A Call to a Holy Life – 1 Thessalonians 4:1-12

The first three chapters of this letter focus on looking back at Paul’s visit with the Thessalonians. As a faithful teacher and overseer, Paul was diligent not only to impart truth to his flock but also to apply that truth himself and to motivate his people to apply it in an ever-increasing way.

The final two chapters look ahead to the future of the church—giving advice for certain areas of Christian conduct that he felt needed to be addressed. The end of chapter 3 is a prayer that Christ would make these believers strong, blameless, and holy before God (3:13). That is a process of walking in faith and learning to live to please God. Effective faith should show itself in every area of a believer’s life.

4:1-2 Finally, brothers and sisters, we ask and urge you in the Lord Jesus that, as you learned from us how you ought to live and to please God (as, in fact, you are doing), you should do so more and more. For you know what instructions we gave you through the Lord Jesus.NRSV The word “finally” signals a change in subject as Paul moved on to practical application of faith. Apparently Timothy’s report (3:6) had brought Paul great joy regarding the believers’ faith but also included a few note-worthy concerns, for Paul here gave instructions for right living in some very specific situations.

The believers had learned from Paul and his companions how [they] ought to live and to please God (2:4-12). The missionaries had set an example for them of Christlike living. Evidently they had learned, for Paul said that they were doing just that, but he wanted them to do so more and more. They already knew what instructions Paul and Silas had given them through the Lord Jesus. These instructions were not Paul’s made-up desires for them to follow him; rather, these instructions in right living came “through the Lord Jesus himself.” They are important for every believer of every generation.

Living to please God is every Christian’s priority. Knowing Jesus as Savior brings salvation and should lead every believer to want to live to please him in gratefulness for what he has done. Through obedient believers, God works in the world. Obedience pleases God. People cannot claim to know and love God if they do not seek to please him.

 LIFE APPLICATION – PLEASING GOD
How do we please God? (Verses quoted from NIV, italics added.)
Genesis 8:21: “The Lord smelled the pleasing aroma” of the sacrifice. In the Old Testament, God’s pleasure in the aroma of a sacrifice meant that he had accepted the sacrifice for sin.  Pleasing God means making an acceptable sacrifice to him.
Psalm 19:14: “May the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart be pleasing in your sight.” Our love for God should guide what we think and what we say (see also Psalm 104:34).
John 5:30: “I seek not to please myself but him who sent me.” Jesus taught us not to try to please ourselves but to please God (see also John 8:29).
Romans 12:1: “Offer your bodies as living sacrifices, holy and pleasing to God.” God wants us to turn over our lives to him daily, renouncing our own desires and trusting him to guide us (see also Romans 14:8-18).
Ephesians 5:10: “Find out what pleases the Lord.” We must live in contrast to those who live immorally.
Colossians 1:10: “We pray this in order that you may live a life worthy of the Lord and may please him in every way: bearing fruit in every good work, growing in the knowledge of God.” Bearing fruit and growing in the knowledge of God are ways to please him.
Hebrews 11:6: “Without faith it is impossible to please God.” God rewards with his presence those who trust him fully.

4:3-5 God wants you to be holy, so you should keep clear of all sexual sin. Then each of you will control your body and live in holiness and honor—not in lustful passion as the pagans do, in their ignorance of God and his ways.NLT The phrase “God wants you to be holy” is also translated, “It is God’s will that you should be sanctified” (NIV). Becoming “holy” involves a process called “sanctification.”

This process continues throughout every believer’s lifetime on earth, preparing him or her for heaven. God takes the old patterns and behaviors and transforms them to his standards and will. Those who are being sanctified have accepted Christ as Savior and are allowing the Holy Spirit to work in their lives, making them more and more like Christ. If the heathen behave as they do because they do not know God, Christians must behave in a completely different way because we do know God, because he is a holy God, because he is our God, and because we want to please him.

John Stott

 

Because God wants his people to become holy, believers need to uphold certain standards here on earth. Christianity is not a list of dos and don’ts but a relationship in which believers desire to please their heavenly Father (2:4; 4:1). To please him requires obedience to his standards. Apparently the area of sexual sin (Greek, porneia) was plaguing the church in Thessalonica, as it was plaguing the Roman Empire as a whole. The many idols worshiped in the regions across the empire often had an emphasis on sex—some temples even employed prostitutes for the pleasure of “worshipers.” In general, people regarded any kind of sexual activity as acceptable. It was quite common for a man not to limit his sexual relationship to his wife. Homosexuality was common. Incest was overlooked. Slaves were kept and used for sex.

God’s standards are the opposite. Paul taught abstinence from sexual immorality. This included any kind of illegitimate sexual intercourse or relationship outside of marriage. He forbade any homosexual activity. In Corinth some of the new Christians had been prostitutes, adulterers, or homosexuals. When they came to Christ out of such perversion, they had to alter their attitude toward this particular area of life. They had to accept God’s standards—which had to be taught to them, as Paul was teaching them here.

We live in a society similar to the one in which Paul lived and taught. Every kind of sexual activity, including violence and abuse of children, has become commonplace. Unbridled expression of all desires has become the norm. As Christians, we must uphold the sanctity of sexual expression within the loving commitment of the marriage relationship.

 LIFE APPLICATION – NEVER UNDERESTIMATE
Sexual immorality is a temptation that is always before us. Movies and TV shows present sex outside marriage as a normal, even desirable, part of life, while marriage is often pictured as confining and joyless. Those who are pure are often mocked. God does not forbid sexual sin just to be difficult. He knows its power to destroy us physically and spiritually. No one should underestimate the power of sexual immorality. It has devastated countless lives and destroyed families, churches, communities, and even nations.
Sexual desires and activities must be placed under Christ’s control. God created sex for procreation and pleasure and as an expression of love between a husband and wife. Sexual experience must be limited to the marriage relationship to avoid hurting ourselves, our relationship to God, and our relationships with others. God wants to protect us from damaging ourselves and others, so he offers to fill us—our loneliness, our desires—with himself.

These believers were not being exhorted to keep clear of (literally, “abstain from”) all sex but of all sexual sin. God created sex to be a beautiful and essential ingredient of marriage, but sex outside the marriage relationship is sin. That is where God drew the line. These believers had to keep clear of all forms of sexual sin—stay away or even run away if need be (see also 1 Corinthians 6:13-20; 2 Corinthians 12:21). Therefore, Paul taught that believers must control their bodies and live in holiness and honor—not in lustful passion as the pagans do, in their ignorance of God and his ways. Sex should be kept within the context of marriage between a man and woman; sex should be done in “holiness and honor—not in lustful passion.” Honorable conduct is contrasted with an evil, lustful attitude that can contaminate even a marriage. People who live by “lustful passion” are ignorant of God because they have chosen to ignore the knowledge of him that they have been given (Romans 1:19-20, 24-27) and to ignore his messengers who bring the Good News to them.

LIFE APPLICATION – PASSIONS
Paul said that lustful passions should not control God’s people. Some argue that if they’ve already sinned by having lustful thoughts, they might as well go ahead with lustful actions too. Acting out sinful desires is harmful in several ways: (1) It causes people to excuse sin rather than to stop sinning; (2) it destroys marriages; (3) it is deliberate rebellion against God’s Word; and (4) it always hurts someone else in addition to the sinner. Sinful action is more dangerous than sinful desire, so desires should not be acted out. Nevertheless, sinful desire is just as damaging to righteousness. Left unchecked, wrong desires will result in wrong actions and will turn people away from God.

4:6 And that in this matter no one should wrong his brother or take advantage of him. The Lord will punish men for all such sins, as we have already told you and warned you.NIV These words “in this matter” refer to what Paul had just written regarding sexual sin (4:3). Paul focused here on the men among the believers. Not only does sexual sin ruin the holy and honorable living to which Christian men should aspire, but it also is a sin against one’s fellowmen—whether they are Christians or not. To have a sexual affair with another man’s wife or member of his household wrongs that other man. It takes advantage of a trusting relationship. To have premarital sex, or a sexual affair with a woman who is unmarried, also wrongs another man, for the woman cannot bring virginity to her marriage. God does not overlook these sins; instead, he will punish men for all such sins. So important was this that Paul and Silas had already told and warned the new Christians

in Thessalonica. While Paul was focusing on the men because of the society he lived in, it is important to note that these principles are just as true for women. Behold how these Christians love one another.

Tertullian

 

4:7 God has called us to be holy, not to live impure lives.NLT The Greek word translated “called” is the exact word Paul used in Romans 8:30: “And those he predestined, he also called; those he called, he also justified; those he justified, he also glorified” (niv; see also Romans 9:24; 1 Thessalonians 2:11-12; 2 Thessalonians 2:14). The verb means “to call forth” or “to summon.” Paul always made it clear that salvation was God’s initiative and that people are called to be his. “Calling” includes a commitment on the part of believers to be holy, not to live impure lives. Because it is a call, God is part of it, promising to help each believer have wisdom, the ability to resist temptation, and the ability to live as God desires.

 LIFE APPLICATION – HOLY, HOLY
God desires believers to be holy. A follower of Christ becomes holy or sanctified (set apart for sacred use, cleansed and made holy) through believing and obeying the Word of God (Hebrews 4:12). He or she has already accepted forgiveness through Christ’s sacrificial death (Hebrews 7:26-27). But daily application of God’s Word has a purifying effect on one’s mind and heart. Scripture points out sin, motivates us to confess, renews our relationship with Christ, and guides us back to the right path. If you are putting off reading your Bible, you may be harboring sin in your thoughts or actions. If sexual sin is keeping you from God and his Word, confess it to God and turn away from those sinful activities.

4:8 Anyone who refuses to live by these rules is not disobeying human rules but is rejecting God, who gives his Holy Spirit to you.NLT Clearly, to live in sexual sin is to reject God. God laid down these rules—basically, one rule: Sex is for married people (a man and a woman) only. Anyone who refuses to live by this simple rule, who treats sexual sin lightly, is not disobeying human rules because human rules change (witness the change in “sexual rules” in the American culture over the last fifty years). To go with the flow of the surrounding culture and to disregard God’s rules about sexuality are tantamount to rejecting God.

Why does it matter so much? Paul would later write to the believers in Corinth (another sexually immoral city and, incidentally, where Paul was when he wrote the letter to the Thessalonians): “Run away from sexual sin! No other sin so clearly affects the body as this one does. For sexual immorality is a sin against your own body” (1 Corinthians 6:18 NLT). Sexual sin is a violation of one’s own body. Paul described it as a sin that affects the body like no other, a sin that is against one’s own body, affecting not just the flesh (promiscuous sex can lead to disease) but the whole being and personality. Sexual sin has disastrous effects. What an enticement it can be for all people—believers are not exempt.

Clearly other sins also affect the body, such as gluttony or drunkenness, but no other sin has the same effect on the memory, personality, or soul of a person as sexual sin. Paul argues that in intercourse, people are united (1 Corinthians 6:16). Their spirits are not involved in quite the same way in other sins. Also Paul argues that a believer’s body is the temple of God (1 Corinthians 6:19-20). In sexual sin, a person removes his or her body from God’s control to unite with another sinner. Thus, those people violate God’s purpose for their bodies. Satan gladly uses sexual sin as a weapon, for he knows its power to destroy. Thus, Paul wrote, don’t walk, but “run away from sexual sin!” (1 Corinthians 6:18). Believers need to exercise alertness and awareness to stay away from places where temptation is strong, and they need to use strong, evasive action if they find themselves entrapped.

To reject God in this area is to despise the wonderful gift of his Holy Spirit and to reject Christ’s ultimate sacrifice on sinners’ behalf. The Thessalonians had received that gift (it was given to you), and they ought to have lived in thankfulness and obedience. In Galatians 5:22-23, Paul describes the fruit of the Holy Spirit in believers’ lives. One fruit is self-control, referring to mastery over sinful human desires and ability to show restraint. When believers surrender to the Holy Spirit, he gives them the strength to follow God’s rules. The Holy Spirit brings out the best in us, not the worst. He reminds us of Christ’s law of love and to treat our neighbors as ourselves.

4:9 But I don’t need to write to you about the Christian love that should be shown among God’s people. For God himself has taught you to love one another.NLT Paul switched gears here from exhorting the Thessalonian believers about sexual purity to exhorting those who needed to work and not depend on others (4:11-12). He commended them that he did not need to exhort them to love one another, for it seemed that they had learned that lesson from God himself—most likely Paul was referring to the ministry of the Holy Spirit. Paul used a literary device called a paralipsis. By using it, he pretended that he was going to pass over a comment as a means of disarming his audience (see 2 Corinthians 9:1). The Christian love described by Paul is not the Greek word “philadelphia.” This is the kind of love that binds people together (John 13:34-35; 1 John 2:7-8). Normally used for blood relations, the New Testament applies philadelphia to “faith relations” in the family of God. This is a brotherly love that should be shown

among God’s people. Not only did sexual purity set the believers apart from the culture around them, but so did the love they showed for one another. Indeed, it was a trademark of the first church (Acts 2:43-47; 4:32-35). Love must be learned and learned again and again; there is no end to it. Hate needs no instruction but waits only to be provoked.

Katherine Anne Porter

 

With the presence of the Holy Spirit comes his inward teaching. That “God himself has taught you to love one another” means that the Holy Spirit reminds Christians of Christ’s commandment to love one another and then empowers them to do it. Christians need to be reminded daily to love each other. It is a discipline that may not come easily (see also Romans 5:5; Galatians 5:22; 1 John 4:21).

 LIFE APPLICATION – CHRISTIAN LOVE
In the Christian church, love is not only expressed by showing respect; it is also expressed through self-sacrifice and servanthood (John 15:13). In fact, it can be defined as “selfless giving,” reaching beyond friends to enemies and persecutors (Matthew 5:43-48). Love should be the unifying force and the identifying mark of the Christian community. Love is the key to walking in the light because we cannot grow spiritually while we hate others. Our growing relationship with God will result in growing relationships with others.

4:10 Indeed, your love is already strong toward all the Christians in all of Macedonia. Even so, dear brothers and sisters, we beg you to love them more and more.NLT The Thessalonian believers did not need instruction about showing God’s love, but Paul urged them forward. Although their love was already strong not only among themselves but also toward all the Christians in all of Macedonia, Paul begged the believers to love them more and more. There is always more to learn about love, always more depth to be plumbed, always more ways to show love. Paul wanted them to understand that love was not an end in itself but a continual process.

4:11-12 Make it your ambition to lead a quiet life, to mind your own business and to work with your hands, just as we told you, so that your daily life may win the respect of outsiders and so that you will not be dependent on anybody.NIV Another group of believers in the church needed some warning (see also 5:14). Believers are to be responsible in all areas of life. Some of the Thessalonian Christians had adopted a life of idleness, depending on others for handouts. This did not show love for fellow believers, for these people were taking advantage of others’ hard work (see Ephesians 6:6-7). The reason for their idleness is unknown, however, because a discussion of the Second Coming follows this section. These people may have decided that because Christ could return at any moment, they would just sit around and wait. They may have genuinely thought they should spend all their time working to bring others into the kingdom, but they were being a drain on their fellow believers and therefore were not loving them.

It seems that these people were not quiet about this either, so Paul first exhorted them to focus their ambition on leading a quiet life and minding their own business rather than meddling in other people’s business (see also 5:14; 2 Thessalonians 3:11). The injunction to work with your hands may have been distasteful, for Greeks looked down on manual labor as fit only for slaves. Paul was a tent maker, however, and used his hard, manual labor as an example to all believers (2:9-11).

The reason for Paul’s warning? He wanted the believers to be involved in honest labor so that they might win the respect of outsiders and so that they would not have to be dependent on others (see 1 Peter 2:12). Again, Paul had been working for these same reasons. Those who work hard to support themselves are a positive witness, both outside and inside the church (see also Ephesians 4:28).

 LIFE APPLICATION – GAINING RESPECT
Paul encouraged the believers to be contributing members, not parasites; to be self-supporting, not dependent on others. In Thessalonica some believers had abandoned their responsibilities, so their conduct could have brought condemnation on the church. Our conduct in our neighborhood and in our workplace should reflect our role as ambassadors of Christ. Does your attitude at work reflect your Christian commitment? Show enthusiasm for what you do; follow through on details assigned to you. Even in details, non-Christians will scrutinize our Christian conduct.

Such practical, straightforward living, as embodied in the apostle Paul’s instructions to the Thessalonians, is the foundation of Christian living. Believers who sacrificially love other people, exhibit tranquil lives, conscientiously focus on keeping their own lives in order, and faithfully carry out their daily responsibilities in the workplace —all the while proclaiming the gospel in light of the return of Christ—are the most effective witnesses to their unsaved neighbors and loved ones.

www.Upwards.Church

Message Audio/Video and Outline: https://upwards.church/leander-campus/watch-now-message-videos

Watch Messages: YouTube-Upwards Church

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Read Along Daily Bible Reading: You Version

Sources: Bruce B. Barton et al., Life Application Bible Commentary – 1 & 2 Thessalonians, (Wheaton, IL: Tyndale, 1999), WORDsearch CROSS e-book, Under: “1 THESSALONIANS 4”.

John MacArthur, MacArthur New Testament Commentary – 1 & 2 Thessalonians, (Chicago: Moody Press, 2002), WORDsearch CROSS e-book, 114-121.

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You’re Invited! Kingdom Come Message Series

You’re Invited to our new Message Series!

Kingdom Come” – 1 & 2 Thessalonians – 5 weeks

Description:  Jesus taught us to pray. “Your Kingdom Come, Your will be done.” Do we know what we’re praying for?  1 and 2 Thessalonians answers questions about how we’re to live and how we’re to view the coming of Christ. These letters discuss the future of Christ’s Second Coming, the Anti-Christ, Tribulation and what believers should do now. Paul encourages believers to be prepared, to cling to the truth of what they have been taught, and to live responsibly in light of the future.  Join us for our series, “Kingdom Come.”

Dates             Titles              Scripture                                          Events          

Feb. 8 – A Call to a Holy Life (1 Thessalonians 4:1-12)

Feb. 15 – The Rapture of the Church (1 Thessalonians 4:13-18)

Feb. 22 – The Day of the Lord (1 Thessalonians 5: 1-11)                          Communion

Mar 1 – Trials and Tribulation (2 Thessalonians 1:1-12)

Mar. 8 – The Antichrist is Coming (2 Thessalonians 2:1-12)

Introduction to 1 Thessalonians

In our day of intense interest in end times and what will happen in future we find some answers in the letters to the Thessalonian church.

“You won’t learn unless you ask questions!” Countless teachers and parents have explained that truth to children as they begin their educational experience. Those who desire to train others and impart knowledge don’t mind responding to queries. Questions help them know what students are thinking and learning. Those who don’t verbalize their doubts, voice their concerns, or seek to clarify what they have heard often harbor misunderstanding, go the wrong way, or live in ignorance.

Paul, master teacher, also felt like a father to believers in the churches he had planted on his missionary journeys. In both roles, he eagerly welcomed students’ questions and patiently responded. With limited time in each location, however, Paul could not cover every topic, resolve every conflict, or answer every question, so he wrote letters to his beloved churches. Each letter had a purpose and spoke to specific needs.

Paul wrote this epistle, his first to the church at Thessalonica, to answer believers’ questions and to commend them on their faith and commitment to Christ. The Thessalonians had questions . . . and they asked them. As we read this short, personal letter, let’s too look for answers.

The Message of 1 Thessalonians: Hope and Preparation for the Second Coming.

Hope:  Paul encouraged the Thessalonian Christians by reminding them that one day all believers, both those who are alive and those who have died, will be united with Christ. Christians who die before Christ’s return have hope—the hope of the resurrection of the body and life everlasting with the Lord.

Importance for Today. All who believe in Christ will live with him forever. All those who belong to Jesus Christ—throughout history—will be present with him at his second coming. No matter how bad the situation or bleak the outlook, we can take heart, knowing that our future is secure in Christ. We can be confident that at death or at the Second Coming, we will be with loved ones who also have trusted in Christ.

Preparation for the Second Coming: No one knows the time of Christ’s return—it will come suddenly, when people least expect it. Thus, believers should live moral and holy lives, ever watchful for his coming, not neglecting daily responsibilities, but always working and living to please the Lord.

Importance for Today. The gospel is not only what we believe but also what we must live. The Holy Spirit helps us to be faithful to Christ, giving us strength to resist lust and fraud. Live as though you expect Christ’s return at any time. Don’t be caught unprepared.

Paul established the church in Thessalonica during his second missionary journey (about A.D. 51). He wrote this letter a short time later to encourage the young believers there. He wanted to assure them of his love, to praise them for their faithfulness during persecution, and to remind them of their hope—the sure return of their Lord and Savior.

Purpose:  To strengthen the Thessalonian Christians in their faith and give them the assurance of Christ’s return

Author: Paul

Original Audience: The church at Thessalonica

Date Written: Approximately A.D. 51 from Corinth; one of Paul’s earliest letters

Setting:  The church at Thessalonica was very young, having been established only two or three years before this letter was written. The Thessalonian Christians needed to mature in their faith. In addition, there was a misunderstanding concerning Christ’s second coming—some thought Christ would return immediately; thus, they were confused when their loved ones died because they expected Christ to return beforehand. Also, believers were being persecuted.

Key Verse: “For since we believe that Jesus died and was raised to life again, we also believe that when Jesus returns, God will bring back with him the believers who have died” (4:14).

Key People: Paul, Timothy, Silas

Key Place: Thessalonica

Special Features: Paul received from Timothy a favorable report about the Thessalonians. However, Paul wrote this letter to correct their misconceptions about the resurrection and the second coming of Christ.

www.Upwards.Church

Message Audio/Video and Outline: https://upwards.church/leander-campus/watch-now-message-videos

Watch Messages: YouTube-Upwards Church

Facebook: Upwards Church

Read Along Daily Bible Reading: You Version

Sources:
 Life Application Study Bible, (Wheaton, IL: Tyndale, 1988), WORDsearch CROSS e-book, 2039.
Bruce B. Barton et al., Life Application Bible Commentary – 1 & 2 Thessalonians, (Wheaton, IL: Tyndale, 1999), WORDsearch CROSS e-book, Under: “1 Thessalonians”.

 

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Avoid Rebellion – Numbers 16

Rebellion involves knowing what God wants me to do and refusing to do it.

Some notorious historical figures might have remained anonymous if they hadn’t tried to grab on to more than they could hold. But by refusing to be content with what they had, and by trying to get more than they deserved, they ended up with nothing. Korah, one of the Israelite leaders, was one such person.

Korah was a Levite who assisted in the daily functions of the Tabernacle. Shortly after Israel’s great rebellion against God (Numbers 13-14) (or see the last post) Korah instigated his own mini-rebellion (Numbers 16:1-2).

Korah was the ringleader of the coup. He was a Levite and, interestingly, a cousin to Moses. Their fathers were brothers. Three other brothers of the tribe of Reuben were also ringleaders: Dathan, Abiram, and On. Korah was from the Kohathite clan. The Kohathites and the tribe of Reuben camped on the south side of the Tabernacle, camped side by side. Living close together and being friends and co-leaders gave them ample opportunity to sit around in the evenings grumbling, murmuring, and sharing their complaints and disappointments.

Korah recruited a grievance committee and confronted Moses and Aaron. Their list of complaints boils down to three statements (Numbers 16:3-4): (1) You are no better than anyone else; (2) everyone in Israel has been chosen of the Lord; (3) we don’t need to obey you. It is amazing to see how Korah twisted the first two statements—both true—to reach the wrong conclusion.

  • Rebellion reveals deeper problems.

Whenever you find complaining and rebelling among God’s people, there’s usually a “stated reason” and a “hidden reason.” Korah’s public complaint was that Moses and Aaron were “running things” and not giving the people opportunity for input. He wanted more democracy in the camp. After all, the Lord dwelt in the entire camp and all the people were “a kingdom of priests” (Ex. 19:3-6), so who were Moses and Aaron to elevate themselves above everybody else? The hidden reason was that Korah wanted the Levites to have the same privileges as Aaron and his sons (Num. 16:10). Korah wasn’t satisfied to be assisting the priests; he wanted to be a priest.

Korah and his associates had seen the advantages of the priesthood in Egypt. Egyptian priests had great wealth and political influence, something Korah wanted for himself. Korah may have assumed that Moses, Aaron, and his sons were trying to make the Israelite priesthood the same kind of political machine, and he wanted to be a part of it. He did not understand that Moses’ main ambition was to serve God rather than to control others.

Like Korah, we often desire the special qualities God has given others. Korah had significant, worthwhile abilities and responsibilities of his own. In the end, however, his ambition for more caused him to lose everything. Inappropriate ambition is greed in disguise. We should concentrate on finding the special purpose God has for us instead of wishing we were in someone else’s shoes.

Note the reaction of Moses: he fell face down, seeking God (Numbers 16:4-11). How long he stayed upon his face seeking the Lord is not stated. But falling prostrate apparently so startled the rebels that they temporarily held their peace, somewhat backing off until he arose from the ground. Note that Moses did not lash out nor retaliate against the rebels. When they first confronted him face to face, he simply fell prostrate to the ground—in great meekness and humility—and took the matter to the Lord.  This is a great lesson for us as well; when confronted with bad news, or argumentative people, we should go to the Lord in prayer first.

When Moses got up, he responded:

They were the ones who had gone too far. He used their own charge against them. They were guilty of abusing and trampling underfoot God’s call to them to serve as Levites (Numbers 16:8-9). They had personally been given the privilege of being set apart to serve God and His people. This should have been enough: they were already leaders and servants of God, appointed to lead God’s people as directed by Him. They were guilty of seeking the priesthood itself—seeking a much higher position that should come only from God, never from selfish effort.  Numbers 16:10-11

They were revolting against the Lord Himself!  (Numbers 16:11)

  • Rebellion is ultimately against God.

When Jude wrote to warn the early church about false teachers, he used Korah as an example, pointing out that he “rejected authority and spoke evil of dignitaries.”  (Jude 5-11).

The test Moses proposed was a simple one. If Korah and his men were indeed priests acceptable to God, then let them bring their censers to the tabernacle and see if God would accept them. Surely the rebels remembered what happened to Nadab and Abihu when they rashly brought “strange fire” before the Lord (Lev. 10), but even this warning didn’t deter them.  The next morning, Korah and his followers showed up with their censers and stood with Moses and Aaron at the entrance of the tabernacle, while Dathan and Abiram stood with their families at the doors of their tents on the south side of the tabernacle. God showed his displeasure with the rebels as the earth opened up and swallowed them! (Numbers 16:32-35)

Korah’s story of rebellion gives us numerous warnings:

  1. Don’t let desire for what someone else has make us discontented with what we already have.
  2.  Don’t try to raise our own self-esteem by attacking someone else’s.
  3. Don’t use part of God’s Word to support what we want now, rather than allowing its entirety to shape our worldview.
  4. Don’t expect power and position to be an end all; God may want to work through us in the position we are now in.

The selfish desire for greatness and authority is a common theme in Scripture, whether it’s Korah opposing Moses and Aaron, Absalom defying his father (2 Sam. 15), Adonijah claiming the crown (1 Kings 1), the disciples arguing over which of them was the greatest (Luke 22:23-25), or Diotrephes loving to have preeminence in a local church (3 John 9-11). And yet the most important place in the Christian life is the place of God’s choice, the place He’s prepared for us and prepared us to fill. The important thing isn’t status but faithfulness, doing the work God wants us to do. Every member of the church, the body of Christ, has a spiritual gift to be used for serving others, and therefore every member is important to God and to the church (1 Cor. 12:14-18).

  • Rebellion must be replaced with submission.

Whether it’s the ancient camp of Israel or a modern city, no society can function without subordination. Somebody has to be in charge. Parents have authority in the home, teachers in the classroom, managers in the factory or office, and civil servants in the city or nation (Rom. 13; 1 Peter 2:13-25). When this kind of order breaks down, then society is in serious trouble. God places us in families, churches, communities, countries and all of them have people who the responsibility to lead, manage and we must submit to the authority God has placed over us.

Darrell www.Upwards.Church Message Audio/Video and Outline: https://upwards.church/leander-campus/watch-now-message-videos Watch Messages: YouTube-Upwards Church Facebook: Upwards Church Read Along Daily Bible Reading: You Version

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Avoid Doubt – Numbers 13-14

Doubt is a lack of confidence or assurance that God will keep His promises.

Today we examine Numbers 13. This chapter tells about a crucial event in the history of Israel. And I believe it is relevant to us because the way they reacted in doubt is too often the way we react today.

This is the story of Moses & the people of Israel as God freed them from their slavery in Egypt & led them to the border of the Promised Land. When they arrive, God gives the command, & Moses tells the people, “It is time for us to go in & take the land which God has given us.”

But first, he chooses 12 men – one from each tribe – & tells them, “Go & spy out the land. Observe the people, their cities & fortifications, & their produce. Then come back & tell us what the land is like.”

So these 12 men take off & spend 40 days spying out the land. When they come back they reported, “We went into the land to which you sent us, and it does flow with milk and honey! Here is its fruit.” (Numbers 13:27)

God was right! “We looked at the land & it is exactly what God said it would be. But from that point on, their report was no longer unanimous. They were divided 10 to 2, & the majority begins the rest of its report with the word, “But“.

Have you ever noticed how often the word, “But,” is used when we don’t want to do what God is asking?  “I know you said this God, but.”  “I know your word is clear on this, but.”

That is exactly what was happening here in verses 28-33 where their report continues: “But the people who live there are powerful, & the cities are fortified & very large. We even saw descendants of Anak there.

Then Caleb silenced the people before Moses & said, ‘We should go up & take possession of the land, for we can certainly do it.’

John Gardner said, “We are continually faced with a series of great opportunities brilliantly disguised as insoluble problems.” A faith that can’t be tested can’t be trusted, and God tests our faith to help us make sure it’s genuine.

  • God places regular tests of faith before His children.

But the men who had gone up with him said, ‘We can’t attack those people; they are stronger than we are.’ . . . ‘All the people we saw there are of great size. We saw the descendants of Anak there. . .’  ‘We seemed like grasshoppers in our own eyes, & we looked the same to them.'”

Oh, no, the majority is recommending they disobey God!  Why?  Doubt that expresses itself in fear, worry and anxiety.

Caleb & Joshua, even though they are in the minority, urged the people to do what God wants them to do. They argued, “If God is leading the way, then why should we be afraid?”

  • Doubt sees obstacles, faith sees opportunities.

After all, look at the miracles God had already done on their behalf. He had sent the plagues upon Egypt & forced Pharaoh to let them go. He had divided the waters of the Red Sea, & then closed those waters upon the chariots of Egypt.

He had given them water in the desert when they were thirsty, manna when they were hungry, & quail when they wanted meat.

God had been with them all through the wilderness. He had led them with a pillar of cloud by day, & a pillar of fire by night. They had even heard His voice in the midst of the thunder & lightning & smoke on Mt. Sinai.

After witnessing so many miracles, why did they stop trusting God? Why did they refuse to enter the Promised Land when that had been their goal since leaving Egypt? They had fear and doubt. Often we do the same thing. We trust God to handle the smaller issues but doubt his ability to take care of the big problems, the tough decisions, the frightening situations.  He brought me this far and won’t let me down now. We can continue trusting God by remembering all he has done for us.

But sadly, ten of the spies were so afraid that they were not willing to obey God.

We are not able” is the cry of doubt (Num. 13:31), but, “Our God is able is the affirmation of faith.

Vs. 31-32 says that “they spread a bad report” among the people, and each time they told it, their description was exaggerated, misrepresented or flat out lies.  When our eyes are on ourselves and our circumstances, we lose our perspective and say and do ridiculous things.

And in vs. 33 they say, “We saw the descendants of Anak there!”  The “descendants of Anak” were a race of abnormally large people. The family of Goliath may have been descended from these people.

These 10 spies are saying, “We don’t stand a chance because there are giants – fearsome warriors – in the land! Everywhere you go there are giants!” They saw themselves as grasshoppers. They saw the enemy as giants. And they didn’t see God at all!

The negative opinion of 10 men spread doubt among the people.

  • Doubt is contagious.

Because it is human nature to accept opinion as fact, we must be especially careful when voicing our negative opinions. What we say may heavily influence the actions of those who trust us to give sound advice.  The ten spies spread an evil report among the people. They exaggerated and distorted the truth. They became stumbling blocks to Israel. Scripture is clear: we are not to be stumbling blocks, not to cause people to stumble and fall.

Now let’s apply this to our lives today. To the children of Israel, the Promised Land represented their future. And God gave them the opportunity to go in and start a new life.

As you look into the future, what do you see? Do you see giants, or God?

There are crises in our world, a crisis in the family, a crisis in morality and a crisis in government. Integrity and morality has been shoved aside. We are a people living as if there is no God.

Those are some of the giants we face. But as we look into the future, I think that sometimes we become so overwhelmed by the giants that we are like these 10 men, & we think that there is no way we can take the land.

But if there has ever been a time when our world needs Christians who care about people who are hurting, who will reach out to a lost & confused world, who will live out and speak the simple Bible message without compromise, now is that time.

We must not retreat. We must not be intimidated. And don’t ever forget, our God specializes in slaying giants. David slew Goliath. So what do you see when you look into the future? Do you see giants, or do you see God? God is bigger. No obstacle is too big for God..

Finally, as you look toward the future, where are you going? Isn’t it amazing how short a memory the children of Israel had? For over 200 years they had suffered as slaves in Egypt, & complained bitterly to God about it.

So God heard their cries, set them free, & led them through the wilderness to the Promised Land. But now they’re afraid to go in. And they’re saying, “Maybe it would be better if we went back to Egypt.” What???   How sad, how defeating!

  • Doubt can lead to despair.

For some people they would rather suffer in what is familiar than trust God in what is unknown. They were ready to give up their freedom & become slaves once again, just for a measure of security.  Our security is in God.

What do we do if we are gripped with doubt?

  • Doubt must be replaced with faith.

If your life is in the wilderness, if you feel doubt, then Jesus Christ is the one who goes before us!  He conquers the giants of death and sin.  Jesus Christ is the one to deliver us from bondage and take us into a growing relationship with Him, a promise land that starts now: a life of faith, with growth and struggles, but leads to victory and ultimately heaven.  It all starts with faith in Jesus.

For by grace you have been saved through faith, and that not of yourselves; it is the gift of God.  Ephesians 2:8   

Darrell

www.Upwards.Church

Message Audio/Video and Outline: https://upwards.church/leander-campus/watch-now-message-videos

Watch Messages: YouTube-Upwards Church

Facebook: Upwards Church

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