The Deflector Shield
You all know the routine. Some so-called minister in some so-called church will come out sporting a rainbow-colored vestment and brazenly declare that "God is gay!" or "God is transgender!" or some such woke foolishness in order to show how tolerant and inclusive he is.
Oh, and of course...
How tolerant and
inclusive he thinks all Christians should be today.
The mainstream media
will waste little time in lavishing attention on such a wonderfully woke
person, and in the process subtly sanction the trendy garbage such people are
spewing. And as they do so, it becomes reasonably clear that the real goal is
to enlighten non-woke Christians who are apparently too jaundiced and
narrow-minded to openly embrace said garbage.
Relax...this isn't going
to be an LGBT "hit piece" (been there—done that. I'm simply using this
"wokest of the woke" group as an illustration of what I want to
discuss because they provide such exquisite examples.
Now, I'm pleased to
report that there are still a decent number of prominent Bible teachers who
will spare no effort in pointing out the profoundly obvious scriptural problems
with all manner of woke, politically correct attitudes and beliefs that are so
popular today, and let it be known in no uncertain terms how contrary such
things are to the plain text of Scripture—not to mention revoltingly offensive
to most born-again believers.
But they won't do it by
scolding such people, calling them names, or telling them that in their
opinion they are wrong.
They will point to the
words of Scripture
and let God tell
them they are wrong.
In spite of the
(biblically prophesied) decline of the Church's strength and influence in the
end times, we are still blessed to have individuals who are willing to call a
spade a spade and speak God's truth with black-and-white clarity to an
unbelieving world (which includes unbelieving wokesters).
But again: You all know
the routine. The wokester in question will raise a deflector shield—a
surprisingly powerful device that completely stymies the majority of otherwise
scripturally competent believers and that consists of what has become one of
the most oft-quoted Bible-isms in today's woke world:
Judge not.
The message is
essentially this:
"Jesus said 'Judge
not, that you be not judged,' and He meant what He said—DO NOT JUDGE!! How is
that unclear?! So why don't you obey the words of Jesus and stop judging me,
you judgmental hypocrite!!"
This "judge
not" canard frequently comes into play when believers point out the errors
of a fallen world, but it also rears its hoary head when they point out the
errors of other believers who have foolishly allowed themselves to get swept up
in trendy wokeness and have come to espouse ideas that do little more than
mirror that fallen world.
This second
Church-related category can include a variety of contentious issues, such as a
heartbreakingly relaxed attitude toward abortion, a lack of support for the
nation of Israel and the Jewish people (if not flat-out anti-Semitism), not to
mention a ham-fisted mishandling of end-time prophecy that robs the Church of
its blessed hope of the Rapture and tramples underfoot what the Bible clearly
teaches about God's judgment during the Tribulation, Christ's literal return to
earth, and His blessings in the Millennial Kingdom.
But without a doubt,
LGBT-related issues are the stars of this particular show, and this includes
issues pertaining to the world as well as the Church.
LGBT-related issues
pertaining to the world include things such as...
• The
surreptitious indoctrination of young children with the perversions of the LGBT
agenda, not to mention the mutilation of these children's bodies under the
glowing guise of "gender affirming care."
• Allowing biological men who are
pretending...er, I mean "transitioning" to be women to compete
against real women in sports, effectively robbing talented young ladies of the
hard-earned rewards of their efforts.
• The acceptance and normalization of
homosexual "marriage."
LGBT-related issues
pertaining to the Church include things such as...
• The actual performance of
homosexual "marriages" by licensed ministers.
• Insisting that all of the fanciful LGBT
flavors of gender and sexuality should not only be accepted but celebrated
by believers because God made those people that way, and God certainly
doesn't make mistakes.
• Expecting churches to openly and warmly
accept members of the LGBT community, but while also openly and warmly
accepting their sin. That's because failing to do so would be unloving—and
God is love, right?
And the message never
changes:
"You guys always
make such a big deal about all that stuffy holiness and justice business, but
you forget that God just love love loves the bejeepers out of us, and
that's all that matters!"
And these are just the
tip of the proverbial iceberg. The point is that as soon as believer A confronts deceived believer B who holds to any of the above views or any one of a
million others that ooze out of the woke world, believer B activates his thermonuclear
deflector shield and whatever believer A says from that point on is going to
bounce off it like Nerf balls off the USS Nimitz:
JUDGE NOT!!
Sadly, the great
majority of the time this deflector shield works like a charm for believer B,
typically making believer A shut up and shuffle away (or what's worse, fall
into the trap of condemning believer B even more vehemently) because he is
uncertain how to effectively counter the "judge not" ruse from the
Word. He most likely recognizes that this absolutely must to be
some sort of scriptural sleight of hand, but he's just not quite sure who,
what, when, where, why, or how.
He's stumped—he has no
comeback.
Hence this article. In
this article I want to do three basic things:
1. Help you understand
what Jesus is actually saying in the passage where He says "Judge
not." (Hint: It ain't what believer B is so cocksure it is.)
2. Help you understand why
God wants and expects us to make judgments, and the manner in
which He wants us to make them.
3. And conversely, help
you understand the manner in which God doesn't want us to make
judgments.
And I'll be the first to
admit that no believer on earth needs to read this article more than I do.
So what
is Jesus saying?
The first thing I want
to do is go to the Word and take a closer look at the passage in question in
which Jesus says "Judge not." I want you to see how people who
activate their deflector shields every time someone challenges their woke
beliefs as being contrary to Scripture yank the words "judge not"
completely out of context and build an erroneous doctrinal position out of
them. To do that, however, we need to gain a clear understanding of what Jesus
was actually talking about when He said these words.
Here is the full
passage, which is taken from the Sermon on the Mount in the Gospel of Matthew:
1Judge not, that you be
not judged.
[Screeech...woke stops here.] 2For with what judgment
you judge, you shall be judged: and with what measure you mete, it shall be
measured to you again. 3And why behold you the mote [Greek:
kárphos, or a splinter of hay or straw] that is in your brother's eye, but consider not the beam [Greek:
dokós, or a log or wooden plank] that is in your own eye? 4Or how will you say
to your brother, Let me pull out the mote out of your eye; and, behold, a beam
is in your own eye? 5You hypocrite, [which
is what you are if you don't do the following] first cast out the beam out of your own
eye; and then shall you see clearly to cast out the mote out of your brother's
eye. [Note with care what Jesus is telling us to do here.]
(Matthew 7:1–5 AKJV / emphasis
& [comments] added)
So the question is this:
When Jesus says
"Judge not," is He telling believers to never judge or criticize
anyone's words, actions, or beliefs in any way, no matter how contrary they are
to clear teaching in God's Word or how badly they flout well-established
biblical principles?
No, He isn't. He can't
be, because in other places in Scripture we are literally told to make
judgments...and we see a clear example of this before we even finish the above
passage.
Notice the command in
verse 5 that effectively prompts us to judge our brother: "...first
cast out the beam out of your own eye; and then shall you see clearly to
cast out the mote out of your brother's eye."
As you obey what Jesus
is telling us to do here, you are judging
your brother. How is this
unclear? It's just that you are not
judging him in a hypocritical way, because you have removed the log from
your own eye first.
If Jesus were telling us
in verse 1 to never judge our brother in any way, then He might have said
something along the following lines:
"Sure, remove the
log from your own eye—that's great. But as for the splinter in your brother's
eye, leave it alone—it's none of your business, so go easy, bro! Hey, maybe
your brother likes that splinter. Maybe he actually thinks it helps him
see better. How do you know? So don't worry about taking it upon
yourself to remove it. Who knows, perhaps the day will come when he realizes he
should get rid of that splinter. After all, it's his splinter and it's his
journey."
But that's not what
Jesus is saying, is it? What Jesus is saying is if you see your brother engaged
in error, make sure you are completely free of that error to the best of
your ability before you call it to his attention in an effort to correct him. Why?
Because if you don't remove the log from your own eye first—that is, if you
don't ensure that your life is free of some type of error before you try to
correct your brother of that same error—you are nothing but a judgmental
hypocrite and have no business trying to correct anyone.
Note that in other
places in Scripture, we are expressly told to judge, but are told to judge in a
righteous manner free of any hypocrisy:
24Judge not according to
the appearance, but judge righteous judgment. [Many
modern translations read "Judge with righteous judgment." In
other words, judge in a righteous manner.]
(John 7:24 AKJV / emphasis
& [comments] added)
In his first letter to
the Corinthians, Paul tells us that those who are spiritual certainly do
judge, since they are uniquely qualified to do so because they have the mind of
Christ:
14But the natural man
receives not the things of the Spirit of God: for they are foolishness to him:
neither can he know them, because they are spiritually discerned. 15But
he that is spiritual judges all things, yet he himself is judged of no man.
16For who has known the mind of the Lord, that he may
instruct him? But we have the mind of Christ. [See
remarks below.]
(1 Corinthians 2:14–16
AKJV / emphasis & [comments] added)
Note that when Paul says
"we have the mind of Christ," he obviously doesn't mean we know
everything Christ knows. He means that the spiritual things we do
know come from Christ and constitute spiritual truth. As a result, we are able
to judge in a manner that is in accordance with God's Word.
I have a couple of quick
questions for people who believe Jesus is telling us in Matthew 7:1 that we are
not to judge people in any way, and we don't have to go very far before we
stumble into verses that provoke such questions:
1. The very next verse
after the "judge not" passage in Matthew 7:1–5 that I quoted above
prompts a judgment-related question:
6Give not that which is
holy to the dogs, neither cast you your pearls before swine, [Dogs,
swine...how can we tell?] lest they trample them under their feet, and turn again and
rend you. [Judge that.]
(Matthew 7:6 AKJV / emphasis
& [comments] added)
So, how exactly are we
to discern who are the dogs and pigs unless we make a judgment concerning them
and determine them to be such? Rather than prohibiting judgment, this
verse literally presumes judgment.
2. And just
a few verses later, Jesus warns us about false prophets:
15Beware of false
prophets, [Same deal...how can we tell?] which come to you in
sheep's clothing, but inwardly they are ravening wolves. 16You
shall know them by their fruits. Do men gather grapes of thorns, or figs of
thistles? [That is, we have to make judgments about the fruit
of the ministry.]
(Matthew 7:15–16 AKJV / emphasis
& [comments] added)
Again, our judgment
of their fruit is presumed. There are a number of others, but the point is
made. Jesus is certainly not telling us that it is wrong to make
judgments about people's words, actions, and beliefs. As we read the context in
Matthew 7:1–5, we readily see that Jesus isn't telling us not to judge—He is
telling us not to judge hypocritically. He is telling us to purge
ourselves of a particular error before we call attention to that same error in
someone else so we don't dishonor His name by acting like judgmental
hypocrites, because hypocrisy is something God hates.
God's hatred of
hypocrisy is touched on in several places in the Old Testament, and here are
two:
13The Lord said,
"Because this people draws near with their mouth and honors me with
their lips, but they have removed their heart far from me, and their
fear of me is a commandment of men which has been taught; [In
other words, they are complete hypocrites.]
14therefore, behold, I
will proceed to do a marvelous work among this people, [i.e.
send the promised Messiah] even a marvelous work and a wonder; and the wisdom of their
wise men will perish, and the understanding of their prudent men will be hidden." [Due to their abject hypocrisy, when God sent that Redeemer their eyes
were blinded to what He was doing in their midst—and they ultimately crucified
Him.]
(Isaiah 29:13–14 / emphasis
& [comments] added)
Hypocrisy is closely
linked to pride and arrogance: When someone judges another person for something
they are guilty of as well, it is their own pride and arrogance that blinds
them to their error and makes it easy for them to hammer their brother. Note that
the prideful arrogance that spawns and fuels hypocrisy takes the top spot on
God's Top Seven List of Things He Hates:
16These six things does the LORD hate: yes, seven are an abomination to him:
17A proud look, [i.e. the prideful arrogance that underlies hypocrisy] a lying tongue, and hands that shed innocent blood,
18An heart that devises wicked imaginations, feet that be swift in running to mischief,
19A false witness that speaks lies, and he that sows discord among brothers.
(Proverbs 6:16–19 AKJV /
emphasis & [comments] added)
(See also Proverbs
18:13.) So if you only take away one thing from this article, this is the gem
to stick in your pocket:
Jesus never told
us not to judge anyone
in any way. He told us not to judge others
as hypocrites who overlook their own sin.
Right ways
to judge
Since the Bible tells us
to judge in a righteous manner, we would do well to take a closer look at
exactly what that entails to help us avoid the all-too-common pitfalls that can
easily lead to the hypocrisy God hates.
1.
Judge in agreement with God's Word.
Arguably the point of
overriding importance here is that we are to judge with righteous judgment, or
in a righteous manner. But what exactly does that mean? I would say this is the
easiest one of the bunch:
Any judgment we make
must be
in agreement with God's Word.
Remember: We have a
Judge, and He always judges in accordance with His own perfect righteousness,
perfect justice, and perfect Word.
Everything begins with us
agreeing with God. As a matter of fact, that forms the very basis of our
salvation. We agree with God when He says that we are sinners whose sin has
separated us from Him. We agree with God when He says that His Son's one-time
work of atonement paid the penalty for our sin, and believe this in simple
faith. In a large sense, you might say that repentance is essentially changing
the way we think and agreeing with the way God thinks.
In other words, there is
only one way we should judge anyone:
We should only judge
someone by
comparing their actions with what
God has clearly spoken in His Word.
In a very real sense, it
is what God has spoken that does the judging. To dig into that a wee bit more,
notice what Jesus said shortly after His triumphal entry into Jerusalem at the
beginning of Passion Week:
44Jesus cried out and
said, "Whoever believes in me, believes not in me, but in him who sent me.
45He who sees me sees him who sent me. 46I
have come as a light into the world, that whoever believes in me may not remain
in the darkness. 47If anyone listens to my sayings and doesn't
believe, I don't judge him. [Rather, he will be judged by his rejection
of Jesus' words.] For I came not to judge the world, but to save the world. 48He
who rejects me, and doesn't receive my sayings, has one who judges him. The word that I
spoke will judge him in the last day. [See remarks below.] 49For
I spoke not from myself, but the Father who sent me gave me a commandment, what
I should say and what I should speak. 50I know that his
commandment is eternal life. The things therefore which I speak, even as the
Father has said to me, so I speak."
(John 12:44–50 / emphasis
& [comments] added)
Notice what Jesus says
in verses 47–48: He wasn't here on earth to judge those who rejected His words.
Why? Because He didn't come to judge the world—He came to save
the world (see also Luke 19:10).
As for someone who
rejects Christ's words, Jesus doesn't have to judge him personally, either at
that time or in the future. Men will be judged by their rejection of the words
the Father gave His Son to speak:
The rejecter of Christ
"has one to judge him; the word which I spake, it will judge him in the
last day." Nothing personal enters into the judgment: the man will be
judged by what he has heard, by his opportunities and light.
— Expositor's Greek Testament [Source]
At the Great White
Throne Judgment, all those who have rejected what God has said will stand
before Christ and hear Him read the verdict and announce the punishment that
was carved in stone the moment they died and entered the spiritual realm
without believing what God has said. And that verdict?
Guilty as charged.
But I'm guessing you
already knew the verdict...as well as the punishment.
2.
Judge with humility.
Knowing that we have a
Judge should keep us humble and appropriately tone our attitude when it comes
to judging the errors of others.
The idea of judging with
humility is closely related to the idea of removing the log from our own eye
before we attempt to remove the splinter from the eye of our brother. Just as
Jesus said—we need to deal with our own errors before we point out those of
others. And as we deal with our own logs, we will be better be able to maintain
the attitude of humility God desires us to have before we attempt to deal with
the splinters of other believers.
And before we go for
that splinter in our brother's eye, it wouldn't hurt to give our humility a
shot in the arm by reviewing the following verse:
23Search me, O God, and
know my heart: try me, and know my thoughts:
24And see if there be any
wicked way in me, and lead me in the way everlasting. [And
if there is, let me remove it before I judge anyone else.]
(Psalm
139:23–24 AKJV / emphasis & [comments] added)
3.
Judge to restore, not to rebuke.
When we do have
to judge or correct a brother who has erred, the purpose of it should be to
restore that brother to fellowship, not simply rebuke him like an angry mother
scolding a naughty child. In other words:
The goal of our judgment
of
another person should be
restoration, not retribution.
As Paul wrote to the
believers in Ephesus:
32And be kind to one
another, tender hearted, forgiving each other, just as God also in Christ
forgave you. [Key point: Think about how He
forgave us.]
(Ephesians 4:32 / emphasis
& [comments] added)
And to the believers in
Galatia:
1Brothers, even if a man
is caught in some fault, you who are spiritual must restore such a one in a
spirit of gentleness, [Paul says we must do this] looking to yourself so
that you also aren't tempted. [...and as a result start growing a log in
your own eye.]
(Galatians 6:1 / emphasis
& [comments] added)
Jesus speaks to this in
Matthew's Gospel, and I might add that He seems to emphasize the idea of
keeping it as private and low-key as possible:
15If your brother sins
against you, go, show him his fault between you and him alone. If he
listens to you, you have gained back your brother. [Jesus goes on to describe the details of church discipline if it
reaches that point.]
(Matthew 18:15 / emphasis
& [comments] added)
I should also emphasize
that our goal should be to restore—not to be right.
This is not about who's
right—God's Word is right. This is about focusing on that simple fact
and restoring fellowship with a fellow believer.
Wrong ways
to judge
Since we have taken a
closer look at what it means to make righteous judgments, it would be
profitable to also take a closer look at some of the wrong ways to judge
to help keep us focused on the right ways.
We've already discussed
the problems associated with judging people in a hypocritical manner, but there
are others aspects to this issue.
1.
Don't judge in a superficial manner.
We shouldn't judge based
on mere appearances, or on unsubstantiated, incomplete evidence. We shouldn't
jump to conclusions based on our own opinions (or delusional rants spewed by a
radically biased mainstream media).
We need to make an
effort to dig a bit deeper and get the facts of a situation before we judge
someone, or else we may find ourselves neck-deep in hypocrisy. We see a
wonderful example of this in Luke's Gospel, when a Pharisee named Simon invites
Jesus to dine with him:
36One of the Pharisees
invited him to eat with him. He entered into the Pharisee's house and sat at
the table. 37Behold, a woman in the city who was a sinner,
when she knew that he was reclining in the Pharisee's house, brought an
alabaster jar of ointment. 38Standing behind at his feet
weeping, she began to wet his feet with her tears, and she wiped them with the
hair of her head, kissed his feet, and anointed them with the ointment. 39Now
when the Pharisee who had invited him saw it, he said to himself, "This
man, if he were a prophet, would have perceived who and what kind of woman this
is who touches him, that she is a sinner." [Only
focusing on the surface.]
40Jesus answered him,
"Simon, I have something to tell you." He said, "Teacher, say
on." 41"A certain lender had two debtors. The one
owed five hundred denarii, and the other fifty. 42When they
couldn't pay, he forgave them both. Which of them therefore will love him
most?" 43Simon answered, "He, I suppose, to whom he
forgave the most." He said to him, "You have judged correctly." 44Turning
to the woman, he said to Simon, "Do you see this woman? I entered into
your house, and you gave me no water for my feet, but she has wet my feet with
her tears, and wiped them with the hair of her head. 45You
gave me no kiss, but she, since the time I came in, has not ceased to kiss my
feet. 46You didn't anoint my head with oil, but she has
anointed my feet with ointment. 47Therefore I tell you, her
sins, which are many, are forgiven, for she loved much. But one to whom little
is forgiven, loves little." 48He said to her, "Your
sins are forgiven." 49Those who sat at the table with
him began to say to themselves, "Who is this who even forgives
sins?" [Note that this isn't the only time Jesus got
the Pharisees all up in a tizzy by making a point of openly forgiving someone's
sins—see also Jesus' healing of a paralytic in Luke 5:17–26 (also Matt. 9:1–8;
Mark 2:1–12).]
50He said to the woman, "Your faith has saved you. Go in
peace."
(Luke 7:36–50 / emphasis
& [comments] added)
Simon the Pharisee made
a superficial judgment based only on his personal opinion of the woman and with
no consideration of other compelling factors that informed the true nature of
the situation. Simon's reaction was typical for the Pharisees: a shallow, snap
judgment born of legalism.
And Jesus wasted no time
hanging him out to dry for it.
2.
Don't judge in a harsh, condemning manner.
Recall that in our
"judge not" passage above, Jesus reminds us that we will be judged in
the same manner we judge others:
2For with what judgment
you judge, you shall be judged: and with what measure you mete, it shall be
measured to you again.
(Matthew 7:2 AKJV)
So it is clear that when
we do judge others, we shouldn't do so in a harsh manner, blazing with
condemnation.
We should make every
effort to be gentle and forgiving in our judgment, as Paul reminds us in his
letter to Titus:
1Remind them to be in
subjection to rulers and to authorities, to be obedient, to be ready for every
good work, 2to speak evil of no one, not to be contentious, to be
gentle, showing all humility toward all men. [And it goes without
saying that this especially applies when we judge others.]
(Titus 3:1–2 / emphasis
& [comments] added)
See Galatians 6:1 above
as well. Jesus also touches on the idea of being merciful to others earlier in
the Sermon on the Mount, when He says:
7Blessed are the
merciful, for they shall obtain mercy.
(Matthew 5:7)
Taken all together, we
could effectively paraphrase this verse as...
Blessed are those who
judge mercifully,
for they shall likewise be judged mercifully.
3.
Don't make false judgments.
Arguably the worst of
the lot is making false judgments—lying about someone and viciously pummeling
them with untruths. Obviously lying is forbidden all throughout Scripture, from
the 10 Commandments onward:
16You shall not bear false
witness against your neighbor.
(Exodus 20:16 AKJV)
End of story. See also
item no. 6 on God's Top Seven List of Things He Hates that I quoted earlier ("...a
false witness that speaks lies…").
Another passage in
Proverbs hits this yet again:
5A false witness shall
not be unpunished, and he that speaks lies shall not escape.
(Proverbs 19:5 AKJV)
Judging others based on lies is
about as low as it gets. I mean...
• It's bad enough to judge someone in a
hypocritical manner.
• It's bad enough to judge someone based
solely on outward appearances.
• It's bad enough to judge someone in a
harsh, unforgiving manner.
But judging someone
based on known lies is the bottom of the barrel.
So don't go there.
No joke
What we're saddled with
these days, however, is a regiment of self-appointed social media saints who
consider it their sacred duty to correct everyone's doctrinal
"errors" and publicly ID every "false prophet" in the
entire world—which includes anyone who interprets anything in
Scripture in a way that disagrees in any way with their immaculate,
inviolable interpretation.
Hey, don't look at me
like that!
Uhm...on second thought,
maybe you should look at me like that. Yes, I admit I've been guilty of
this in the past on a few occasions, and the Holy Spirit is at work as we speak
to remedy it. It's like I said earlier...and I'll bet you thought I was joking.
Well, I meant what I said—that was no joke:
No believer on earth
needs to read this article more than I do.
Oh, and next time you point out
someone's error and that person activates the old "judge not" deflector
shield and quips that you should obey the words of Jesus and not judge them, I
just may have the comeback you need:
So you want me to obey the words
of Jesus, do you? Well, stand by:
I've removed the log from my eye,
and Jesus says that means I'm ready
to help you with the splinter in yours.
From Greg Lauer @ A Little Strength—SEP '25
Thanks for this, Greg.
ReplyDeleteA little over 3 years ago, I had a discussion that started to heat up pretty quickly because I said much of the same. I remember it well because, truth be told, I'm still smoldering on the inside. There are just so many "Christians" willing to follow the world, and it's such a betrayal to Jesus, I think. But the more you speak about this, the more you are marginalized. Just one more cross to carry in a world that is doomed, and I lay no claim to perfection, myself, but if we can't even call out the sin that we see (ours included), and if we can't discuss our thoughts on the issues openly, then who are we kidding?! We, as a society, are more wrapped up in the world and popularity than we ever were in sharing Christ's vision. But that will change soon, when He tells us EXACTLY what He's thinking in the most obvious manner possible.
Also, today's news is pointing out that Israel is pooling its ministers for a roundtable discussion on annexing portions of the West Bank, primarily as a possible repudiation of major European nations throwing support to a Palestinian state. And, at that point, why shouldn't they?
I have two short things to say to that. First, it is no longer difficult to see Israel reaching a point where they will take control of the Temple Mount. In the recent past, you wouldn't have necessarily said that. But now you can very easily imagine that if the overwhelming majority of nations were to vote for, and establish, an official Palestinian territory within Israel, and against the wishes of Israel, then there would be NO REASON WHATSOEVER for Israel to give a fig (see what I did there?) about world opinion on their own Temple space.
Second, I have to say that I am tired of listening to the dregs of society supporting today's terrorist Canaanites in the Gaza strip. I mean, I know it's prophetically inevitable, and I know that the path to destruction is wide because it has to be big enough for the majority, but . . . how is it possible that we're even passing the UN microphone to Hamas, and Hezbollah, and the Houthis, and the other billions of Muslims in order to vouch for the official recognition of a Palestinian state (that they will use to further encroach upon Israel) when . . . they just spent the last 77 years fighting violently against the UN's official recognition of an Israeli state????
I hope the world doesn't honestly believe that Israel won't take back the Mount . . . or use Nukes on Damascus . . . or fight tooth and nail for another 77 years. Because they won't lay down for another holocaust. And the stone is about to become much more burdensome. Thank God I'm a Pre-Trib Rapture believer!
Jeremy
Jeremy--When I saw the possibility that the UN could be thwarted from giving the PEACE & SAFETY declaration this month due to America's veto power, I thought we might have quite a while to wait before the Rapture BUT
DeleteI think I found a LOOPHOLE the UN will likely use to force the Two-State Solution this month.
So, Jeremy and Beloved Unsealed Brethren, please let me know what your prayerful insights are:
PEACE & SAFETY and a dream of THE REVELATION 12 MAN CHILD
Just added to PEACE & SAFETY and a dream of THE REVELATION 12 MAN CHILD an excerpt from an article by Michael Snyder titled,
DeleteWhy The Peace Conference On September 22nd Could Cause A Catastrophic War To Erupt In The Middle East
Of course, war could erupt BEFORE September 22 making the UN's case for a Two-State Solution all the more stronger for the world will be crying out for PEACE AND SAFETY!
2 Timothy 4: 2-3
ReplyDeletePreach the word; be prepared in season and out of season; reprove, rebuke, and encourage with every form of patient instruction. For the time will come when men will not tolerate sound doctrine, but with itching ears they will gather around themselves teachers to suit their own desires.
- - -
And how they do not tolerate that now, already!
The Word is best to use, because He IS the Word. Let the argument be between them and God as it should be. His Spirit is the one that convicts and convinces men.
All are given the free will choice to accept or reject, and all are responsible for that choice, and all reap the consequences of that choice whether good or bad.
Why should I use my words as though I can do anything for anyone else when His are already available and are the best that can be delivered?
:)
It's fast becoming the case that most have alreeady made the choice, and have closed their ears to the truth, and desire the world all the more.
Shall I fret over something I could never change to begin with? I'll let Him fight the battle instead, and get my grimy hands off of the reigns. ;)
Hi all,
ReplyDeleteI published a new blog post looking at the revealing links between the book of Jeremiah and the book of Revelation:
https://istrumptheantichrist.blogspot.com/2025/09/jeremiah-and-book-of-revelation.html