[brethrenvoice] 4 Nov 2002

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From: "Brethren Voice" <brethrenvoice@...>
Date: Tue, 05 Nov 2002 02:52:58 +0400

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<4 November 2002>


Contents:
-----------
1) <Devotional> "Where did now go?" - Ravi Zacharias
2) <Doctrinal> "Elisha, Prophet of water" (Pt-1) - Charles E.Wigg
3) <Prophetical> "The Redeemer's Return" (Pt-70)- A.W.Pink


1)  <DEVOTIONAL> <SLICE-OF-INFINITY>
"WHERE DID NOW GO"?"
Ravi Zacharias

Quick, what time is it?  Where are you supposed to be right now?  What are 
you supposed to be doing?

Do such frantic thoughts continually pursue you? The scholar Robert Banks 
has correctly characterized our servitude to the clock in contemporary 
times.  He states, "Clock time has become tyrannical and all pervasive.  Our 
pattern of life is largely controlled by the clock and the calendar." 
(Footnote 1: Banks, The Tyranny of Time, pp. 126-7.  Quoted from Gunten, The 
One, the Three and the Many, pp. 91.)  Now, by "clock time" Banks means the 
time that a clock keeps.  Part of our modern predicament is that we confuse 
the working of the clock with time itself.  The clock is only a device that 
divides up time in increments that we have decided.  Unfortunately, we take 
the movement of the clock as time itself.  So we end up with clock time, a 
bare reflection of real time.

Clock time contributes to another aspect of our modern predicament: We have 
unmoored time from the eternal.  With our fixation on the clock, time 
becomes just a succession of units that the clock neatly orders.  And, of 
course, we are continually reminded that the clock is always ticking.  So we 
come to feel that the present moment is like a wisp of smoke that we can't 
grab, for as we grab for it, that instant has already passed and we are 
moved along into the next.  Thus we spend our lives being shoved in moments 
by the powerful hand of the clock.  You know, Augustine felt this even 
before the clock, and so he concluded that the present was merely the brief 
instant when the unreal future slid into the already gone past.

Do you feel the weight of this view of time?  Many times I do, sometimes 
every day.  It says that the present is nothing, it is an ephemeral bubble 
that cannot be clasped.  No doubt this builds anxieties, and we respond to 
that strain by constantly projecting ourselves into the future.  That is why 
we are consumed with what we are doing next.  What is in the next hour? What 
is happening tomorrow?

May I suggest, dear friend, that this is what happens when time is unmoored 
from eternity, from God Himself.  You see, time is the arena in which we 
are, in which we know and are known by others, and above all, by God.

You see, God has given you and me time.  He's the author of time and He asks 
of us to see it in eternal terms for value, for opportunity, and for 
purpose.  To know Him is to know time.  Don't lose it on the dial of a 
clock.
---
Copyright (p)(c) 2001 Ravi Zacharias International Ministries (RZIM). 
Reprinted with permission. A Slice of Infinity is a radio ministry of Ravi 
Zacharias International Ministries.
_______________________________________________________________________

2)   <BIBLE-STUDY>
ELISHA, PROPHET OF WATER (PART-1)
Charles E. Wigg

I thought that it may be of profit to the people of God to examine what the 
scriptures tell us about this remarkable prophet. The title of this paper 
may seem a little strange, but it was pointed out to me many years ago that 
there was a contrast  between the ministry of Elijah, and that of Elisha. 
Elijah's ministry was characterised by fire, but Elisha's by water.

I think that we see the perfect combination of both in the life and ministry 
of our Lord Jesus Christ. John tells us that grace and truth came by Jesus 
Christ. In Elijah's ministry we see the evidence of truth, which at times 
can be sharp and severe. Whereas grace, is more soft and gentle. Truth 
demands, but grace supplies. Truth tends to expose faults, failures, 
shortcomings, but grace like the love from which it springs, covers a 
multitude of sins, 1Pet. 4:8

Thus we see the contrast between the ministry of Elijah and Elisha. He is 
described as one "who poured water on the hands of Elijah", 2Kings, 3:11. 
This is what characterised his life and ministry. He continued to be a 
source of life and blessing, even after his death, as we shall see later.

HIS PARENTAGE AND DWELLING PLACE.

Elisha was  born and lived in a village called Abel Mehola, that was 
situated in the territory of Issachar. In normal times it was a lush, green, 
and fertile place. It was near where a stream or wadi El Maleh empties into 
the Jordan. The name means 'dancing fields', so it was a place of joy. His 
father's name was Shaphat, which means, 'judges', or 'has judged', so it 
seems that he was a man of judgment, one who was able to arrive at a correct 
assessment of a matter. In the New Testament this is said to be a 
characteristic of those who are intelligent and spiritual. 1Cor. 10:15, and 
1Cor. 14:37. Such a father normally would have a wise son, Elisha proved to 
be one such.

It would seem that he had met or seen Elijah at some previous time. It is 
possible that he was there at Mount Carmel, when Elijah stood alone for 
Jehovah. Perhaps he was amongst those who fell on their faces and cried, 
"Jehovah, He is God, Jehovah, He is God".

But though Abel Meholah was normally a green and fertile place. The whole 
land had been through a horrendous drought. The green grass had disappeared, 
and all was baked and hard. However Elisha had witnessed the storm that 
followed Israel's restoration, when they turned back to Jehovah. Yet one 
storm alone does not end a drought. Elisha believed that there was more to 
follow and was preparing for it as we shall see. [To be concluded]
---
[Reproduced with permission]
_____________________________________________________________________

3)   <PROPHETICAL>
"THE REDEEMER'S RETURN" (PART-70)
THE CHURCH-WARD RESULTS OF THE REDEEMER'S RETURN
Arthur W. Pink
....
2. The Resurrection of the sleeping saints.

"And the dead in Christ shall rise first." This is the second blessed event 
which shall occur at the Redeemer's return--the sleeping saints will be 
awakened and raised. This brings us to a branch of our subject upon which 
there is much ignorance and confusion in Christendom generally. The idea 
which popularly obtains is that of a general resurrection at the end of 
time. So deeply rooted is this belief and so widely is it held that to 
declare there will be two resurrections--one of saints and another of 
sinners, the two being separated by a thousand years--is to be regarded as a 
setter forth of strange ideas and extravagant fancies. Nevertheless, the 
teaching of Scripture upon this point is exceedingly plain and explicit. 
Probably many of those who will read these pages are already clear upon this 
distinction, but the sake of those who are not we must briefly outline the 
teaching of God's Word upon this subject, first quoting, however, from one 
whose writings have been justly esteemed by Christians of every shade of 
thought.

John Bunyan who was certainly a close student of the Divine Oracles wrote, 
"Now when the saints that sleep shall be raised thus incorruptible, 
powerful, glorious and spiritual; and also those that then shall be found 
alive, made like them; then forthwith, before the unjust are raised, the 
saints shall appear before the judgment-seat of the Lord Jesus Christ, there 
to give an account to their Lord the Judge of all things they have done; and 
to receive a reward for their good according to their labor. They shall 
rise, I say, before the wicked, they being themselves the proper "children 
of the resurrection," that is, those that must have all the glory of it, 
both as to preeminency, and sweetness; and, therefore, they are said, when 
they rise, to rise from the dead; that is, in their rising, they leave the 
reprobate world behind them. And it must be so, because also the saints will 
have done their account, and be set upon the throne with Christ as kings and 
priests with Him to judge the world, when the wicked world are raised."

But without citing human testimony any further, let us turn to the teaching 
of Christ and the inspired writings of His apostles. On one occasion the 
Lord said, "But when thou makest a feast, call the poor, the maimed, the 
lame, the blind; And thou shalt be blessed; for they cannot recompense thee; 
for thou shalt be recompensed if there is to be but one resurrection--a 
general resurrection of all the dead--then why did our Lord make the above 
distinction and qualification of "the resurrection of the just"? Again, in 
Luke 20:34, 35 we read, "The children of this world marry, and are given in 
marriage. But they which shall be accounted worthy to obtain that world, and 
the resurrection from the dead, neither marry, nor are given in marriage." 
What can be the meaning of such words as "they which shall be accounted 
worthy to obtain that world, and the resurrection from the dead" if All the 
dead alike are sure of participating in an indiscriminate resurrection. 
Worthiness to obtain the resurrection from the dead certainly implies there 
will be some who are not esteemed worthy, and hence will not be partakers of 
the resurrection here mentioned; therefore, the conclusion is irresistible 
that there must be two distinct resurrections. That there will be is further 
seen from the language of John 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." 
Here the two resurrections are sharply distinguished both as to name and 
participants, and as we shall see, there is to be a long interval of time 
between them.

The testimony of the apostolic Epistles is in strict harmony with the 
teaching of our Lord recorded in the four Gospels. In 1 Cor. 15:21-23 we 
read, "For since by man came death, by man came also the resurrection of the 
dead. For as in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive. But 
every man in his own order: Christ the firstfruits: afterward they that are 
Christ's at His coming." It is important to notice that the resurrection of 
the wicked is not contemplated in this chapter at all, but is strictly 
limited to the resurrection of Christ and His saints. The words "all be made 
alive" are qualified by the clause which immediately precedes them. It has 
reference solely to those who are "in Christ." Christ Himself is the 
"firstfruits" (the reference is to the type of Lev. 23:10) and the harvest 
that is garnered at His return are "they that are Christ's." Again, we are 
told that the people of God in Old Testament times who refused to accept 
deliverance from death at the hands of their persecutors, did so "that they 
might obtain a better resurrection" (Heb. 11:35) which expression is quite 
meaningless if there is but one general resurrection in which saints and 
sinners shall alike participate.

One other Scripture yet remains to be considered, namely Rev. 20:4-6 "And I 
saw thrones, and they sat upon them, and judgment was given unto them: and I 
saw the souls of them that were beheaded for the witness of Jesus, and for 
the word of God, and which had not worshipped the beast, neither his image, 
neither had received his mark upon their foreheads, or in their hands; and 
they lived and reigned with Christ a thousand years. But the rest of the 
dead lived not again until the thousand years were finished. This is the 
first resurrection. Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first 
resurrection: on such the second death hath no power, but they shall be 
priests of God and of Christ, and shall reign with Him a thousand years." 
Here we learn not only that the resurrection of the saints is quite distinct 
from that of the wicked, but we are also expressly told that an interval of 
a thousand years lies between the two. It were meaningless to speak of the 
resurrection of the "blessed and holy" as the first resurrection" if there 
is no second resurrection of the wicked to follow. The righteous shall all 
be raised before the Millennium begins, but the lost shall not be raised 
until its close. Thus we see that the uniform teaching of the New Testament 
respecting the resurrection of sleeping believers is in perfect accord with 
our Thessalonian Scripture--"The dead in Christ shall rise first." None but 
the "dead in Christ" will come forth from their graves in response to the 
assembling shout of our descending Lord at the time of His second advent. 
But now consider, [To be concluded]

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