Something unexpected happened as the Lord was preaching the Word in a crowded house in Capernaum (Mark. 2:2). There was noise above them. People on the roof began digging out the topcoat of clay, removing and tearing away clay tiles, then pulling, tugging, and pushing at the underlying branches and timbers. One can surmise that debris from the roof rained down on those inside the house, and they clamored and struggled to get out of the way.
We imagine that bright sunlight suddenly streamed into the darkness of the home from a hole in the roof. But the men above kept working until they made a larger opening. Now particles of dust probably hung in the air from the partial demolition of the roof. Then the stream of light was blocked as a stretcher was swung over the hole, and a man who was a paralytic was lowered into the house (2:4). People shuffled and made room as the man on the stretcher was lowered and placed directly before the Lord. Above the scene now were seen four happy, hopeful friends looking down into the house.
These four determined men are examples of true friends who, in love, help needy sinners to come before the Savior. These four had a faith that refused to quit in the face of obstacles. Their friend couldnβt walk, so they carried him. The crowd blocked their access to Christ, so they went around them. The roof was in the way, so they tore a hole in it. The men went to extraordinary lengths and great effort to place their friend before the Lord.
The paralytic is a picture of all who are outside of Christ for, in our sins, we are all spiritual paralytics. The four men believed in Christ (v. 5), and they knew He could help their friend, so they brought him to Christ and were willing to do whatever it took to get that man before Him. May their same heart beat within us, having the kind of faith and zeal that would tear apart a roof to get a person before the Lord and under the hearing of the gospel. By far, the number one reason new people come to a church or go to a Bible study is that a friend invites them. When you stop and think about that hole in that broken roof, what you see is a picture of love.
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βMany people believe that Saul, after his vision on the road to Damascus, began to preach Body truth. But in Galatians 1:23 the Scriptures clearly state that Saul now preached the faith which he once destroyed (Peterβs message).β
As we know, Paul spent the first two chapters in Galatians distinguishing his apostleship and message from the apostleship and message of the Twelve. In fact, he clearly states that the gospel he preached was βnot after man,β that is, the Twelve or any other man for that matter. Rather, his message was a direct revelation from the Lord of glory (Gal. 1:11-12). With this in mind, verse 23 must be interpreted in light of the context that precedes it.
βBut they [churches of Judea] had heard only, that he which persecuted us in times past now preacheth the faith which once he destroyed. And they glorified God in meβ (Gal. 1:23-24).
We must remember that there was a point in Paulβs life when he rejected Christ and the seemingly ridiculous notion that He had risen from the dead. He believed Him to be nothing more than an imposter. But when the Lord of glory appeared to Paul on the dusty road leading to Damascus, his stony heart of flesh melted within him. He could not deny his senses; he believed Christ was Who He claimed to be! You see, the fact that Christ was the Son of God Who had risen from the dead was common ground between the two programs of God. So it is in this sense the apostle preached the faith that he once sought to destroy.
This is further confirmed by Paulβs statement in 1 Corinthians 15:11: βTherefore whether it were I [the apostle of the Gentiles] or they [the twelve apostles of the kingdom], so we preach, and so ye believed.β Preached what? Clearly in this context the resurrection of Christβtrue, it may have been for completely different purposes; nevertheless, it was a common denominator.
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Robert Gorham Davis was a professor of English at Columbia University. After his retirement he spent his energies writing letters to the New York Times Editorial Section. He wrote many letters, usually prompted by any favorable mention of Christian truth. Anytime the New York Times made some mention of Christianity, he protested with a letter.
In one such letter he wrote, βPlainly if there were such a God who really wished to reveal Himself to mankind, He could do so in a way that left no doubt.β
Well, He did. God revealed Himself to mankind through His Son, and God left no doubt as to the revelation of Himself to mankind by His Son rising from the dead. The resurrection of Jesus Christ is the single most amazing way God could have revealed Himself to us. And the facts are clear, the evidence is conclusive: Christ is risen from the dead.
Satan hates the Resurrection. He tried to cover it up by the lies and scheming of religious leaders and Roman soldiers, and he still tries to cover up the resurrection today. As a result, the true meaning of Easter is covered up with bunnies, eggs, candy, and baskets. But we must be careful and vigilant not to allow the world to cover up for us what this blessed holiday is all about.
Sure, Sealed, and Set
βNow when they were going, behold, some of the watch came into the city, and shewed unto the chief priests all the things that were doneβ (Matt. 28:11).
Matthew records, βNow when they were going.β The βtheyβ are the women who had come to the tomb on Resurrection morning. An angel had appeared to them at the tomb and told them to tell the disciples that Christ was risen from the dead as He said, and that He was going before them into Galilee where they would see Him (vv. 5-8). As they went from the tomb, the Lord appeared to the women. And then He too told them to tell the disciples that He was risen and would meet them in Galilee.
Thus, verse 11 says, βNow when they were going,β meaning that these women were obeying the Lord and were on their way to deliver to the disciples this message of good news from the risen Savior.
People were moving in different directions on Resurrection morning. The women were on the move toward the disciplesβ location, and βsome of the watch,β or the Roman soldiers, were on the move as well βinto the cityβ of Jerusalem to find the Jewish chief priests. Strange, isnβt it, that Roman soldiers would seek out the Jewish chief priests?
To answer that question, first we need to learn about the orders given to these soldiers.
βNow the next day, that followed the day of the preparation, the chief priests and Pharisees came together unto Pilate, βSaying, Sir, we remember that that deceiver said, while He was yet alive, After three days I will rise again. βCommand therefore that the sepulchre be made sure until the third day, lest His disciples come by night, and steal Him away, and say unto the people, He is risen from the dead: so the last error shall be worse than the first. βPilate said unto them, Ye have a watch: go your way, make it as sure as ye can. βSo they went, and made the sepulchre sure, sealing the stone, and setting a watchβ (Matt. 27:62-66).
After Christβs death on the cross, the chief priests and Pharisees remembered Christβs words that He would rise again after three days.
They requested from the Roman governor, Pilate, a watch, or a Roman guard unit, to be stationed at the tomb to ensure that the disciples didnβt try to steal Christβs body and claim He rose again. Pilate granted the watch. So the Roman soldiers βwent, and made the sepulchre sure, sealing the stone, and setting a watch.β
Now, Roman guards were serious about what they were put in charge of guarding, because if a Roman soldier failed in his duty as a guard, it was an offense punishable by death. They faced certain and immediate execution. This was why the Philippian jailor was about to kill himself after the earthquake when he thought Paul and all the prisoners had escaped (Acts 16:26-29).
The punishment for failing on guard duty was for the soldier to be βstripped of his clothes, then burned alive in a fire started with the garments.β The fear of that punishment made guards very alert and mindful of their responsibilities.
Christian apologist, evangelist, and author Josh McDowell wrote this about a Roman watch: βA Roman guard unit was a 4-to-16-man security force. Each man was trained to protect six feet of ground. The 16 men in a square of four on each side were supposed to be able to protect 36 yards against an entire battalion and hold it. Normally what they did was this: four men were placed immediately in front of what they were to protect. The other 12 were asleep in a semi-circle in front of them with their heads pointing in. To steal what these guards were protecting, thieves would first have to walk over those who were asleep. Every four hours, another unit of four was awakened and those who had been awake went to sleep. They would rotate this way around the clock.β
We know the guard unit in front of Christβs tomb was a multi-man force because Matthew recorded how βSOME of the watch came into the cityβ (Matt. 28:11) after the resurrection. βSomeβ implies several men of the Roman guard unit.
Matthew 27:66 tells us that the Roman guards βmade the sepulchre sure, sealing the stone.β Application of the Roman seal to the stone was key because it was a public testimony that Christβs body was actually there. Before that seal was applied, each member of the guard unit would go in and verify that what they were guarding was there. Their lives depended on that. That seal tells us that Christβs body was in that tomb.
After verifying that Christβs body was in the tomb, the stone was rolled in place, and a cord was stretched across the rock covering the entrance. The cord was fastened at each side with sealing clay. While still soft, the clay packs were stamped with the official signet of the Roman governor.
Trying to move the stone from the tombβs entrance would have broken the Roman seal, and thus incurred the judgment of Roman law and power. And the consequences were severe, that is, βautomatic execution by crucifixion upside down.β
After inspecting the tomb, rolling the stone into place at the entrance, and sealing the stone, the Roman guards then set the watch and got themselves in place.
A Powerful Angel
βAnd, behold, there was a great earthquake: for the angel of the Lord descended from heaven, and came and rolled back the stone from the door, and sat upon it. βHis countenance was like lightning, and his raiment white as snowβ (Matt. 28:2-3).
When Christ died, there was a great earthquake. His death in payment for sin was of such magnitude that it shook the world (Matt. 27:50-51). In Matthew 28:2, we see that when He rose again in victory over death, the chains of death were broken forever, and this too was of such magnitude that it literally shook the world. His death shook the world. His resurrection shook the world. Verse 2 calls it βa great earthquake.β The word βgreatβ is megas in the Greek, so we would say that it was a mega-quake. That is to say, it was a supernatural earthquake, and a severe one.
It wasnβt any shifting of the tectonic plates in the earthβs crust that caused the earthquake. It wasnβt any physical phenomenon at all. It was the result of the arrival of the angel of the Lord, descending from heaven to roll the stone away. The earthquake was not caused by Christ coming out of the tomb. It was caused by the arrival of the angel coming to the already-empty tomb. The angel did not come to let Christ out. When the angel arrived, Christ was already gone. He had already risen. In Christβs resurrected, glorified body, He could simply move right through the rock, which He did when He left the tomb.
We learn that the angel didnβt move the stone to let Christ out. The angel moved the stone to let the world in, so all could see that Christ was gone. The angel moved the stone so that the women and the apostles could go in and give eyewitness testimony to the fact that Christ wasnβt there.
You gotta love this angel. When he comes, he comes in power, and thereβs a great earthquake. He then single-handedly rolls that great stone some distance from the entrance of the tomb, and then he sits on it. That stone being removed from that door showed death had been conquered forever, that we are free forever from bondage through the fear of death (Heb. 2:15). That stone was a symbol of the sin that shut man in prison and condemned him to death. But now Christ had conquered sin and the grave. Nothing was going to change this fact. And in exultation at Christβs victory, this angel sat on that stone. He sat on it as a divine testimony to Christβs once-for-all, finished sacrifice for sin and His triumphant resurrection over death.
Shaky Soldiers
βAnd for fear of him the keepers did shake, and became as dead menβ (Matt. 28:4).
When the angel appeared and the earthquake occurred, and he moved the stone and sat on it, Matthew 28:4 records that the guards shook. The Greek word translated βshakeβ (seio) comes from the Greek word for βearthquakeβ in verse 2 (seismos). One could say that the guards had their own seismic experience. The ground quaked and then they quaked and shook out of sheer terror from seeing this heavenly angel.
Roman soldiers were acquainted with the terrors of battle. They were not easily shaken emotionally. But the angelβs shining countenance, coupled with the earthquake, paralyzed the βkeepers,β the Roman guard. They were struck with such fear that they went into a comatose state, and they fainted βand became as dead men.β The angel never speaks to these guards. It was just his powerful presence that overwhelmed these rough and tough Roman legionnaires.
As soon as they regained consciousness, the soldiers checked the tomb, which they found empty except for the graveclothes lying as they were when they were wrapped around the Lordβs body, and the head napkin folded neatly to the side (Jn. 20:5-7). The soldiers saw and examined the entire scene.
βNow when they were going, behold, some of the watch came into the city, and shewed unto the chief priests all the things that were doneβ (Matt. 28:11).
Then some of the guards came into the city of Jerusalem to talk to the chief priests and to report to them all that had happened. Only βsomeβ of them came because the others probably feared for their lives and were in hiding. The βsomeβ who did come were shrewd. They did not report to their superior officers or to Governor Pilate; instead they reported to the Jewish chief priests. They reported to the men who were as anxious as they were to cover up what had happened.
They reported to βthe chief priests all the things that were done.β And βall things that were doneβ included the earthquake, the appearance of the angel, the angel moving the stone away from the entrance to the tomb by himself and then sitting on it, and how, after this, they fainted. Then they reported that, after they came to, the tomb was empty, except for the graveclothes. The chief priests, therefore, received word of Christβs resurrection before the disciples did. The religious leaders already knew while the women were still on their way to the disciples.
A Bribe and a Lie
βAnd when they were assembled with the elders, and had taken counsel, they gave large money unto the soldiers, βSaying, Say ye, His disciples came by night, and stole Him away while we slept. βAnd if this come to the governorβs ears, we will persuade him, and secure youβ (Matt. 28:12-14).
In verse 12 we read, βwhen they [the chief priests] were assembled with the elders, and had taken counsel.β The chief priests immediately called for a formal, emergency meeting of the Sanhedrin, the 70-man ruling body of the Jewish religious leaders. The firsthand facts from the soldiers were shared: the tomb is empty and theyβve got to do something about it. They assembled to consult together, that together they might come to a satisfactory resolution.
First they decided to bribe the soldiers to lie: βthey gave large money unto the soldiersβ (v. 12). They couldnβt have the soldiers going around saying there was an earthquake, an angel who rolled the stone away, and then that the tomb was empty. Today we would call this hush money.
The Greek word for money in verse 12 means silver coinage. The Jewish leaders gave the soldiers a large sum of silver money. They had bought Judas off for the sum of 30 pieces of silver; now they had to pay much more, but there was no price too high to buy a lie about this. This information could not come out. One would think that the resurrection would soften the hearts of the religious leaders to believe, but instead it hardened their hearts. They were determined in their unbelief.
Second, the Jewish religious leaders decided that, in return for the large sum of money, the soldiers were to spread a lie: βSay ye, His disciples came by night, and stole Him away while we sleptβ (v. 13). These religious leaders of Israel were desperate to come up with a story to explain the empty tomb and deter people from faith in Christ. The body was stolen. This was the only lie that worked. Nothing else works but this, because you have to offer a natural explanation for an empty tomb. But their cover-up proves the resurrection of Jesus Christ.
The lie to be made known was βWell, we were all asleep when the disciples came in the middle of the night and stole His body.β However, the question that logically raises is βIf you were asleep, how do you know His disciples came during the night and stole His body away?β You canβt have it both ways. You canβt be asleep and also know who took Him.
Another reason for the large bribe was that the religious leaders were asking the soldiers to incriminate themselves and to admit to sleeping while on guard duty in violation of Roman military law, which, as previously stated, was punishable by death.
For this reason, the third thing the religious ruling body decided was to assure the soldiers of their protection, telling them, βAnd if this come to the governorβs ears, we will persuade him, and secure you.β They were good at that, persuading Governor Pilate. Pilate was like putty in their hands. When Pilate was resistant to crucifying Christ, they kept working on him and worked the crowd into a frenzy against him: βthe Jews cried out, saying, If thou let this Man go, thou art not Caesarβs friendβ (Jn. 19:12). As we know, the weak-kneed Pilate ultimately relented and commanded Christ to be crucified. Thus, if Pilate tried to take action to execute the soldiers, the chief priests knew they could go to him and keep the soldiers out of trouble.
βSo they took the money, and did as they were taught: and this saying is commonly reported among the Jews until this dayβ (Matt. 28:15).
Confident that the chief priests could do this and keep them safe, we learn in verse 15 that the soldiers took the large sum of money and did what they had been βtaught.β The Jewish leaders had a number of soldiers that all needed to be telling the exact same story. They needed to go over the details of the cover-up and the lie so that one soldier wasnβt saying one thing and another was saying something different. As we say today, they needed to be on the same page. Thus, they were βtaughtβ the lie carefully.
The leaders feared that the Resurrection was going to be preached and believed. They knew the news that the tomb was empty was going to spread, so they had to spread the lie quickly and widely. As Mark Twain once said, βA little lie can travel half way βround the world while Truth is still lacing up her boots.β The Resurrection cover-up lie of the disciples stealing the body went out far and wide. Matthew, writing years later, confirms that it was still a prominent story believed by the Jews in that day, even though it was ridiculous.
The soldiers, who knew better, lied. The religious leaders, who knew better, lied. Satan, who is the father of lies, still propagates lies about the Resurrection today, and people still believe them.
Here are a few lies about the resurrection. Thereβs the βWrong Tomb Theory,β that says the reason the stone was rolled away and the tomb was empty was that the women went to the wrong tomb. However, two of the women had watched where He was buried the day of His crucifixion and knew where the tomb was (Matt. 27:61). This would mean that not only did the women go to the wrong tomb, but so did Peter and John when they ran to the tomb later (Jn. 20:3-4). And the right tomb would have been located after a while, especially by the Lordβs enemies who would have wanted to disprove the resurrection. Obviously, Joseph of Arimathea and the Roman soldiers knew which tomb contained the Lordβs body.
Thereβs the βSwoon Theory,β that Christ didnβt really die on the cross and just fainted from exhaustion. He was buried alive, and so later He came to and left the tomb on His own.
βA woman wrote [pastor and radio preacher] J. Vernon McGee, βOur preacher said that on Easter Jesus just swooned on the cross, and the disciples nursed him back to health. What do you think?β
βMcGee replied, βDear Sister, beat your preacher with a leather whip for thirty-nine heavy strokes. Nail him to a cross. Hang him in the sun for six hours. Run a spear through his heart. Embalm him. Put him in an airless tomb for three days. Then see what happens.ββ
You may have heard the βHallucination Theory.β This theory states that people only thought they had seen the resurrected Christ and had just hallucinated. However, mass hallucinations do not exist, and numbers of people together in the same place saw the risen Christ. There were too many different people in too many different places at too many different times and circumstances to be able to have that many hallucinations. And if the risen Christ were a hallucination, there would have been a body in the tomb.
Then thereβs the βStolen Body Theoryβ of Matthew 28:12-15 that began on Resurrection Day, a theory which is still believed by some. However, the disciples werenβt plotting how to steal the Lordβs body, they were hiding in fear of their lives.
He is Risen Indeed
What we have here in Matthew 28:11-15 is an account of Christβs resurrection from the viewpoint of His enemies. The Holy Spirit, in the wisdom of God, gives us this angle as proof of the truth. Critics and doubters of the Resurrection may question the accounts by Christβs friends, saying that of course theyβre going to lie and say He rose again, because they were His friends. So unbelievers might dismiss the testimony of His followers. But itβs pretty hard to dismiss the testimony of His enemies! The last thing the Jewish leaders wanted was a resurrection and an empty tomb, but this is exactly what they got, and the elaborate cover-up is proof that the Resurrection really happened.
Christβs followers give strong testimony to His resurrection in their eyewitness accounts, and His enemies give strong testimony to it in the plot to cover it up. Any and every way you look at it, Jesus Christ rose from the dead.
Praise God that He did! His resurrection is the cornerstone of our faith. The fact that Christ came out of that tomb is an everlasting proof of the sufficiency of His sacrifice for our sins and that our sin debt was paid in full, and that we will spend eternity in the heavenly places. As we are reminded in 2 Corinthians 4:14,
βKnowing that He which raised up the Lord Jesus shall raise up us also by Jesus.β
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βYouβve probably never heard of Wilbert Williams. Heβs not famous or rich. Still, Williams received an honor normally reserved for the connected, powerful, and wealthy. On December 2, 2004, the city of Chicago designated a street as Wilbert Williams Way. The honor is in celebration of his upcoming retirement.
βWhat did someone as unknown as Williams do to deserve such a tribute? The question becomes even more compelling when you realize that for nearly 40 years, Wilbert Williams has worked at the Womanβs Athletic Club as a doorman. Normally, an honorary street sign goes to people who get the door held open for themβnot to the one holding the door.
βWhat set Williams apart? He has carried out his duties in an exemplary fashion. Police Officer Paul OβDonnell said, βIn all these years, Iβve never heard him speak a harsh word about anyone. Heβs a gentleman.β Through his kindness and service to others, Williams made an impact on those who he met at the corner of Michigan and Ontario. Commenting on why he has always helped tourists, pointing them in the right direction, Williams says, βIf I was in a different city, Iβd like someone to help me.β
βHaving a street named after you is impressive. How much greater the honor God promises to give to those who serve Him well, an eternal inheritance that will never spoil or fade away.β
What Should the Believerβs Work Life Look Like
βServants, obey in all things your masters according to the flesh; not with eyeservice, as menpleasers; but in singleness of heart, fearing God: βAnd whatsoever ye do, do it heartily, as to the Lord, and not unto menβ (Col. 3:22-23).
The word βservantsβ (v. 22) refers to a slave. When Paul wrote Colossians, slavery was widespread in the Roman Empire. There are differences between the institutions of ancient slavery and modern employment. However, the practical principles given by Paul for servants and masters can be applied to the employee employer relationship of our day.
Much of our lives is given to work. For the majority of us, most weeks and days are given to a job or some kind of work. Work is a significant part of who we are and what we give ourselves to, day in and day out, year in and year out. If you spend 40 hours a week on the job for 50 weeks a year, between the ages of 18 and 65, you will amass 94,000 hours on the job. God cares about what you do with all that time and has instructions for it.
In verses 22-23, Paul gives instructions for the believer who is under the authority of another in the workplace, and Paul answers the question, βWhat should the believerβs work-life look like?β For many believers, God has called for the workplace to be their primary mission field. It is where we spend the most time and often where we are around the most people. The way we work is a testimony to a watching world.
1. Obedience
βServants, obey in all things your masters according to the fleshβ¦β (Col. 3:22).
A couple of verses earlier, Paul wrote, βChildren, obey your parents in all thingsβ¦β (v. 20). Then in verse 22, he wrote, βServants, obey in all thingsβ¦.β This shows that the obedience the child learns from their parents in the home is important for the future obedience that they will need in the workplace.
For the employee, there is to be obedience to our βmasters according to the flesh.β There is a subtle reminder here by Paul that these masters are only masters according to the flesh, meaning the believer has another Master Who is far above all (Col. 1:18). And before Him, believing employees owe submission and obedience to their employers or supervisors. Obedience in the workplace is ultimately obedience to the Lord. Of course, this instruction is not suggesting that the believer compromise his or her faith, do something contrary to Godβs Word, or break the law. The point is that God wants us to respect and cooperate with the people we work for and to do as we are instructed.
2. Not with Eyeservice
ββ¦not with eyeservice, as menpleasersβ¦β (Col. 3:22).
βIn the comic strip Calvin and Hobbes, Calvinβs boss is catching him sitting at his desk staring out the window. βWhy arenβt you working Calvin?β Without much thought Calvin confessed to his boss, βBecause I didnβt see you coming.β β
βEyeserviceβ refers to one who just works hard, or pretends to work hard, when he or she knows somebodyβs watching and, as such, is a βmenpleaserβ and one who seeks to gain the praise and favor of others through the work being seen. The quality, effort, and thoroughness of those who work only with eyeservice drop off dramatically when they arenβt being watched.
The type of work Paul exhorts from believing employees has nothing to do with whether we are being watched or not, or whether we will get credit or not. By the grace of God, Christ desires that His Church be people of integrity who work diligently all the time, even when no earthly master is watching. We do so knowing that the Lord, our Master in heaven, sees all we do at all times (Prov. 5:21).
3. In Singleness of Heart, Fearing God
ββ¦but in singleness of heart, fearing Godβ (Col. 3:22).
The word βsinglenessβ means simple sincerity, the virtue of one who is free from pretence and hypocrisy. This sincerity comes from oneβs heart. Godβs grace reaches for the heart, and it changes it. The goal for our respect, cooperation, and a good work ethic on the job is that it be not just superficial but genuine from the heart.
Singleness of heart is wanting to do what is right and good in Godβs sight. Itβs being singularly and sincerely focused on pleasing the Lord in all we do, including in the workplace. There is more to working for the believer than just punching the clock, doing the job we are paid to do, and then punching out. Weβre called to work with singleness of heart as a testimony for Christ.
Paul adds that we are to work, βfearing God.β Fearing God is about giving reverence to Him. Your job, no matter what it is, can be an act of worship. Itβs been said well that βAs Christians we sometimes exalt βspiritualβ work and downplay simple labor. However, any work, no matter how mundane, that is done for God is spiritual work.β All believers can serve the Lord in their jobs, whatever that job may be. Thus, any job becomes a ministry.
Often, many in the world look to their career to provide them with meaning and for it to bring significance to their lives. For the believer, however, Christ is the One Who gives meaning and significance to our lives. Therefore, we do not look for meaning in our career; rather we bring meaning to it by faith as we work in an attitude of worship, fearing God.
4. Do It Heartily
βAnd whatsoever ye do, do it heartilyβ¦β (Col. 3:23).
βWhatsoever ye doβ is a comprehensive statement. Oneβs whole being belongs to God: body, soul, and spirit. All of life is Christian. And whatever we do in our daily employment, we should βdo it heartily,β putting our hearts and souls into it, doing it wholeheartedly to the best of our abilities.
In His earthly ministry, the Lord told Israel, βAnd thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind, and with all thy strengthβ¦β (Mark 12:30). Worship teaches us to give our whole heart to the Lord God. And stemming from our devotion to God, in our employment, we are called to work with all our hearts. Being a reliable, productive, hard worker glorifies God. As King Solomon advised, βWhatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it with thy mightβ¦β (Eccl. 9:10).
5. As to the Lord
ββ¦as to the Lord, and not unto menβ (Col. 3:23).
Walter Wangerin wrote the following: βIf a carpenter crafts a chair for a rich stranger, he may do it well, but if he crafts it for his daughter, he will do it lovingly. Much, much is different between the first and the second crafting, and much is different between the two chairs, too, though only he and his daughter may see the difference.β
As we work out of our love and gratitude for the Lord, this makes a difference in how we work and the kind of effort we give it. Working just for a paycheck often leads to doing just enough. Knowing that one is ultimately working for the Lord is meant to transform and upgrade a workerβs attitude and performance. And because we truly are serving the Lord in our jobs, Paul wrote that our faithful testimony in our jobs will be justly rewarded by the Lord one day.
Payday Someday
βKnowing that of the Lord ye shall receive the reward of the inheritance: for ye serve the Lord Christ. But he that doeth wrong shall receive for the wrong which he hath done: and there is no respect of personsβ (Col. 3:24-25).
We serve the Lord in our daily employment βknowingβ we will be rewarded by our Master in heaven one day. The Lord promises to reward those who work with the kind of heart, integrity, and obedience described in verses 22-23. The word βrewardβ (v. 24) means recompence. It refers to what Christ will give in return for the work that believers do in the workplace.
This reward is called βthe reward of the inheritance.β Believing Israel has a future inheritance in the Promised Land during Christβs earthly kingdom (Matt. 5:5). For the Body of Christ, we learn of our inheritance from the message revealed to the Apostle Paul for the Church today. Paul referred to the believerβs inheritance earlier in this letter:
βGiving thanks unto the Father, which hath made us meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the saints in lightβ (Col. 1:12).
When we trust Christ as our Savior, we are born again, by grace, into the family of God (Eph. 2:4-5; Titus 3:4-5). In Christ, believers enter a familial relationship that, in turn, legally bequeaths us an inheritance called βthe inheritance of the saints in light.β This describes the believerβs position and standing before God in Christ in the light and glories of heaven (Col. 1:5). Our inheritance of eternity in heaven in Christ cannot be gained by works or lost by bad behavior. It is all of grace and is a gift received by faith alone.
However, βthe reward of the inheritanceβ (Col. 3:24) is different from our βthe inheritance of the saints in light.β The βreward of the inheritanceβ is something that can be gained or lost based on our service to Christ.
Colossians 3:24 tells us that one who serves the Lord in the workplace βshall receive the reward of the inheritance: for ye serve the Lord Christ.β Thus, we see the receiving of reward is dependent upon good and faithful service rendered to Christ. Colossians 2:18 also warns the church of the possibility of losing rewards: βLet no man beguile [defraud or cheat] you of your reward in a voluntary humility and worshipping of angelsβ¦.β
The reward of the inheritance refers to heavenly, spiritual, and eternal rewards. These will be given or withheld, won or lost when we stand before the Lord at the Judgment Seat of Christ (Rom. 14:10-12). It is at that day when each believer will individually stand before the Lord to give an account, that believers who faithfully labor in their jobs and ministries and serve the Lord in them will be recompensed and given an eternal reward by Him.
Your daily work goes into eternity. Your job has eternal significance. You might feel as if your work doesnβt matter in the grand scheme of things. You get called out to a job for a sink thatβs leaking, you fix the pipes like youβve done a thousand times before, and you wonder what difference it makes. You go to your class every day and teach the children the things youβve been teaching for many years, and you wonder if it is making any difference.
Work often feels futile and pointless. This passage reminds you that it isnβt. What you do matters forever. The kids you taught might not care that you poured your heart out teaching them, and they might not ever realize how much it helped them in life. In the house where you ably fixed the plumbing, conscientiously caring that you did a good job, the residents wonβt remember you were there in a day or two, and they might not remember your name. But Christ cares. He knows. He wonβt forget. He will reward you for it one day. Everything you did for the glory of Christ and as a godly testimony for Him will be remembered forever.
Regarding the receiving of the reward of the inheritance at the Judgment Seat of Christ, Paul further points out that, at that day, βhe that doeth wrong shall receive for the wrong which he hath done: and there is no respect of personsβ (Col. 3:25).
The motives, attitudes, and conduct of the believing workman are the issue in this context. βHe that doeth wrongβ is obviously one who does the opposite of what is right, and in this context, it means to do the opposite of everything Paul said the believer should do in the workplace. It means to be habitually stubborn, insubordinate, and disobedient to the supervisor. It means to work with eyeservice and superficial cooperation, not giving a full effort or working as to the Lord.
Paul says when this kind of unfaithful workman stands before the Lord at the Judgment Seat, he will βreceive for the wrong which he hath doneβ in the sense that he will receive nothing. βHe shall suffer lossβ of reward (cf. 1 Cor. 3:15). The heavenly rewards of our inheritance that we could have received from the Lordβs own hand, had we been faithful laborers, will be withheld.
At the Bema Seat, with βno respect of personsβ (Col. 3:25), or without favoritism, the impartial Judge and Head of the Church will righteously judge the entire Body of Christ. On that day, every believer in Christ can expect to receive a reward for good conduct or suffer loss of reward for consistent misconduct in their daily employment. As 2 Corinthians 5:10 reminds us,
βFor we must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ; that every one may receive the things done in his body, according to that he hath done, whether it be good or bad.β
By the grace of God, may we resolve to be faithful, godly workers for the glory of our Savior!
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βCould the individual named Gaius, whom John wrote 3 John to, be the same Gaius that Paul baptized in 1 Corinthians 1?β
While this question on the surface might seem of little consequence, in reality, there are those who have used such situations to suggest that the Apostle Paul and the 12 Apostles had the same audience, which is not the case (cf. Rom. 11:13; Gal. 1:16; 2:7-9).
Furthermore, it does not seem likely that the Gaius that John mentioned in 3 John was the same Gaius that Paul baptized since John suggests in verse 4 that his Gaius was one of his βchildren,β meaning he was led to the Lord by John. We would expect that the Gaius Paul baptized (1 Cor. 1:14) would have been led to the Lord by Paul when he visited Corinth.
Gaius was one of the more popular names of the time. In fact, Paul likely worked with at least two different men named Gaius. One from Macedonia (Greece cf. Acts 19:29) and another from Derbe, which is in Asia Minor β modern-day Turkey (cf. Acts 20:4).
Interestingly, Paul wrote Romans while being hosted by a Gaius (cf. Rom. 16:23), and this almost certainly was the Gaius of Corinth, for in the same verse that he mentions Gaius, he also sends greetings to the Romans from another man named Erastus, who, according to 2 Timothy 4:20, lived in Corinth.
Another detail that suggests that Paul wrote Romans from Corinth is in Romans 15:26, where he said he had a contribution from those in Macedonia and Achaia (regions very close to Corinth) to take to Jerusalem.
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Robert does an excellent job of showed that the King James Bible is Holy Spirit inspired. I also believe what he says. Listen to what he says about the people who created the KJB. This is very enlightening.
βWhy the 70th Week is Still Futureβ The timing of 70th Week β the final 7 years of this era of human history β is explored in Part 1-3 of this series
This has to with the church using replacement theology, not rightly dividing the word. I am experiencing this today. I attend a church that believes we are under the new covenant, and we are a part of the Jewish church
We recognize Paulβs distinctive apostleship and follow a dispensational approach to Bible study as outlined in his epistles (1Cor15:3-4, Eph2:8-9, Ro11:6, Ro16:25, Eph3, 2Tim 2:15).
David articulates Dispensation Very Well First, we all share in the Belief as Paul says many times, Faith and Faith alone leads us unto Salvation. A required point for many of us. But from their we deviate. I believe through the holy spirit, prayer, and reading my KJV bible that Paul teaches a rightly divided
Additionally, we study God's word, rightly divided, recognizing Paul's distinctive apostleship as outlined in his epistles. We love the Lord, His word, and each other, and are committed to glorifying our Saviour in all that we do. We invite you to join us for worship, Bible study, and fellowship! Our in-person meetings are on Sunday mornings and Wednesday evenings.
It Hurts Because It's True ββthe Religious decline is only now tipping society slightly towards its inevitable conclusionsβ¦. lots of suffering to come if we don't tip the scale back towards sanity. And that sanity is religion.
Great clip, and as a believer I must point out that the drama in the clip isn't hard to believe but does add to the account of what the bible says. One needs to read the accounts in Mathew, Mark. Luke and John. But for us Gentiles Paul's epistle provide much more enlightenment.
David B Curtis of the Berean Bible Church studies Melchizedek This study seems to be a lean topic to study but David finds much to say about it. I like his approach to these two messages. I include his notes and audios below. He is a true Berean and this is a Berean Bible Church.
This video is excellent in understanding Dispensation of the Grace of God. Finished Work Fellowship is there website, Its is always good when another part of the Body of Christ puts out good material for all of us to view. See what you think and Review for me.
People/Things Testify of Jesus
a. Adam, Abel, Seth, Noah, Enoch, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, Job, Moses, Joshua, Judges (Samson), David, Solomon, Elijah, Elisha, Isaiah, Daniel, Nehemiah, Jonah, Jeremiah, Zerubbabel
b. The priest, the prophet, the king, the promise, the law, the psalms (lament, victory)
c. The lamb, goat, the mercy seat, the city, the temple, the ark, the word
Romans is the single greatest Book in God's Word. I use both CSV and KJV.
This book is full first in the Bible. When one reads Romans it is key to see first who Paul is - An Apostle by Grace
The MYSTERY βHid in Godβ was the
divine purpose to make of Jew and Gentile
a whole new thing, that is, the Church,
which is Christβs Body. The revelation of
this Mystery was committed to Paul, and
it is in his writings alone that we find the
doctrine, position, walk and destiny of the
Church