Randy Green's Blog, page 350
November 16, 2015
Justified. What’s that?
NEWS FLASH!!! Matthew: Volume 7 of Heavenly Citizens in Earthly Shoes is now available from CreateSpace (paperbacks) and Kindle (eBooks). Click on the link to the right of this page to go to Amazon and place your order.
There’s this TV show about U.S. Marshal Raylan Givens of Kentucky. The name of the show is Justified. No, the TV show has nothing to do with the topic of this post, so go back to your widescreen if that’s what you’re looking for.
Consider another TV show which is more appropriate for our topic, viz., Perry Mason. I know, it’s a bit dated and some of you young whippersnappers might not have a clue. But it is more apposite for our subject than the other TV show is.
Picture in your mind’s eye this imaginary courtroom. The defendant is accused of killing his wife. His defense attorney is none other than the famous Perry Mason himself. Mason’s P.I. sniffs around the crime scene a while and does his stuff elsewhere, coming up with a goodly number of clues. Perry Mason does his stuff and figures out who the real culprit is.
At the conclusion of the trial the judge pounds his gavel on the judge’s bench and roars in thunderous pronouncement, “NOT GUILTY!” Guess what? The defendant has just been justified. The word justification is a legal term which means “not guilty”. It is really that simple, no matter how many paragraphs and chapters some theology textbooks use up in explaining it.
In Scripture we are taught by Judge Jesus that the absolute ONLY way to be justified is by grace through faith. The word grace refers to what God did all on His lonesome, and He freely bestows it on any person who will accept it by faith. The word faith has reference to what God teaches in the Bible. When we believe the Word of God in our heart and confess it with our mouth, then we have Biblical faith.
The Bible teaches that Jesus is the ONLY way to the Father, that there is salvation—in our case justification—in on one but Jesus Christ. Jesus’ death on the cross and His resurrection out of death is the basis for man’s “not guilty” verdict regarding sin. When we believe the Bible regarding this matter, believe it in our heart and confess it with our mouth, then we are justified. All our sins become judged on the cross circa 27 A.D., and we are thenceforth “not guilty” regarding them.
Isn’t God marvelous? Isn’t He awesome? I’d much rather depend on Him for salvation than on myself. Me get to heaven? Not a chance! But me “in Christ” get to heaven? Without a doubt.
To further research this issue, I direct you to my book Genesis: Volume 1 of Heavenly Citizens in Earthly Shoes. To purchase my books please go to:
http://www.amazon.com/Randy-Green/e/B00507WC86
Filed under: Church Age Tagged: Faith, grace, Jesus, Justification, Salvation, sinners and saints








November 15, 2015
What’s it take to be a Christian leader?
HOT OFF THE PRESS!!! Romans: Volume 9 of Heavenly Citizens in Earthly Shoes is now available from CreateSpace (paperbacks) and Kindle (eBooks). Click on the link to the right of this page to go to Amazon and place your order.
There’s a misconception amongst a goodly portion of Christian leaders today. Such folks have the notion that Jesus, Paul, Peter, John, Moses, Joshua, Isaiah, Jeremiah—in fine, all those whom the Bible presents as strong spiritual leaders—that suchlike people would make poor leaders in the churches today.
If you will permit me to say so, I beg to differ! The Word of God instructs us to speak the truth in love. In today’s mushy liberal culture, anything controversial is politically incorrect. It is a no-no which only rabble rousers and low-lifes would dare foment. Perish the thought.
Such sentiments are founded upon the worldview of our contemporary anti-christ society, dear friends. Today “love”—when it’s not defined as sex—is defined as a feel good, kum ba yah around the camp fire moment. Following that prescription, leaders who don’t make us feel good are not “loving” and so are not Biblical.
In terms of the Bible such a view attempts to speak “love” without keeping the “truth” attached to it. This cannot be done! The Lord NEVER sets aside the truth in order to make us feel good. He ALWAYS keeps the truth and love connected. When “love” is not conjoined in holy matrimony with the truth, then it is not Biblical love.
Yes, let us speak in a loving manner by looking out for the welfare of our brothers and sisters. But let us not set aside any of the whole counsel of God because we don’t want to offend someone. If we present the truth in love and anyone is offended, then they are offended by the Word of God, not by us…in which case they need to take it up with the Lord and not with us!
To further research this issue, I direct you to my book Genesis: Volume 1 of Heavenly Citizens in Earthly Shoes. To purchase my books please go to:
http://www.amazon.com/Randy-Green/e/B00507WC86
Filed under: Church Age Tagged: Christian living, false doctrine, Scripture, the Lord, Word of God








November 14, 2015
Adam, meet Adam.
NEWS FLASH!!! Acts: Volume 8 of Heavenly Citizens in Earthly Shoes is now available from CreateSpace (paperbacks) and Kindle (eBooks). Click on the link to the right of this page to go to Amazon and place your order.
When the Israelites crossed the Red Sea, the Lord dried up the water for them to do so. When they crossed the Jordan River, the Lord likewise dried up that water near the town of Adam, so they could cross over on dry ground. The symbolism is intriguing.
We must die to living in and for the world, symbolized by the exit from Egypt which ended by crossing the Red Sea. At the Red Sea God’s people died to their old sinful life (the first Adam). They were cut off from returning to Egypt. But that only begins the matter. We also must rise out of death to newness of life, symbolized by crossing the Jordan River and receiving our inheritance in the Promised Land.
In our earthly existence we are not merely to be born again. We are then to grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. We are to mature spiritually into reborn adults, just as surely as newborns are to mature into adults in the natural realm.
By drying up the waters of both the Red Sea and the Jordan River, the Lord taught both aspects of being new creations in Christ Jesus. The Promised Land symbolized victorious spiritual living, while the wilderness wanderings typified defeated carnal living. If we don’t enter the Promised Land and live by faith, then we are wandering the desert and living by sight.
If the Church would grasp this truth, not just intellectually but spiritually, what vast expanses would appear on the horizon! Revival would be the result. We mustn’t merely call people to the front of the church building to “receive Jesus”, dear friends. We must needs rear them with strong spiritual meat to nourish them into spiritual maturity.
I fear that too often newborn spiritual babes are rushed into “serving Jesus”, into getting busy “doing things for Jesus”, before they are taught enough to grow up in Jesus. First we must be born again. Next we must spiritually mature enough to know our spiritual gifts. Only then are we equipped to know God’s ministry for our lives and perform it under the power of the Holy Spirit.
To further research this issue, I direct you to my book Genesis: Volume 1 of Heavenly Citizens in Earthly Shoes. To purchase my books please go to:
http://www.amazon.com/Randy-Green/e/B00507WC86
Filed under: Church Age Tagged: baptism, Christian living, Church Age, the Lord








November 13, 2015
Will the real sinner please stand up?
NEWS FLASH!!! Matthew: Volume 7 of Heavenly Citizens in Earthly Shoes is now available from CreateSpace (paperbacks) and Kindle (eBooks). Click on the link to the right of this page to go to Amazon and place your order.
It is a trustworthy statement, deserving full acceptance, that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners, among whom I am foremost of all [1 Timothy 1:15].
Those words came from the Apostle Paul. The question is, “Did Paul write them before he was saved or after? Paul’s salvation experience occurred on the Damascus road (Acts 9). The above quoted words from Paul are from one of the final letters he wrote, before being martyred for preaching the Gospel.
In other words Paul wrote those words to Timothy toward the end of his life, long after he was born again. This is significant for Christians today because of false theology making the rounds on the Christian circuit. Some folks asseverate that Christians are not “sinners” because Christ saved them. Others limit sinlessness to just some Christians who follow Christ more maturely. Supposedly such folks have reached “perfection” already.
Paul’s words are from an apostle of Jesus Christ, a right holy man if ever there was one (aside from Jesus). Still, even as the end of his life drew nigh, Paul recognized that he was still a “sinner”. Indeed, he saw himself as the FOREMOST of sinners. In Philippians 3:12-14 Paul noted that he hadn’t yet attained to Christ’s goal for his life, but he continued to press onward to reach it.
Let us not grow a fat head and hard heart and be full of ourselves, dear Christians. Let us not be too righteous to accept correction. Let us instead recognize that we are indeed sinners still. Yes, we have been saved by grace through faith and are justified; but no, we are not yet glorified and in eternity with the Lord. Only then will we be fully perfected. Until then we must continue being sanctified, continue working out our own salvation with fear and trembling; for God is at work in us both to will and to do of His good pleasure (Philippians 1:12-13).
To further research this issue, I direct you to my book Genesis: Volume 1 of Heavenly Citizens in Earthly Shoes. To purchase my books please go to:
http://www.amazon.com/Randy-Green/e/B00507WC86
Filed under: Church Age Tagged: Christian living, false doctrine, perfection, sinners and saints








November 12, 2015
Water for Three, Please!
HOT OFF THE PRESS!!! Romans: Volume 9 of Heavenly Citizens in Earthly Shoes is now available from CreateSpace (paperbacks) and Kindle (eBooks). Click on the link to the right of this page to go to Amazon and place your order.
There are a lot of occasions in Scripture involving “three days”. The typology involved is theologically astute! The axis of all history is the cross and resurrection of Jesus Christ. He died and was in a tomb for three days.
Realize that Jesus is the axis of all Scripture. Beginning with Moses and with all the prophets, (Jesus) explained to them the things concerning Himself in all the Scriptures [Luke 24:27]. Jesus takes center stage in ALL THE SCRIPTURES, from Genesis through Revelation.
This being the case, and considering that His death and resurrection (a three day event) form the center of Jesus’ ministry, is it too much of a stretch to consider that “three days” in Scripture should be given consideration as typifying in some fashion Jesus’ death and resurrection?
Consider the Book of Joshua. In Joshua 1:11 Joshua announced that the Israelites would cross the Jordan in three days. In chapter 2 he sent two spies to survey Jericho before Israel attacked the city. The spies were gone for three days. In chapter 3 the Israelites crossed the Jordan after three days.
At the Red Sea the Israelites were baptized into Moses (1 Corinthians 10:2). Christian baptism typifies the Christian’s death and resurrection in Christ (Romans 6:4). Christ accomplished this on our behalf in three days.
When the older generation of Israelites left Egypt under the Lord’s auspices, they irrevocably left that life of worldliness to be the people of the Lord. In Christian terminology this is known as dying to self and rising to new life in Christ Jesus. Once they crossed the Red Sea and its waters returned, they were cut off from the life they had in Egypt. They in effect died to Egypt, the world power of the day and symbol of the world. Hence they were “baptized into Moses” at the Red Sea.
The same applied to the younger generation of Israelites some forty years later at the Jordan River. Once they crossed the Jordan to the west bank and the Jordan’s waters returned, they were cut off from the life of wilderness wanderings in order to receive their spiritual inheritance—for a spiritual inheritance it was, even though it was also a physical inheritance. They in effect were “baptized” into Joshua at the Jordan River.
The name Joshua means “salvation of YHWH”. In English the name is Jesus. Moses brought the Israelites out of the world (Egypt), and Moses represented the Law. But Moses failed to bring the Israelites into the Lord’s inheritance, into the new life of resting in Him because the Law cannot achieve that. It took Joshua (aka Jesus) to do that.
So we see that Moses (the Law, the Old Covenant) and Joshua (Jesus, grace, the New Covenant) are symbolized by the Israelites’ exodus from Egypt, their wilderness wanderings, and their new life in the Promised Land. But the Promised Land does NOT typify heaven. It typifies victorious Christian living which can only be the result of God’s grace. The wilderness wanderings, contrariwise, typify defeated Christians who walk in the flesh. This results from living in one’s own strength and power, which the Law typifies.
To further research this issue, I direct you to my book Genesis: Volume 1 of Heavenly Citizens in Earthly Shoes. To purchase my books please go to:
http://www.amazon.com/Randy-Green/e/B00507WC86
Filed under: Church Age Tagged: baptism, Christian living, Israel, Jesus, Moses, the Law, Torah








November 11, 2015
How, and how not, to build character
NEWS FLASH!!! Acts: Volume 8 of Heavenly Citizens in Earthly Shoes is now available from CreateSpace (paperbacks) and Kindle (eBooks). Click on the link to the right of this page to go to Amazon and place your order.
We also glory in our sufferings, because we know that suffering produces perseverance; perseverance, character; and character, hope [Romans 5:3-4].
I live a life of affluence in an affluent society. I have all I need or want and give my kids all they want. I have so many worldly toys to play with, I am like a little child in a toy store. I cannot make adult choices and commitments in life because I am impossibly distracted by so many opportunities. It’s more fun to go with the flow and not have to commit. I eat free lunches rather than earn my keep.
Trouble is, there is no such critter as “free lunch”. Someone paid for the lunch, even if I ate for free. So my free lunch meant I loafed on the back of someone else’s labor. This is the way of today’s society in the good ol’ USA.
How can I expect my kids to develop character, unless they experience the sufferings which can lead to real character. Am I really doing my kids right when I make their life so easy? Fact is, I am harming them by stunting their growth spiritually, emotionally, and in all ways.
As a Christian I need to do much better than the world. I need to be salt and light to the world by means of the Gospel, not mimic the world in affluent living. We cannot serve two masters. Either we serve the Lord or we serve affluence. Country club church is not the Gospel.
To further research this issue, I direct you to my book Genesis: Volume 1 of Heavenly Citizens in Earthly Shoes. To purchase my books please go to:
http://www.amazon.com/Randy-Green/e/B00507WC86
Filed under: Church Age Tagged: affluence, Christian living, Church Age








November 10, 2015
The Chicken or the Egg? – Part 2
NEWS FLASH!!! Matthew: Volume 7 of Heavenly Citizens in Earthly Shoes is now available from CreateSpace (paperbacks) and Kindle (eBooks). Click on the link to the right of this page to go to Amazon and place your order.
He will cry to Me, “You are my Father, My God, and the rock of my salvation.” I also shall make him My firstborn, the highest of the kings of the earth [Psalm 89:26-27].
The concept of the “firstborn” has to do with inheritance rights. It began with Adam and Eve and has continued to this day. The “firstborn” refers to the son born first in a family.
In the realm of natural birth, the firstborn received the leadership of the family when dad died. He also received “the double portion”, twice as much of the family wealth as the other sons.
In the spiritual realm the Lord also employs the concept of the “firstborn”. Truth be told, the concept in the spiritual realm came first. The Lord made use of it to establish “the law of the firstborn” for the natural realm.
There is a significant difference in the concept of the “firstborn” with respect to the natural and spiritual realms though. We will assay this distinction in today’s study. Without understanding this distinction, we cannot rightly divide the Word of Truth. The Bible will be inexplicable with regard to the spiritual firstborn.
In our two Bible verses today God is speaking. He notes that the future Messiah, the Son of God, will recognize Him as His Father (verse 26). Then Father God adds, “I also shall make him My firstborn, the highest of the kings of the earth” (verse 27).
This is a reference to the spiritual firstborn, dear friends. God is spirit. He doesn’t procreate and have children. The Son of God eternally coexists with Father God and with the Holy Spirit through all eternity. The Son of God was never born, so He cannot be “the son born first”, as is true of the “firstborn” in the natural realm.
What, then, are we to make of this concept of the “firstborn” in the spiritual realm? Well, the most significant aspect of the spiritual firstborn is defined in our Bible verse: he is “the highest of the kings of the earth.” The spiritual firstborn is a reference to preeminence, not to who was born first.
Three offices existed in Old Testament Israel under the Law of Moses. These were,
prophet
priest
king
The Messiah was to combine all three offices in His one person. This was a no-no for anyone else to ever do. Each person of authority in Israel held one or the other of these three offices, but no one was to hold all three. Indeed, even those who held one office had to be chosen by God to that office. Man could not take it upon himself to lay claim to the office of prophet or priest or king.
The Messiah held all three offices. He was the fulfillment of the Law and the fulfillment of all righteousness. He was the King of kings and Lord of lords. He was “the highest of the kings of the earth.”
You can see from this that the spiritual firstborn refers to preeminence. It has reference to being the most distinguished person of his type. He is unique and outstanding above all others.
Jesus Christ is the eternal Son of God. He is also fully man, but only since circa 7 B.C. Jesus is the firstborn of all creation, making Him preeminent over all creation, not the person or thing born first in creation.
Jesus Christ is also the firstborn of all recreation. He is the first man to rise out of death as being dead to sin but alive evermore to righteousness. Those of us who are born again are “second born”. Jesus has the preeminence. All glory goes to Him.
Let’s spend time now giving Him the glory. Let’s stop being full of self and instead deposit self in the nearest rubbish bin. To God be the glory! Jesus Christ be praised. Hosanna to the Son of David!
To further research this issue, I direct you to my book Genesis: Volume 1 of Heavenly Citizens in Earthly Shoes. To purchase my books please go to:
http://www.amazon.com/Randy-Green/e/B00507WC86
Filed under: Church Age Tagged: antitype, firstborn, heir, inheritance, preeminence, Psalm 89, type








November 9, 2015
The Chicken or the Egg? – Part 1
HOT OFF THE PRESS!!! Romans: Volume 9 of Heavenly Citizens in Earthly Shoes is now available from CreateSpace (paperbacks) and Kindle (eBooks). Click on the link to the right of this page to go to Amazon and place your order.
He will cry to Me, “You are my Father, My God, and the rock of my salvation.” I also shall make him My firstborn, the highest of the kings of the earth [Psalm 89:26-27].
Which came first, the chicken or the egg? We’ve all heard that trick question before, most of us in the first grade! If we are your everyday run-of-the-mill worldling, then we find ourselves in a quandary. Hmm. That’s a tough question to answer. How do we get a chicken without it being hatched from an egg? And how do we get an egg without a chicken to lay it?
Then along comes those pesky Christians. They have the answers to everything! Well, the Bible does anyway, and they believe the Bible. According to Genesis 1, the chicken came first. God created everything full-grown to reproduce after its kind.
That is why evolution and uniformitarianism cannot determine the age of the material universe. Fossil fuels were created by God fully developed. They didn’t take millions of years to form under uniform conditions. Diamonds were created by God fully formed. Tons of pressure over humongous periods of time weren’t required to produce those gems.
Man too was created fully developed. There was no procreation, conception, nine months of carrying child, and then a teeny tiny baby came out, followed by two decades of growing into manhood. Not on your life! Man was a fully mature being the day the Lord God created him.
In our Bible verses today we have another instance of the “which came first” trick question. It’s sort of like the joke, “In an emergency call 9-1-1.” To which comes the question, “What’s the number?” Duh! If you have to ask, you probably need instruction on how to use the telephone, maybe a copy of “Telephones for Dummies” or something like that.
Today’s verses make reference to the “firstborn”. This is a Biblical concept having to do with the inheritance. It should be rather obvious—like what’s the number for 9-1-1—but the “firstborn” is the person who is born first in a family. More correctly, the “firstborn” is the male child who is born first in a family.
In the Bible as well as among many other cultures, the firstborn son received the leadership of the family after dad was deceased. He also received the double portion, which entitled him to twice as much of the family wealth. The concept of the “firstborn” served in the place of a will. The inheritance was always divided into equal parts for each son, except for the firstborn who received two parts.
This procedure vis-à-vis the inheritance was standard practice in Scripture from the beginning of time. In the story of Cain and Abel, Cain was the firstborn and Abel his younger brother. When the Lord accepted Abel’s offering but rejected Cain’s, Cain’s nose was bent out of shape. He was the firstborn, you see. How dare God favor his twerp punk bro over him!
The Law of Moses made the law of the firstborn a part of the legal code for the Israelites, while they inhabited the Promised Land. The inheritance procedure of the natural firstborn was thereby perpetuated throughout history.
We will vet the Biblical concept of the spiritual firstborn in our next study. For now spend some time alone with the Lord Jesus. He beckons us into His presence.
To further research this issue, I direct you to my book Genesis: Volume 1 of Heavenly Citizens in Earthly Shoes. To purchase my books please go to:
http://www.amazon.com/Randy-Green/e/B00507WC86
Filed under: Church Age Tagged: antitype, firstborn, heir, inheritance, preeminence, Psalm 89, type








November 8, 2015
The Town Crier – Part 4
NEWS FLASH!!! Acts: Volume 8 of Heavenly Citizens in Earthly Shoes is now available from CreateSpace (paperbacks) and Kindle (eBooks). Click on the link to the right of this page to go to Amazon and place your order.
Righteousness and justice are the foundation of Your throne; lovingkindness and truth go before You [Psalm 89:14].
Contemporary America is under the spell of middle class affluent morality, and it parades itself in the churches as Biblical righteousness. Beware the leaven of the spoiled rich kids, dear people.
A judge’s role is not to be “loving”. He is there to be “righteous”. He is there to enforce the law. God didn’t just overlook man’s sins and send him away scot-free because God is such a swell guy. God the Father gave His one and only Son as a sin offering on man’s behalf. The Son died man’s death that we might live His life. Man’s sins were not overlooked. Their penalty, death, was paid by God Himself.
That is the essence of “grace”, dear friends. It flows from God’s love, not from anything stemming from man. Jesus is the way, the TRUTH, and the life (cf., John 14:6). The Law came through Moses, but grace and TRUTH came through Jesus Christ.
Hence the parallelism in Psalm 89:14. God’s rule is righteous. That is its foundation. So God paid the penalty for man’s sins Himself, thereby maintaining His righteous rule. Sin was not overlooked: it was judged and the sinner executed. Man’s sins were placed on Jesus on the cross, making Jesus to be sin on our behalf.
After maintaining His righteous rule by condemning sin in the flesh, God now holds out His hand to man and offers us peace with Him through our Lord Jesus Christ. This comes by grace through faith. It spells God’s “lovingkindness and truth”. The Law is the foundation of God’s rule, but grace goes before Him. Grace, you see, is the town crier.
The legal proceedings have been completed. The meeting is adjourned. The King has arrived at His decision: the soul that sins will die. Every head drops and every mouth is shut. No one can lift the head to look into the face of the King of kings and Lord of lords. All have sinned and fall short of the glory of God. There is none righteous, no, not even one. All we like sheep have gone astray. We have turned everyone to his own way.
But then the town crier goes before Him, goes ahead of the Law and announces the remainder of the King’s ruling. The town crier announces,
Though all of us have gone astray like sheep and turned to our own way, nonetheless the King has laid on Jesus the iniquity of us all. All that is required of us is to turn back to Jesus and repent of our sins, acknowledge them to Him, and ask Him for His forgiveness.
I think I like this town crier. He is a preacher of extraordinary ability. He is a prophet to proclaim glad tidings of good cheer. He is the lovely feet on the mountaintop to bring good news, to publish glad tidings, to proclaim peace, to declare, “Our God reigns!”
Do you know the grace of God? Have you received His offer of peace through His Son, Jesus Christ? Go to Him now and receive Him. Kiss the Son, lest He smite you in the way.
To further research this issue, I direct you to my book Genesis: Volume 1 of Heavenly Citizens in Earthly Shoes. To purchase my books please go to:
http://www.amazon.com/Randy-Green/e/B00507WC86
Filed under: Church Age Tagged: forerunner, foundation, grace, harbinger, herald, justice, Law, lovingkindness, Psalm 89, righteousness, truth








November 7, 2015
The Town Crier – Part 3
NEWS FLASH!!! Matthew: Volume 7 of Heavenly Citizens in Earthly Shoes is now available from CreateSpace (paperbacks) and Kindle (eBooks). Click on the link to the right of this page to go to Amazon and place your order.
Righteousness and justice are the foundation of Your throne; lovingkindness and truth go before You [Psalm 89:14].
In the prior study we itemized the parallel ideas of the two lines, and we observed that the first line depicts the Covenant of Law, while the second line portrays the Covenant of Grace. Here is how we delineated the lines:
A. righteousness and justice
B. are the foundation of Your throne
A. lovingkindness and truth
B. go before You
We descanted on the parallelism of the first line. God’s throne is symbolic of His rule. The foundation of God’s rule is “righteousness and justice”. The two go together like hand in glove, or better yet like fruit on the tree. It is inconceivable that God could be anything but righteous, is it not? Righteousness and His very character are indivisible.
The legal code of the Israelites while they inhabited the Promised Land was the Law of Moses. God legislated it as the Law for the Israelites in the Promised Land. He noted that obedience to His Law equaled “righteousness”. Justice resulted when the Law was obeyed. The Law was the tree, and it represented righteousness. Obedience to the Law typified the fruit of the tree, the justice which occurred when the Law was obeyed.
Now let’s delve into the second line of the Bible verse. This line portrays the Covenant of Grace. The Law is noted for its “righteousness and justice”. Grace is epitomized by “lovingkindness and truth”. The two are bound together indivisibly in the Person of God, yet they are anything but the same. This is why the Bible verse presents “antonymous parallelism” and not “synonymous parallelism”.
On the one hand God loves us and doesn’t want to sentence us to death for our sins. Yet the wages of sin is death, and so He must put sinners to death as the penalty for their sins. Anything short of this would be tantamount to unrighteousness. Can it even be envisioned, God being unrighteous? Egads, man!
Imagine a local judge in the courtroom. A person is tried and convicted of premeditated murder. His sentencing is underway. The judge looks at him sternly and tells him off for being a lowlife killer. But then the judge’s face changes to a look of leniency, a look of pity and spineless morality. He tells the convicted murderer,
Though you are most definitely guilty of first-degree murder and deserve to die, still I can’t bring myself to have you executed. So go your way and behave yourself. I am releasing you under your own recognizance.
I can smell impeachment proceedings. I can also smell the avenger of blood going to work post haste. That scenario doesn’t depict a “loving” judge. It depicts a spineless wonder, a pusillanimous pansy. Contemporary America is under the spell of middle class affluent morality, dear friends, and it parades itself in the churches as Biblical righteousness. Beware!
Let us ponder this warning in the presence of the dear Lord Jesus. We will conclude this study on the morrow.
To further research this issue, I direct you to my book Genesis: Volume 1 of Heavenly Citizens in Earthly Shoes. To purchase my books please go to:
http://www.amazon.com/Randy-Green/e/B00507WC86
Filed under: Church Age Tagged: forerunner, foundation, grace, harbinger, herald, justice, Law, lovingkindness, Psalm 89, righteousness, truth







