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THE PARABLE OF THE LAMB
           
There was a rich man and a poor man in one city, so the story goes. The poor man owned one solitary ewe lamb and the rich, respected, righteous fellow owned many flocks and herds of countless sheep and cattle.
            The poor man loved the lamb as a pet. He let it eat from the table, drink from his own cup, he even held it in his arms close to his heart like it was one of his own children. You know how people can be with their pets. He was poor, but content with God’s love.
            Then, it so happened that one day a traveler stopped in at the home of the rich man.  The rich man, instead of taking out one of his own flock to throw a party for the stranger took the poor man’s little lamb, slaughtered it, dressed it, and had a fine feast with the stranger.
            What should be done to that rich man when it was discovered what he has done?
            Before you answer, know this: That rich man is you and me.
            That’s correct, but before you say, “Oh, Get Out!” Hear me out. Tonight when you go to sleep consider the parable for what it’s worth. It has to do with Easter, though it may not seem so on the face of it. Be aware that you have taken Jesus, the innocent lamb and slaughtered Him for your own pleasure whenever you have broken the Ten Commandments, done evil against God, failed to love your neighbor as yourself, or by generally satisfying your own lusts and desires at the expense of another. Every time you have hated someone, you who have thought yourselves to be rich in righteousness, you have killed in your heart. The Bible calls you and me an outright murderer, that’s right, a murderer, (see 1 John) when we have gone off and hated someone. Every time you have coveted another man’s wife or envied his good fortune, you have been as the man who slaughtered the innocent lamb. So you and I stand together, condemned.
            But know this also. There is hope to have the sentence staid. For even the wicked rich man in this allegory (but it is a true story) was saved from eternal damnation and judgment.  The man was King David of Israel. King David, that’s right!  The king God greatly loved.  The king whose lineage bore Jesus of Nazareth, the ultimate Lamb of God that takes away the sins of the world, the Lamb of God that was slain, the Lamb of God that we “good” people have slain in our hearts.
            For the deed that was done (stealing a man’s wife and having the man killed, II Sam. 12) David was punished, but God offered him forgiveness despite this despicable act.  David had a heart to repent and it saved him from God’s terrible justice because God He is a merciful God.  That is why God sent His only Son to die for us, because He is merciful.         
            And if you have not already repented of your covetousness, hatred, envy, deceit, or greed you can be like David and turn this day into Easter, even if it is the 30th of whenever. Turn to God. Turn this day, this night into Easter. Come to Jesus, the Lamb of lambs.  Be as the poor man and give your heart to the Lamb.  Come to Jesus.  The Lamb lives.  If you will come to him and admit your unrighteousness and ask for forgiveness, He will come into your heart and make you a new creature.  Admit to Him that you are poor in the ways of God.  He will not make you ashamed, but He will restore joy, peace, happiness and an abundant life to you, not only in this world but in the world to come.  Come to Jesus.
    THE LAMB LIVES!

OUR THREE GREAT ENEMIES
     OVERCOMING IN CHRIST

1. THE FLESH (THIS SECTION)

    Beware the S.N.A.R.E.
    Flee from a World of sin
    The Pride of Life
    Ego Ought not Eclipse Son
    Mortify deeds of the body
2. THE WORLD
    To Antichrist WORLD
3. Demonic
     To Antichrist Demonic



THE ANTICHRIST -
COMING
PERSON/EMPIRE: ONE KINGDOM



MYSTERY BABYLON SECTION


Signs of Christ's Return

to Brideship


Flee From These
Four Worlds of Flesh


                                                                                                   by Terry Smith
Flee From Your Flesh
            There are four particular areas of sin, whole worlds in themselves, from which we are advised by the Scriptures to "flee". For older mature Christians these four areas serve as a mirror to examine one self. For the younger Christian, still learning to overcome, they are admonishments to righteousness, advice that can further circumcise the heart. Our Christian journey is not only to Brideship but includes a departure from the world and its existence in sin.  The young Christian must realize that to begin the journey to the Father requires that we leave our home (of sin). We should know that there is no shame in retreating from these things, no shame in fleeing just as an honest man would flee a den of thieves, or a godly woman would flee a house of prostitution, or a criminal would revel in being released from prison.

            When we think of winning a battle we usually think of aggressively confronting some foe face to face. Military men set out to destroy their enemy. Football teams go at one another head on head. Politicians assail their opponents openly. We Christians regularly encourage one another to stand in faith and resist the Devil. We exhort one another to seek out opportunities to defeat the enemy "by the blood of the Lamb and the word of our testimony." And that, my friends is as it ought to be.
            But when it comes to the adversary called sin and stumbling about in Satan's unlit ballpark of lust and greed, there is no shame in making a hasty retreat. The Scriptures openly demand of us that we "flee from these things."
            The one whom God sent to prepare the way for the coming of the Lord preached sternly about fleeing from sin. When the Pharisees and religious leaders of Israel came out to see John the Baptist in the wilderness, where he was preaching repentance, John scolded them loudly, "0 generation of vipers, who hath warned you to flee from the wrath to come. Bring forth therefore fruits meet for repentance." The pretentious men, who were trying to play both ends against the middle, were hoping to flee God's wrath without fleeing the sin that brings God's wrath upon us.
            But those who want to please God are beckoned to Christ and thereby immediately and instinctively know that it is Christ's will that they make a hasty and unashamed withdrawal from sin, so they can escape from the wrath that is to come and thereby make their "election and calling sure." Those who are ready and willing to make a retreat from sin's seductive arms are the ones John sought to baptize.
            God's word makes no secret of saying, "Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom of God? Be not deceived: neither fornicators, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor effeminate, nor abusers of themselves with mankind, nor thieves, nor covetous, nor drunkards, nor revilers, nor extortioners, shall inherit the kingdom of God". 1 Cor. 6:9-10

Flee these Four ‘Worlds’ of FLESH
            There are four particular areas of sin, whole worlds in themselves, from which we are advised by the Scriptures to "flee". For older mature Christians these four areas serve as a mirror to examine one self. For the younger Christian, still learning to overcome, they are admonishments to righteousness, advice that can further circumcise the heart. Our Christian journey is not only to Brideship but includes a departure from the world and its existence in sin.  The young Christian must realize that to begin the journey to the Father requires that we leave our home (of sin). We should know that there is no shame in retreating from these things, no shame in fleeing just as an honest man would flee a den of thieves, or a godly woman would flee a house of prostitution, or a criminal would revel in being released from prison.
            It is no mistake that these four Biblical exhortations to flee are made to young Christians. Two are to the church of Corinth (an immature church in Christ) and two are to Timothy, Paul's young protégé.

The four worlds of THE FLESH we are advised to flee from are:

  1. Fornication (1 Cor. 6:18)
  2. Idolatry (1 Cor. 10:14)
  3. Love of money (Mammon) (1 Tim. 6:11)
  4. Youthful lusts (2 Tim 2.22)

 

Fornication
            In his letter to the Corinthians, that greatly zealous but immature church, Paul warns them to "flee fornication".
            "What, know ye not that he which is joined to an harlot is one body? for two, saith he, shall be one flesh. But he that is joined unto the Lord is one spirit. Flee fornication. Every sin that a man doeth is without the body; but he that committeth fornication sinneth against his own body. What, know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost which is in you, which ye have of God, and ye are not your own. For ye are bought with a price; therefore glorify God in your body, and in your spirit, which are God's." 1 Cor. 6:16-20
            Christians must move away from any form of fornication as revealed to them by the Spirit of God, pornography, adultery and the carnal sins that would cause them to be joined to anything unholy.

Idolatry
            Later, in the same letter, Paul warns the Corinthians to flee a second destructive sin.
"Wherefore, my dearly beloved, flee from idolatry."
            Paul reminds the Corinthians that all those who fell in the wilderness after being delivered out of Egypt had eaten the same manna and had drunk from the same Rock. They had all been baptized through the waters of the Red Sea and had eaten the same spiritual food. But they were not all pleasing to God because they eventually fell prey to the sin that was nestled within their rebellious hearts. They had fled from Egypt, but not sin. They had fled from the wrath of Pharaoh, but not the wrath of God. They had fled bondage and servitude but not slavery to fornication, idolatry, evil lusts and the desire for worldly comforts and riches. They had not fled sin.
            Idolatry takes on forms subtle as well as blatant. Telling Christians not to be idolaters, Paul quotes a curious Scripture from Exodus. "The people sat down to eat and drink, and rose up to play." The people had shed God completely. They had decided to do their own thing and have fun doing it. Idolatry is coveting anything but God. Flee covetousness, flee anything that is put ahead of Jesus Christ in your life, because brothers and sisters, that is what idolatry is all about.

The Love of Money - Riches
            To Timothy, Paul wrote of two things from which the wise Christian will flee without shame. The first was the pursuit of riches.
"But they that be rich fall into temptation and a snare, and into many foolish and hurtful lusts, which drown men in destruction and perdition. For the love of money is the root of all evil: which while some coveted after, they have erred from the faith, and pierced themselves through with many sorrows. But thou, 0 man of God, flee these things; and follow after righteousness, godliness, faith, love, patience, meekness. Fight the good fight of faith, lay hold on eternal life, whereunto thou art also called, and hast professed a good profession before many witnesses."
            As the proverb says, let me not be poor so I have to steal and sin against God, and let me not be too rich so I forget about God. Flee the love of money and the pursuit of worldly riches. Such simple advice must be taken on faith. We must let the experience of God's love and care prove to us that He knows how to take care of His own. God wants to usher us into a world of faith where we can truly know that man does not live by bread alone. Money cannot buy happiness, only Jesus Christ and His personal presence in our daily lives can purchase an abundant life for us.

Youthful Lusts
            The last instance of fleeing sin comes when Paul, in his second letter to Timothy, exhorts his young follower to "flee youthful lusts", and "follow righteousness, faith, charity, peace, with them that call on the Lord out of a pure heart."
            Youthful lusts encompass a huge world of pride, ambitions, addictions, self intoxication, indulgence, avarice, and on and on. Flee like you were fleeing from a swarm of killer bees, these spiritual cancers. All of these things are motivational drives lodged deep within our nature that are by their nature, uncontrollable. The advice to follow after God's ways with those of a pure heart not only advises us to do the right thing, but it warns us to stay out of Satan's ballpark, a ballpark that was once our home field and though we were the constant loser we always felt we were doing very well.
            The reader should not only be aware of fleeing these "fleshly worlds" of sin, but the Christian should take note of the Scriptures in the epistles and gospels that tell us to "follow after" something. Let us flee the flesh and sin and follow after God and His ways, moving toward the destination of our vigorous adventure leading to intimacy with God. So, flee - unashamed all Christians should be scared of being tainted in any way by these four fleshly devourers of the soul. Flee fornication, flee idolatry, flee the love of money with its pursuit of riches, and flee every youthful lust and self indulgent addiction.
            Then we can be free to follow after good things, healthy and strong in life, separating our self from worlds of Flesh that can so easily take hold on us - Let us run the race and follow after godliness, charity, hope, faith and those things that edify the Church of Christ. Let us follow after God "with those who call on the Lord out of a pure heart."

See: Beware the Snare