anti-christs

ARMAGEDDON, END TIMES, AND THE BOOK OF REVELATION

I noted last week that NOT to address the war with Iran seems like ignoring the elephant in the room, so I am going to talk about it, but not in terms of its merits - or lack thereof, depending on your opinion. Google “Just War Theory Iran” or some combination of words like that and take some time to study and reflect.

I want to address something different. Many people are asking questions like this right now:

“Is what’s happening in the Middle East a fulfillment of prophecy? Are we watching Revelation unfold on the news? Does this war with Iran mean the world is approaching the final battle of Armageddon? Should I be looking out for the Antichrist? How should we be responding?” [1]

If you have grown up in evangelical circles, war in the Middle East - especially if it involves Israel - has always led to speculation about eschatology (end times study). At least 20 countries are now involved; the global economy is stumbling; there are murmurs of WWIII. It feels potentially apocalyptic.

Since most of the “end times” text comes from the book of Revelation[2], I am going to condense my 30+ episode sermon series from 2021 into one sermon.

* * * * *

Faithful, Bible-believing Christians have interpreted Revelation differently throughout church history.

  • Preterist: Revelation’s events happened in the 1st century.

  • Poetic/Theopoetic: The text is poetic language expressing ultimate truths about God, evil, and history.

  • Theopolitical: The text is a form of political protest and dissent against the Roman empire[3], a prophetic critique of Empire power.

  • Pastoral/Prophetic: The text gives a timeless call for hope and faithfulness in the face of inevitable, ongoing conflict with all empires and their evils, injustices, and misguided allegiances.

  • Predictive/Futurist: The text reveals future events that will happen at the end of time (“end times”). This is part of what is called Dispensationalism.[4]

For Christians raised in evangelical culture in the United States, Revelation has typically been taught in the Predictive/Futurist model: a roadmap of future wars, the Antichrist and geopolitical alliances that usher in the return of Jesus. #LeftBehind

It may surprise you to know that this view is not very old. The idea that Revelation provides a precise geopolitical map of the End Times developed through John Nelson Darby (1800-1882). He was heavily influenced by Margaret McDonald, a Scottish woman who claimed to have had visions of a pre-tribulation rapture in 1830. Soon, the Scofield Reference Bible (1909) was the first Bible to have footnotes for this Dispensational approach.

Do with that what you will. My point is that the earliest Christians did not read Revelation through that lens. For them, Revelation was a combination of the first 4 approaches. It was a message about how to avoid compromise, remain faithful, and live with hope in the midst of what was happening in their lifetime. I am going to try to explain that this morning so we can see what John’s audience saw, hear what they heard, and hold to the hope they had.

* * * * *

In the first century, Rome claimed a divine leader and an empire blessed by the gods. They had symbols everywhere to remind people of their allegiance: flags, statues of the emperor, coins with Caesar’s image, temples where incense burned in his honor, and citizens expected to say three simple words: “Caesar is Lord.”

Christians refused. Instead, they said: Jesus is Lord.” That confession was deeply theological – and political. It put them at odds with a Rome that demanded allegiance. As you might imagine, the Empire was not happy with this turn of events, and life got really hard for Christians. As they suffered, there was a temptation to give up and join Rome.

Revelation was written to reveal spiritual realities behind the political power and false promises of Rome, and to help Christians remain hopeful and faithful when empires threatened their lives and demanded their allegiance.

John used apocalyptic literature[5] to communicate this. He narrated a vision through creative storytelling that is heavily symbolic, full of exaggerated imagery. Apocalyptic writing is less like a political news report and more like the political cartoons on the editorial page. I’ll try to show you what that looks like with some images I am going to use.

Revelation Was Written to First Century Christians Living in the Roman Empire, specifically to seven real churches in Asia Minor (Ephesus, Smyrna, Pergamum, Thyatira, Sardis, Philadelphia, Laodicea). It was written for us, but not to us. If the book only made sense thousands of years later, then it failed its first readers. It had to make sense first in their context, and second in ours.

John’s audience would not have seen the prophetic nature of Revelation as foretelling about future events 1000s of years down the road. After all, Jesus had kept telling them, in their moment, to look out for what was going to happen in the Last Days (Matthew 24, Mark 13, Luke 21). John, himself, writing in 1 John 2:18, made it clear:

Dear children, this is the last hour; and as you have heard that the antichrist is coming, even now many antichrists have come. This is how we know it is the last hour.[6]

John’s audience read Revelation’s prophetic voice as forthtelling,  interpreting the world’s current events theologically to give them wisdom and hope.

Revelation Is Primarily a Revelation of Jesus.

“The revelation of Jesus Christ…” (Revelation 1:1)

It is a revelation of Jesus first and foremost. That’s where the hope comes from. Revelation has wonderful imagery about Jesus:

  • The faithful witness (1:5)

  • The slain Lamb (5:6)

  • The one who conquers by sacrifice (5:9–10)

  • The rider whose robe is dipped in his own blood (19:13)

  • The maker of new things from all that was broken (21:5)

The dominant image is that of a Lamb who was slain. Even when John hears a lion, when he looks, it’s a lamb. (5:7-9) Once the Lion has been revealed to be the Lamb, we never again find Christ referred to as a Lion, though he’s referred to as the Lamb twenty-seven more times.[7] It’s reinforcing a point Jesus made in his lifetime. When the people waved the palm branches of the violent Zealots to welcome him into Jerusalem (Luke 19), Jesus cried for them and their vain pursuit of peace. That’s not the kind of Lord Jesus is, and it’s not how he will usher in his kingdom then or in the future.

 

Revelation Exposes Empires. Revelation’s central claims would have been shocking to people overwhelmed by Rome’s power and grandeur:

  • Rome claims to be blessed and ruled by divinity. John says Rome is a beast rising from the sea, empowered by a propaganda-fueled dragon that demands worship. John uses Rome/Babylon as stand-ins for all earthly kingdoms, nations, and empires. Any political authority that demands an unquestioning or ultimate allegiance, any ruler who relies on violent, destructive domination to rule, any earthly system that exalts itself as being a savior -  they are all trying to stand in a place that belongs to God, and Jesus has something to say about that.[8]

  • Rome says it brings peace with the sword (Pax Romana). John says it is bathed in violence.Revelation unmasks false peace that trusts in violence, the kind of path that made Jesus weep when he entered Jerusalem, as it was clear that was the path the people wanted him to take. (Luke 19:41-44) Jesus is establishing a new kind of peace and way of peace (often referred to as Pax Christi, or peace of Christ). 

  • Rome claims to be like a stunningly beautiful woman (the goddess Roma). John says she’s a blood-soaked, cruel seductress (played by Babylon). Babylon is covered with the blood of the saints (Revelation 17), suggesting many had already been devoured by the Empire, either willingly or forcefully.

  • Rome says Caesar is Lord and Savior. Revelation says only Jesus is Lord and Savior. Empires will say, “I alone can save you,” but it’s hollow arrogance. Jesus alone can save us.

  • Rome conquers by taking the lives of others so it can live. Revelation says the Lamb conquers through giving his own life so others can live.

Revelation is unmasking “how the sausage is made” in empires for an audience in danger of being overwhelmed by power or seduced by pleasure. The kingdoms of this world often look glorious on the outside, but from God’s perspective they are beastly. How do we follow Jesus when the nation we live in demands unquestioning loyalty - and compromise? First, we must see it for what it is.


* * * * *

“Is what’s happening in the Middle East a fulfillment of prophecy? Are we watching Revelation unfold on the news? Does this war with Iran mean the world is approaching the final battle of Armageddon? Should I be looking out for the Antichrist? How should we be responding?”

I will offer answers based on my understanding of how Revelation is meant to be read. Others have differing opinions, and we can hold those and still be on Team Jesus. I’m a big fan of listening to what a variety of people have to say and praying for discernment, and I encourage you to do the same.

Are we watching Revelation unfold on the news? Very much so – in the sense that John warned us about empires and how they work. They will either violently bully us to control us, or they will try to seduce us and distract us from Jesus and His Kingdom with worldly pleasure and power.[9] 

It’s a tale as old as history, for all of history. Revelation warns all Christians, in all places, at all times, about the beastliness and seductiveness of nations. No one is exempt. With that in mind, hear me carefully.

In today’s headlines, it’s a warning about Iran and the U.S., Israel[10] and Lebanon, Russia and Ukraine – name the country. Human governments have a beastliness and seductiveness that we must resist. The legacies of Rome and Babylon live on in their empire children. The people of God’s Kingdom stand in their midst as counter-cultural salt and light, shining cities on a hill surrounded by darkness.

Is this a fulfillment of prophecy? If by that we mean that John warned us about what to expect in the times we are living, then yes. Are we moving closer to the end of history? Of course. Eventually, the cycle will end. Maybe we are there. Someday we will be, for sure.

I’m just not convinced John was trying to give us signs to help us figure out “the day and hour” that Jesus will return when Jesus himself said nobody will know (Matthew 24:36).[11] Jesus didn’t seem concerned about being too specific, so I want to encourage us not to be too concerned about it either. If Jesus said, “Be ready,” to an audience 2,000 years ago, we might still have quite a while to wait, and we should still be ready. 

Should I be looking out for the Antichrist? Yes, as the church has been for 2,000 years. The Antichrist does not get a ‘shout out’ in Revelation, but John does in 1 John 2. After he talks about living in the Last Days, he warns:

“Whoever denies that Jesus is the Christ. Such a person is the antichrist—denying the Father and the Son.” (1 John 2:22)

He also revealed where to look for them:

“They went out from us, but they did not really belong to us. For if they had belonged to us, they would have remained with us; but their going showed that none of them belonged to us.”

We don’t need to look “out there” for an antichrist. Apparently, the call will come from inside the house.

Does this war with Iran mean the world is approaching the Battle of Armageddon? A very popular speaker on End Times thinks so.[12] He claimed that Russia, Turkey, “what’s left of Iran” and other Muslim groups would soon invade Israel and be destroyed by God. Last week he prayed that,

“…God Almighty is brought onto the battlefield and the enemies of Zion and the enemies of the United States can be destroyed before our eyes. Let God arise and let his enemies be scattered.”[13]

The thing is, there is no battle between armies that happens at Armageddon, and God does not destroy the nations that gather. Let me explain.

Let’s say (for the sake of discussion) that at this point Revelation suddenly stops being full of symbolic apocalyptic imagery and is now meant to be read literally, like a (future) news report. That would be really different than how we read the rest of the book, but let’s grant a “future historical” reading.

The word “Armageddon” appears only once (Revelation 16:16), and no battle is described there. Nations gather, but nobody starts fighting. The confrontation happens in Revelation 19:11–21. A rider on a white horse –  Jesus - shows up. There is a confrontation, but not what one might expect.

“His eyes are like blazing fire, and on his head are many crowns. He has a name written on him that no one knows but he himself. He is dressed in a robe dipped in blood, and his name is the Word of God. The armies of heaven were following him, riding on white horses and dressed in fine linen, white and clean. Coming out of his mouth is a sharp sword with which to strike down the nations.”

The sword of the Spirit is the Word of God (Ephesians 6), which cuts sharper than any two-edged sword (Hebrews 4). The weapon is Jesus’ mouth is His Word. It’s truth. It’s the gospel. It’s the message that the love displayed on the cross has conquered all that is evil – sin, death, hell, the grave.

Jesus’ robe is already dipped in blood before the battle begins. Most scholars agree this must be his own blood, the blood of the cross. Jesus conquers the world the same way he conquered death: through sacrificial love. The Lamb wins by being slain so that death does not get the final word.

Meanwhile, all the bad guys are still there. All these nations from all over the earth intent on making war are all still there. Now what?

“Then I saw the beast and the kings of the earth and their armies gathered together to wage war against the rider on the horse and his army. But the beast was captured, and with it the false prophet who had performed the signs on its behalf.”

The Beast and False Prophet – keep in mind that these are national symbols of violence and lies, not individuals - are bound and given over to judgment, and that’s it. Nobody draws a sword except Jesus, and it’s the sword of the spirit, the word of God. Even when Gog and Magog gather in Revelation 20, there is no battle between people.[14]

Even if I were to give the most literal reading to these passages, there is no battle at Armageddon where people fight people. There is no blood-soaked field of slaughtered pagans killed by righteous people or heavenly armies. When it is time for judgment, God does it, and it’s not a battlefield slaughter (Revelation 20).

Another famous pastor[15] once described Jesus’ return in Revelation this way.

“In Revelation, Jesus is a prize fighter with a tattoo down His leg, a sword in His hand and the commitment to make someone bleed. That is a guy I can worship. I cannot worship… a guy I can beat up.”

This is….so wrong. Jesus is not an MMA prize fighter; he fights evil with truth and cruciform love. Revelation does not show a returning Jesus with a commitment to make someone bleed; it reveals a slain Lamb who bled on our behalf. And I do worship a man who people not only beat up but also crucified, whose cruciform love swallowed up evil as a result of his sacrifice. Jesus willingly gave up his life to conquer the power of sin, death, hell and the grave. (1 Corinthians 15:55)

So, how do God’s people live in these times? How do we stay true in the midst of beasts, false prophets and the seducers that try to dirty our hearts and divide our allegiance? Revelation 12:11 tells us.

“They conquered [the accuser] by the blood of the Lamb and the word of their testimony, for they did not love their lives even unto death.”

The church participates in fighting against evil with the tools of the Kingdom: faithful witness, sacrificial love, a righteous presence (committed to “right”), perseverance, and a message of hope in Jesus. The church does not overcome the Evil One and his schemes by killing its enemies in the name of Jesus.

When the disciples asked Jesus to call down fire on a Samaritan town, he said “no” (Luke 9), then sent them there as missionaries (Luke 10). The church resists evil by being like Jesus. The point is to “Follow the Lamb wherever he goes.” (Revelation 14:4).

The story ends not with the destruction of the nations, but with the healing of the nations. The kings of the earth – the ones apparently gathered at Armageddon? - are shown coming to the celestial city, bringing the glory and honor of the nations” (21:26). Water flows from the city for the healing of the nations. (Revelation 22:1-2)

Do you remember when we talked about the connection between theology and relationships? There is also a connection between eschatology and relationships.

If we think Armageddon needs to be bloody and violent – and if we think God expects us to bring it about – we might excitedly choose a bloody and violent path shouting the Crusades’ slogan of Deus Vult, “God wills it,”[16] and using the cross as a sign to militarily conquer. #constantine This is what happens when we think God conquers like Empires conquer.

But if we think the judgment that Jesus brings will also offer opportunity for repentance, healing, and restoration, then we will likely promote and pray for an approach that brings that about in the face of even national evil. This is what happens when we believe God conquers evil like Jesus conquered evil (because God is just like Jesus, because, well, God IS Jesus.)

How we think Jesus will return directs how we think we should prepare for it.


So, how are we to respond in this time?

John’s readers may find it hard to see in their neighbors on the street anything but cold, hostile stares and the threat of informing the authorities. They may be so aware of the present rule of the dragon, the monster and the false prophet that all they want is to escape, to be rescued, not to hold out to their neighbors God’s repeated and generous invitation.

But see they must, because the mercy of God is vast and his invitation wide as the world. Because he is who he is, the creator whose purposes are gloriously fulfilled in the slaughtered lamb, he will go on inviting and welcoming and pouring out the water of life for all the thirsty.  (N.T. Wright, Revelation For Everyone)

Empires will rise and fall. Wars will come and go. Nations will boast about their power. But above them all stands the Lamb who was slain and who has risen. Revelation reveals the self-giving, radically forgiving, co-suffering love of Jesus. The power of cruciform love gets the final word.

“Behold, I make all things new.” (Revelation 21:5)

* * * * * * * * *

[1] The fancy term for this in Christian circles is eschatology.

[2] Daniel is commonly cited also, as well as 2 Thessalonians 2.

[3] The Topical Lexicon at Biblehub.com describes empire this way: “In the biblical context, the term ‘empire’ refers to a large political unit or state, usually under a single sovereign authority, that extends its dominion over diverse peoples and territories.”

[4] Dispensationalists believe God works through distinct historical periods (dispensations), with a key distinction between His plan for Israel (earthly people) and the Church (heavenly people), viewing the Church as a temporary "parenthesis" in God's focus on Israel, culminating in a future earthly millennial kingdom where Israel's promises are fulfilled literally, and often embracing a pre-tribulation rapture. 

[5] A style of writing the really began to flourish during their exile.

[6] I think this likely applies to the “man of lawlessness” in 2 Thessalonians 2.

[7] “The Key To Understanding Revelation.” https://reknew.org/2016/05/key-understanding-revelation/

[8] In Reading Revelation Responsibly, Michael Gorman gives this definition for an empire: “Empire is a system of domination that both seduces the powerful, partly with the promise of more power, and intoxicates common people with its alluring wine, perhaps the false promise of security that supposedly comes from increasing prosperity and power.”

[9] It’s Orwell’s 1984 and Huxley’s Brave New World.

[10] If you find yourself resistant to the idea that Israel could be beastly, read the Old Testament, and why they went into exile.

[11] “It is not for you to know the times or seasons the Father has fixed.” Acts 1:7

[12] You can ask me who this is if you would like to know.

[13] Quoted here from a sermon streamed live on Facebook. https://theconversation.com/as-iran-war-expands-some-conservative-christians-interpret-the-conflict-through-biblical-prophecies-277488

[14] Gog and Magog appear to represent all nations deceived by Satan; numbered as "the sand of the sea" (20:8).

[15] You can ask me who this is if you would like to know.

[16] This Latin phrase was used as a battle cry and rallying cry during the First Crusade (1095–1099). It was  shouted by soldiers and clergy  alike in response to Pope Urban II’s speech calling for the Crusade in 1095. Theology even dictates geopolitical relationships between nations.

The Christ and the anti-Christs (1 John 2:18-27)

I’m going to write today’s passage as if it were a letter –which, uh, it was J This letter draws from the passage, as well as the commentary that helps to unveil things that were written 2,000 years ago. The underlined portions are the heart of the text itself. Once we finish the letter, I will focus on an aspect that seems central to the entire discussion.

Dear friends, I don’t “know times or seasons that the Father has fixed by his own authority”[1] but I do know this: we are between the first and the second comings of Christ, so we are in “the last hour”[2]or “the last days”, the last era in God’s spiritual timeline before He wraps up history. And one of the things we know will happen in the last days is the rise of the anti-Christ.[3]

This is the one Paul calls the ‘man of lawlessness,’[4] the person who is the ultimate example of a leader who claims to be God in the flesh and/or leads people away from the church. This will be the greatest enemy to rise against God’s kingdom. Meanwhile, you are going to see lot of anti-christspaving the way through the course of history (I'm talking to you, Antiochus Epiphanes[5]), some worse than others for sure, but all standing in opposition to Jesus.[6]

But the category of anti-christ is broader than you might think. The reality is that many anti-Christs are already here – and they have been rising from within the church rather than attacking us from the surrounding culture. You know who they are because, like all false teachers (as Paul made clear in his letters to Timothy[7]), they refuse to have their false teaching and corrupt lifestyles reined in. Fortunately, they have left. 

Their desertion tells you they were never truly part of our family. If they were truly our brothers and sisters, they would have  remained until the end with us,[8] accepting accountability and correction as their teaching and lives were held up to the Scripture. They would have endured with us as family members united around the true faith and the teaching of the apostles in spite of our other secondary differences. But when they left, they made it ever so obvious that they were not part of us.

I know it’s hard to go through this, so consider this analogy that I guy people call the Venerable Bede will eventually make in about 700 years. In the body of Christ we all wrestle with a form of spiritual sickness; that is, we all struggle with sin-sickness in these corruptible bodies. We keep opening the door to the sin that crouches outside.[9] However, we have sought and are surrendered to the healing of the Great Physician. 

God has begun a good and transformative work in us so that we increasingly bear the likeness of  Jesus, though that process will not be fully completed until the age to come.[10] But… there are also those who are malignant tumors. They too are sick, but this sickness is not surrendered to the Great Physician, and it is toxic to the spiritual and relational health of the church.  When tumors are removed, the body is spared. The departure of such people is actually of great benefit to the church.[11]

You know how priests and prophets in the OT were anointed to receive the gifts needed for them to perform their offices? You have been given an anointing too. It’s the ongoing reality of the indwelling presence and the gifts of the Holy Spirit, who works in every member of the Church to help us all defend, keep and live in the truth.[12]  You know the truth, because the Holy Spirit guides you into the truth of what is in the Scriptures: the Old Testament, as well as what the Holy Spirit inspired Jesus’ disciples and the apostles to record of his life and teaching.[13]

I am not writing to you in order to correct you because you do not know the truth; I am encouraging you because you do know it. Don’t let that knowledge be compromised. A lot of confusion is generated by false teaching[14] even among those of you who have the Holy Spirit. But the Holy Spirit enables you to discern rightly by leading you to the truth of the Holy Scriptures that have been given to you. There, you will be able to discern good teachers from evil ones.

You are people of the one who said, “I am the Truth.”[15]  No lie belongs to the truth. All anti-Christs are liars[16] and deceivers[17] who deny that Jesus was God in the flesh, fully God and fully man.[18]The liars who left you are saying things like this:

 “Jesus might have had an anointing placed on him, but he wasn’t the Anointed One by nature. He’s just human. We could have been Jesus if we had gotten the same anointing![19] Or (they say) maybe think of his body as just like a shell, hosting the REAL Jesus inside, like a deity ghost in a meat machine. Anyway, I’ve got lot’s of cool alternative ideas about who Jesus could have been. Follow me on Twitter @gnosticandgnarly.”

This is the anti-Christ you should be worrying about: the one showing up in church circles denying or distorting the nature of both the Father and the Son. Yes, that’s right, anyone who denies the nature of the Son does not know the Father.  Because God is revealed in the incarnational Jesus, it is not possible to know God personally and truly without fully acknowledging  Jesus for who he is. Then, the one affirming the Son as He really is enjoys an intimate relationship with the Father as well.

Let the good news, the gospel, the story you have heard from the beginning of your journey following Jesus, live in and take hold of you. If that happens and you focus on the good news, then you will always remain in a relationship with the Son and the Father. This is the beginning of experience what He promised us: eternal life. New life begins now, in this age and hour, and continues into the age to come.

Back to my warning: there are still some attempting to deceive you. But you have an anointing of the Holy Spirit that illuminates the truth you have been given. You received this promised Comforter from Jesus,[20] and His spirit remains on you. If you follow the Holy Spirit into the teaching you have been given, you have no need for another teacher claiming to be an apostle or disciple when they are not, or claiming to have some new, previously unknown revelation from God. 

The anointing you have been given points you toward and instructs you in all the essentials you have been given: the truth of the ‘faith once delivered,’[21] uncontaminated by darkness and lies. If you follow and learn this teaching and let it transform your life, you will remain connected to Him.”[22]

* * * * *

One thing that stands out to me in this passage is the spiritually stabilizing effect of seeing and knowing Jesus as he is truly is. It’s the heart of our faith. When the Holy Spirit guides us into truth about Jesus, it is truth about Jesus that is revealed in Scripture. At the end of the day, as we sort out competing voices, or we stumble through a confusing world, the focal point that sets our eyes and steadies our hearts is Jesus.

The less we know Jesus, the more our lives and our words will detract, distort, or even actively undermine the message of the Gospel. The more we know Jesus, the more our words and our lives will function as a prophetic witness to the world.

Last week, I stumbled my way through a phrase connecting orthodoxy with doxology. I got some of the language wrong, so let me correct that this week. What I should have said was more like this: 

True theology (study and knowledge of God) is necessary for accurate doxology (expressions of praise to God) and righteous worship (lifestyle of loving obedience to God). [23]

God is not concerned with just one of those things. They are all deeply intertwined. 

Theology without doxology and worship is dead. It’s just true stuff in our heads that hasn’t moved into our hearts. True theology is necessary, but not sufficient for godliness. We can be the smartest person in the room when it comes to theology and have the least impact in the world if all we have is knowledge that puffs us up.[24] Even demons believe and tremble.[25] If what we know of Jesus does not lead to the fruit of the Spirit in our words and our lives, what’s the point? 

True theology (the study of God) is necessary for right doxology (expressions of praise to God) and righteous worship (lifestyle of loving obedience), but it is not automatically sufficient.

True theology must be accompanied by surrender to the Lordship of Christ (salvation) and the embrace of the work of the Holy Spirit (sanctification) in the community of the church (fellowship) so that we display the fruits of righteousness as we are transformed into the image of Christ. 

Doxology (expression of praise to God) without good theology can very quickly drift toward idolatry. Why do I say this? Because we can sing an expression of praise or repeat a teaching not informed by the truth of who God is. When we do, it’s worship – but not the kind of worship we think it is. And it will be formative in our thoughts about God. Let me give an example from a popular CCM song.

There is a song called “The Devil Is A Liar” (true) which contains this lyric: “Don't be dancing with the devil, don't believe a single word, 'Cause when we get to Heaven, we gon' sing and watch him burn.” No, friends, we will not do that. We will not take pleasure in heaven from the punishment of Satan. Even God says, “I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked.”[26] This distorts who God is. This doxology trains you to believe that God will reward the faithful by entertaining them for eternity with the punishment of others. That is not an accurate representation of God. That is the beginning of an idol that shares a name (God) bot not a nature.

 This example highlight my concern about drifting toward idolatry that isn’t just true about music. It’s true about any verbal expression that claims to make true statements about God but distorts and re-creates in some way.

 I know idolatry is a strong word, but surely a false God includes a false image of God. It’s why we offer criticism of the theology of groups like Mormons and Jehovah’s Witnesses. As well intentioned as they may be in their attempt to worship the God of the Bible, it’s not the same. They are sincere believers with a false image of God. And if you are not worshiping God in truth, it’s not enough. It’s why at times we will talk about false teaching that is becoming popular in the American church. 

 The Psalmist says we become like our idols.[27] It is possible to fill ourselves with teaching from within the church and slowly begin to look less and less like the Jesus of the Bible and more and more  like the new Jesus we are constructing. 

 

And now, worship. If worship is a lifestyle of response to the God we serve, a lifestyle in which we walk in the footsteps of Jesus and are transformed into His image by His Spirit and His Word, then the more we know and speak of Jesus rightly, the more we truly worship “in spirit and in truth.” And this is why right theology (the study of God) and true doxology (expressions of praise to God) are sooooo important. If I am called to walk where Jesus walked, and have a heart and mind attuned with the heart and mind of Jesus, I have to know the actual path of Jesus, and what he thought and felt. 

Back to the song to show how what we think (and say) about God will impact our worship (lifestyle of response to God):

If part of our reward for eternity is to gloat over the punishment of Satan, why not take pleasure now in the punishment of those who do evil now? Finding pleasure not in justice but in punishment would just be us snacking right now on a reward that will one day be a feast. But that must mean God even now also enjoys watching the wicked be punished. And we forget about that pesky verse about “no pleasure in the death of the wicked” because we are starting to find pleasure in that exact same thing. I mean, when others experience it for their sin.  

You might think I am exaggerating. I might be J I am trying to make a point. Theology, doxology, and worship are deeply intertwined. Why does all this matter?

The goal as a Christian is relationship and connection with the Father through the Son by the Holy Spirit grounded in God’s Word and experienced in the company of God’s people. 

* * * * *

 

This brings us full circle back to Jesus as the foundation. The goal is to know Jesus so that we know the Father. Everything centers around knowing, loving, and worshipping Jesus.  

  • Does Christianity just feel functional and cold to you? Get to know Jesus as the Bible reveals him.

  • Do your prayers feel empty? Get to know the Jesus in the Bible.

  • Does your heart feel hard? Get to know Jesus.

  • Do you struggle with giving in to temptation? Get to know Jesus.

  • Have you given up on life? Get to know Jesus.

  • Are you thoughts vile? Get to know Jesus.

  • Do you harbor bitterness and unforgiveness? Get to know Jesus.

  • Do you think our church family needs more mature believers? Get to know Jesus.

  • Do you want to know the heart and mind of Jesus concerning all kinds of cultural controversies? Get to know Jesus.

  •  Do you want the worship of people far from Jesus to look more like the worship of Jesus? INTRODUCE THEM TO JESUS.

 This is the start to everything, spiritually. This is the cornerstone[28] on which our faith and our lives are built. 

 

QUESTIONS FOR CONSIDERATION

Are you confident that you are building true theology? Why or why not?

What does it look like to be conscious of the doxology of our lives - songs, prayers, etc?

Can you think of examples how the worship of your life (a lifestyle of obedience to God) has grown or changed as you have gotten to know Jesus (and understand His Word) better?

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[1] Acts 1:7

[2] Acts 2:171 Corinthians 10:11

[3] A term only John uses in the Bible: 1 John 2:181 John 2:221 John 4:32 John 1:7

[4] “Let no one in any way deceive or entrap you, for that day will not come unless the apostasy comes first [that is, the great rebellion, the abandonment of the faith by professed Christians], and the man of lawlessness is revealed, the son of destruction [the Antichrist, the one who is destined to be destroyed].” (2 Thessalonians 2:3)

[5] He butchered a pig on the altar of the temple. 

[6] 2 Thessalonians 2:3–10Revelation 13:11–18

[7] Here’s an example: https://www.clgonline.org/sermonblog/2021/1/24/itching-ears-2-timothy-41-5

[8] “The early church obviously had severe debates, with significant differences of opinion being expressed. Yet as far as we know, no one thought that "separation from the congregation" was an option for anyone professing faith in Jesus. Departure, like Judas's going out from the community of disciples, pointed to betrayal, denial of faith, and separation from God's grace. That is why John acknowledges that those false teachers, whom he now designates as antichrists, had been regular members of the congregation. "They went out from us," he says, but hastens to add, "they did not really belong to us." Like Judas, they had been nominal members of the community and had never truly shared its fellowship.” Expositors Bible Commentary

[9] Genesis 4:7

[10] Philippians 1:6

[11] Entire paragraph is a paraphrase from commentary on this passage by the Venerable Bede. 

[12] John 14:2616:13–15.  I. H. Marshall defines the anointing as “the Word taught to converts before their baptism and apprehended by them through the work of the Spirit in their hearts (cf. 1 Thessalonians 1:5f).” The Epistles Of John

[13] “This unction, then, predisposes John’s readers to recognize and respond to God’s truth, but not to arrive at it independently of the biblical and apostolic Word. Had the readers been capable of knowing all things apart from written and spoken instruction, 1 John would not need to have been written.” – KJV Study Bible Notes

[14] Mattheew 24:24

[15] John 14:6

[16] 1 John 2:422

[17] 2 John 7

[18] 1 John 4:1–32 John 7

[19] Mormonism, for example, claims that “all the Father’s children (including humans) possess the same potential to become gods (like the Father, Jesus, and the Holy Ghost) since they are of the same species.” https://www.thegospelcoalition.org/article/9-things-you-should-know-about-mormonism/  “Jehovah’s Witnesses believe that Jesus was created by Jehovah as the archangel Michael before the physical world existed, and is a lesser, though mighty, god... when Jesus was born on earth, he was a mere human and not God in human flesh.”  https://www.thegospelcoalition.org/blogs/justin-taylor/the-11-beliefs-you-should-know-about-jehovahs-witnesses-when-they-knock-at-the-door/

[20] John 14:16

[21] Jude 1:3

[22] “Ye need not that any man teach you - The Gnostics, who pretended to the highest illumination, could bring no proof that they were divinely taught, nor had they any thing in their teaching worthy the acceptance of the meanest Christian; therefore they had no need of that, nor of any other teaching but that which the same anointing teacheth, the same Spirit from whom they had already received the light of the glory of God, in the face of Jesus Christ. Whatever that taught, they needed; and whatever those taught whose teaching was according to this Spirit, they needed. St. John does not say that those who had once received the teaching of the Divine Spirit had no farther need of the ministry of the Gospel; no, but he says they had no need of such teaching as their false teachers proposed to them; nor of any other teaching that was different from that anointing, i.e. the teaching of the Spirit of God. No man, howsoever holy, wise, or pure, can ever be in such a state as to have no need of the Gospel ministry: they who think so give the highest proof that they have never yet learned of Christ or his Spirit.” – Adam Clarke

[23] This idea comes from black evangelical hip hop artist Shia Linne, “Doxology Intro,” in Lyrical Theology Part 2: Doxology

[24] 1 Corinthians 8:1

[25] James 2:19

[26] Ezekiel 33:11

[27] Psalm 115:8; Psalm 135:18

[28] Ephesians 2:19-22