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Monday, January 16, 2023

Gospel of Matthew Chapter 24 Vs. 39

 No One Knows That Day and Hour


Verses 39-42: The observation that the people of Noah’s day knew not the severity and suddenness of the coming destruction indicates that this last generation will be totally unprepared for the coming of the Son of man, the return of Christ to judge the world (see 2 Thes. 1:7-8).

The reference to two being in the field or at work at the time of Christ’s return implies the suddenness of His coming to separate the lost and the saved.


Matthew 24:39 “And knew not until the flood came, and took them all away; so shall also the coming of the Son of man be.”


And knew not... That is, they knew not the exact time until it came upon them. So says he, it shall be when the Son of man shall come. They shall not know the precise time until he comes, and then once again they will be found engaged in the ordinary business of life unconcerned.

There are several comparisons we should note here. Noah knew the flood was coming and was preparing as God had told him to do. He did not know what hour it was coming, but he did know that it was very soon. He especially knew it was soon, when God sealed him and his family in the Ark.

The world around him did not believe that it would rain. It had never rained before, why would it rain now? You see, that is just like worldly people of our day. They do not believe that the second coming of Christ is near. If you try to tell them, they laugh at you like the worldly people of Noah’s day. They were going on about everyday life, just as people are today.

When Jesus returns, it will be too late to decide to accept Him. It was too late for the people of Noah’s day, after it started raining. We have some friends, who sing a song about Noah. It goes like this; It wasn’t raining when Noah built the Ark.

took them all... Rapture Or Destruction?

Destroyed them all (Luke 17:27), that is, the ones that needed to be destroyed, and saved Noah and family. So Christ will destroy some at His coming and leave some to replenish the earth in the Millennium (Zec. 14:16-21; Isa. 2:2-4; 66:19-21; Rev. 20:1-15).

You know, if people could look up in the eastern sky and see Jesus in the clouds, they would believe. Jesus doesn’t want us to believe in our minds in something we can see. Faith is what He wants from us, faith is believing something we cannot see.

Noah and his family were in the Ark of safety, and the people around were left for the punishment that lay ahead for them. In the case of the people of Noah, they were drowned. In the case of the people left when Jesus takes the Christians away, the wrath of God will fall.

Terrible war, and pestilence, and famine await those who are left. In all, 21 plaques are mentioned in the book of Revelation. It is certainly not a rosy picture. The thing to do is be prepared to go with Jesus and escape the horrors that await those left.

Until the day that Noah entered into the ark, and knew not until the flood came, and took them all away Watch therefore: for ye know not what hour your Lord doth come. But know this, that if the Goodman of the house had known in what watch the thief would come, he would have watched, and would not have suffered his house to be broken up. Therefore be ye also ready: for in such an hour as ye think not the Son of man cometh.



As it was in Noah’s day, so it will be before the glorious coming of the Lord.

Book of Hosea Chapter 7 Vs. 10

 THE CONFUSION OF THE NATION


And the pride of Israel testifieth to his face: and they do not return to the LORD their God, nor seek him for all this. Hos. 7:10

And the pride... His pride convicted him. All the afflictions of God humbled him not; yea, they but brought out his pride, which kept him from acknowledging and repenting of the sins which had brought those evils upon him, and from turning to God and seeking to Him for remedy.

People complain of their fortune or fate or stars, and go on the more obstinately, to build up what God destroys. To prop up by human means or human aid what, by God's providence, is failing. They venture more desperately, in order to recover past losses, until the crash at last becomes hopeless and final.

nor seek Him... Seven reasons it is time to seek God:

1. God remembers and keeps a record of all sins committed (Hos. 7:2).

2. The ungodliness and depravity of sinners (Hos. 7:1-7).

3. Sin, if left unchecked, will get out of hand like an uncontrolled fire (Hos. 7:6).

4. Man corrupted by sin is like a cake unturned—unfit to use (Hos. 7:8).

5. Gray hair—old age is coming on (Hos. 7:9).

6. Unconsciousness as to the time left in which to find God.

7. The pride of Israel—God testifies to the sinner of his end (Hos. 7:10; cp. 5:5).

    God had exhausted all the treasures of His severity, as before, of His love. He Himself marvels at His incorrigible and disobedient servant, as He says in Isaiah, Why should ye be stricken anymore? Ye will revolt more and more (Isaiah 1:5). How is this? It follows, because they have no heart.

They were so sure of their standing with God; they did nothing to assure its continuance. They thought of themselves as God's chosen people, and they felt they were beyond being judged of God. Pride of this kind comes just before a fall. They had overlooked the necessity of maintaining their standing with God by their faithfulness. They took God for granted and began seeking thrills with false gods.

Despite her weakened condition, Israel did not repent. The nation’s refusal (arrogance) to acknowledge the covenant God was self-incriminating (cf. testifies against him; also see Hos. 5:5).

The pride of Israel testifieth to his face, yet even when the pride of the nation is touched to the quick by such humiliating overtures as they make to both Assyria and Egypt they do not return to Jehovah their God, nor seek Him for all this.



Despite her weakened condition, Israel did not repent. The nation’s refusal (arrogance) to acknowledge the covenant God was self-incriminating (cf. testifies against him; also see comments on Hos. 5:5).

Sunday, January 15, 2023

Gospel of Matthew Chapter 24 Vs. 38

 No One Knows That Day and Hour


Matthew 24:38 “For as in the days that were before the flood they were eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage, until the day that Noah entered into the ark,”


For as in... Seven reasons it is time to seek God:

1. God remembers and keeps a record of all sins committed (Hos. 7:2).

2. The ungodliness and depravity of sinners (Hos. 7:1-7).

3. Sin, if left unchecked, will get out of hand like an uncontrolled fire (Hos. 7:6).

4. Man corrupted by sin is like a cake unturned—unfit to use (Hos. 7:8).

5. Gray hair—old age is coming on (Hos. 7:9).

6. Unconsciousness as to the time left in which to find God.

7. The pride of Israel—God testifies to the sinner of his end (Hos. 7:10; cp. 5:5).

that were before... Not all the days before the flood, from the creation of the world; but those immediately preceding it, a century or two before it.

They were eating... They were eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage: not that these civil actions of life were criminal in themselves, had care been taken that they were not abused. It is lawful to eat and drink, provided it be in moderation, and not to excess; and to marry, and give in marriage, when the laws, rules, and ends thereof, are observed: and therefore this must be understood, either of their wholly giving themselves up to the pleasures of life, and lusts of the flesh, without any concern about the affairs of religion, the worship and glory of God, the welfare of their souls and their approaching danger, of which Noah had given them warning.

Or of their luxury and intemperance, in eating and drinking, and of their libidinous and unlawful marriages; for the word here used for eating, signifies eating after the manner of brute beasts. They indulged themselves in a brutish way, in gluttony and drunkenness; and it is certain from the account given of them (in Genesis 6:2), that they entered into unlawful marriages, and unclean copulations.

Wherefore these things may be spoken of them, as what were really sinful and wicked, and denote a course of sinning. A constant practice of these sins of intemperance and lust, and which is still more fully expressed, until the day that Noah entered into the ark.

But for those who are not watching, it will be too late-it will be with them as with those who lived at the close of the very first dispensation, who were eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage, until the day that Noah entered into the ark.



Life continued normally for the people of Noah’s day for they were eating, drinking, marrying, and giving in marriage.

Book of Hosea Chapter 7 Vs. 9

 THE CONFUSION OF THE NATION


Strangers have devoured his strength, and he knoweth it not: yea, gray hairs are here and there upon him, yet he knoweth not. Hos. 7:9


Strangers have devoured... The past tense may refer to the invasions of Tiglath-pileser. Both Egypt and Assyria had come to regard Israel as a small earthenware pot between iron pots. These strangers have devoured his strength, i.e., he has less power to resist aggression, less treasure, less land, smaller population. The signs of senility are upon him.

yea, Gray hairs... Themselves the effects of declining age and tokens of decay, are the forerunners of death. Thy gray hairs are thy passing-bell, says the proverb.

he knoweth not... This is saying that the sin crept in without him being aware of it. Such a person turns gray one hair at a time, and does not realize he is gray until after it is complete. The sinful nature came in a little at a time and he was not even aware of it until it was too late.

The negative effects of Israel’s foreign policy are described further in this verse. The nation is compared to an elderly man who has failed to notice the gradual effects of the aging process (loss of physical strength, graying hair). Death is much closer than he expects. The point was probably that Israel was experiencing loss of political autonomy. This loss was epitomized by the tribute payments that were an excessive drain on its wealth and economy (cf. 2Kgs. 15:19-20; 17:3).

Upon the theme of these two epigrams the other verses of this chapter are variations. Has Ephraim mixed himself among the peoples? Strangers have devoured his strength, and he knoweth it not, senselessly congratulating himself upon the increase of his trade and wealth, while he does not feel that these have sucked from him all his distinctive virtue. Yea, gray hairs are sprinkled upon him, and he knoweth it not. He makes his energy the measure of his life, as Isaiah also marked, (Hos. 9:9) but sees not that it all means waste and decay.



The negative effects of Israel’s foreign policy are described further in this verse. The nation is compared to an elderly man who has failed to notice the gradual effects of the aging process (loss of physical strength, graying hair). Death is much closer than he expects. The point was probably that Israel was experiencing loss of political autonomy. This loss was epitomized by the tribute payments that were an excessive drain on its wealth and economy (cf. 2Kgs. 15:19-20; 17:3).

Saturday, January 14, 2023

Gospel of Matthew Chapter 24 Vs. 37

 No One Knows That Day and Hour


Matthew 24:37 “But as the days of Noah [were], so shall also the coming of the Son of man be.”


as the days... The days of Noah before the flood. There were giants in those days and also after that, i.e., after the flood. Jesus’ emphasis here is not so much on the extreme wickedness of Noah’s day (Gen. 6:5), but on the people’s preoccupation with mundane matters of everyday life (eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage (verse 38), when judgment fell suddenly.

They had received warnings, in the form of Noah’s preaching (2Pet. 2:5), and the ark itself, which was a testimony to the judgment that was to come. But they were unconcerned about such matters and therefore were swept away unexpectedly in the midst of their daily activities.

But for those who are not watching, it will be too late-it will be with them as with those who lived at the close of the very first dispensation, who were "eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage, until the day that Noah entered into the ark, and knew not until the flood came, and took them all away Watch therefore: for ye know not what hour your Lord doth come. But know this, that if the Goodman of the house had known in what watch the thief would come, he would have watched, and would not have suffered his house to be broken up. Therefore, be ye also ready: for in such an hour as ye think not the Son of man cometh.



But the period before His coming will be like the time in the days of Noah. People then were enjoying the normal pursuits of life, with no awareness of imminent judgment. Life continued normally for the people of Noah’s day for they were eating, drinking, marrying, and giving in marriage. But the Flood came and took them all away. It was sudden and they were unprepared.

Book of Hosea Chapter 7 Vs. 8

 INIQUITY UNCOVERED


Ephraim, he hath mixed himself among the people; Ephraim is a cake not turned. Hos. 7:8


he hath mixed... By his alliances with the heathen, and by imitation of their manners, he is himself become one of them. He has thrown off all the distinctions and forfeited the privileges of the chosen race.

cake not turned... Referring to the destructive effect of foreign influences. Ephraim was consumed by the unhallowed fire of Baal-worship, with all its passion and persistent or excessive pursuit of sensual pleasures and interests. A cake burnt on one side to a cinder, and on the other left in a condition utterly unfit for food. So, the activity of foreign idolatries and foreign alliances, and the consequent unfaithfulness to Israel’s God, are the nation’s ruin.

This is speaking of God's people mixing with the heathen people around them. It also is speaking of a cake that had been cooked with uneven heat. It was well done on the one side, and the other side of the cake was raw. This is speaking of a person whose life is not consistent. He proclaimed to love God and to live for God, but he played around with the worship of false gods at the same time. He was unstable in all of his ways.

Instead, Ephraim launched a futile foreign policy (Hos. 7:8-12). The baking metaphor continues in Hos. 7:8 (cf. Hos. 7:4, 7:6-7). Israel had formed alliances with foreign nations (cf. Hos. 7:11; 8:9). This is compared to the mixing of flour with oil to form cakes (bālal, mixes, is frequently used in this sense). This policy had proven self-destructive. Israel had become like an unturned cake on hot stones — burned and soon to be discarded.

cake not turned... A thin pancake burned on one side and uncooked on the other—therefore, not fit to eat.

Thirty Similitude's of Israel

1. Whore (Hos. 1:2)

2. Divorcee (Hos. 2:1-13)

3. A divorcee remarried (Hos. 2:14-23; 3:1-5)

4. A backsliding heifer (Hos. 4:16)

5. Troops of robbers (Hos. 6:9)

6. Heated oven (Hos. 7:4-7)

7. An unturned cake (Hos. 7:8)

8. A silly dove (Hos. 7:11)

9. A deceitful bow (Hos. 7:16)

10. A dishonored vessel (Hos. 8:8)

11. A wild ass (Hos. 8:9)

12. Wild grapes (Hos. 9:10)

13. A first-ripe fig

14. An empty vine (Hos. 10:1)

15. A working heifer (Hos. 10:11)

16. Fallow ground (Hos_. 0:12)

17. A bird out of Egypt (Hos. 11:11)

18. A dove out of Assyria

19. A morning cloud (Hos. 13:3)

20. Early dew

21. Chaff

22. Smoke

23. A lily (Hos. 14:5)

24. Lebanon (Hos. 14:5-6)

25. An olive tree (Hos. 14:6)

26. Corn (Hos. 14:7)

27. Wine

28. Wind

29. A vine

30. A green fir tree (Hos. 14:8)


THE CONFUSION OF THE NATION


Hosea begins by summing up the public aspect of Israel in two epigrams, short but of marvelous adequacy:-(Hos. 7:8)

"Ephraim-among the nations he mixeth himself:

Ephraim has become a cake not turned."

It is a great crisis for any nation to pass from the seclusion of its youth and become a factor in the main history of the world. But for Israel the crisis was trebly great. Their difference from all other tribes about them had struck the Canaanites on their first entry to the land; (Num. 23:9 b; Jos. 2:8) their own earliest writers had emphasized their seclusion as their strength; (Deut. 33:27) and their first prophets consistently deprecated every overture made by them either to Egypt or to Assyria. We feel the force of the prophets’ policy when we remember what happened to the Philistines. These were a people as strong and as distinctive as Israel, with whom at one time they disputed possession of the whole land. But their position as traders in the main line of traffic between Asia and Africa rendered the Philistines peculiarly open to foreign influence. They were now Egyptian vassals, now Assyrian victims; and after the invasion of Alexander the Great their cities became centers of Hellenism, while the Jews upon their secluded hills still stubbornly held unmixed their race and their religion. This contrast, so remarkably developed in later centuries, has justified the prophets of the eighth in their anxiety that Israel should not annul the advantages of her geographical seclusion by trade or treaties with the Gentiles. But it was easier for Judaea to take heed to the warning than for Ephraim. The latter lies as open and fertile as her sister province is barren and aloof. She has many gates into the world, and they open upon many markets. Nobler opportunities there could not be for a nation in the maturity of its genius and loyal to its vocation: -

"Rejoice, O Zebulun, in thine outgoings:

They shall call the nations to the mountain.

They shall suck of the abundance of the seas.

And of the treasure that is stored in the sands." (Deut. 33:18-19)

But in the time of his outgoings Ephraim was not sure of himself nor true to his God, the one secret and strength of the national distinctiveness. So, he met the world weak and unformed, and, instead of impressing it, was by it dissipated and confused. The tides of a lavish commerce scattered abroad the faculties of the people and swept back upon their life alien fashions and tempers, to subdue which there was neither native strength nor definiteness of national purpose. All this is what Hosea means by the first of his epigrams: Ephraim-among the nations he lets himself be poured out or mixed up. The form of the verb does not elsewhere occur; but it is reflexive, and the meaning of the root is certain. Balal is to pour out, or mingle, as of oil in the sacrificial flour. Yet it is sometimes used of a mixing which is not sacred, but profane and hopeless. It is applied to the first great confusion of mankind, to which a popular etymology has traced the name Babel, as if for Balbel. Derivatives of the stem bear the additional ideas of staining and impurity. The alternative renderings which have been proposed, lets himself be soaked and scatters himself abroad like wheat among tares, are not so probable, yet hardly change the meaning.

Ephraim wastes and confuses himself among the Gentiles. The nation’s character is so disguised that Hosea afterwards nicknames him Canaan (Hos. 12:8) their religion so filled with foreign influences that he calls the people the harlot of the Ba’alim.

If the first of Hosea’s epigrams satirizes Israel’s foreign relations, the second, with equal brevity and wit, hits off the temper and constitution of society at home. For the metaphor of which this epigram is composed Hosea has gone to the baker. Among all classes in the East, especially under conditions requiring haste, there is in demand a round flat scone, which is baked by being laid on hot stones or attached to the wall of a heated oven. The whole art of baking consists in turning the scone over at the proper moment. If this be mismanaged it does not need a baker to tell us that one side may be burnt to a cinder, while the other remains raw. Ephraim, says Hosea, is an unturned cake.

By this he may mean one of several things, or all of them together, for they are infectious of each other. There was, for instance, the social conditions of the people. What can better be described as an unturned scone than a community one half of whose number are too rich, and the other too poor? Or Hosea may refer to that unequal distribution of religion through life with which in other parts of his prophecy he reproaches Israel. They keep their religion, as Amos more fully tells us, for their temples, and neglect to carry its spirit into their daily business. Or he may refer to Israel’s politics, which were equally in want of thoroughness. They rushed hotly at an enterprise but having expended so much fire in the beginning of it, they let the end drop cold and dead. Or he may wish to satirize, like Amos, Israel’s imperfect culture-the pretentious and overdone arts, stuck excrescence-wise upon the unrefined bulk of the nation, just as in many German principalities last century society took on a few French fashions in rough and exaggerated forms, while at heart still brutal and coarse. Hosea may mean any one of these things, for the figure suits all, and all spring from the same defect. Want of thoroughness and equable effort was Israel’s besetting sin, and it told on all sides of his life. How better describe a half-fed people, a half-cultured society, a half-lived religion, a halfhearted policy, then by a half-baked scone?

We who are so proud of our political bakers, we who scorn the rapid revolutions of our neighbors and complacently dwell upon our equable ovens, those slow and cautious centuries of political development which lie behind us-have we anything better than our neighbors, anything better than Israel, to show in our civilization? Hosea’s epigram fits us to the letter. After all those ages of baking, society is still with us an unturned scone: one end of the nation with the strength burnt out of it by too much enjoyment of life, the other with not enough of warmth to be quickened into anything like adequate vitality. No man can deny that this is so; we are able to live only by shutting our hearts to the fact. Or is religion equally distributed through the lives of the religious portion of our nation? Of late years religion has spread, and spread wonderfully, but of how many Christians is it still true that they are but half-baked living a life one side of which is reeking with the smoke of sacrifice, while the other is never warmed by one religious' thought. We may have too much religion if we confine it to one day or one department of life: our worship overdone, with the sap and the freshness burnt out of it, cindery, dusty, unattractive, fit only for crumbling; our conduct cold, damp, and heavy, like dough the fire has never reached.



Instead, Ephraim launched a futile foreign policy (Hos. 7:8-12). The baking metaphor continues in Hos. 7:8 (cf. Hos. 7:4, 7:6-7). Israel had formed alliances with foreign nations (cf. Hos. 7:11; 8:9). This is compared to the mixing of flour with oil to form cakes (bālal, mixes, is frequently used in this sense). This policy had proven self-destructive. Israel had become like an unturned cake on hot stones - burned and soon to be discarded.

Monday, January 9, 2023

Gospel of Matthew Chapter 24 Vs. 36

 

No One Knows That Day and Hour


Matthew 24:36 “But of that day and hour knoweth no [man], no, not the angels of heaven, but my Father only.”


But of that... Date-Setting Valueless

The exact time of the second coming is unknown to men and angels and even Jesus (Mar. 13:32). God only knows (Acts 1:7). So all date-setting of men who think they know more than they can know is valueless.

day and hour... The disciples wanted to fix the precise time, but this was not for them to know (Acts 1:7). No one knows for sure the hour or the day that the Lord shall return to the earth.

We read (in Luke chapter 21 verses 34-36): “And take heed to yourselves, lest at any time your hearts be overcharged with surfeiting, and drunkenness, and cares of this life, and [so] that day come upon you unawares.” “For as a snare shall it come on all them that dwell on the face of the whole earth.” “Watch ye therefore, and pray always, that ye may be accounted worthy to escape all these things that shall come to pass, and to stand before the Son of man.”

What in the world is surfeiting in verse 34? This is about over indulgence, and how it can cloud our senses to the point where we miss God and become ensnared in the things of this world.

Even though we do not know the day or hour, we can see all around us the signs. We have an expectancy in our hearts, if we truly love Jesus. We must not grow lax and fall back in sin as the Scriptures above are saying in Luke.

Jesus recommended that we use that time to pray. The moment we are not expecting Him, is when Jesus will return. We must be ready. The Jewish bride waits at her home, until the groom builds her a home approved by his father. The groom does not even know the time. When the father is satisfied that the house is ready, he sends his son for the bride.

The groom stands on a hill just outside the city and blows the trumpet. The bride must be ready, and when she hears the trumpet, goes to meet her groom. They steal away together.

The passage from Mat. 24:36 onwards is still quite applicable to the near event, the destruction of Jerusalem; but the language used is evidently such as to carry the mind onward to the more distant event which had been brought prominently forward in the latter part of the prophecy (Mat. 24:36-44). In these verses, again, not only is no date given, but we are expressly told that it is deliberately withheld. What then? Are we to dismiss the subject from our minds? Quite the reverse; for though the time is uncertain, the event itself is most certain, and it will come suddenly and unexpectedly. No time will be given for preparation to those who are not already prepared. True, there will be the sign of the Son of man in heaven, whatever that may be; but, like the other sign which was the precursor of Jerusalem’s destruction, it will appear immediately before the event.



(Mark 13:32-33; Luke 17:26-37) The precise moment of the Lord’s return cannot be calculated by anyone. When the Lord spoke these words, that information was said to be known by only the Father. Christ was obviously speaking from the vantage of His human knowledge (cf. Luke 2:52), not from the standpoint of His divine omniscience.