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Apr22WEEK17
While we are waiting for God’s parousia, His presence, to come and unify His people, let us do what we can to prepare the way. We know this is important to our King. How can we not do everything possible to prepare the way for Him by making His way straight, bringing down the mountains and hills, and raising up the low places, as we are told in Isaiah 40:4?
The first requirement for true koinonia (unity) is to be Christ-centered, not man-centered. When our hearts begin to burn like King David’s did for the Lord to have...
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Apr16WEEK16
Last week, we addressed the transforming effect of being in God’s manifest presence, His parousia. It was the apostles’ inquiry about His parousia that provoked Jesus’ discourse in Matthew 24. We may think that we should just wait for this to come and not worry about working so hard at evangelism, the unity of His people, or the basic Christian disciplines that help transform us, but this is not so. The Lord gave many exhortations, such as keeping our vessels filled with oil, staying awake, and waiting expectantly for His return. Above all things, as the time gets closer,...
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Apr09WEEK15
When Jesus prophesied in Matthew 24 about the signs that would mark the end of this age, He spoke about His presence coming on the earth. That time is unfolding now, and is the most important event of the age yet: the Lord’s presence, which is to be distinguished from His second coming.
The word Jesus used for “presence” is the Greek word parousia, which is sometimes inaccurately translated in English as “coming.” A different Greek word, erchómenon, is translated “coming,” and is used in Matthew 24 when speaking of the Lord’s physical second coming. There is an...
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Apr02WEEK14
I know that I am only speaking to the most serious Christians in these Words for the Week. For this reason, I share with you things I do not feel at liberty to share with a general audience. I know I’m addressing some who will pursue the high calling in Christ that the apostle Paul wrote about in Philippians 3:13, where he said this “one thing” had become the focus of his life. I know there are some alive today, and many who are reading this, who cannot be satisfied with even the best the world can offer, because...
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Mar26WEEK13
As previously covered, two of the Greek words translated “church” in the New Testament are ecclesia and koinonia. Ecclesia is the structure and government of the church, and koinonia is the church bonding together in love. Which is the most important? We are called to be a family first, not an organization, but we do need organization, too.
True koinonia is rare in the church today, because most of our emphasis is on organization, the ecclesia. This will change at the end of this age, when the main emphasis of church life will be loving God and one another. This is...