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Showing posts from August, 2022
The Evil of this World         We are continuing in our series about what Jesus and the Bible say about the world and how to live in it. Last week’s article focused on what Jesus, who is the Truth, tells us about the world. In the process, we got an overview of who Jesus is, what He has done, how He has overcome the world, and how He now reigns over the world.       Reading last week’s article , were you surprised at how many of the Scriptural references refer to the devil and his demons? Amazing, isn’t it? When we look at those Scriptures we see quite clearly that Jesus came to overcome the devil and his evil, and they are very real indeed.       A couple weeks ago a YouTube video by a guy called “JP” went around social media. It is titled, “ Why I Changed My Mind About Evil! (I Was WRONG) .” In his own humorous way, JP basically says that in the past he could brush off the idea of evil, the devil and demons, but not in today’s world. It is all too real. He speaks of how we must lear
The Reign of Christ over This World.       “What will it profit a person to gain the whole world if he loses his own soul?” ( Mt16:26 ; Mk 8:36 ; Lk 9:25 .)       “World,” of course can mean the physical universe. “World” is also used in the Bible to refer to the collection of forces of opposition to God. “Worldliness.” Anti-God.       So what if a person gains everything this world has to offer – riches, pleasures, honors and respect, power and authority over others, self-satisfaction – all of it! But if you lose your soul, your personhood, your life? If you end up apart from God by your own choice? That’s Hell. You’ve given your soul to the devil. Jesus says your soul – destined for eternity – is worth more than the whole world. But you’ve tossed it away.       So let’s look at what Jesus, the Truth, tells us about this world. First, He’s not of this world ( Jn 8:23 , 17:14 ). The world doesn’t know the Father ( Jn 17:25 ) and doesn’t know the Son ( Jn 1:10 ). The world’s rulers do n
Meditation on the Two Standards of the Two Kingdoms. Last week we spoke of two kingdoms within this world. We have only the two options: to live according to the kingdom of this world and the devil, or according to the kingdom of Jesus Christ. There is no other option. To serve self is to serve the devil.  Bob Dylan laid it out it in his 1980 Grammy award-winning song:  But you’re gonna have to serve somebody, yes indeed You’re gonna have to serve somebody Well, it may be the devil or it may be the Lord But you’re gonna have to serve somebody. In his Spiritual Exercises , St. Ignatius of Loyola (1491-1556) has a Meditation on Two Standards . Ignatius had been a soldier. The “standard” is the banner held high in battle signifying the lord under whom the soldiers serve. Ignatius begins this meditation – and we might follow along – as follows: “This is the history. Here it will be that Christ calls and wants all beneath His standard, and Lucifer, on the other hand, wants
The World's Two Kingdoms.         In our series reviewing what Jesus Christ and the Bible tell us about the world, we have so far reviewed that the world as created by God is good, although now in a “fallen” state because of the entrance of the evil which fallen angels (devil, demons) and humans brought into the world ( Gen 3 ). Due to such rebellion, creation now suffers death ( Wis2:24 ) and decay ( Ro 8:20-23 ), and is under the power of the devil, its ruler ( Jn 12:31 ; 14:30 ; 16:11 ; 2 Cor 4:4 ). But we also know God has a plan that is being worked out in history.       Then what is the world’s destiny? On the one hand, the world is to be condemned ( 1Cor 11:32 ) and punished ( Is 13:11 ) for its evil. Yet just as God’s grace has prepared the means of salvation for humanity so that we need not be condemned ( 1Cor 11:32 ), there will similarly be a “new creation,” a “new heavens and a new earth in which righteousness dwells” ( 2 Pet 3:13 ; cf. Rev 21:1 ; Catechism ofthe Cathol