Friday, June 7, 2024

The Last Days Of The World XV

 We can either establish and sanctify the Lord in our hearts and make the knowledge of Him our singular pursuit and desire, or hyperventilate each time we hear some new conflict has escalated or some new mystery illness is making its way across the globe with an almost, but not quite 1% mortality rate.

But that already happened; we saw pestilence. But Jesus said pestilences, not pestilence, and if you thought the test run was bad, just wait until they tweak the next iteration. In modern parlance, it’s called gain-of-function research; in reality, it’s finding new and inventive ways to make largely innocuous pathogens deadlier and more transmissible. It’s little weasely men in lab coats playing at being gods without the love and compassion the one true God has for His creation.

While the God of the Bible so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, these new gods, at least gods in their estimation, have no such empathy. It’s all about omelets and eggs to them and being unable to make one without breaking the other.

I actually heard a panel discussion between men of science once, lamenting the short incubation window of Ebola because it made it so difficult to spread. People just die too quickly from Ebola for it to spread effectively. It takes as little as two days for symptoms to appear after someone is exposed to it, and that’s not nearly enough time for them to travel to international hubs or busy metropolitan cities. Imagine the horror they could unleash on the world if they could push incubation to a couple of weeks rather than a couple of days. As the adage goes, there’s dying, then there’s dying of Ebola. I’ll spare you the details. It’s neither fun, painless, or peaceful.

Pestilences, outbreaks of contagion such as the bubonic plague, avian flu, leprosy, and smallpox, have occurred in the past, but they affected far fewer individuals than the most recent iteration, and the next iteration will be worse still, both in size, severity, and scope.

You can’t scare the world to a screeching halt with the sniffles again, but bleeding from their orifices might give most folks a reason for pause and reflection.

Nothing Jesus said regarding the last days is mundane. If something was mentioned within the context of His revelation, then there will be something special and unique about it when it is fulfilled. Whether all of them are happening in unison, their frequency and intensity being unprecedented, or the events spanning the globe rather than just specific regions, something will make them stand out and be readily identified as the things He spoke of.

To those insisting that everything Jesus spoke of during His Olivet discourse has already come to pass, you’re unoriginal and wrong. It’s okay to be wrong if you’re willing to acknowledge that you might be, but as far as being unoriginal, you’re two thousand years too late to peddle that particular whopper. Paul said as much and warned of those who would, by spirit, by word, or by letter, attempt to trouble and shake in mind the household of faith.

2 Thessalonians 2:1-2, “Now, brethren, concerning the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ and our gathering together to Him, we ask you, not to be soon shaken in mind or troubled, either by spirit or by word or by letter, as if from us, as though the day of Christ had come.”

Jesus was referencing the declarative statement He made at the beginning of the chapter while prophesying the temple's destruction and not one stone being left upon another when He said this generation would not pass away until all those things occurred. It didn’t. A generation is 40 years. Thirty-seven years after Jesus spoke the words He did, the temple was destroyed.

Those who remembered His words and saw Jerusalem surrounded by armies fled and were spared. Those who ignored or otherwise waved off His warnings were trampled underfoot.

Luke 21:20-22, “But when you see Jerusalem surrounded by armies, then know that its desolation is near. Then let those who are in Judea flee to the mountains, let those who are in the midst of her depart, and let no those who are in the country enter her. For these are the days of vengeance, that all things which are written may be fulfilled.”

It is an incontrovertible historical fact that the early Christians fled Jerusalem for Pella before the Romans sacked it and the temple. There are manuscripts that survived from the fourth century by two independent sources that described their flight when they saw Jerusalem surrounded by armies.

We’re taking two separate events separated by thousands of years and attempting to throw them into the sloppy doctrine blender and give them a whirl. It’s easier that way, isn’t it? It all happened, and we’re just the fever dream within a fever dream of some spaceman with three mouths and six eyes.

What Jesus said would happen to the temple happened within the timeframe He said it would. The other things have yet to happen because He said they would occur prior to His return and the end of the age. If, perchance, a catastrophe on the scale of what Jesus spoke had occurred in 70 AD, it would be evident in the historical text since the temple's destruction and the sacking of Jerusalem were so documented. We’re talking cataclysmic events that would have been recorded, likely by more than one source, and that’s not even getting into individuals throughout Jerusalem and Judea mysteriously disappearing.

Some things, such as being persecuted and hated by those of the world, are not exclusive to one era or another but a running theme throughout both. While those of the early church were told to flee when they saw these things begin to happen because it was not yet their time, we are told that he who endures to the end shall be saved.

The difference between then and now is that we will have nowhere to run to. The whole world lies under the sway of the wicked one. When the noose begins to tighten, and the children of God are persecuted even in places they deemed safe havens, all that will be left for them to do is endure.

With love in Christ,

Michael Boldea, Jr.  

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