Tuesday, April 22, 2014

The Jew's Punishment in Suffering from 1 Thessalonians 2 16b


SPIRITUAL DIARY FOR 4/22/2014 9:44 AM

My Worship Time                                                        Focus:  The Jew’s Punishment in Suffering

Bible Reading & Meditation                                     Reference:  1 Thessalonians 2:16b

            Message of the verses:  “with the result that they always fill up the measure of their sins. But wrath has come upon them to the utmost.”

            This is the last SD on the main section from John MacArthur’s Commentary in which he entitles it “A People to be Sad For.”  I certainly have to agree with the title that MacArthur gave to this section, for the children of Israel have certainly gone through some very difficult times in their lives.  I can’t help but to think of the movie “Fiddler on the Roof” as that move very accurately describes the events of the children of Israel since after they were kicked out of their land in 70 AD.  Daniel chapter ten speaks to this as we see from that chapter that the problems that resulted in God taking them out of their land in 586 BC would not end when they were allowed to go back to their land 70 years later, but would last all the way up to the second coming of their Messiah.  Paul writes about what will happen to the remnant during the seven year tribulation period when he addresses the church in Rome by saying that “all Israel will be saved.”  Paul was very upset with how the Jews in Thessalonica were causing trouble for him and his missionary friends but at the same time had a deep love for the Jews.  It surely was a sad situation.

            Let me at this time use some quotes from John MacArthur’s commentary on 1 Thessalonians to help us better understand what we read in this half of verse sixteen.  Before we do that let me say that what I am about to write is very difficult to write for it has to do with the wrath of God, and although the wrath of God is a part of His attributes it is not pleasant to write about.  I think of the passage in the book of Revelations where John is told by an angel to eat a little book which will be sweet in his mouth, but very bitter when it gets to his stomach.  God’s Word has sweet things in it, and it also has bitter things in it.  To know the future according to how God has written about it in His Word is both sweet and bitter and what Paul was writing about in this half of verse sixteen was as if it had already happened, that is the wrath of God on these unbelieving Jews. 

            MacArthur writes about the phrase “always fill up the measure of their sins” literally means “They always heap up their sins to the limit.”  “There is a well-defined point at which people reach the limit of their sins.”  I have mentioned a verse in the 15th chapter of Genesis that makes this point on several other SD’s but it surely fits in here:  “"Then in the fourth generation they will return here, for the iniquity of the Amorite is not yet complete.’”  God was telling Abraham that the children of Israel would come into the Promised Land after 400 years to destroy those who were now living there.  God’s wrath would be complete for these people in four hundred years.  We surely can see the “longsuffering” of God in this verse.  However His longsuffering was done with the unbelieving Jews that Paul writes about for MacArthur writes the following on the verb tense of “has come” as follows “The verb translated  has come is in the aorist tense, which affirms that Paul was so certain that divine wrath would come that he expressed the notion as if it had already occurred.  And historically, it had occurred—in the Babylonian exile (Eze. 8-11).  His expression likely includes the destruction of Jerusalem in A.D. 70, although then nearly twenty years off, and it denotes the eschatological wrath to come when Jesus returns to earth in judgment (Rev. 19).”

            MacArthur writes “Today, as in Paul’s day, the choice between God’s blessing and His cursing (cf. Deut. 28:1, 15) remains.  Those who believe and obey the Word and honor other believers by imitation their lives will persevere to eternal glory, which is good reason to be glad for them.  But those who reject the Word and hinder those who preach it will ultimately suffer eternal condemnation, which is a good reason to be sad for them.”   There is a choice to make here, and that choice is to believe that Jesus Christ died for your sins and accept His forgiveness or not to believe and suffer the wrath of God.

            Spiritual meaning for my life today:  I surely have a desire to reach as many for the Lord as He gives me the grace to reach, one soul at a time.

My Steps of Faith for Today: I pray that the Lord will bring someone onto my path today to be able to tell them about the good news of the Gospel.

Memory verse for the week:  Galatians 2:20

I have been crucified with Christ; and yet it is no longer I who live, but Christ live in me; and the life which I now live I live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave Himself up for me.

Answer to yesterday’s Bible question:  “Obadiah.”

Today’s Bible question:  “What was the Arc of the Covenant?”

Answer in our next SD.

4/22/2014 10:56 AM  

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