.
Jesus Christ said to God, “Your word is truth” (John 17:17). What is all-important to understand about the founders of the United States of America is that many of them believed the Bible to be the infallible revelation of God, so what they considered to be “truths” were derived from their understanding of the Bible. They considered these truths to be especially “self-evident” to all who shared their belief in the Bible.
Believe it or not, the Bible is the premier authority on personal liberty! It has been the world’s greatest force for freedom, inspiring people for millennia to seek freedom for themselves and their nations.
The greatest freedoms are spiritual—freedom from slavery to sin and human nature, from the burdens of guilt, from bad habits and addictions and eventually even freedom from the limitations of our mortal human bodies!
However, the Bible also makes clear that God favors great civil liberties and personal freedoms for all people.
Therefore, let’s analyze the Declaration’s famous words to see how biblically accurate they are.
How are people “created equal”?
God’s creation displays awesome variety, including variety in humanity. People are born with many different characteristics, strengths and weaknesses. But the Bible clearly teaches that every single human being is important to God.
God “desires all men to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth” (1 Timothy 2:4). The Bible compares God to a “good shepherd” who cares not just for the flock as a whole, but also for every single sheep in the flock (Matthew 18:10-14; John 10:10-15).
God will eventually offer every human being the equal opportunity for eternal life in His family! In fact, “God so loved the world [meaning every single person in the world] that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life” (John 3:16).
God also judges every person equally according to His laws. “God shows personal favoritism to no man” (Galatians 2:6). What is sin for one person is a sin for the next person.
Therefore, people are “created equal” in that they have the same spiritual potential and ultimate opportunity, and God judges all in the same way.
This also means that governments should follow the example of God in showing great respect for every citizen and treating everyone fairly and equally under the law. No one should be “above the law,” not even the highest officials in the government. And the freedoms of the weakest members of society should be guarded as zealously as the freedoms of the strongest members.
What are “unalienable rights”? They are the permanent rights of each individual that he or she cannot be alienated, or separated, from. Stating that every individual has unalienable rights further emphasizes the importance of the individual as compared to the importance of the state. The Bible in no way supports the idea of statism. Instead of government “for the people,” statism sacrifices the welfare of the people for the state.
So how are people born free?
“God created man in His own image” (Genesis 1:27), giving us incredible honor, potential and abilities!
God gives us a huge amount of freedom, and Satan tries to rob us of freedom.
He gave humans “dominion,” or rule, “over all the earth” (verse 26). God delegated to us stewardship of planet Earth. That’s a lot of freedom and responsibility! In a sense, God was saying, “I’m giving you this whole planet to enjoy and use in any way that you think is beneficial. I’ll give you guidelines, but I won’t be micromanaging. You’ll have the freedom to manage it as you think best.”
Humans are born free because they have incredible minds. Non-human creatures are not born free—they are strictly governed by their instincts.
Humans, on the other hand, are free to think, learn, speak, reason, imagine, dream, set goals, be creative and artistic, develop tools that multiply the power of human energy, change their environments and change themselves, invent, develop personality, love, worship, nurture relationships and make decisions and choices.
We were born free. Another person or group of people can restrict, restrain and rob you of freedom—they can tie you up and gag you, rob you of your resources, injure you and kill you. But governments can’t give you freedoms that you already have from birth, and a government is defying the will of God when it takes away those God-given freedoms.
Believe it or not, the Bible is the premier authority on personal liberty!
Free moral agency is clearly taught in the Bible. God defines good and evil, announces rewards and punishments, and proclaims warnings and pleas. But God leaves people free to “choose” between the options (Deuteronomy 30:19). This freedom is absolutely essential to character development and spiritual growth. People must be free to make choices and to experience both the good and bad consequences of their choices.
When tyrants and tyrannical governments take away people’s personal freedoms, it should be obvious that this interferes with God’s plan for mankind.
In contrast, most pagan religions teach fatalism—that the gods predetermine your fate. As a result, when people think they are being controlled by the gods, they think it would be futile—and perhaps against the will of the gods—to try to better themselves and improve their world. This is but one of many ways that religious beliefs have major affects on the attitudes and actions of a nation’s people.
Liberty based on law
True freedom is based on right laws, and God also is the great Lawgiver. Since God created all “nature,” the “natural laws” or laws of nature are the laws of God. Just as God instituted laws of physics, chemistry and mathematics, He instituted absolute spiritual laws. Just as breaking a law of “science” has automatic penalties, breaking a spiritual law has automatic penalties as well.
People don’t think laws of physics, chemistry and math are robbing them of freedom. Actually, they enable freedom, whereas unpredictable chaos would destroy freedom. Understanding natural law provides predictability and reliability that is essential for scientific progress.
Likewise, God’s spiritual laws enable and preserve freedom. God’s law is the perfect “law of liberty” (James 1:25; 2:12).
True enduring freedom is not absolute liberty; licentiousness or license to do anything one wishes or lusts to do. One’s freedoms must not intrude into another person’s life in a way that takes away from his own freedom. Good laws, such as the Ten Commandments, protect everyone’s freedoms equally.
When God brought Israel out of Egypt, Israel was to be His model nation founded on a covenant (a charter or constitution!) including laws that David said were “perfect” (Psalm 19:7). All of God’s laws and instructions were to be written down and regularly read by or to the people. It was also important for parents to teach them to their children (Deuteronomy 6:7).
Thus, we see that for freedom to thrive, there must be a written constitution that restrains government rather than restraining the people. The constitution should apply to all the citizens equally and be available for all to read. Therefore, it is important for the citizens to be educated, to be able to read, and to be familiar with their rights and responsibilities according to their constitution.
The Ten Commandments have been criticized for sounding negative—most saying, “You shall not.” But that kind of law is exactly what a nation needs—laws that restrain evil! These are not restraining the countless way to do good! They keep people free to unleash their creative imaginations and energies to be productive. God is positive! The Ten Commandments imply that God is saying yes to everything that He is not saying no to.
Beware of many positive-sounding laws (making all kinds of promises), which are interventionist efforts of a welfare state to manipulate and micromanage the people and the economy—thereby creating more problems than solutions in the long run.
Think how tiny our Bibles are compared to the enormous law libraries of today’s large nations! And yet, the laws contained in only a small part of the Bible were all that was necessary for national governance. Good laws are a blessing; bad laws and too many laws are a curse.
God offers freedom—Satan offers slavery
God created us to enjoy freedom and to use it for good purposes. But to fulfill His ingenious plan for mankind, God has allowed Satan to temporarily be the god and ruler of this world (2 Corinthians 4:4; John 12:31).
One of the temptations of human nature is to lust for power over others. And Satan pours fuel on the fire, inciting people to become despots and tyrants.
To illustrate how much freedom God offers us, consider the Garden of Eden. God told Adam and Eve that they had the freedom to enjoy all the many kinds of trees in the garden—except for one. But they abused their freedom at Satan’s prompting and ate of the one forbidden tree. Here is the point: God gives us a huge amount of freedom, and Satan tries to rob us of freedom.
Notice how Jesus Christ summed up the difference between Him and Satan: “I am the door. If anyone enters by Me, he will be saved, and will go in and out and find pasture. The thief [Satan] does not come except to steal, to kill, and to destroy. I have come that they may have life, and that they may have it more abundantly (John 10:9-10).
Indeed, it is true: All people are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights—one of those being liberty. Future articles will explain the gift of life and the gift of the pursuit of happiness.
Enjoy God’s gift of liberty. Don’t abuse it. Use it well. And be very, very thankful.
Further reading
To read more articles regarding liberty, check out “There's More Than a Crack on the Bell” and “America's Revolution and the Bible”.

Thursday, July 8, 2010

Coming Calamities: Does God Offer Protection?

From http://el-paso.ucg.org/

Coming Calamities: Does God Offer Protection?
Where will you be when terror strikes the nations? Does God offer safety for anyone? Will He care about you when your fellow man doesn't?
by John Elliott
We can scarcely describe our state of affairs better than a recent article in Britain's Independent on Sunday: "If you go to the opera you risk being taken hostage. If you go on holiday you might be blown up. If you stop for petrol you could be shot by a sniper. Open a letter—does it contain anthrax? What's going on these days? Where will the next outrage be?" The message is clear: We live in a dangerous world.
Yet these aren't the worst possibilities. As more nations upgrade their stockpiles of nuclear, chemical and biological weapons, the likelihood of unfathomable terrors unleashed on Western countries continues to increase.
Religious fanaticism and extremist governments grow more threatening. In response, uneasy nations sense the need to build political, military and economic coalitions in an attempt to bring stability to an increasingly uncertain world.
It's no wonder people increasingly feel uncertainty and unease. In the post-Sept. 11 world, simpler and safer times seem to be gone forever.
Danger from those with little to lose
The 1,400-year struggle between Christianity and Islam is heating up in many places around the world, bringing armed conflict and civil war. Citizens in several European nations are increasingly favoring extreme-right political candidates who advocate action to alleviate their fear of foreigners. Solutions to ethnic rivalries are creeping back into politics at levels not seen since World War II.
Meanwhile, several smaller nations have attempted to expunge ethnic groups from within their borders—including Iraq, Sudan, Sri Lanka, Afghanistan and the former Yugoslavia. In other countries the brewing confrontations between diverse populations are nearing flash points.
Historically, small underdog groups have shown that they will resort to desperate measures. Terror emanates from little groups more commonly than from larger nations because, in their view, they have so little to lose and potentially much to gain by unleashing destruction on civilization in unpredictable and inhumane ways.
Consider the potential of their exploiting the caches of thousands of chemical and biological munitions of the former Soviet Union that were warehoused near its perimeter. The breakup of the U.S.S.R. meant that small independent states inherited many of its deadly weapons. Exactly how many exist—and where they all are—is unknown. These often backward and impoverished countries are cash-poor, with many potential buyers lining up for their weapons of mass destruction. This concern doesn't even address the former Soviet Union's nuclear weapons.
Regional skirmishes and isolated outbreaks of terror may not seem to be high risks for the world's population at large. However, we're already seeing that these specific incidents may draw the larger powers into attempting radical solutions for the threats and other problems they face. Christ's end-time prophecy warns that a period of "great tribulation" will come suddenly on the whole world. The flash point will be an occurrence in the Middle East (Matthew 24:15-21).
The Bible teaches that events will mushroom into a global melee with several powers fighting for control. The loss of life from the resulting wars, famines and pestilence is forecast in the book of Revelation to include a great part of the world's population. (For more understanding of these endtime events, please request our free booklets Are We Living in the Time of the End? and The Book of Revelation Unveiled.)
Why is this happening?
The escalating collapse of ethics and morals in many countries is a symptom of a deeper sickness and out-of-control internal problems. Many in our self-centered world seem hell-bent on living any way they please. Our societies stifle anyone who opposes their self-serving appetite. People weigh in for a bigger slice of the pleasure pie. They seem willing to do anything in their lust for power, possessions and prestige. Meanwhile, traditions, customs, culture and laws based on the Bible are casually cast aside.
At almost every turn we see an escalation of brutality, violence, slander, theft and sexual perversion. In Western civilization this is matched with a determined effort to remove any mention of God and His standards from public life.
The apostle Paul warned of an age like ours when he wrote that "there will be terrible times in the last days. People will be lovers of themselves, lovers of money, boastful, proud, abusive, disobedient to their parents, ungrateful, unholy, without love, unforgiving, slanderous, without self-control, brutal, not lovers of the good, treacherous, rash, conceited, lovers of pleasure rather than lovers of God . . ." (2 Timothy 3:1-4, New International Version, emphasis added throughout).
God's Word has forecast this slide into lawlessness and moral depravity since ancient times. Vivid descriptions of where it ultimately leads are mentioned widely throughout the Scriptures. More and more we live in societies that, the Bible forewarned, "parade their sin like Sodom; they do not hide it. Woe to them! They have brought disaster upon themselves" (Isaiah 3:9, NIV).
Right on the heels of the prophesied degeneration of this era comes escalating worldwide violence and terror unlike anything we have ever seen. Jesus Christ warns that "it will be a time of great distress, such as there has never been before since the beginning of the world, and will never be again. If that time of troubles were not cut short, no living thing could survive . . ."
(Matthew 24:21-22, Revised English Bible). This devastating time will climax with the intervention of Christ's second coming- to save mankind from annihilation.
What about you?
If global turmoil escalates to such proportions in your lifetime,what will happen to you?
Don't think it couldn't happen. The last century saw two world wars that took the lives of tens of millions, not to mention countless smaller conflicts that killed and maimed millions more. Even now the seeds are being sown for the next worldwide inferno. Will you be swept away to suffer the same fate as the lawless and ungodly? Or will you summon the spiritual courage to swim upstream and uphold God's way of life?
Throughout the Bible this one theme is constant: God blesses the righteous and lets the sinners suffer the consequences of their rejection of Him. The reason involves the very purpose for which God created man in the first place. Each person, at some point, must choose one of two ways. Either we choose the way of selfishness, the mentality of Satan the devil (John 8:44; Galatians 5:19-21), or we choose and live a way of selflessness and concern for others that expresses God's mind and character (Galatians 5:22-23).
Most of humanity has chosen the way that comes most naturally to us, the way that "is hostile to God" and "does not submit to God's law" (Romans 8:7, NIV). But, while many have been offered the opportunity to learn God's way and begin living it, only a few have embraced the godly way of thinking and living exemplified by Christ and followed by the apostles and the saints (Matthew 7:13-14; 22:14).
Meanwhile, a man-made religion bearing the name of Christianity has permeated Western civilization for millennia and successfully masked many fundamental biblical truths. In addition to fostering fables and unbiblical rules and traditions, it has spawned violence, bloodshed and wars since its inception. The Bible prophesies that at the time of the end a great false religious system, symbolized prophetically as a prostitute, will sit atop an alliance of nations that will bring the world to the brink of annihilation (see Revelation 17).
But amid the political, moral and religious confusion around us are people whom God has chosen to be different. They form an early crew of "fellow workers" and spiritual children that His Word refers to as "saints" and "firstfruits" (Philippians 4:3; Romans 16:15; James 1:18). Those who have received and are guided by God's Spirit have a spiritual Father; they are spiritual children of His divine family. They are coheirs with Christ of the Kingdom of God and will rule with Him over the people of earth after His return (Revelation 5:10; 20:4).
Regrettably, terrible times will come before that day arrives. During this ominous period all who choose to live selfish and ungodly lives will face head-on the disasters spelled out in the book of Revelation and in other biblical prophecies.
But what about those who follow the will of their heavenly Father? Will they fare any better during the perilous times ahead?
The honest answer is twofold. On the one hand, Jesus warned His followers they would suffer persecution (Matthew 10:17-18). But the type of persecution He spoke of is not that of being sucked along with humanity into a vortex of war to be lost along with the masses. Rather, He described a form of courageously serving God in the face of the world's animosity (John 15:20).
Martyrs down through the ages have been singled out for persecution—primarily by human leaders (religious and secular)—for their rejection of a society in moral and religious collapse (Matthew 24:9; Hebrews 11:35-40). Paradoxically, God also promises protection for His spiritual children.
God loves His own
Throughout the Scriptures those whom God has chosen to be "His own special people" (1 Peter 2:9) have had His eye and ear on them. God calls these people in advance of the rest of humanity to be the "firstfruits" of billions whom He will ultimately include in His plan and bring into His family (James 1:18).
An example of God's care even in the midst of martyrdom is found in the book of Acts, where Stephen proclaimed God's truth to a hostile crowd (Acts 6-7). His message incited a lethal reaction from his audience, which stoned him to death.
But a closer reading of the story shows that God was supporting Stephen throughout the ordeal, from inspiring his words and actions to miraculously making his face seem like that of an angel. As Stephen died, God reassured him with a dramatic vision showing the Father and Son in heaven. Clearly, Stephen would live again through the resurrection of the saints at Christ's return. In spite of his dire circumstances, how encouraging this whole event must have been to Stephen!
Jesus and the Father are partners with those They have called to be the firstfruits of the divine family. God is faithful to His people and promises He will be with them. "For He Himself has said, 'I will never leave you nor forsake you.'So we may boldly say: 'The LORD is my helper; I will not fear. What can man do to me?'" (Hebrews 13:5-6).
In the Father's ultimate wisdom, some become martyrs for the sake of the Kingdom of God, to be resurrected later. Yet other believers' lives are miraculously spared now.
Either way the life of a saint is precious to God. He has a purpose for every true Christian.
Who will be spared?
Just as God warns of the consequences of unrighteous conduct, He promises blessings for those faithful to His commandments and teachings. Consider some specific prophecies of events that will happen in the coming time of the Great Tribulation:
"And there shall be a time of trouble, such as never was since there was a nation, even to that time. And at that time your people shall be delivered, every one who is found written in the book [of life]" (Daniel 12:1).
"Say to the righteous that it shall be well with them, for they shall eat the fruit of their doings. Woe to the wicked! It shall be ill with him, for the reward of his hands shall be given him" (Isaiah 3:10-11).
A passage in Revelation indicates that God plans to spare His people, granting them His protection during the 3 1/2 years of tribulation and wrath that will come on humanity (Revelation 12:14). This is affirmed in other prophecies (see Zephaniah 2:3; Revelation 3:10).
Jesus' dark prophecy about the climactic events that will rip the world apart just before His second coming is prefaced with a positive statement to His followers: "Pray that your flight [their escape] will not take place in winter or on the Sabbath. For then there will be great distress, unequaled from the beginning of the world until now—and never to be equaled again. If those days had not been cut short, no one would survive, but for the sake of the elect those days will be shortened" (Matthew 24:20-22, NIV).
Will you be spared?
At a time known only to God, this present society will complete its irreversible, selfdestructive path that will take it to the brink of annihilation. God's true followers will not be part of that process, not be part of that mentality and not be part of that society. Rather, they will identify with a different kingdom (Hebrews 11:13-16) and long for the setting up of the righteous government of Christ on earth. They are those God will be closely involved with, whatever their circumstances may be.
A passage in Luke's account of Christ's end-time prophecy highlights the primary hope of God's people: "Now when these things begin to happen, look up and lift up your heads, because your redemption draws near" (Luke 21:28). In this context, that redemption means eternal spirit life in the Kingdom of God, the primary goal of every true Christian. (To learn more about that Kingdom, please request our free booklet The Gospel of the Kingdom.)
But will you be one of those God is using for His purpose? Will you repent of humanly devised religious beliefs and traditions purporting to please God while actually rejecting Him, His commands and His ways?
The times ahead are forecast to wake us up to the truth. We need to be deadly serious about our dedication to doing the will of God in our lives from here on!
Referring to God and His awesome power (Hebrews 12:29), Isaiah the prophet was inspired to ask: "Who among us shall dwell with the devouring fire? Who among us shall dwell with everlasting burnings?" (Isaiah 33:14).
These questions impact every person alive at the beginning of the prophesied Great Tribulation. The answer follows in the next verses: "He who walks righteously and speaks uprightly, he who despises the gain of oppressions, who gestures with his hands, refusing bribes, who stops his ears from hearing of bloodshed, and shuts his eyes from seeing evil: He will dwell on high; his place of defense will be the fortress of rocks; bread will be given him, his water will be sure" (verses 15-16).
Shouldn't you follow Christ's instruction in Luke 21:34-36 and ask God to bring you to a right spiritual condition, striving to yield to His guidance, so that He will consider you worthy to escape these calamitous things that are coming on the world and to stand before Him at His return? GN

Recommended Reading
You need to understand where this world is headed- and where you will fit in the events that lie ahead. As this article shows, it's literally a matter of life and death! To learn what your Creator expects of you and to begin living in a way that will please Him, please request the free booklets Transforming Your Life: The Process of Conversion and The Road to Eternal Life.

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

The Power of the Earth

From http://el-paso.ucg.org/

The Power of the Earth
A commentary by David Elliott
For several weeks in April and May 2010, a little heard of volcano in Iceland called Eyjafjallajökull caused massive disruption throughout Europe and to a lesser degree many other parts of the world.
The volcano produced an ash cloud that spread for thousands of square miles, filling the skies over the United Kingdom and much of Europe. Due to safety concerns over how the ash particles might affect the operation of jet engines, aircraft all over Europe were not allowed to fly and flights coming into the area were cancelled or redirected. For the first time ever U.K. airspace was closed completely.
This volcano is just one of an estimated 1,500+ volcanoes in the world (not including submarine volcanoes, the number of which can't even be estimated). It's not even the largest or most potent volcano in Iceland! The biggest is Askja.
How much power?
So, if one relatively modest volcano can cause this much disruption to international travel, what potential does the rest of the earth have?
We know from history that the power of the earth has often affected the course of mankind. Two of the biggest natural disasters of recent times were the tsunami of December 2004, created by a powerful earthquake in the Indian Ocean, and the earthquake of 2010 in Haiti. The exact numbers of people who lost their lives in these tragedies is unknown but estimated to be well over 200,000 from each disaster, possibly many more.
Clearly the earth is an immensely powerful and largely unpredictable place.
When earth trouble comes
Now that we've experienced the difficulties that can be caused by a volcanic ash cloud, will we be able to avoid it occurring again in the future? Probably not.
Scientists are unable to accurately predict how the earth is going to act. When dealing with the immense and awesome power of the earth, we're largely playing a "wait and see" game. When the earth presents us with a problem or disaster, we can only react as best we can.
If natural disasters increase (as Jesus Christ tells us they will in Matthew 24:7), how will the governments of the world react? No doubt, they'll do the best they can. But God tells us that this will be like no other troubled time before: "Unless those days were shortened, no flesh would be saved; but for the elect's sake those days will be shortened" (Matthew 24:22).
Dealing with earth's power
God wants us to realize the great power of this little planet—and His immeasurably larger power as earth's Creator.
God has a purpose for all humans who ever lived. He wants us to see His presence in the creation around us and to come to the knowledge and understanding of it, choosing to submit ourselves to His will by following the footsteps of His Son Jesus Christ.
If we find ourselves stranded abroad due to a volcanic ash cloud, instead of being fearful or frustrated, let's be reminded that as powerful and scary as the earth can be, God is in charge of it all. If we allow Him to work in and direct our lives, He will take care of us and lead us to the ultimate and amazing future that He has planned.
To learn more, request or download a free copy of these short booklets, What Is Your Destiny? and Are We Living in the Time of the End? VT

About the AuthorbDavid Elliott works as an insurance claims consultant in London, United Kingdom, where he resides with his wife. He attends the London congregation of the United Church of God.