Paul's second letter to the Thessalonians was a bit different from his first one. The first was full of thanksgiving and exhortation. The second letter was a bit more somber. Apparently between the two letters, the church there had come under some persecution.
Paul wrote this second letter less than a year after writing the first one.
There was some confusion among the people concerning the second coming. Many
thought it was imminent and so were just waiting without doing much. He wrote
this letter to clear up the confusion concerning Jesus’ second coming. Read I
Thessalonians 4:16-17 and then read 2 Thessalonians 2:1-12. Paul made it very
clear what things MUST take place BEFORE Jesus returns.
The events before the second coming include a “falling away” and the man of
lawlessness revealed:
1. falling away
2. anti-Christ is revealed,
3. anti-Christ will declare he’s God (the Messiah) in a temple in Jerusalem not
yet built.
Through satanic empowerment, the lawless one will display counterfeit signs,
wonders, and miracles and deceive many people. People will perish because they
do not love the truth. If we love the truth we will study and search for it. If
we don’t know the truth we will be deceived.
“But the Lord is faithful, and he will strengthen and protect you from the
evil one.”
We should have no fear of the evil one or the powerful forces of evil because
we will be protected from spiritual harm if we trust in Him. We do need to
stand firm with all the armor of God in place. (see Ephesians 6)
We must understand that spiritual warfare is real. We must take spiritual
attacks seriously. How do we know when something is a spiritual attack?
We must know our enemy the devil, his tactics and his style. How do we know our
enemy? We must study, memorize, and apply scripture. We must be in
communication with the Lord through prayer. We must be in fellowship with
other believers.
As humans we think of attacks as something that hurts. In reality the attacks
from Satan may feel good. He "whispers" in the ear such things as,
“you don’t really need to go to church or fellowship group today, or you’re too
tired to read your Bible, or you’re running late this morning so you don’t have
time to pray", etc. He helps us rationalize away spiritual disciplines,
(devotions, prayer, Bible study, worship and praise, fellowship with other
believers) things that draw us closer to God.
Some of the devil’s deadly “Ds”:
Doubt, when unchecked leads to disbelief. Disappointment leads to discouragement,
which leads to despair. Distraction, delay, discord, deceit, all lead to
division.
If the things that happen to us push us away from God, then it’s from Satan. If
things pull us to God and give glory to Him, then it’s from God no matter how
it feels to us, even if it’s painful.
What is Paul’s distinguishing mark? Could it be the large letters he uses as he
writes because his vision is poor?
Apollos “was a learned man, with a thorough knowledge of the
Scriptures. He had been instructed in the way of the Lord, and he spoke with
great fervor and taught about Jesus accurately, though he knew only the baptism
of John.”
Apollos knew about Jesus but didn’t know Jesus.
He, along with the Old Testament people believed in the Messiah, the Redeemer,
in advance of His coming. Apollos was teaching about the Messiah.
A similar thing occurred with Paul and some followers in Ephesus. They received
only the baptism of John, the baptism of repentance. Paul baptized them in the
name of Jesus and they received Jesus as personal Lord and Savior and they
received the Holy Spirit.
Why were the seven sons of Sceva not able to drive out the evil spirit? Could
it be that they were just saying words and weren’t given the power or authority
to drive out demons? Notice what happened when the people heard about it. They
were seized with fear and openly confessed their sins. Many who practiced
sorcery brought their scrolls and burned them publicly. These scrolls were very
valuable, just for the paper itself, not to mention what was inscribed on them.
The parchment itself was expensive. The scripture tells us that the scrolls
were worth about 50,000 days wages. That’s the equivalent of about 137 years
wages. Talk about selling out!
No comments:
Post a Comment