Rev 20:12 Sinners
Before the Great White Throne 8/13/2006 ßà
- Judgment Day (Rev
20:11-15, 4:3, John 19:13, 5:28-29,
1Thes 4:17, 1Cor 15:52, Rev
11:12)
#1. A
Righteous Judge (Rev 20:11,
Joh 5:22,27, Mat
25:31-33, 1Thes 4:13-18, Eph
2:3, 1:4)
·
The Books Were Opened (Rev 20:12, 2Cor
5:10, Rom 8:1,32, 14:10, 9:14-16, Ps 9:7-8, 89:14)
#2. According
to Their Works (Rev 20:12, Psalm 103:12, Mic 7:19, Isa 43:25,
Mat 12:36, Rom 12:19, Prov 24:12, Eccl 12:14, Jer 32:19, Mat 16:27, Rev 17:8)
- Death and the Grave Delivered Up the Dead (Rev 20:13)
#3. The
Lake of Fire
(Rev 20:14-15, 21:8,
Mark 9:44,46,48, Rom 3:18, Jer 29:13, Heb 2:3)
Please open your Bibles to the Revelation of Jesus Christ, Rev 20:11 (2X). God gave here a new
vision. John said, “And I saw a great white throne”. This is a totally
different place than the place where fire came down from God on all those that
were deceived by the Devil. It is not a place on this earth, but it is
definitely a place somewhere, since the people who stand before the Judgment
throne are standing there as complete human beings, with body and soul. The
title of this sermon is: “….....”
(2X).
- Judgment
Day (Rev 20:11-15,
4:3, John 19:13,
5:28-29, 1Thes
4:17, 1Cor 15:52, Rev 11:12)
Re 20:11 ¶ And
I saw a great white throne, and him that sat on it, from whose face the earth
and the heaven fled away; and there was found no place for them.
Re 20:12 And I saw the dead, small and great, stand
before God; and the books were opened: and another book was opened, which is the
book of life: and the dead were judged out of those things which were
written in the books, according to their works.
Re 20:13 And the sea gave up the dead which were in
it; and death and hell delivered up the dead which were in them: and they were
judged every man according to their works.
Re 20:14 And death and hell were cast into the lake of
fire. This is the second death.
Re 20:15 And whosoever was not found written in the
book of life was cast into the lake of fire.
This great white throne is the Judgment throne, plain and simple.
But God does not always sit on the Judgment throne. For example we read in Rev
4:3, “And he that sat was to look upon like a jasper and a sardine
stone: and there was a rainbow round about the throne, in sight like
unto an emerald”. This is just a faint reflection of the throne upon which
God sits in all His glory throughout the ages. There are only two times
that God will sit on the Judgment throne: Once in AD 33, when Christ was judged
on the cross for our sins that were laden on Him, Christ appeared before the
Judgment throne of God, and God poured upon Him the equivalent of the Judgment
that was due for our sins. And the second time God will sit on the Judgment
throne is when at the end of the world, He shall sit on the great white throne
here as described here in Rev 20:11.
Now, we should not imagine that this is a real physical throne on
which God will sit. Remember, we are reading this in Revelation, which is an
Epistle full of symbolism. God does not need a material throne to sit on when
He judges. This description is only given to us to make us understand this
event in earthly terms. But God did not reveal what it really would be, and we
would probably not understand it either. Please turn in your Bibles to
the Gospel according to John, John 19:13
(2X). Some people are looking for the Bema Seat, which preachers in many
churches speak about as the Judgment throne where our good works are going to
be rewarded. They think that this event before the great white throne here in Rev 20:11 is the event where the bad guys, the
unsaved, are going to be sent to Hell, whereas the good guys, the saved people,
are going to receive special rewards for their good behavior while they were
living here on this earth. Let us now address this question of special rewards,
for it is being taught in many churches. We read in Joh 19:13,
Joh 19:13 When
Pilate therefore heard that saying, he brought Jesus forth, and sat down in the
judgment seat (Gr: Bema) in a place that is called the Pavement, but in
the Hebrew, Gabbatha.
Now we see here clearly that the Bema Seat is another name for the
Judgment Seat. Christ was not rewarded for His good works at the Bema Seat; He
was sent to the cross. And thus the question of special rewards is shifted to
the great white throne. Is the great white throne judgment the event where the
saints are going to receive extra rewards for their good works on this earth? Please
turn to chapter 5 of this Gospel according to John, John 5:28 (2X). Who are the people
that are standing here before the Judgment throne? Are all people bodily
resurrected on the same day? And indeed, this is true. There is not a hint
anywhere in the NT that the unsaved will be resurrected 1000 years after the
saints have been resurrected. They all are resurrected on the same day. The
Lord Jesus said in Joh 5:28-29,
Joh 5:28-29
Marvel not at this: for the hour is coming, in the which all that are in
the graves shall hear his voice, And
shall come forth; they that have done good, unto the resurrection of life; and
they that have done evil, unto the resurrection of damnation.
Now we know from 1Thes 4, and from 1Cor 15, and from Rev 11, that
this bodily resurrection of the saints “unto the resurrection of life”
coincides with what is called The Rapture. The saints are snatched away
from this earth to be with Christ forever, and the unsaved remain on
this earth with bodies that are characterized as “unto the resurrection of
damnation”. And so, these passages indicate that the ones standing before the
great white throne are only the unsaved. We will revisit this subject later.
First we must look at the person who is sitting on the throne in Rev 20:11. Please turn again to Rev 20:11 ()
#1. A
Righteous Judge (Rev 20:11,
Joh 5:22,27, Mat 25:31-33,
1Thes 4:13-18, Eph 2:3, 1:4)
Who is that person sitting on the great white throne, which is
here the Judgment throne?
Re 20:11 ¶ And
I saw a great white throne, and him that sat on it, from whose face the earth
and the heaven fled away; and there was found no place for them.
And why does He sit on a great white throne? First of all,
it is a great throne, for literally our God is very great. He is greater
than this universe which He made. He is also a great God for the beautiful
Gospel that He left us in this great Book, and for showing us His great power
and wisdom by which He defeated Satan, and for His great love for us which He
manifested on the cross, and more particularly in Rev 20:11 for His great
righteousness as a righteous Judge which He demonstrated by sending His only
begotten Son to pay for the sins that He was willing to bear. Moreover the
throne is a white throne to symbolize the glory and the holiness and the
righteousness of this Judge, and therefore also of the perfect holiness and
righteousness of the judgment which proceeds from Him. Please turn again
to the Gospel according to John, John 5:22
(2X). Let us now consider the Person who sits on this throne. More than
once do the Scriptures speak of the fact that Christ shall be the Judge of the
whole world on the Last Day, and also that we must all appear before the
Judgment seat of Christ. For example we rea
John 5:22 For the Father judgeth no man, but hath
committed all judgment unto the Son:
The Father has delegated all judgment to the Son. Of course! A
throne is made for someone with a
body. Of the
three persons in the triune Godhead only Christ has a body. Moreover we read in
V. 27,
John 5:27 And hath given him authority to execute
judgment also, because he is the Son of man.
Please turn about 120 pages to your left, to the Gospel according
to Matthew, Mat 25:31 (2X). The Lord Jesus told us here the parable of
the sheep and the goats. We need to understand that this is a parable. It is
not the real scenario of the Judgment on the Last Day. The real scenario is
given in 1Thes 4:13-18.
But here, in this parable, the Lord Jesus is teaching us different doctrines. First
of all, in this parable Christ teaches us that He will be the Judge. We read in
Mat 25:31,
Mt 25:31-32
When the Son of man shall come in his glory, and all the holy angels
with him, then shall he sit upon the throne of his glory:
And before him shall be gathered all nations: and he shall separate them
one from another, as a shepherd divideth his sheep from the goats:
Mt 25:33 And
he shall set the sheep on his right hand, but the goats on the left. (And so
on.)
Secondly, Christ shall come in all His glory and all the holy
angels with Him, for He is God. Then He shall gather all nations for judgment,
and He shall separate the saved, the sheep, from the unsaved, the goats. This
tells us that we cannot distinguish the sheep from the goats until the Lord
separates them, and then we shall see. Thirdly, you are either born as a
sheep, or you are born as a goat. Sheep do not turn into goats and goats do not
turn into sheep. The sovereignty of God in choosing who shall be sheep and who
shall be goats is on display. The sheep are not chosen because they are so much
nicer animals than goats, for God says in Eph 2:3 that “we were by
nature the children of wrath, even as others”, which means we were in our
basic human nature as rotten as others who never become saved. These are the
doctrines we must learn from this parable, but the scenario of the Last Days we
must learn from other passages. And so, Christ is the Judge who sits on
the great white throne in Rev 20:11.
And He is a righteous Judge who will apply the exact penalty that was
destined for the crime, as written in His Law Book. He will do that for every
crime, and He will apply that same penalty for every one standing before His
Judgment throne who bears the guilt of that crime, regardless whether it is a
stranger or a close relative. And so, when the Lord Jesus stood before the
Judgment throne of God, in AD 33, with all my sins laden on Him, He had to
endure the penalty that was due for the crimes that I committed. And that
penalty was the equivalent of an eternity in Hell. It would take me an
eternity to pay for all my sins. But since the Lord Jesus was also God He could
pay this penalty in less than 24 hours. And He did that willingly for a
helpless sinner that I am. I will never understand how great His sufferings
were, but I am eternally grateful that He did it for me. And He did this for
many others, for many who are called God’s elect! There are many passages in
the Bible, such as Eph 1:4, where we read that WE, the elect of
God, were in Christ before the foundation of the world. We were in
Christ when He stood laden with our sins before the Judgment throne of God. We
were crucified with Christ. We were in Christ when He endured the penalty of
the equivalent of an eternity in Hell. We died with Christ. We were raised with
Christ. We ascended with Christ into heaven (past tense). We are seated with
Christ in the heavenlies, all because we were and we are in Christ. But God
is a righteous Judge who will not inflict the same penalty twice.
When the Lord Jesus Christ as the Lamb of God bore the sins of many and paid
for those sins on the cross, He endured the equivalent of an eternity in Hell
for all His elect. It would then be an insult to the righteousness and the
wisdom of God to assume that some of these people would still go to Hell
because there is one sin that the Lord did not pay for, such as the sin of
unbelief. We all were unbelievers at some point in time. None of us deserved to
receive faith unto salvation. And so, Christ only suffered on the cross for
those whom He chose in His wisdom to receive this faith unto salvation. Christ
did not suffer the equivalent of an eternity in Hell for those who themselves are
going to Hell. But God, the righteous Judge, will not inflict the same
penalty twice. We have already endured Hell with Christ and in Christ when He
was on the cross. And thus God will never send us to Hell again because we have
already been there. This is the Gospel; this is the Good News. But it is
only Good News for those who have discovered how great sinners they are, and
that they cannot help themselves out of their predicament of being on a
slippery slide into Hell. But for those who in their pride are pointing to some
good work they have done, such as accepting the Lord Jesus Christ, God has for
them no salvation, for they have their reward already. They have their reward
now for feeling good that they have made such a good choice. This is the only
reward they will receive. Please turn again to the Revelation of Jesus
Christ, Rev 20:12 (2X). There
we read:
·
The
Books Were Opened (Rev 20:12, 2Cor 5:10, Rom 8:1,32, 14:10, 9:14-16,
Ps 9:7-8, 89:14)
What books are these? And who are standing here before
Christ as the Judge? An awesome and threatening verse. Will all my thoughts and
actions be made known to everyone there? We read in Rev
Re 20:12 And I saw the dead, small and great, stand
before God; and the books were opened: and another book was opened, which is the
book of life: and the dead were judged out of those things which were
written in the books, according to their works.
John saw the dead. Who are the dead at this point in time? Are
these all the people who have died, and who have now been resurrected in their
new bodies unto the resurrection of life, as well as those in their new bodies
unto the resurrection of damnation? Then what about the saints who have never
died, but who have received their glorified bodies in a moment, in the
twinkling of an eye, at the coming of the Lord? Are they also counted among the
dead? Is this event here the fulfillment of 2Cor 5:10?
2Co 5:10 For
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.
It is taught in many churches that everyone, both the saved
as well as the unsaved, shall stand before the great white throne of Rev 20. This
seems to be repeated in the Epistle to the Romans. Please turn in your
Bibles to the Epistle to the Romans, Rom 8:1 (2X). Is it really true that
the Bible teaches that there is a point in time in the future that we all must
appear before the Judgment throne of Christ? The Bible teaches that the saints
have been judged already at the cross. Can we be judged again? Can we be judged
twice? The Bible teaches that the saints are raptured to be with Christ
forever, and this Rapture occurs just before the great white throne judgment.
Is it possible that we are snatched away from being on the side of Christ, to a
position in front of Him at His Judgment throne? The Bible teaches in Rom
8:1, “There is therefore now no condemnation to them which
are in Christ Jesus, who walk not after the flesh, but after the Spirit”.
This means “no more judgment”, for the only result of judgment is condemnation,
since none of our works are done without sin. But could it be that we will be
judged again? Does not God, in His omniscience, already know in AD 33 what all
our works are going to be? And has not God’s justice been fully satisfied in AD
33? Please drop down to Rom 8:32
(2X). You see, it is totally out of character with God’s system of justice if
the saints must appear again before the Judgment throne of Christ. The great
white throne judgment is not the place where the saints are rewarded for their
good works. Our inheritance is eternal life, which is a far greater gift than
anyone can imagine. God says in Rom 8:32,
“He that spared not his own Son, but delivered him up for us all, how shall
he not with him also freely give us all things?” Do we understand what all
things mean? If God would give all His saints this entire universe, then this
universe is large enough to give each one of the saints an entire galaxy each
one containing billions of stars and billions of planets, and God would still
have many galaxies left over. Such great gifts already boggle the mind. Such
great gifts are already infinitely greater than we could expect from any series
of good works that we possibly could do. But God does not give us that. God
gives us the New Creation, which is far greater and more glorious than this
entire universe plus heaven combined, and on top of that God gives us Himself.
And when He has given us all things, and has given us Himself too, there is
nothing left over for “extra rewards”. Truly, after having received such great
gifts, we would be ashamed to ask for some extra rewards. And that is really
the meaning of Rom 8:32. Please drop down to Rom 14:10 (2X). On the subject matter that all must
stand before the Judgment seat of Christ, this verse is a little clearer than
2Cor 5:10. We read here in Rom 14:10, “But why dost thou judge thy
brother? Or why dost thou set at nought thy brother? For we shall all stand before
the judgment seat of Christ”. Literally the Greek text says in the last
half of this verse, “For ALL shall all stand before the judgment seat of
Christ”. The word “we” is not in this verse. And this is a fundamental
truth. No one goes to heaven or Hell without having stood before the Judgment
throne of Christ at some time or another. But the saints have already stood
before the judgment throne of Christ in AD 33. The saints will not be
judged again, for that will violate the justice of God, for our God is a righteous
Judge. In fact, God is glorified when He is praised for being a righteous
Judge. God says in Psalm 9:7-8, “But the LORD shall endure for ever:
he hath prepared his throne for judgment. And he shall judge the world in righteousness,
he shall minister judgment to the people in uprightness”. You see, in God’s
entire plan of salvation of His elect, and in His condemnation of all the
wicked, God calls Himself absolutely righteous and just. He has prepared His
throne especially for the execution of this plan that He in His sovereign
pleasure has created. Moreover, God says in Psalm 89:14, “Justice
and judgment are the habitation of thy throne: mercy and truth shall go
before thy face”. Basically, the meaning of this verse is, “Justice and
judgment is the foundation of
thy throne: mercy and truth shall go before thy face”. Paraphrased, the
foundation of God’s plan for the creation of this world, and the salvation
program of man, and the glorification of God through all this, is His justice
and judgment in all the affairs of man and angels, in order that His mercy and
the truth of the Word of God shall go forth to praise His holy Name. Therefore,
let no one accuse God of being unrighteous, or unjust, for this triggers the
wrath of God. Please turn a few pages back to Rom 9:14-16 (2X). When
people invent another gospel than the Gospel of the Bible out of fear that it
may offend the ears of the man on the street, and they try to eliminate the
sovereignty of God by crafting a free-will gospel, they are in fact accusing
God of being unrighteous. But God looked down into the future. God addressed
this heinous sin that is now so prevalent in today’s churches in Rom 9:
Ro 9:14-16 What shall we say then? Is there
unrighteousness with God? God forbid. For he saith to Moses, I will have mercy
on whom I will have mercy, and I will have compassion on whom I will have
compassion. So then it is not of him that willeth, nor of him that
runneth, but of God that sheweth mercy
No! The only ones who will stand before the great white throne of Christ
are the unsaved, who will be judged. Our God is an altogether righteous God,
and when the Books are opened and the works of all the unsaved are made public,
no one will object to the just verdict of God to cast these people into Hell. Please
turn again to the Revelation of Jesus Christ, Rev 20:12 (2X). The dead, the unsaved, who are
standing there before the throne in bodies that are destined for eternal
damnation, are judged:
#2. According
to Their Works (Rev 20:12, Psalm 103:12, Mic 7:19, Isa 43:25,
Mat 12:36, Rom 12:19, Prov 24:12, Eccl 12:14, Jer 32:19, Mat 16:27, Rev 17:8)
You see, salvation is all by grace, not by any of our works, not
by our free will, but entirely as a gift from God. But condemnation of
the unsaved is entirely by their works, by their own free will.
Re 20:12 And I saw the dead, small and great, stand
before God; and the books were opened: and another book was opened, which is the
book of life: and the dead were judged out of those things which were
written in the books, according to their works.
We see here that many books are opened. Do not imagine that these
represent real books with black ink on white pages as we know books. There are
no material books in heaven. Does God need a ledger or a tally sheet to keep
track of all the sins people commit? No! God’s mind is infinitely larger than
any computer we can possibly dream of. God remembers every sin of every
human being without writing it in a book. The only reason many books are pictured
here in Rev 20:12 is to let us know
that all the works of men are written in the mind of God. No one will get away
with anything. Every sin shall be accounted for, except the sins of all the
saints, for these have already been judged, and have already been removed from
the memory of God. Did He not say that He has cast our sins from Him as far as
the East is from the West? (Psalm 103:12) Did He not say that He has
cast all our sins in the depths of the sea? (Mic 7:19). Did He not say,
“I, even I, am he that blotteth out thy transgressions for
mine own sake, and will not remember thy sins”? (Isa 43:25). With
these words God comforts us by letting us know that our sins are no longer
found in the books that are opened here in Rev
20:12. But for all the unsaved, even their smallest sins shall be
dug up and declared to all who are present. The Lord Jesus declared this in Mat
12:36, where He said, “But
I say unto you, That every idle word that men shall speak, they shall give
account thereof in the day of judgment”. And thus it is impossible that the
Lord Jesus paid for the sins of everyone in the world, for even this small sin
of speaking an idle word is still remembered, and thus it was not paid for. It
is a lie from all those who adhere to a free-will gospel that the Lord Jesus
paid for the sins of everyone in the whole world. God remembers all the sins of
all the unsaved, and He said, “Vengeance is mine, I will repay, saith the
Lord” (Rom 12:19).
The Scriptures are abundantly clear that many sins have not been paid at the
cross, and that they shall be accounted for on the Day of Judgment. God says in
Prov 24:12, “If thou sayest, Behold, we knew it not; doth not he that
pondereth the heart consider it? and he that keepeth thy soul, doth not
he know it? and shall not he render to every man according
to his works?” God says in Eccl 12:14, “For God shall bring every work
into judgment, with every secret thing, whether it be good, or whether it
be evil”. God says in Jer 32:19, “Great in counsel, and mighty in
work: for thine eyes are open upon all the ways of the sons of men: to
give every one according to his ways, and according to the fruit of his
doings”. God says in Mat 16:27,
“For the Son of man shall come in the glory of his Father with his angels; and
then he shall reward every man according to his works”. From that judgment
there is no appeal, and of that judgment there is no reversal. All the wicked shall
acknowledge that Christ’s judgment is perfectly righteous. All that a man
has ever done will be judged; his internal as well as his external works,
his thoughts and words and deeds, his deepest and secret motives and desires,
and these also in their proper relation and connection with the time, and his
age, and his country, and the environment in which he lived, and in connection
with his gifts and talents, and in connection with his relation to former
generations, and in connection with other people around him, and so on; all
these factors will be made manifest in their proper value and light. And we
shall be able to see clearly the proper value of every man’s work, and the
judgment which is pronounced. And all shall justify Christ in the
judgment given, for Christ’s Judgment shall be based on the Word of God. With
it He shall smite the nations.
And then we read in Rev 20:12
that another book was opened, which is the Book of Life. Why did God
bring up this detail? Please turn a couple pages back to Rev 17:8
(2X). We have heard about this Book of Life. The Bible is that Book of
Life. I have already addressed this topic more than 3 years ago, and I have at
that time indicated how our names are written in that Book of Life. But those
who are following a free-will gospel cannot find their names in the Book of
Life. Why not? God says in Rev 17:8,
Re 17:8 The beast that thou sawest was, and is not;
and shall ascend out of the bottomless pit, and go into perdition: and they
that dwell on the earth shall wonder, whose names were not written in the book
of life from the
foundation of the world, when they behold the beast that was, and is not, and
yet is.
God brings up this Book of Life to show to all the followers of a
free-will gospel how they have violated the Word of God, and therefore their
names are not found in the Book of Life. Likewise all those who have
followed a Charismatic gospel, and all those who have followed a gospel where
something was added or something was taken away from the Word of God, also did
not find their names written in the Book of Life. And they all had to admit
that they were dead to God, for they were not able to show anything of
value to God that they had done. That is why God called them the dead, standing
before His great white throne. Yes they are standing before God. The
beginning of Rev 20:12 reads,
“And I saw the dead, small and great, stand before God”. Christ is on
the throne, but here we read that God sits on the throne. Is this not a clear
proof that Christ is God? Tell that to the cults. But will they believe that
the Lord Jesus Christ is God? No! They will find another reason why they should
not believe, and thus their stubbornness will land them before the great white
throne.
- Death and
the Grave Delivered Up the Dead (Rev
20:13)
Re 20:13 And the sea gave up the dead which were in
it; and death and hell delivered up the dead which were in them: and they were
judged every man according to their works.
When God speaks of the resurrection from the dead, both of the
just and of the unjust, there is a great deal more than meets the eye, and that
is indicated here when God said, “the sea gave up the dead which were in it”.
When someone of the Phoenicians died on his ship and was buried in the sea, 3000
years ago, his body was eaten by the fish, and those fish were eaten by other
fish, and those fish were eaten by other fish, and those fish were eaten by
other fish, and so on, it is clear that all the molecules and atoms which at
one time made up this Phoenician sailor were scattered throughout the
Mediterranean Sea. Nevertheless, God is able to reassemble his body on
the Last Day and transform this body into a body that will be able to endure
eternal condemnation in Hell, and unite this new body with the soul of the
sailor who died 3000 years ago. This same process will be repeated for all
those who have died on land and have been put in a grave. Their body has been
eaten by worms, who have been eaten by birds, whose droppings have been
consumed by plants, who have been eaten by people, and so on. Perhaps some of
those atoms and molecules have been reused in people five times over. Nevertheless
God is able to reassemble these bodies on the Last Day, and transform
all these bodies into bodies unto the resurrection of life and bodies unto the
resurrection unto damnation, and unite these bodies with the souls of the
people whose bodies they were originally. This is the great miracle that is in
view in verse 13. The word “Hell” in this verse actually should have been
translated “the grave”. And thus we would read, “Death and the grave
delivered up the dead which were in them”. And again God says that they
were judged according to their works, to make sure that we understand that it
is the works of the unsaved that are bringing them condemnation. And then we
read of:
#3. The
Lake of Fire
(Rev 20:14-15, 21:8, Mark
9:44,46,48, Rom 3:18, Jer 29:13, Heb 2:3)
Re 20:14 And death and hell were cast into the lake of
fire. This is the second death.
Re 20:15 And whosoever was not found written in the
book of life was cast into the lake of fire.
First death and the grave were cast into the Lake
of Fire. In other words, death and
the grave were done away. Or to say it another way, there will be no escape
from the torments of Hell by dying and by being put in the grave. Hell will be forever
without interruption by death. Then the words, “this is the second death” do
not refer to death and the grave, for death and the grave do not exist any
more. We need to remember that the original Greek text did not have any
punctuation marks. And thus the words “this is the second death” refers
to the Lake of Fire.
You can see that more clearly when you look to the page on your right. Please
drop down to Rev 21:8 (2X), and there we read,
Re 21:8 But
the fearful, and unbelieving, and the abominable, and murderers, and
whoremongers, and sorcerers, and idolaters, and all liars, shall have their
part in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone: which is the second
death.
You see, the Lake
of Fire is the second
death. The first death is the death of the body. The second death is to be
cut off from God both body and soul in Hell. We cannot fully understand how
horrible this is, but God informs us that it is as bad as being cast into a
lake of fire. The Lord Jesus expressed this horrible condition in Mark 9:44,46,48,
where He said three times, “Where their worm dieth not, and the fire is not
quenched”. Does this frighten anyone of the unsaved around us? No! Not at
all! If we try to warn them of the coming judgment, they say, “That is your
opinion”. If we try to warn them to read the Word of God carefully, they say,
“I know what I believe; you can keep what you believe, but I am not going to
change my beliefs”. Why is it that almost none of them will take the
Word of God seriously? God says in Rom 3:18,
“There is no fear of God before their eyes”. When we read the Bible we
want to make sure that we understand it the way God wants us to understand it.
And we will double check if we were right. Why? It is because we know that
these words came from God. God is speaking these words, and so we have respect
for the words and for the meaning they convey. We have a holy fear of God
and for the words He spoke. And when we approach the Bible with this fear of
God and for the words He spoke, God promised us in Jer 29:13, “And ye
shall seek me, and find me, when ye shall search for me with all your
heart”. How can we warn people around us to have this fear of God? We
cannot, for they say, “The fear of God? That is an old fashioned idea that went
out 100 years ago”. Not only have they been blinded by the preachers they have
been listening to. They are still blinded for many years thereafter, for “the
prince of the power of the air”, Satan, has them firmly in his grips. Satan
entices them by saying, “You shall not surely die. Don’t believe these
paranoid preachers. They try to scare you into their kind of religion”. All we
can do is pray that God will open their eyes, and warn them: Heb 2:3 “How shall we escape, if we neglect so great
salvation; which at the first began to be spoken by the Lord, and was confirmed
unto us by them that heard him”. And
so, we pray that God will make them see this great salvation. AMEN. Let us turn to the Lord in prayer.