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"Shaking Off the Intoxication of Compromise" |
A Child in the Womb of God
The true church is a child in the womb of God; what the Almighty feels affects us.
We absorb into our spiritual DNA the great loves of God; His compassion becomes
our compassion. However, what God hates we must not be afraid to also hate, for
our thoughts and attitudes must exist in yielded surrender to His own.
I am thinking of Ezekiel. The prophet was commanded to walk through sinful
"And the Lord said to him, 'Go through the midst of the city and put a
mark on the foreheads of the men who sigh and groan over all the abominations
which are being committed in its midst.'"
Caring
About What He Thinks
It was important to the Lord to identify those who
were united to His heart, who cared more about what He thought than finding
acceptance in a godless world around them. Beloved, there is a great, false
tolerance in the church today. Instead of the
The Lord continued His word to the prophet, "But to the others He said in
my hearing, 'Go through the city after him and strike; do not let your eye have
pity, and do not spare. Utterly slay old men, young men, maidens, little
children, and women, but do not touch any man on whom is the mark; and you
shall start from my sanctuary'" (Ezekiel 9:1-6).
Perhaps we have felt heartache concerning the sins of our society, but we do
not know w what to do. So we buried our feelings. Today, we barely hear the
whisper of what once was the voice of outrage in our hearts. Even when alone
before God we have become silent concerning our vexation about abortion and
child abuse; we have learned to quietly accommodate the multi-leveled invasion
of immorality into our society; we have accepted with but a whimper the loss of
virginity among our youth.
The Lord said, "strike . . . and do not
spare" those who do not mourn. And then He warned, "And you shall
start from my sanctuary."
Being
Willing to be "Out of Step"
Dear pastors, as leaders, we must not be afraid to show our heartache and
distress concerning sin in our land, even if we seem out of step with our
times. I, for one, refuse to use the anticipation of a soon rapture as an
excuse to stop caring about my nation. I tell you, even when the trumpet
sounds, as I rise at the command of God, you will hear me pleading for mercy
for my nation!
Jesus said, "Blessed are those who mourn." If the church today isn't
a revelation of the heart of Christ in the earth, if it isn't mourning over
wickedness and weeping over the suffering masses, it is only because we have
positioned ourselves outside the passions of God.
The Lord told Ezekiel to put "a mark" on the foreheads of "those
who sigh." The Hebrew word for the "mark" was the last letter of
the Hebrew alphabet, the "tau." Its symbol was that of a cross
without the top, similar to our letter "T." This sign was often used
in first-century Christianity as the symbol of the cross. Looking at it from
God's eternal perspective, it was as though the Lord said to Ezekiel, essentially,
"Put a cross on the foreheads of those who grieve over sin."
Interestingly, although judgment had fallen upon
The Future
"Seal"
Consider also that the Book of Revelation declares there will come a time prior
to the judgments of tribulation, when the Almighty shall indeed send forth His
angels to seal "the bond-servants of our God on their foreheads" (Rev
7:3). This "seal of God" on their foreheads shall identify them
during the ensuing plagues. Whatever this mark is, it shall become a shield of
immunity in the days ahead. Because of the similarities between Ezekiel and
John's revelation, I am struck with a question: Is the Spirit of God still
seeking to identify those who sigh and groan over the injustices, heartaches
and abominations of their land?
Dear friends, let us shake off the intoxication of compromise. Too many of us
are entertained by things we should weep over. God destroyed the world during
Noah's day because of violence, yet we sit before televisions and in theaters
amused by violence. The Lord ultimately destroyed
I am talking about being alive to the feelings of the God in Whom
we dwell. Yes, we should be grateful for all He has done, but let us be
thankful while we break the spell of compromise. We can transform our land and
God will help us! He does not want us only to react with outrage, but to turn
our anger into intercession and godly action. His desire is that we reconnect
with the passions of His heart. Ask Him how He feels about the needs in the
world around you. If the church indeed is a child in the womb of God, can we
open our spirits again to the passions of His heart?
by Francis Frangipane
http://www.frangipane.org