Indeed it is the day of judgement:
For the day of the LORD of hosts
shall be upon every
one that is proud and lofty, and upon every
one that is lifted up; and he shall be brought low: Isa. 2:1
Howl ye; for the day of the Lord is at hand; it shall come as a destruction from the Almighty. Isa. 13:6
Behold, the day of the LORD cometh, cruel both with wrath and fierce anger, to lay the land desolate: and he shall destroy the sinners thereof out of it. Isa. 13:9
And it shall come to pass in that day,
that his burden shall be taken away from off thy shoulder, and his yoke from off thy neck, and the yoke shall be destroyed because of the anointing. Isa. 10:27
On that day a fountain will be opened to the house of David and the people of Jerusalem, to cleanse them from sin and impurity.
2And on that day, declares the LORD of Hosts, I will erase the names of the idols from the land, and they will no longer be remembered. I will also remove the prophets and the spirit of impurity from the land.
3And if anyone still prophesies, his father and mother who bore him will say to him, ‘You shall not remain alive, because you have spoken falsely in the name of the LORD.’ When he prophesies, his father and mother who bore him will pierce him through.
4And on that day every prophet who prophesies will be ashamed of his vision, and he will not put on a hairy cloak in order to deceive. He will say, ‘I am not a prophet; I work the land, for I was purchased as a servant in my youth. 6 If someone asks him, ‘What are these wounds on your chest?’ he will answer, ‘These are the wounds I received in the house of my friends.’ Zech 13:1-6.
This is the terrible day when the Lord comes again, to each person according to His timing, and judges the person, who will either accept that judgement or quench the Holy Spirit in His work of convicting His people of their sin.
I just happen to think this is a misapplication of those passages. That they were given to speak of events future for the world, and not a metaphor of God's working in the believer.
I'm curious, and I don't want to get sidetracked, but just to know this, do you see the physical return of Jesus in the future, when He will regather the Israelites to their promised land?
This action of destruction by fire is required for the work of a man accepting the death of the old nature (crucified with Christ) where he is stripped of all of his old understanding so that he can be baptized into Christ. It is an ending of all things so the start of new things can begin.
I continue to think that we all go through this in various ways, different times in our lives, differing individual efficacy, all unique as are we.
For those who will not go through the fire, (held in sword that the cherubim hold to guard the way into paradise) then judgement lays on their heads as they chose to walk in the flesh instead. It is indeed a day of wrath for God's disobedient people.
I don't see any wrath coming upon God's children. When we go too far He has promised chastening, and that it will be effective. If that is so, then where is there a place for wrath?
I think the counter argument is that we can refuse His chastening, and in so doing, walk away, but the Bible doesn't leave that option open. IF we are His child, this is what He's promised.
This is the second coming of Christ, which was expected at any time, when written about in the old and new testaments with warnings. As for the end of time - who knows? We just guess. It is this life where we are to have our aims.
If the passages are actually speaking of Jesus' return physically to the earth, to gather, and judge, and establish His kingdom, if we apply them as metaphors for our Christian walk, might that not be misleading?
Like the wilderness walk. There are several ways it can be used to illustrate a Christian walk, and none of them seem to fit quite right.
We miss so much under this interpretation which consists of a small part of church history.
Maybe yes and maybe no. I'm all about the Bible and specifically what it says. I believe God said what He meant. The nonchristian won't understand it, and the Christian can understand it as God reveals it.
You have a passion to learn from the early church commentators, God actually cut me off from that. It was in 2001 that God touched my heart in such a way that I no longer wanted to read anything (I've been a constant and avid reader from 4 years old, at which time I was choosing my own books from the library.
I became completely disinterested in anything not the Bible, and completely fascinated to learn all I could about the Bible. It happened one afternoon sitting at my desk at home. I put down the Science Fiction I was in the middle of, and never picked it up again. Since then, it's all about the Bible itself.
I seek to know exactly what it does and doesn't say, and hang my hat on that.
I'm interested in other views, and on this topic especially. I'll still say this is the most important thing I can think of discussing, and with someone who is studied from a different direction that I, and someone who shares a similar burden in life, and someone who is as serious about this as I am, if not more so, this is truly a blessing for me!
I really believe God is working in this discussion.
I do not see Christians I have known over 50 years have what they need. And it just gets worse as they age, is what I see. There is something missing.
Yes, this is the Big Question. In others, in myself, why, If Christ is over all, do we not see all things yet under His feet.
Philippians 3:20-21 LITV
20) For our citizenship is in Heaven, from where we also wait for a Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ,
21) who will transform our body of humiliation, for it to be conformed to His body of glory,
according to the working of Him to be able even to subject all things under Himself.
Yes, He can do it! So why don't we see it yet? Crucifying the flesh . . . this seems the answer. God has all the power we need to do this, I believe we choose, and then live out that choice, counting on God to make it possible, to make it happen.
I can see how it can cause problems when a man who accepts he has been wrong on this, must ask himself 'what else have I been wrong over and can I ever trust my thoughts again'. This is part of the stripping away of everything to accept the new life in Christ.
Certainly!! We have to be humble, children, ready to be reproved and corrected over anything, according to the Lord's intent for us.
The things of the flesh include mans best thoughts and intentions. There is a discipline in walking in the Spirit that includes these things. I admit that I don't know it all, things are still opening up to me in the understanding of scripture since I began to see them through spiritual eyes whereas before it was in my own understanding.
I think some of our desires are good - food for energy and health - and some are not - that third piece of cake - walking crucified to me means that I reject my self-interest and submit my desires to God, looking for His leadership. I'll say also, and I'm sure this goes without saying, I certainly don't have it all figured out!
Indeed everything has been provided but we have to go through various deaths to get there I believe.
Yes, I agree, and am becoming much more focused this way.
It is all by faith.
You are tired because it is from your own strength you are doing it. In God's strength we can do all things as Paul did. The fight is over and peace reigns.
Agreed. And that's what I seek.
As I have said, saying it is a second blessing is misleading. It is about appropriating what has already been gained for us on the cross but it means a death to our old ways.
Amen!
Much love!