Tuesday, April 7, 2026

The Great Falling Away and Our Great Hope (1)

 

 

“But the Spirit explicitly says that in later times some will fall away from the faith, paying attention to deceitful spirits and doctrines of demons, by means of the hypocrisy of liars seared in their own conscience as with a branding iron…” (1 Timothy 4:1 – 2).

 

“But realize this, that in the last days difficult times will come. For men will be lovers of self, lovers of money, boastful, arrogant…unloving…without self-control, brutal…reckless, conceited, lovers of pleasure rather than lovers of God…Avoid such men as these.” (2 Timothy 3:1 – 5).

 

“Let no man deceive you, for [the Day of the Lord] will not come unless the falling away comes first, and the man of lawlessness is revealed, the son of destruction…” (2 Thess. 2:3).

 

What does a “falling away” look like? I suppose it has many expressions, many flavors, some perhaps obvious, many – the most dangerous – not easily discerned. I write “not easily discerned,” yet they can be discerned, for it always comes down to the Person of Jesus Christ. Is the Christ of the Cross and the Cross of Christ the message? Are we called to follow Him as He is, consistent with the Scriptures, or are we called to follow images of Him created in our own image?

 

Perhaps I have waited too long to write about this. For sure we are over the tipping point, at least in America we are. We have passed the point of no return, as in Jeremiah’s day. We have rushed past it, bursting through the barriers of morality, compassion, sympathy, and the Gospel, trampling on the good in Christ, the beautiful in Christ, the truth in Christ. While I avoid the terms liberal and conservative and moderate for many good reasons, I will write that these “movements” and ideologies whether political, social, or theological are all destructive and that you and I are called to follow Jesus, and only Jesus. All of these ideologies strip away the image of God within us, the image of God restored within us in Christ, and would make us enemies of one another.

 

Let me share something with you, if a man or woman or young person truly comes to know Jesus, encounters Jesus, and follows Jesus; if a person spends his days and nights with Jesus, that person (let us hope) will only desire Jesus and learn to see all other movements and ideologies as whores seeking to seduce him or her away from Jesus (2 Cor. 11:1 – 3; Ezekiel Chapter 23).

 

Let me tell you something else, those who enter that glorious City, our home, the true and heavenly Jerusalem, which is the Mother of ALL the Faithful (for God only has One People and they are not based on race but found in Christ, the Seed of Abraham; Gal. 3:16; 4:21 – 31) are going to see Jesus and the Father and God is going to overwhelm them in His love and care. They are also going to be overwhelmed in love, with love, for one another – the prayer of Jesus in John 17 will be fully fulfilled in heaven and on earth.

 

And so I ask you, why not live in Jesus now? Why not live in His love now? Why allow ourselves to be seduced and deluded into hatred for others? Why engage in vitriol? Why partake of demonic anger when “righteousness is sown in peace” (James 3:13 – 18)?

 

As Nero and the Imperial Cult lead us into the abyss of hell and death and destruction, why do we not flee to the Ark of Jesus Christ? Why do we not implore those we love to come to Jesus, live in Jesus, live for Jesus?

 

Pastors, let us remember that cowards are the first ones mentioned in Revelation 21:8. Cowards are not those who do not believe the Word of God, they are those who know the Word of God and are afraid to proclaim it, afraid to call their people to Jesus, to live as citizens of heaven. Cowards are those who sell themselves and their people to the Beast, the Whore, and the present evil age. The shepherds of the Good Shepherd lay down their lives, including their economic lives, for the Master’s sheep.

 

Our hope is Jesus and only Jesus, and we are to go “outside the camp, bearing His reproach” (Hebrews 13:13). Make no mistake, whatever “movement” we may be in, does not want Jesus and His Cross, for it is offensive, it is foolishness, and it brings to an end ego, pride, and boasting. Jesus and the Cross will have no image but Himself in our hearts and minds and souls.

 

The early Christians were not persecuted so much because they worshipped Jesus, they were persecuted because they would not worship the Emperor alongside Jesus, they would not buy into the Imperial Cult. The same cannot be said of us today.

 

To be continued….

Friday, April 3, 2026

The Shovel and the Sacrifice

 

 

“The day’s work had ended; the tools were being counted, as usual. As the [work] party was about to be dismissed, the Japanese guard shouted that a shovel was missing. He insisted that someone had stolen it to sell to the Thais. Striding up and down before the men, he ranted and denounced them for their wickedness, and most unforgivable of all their ingratitude to the Emperor. As he raved, he worked himself up into a paranoid fury. Screaming in broken English, he demanded that the guilty one step forward to take his punishment. No one moved; the guard’s rage reached new heights of violence.

 

“All die! All die!” he shrieked.

 

“To show that he meant what he said, he cocked his rifle, put it to his shoulder and looked down the sights, ready to fire at the first man at the end of them.

 

“At that moment the Argyll stepped forward, stood stiffly to attention, and said calmly, ‘I did it.’

 

“The guard unleashed all his whipped-up hate; he kicked the helpless prisoner and beat him with his fists. Still the Argyll stood rigidly to attention, with the blood streaming down his face. His silence goaded the guard to an excess of rage. Seizing his rifle by the barrel, he lifted it high over his head and, with a final howl, brought it down on the skull of the Argyll, who sank limply to the ground and did not move…

 

“The men of the work detail picked up their comrade’s body, shouldered their tools and marched back to camp. When the tools were counted again at the guard-house no shovel was missing.”

 

Ernest Gordon continues with this story about an Aussie private who was caught outside the prison camp trying to get medicine from the Thais for his sick friends, he was sentenced to death.

 

“On the morning of his execution he marched cheerfully between his guards to the parade-ground. The Japanese were out in full force to observe the scene. The Aussie was permitted to have his commanding officer and a chaplain in attendance as witnesses. The party came to a halt. The CO and the chaplain were waved to one side, and the Aussie was left standing alone. Calmly, he surveyed his executioners. He knelt down and drew a small copy of the New Testament from a pocket of his ragged shorts. Unhurriedly, his lips moving but no sound coming from them, he read a passage to himself…

 

“He finished reading, returned the New Testament to his pocket, looked up, and saw the distressed face of his chaplain. He smiled, waved to him, and called out, ‘Cheer up, Padre, it isn’t as bad as all that. I’ll be all right.’

 

“He nodded to his executioner as a sign that he was ready.”

 

From To End All Wars, by Ernest Gordon, pages 101 – 103.

 

What does Good Friday look like in our lives?

 

In our lives as the professing church?

 

John 15:12 – 13; 1 John 3:16; Mark 8:34 – 38.