Sunday, June 1, 2014

Introduction to First Thessalonians chapter Four


SPIRITUAL DIARY FOR 6/1/2014 10:37 PM

My Worship Time                                                                  Focus: Introduction to 1 Thess. Four

Bible Reading & Meditation                                     Reference:  1 Thessalonians 4:1-2

            Message of the verses:  As we begin the month of June I have a decision to make, and that decision has to do with the direction of study that I want to go to.  Chapter four of 1 Thessalonians is a very important chapter in Paul’s first letter to the Thessalonians.  He begins the fourth chapter with these words “Finally then,” and this means that his letter is as far as what he is saying is moving into the last subject he wants to write to them.  This will take until the end of the letter.  We will see in chapter four two main themes with the first one being Paul exhorting the Thessalonians to excel more and more, and this has to do with their sanctification.  He then moves into what is called the “Rapture” of the Church, explaining what this is all about.  There are sub-points to these two main points, but these are the two things he wants to drive home to this very young church.

            John MacArthur takes a whole chapter in his book to explain the first two verses in this fourth chapter of 1 Thessalonians.  Warren Wiersbe has only two chapters in his commentary on 1 Thessalonians to explain this entire 4th chapter.

            We have talked about sanctification in earlier SD’s and said that there were three parts to Sanctification.  The first is that we are sanctified when we first come to know Jesus Christ as Savior and Lord.  Next there is a process of sanctification that we go through while here in planet earth.  Finally we will be completely sanctified when we get to heaven.  Paul is writing about the second part of sanctification in the first section of chapter four.  As we grow in the Lord we are being sanctified more and more, and what this is in a nutshell is living a holy life before the Lord, becoming more and more like Christ.  Now we know that we will never arrive while in our bodies, but we are to strive as Peter writes at the end of his second letter:  “but grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. To Him be the glory, both now and to the day of eternity. Amen.”  Peter must have know the great importance of growing up in the Lord for this is the last thing that he states to his reader, and he will soon be joining the Lord in heaven for he was martyred shortly after that letter he wrote.

            As I was driving to church this morning I was listening to John MacArthur’s message on these first two verses on the fourth chapter of 1 Thessalonians, he mentions Jonathan Edwards, and then when I was listing to our Pastor’s message, which was actually for the high school graduates he also mentioned Jonathan Edwards.  Edwards is credited with being the main person that the Holy Spirit used to begin the “Great Awakening” which was the first great revival in the United States.  Jonathan Edwards was saved at age seventeen and was truly a godly man, a man who loved the Lord and loved to please the Lord every day.  Warren Wiersbe writes the following on how to please God:  “How do we know what pleases God?  How do we know what pleases an earthly father?  By listening to him and living with him.  As we read the Word, and as we fellowship in worship and service, we get to know the heart of God; and this opens us up to the will of God.

            Now back to the dilemma that I have as far as how much of the 4th chapter of 1 Thessalonians I want to cover this month.  I believe if I cover this entire chapter that I will not be able to get back to Jeremiah, which is the main book that I am studying at this time.  I see two possibilities here.  The first is that I just try and get through the first twelve verses of chapter four, and the second is that I try to do two SD’s a day for a while, but I probably will have to do that even if I only look at the first twelve verses.  This will be a matter of prayer.

6/1/2014 11:04 PM       

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