Friday 11 August 2017

The Courage of Esther for Such a Time as This

When Esther, queen of Persia, appeared before the king to speak out on behalf of her people, she did so at the risk of her life. As a young peasant woman, she had won the king's heart and attained the influence, comforts, and personal security that accompany royalty. Esther’s integrity, however, was not corroded by privilege. She was prepared to lay everything down – even life itself – for the greater cause.
And so will I go in unto the king, which is not according to the law: and if I perish, I perish. Est 4:16

Esther had an almost fairy-tale ascendancy to the throne. The king of the land, in search of a new bride, chose Esther from hundreds of hopeful, young maidens. Her beauty and grace captured his heart and she stepped from obscurity into the high estate of royalty. As Esther became accustomed to the ease and dignity of royal life, one might have expected her to hold on to what she had at any cost. What possible reason would there ever be to ‘rock the boat’ or risk what had fortuitously become hers?


Esther was a woman of principle – a woman of conviction. A conviction that is worth something, always costs something. Esther’s convictions would be tested to the limit. What were they worth? What would they cost her? Were they worth more than her fame and fortune? Were they worth more than her title and influence? Were they worth more than her personal ease and security? Indeed, were they worth more than life itself? All would be tested.

Mordecai raised Esther well. He didn’t gift her with beauty. That was her natural inheritance. And while he had no earthly riches with which to establish his young, orphaned cousin, Mordecai did substantially invest in her. When a rare opportunity arose for a common girl to become queen, Esther stepped forth with more than her natural beauty. Thanks to Mordecai’s tutelage, she appeared on Persia’s stage with a poise beyond her years, a strong connection to her Jewish heritage, and a stockpile of the faith especially reserved for the poor of this world.
And the king loved Esther above all the women, and she obtained grace and favour in his sight more than all the virgins; so that he set the royal crown upon her head, and made her queen instead of Vashti. Est 2:17

Esther rose to prominence in Persia (circa 500 BC) for a purpose she had yet to discover. She came to the kingdom at a divinely appointed time in order to expose a conspiracy against her people and to help deliver them from certain destruction.

The church has been gifted with heavenly beauty and she has become influential in the kingdoms of men. She too has been invited into the highest spheres of influence. At an individual level, many Christians in the West enjoy social acceptance, career success, financial security, and political influence. We are, like Esther, in the royal courts. Like the Jews in Esther’s day, Christians have flourished. Like the Hebrews in Moses’ day, Christians have become numerous in the land.

The Lord's Prayer in the House of Representatives, Canberra, Australia

Christians may have different perspectives on moral issues. There may be room for debate and interpretation on certain matters. And then there are ‘line-in-the-sand’ issues. These are matters of deep conviction and moral certainty for Bible-believing Christians and they serve to separate the sheep from the goats. In Mordecai’s day, the line in the sand was bowing down to an egotistical official, named Haman. Today, the line in the sand is ‘same-sex marriage’. The term itself is a misnomer. Marriage is, and can only be, between a man and a woman.

Homosexuality is a lifestyle choice that is permitted in modern, secular societies. And, at least in Australia, homosexual civil partnerships have the same rights and protections as married couples. This extends to property, parental, and estate rights. [1] Little wonder that many homosexuals have no interest in marriage. In November 2015, Ireland redefined marriage to include homosexual couples. By the end of 2016, just 0.8% of Ireland's estimated 282,000 homosexuals had opted to marry. [2] With legal equality and community acceptance for homosexual relationships, why then do gay and lesbian (LGBTIQA) lobby groups have their sights so persistently set on marriage?

Noisy LGBTIQA lobbyists would have the public believe that the redefinition of marriage is a noble cause for human rights. The redefining of marriage, however, is all about securing a symbolic victory. When French revolutionaries captured Bastille in 1789, it was a symbolic victory. The occupation of the royal fortress by the revolutionaries announced the end of the old order. In the same way, the wresting of marriage by homosexuals – wherever it takes place in the world – signals the collapse of the Judeo-Christian order. This is what the redefinition of marriage is really about. Wherever it has taken place, the freedoms of speech and religion have been diminished, traditional family units have been undermined, and nonsensical gender fluidity theories have proliferated. The aggressive LGBTIQA agenda is surreptitiously setting conscientiously-objecting Christians on a collision course with the state.

The antagonist in Esther’s day was a man named Haman. He was not content with civil respect and appropriate recognition of his position. He craved obeisance. He did not feel secure unless he had the fawning worship of the people. When Mordecai could not (for fear of God) bow his knee to Haman, his humble and conscientious objection was misread as a personal and defiant rejection of the man himself. The insecure and raging civic leader became irrationally punitive and set out to kill a good man – a man who had prepared a beautiful and graceful future queen and a man who had once even saved the king’s life. Mordecai was a man of conviction and his peaceful, conscientious objection to an immoral law was framed as sedition, warranting the death penalty.


Not content to just destroy Mordecai, Haman set out to eradicate the entire ‘troublesome’ race of Jews. Haman could not and would not tolerate dissent, no matter how peaceful the protest. His position must be celebrated and applauded. He was not satisfied with appropriate civic recognition. He demanded worship. And he raged and plotted when he didn’t get it.
When Haman saw that Mordecai neither bowed down nor paid homage to him, Haman was filled with rage. But he disdained to lay hands on Mordecai alone, for they had told him who the people of Mordecai were, therefore Haman sought to destroy all the Jews, the people of Mordecai, who were throughout the whole kingdom of Ahasuerus. Est 3:5-6

Little did Haman know that Mordecai’s race included the queen herself, and it was her courage that would deliver God's people and bring about Haman’s demise. Haman would ultimately hang on the gallows he prepared for Mordecai.

Mordecai’s reproach is felt by good people today. The redefinition of marriage to include homosexual unions is being loudly declared as the progressive, enlightened path. Dissent to the clamouring demand for ‘marriage equality’ is proving costly. Australian tennis legend, Margaret Court, has endured public ridicule and threats to remove her name from a Melbourne tennis arena because she dared to voice disagreement to the redefinition of marriage. Coopers Brewery was pressured into a snivelling, public apology for its product’s placement in a public (and polite) conversation between two politicians about the redefinition of marriage. Seventy ordinary Australians were physically jostled and ultimately barred from attending a public lecture by a Sydney University academic who voiced concerns about gender fluidity theory. Christians are increasingly being pressured to applaud the agenda of the homosexual lobby or remain silent. Respectful tolerance and civil recognition of homosexual unions is not enough. You’re either an enthusiast for redefining marriage to accommodate homosexuals or you are homophobic and bigoted.

Our Lord Jesus Christ defined marriage.
And Jesus answered and said, “Have you not read that He who created them from the beginning made them male and female, and said, ‘For this reason a man shall leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife, and the two shall become one flesh’? So they are no longer two, but one flesh. What therefore God has joined together, let no man separate.” Matt 19:4-6

It is not an option for Bible-believing Christians to be enthusiasts of ‘same-sex marriage’. In a brave new world of ‘same-sex marriages’ and everything else that follows, will we become, by default, enemies of the state? Are Christians being corralled, by a treacherous minority, into a collision course with the authorities? Governments do not want enmity with Christians. Christians are the salt of the earth. Bible-believing churches underpin peaceful and stable societies and Christians lead the way in serving the poor and disadvantaged.

Unfairly falling foul of the governing authorities is not new for God's people. Years before Mordecai and Esther, another Persian king was hoodwinked by a devious cabal. King Darius found himself pitted against his most loyal servant in Daniel, thanks to a small group of conspirators. Hundreds of years later, the Prince of Peace himself was crucified by an unwilling Roman governor held to ransom by a cunning, Pharisaical faction. In modern times, governments have also shown susceptibility to being manipulated by pressure groups to the detriment of decent, hard-working, salt-of-the-earth types. Mordecai, Daniel, Christ our Lord – none of these men were looking for trouble and neither are Christians. We are decent people who live according to our convictions and we have a preserving and refining influence in society.


The story ends well for Mordecai and Esther and their countrymen. “When the enemy comes in like a flood, the Spirit of the LORD will lift up a standard against him.”(Isa 59:19). While Haman plotted and schemed, he hadn't counted on two things. Firstly, there was a Jew in the highest office of the land. Haman didn't know that the beautiful Esther, in whom the king's heart was enthralled, was none other than a Jewess and therefore the target of his rage. And secondly, Haman didn't realise that this hidden, beloved woman of Mordecai's race would have the courage to reveal herself and put everything on the line to save her people.

There are Esther types today in all spheres of society. They can read the writing on the wall and they can see that Bible-believing Christians have fallen foul of a ruthless LGBTIQA lobby. At some point they will have to make an Esther type decision. Will I speak out and be labelled a bigoted, outdated, enemy of progress and equality? What if I offend people I care about? What if I damage my reputation? What if I sabotage my career? What if I make myself a target? Surely God has not gifted me my enviable station in life for me to throw it all away because of an opinion on marriage? Is it an opinion or is it a conviction? Are we people of conviction or convenience? As was the case with Esther, so it is with us. God has indeed placed us in our current callings and places of influence for such a time as this. May we rise to the occasion.
Then Mordecai told them to reply to Esther, “Do not think to yourself that in the king’s palace you will escape any more than all the other Jews. For if you keep silent at this time, relief and deliverance will rise for the Jews from another place, but you and your father’s house will perish. And who knows whether you have not come to the kingdom for such a time as this?” Est 4:13-14

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References:

[1] Findlaw Team, 'How Are Same-Sex Couples Recognised in Australian Law?' http://www.findlaw.com.au/articles/4290/how-are-same-sex-couples-recognised-in-australian-.aspx (Accessed: 10/08/17)

[2] Joyce Fegan (14 April 2017) 1147 Same Sex Marriages in 2016. http://www.irishexaminer.com/ireland/1147-same-sex-marriages-in-2016-447797.html (Accessed: 10/08/17)

Monday 2 January 2017

Do We Provoke the Lord to Jealousy?

When Eli's sons, Hophni and Phinehas, were contaminating the tabernacle and robbing God's people of their vision and hope, Eli should have known better. He did know better. Though he voiced his disapproval, the high priest's failure to zealously take action against his rebellious sons was to dishonour Yahweh and His precious heritage.
Why then do you scorn My sacrifices and My offerings that I commanded for My dwelling, and honour your sons above Me...? 1 Sam 2:29
What a travesty. Young, unrestrained, professional priests using the tabernacle and the people of God for material gain and self-gratification. They badly misrepresented the Lord of hosts and showed great contempt for His people. So great was the sin of Eli's sons that people lost faith and abhorred the offering of the Lord.
Wherefore the sin of the young men was very great before the LORD: for men abhorred the offering of the LORD. 1 Sam 2:17
The fear of God had long been abandoned by Hophni and Phinehas and their father was far too heavy and blind to gird himself in Yahweh's defence (1 Sam 4:15,18). Under Eli's watch, and at the mercy of his unspiritual sons, God's people became naked and exposed to their enemies as surely as they had hundreds of years earlier under Aaron's watch at Mt. Sinai. (Ex 32:25)


Judgement came swiftly on the Eli administration. No talisman-like employment of the ark of the covenant or superstitious appeal to the presence of God could save them from their enemies. In one day, thirty thousand Israelite footsoldiers fell before the Philistines and Hophni and Phinehas were slain in battle. Before the sun had set, the ark of the LORD had been captured and Eli's neck was broken. In the midst of the turmoil, Eli's daughter-in-law went into childbirth and died while delivering a son. Her final words were, “The glory has departed from Israel.” Eli and his sons had corrupted the true worship of Yahweh and, in one appointed day, all the chickens came home to roost.
And she called the boy Ichabod, saying, “The glory has departed from Israel,” because the ark of God was taken and because of her father-in-law and her husband. 1 Sam 4:21
As harsh as it was, the judgement on Eli and his sons, and the ensuing upheaval, made way for the deliverance of a grieving remnant of faithful Israelites. God had his man in waiting. At the appointed time, Samuel was brought out of the quiver and sent forth to restore dignity and vision to God's people.

Truly, in our day, there is a contaminating of the church of God and a grand theft of vision and hope taking place. Like Hophni and Phinehas, there is a new generation of leadership in many churches that do not know the fear of the Lord. Their mentors and fathers, like Eli of old, are too heavy and dim of sight to exercise discernment and bring correction. As in the days of Eli, the word of the Lord is rare (1 Sam 3:1). As in the days of Ezekiel, the waters are being muddied and the pastures trodden down (Ezek 34:17-19). Again, the sin of the young men is very great.

At no time is the contamination more clearly visible than during the month of December. At this time, Christmas (or Christ's Mass) – the high point on the Roman Catholic liturgical calendar – is embosomed by churches everywhere. Every year, church leaders in the Protestant, evangelical tradition prepare a Christmas table for the people – a polluted smorgasbord of paganism and Catholicism that would have been eschewed by the apostolic leadership of the early church. Our fathers should know better. They do know better. 

Church carols event 2016

Without any apostolic mandate and, in complete submission to the world's passions and desires, church leaders shamefully invite the sham Santa Claus and his elves into our gatherings. In blatant idolatry and paganism, decorated evergreens are erected in otherwise godly homes and church buildings. Songs of truth about our Lord Jesus Christ are mixed with songs about fabled drummer boys and the like and are carolled for the world's entertainment. December is the time when church leaders serve up a toxic brew of winter solstice paganism and Catholic tradition to sensually primed congregations. The new generation of church leaders value large congregations and they'll readily serve up confusion and mystery Babylon religion if it means pleasing the crowds.

The rot has to stop. It is abhorrent. The fathers should move quickly from voicing private disapproval to acting decisively, if they care about the chastity of the Bride they were entrusted with. If the fathers are too heavy and dim of sight to act, they will be removed to make way for a Samuel generation of leadership who know the Lord and whose words do not fall to the ground.
And Samuel grew, and the LORD was with him, and did let none of his words fall to the ground. 1 Sam 3:19
It's abhorrent what is happening in church meetings at this time of year. December does not belong to Santa or Satan or Christ's Mass. Not as far as the living, organic church is concerned. December is the Lord's, along with every month of the year. We do not follow pagan seasons or Roman Catholic liturgical calendars. In the words of Watchman Nee, Christmas is an unclean bird that “flew from the Roman Catholic Church into the Protestant Church” [1]. We are above days, and months, and seasons, and years (Gal 4:10) or at least we should be after 2000 years of church history. We must follow the Holy Spirit over the sensual desires of carnal congregations. The rot must stop. In the midst of our 'sanctified' Christmas revelry, we are naked and exposed to our enemies and our leaders glory in our shame.

Church service 2016

It's high time we repented of our Christmas participation. Every year things degenerate further in churches. Christmas really has become an annual celebration of how worldly and compromised and contemporary we are – of how cool we are. It's abhorrent to the lowly disciple of Christ. The church has more to offer the world than an annual, polluted Christmas carols event. Our leaders need to repent. When judgement and upheaval come, no amount of shameful misuse of the anointing or 'entertain me' style of worship will deliver us. Only repentance can turn this around. Hophni and Phinehas marched brazenly to their own destruction and so will all who refuse to heed the prophetic call to repentance.

Another church service 2016

When we see the exchanging of gifts and Christmas trees and Santa and his entourage and we hear tepid carols – and it's all mixed together with the story of Jesus' birth – we are witnessing Jezebel-type religion. Likewise, when we see Easter eggs and rabbits all mixed in with the Gospel account of Jesus' death, burial, and resurrection, it's Jezebel-type religion. It's Babylon. The church does not need, nor should we be held ransom to, Christmas or Good Friday or Easter Sunday – Catholic/pagan high days that they are. We have, in the book of Acts, a living demonstration of the church's path to growth and her means of accessing grace. “They were continually devoting themselves to the apostles' teaching, and to fellowship, to the breaking of bread, and to prayer” (Acts 2:42). The Word, fellowship in the Gospel, the Lord's Supper, prayer – these are our means of grace.


We abhor 'special' days  contaminated with paganism – foisted on us to 'help' us worship. We cannot honour the Lord while we observe these days. We have no apostolic mandate or Scriptural authority to do so. To honour these days, is to dishonour God. Let us repent for our idolatry and Jezebel-type adultery with the world. Let us return to the pure streams of Christianity and the power in simple church. May God help us.
But I say, that the things which the Gentiles sacrifice, they sacrifice to devils, and not to God: and I would not that ye should have fellowship with devils. Ye cannot drink the cup of the Lord, and the cup of devils: ye cannot be partakers of the Lord's table, and the table of devils. Do we provoke the Lord to jealousy? Are we stronger than He? 1 Cor 10:20-22
The baby in the manger – Jesus Christ our Lord – grew up and cleansed His Father's house. He made for Himself a whip out of cords and overturned tables in the temple courts. Why? His Father's house had become a den of thieves – true worship had been polluted by money interests and opportunists. The place that should have been a house of prayer for those close and those afar off, had been trampled underfoot by a generation of leaders not unlike Hophni and Phinehas. As it was in Eli's day, again the lowly followers of Yahweh were bullied out of His house to make way for avarice and all the trappings of dead religion.


And they came to Jerusalem: and Jesus went into the temple, and began to cast out them that sold and bought in the temple, and overthrew the tables of the moneychangers, and the seats of them that sold doves; and He would not suffer that any man should carry any vessel through the temple. And He taught, saying unto them, “Is it not written, My house shall be called of all nations the house of prayer? But ye have made it a den of thieves.” Mark 11:15-17
The oppressed and hurting in this world do not need Jezebel-type idolatry and religion. They need Elijah's repentance preaching and his healing balm. They need pure waters and Gospel power. Sovereign Lord, let us walk again in the devil-routing power of Jesus Christ. Let us settle for nothing less. Give us the courage to overturn tables that You have not prepared. God, help us.
Thus says the LORD of hosts, “I am exceedingly jealous for Zion, yes, with great wrath I am jealous for her.” Zech 8:2
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References:

[1] Nee, Watchman (1978) The King and The Kingdom of Heaven. Christian Fellowship Publishers: Virginia. pg.170