Seek Ye First the Kingdom of God in a Wicked Society
My topic for this
year’s lectureship is to seek first the kingdom in a wicked society. We
do indeed live in a wicked society. Televisions can pump filth into our
homes on a daily basis. The internet is saturated with pornography.
Denominationalism is running rampant. One can walk down the streets of
almost any community anywhere and see immodest dress and immodest
behavior. God is being thrown out of our school system, rejected from
our society and out of our government. We are governed for the most
part by infidels. Islam is growing fast and it appears that the leader
of our country is pro-Islam. Christianity is becoming less and less
popular as society seeks its own interests over the righteousness of
God. We do indeed live in a wicked and evil society. So what are we to
do? How do we as Christians today seek first the kingdom of God in this
present wicked society?
To answer this we are
going to consider the wicked society in which the first century
Christians lived and served God and make some applications from their
circumstances to us today.
First we'll look at the
Jewish persecution of Christianity. When the church was established on
Pentecost, the scriptures say there were about 3000 souls added to the
church. The church in Jerusalem began growing rapidly and before long
it had reached about 5000.
This started getting
some attention and in Acts 4:4 we read of the Jewish high council
confronting Peter and John about their teaching the gospel of Christ.
By Acts 6, we see the church growing in Jerusalem to such proportions
that the Jewish High Council brought Stephen before them where he
confronted them directly with the hard facts of the truth and they
killed him for it.
Now I want you all to
just stop right here and think about this for just a minute. This is
the same society that publicly scourged our Savior and spiked Him naked
to a cross to die in shame and humiliation. Now they stoned Stephen to
death. This was not just an isolated mob of angry people worked up to a
frenzy folks. This was the Jewish high council; the leaders of the
nation of the Jews. Now stop and think for just a minute. We live in a
society that guarantees our right to the religion of our choice. We are
free to worship and serve whoever we want and our government guarantees
us this freedom.
As we go on I want to
encourage each and every one of you in here to put yourselves in their
shoes. I want you to imagine yourselves living in the first century as
they did. You are no longer sitting in a padded pew in an air
conditioned room, guaranteed the right to worship as you see fit under
the protection of the most powerful nation on earth. Rather, you are
living in the first century during some of the worst persecution that
history has ever recorded. And let’s remember that the Christians who
lived in that wicked society are our brothers and sisters in Christ.
The Jews hated the
Christians intensely. In Acts 8, we read of Saul going into the houses
of our brothers and sisters in Christ and having them drug out and
imprisoned. Some of them were executed and Saul was in favor of it
(Acts 26:8). Saul, acting under orders from the Jewish High Priest went
about the land imprisoning and persecuting US. Not just them. Our
brethren, US!!! Those were our brothers and sisters in Christ,
Christians like US. WE were persecuted by Saul. He was operating
under the direct authority and approval of the Jewish high priest. Saul
came into OUR houses and he drug US out into the streets bound and
imprisoned and had US taken back to Jerusalem as prisoners to face the
Jewish High Council.
In Acts 8, we read that
many of our brethren were driven from their homes and fled Jerusalem and
went abroad. But we Christians didn’t just go quietly did we? We went
abroad throughout the region preaching the word of God (Acts 8:4). We
scattered out across the region and spread the gospel everywhere we
went. But the Apostles stayed on in Jerusalem and continued to preach
and teach Jesus Christ.
In Acts 12, we read of
Herod having James the brother of John executed. The Jews were happy
about that so Herod tried unsuccessfully to kill Peter as well. When
Herod saw that he could win the favor of the Jews by persecuting
Christians, he pursued that opportunity. Our Christianity, OUR faith in
the first century was a life threatening religion. WE could not
practice our faith under the protection of the government authorities.
WE were hunted, persecuted and killed by OUR own countrymen. It was
dangerous to be a Christian in Jewish Society.
In 70 AD, the Roman
Empire destroyed Jerusalem because the Jews revolted against the Roman
Empire. Titus, the son of Emperor Vespasian leveled the city of
Jerusalem and utterly destroyed the temple.
As a result of that
devastation, WE were scattered across the Roman Empire. So what did WE
have to look forward to under this development? Was the Roman Empire
going to be any less cruel than the Jews?
The society living
under the rule of the Roman Empire was a melting pot of all kinds of
nationalities of people and religions. The Roman Empire was tolerant of
other religions as long as they were not exclusive. As a Roman Citizen,
there was an abundance of false gods one could choose from and worship.
Some of them are even mentioned in scripture. Zeus and his supposed
sons, Castor and Pollux; and then Hermes, Diana. Later after Saul
repented and converted to Christianity, he preached a sermon in Athens
where they had so many gods, they even had an idol set up to the unknown
god in case they missed one.
The Roman society of
the day had no concept of a single, all powerful God. The Roman Empire
assimilated other cultures and nationalities into their society and they
were tolerant of their gods. The result was a society with many gods
they could worship. In their minds there were thousands of Gods and one
could choose whichever one or however many they wanted to serve and do
so as long as everyone paid their taxes and behaved themselves.
So the Christians might
have been left alone except for one thing. Later in the first century,
the Roman Empire required its citizens to bow down and worship her
emperors as gods.
The confrontation
between Rome and Christians arose for the most part because of OUR
intolerance of other gods. A faithful Christian cannot and will not
serve another god under any circumstances. To do so is, in the eyes of
the God we serve, on the same level as marital infidelity. It is
absolutely forbidden and carries with it the penalty of eternal
damnation. Christians living in the Roman Empire rejected Rome’s pagan
society with their numerous gods and they taught one body, and one
Spirit, and one hope; One Lord, one faith, one baptism; One God and
Father of all, who is above all, and through all, and in all, (Ephesians
4:4-6). Eventually, Christianity became illegal according to Roman law.
So WE started
assembling in secret, sometimes in the catacombs beneath the streets of
Rome. Sometimes we gathered secretly in our homes, but this got to the
point that it was not safe. Christians are required to assemble on the
first day of the week and they did so at great personal peril to
themselves. The Romans knew this and would learn of the secret
gathering places of the Christians and would wait until they were
assembled in their worship and raid their assemblies taking them
prisoner.
Now keep in mind, we
are not in the 21st century any more. We are assembled in the 1st
century, in a secret place and we are worshipping God and conducting
this lectureship in peril of our lives. Suddenly those doors burst open
at the back and Roman soldiers storm in here and take us all prisoner
because what we are doing here today is illegal by Roman law. What is
our fate now? What do WE as Christians have ahead of us as prisoners of
the Roman Empire?
Our sons might become
slaves; our daughters often times faced a fate much worse than death.
Our property was seized and we are taken as prisoners. In the latter
part of the first century, we could be taken before a group of civil
authorities known as the Concilia. The Concilia was an Imperial Cult of
zealots who went about the Roman Empire and established the worship of
the Roman Emperors as Gods. These people were acting under the direct
authority of the Roman Empire and they had the power to do just about
anything they wanted in order to promote the worship of the Roman
Emperors on the citizenry of Rome. This was no problem for the Pagan
citizens of Rome who were accustomed to worshipping many gods. The
emperor was just another god among hundreds if not thousands.
Now this presents a
real problem to a Christian. A faithful Christian cannot participate in
any of this and have any hope of living a faithful life before God and
inheriting a home in heaven.
So what did they do to
US in this wicked society? We were sometimes piked in the streets of
Rome, doused with an oily substance and set on fire to serve as street
lights. We were sewn alive into animal skins and thrown to starving
dogs or other wild beasts where they would mutilate and kill us as they
tore through the skins to get to their victims. Sometimes they did this
to US in the Coliseum in front of tens of thousands of jeering Romans.
Sometimes we were pitted against the gladiators in the coliseum and
butchered for an audience of Romans who were there for entertainment
The Concilia had the
right to deny anyone in Rome the right to buy or sell property, to work
for a wage and earn money to feed their families. They could seize the
property of anyone and turn them into homeless beggars living on the
streets, incapable of earning a living or buying food. They had a
certificate that they would give out to the people living in Roman
society. Without this certificate, one could not buy food to feed their
families. You had to show the merchants this certificate before they
could sell you food. Without this certificate, you could not work in a
decent job and earn a decent wage. Without this certificate, no one was
permitted to sell anything to you or hire you. Without this
certificate, they were branded as traitors to the Roman Empire.
So how did one acquire
this certificate? All one had to do was bow to the Roman Emperor and
burn a pinch of incense in a brazier in front of them. Offer up a
little worship to a statue of a Roman Emperor and you received your
certificate and were good to go. Refuse and face persecution, your
children sold off as slaves and your property seized. You might be
forced to face the lions or the dogs or the gladiators in the coliseum.
You might be forced to denounce Jesus Christ and Christianity while a
Roman soldier held a sword to the throat of your spouse or your
children. Refuse and you might have to watch your loved ones die under
the knife.
Christianity was
illegal in the Roman Empire. Christians were hunted down, enslaved,
tortured, mutilated or killed. Their property seized by the
authorities, many who escaped imprisonment were homeless and unable to
buy food to live on. They became the dregs of society, the ones you
would see in the gutters of the streets, poor, destitute and seemingly
without hope.
The circumstances under
which our first century brethren lived were dreadful. They lived in a
society so wicked that their lives were in constant peril. Now we have
to ask ourselves right now, did the extreme circumstances under which
OUR brethren lived in the first century have any effect on the
expectations of the God we serve? In other words, did God cut them any
slack because of the ordeals they had to endure?
In the pages of the
Revelation, we have Jesus directly addressing several churches of Asia
Minor through the inspiration of John. The Christians in these
congregations were living in quite possibly the most wicked and hostile
society that has ever existed in regards to Christianity. We don’t
have to live our lives wondering what the expectations of Jesus Christ
are for His church. We can open the pages of scripture and see it
right there, left for us by inspiration.
Jesus addressed the
church of Ephesus in Revelation 2. That was where the temple to the
false goddess named Diana was. There was no shortage of persecution
there. The Christians in Ephesus certainly did live in a wicked and
evil society. To the church in Ephesus who lost their first love, Jesus
said in Revelation 2:5, "Remember therefore from where you have
fallen; repent and do the first works, or else I will come to you
quickly and remove your lampstand from its place — unless you repent".
He went on to say in V7 "To him who overcomes I will give to eat from
the tree of life". They were commanded to repent and do the first
works instead of the works they were doing which were obviously not
right. They had lost their first love, which means they, as the bride
of Christ, were not following the will of their groom. Their groom,
Jesus Christ, told them to put Him first over everything else in their
lives. The consequence for failure to repent, do the first works and
return to their first love was to have their lampstand removed from its
place. What does a lampstand hold? It holds a light. Who is the
light of the world? Jesus Christ is. If one does not hold the light of
the world, then one is not in fellowship with God. The Christians in
Ephesus were warned that they would lose their right to Hold Jesus
Christ as their light.
What was expected of
the church in Pergamum where Satan's seat was? The headquarters of the
Imperial Cult known as the Concilia was in Pergamum. These Christians
had some who had compromised their faith. Some of them were eating
things sacrificed to idols. It was a customary thing in those times
for the authorities to feed the meat that had been sacrificed to various
pagan gods to the public. They held these wild riotous public feasts
where this was done among other filthy and disgusting things. The
Christians living in Pergamum were living right under the noses of the
Concilia. You couldn't hide from them because they had to witness your
emperor worship personally before issuing a certificate that allowed you
to buy and sell. If you did not have that certificate, you could not buy
food. Faithful Christians could not buy food to feed themselves or
their children. And God said to them I have a few things against
you, because you have there those who hold the doctrine of Balaam, who
taught Balak to put a stumbling block before the children of Israel, to
eat things sacrificed to idols, and to commit sexual immorality",
(Revelation 2:14-15). Sexual immorality was what went on in those
riotous public feasts. Participation in these public feasts was
prohibited by God. To participate in them would be to expose oneself to
powerful temptations and God did not permit it. Christians were hungry
but they were still not allowed to attend those feasts. What did He say
to them? Revelation 2:16-17, "Repent, or else I will come to you
quickly and will fight against them with the sword of My mouth. He who
has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches. To him
who overcomes I will give some of the hidden manna to eat." These
Christians living under the noses of the Concilia were hungry. These
Christians were struggling for the food they needed to survive with.
These Christians struggled just to feed their families. They were told
by Jesus Christ to seek the kingdom of God first over their own physical
needs rather than attend those feasts where sexual uncleanness ran
rampant.
To the dead church in
Sardis, Jesus said in Revelation 3:2-3, "for I have not found your
works perfect before God. Remember therefore how you have received and
heard; hold fast and repent. Therefore if you will not watch, I will
come upon you as a thief, and you will not know what hour I will come
upon you." He went on to say in V-5, "He who overcomes shall be
clothed in white garments, and I will not blot out his name from the
Book of Life". The Christians in Sardis were expected to seek first
the kingdom in all their works. Their works were not perfect, they were
not complete. Their works were not acceptable. Jesus Christ told them
to seek the Kingdom of God first or have their names blotted from the
book of life.
To the Lukewarm church
in Laodicea, Jesus said, "you are wretched, miserable, poor, blind,
and naked" (Revelation 3:17). V-19, "Therefore be zealous and
repent. V-21, "To him who overcomes I will grant to sit with Me
on My throne, as I also overcame and sat down with My Father on His
throne." They were told to overcome the evils of the world they
were living in. Those Christians were expected to seek first the
kingdom in their attitudes and their drive because they had grown too
comfortable. Jesus was telling them to get off the fence and get to
work. He expected them to do something; to show a little fire, to reach
higher, to strive. It didn't matter that Christianity was illegal. It
didn't matter that Christians were being persecuted and killed. It
didn't matter that Christianity was the least popular religion on the
planet and that Christians were outcasts of society. It didn't matter
that almost every culture on the face of the earth was against them.
They were still expected to serve Christ and to seek first the kingdom
of God over everything else.
To the church in
Smyrna, the persecuted church, He said, "Be faithful until death, and
I will give you the crown of life. He who has an ear, let him hear what
the Spirit says to the churches. He who overcomes shall not be hurt by
the second death", (Revelation 2:10-11). The Christians in Smyrna
were being slaughtered because of their faith.
During the Roman persecutions many Christians suffered the most dreadful
torments in Smyrna. They were put to death at the stake, or by wild
beasts in the amphitheater; their properties confiscated by the empire,
enslaved, abused and tortured; and the only test applied to them was
whether they would throw a few grains of incense into the fire as a
sacrifice to the Roman emperor, or whether they would refuse.
These Christians living
under these circumstances were expected to overcome and to seek first
the kingdom of God even under the severest persecution or else suffer
the consequences of the second death. Jesus Christ told them to seek
first the kingdom of God over their own lives. They were told to die if
necessary in order to remain faithful.
It made no difference
how wicked their society was then. And it does not matter how evil our
society is today either. Yes we live in an evil society, no doubt about
it. It's awful out there, but, nothing compared to what those who lived
before us had to endure. If they had to overcome and seek first the
kingdom, then what makes anybody today think we are expected to do any
less? Who are we to set in here in this comfortable building with the
lights and air conditioner and think we can ride a church pew through
the gates of heaven? Who are we to leave this place of worship, under
the protection of the constitution of the United States of America which
guarantees our right and our freedom to worship, serve God and to spread
the message of hope to a people are lost and dying and desperately need
to hear the truth?
Who are we to miss a
worship services today when our brothers and sisters in the first
century attended them at peril of their lives?
Who are we today to
think that God will accept anything less than our best efforts when many
of our 1st century brethren lived and died for their faith?
And finally, where did
our first century brethren get their instructions from? What was the
source of their teaching? How did they know before the book of
Revelation came along what was expected of them? They got their
instructions in the first century from the same place that we get them
today; from the scriptures. The society that existed at the time the
scriptures were written was already wicked and hostile to Christianity.
The New Testament church was established in a society far more wicked
than the one we live in today. The instructions given by inspiration to
the churches in Galatia, Thessalonica, Colossi, Philippi, Ephesus and
others were all written to Christians living in a horribly wicked
society and it was going to get much worse before it got any better.
They had the
scriptures. They may not have been compiled exactly as we have them
today, but they had them. They had the word of God, inspired, accurate
and relevant to their circumstances. We have to always keep in mind
that the scriptures were written to them. They have application for us
today, but they were written to our brethren in the first century.
Sometimes we tend to look at the scriptures as if they were written to
us under our present circumstances. They were not. They were written
to people living in a society so much more wicked and cruel than the one
we live in today that it is beyond our comprehension. We have no frame
of reference for that kind of society. We have no idea what it had to
have been like. We can try to imagine it, but to actually live there in
those circumstances and under those conditions and to read the word of
God and understand what it meant to them is what we must do. Then we
can see clearly enough to make the correct applications to our lives
today.
Now we are going to
read some scripture from the same word of God our first century brethren
had. And while we read these scriptures, I encourage each and every one
of you in this room to put yourselves in their shoes. We are not in
Rush Springs, OK anymore. We don’t have Bibles printed out and
sitting in the book rack on the back of the pew or at home on the coffee
table. We don’t get to take them home with us and study them in
leisure. We don’t get to leave this worship assembly and go set around
in our homes and watch TV and visit with our families while we eat fried
chicken and watermelon. Sunday is just another work day for us like
Tuesday or Wednesday.
We have to organize our
assemblies around our work days. Our work week is nothing at all like
what we have today. Often times our assemblies are early in the
mornings or late in the evenings and they are often conducted at great
peril to ourselves. We are rejected by society, hunted, persecuted and
despised by the wicked societies of the first century. Many of us are
unable to work, unable to earn livings, homeless, living in streets or
slaves to the Romans. Our brethren are being rounded up and slaughtered
by the Roman Empire. Christians are being killed every day for their
faith. Being identified as a staunch and faithful Christian was almost
the equivalent of a death sentence. Many of you are hungry, barely able
to feed your children. Many of you have become bondservants/slaves in
order to survive. Our living conditions are horrific. There are
temples and idols to literally thousands of false gods throughout the
land. The government under which we live is trying to force us to
worship their emperor and refusal to do so often times resulted in our
deaths.
Now I want you all to
close your eyes and imagine yourselves living in the first century under
the Roman Persecution and I want you to listen to the scriptures I am
about to read to you and try to imagine what they would mean to you
living in the wicked society of the first century while trying to obey
the commandment to seek first the kingdom of God, making it your number
one priority.
First of all, what did
Jesus teach?
Luke 16:13 "No
servant can serve two masters; for either he will hate the one and love
the other, or else he will be loyal to the one and despise the other.
You cannot serve God and mammon."
Luke 13:24-25 "Strive
to enter through the narrow gate, for many, I say to you, will seek to
enter and will not be able.”
John 6:27 “Do not
labor for the food which perishes, but for the food which endures to
everlasting life, which the Son of Man will give you, because God the
Father has set His seal on Him."
Matthew 6:31-34 "Therefore
do not worry, saying, 'What shall we eat?' or 'What shall we drink?' or
'What shall we wear?' 32 For after all these things the Gentiles seek.
For your heavenly Father knows that you need all these things. 33 But
seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these
things shall be added to you. 34 Therefore do not worry about tomorrow,
for tomorrow will worry about its own things. Sufficient for the day is
its own trouble.”
Luke 21:36 “Watch
therefore, and pray always that you may be counted worthy to escape all
these things that will come to pass, and to stand before the Son of Man."
Matthew 22:14 "For
many are called, but few are chosen."
Paul wrote this in 1
Corinthians 4:11-13
To the present hour we
both hunger and thirst, and we are poorly clothed, and beaten, and
homeless. 12 And we labor, working with our own hands. Being reviled, we
bless; being persecuted, we endure; 13 being defamed, we entreat. We
have been made as the filth of the world, the offscouring of all things
until now.
In 2 Corinthians
6:14-18, Paul wrote this to the church in Corinth, a Roman City filled
with all of the corruption and persecution the Roman Empire could dish
out. Remember, we aren’t setting in Rush Springs. We’re setting in
Corinth in the midst hundreds of idols to false gods, surrounded by
hostile enemies on all sides and we’re hearing this for the first time.
“Do not be unequally
yoked together with unbelievers. For what fellowship has righteousness
with lawlessness? And what communion has light with darkness? 15 And
what accord has Christ with Belial? Or what part has a believer with an
unbeliever? 16 And what agreement has the temple of God with idols? For
you are the temple of the living God. As God has said:
"I will dwell in them
And walk among them. I will be their God, And they shall be My people."
Therefore "Come out from among them And be separate, says the Lord. Do
not touch what is unclean, And I will receive you." 'I will be a Father
to you, And you shall be My sons and daughters, Says the Lord Almighty."
Under certain
circumstances in Corinth, to obey that was an automatic death sentence
under Roman law.
Now we’re in Philippi,
another Roman City in Asia. A wicked and evil society filled with
idol worship and hostility to Christianity. Paul wrote this in
Philippians 2:12-16
“Therefore, my
beloved, as you have always obeyed, not as in my presence only, but now
much more in my absence, work out your own salvation with fear and
trembling; 13 for it is God who works in you both to will and to do for
His good pleasure.
14 Do all things
without complaining and disputing, 15 that you may become blameless and
harmless, children of God without fault in the midst of a crooked and
perverse generation, among whom you shine as lights in the world, 16
holding fast the word of life, so that I may rejoice in the day of
Christ that I have not run in vain or labored in vain.”
There are literally
hundreds of scriptures we could read but the point is, the Christians
who lived and served and died in the first century under the Roman
persecution understood what "seek ye first the kingdom of God"
meant. In Jesus' address to the churches mentioned in Revelation,
He acknowledged their difficult circumstances and told them to remain
faithful.
Jesus said, I know you've labored and
not fainted. Now repent and do the first works or suffer the
consequences. I know you're poor, hungry and destitute, now repent
and overcome that wicked society. I know you are hated,
imprisoned, persecuted and being killed, now repent and overcome that
wicked society. "Be thou faithful unto DEATH and I will give
you the crown of life" Jesus acknowledged their difficulties but
gave them zero tolerance for their circumstances. Of the seven
churches Jesus addressed, He told all of them to overcome and six of
them to repent.
They understood that to be a faithful Christian, the kingdom of
God had to be their highest priority. Nothing could be allowed to come
between them and God. They had nothing to live for other than that.
Their only hope was in the kingdom. Their only chance for victory was
in the kingdom of God. Their only chance for life was in the kingdom of
God and they knew that. Their circumstances were horrible and they knew
there was something better, they knew there was a place of refuge, they
knew there was a place of safety and they knew the only way they could
ever find it was to seek it first and foremost, making it their number
one priority in life. Never looking back, never giving up, never
stopping, never losing hope and seeking the kingdom no matter what.
Jesus Christ was the only hope these people had and if they wanted to
find Him and His kingdom they had to overcome their wicked society,
living their lives according to the word of God and being faithful unto
death.
How do we seek first
the kingdom of God in our wicked society today? We have to realize and
accept that there is a better place. We have to accept that our only
hope is in Jesus Christ. We have to lay aside the things of the world,
we have to separate ourselves from it, and realize that this world is
the way of death and the path to destruction. We have to order our
lives by the same word of God they lived by, patiently enduring and
persevering, overcoming our wicked society and remaining faithful unto
death.
If we are going to seek
first the kingdom of God, then we have to place a value on it that is
higher than the value of anything else in our lives. If we are going
to seek first the kingdom of God in the wicked society we live in today,
then the kingdom of God must mean as much to us as it did to our
brethren in the first century. The kingdom of God was worth more
than anything else on earth to them even more than their physical
lives.
Our brethren in the
first century knew that they had to seek first the kingdom of God in
order to be in the Kingdom of God. It was their highest priority,
It must be our highest priority. It was their only refuge It must
be our only refuge. It was their only hope, it must be our only
hope. The kingdom of God was sought ahead of their jobs or
physical needs, therefore It has to come ahead of our jobs, our physical needs or our earthly
ambitions. The kingdom of God was more valuable to them than their own
lives or the lives of their loved ones, therefore it must be more
valuable to us than our lives or the lives of our families. It must be
number one on our list of priorities. They had to overcome,
therefore we have to overcome.
Forget about the modern
conveniences we have today. Forget about the luxuries our society
lavishes upon us. Forget about the riches of this world because they
are temporary. There is no other hope of salvation than through the
kingdom of God. There is no hope of reconciliation to our creator
outside the kingdom of God. The kingdom of God is the one and ONLY way
to the throne room of heaven and there is nothing on this earth more
valuable or precious than that.
We are a part of the
church of Christ because we recognize that there is only one path to
heaven, only one body, one faith, only one hope of our calling (Eph
4:4-6). We strive always to walk the path that must be right and than
cannot be wrong. We strive always to be today what the faithful
children of God were way back in the beginning. We know there were
people saved then and we know beyond any doubt that we can be saved the
same way they were.
We can go back to the
source and in doing what the faithful first century Christians did,
overcoming their wicked society and not giving into it,
believing what they believed, living how they lived, striving for what
they strived for and seeking the kingdom with the same fervency, urgency
and devotion that they did, then we can live our lives of service to God
in assurance and confidence of our hope.
We have it so much
better than our brethren in the first century. We are blessed beyond
comparison and often times we do not seem to fully realize it. Our
lesson is drawing to a close but as we go, I want to leave you all with
a final verse of scripture to consider. As we leave this place tonight,
we need to ask ourselves if we are seeking first the kingdom of God. Is
it our highest priority, is it the most valuable thing in our lives.
Because if it isn’t, then we are living in a dangerous state and we need
to repent and make the necessary adjustments to our priorities.
With that said, I want to read one last teaching of Jesus from scripture
and the lesson is yours. I encourage all of you to reflect on what
Jesus is teaching after we leave this place of worship.
Luke 12:47-48 And
that servant who knew his master's will, and did not prepare himself or
do according to his will, shall be beaten with many stripes. But he who
did not know, yet committed things deserving of stripes, shall be beaten
with few. For everyone to whom much is given, from him much will be
required; and to whom much has been committed, of him they will ask the
more.”
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