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  • God Cries...

    God cries There is this one momentous reason why God cries...His divine love. We might then wonder, coming from so high a Being, what must be the sounding of the God who cries. Could it be a voice that reminds us of where we stand with such a holy God? Could it be a sounding that gives us greater understanding of how we are to see God? We might ought to understand that there can be no technical description to any sound coming from God. We know of the sound of thunder, we know of the sound of wind, of fire, of lightning, trumpets, and even a still small voice. The soundings of God can be revealed expressively or impressively through mountains, water, trees, meadows, clouds, valleys, landscapes, and so much more, but most persistently, through His Word. There can be no audible expression attending God’s soundings without the presence of the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit will help us hear God’s soundings whether God decides to speak audibly, visually, or inwardly through impressions, or even while it walks. As believers we have access to know the plans, mind, and purposes of God for our life through the Holy Spirit. Some of us wait for the face to face encounter. We must always consider the spiritual impressions of God’s nature. When we are in the mind of that holy thing born, God sounds like our own voice. Angels speak in both a physical and spiritual light. Who among us can discern the characteristics of God’s love? Love is the greatest attribute of God. When God sounds, He sounds to our faith, to our hope. God does not have faith in the way we have faith, because He never has to “trust” outside of Himself. God does not have hope the way we have hope, because He knows all things and is in complete control. But God is love, and will always be love. Can a faith that moves mountains be heard? Fortunately, we don’t need to choose between faith, hope, and love. God cares about our coming closer to Him. His crying is not dramatic. In our minds, with His will, we engage with wisdom the understanding of God’s nature through a more subtle path of discernment subtle path of discernment. God does not want us to discern in isolation. He lets us hear His crying through people we know who are farther down the path of holiness than we are. God has made us as an inherently relational being and as we are striving to become what we are purposed to be, we find ourselves deciding between sin and virtue. Then know that the voice of God as He cries is through virtue alone. God never asks us to sin. God’s voice is the sound of consistent love. God comes near us for a good purpose in a contrite spirit. In the reality of God what does it mean that He sheds tears? God is beyond human. Can God’s tears be more than an emotional response? He tells us that His eyes run down with tears. God cries for the pressures from the narrowness of circumstances of things that we are to endure. He knows the grievous blows that are coming to His people. God is love, and there is this principle taught in the divine Word, that true love weeps with those that weep. This is exemplary of the Divine character. But God’s peace of mind is never disturbed. His fatherly love that shares the sorrows of His human family contains no anxiety over our eternal welfare. With Divine serenity His wisdom has planned for the eternal welfare of all His people, and in His serenity He knows His Divine love and power will attain that goal. The Lord saw that the wickedness of humankind was great in the earth…and it grieved Him to His heart. Yes, God cried. During the crusades, soldiers in route to the Holy Land slaughtered followers of Christ hiding in their synagogues. Cries of anguish shrilled unto heaven as the wooden structures were torched. And God cried. In Europe reformer’s blood flowed freely in Roman Catholic countries as victims of the so-called “Holy” Inquisition totaled in the millions. And God cried. Over 20 million Black beings were enslaved and between 2 to 4 million died while in slave ships yet at sea during the “Middle Passage” voyage to slave markets run largely by white so-called Christians. And God cried. Six million people claiming to be the people of God, descendants of those who reckoned his blood on themselves and their children were hunted, gassed, and burned in the tragedy termed Holocaust. And God cried. The first of two atomic bombs claimed 130,000 victims and terrified the world. And God cried. Ruthless governments of Nazi Germany, Communist rule, American inexplicable wickedness and the emerging pattern of its unhinged frothing hatred. And God is crying. God’s empathy runs so deep that He actually knows, in the sense of feeling, our troubles, sorrows and tragedies. God grieves with us, and He isn’t in a hurry to superimpose His reality on ours aggressively, why? Because He understands that our tears and temporal pain are a natural consequence of the brokenness we feel which is a direct result of the brokenness in this world. So He empathizes with us first, before He brings His truth to bear in our reality, however long that takes, Love is patient. Does God cry is not an academic question or an abstract philosophy. God suffers when man suffers, and yes, God has His purposes for permitting suffering. God knows the end from the beginning. God’s Son departed from his honor, his majesty to be with us. The foreknowledge of God adds another dimension to the scope of God’s crying. God is doing things too wonderful for us to understand right now. But soon we will see with a clearer understanding of God, that we might serve Him more faithfully and with greater appreciation. God’s last great cry to humanity is going on right now throughout the whole world. We’re a part of this cry, the Bride of Christ with the tears of Calvary, the tears of God, the tears of Jesus, the tears of the Holy Spirit. The Bible tells us that we have been made partakers of His divine nature. Contained in the tears of Calvary are all the love, compassion, mercy of God. In the tears of Calvary, God provided that all the fruits of the Spirit could be manifested in each child of God’s life. God’s crying is not a sound. It is the sheer silence of His presence. You want to hear God cry? Go outside, look around and see what we consider the joy of His creation. Are we attuned to God spiritually? Can we discern the movement of the Holy Spirit? Few there are that can even recognize the voice of God, let alone hear it. Those who are in a right relationship with God can tune out the noise of the world. As God hears their cries, so they hear His. What does God cry about? Why does He cry? Sin interrupted our walk with God and He cries to us in these memorable words...”where art thou”? That cry has been going forth down through the ages to other Adam’s, other Eve’s…God crying over His lost children. Think of the multitudes who have been lost. As Noah and his family boarded the ark, God cried. He cried those seven days the ark door stood open. God thought about the first man and woman He made, how horrifying it had been when they fell into sin, how it grieved His heart when He had to drive them from the Garden and place cherubim at the gate with a flaming sword to keep them out. Never will God forget the way He cried that day. God cried again the day the ark door was to close. Those outside were given one last chance to repent. As God stood looking at the ark so long in the making, He knew a multitude of people were steeped in sin, darkness. All their thoughts were evil continually. God, shedding the tears of His great love, His burning tears of great compassion for lost humanity, the unseen hands of His angel took hold of the ark door and pushed it shut. But when the ark door was sealed, it was a tearless God who poured down the rains from heaven and opened up the fountains of the earth. It might be that the people began to pray. But they found no compassion, no tears of God, no crying; for their prayers contained no love for God but were filled with fear and anger. Without a tear, God brought judgment on those outside the ark of safety. God will not shed tears when He brings final judgment to human beings; they would be useless tears. God sheds tears when those tears can help. If people shut themselves out of reach of His tears, if His tears will not move them, God cries no more. It’s over and done with. How would we feel were God to look at us without the tears of Calvary? Imagine what it would be like for those who are in sin. Too many think they can find the Lord anytime they want – and they can as long as He has tears for them. But one day those tears may not be there, and there will be no hope of Heaven left at all. The only escape is in the tears of Calvary, the only love, the only faith, the only salvation. Without those tears...Do not think it makes God sound too vulnerable to say that He cries. He cries because our unbelief causes us unnecessary grief and sorrow. Our sin is committed against greater light. We stand on a higher mountain and see more than any could ever see. We have a completed Word with a full and detailed record of God's trustworthiness. We have the written testimonies of testimonies generations of godly fathers and faithful others who have passed down to us unshakeable proofs of God's love. And what of the countless personal experiences. He cries because we fail to recognize who He is and rest in His promises. We make God cry. And when we hear God cry, we move to a higher reality of faith. And when we see God cry, we move into a new revelation of His love. Our being made in the image of God and knowing that our God cries lets us know that crying is not a sign of weakness but of strength. Crying is more than an emotion, it is having the heart of God. God’s cries and our cries are joined. God’s cry is a cry of invitation. There is this war cry coming from God’s people today. This is born from confidence that God is mighty and that He is with us. In these last days God will use our cries to help others overcome difficulties. Our tears will be a blessing to many. As the woman’s tears washed Jesus’ feet, our cries will strengthen hearts to be cleansed through prayer and repentance. Just as Jesus wept, not for the death of a friend, but for the lack of faith that his presence means life. They knew not that he was a Savior who dwells alongside, above, and within the creation itself. Our evils have afflicted God. That is why we worship a Lord who experiences all the emotions of the world so that we may relate and cleave to something who has borne our pain. We serve a God who cries. There is no faltering on the part of God in dealing with us in the spirit of fathership. He deals with us as His children. Christ was brought to the extremity which we shall never reach but as he cried in the spirit of sonship we see our God bitterest cry commence with “O my Father”. If we remain faithful, we will go through arduous trials. God will agonize with us. This was Christ’s own Godlike nature that leaped up in him. He is the divine original. This compassion is peculiar to Himself dictated by his originality. And so, we know God cries in the inwardness of His love which may serve us for a pattern, but of which no pattern had existed before. This suggest of the memorable intercession prayer of Jesus overwhelmingly showing the deity of his affection. This is the first cry of our Savior’s intercession for those who will be perfected. And his second cry was his intercession for his enemies...Father, forgive them. All His intercession is in a measure like the intercession of his prayer and on Calvary and his cries help us to reason the character of the whole of His intercession above. Our Savior prayed for persons who did not deserve the prayer, but on the contrary, merited a curse - persons who did not ask for the prayer and even scoffed at it when they heard it. Even so in heaven there stands the great High Priest, who pleads for guilty men...and so our God still cries. There are none on earth that deserve His intercession. He pleads for none on the supposition that they do deserve it. He stands there to plead as the just One on the behalf of the unjust. Not if any man be righteous, but “If any man sin, we have an advocate with the Father.” God cries because His heart of love is entreating the favor of heaven on our behalf. Tears and cries of omnipotence. God cries out of His own personal sorrow for what sin costs, representing the richness and depth of His character. God is spirit. The Father and the Holy Spirit do not cry literal tears as we do. We cry over situations that are overwhelming or uncertain to us. God does not have that element of uncertainty to deal with. He is never overwhelmed, for He has all authority in heaven and on earth. How are God’s tears real? God stores our tears in a bottle. God’s esteem for our tears is an acknowledgement that our sorrow and our very lives are precious in God’s eyes. Christ will be glorious in the eyes of the Lord; and those who are Israel, who are in Christ are truly glorious that are so in God's eyes. We are His tears, just as we are His joy. Though Israel be not gathered, yet shall I be glorious in the eyes of the LORD. Our tears are not lost on God. These tears cause God to be deeply moved. And we are called to be more than onlookers in this drama, to do more than pronounce our judgment about which people God loves and whether God could have done more to prevent certain tragedies. We too must allow the tears being shed around us to disturb us greatly and move us deeply. We need to recognize the tears that God is collecting and crying, and to choose to take part in God’s redemptive and restorative activity on behalf of all those who weep. God cries in our cry. Many have difficulties connecting God with emotional concerns that we have over situations. God’s Word tells us that we were made in God’s image and it also shows us that we can make God joyful, pleased, or sad. Do we think that our behavior has no effects to God’s heart? The spirit of God can be grieved. God is sorrowful when we reject Him. When we willfully forsake His way to walk somewhere else, due to personal passions, wills and ambitions. The spirit of God is not indifferent but sorrowful in such cases. The bible weighs in on what would appear to be the very first reference to the emotions of God in the Old Testament. God repented and He was grieved in his heart. God’s repentance and grieving gives reference to our understanding of Him. For since we cannot comprehend God as He is, it is necessary that, for our sake, He should, in a certain sense, transform Himself. For a God who knows every event that will occur can repentance really take place in God? With this consideration, nothing can happen which is by Him unexpected or unforeseen. God is celestial and sovereign in all His rest. God forever is like Himself, however, truth could not otherwise be known about how great is God's hatred and detestation of sin, therefore the Spirit accommodates Himself to our capacity to understand. God was so offended by the atrocious wickedness of men, it was as if his heart was deeply wounded with mortal grief. It is reality that both the image and the likeness of God were purposed to give us spiritual insight to the infinite realm of what holiness is. The mode of accommodation is for God to represent Himself to us not as He is in Himself, but as He must seem to us. Although He is beyond all disturbance of mind, yet He testifies that He is angry toward sinning sinners. Therefore, whenever we hear that God is angered, we ought not to imagine any emotion in Him, but rather to consider that this expression has been taken from our human experience; because God, whenever He is exercising judgment, exhibits the appearance of one kindled or angered. We learn this of our God...divine emotion is the quiet, understatement of God’s love for His people and His hatred for sin. This divine emotion spiritually bursts with hidden meaning. Here is our coming unto God and understanding the truth of His cries. Let’s discuss the drama of emotion to better understand how God cries. There is God and then there is us. A mystery is our created pattern in His image, His likeness. Emotion is either divine or undivine. When misused it is undivine and restricted to the physical and the shadowy mind. It’s an I, my, mine mentality. Any emotion that binds our conscience should be undone. Divine emotion should be pure in its source to expand our consciousness. When it comes from our soul, it tells us, "I came from God.” God is divine. His repenting, His grieving, God’s cries are divine. God’s cries open for His followers an expression of their inner aspiration. We become better soldiers in the fight against sin. We understand better why Jesus came to us as one of us. In Christ, as he wept, God cried and we feel that humanity is part and parcel of our consciousness, then we have divine emotion. We know why, we know how God cries. We are affected because we truly feel our own existence in the heart of humanity as is Jesus Christ our God. If we want to transform our lower emotion, then we must start feeding our divine emotion. We can consciously feed our divine emotion by feeling that each individual is God's child and humanity's embodied hope. Then we will have the inner urge to fulfil the divinity in humanity. The divine within us is totally responsible for us and for others. God risks revealing this character peculiarity in His crying to expand our consciousness, sweeten our existence and fulfil not only our life but also the lives of those around us who will receive the truth. For God to present a transform event of divinity and humanity, we come to see that the impure, earthbound emotion can spiritually be transformed. It will be thrown into the fiery sea of divine emotion, where everything is purified. We prioritize this “feeling” of closeness with God over the relationship itself, which is steeped in the truth of God’s Word. We come to all of the law of God with the love and grace of God. We cry ourselves to sleep desiring to understanding the hurt, the pain, the tenderness, the intimacy, of our God that extends beyond the comprehension of our Creator. Our God cries and He is the fountainhead of all wisdom, understanding, and knowledge. And in His Being He becomes even more of a mystery to us. God cries. How could He create something in us that He doesn’t understand on the highest of levels or even possess Himself? It’s not that He doesn’t feel. Indeed, God feels - He feels in a perfect way, untainted by the curse of sin. Faith has us draw this inference...flowing out of the heart of God Himself is His image in us to experience His love, His grief, His joy as qualities of our own. God’s feelings for His people are deep and genuine - so perfect that such a feeling can never be possessed by fallen human beings, but only by the God who embodies within Himself the utmost perfection of emotion. Here is how God cries - Jesus wept. “Wept” doesn’t mean that His eyes got a little moist, or that He had to swallow a lump in His throat. And it certainly doesn’t mean He stood beside Mary and Martha as they grieved, with His arms crossed, disappointed in their lack of faith. “Jesus wept,” means that He felt the gut wrenching anguish that comes from losing ones you love and who you would die for, and displayed it in a very human way - by shedding tears. Knowing that he would raise one that was faithful didn’t stop him from entering into their pain and experiencing it with them. We must begin to show the marks of our divine origin. Our cries for others are not just tears. The Holy Spirit must elevate our servitude above duty fulfillment. We will see many abandon the truth. This will hurt us. We must be charged with sacred feeling for every soul, while having profound and tender regret for those who refuse the witness. We must let faith and truth be that powerful experience of godliness that is the seat of our emotion. Our God is an awesome God, and part of His awesomeness is His emotional-ness. Emotions are divine when we have true reverence for God. The emotive poetry written in the word depicts God’s heartbreak over the trauma of His broken relationship with His people is unmatched anywhere. What are we to do with this? We are to cry out to God!

  • Twin Lakes…

    Twin Lakes Let’s call this writing a treatise that weaves comprehensive scripture deeply, reverently rooted and judicially solemn seeking to portray the irrevocable finality of God’s counsel and the absolute termination of sin’s possibility. In the unfolding drama of Revelation is arranged two distinct but profoundly connected immolations of evil: first, at the coming of the King in glory, the beast and the false prophet are seized and cast alive into “a” lake of fire, an event that publicly strips the religiously influential deceivers of their power and exposes the jurisprudence of heaven that has run its lawful course on those who misled multitudes; second, after the millennium the ultimate judicial consummation occurs—the resurrection of the wicked dead, the final assize of every soul, and the casting of “death and hell” into “the lake of fire”—a scene that demonstrates the difference between an initial purging of instruments of deception and the final, universal extinguishment of death, the grave, and all remnants of rebellion. These twin scenes, separated by the thousand years, allow us to see God’s wisdom in ordering history: first the public unmasking and judicial disposal of religious counterfeiters who led the guilty to perdition, then a long, patient millennial epoch in which the saints— those whose names are preserved in the book of life—share in heaven the vindication of God’s character and the unassailable proof of the rectitude of divine administration while the subtlety of sin and the empty boasts of rebellion are left, for a time, as exemplars of folly to be seen and judged. The millennium, therefore, is not a hiatus of injustice but a period in which God’s law and the character of the Redeemer are perfectly displayed and defended while the last act of rebellion is given its public demonstration upon the reconstructed stage of earth when Satan is loosed and gathers his deluded host for the final assault; in this way God’s dealing with sin is both patient and judicially exacting—patient because every opportunity for repentance had been afforded prior to the awful sentences passed in the great day of judgment, and exacting because the rejection of mercy is accounted and executed according to immutable holiness. The imagery of Jeremiah 4 — seed of a new creation where the earth becomes like a solitude and the heavens withdraw their light—casts an ancient prophetic shadow over the postmillennial scene: the desolation that follows Satan’s last desperate effort vividly manifests the truth that rebellion, after every avenue of mercy is exhausted, exists only as self- annihilating fury and is incapable of originating anything lasting or restorative; it is the echo of death, not the seed of a new creation. Our insistence upon exploring Papal Rome, apostate Protestantism, and their various relational permutations to the phenomena of deception and judgment is theologically germane: the beast and the false prophet in Revelation act as archetypes and concrete agents—religious-political leaderships that, by mingling earthly authority with counterfeit sanctity, drew multitudes into culpable complicity and must therefore, by divine necessity, receive an authoritative and public sentence that demonstrates both the reality of sin’s guilt and the righteousness of God’s condemnation. When one examines the distinctions—Papal Rome + apostate Protestantism, their permutations - all three equally, both conditions if possible, woven together, blended yet firm and judicially solemn—one must maintain theological distinction: the Scripture’s indictment is against systems and movements that substitute human constructs for divine truth and employ religion as a mask for tyranny; whether the historical Horn of Papal power or the seductions of apostasy within Protestant ranks, the essential sin is the same—usurping God’s prerogative, obscuring truth, and leading souls into perdition—and therefore the treatment by divine justice is appropriately parallel, though the historical paths and culprits differ. In exposition we can treat these as distinct manifestations of the same moral reality: Papal Rome and apostate Protestantism are two historical channels through which the beast’s power and the false prophet’s delusion flowed; together they constitute that “religious” matrix which proved the fertile field for deception, and toward them God’s judicial process moves with solemn deliberation—no sorrow at final execution, because sorrow would imply surprise or injustice, whereas Scripture insists every sinner had been warned, every trumpet sounded, every pleading of mercy extended and refused. The narrative must emphasize that the casting of the beast and false prophet into “a” lake of fire at Christ’s visible return is a necessary juridical act that removes from the earthly theater the principal seducers so that the vindication of the saints and the full exposition of God’s law may be clearly presented without further perversion; it is an act of final disentanglement of the guilty from the saved— a judicial separation executed with the precision of heaven’s legal sovereignty. The millennium that follows is not a mere interlude but a revelatory epoch when the redeemed, gathered to heaven, behold the full outcome of sin’s fruit and sing the righteousness of God who had been misrepresented, for heaven’s fellowship requires that the mystery of suffering, redemption, and divine character be fully illuminated so that the redeemed might be forever assured that God’s ways were true and that the tragedies of earth did not imply defect in his government but the necessary consequence of free agents’ choices. During those thousand years Satan’s desolation across the ruined earth—wandering, “destroyed attempting to prove his lies”—becomes a living parable: deprived of the human trust he once manipulated, he walks the hollow scene of his own undoing and finds nothing to reconstruct the old lie. The final loosing of Satan at the close of the millennium functions as a culminating demonstration in which the rebellion he instigates is allowed once more to gather, then collapses in one last blaze of futility; the resurrection of the wicked, their rally and attempt, and their final casting into “the lake of fire” show to all intelligences— heavenly and redeemed—what rebellion finally leads to: not reform, not survival, but utter extinction. The bible’s insistence that nothing “ever again remotely related to sin could ever come into existence” after this consummation must be the theological leitmotif of the treatise: the “lake of fire” into which “death and hell” are cast is not a mere temporary disciplinary device but the terminus of sin’s storyline, the metaphysical end of death’s dominion and the final eradication of all principle and personhood that embodied rebellion; with the destruction of death itself the conditions for sin vanish because sin is inextricably bound to mortality, to the willful denial of God’s authority, and to the corrupting capacity of created wills—once those are judged and removed, there remains no substrate on which evil can re- emerge. No surface or material on or from which an organism can live, can grow. To elaborate extensively on these events, the writing must juxtapose careful exegesis with prophetic typology: Papal Rome exemplifies the institutional fusion of spiritual title and temporal coercion; apostate Protestantism illustrates the more subtle corrosion in which truth is compromised while pious language is preserved; together they reveal how deception can be both crude and cunning, both externally oppressive and internally pacifying; all three conditions—tyranny, apostasy, and the hybrid blend—show the breadth by which human systems can rebel against God; woven together in narration they expose the full panorama of affronts that justice finally answers. The judicial tone throughout is to be firm and solemn because Scripture’s portrayal of the final scenes is juridical rather than merely punitive: God’s actions are vindicatory, antithetical to arbitrary cruelty, and entirely consonant with the display of his perfections—holiness, justice, mercy, and truth. This writing will repeatedly emphasize that every opportunity for repentance had been granted and refused, thereby removing any legitimate grounds for sorrow in the execution of sentence; sorrow, if present, would only belong to the lost, whose eternal loss is the natural and just consequence of their obstinacy. Yet this treatise must not be superficial; it must be pastorally sober, grieving for souls while unwavering in its affirmation that God’s ways are right. As the narrative unfolds it should trace the legal and moral logic from Revelation’s immediate removal of the instruments of deception, through the millennial vindication of truth, to Revelation’s final unmaking of evil—each step showing how providence employs both restraint and demonstration to render the case against sin incontrovertible. It should meditate on the two-lake imagery: “a lake of fire” at the first act signifying the specific disposal of the primary deceivers, and “the lake of fire” at the final act signifying the ultimate, universal eradication of death and rebellion. It should point out that Satan’s deferral of ultimate punishment until after the thousand years serves a pedagogical purpose: by allowing the saints to witness the awful completeness of sin’s failure and the finality of divine justice, God leaves no plausible excuse; the universe’s moral education is thereby consummated. In the theological architecture of the writing there must be careful handling of typology and historical application, neither conflating symbolic portrait with simple historicist caricature nor divorcing prophetic archetype from its concrete historical manifestations; the beast and the false prophet function as both symbolic principles of apostate religion and as historical actors who misled nations—thus Papal Rome and apostate Protestantism are not caricatures but real entities whose histories illustrate the prophetic fulfillment in diverse degrees. The tone must remain judicially solemn but not vindictive: the execution of judgment is the necessary, impartial conclusion of a moral universe in which freedom and responsibility are real and where consequences are not avoidable by divine negation of moral order. The treatise must also develop the doctrine that the final eradication of sin is simultaneously the restoration of created order to its original intent: with death destroyed and the lake of fire emptied of all except the remnants of rebellion to be consumed, the new heavens and new earth may be inaugurated where the possibility of sin has been forever removed so that the creaturely life of the redeemed is no longer fraught with the moral ambiguities of a probationary state but rests in unchallenged fellowship with the Creator. Throughout, the writing will bring to bear the depth of biblical reasoning: God’s determinate counsel is not arbitrary decree but a coherent plan that harmonizes the demands of justice with the outflow of mercy, that vindicates his law by suffering and substitution, and that finally eradicates the conditions which allowed sin to exist. The writing must labor to show the brilliance of providential fulfillment: how each prophetic stroke— casting into “a” lake of fire, the millennial showing, the loosing and final overthrow—serves a pedagogical and a juridical end, proving to all intelligences that God’s government was both free from flaw and utterly merciful in opportunity. It should insist, with clarity and solemnity, that nothing thereafter remotely related to sin can come into being, since the instrumentalities, substrates, and willing agents of sin have been removed, judged, and, where necessary, annihilated, and that the new creation that follows is a cosmos free from the possibility of moral rebellion. The prose will avoid sentimentalism and avoid any implication that God takes pleasure in condemnation; rather, it will insist that condemnation is the necessary and tragic aftermath of persistent rebellion. The composition will be densely argued, scripturally anchored, and rhetorically measured—employing the texts as the foundational description while allowing typological and moral reasoning to draw out their implications. Finally, the conclusion will rest upon twin pillars the twin pillars of God’s unassailable righteousness and his everlasting love: the judicial acts recorded in Revelation are the closure of a moral drama in which mercy reached to its uttermost and in which justice, in the end, secures the conditions for eternal blessedness where sin, death, and deception are forever impossible—thus fulfilling the determinate counsel of heaven and glorifying the Redeemer whose cross made both the vindication of law and the restoration of creation possible. In the vision of Revelation, where history reaches its final clarity and all shadows break under the weight of unveiled truth, the Spirit draws before us a sequence of events so decisive, so absolute, that no creature in any realm of existence will misunderstand their meaning. The Scriptures speak of the return of Jesus Christ as the King of kings and Lord of lords, coming in brightness and majesty, no longer veiled in humility, no longer hidden beneath the garments of suffering, but radiant in the full splendor of the glory He possessed with the Father before the world was. Revelation presents Him riding forth on a white horse, His eyes as a flame of fire, crowned with many crowns, and bearing a name that no one fully knows except Himself: a revelation of divine identity not diminished by incarnation nor contained by human concepts. The armies of heaven follow Him, clothed in white and pure righteousness, for they come not to wage a human war, but to bear witness to the judgment that proceeds from the One whose words are sharper than any two-edged sword. At His coming, the kings of the earth, the mighty, the captains, and all who joined themselves to the final rebellion stand assembled in open defiance against divine sovereignty. Yet there is no contest, no struggle, no battle in the sense of opposing powers wrestling for dominion. The Word that once spoke creation into form now speaks judgment, and the glory of the Lord consumes all opposition as easily as light dispels darkness when it appears. In that hour, two figures stand at the center of the world’s rebellion: the beast and the false prophet. These do not represent mere individuals only, but systems of organized religious and political deception that for ages held humanity in bondage through counterfeit worship and counterfeit authority. The beast stands as the embodiment of Papal Rome, that amalgam of political power and sacramental claim which exalted itself above the Word of God, thought to change times and laws, and seated human authority where only the eternal Lawgiver may reign. The false prophet stands as the apostate Protestant world, which after receiving light, truth, and reformation, turned back again to the pattern of Rome, embracing human tradition, worldly philosophy, and a religion of comfort rather than obedience. Together the dragon they formed a counterfeit trinity with the dragon who inspired them, teaching the nations to worship human authority in the name of God. Their deception was not forced merely through violence, but sweetened with the language of piety, ritual, sentiment, and unity, causing multitudes to follow with reverent sincerity what was in truth rebellion against the Most High. These are the deceivers of Revelation 19, and Scripture says they are cast alive into “a lake of fire burning with brimstone.” This casting is not the final destruction of all wickedness, nor the end of Satan’s kingdom, but the first public judicial removal of the religious powers that led humanity into delusion. Their judgment at Christ’s coming reveals a key truth about divine justice: the leaders of deception are dealt with first, before the final judgment of the masses who followed them, for leadership carries accountability equal to the influence it bore. Yet the world does not end when they are removed, for the story of sin has one final testimony to give. The wicked who followed the beast and the false prophet are slain at the brightness of Christ’s coming, and all the righteous— those whose names are found written in the Lamb’s book of life—are gathered, transformed, and ascended to be with Christ. Revelation records that they live and reign with Him a thousand years, seated upon thrones, given judgment, and participating in the great review of the cases of the lost. This is not a second chance for those who rejected salvation, nor a reconsideration of divine verdicts, but the opening of every record so that the redeemed may see the righteous foundation upon which God has acted. Every question, every sorrow suffered unjustly, every mystery of providence, every seeming contradiction between divine promise and earthly suffering, is laid bare in the presence of those who once walked by faith but now see with immortal clarity. They do not judge as tyrants passing sentence, but as witnesses confirming what God has already declared. Heaven is not merely a reward given but a Kingdom entered as full understanding replaces faith, and the redeemed behold that no soul is lost who might have been saved, and no soul condemned whom God did not first pursue with love, patience, and grace beyond measure. During the thousand years, the earth lies in desolation. Jeremiah 4 portrays it as without form, void, sunless, cityless, and silent. There are no living wicked to tempt, no nations to deceive, no armies to manipulate. Satan, who once proclaimed himself the prince of this world, finds himself the king of ruin, wandering a lifeless wasteland, his kingdom reduced to ashes of memory. The loneliness of this millennium is not simply a punishment but a demonstration: the universe witnesses what Satan’s government produces when left to itself. Every lie he ever told—that life without God is freedom, that rebellion is strength, that self-exaltation is glory—lies exposed as emptiness. There is nothing left for him to command, nothing left to build, nothing left to corrupt. He is locked in the prison of his own failure. Then comes the resurrection of the wicked at the end of the thousand years, described in Revelation 20. Satan, loosed for a little season, goes forth to deceive them again, proving that his nature has not changed, that sin no matter how long restrained never yields repentance. The wicked, unchanged by death itself, rally to surround the camp of the saints and the beloved city. It is the final demonstration of sin fully exposed: rebellion rises even in the face of undeniable truth. Then fire comes down from God out of heaven, and now appears not “a lake of fire,” but “the lake of fire,” into which death and hell and all whose names are not written in the book of life are cast. This is the final end, the second death, the complete erasure of sin from the universe. There is no sorrow in this judgment, for sorrow belongs only to love denied; here judgment is perfect and final, the closing of a story God never desired but fully redeemed. And once sin is no more, once every trace of rebellion has perished, then God creates a new heaven and a new earth, where righteousness dwells, and where the redeemed shall know the fullness of divine fellowship forever, without shadow, without trial, without possibility of rebellion ever arising again. For sin will not rise a second time. The prophet declares that the day comes that shall burn as an oven, and all the proud, yea, and all that do wickedly shall be stubble, and the day that comes shall burn them up, leaving neither root nor branch. This is not merely poetic judgment language; it defines the totality of the end of sin. The wicked are not tormented eternally, nor preserved endlessly in a state of burning existence, for this would violate the justice of God and perpetuate the very evil He came to end. Malachi reveals the completeness of the destruction: “neither root nor branch.” The branch is the outgrowth, the fruit, the visible manifestation of sin in individual lives. The root is the originating principle of sin itself, the “mystery of iniquity,” the rebellion birthed in Lucifer’s heart. When God destroys sin, He destroys not only its practitioners but its origin, its ideology, its very possibility. Nothing remains that could think rebellion, imagine self-exaltation, or desire identity apart from the love of God. The saints, Malachi continues, “shall tread down the wicked; for they shall be ashes under the soles of your feet.” This is not triumph in cruelty, nor celebration of vengeance, but the symbol of irreversible finality. Ashes cannot rebel. Ashes cannot speak. Ashes cannot rise again. The memory of sin remains as testimony, but its presence is gone forever. The totality of this destruction is essential to the eternal stability of the universe. If even the faintest seed of rebellion remained—if a single motive of self-rule or distrust of God survived the fire—eternity would contain the possibility of sorrow, conflict, and death. Heaven itself would tremble, for eternal peace must rest upon the certainty that nothing will ever again rise to challenge the goodness of God. Thus the lake of fire is not merely punitive; it is preventative in the eternal sense. It secures the everlasting future of righteousness. It is the fire of restoration. Once the wicked, the fallen angels, and Satan himself are consumed, the universe enters a phase of existence entirely new. For the first time, creation knows life where no rebellion is possible, where free will is not diminished but fulfilled, for love reigns without opposition. To say that sin shall never rise again is not simply to state the outcome of judgment—it is to acknowledge that all intelligent beings will understand, fully and permanently, the nature of sin, the nature of love, and the character of God. They have seen the cost of sin. They have witnessed the patience of God, who pleaded through ages of history, prophets, the Spirit, providence, and suffering. They have seen the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world, His wounds speaking for eternity the price of restoring the lost. They have judged with Christ for a thousand years, seeing every case laid bare. They have seen that no sinner was ever lost without being pursued by heaven itself. There is nothing left to question. The two scenes of fire now stand unveiled in their purpose. The casting of the beast and false prophet into “a lake of fire” at the second coming is the visible judgment upon the leaders of deception. It protects the redeemed from ever being confronted again with the systems of counterfeit religion that led the world astray. It shows that God removes and judges the sources of spiritual corruption before He completes judgment upon the followers of such systems. During the thousand years, the saints see that the followers, too, were given opportunities, calls, warnings, convicting appeals of conscience. None were lost by accident. Judgment is not a reaction of God but the conclusion of a long and patient pursuit of each soul’s salvation. Then, when the thousand years are finished and the wicked are resurrected, the final judgment takes place—not in a courtroom of secrecy, but in full view of the entire redeemed universe. The wicked see the New Jerusalem. They see Christ. They see what they rejected. They see themselves as they are. Scripture says every knee shall bow. Even those who lived in defiance will confess the righteousness of God—not from love, but from the unavoidable recognition of truth. Then the fire falls. Not to torment, but to end. And when the fire has accomplished its work, there is no wound in eternity, no scar in the soul of the redeemed, no hollow room where grief echoes. There is only the eternal knowing that love has triumphed—not by force, but by truth revealed. The redeemed walk a new earth, where every leaf sings life, every breeze carries peace, every star shines without shadow. The memory of sin remains not as pain, but as understanding. The cross remains as everlasting evidence that God did not spare Himself in sparing us. And the universe rests, finally, eternally, in the unbroken harmony of love. For sin is no more. Not merely ended. Not merely judged. Not merely punished. But impossible forever. There is a solemn beauty in the way God does not rush the end of sin. There is no haste in the judgment, no impatience in the closing of history. God does not bring the thousand years to an end until every redeemed mind has seen the full truth. The saints are not passive observers seated on clouds, nor are they detached from the story of salvation. They are participants in the great unveiling of righteousness. Revelation says they “reigned with Christ” and that “judgment was given unto them.” This is not judgment in the sense of deciding guilt, for the verdicts were determined before the resurrection of the righteous. The wicked were not raised to be tested again but to face what truth has already revealed. The saints do not judge in order to condemn, but to understand, to examine, to witness the perfect transparency of God’s justice. They see how the Spirit pleaded with a man in youth, how truth knocked at the door of his conscience in adulthood, and how mercy followed him into old age. They see the moments when a woman stood at a crossroads between surrender and self, between humility and pride, between love and fear. They see the circumstances of culture, upbringing, trauma, pressure, persuasion, opportunity, and conviction. They see every influence that touched every soul. They see that no person was ever lost because God withheld light, or because heaven tired and abandoned them, but because the individual finally and irrevocably resisted the last appeal of divine love. This is the vindication of God before the universe. Not because God needs defending, but because love must always be transparent. If eternity is to be free, then every being must know that the government of God is built not on arbitrary decree but on truth, righteousness, and compassion. The thousand- year review is the final answer to all the accusations Satan once made in heaven, when he claimed God was unjust, when he whispered that Christ’s law was bondage, when he suggested that the angels were loyal only because they had never known an alternative. In the thousand years, the redeemed see the full story of the great controversy laid plain. They see how sin began in the brightness of perfection, in the mind of one who was closest to the throne. They see how deception works—not by darkness, but by twisting the light. They see how rebellion presents itself not as evil, but as independence, as enlightenment, as self-realization. They see how sin spreads, not by force, but by suggestion, invitation, and imitation. Once the saints have seen all this, there is no question left unanswered. The justice of God stands not as theory, but as witnessed reality. Meanwhile, Satan walks the desolate earth. The prophet Jeremiah saw this long before John wrote Revelation, describing an earth without form and void, where cities, once alive with human activity, are broken and silent. It is a strange and dreadful reversal of the creation story. At the beginning, God formed the world from the void to fill it with life; at the end of history, sin returns the world to a void of death. This is not annihilation of the earth itself, but the temporary condition of a planet held in pause between two creations. The saints are not here. The wicked are not here, for they sleep until the final resurrection. Only Satan and the fallen angels remain, surrounded by the ruins of the world they claimed they could govern better than God. For a thousand years, Satan has no one to deceive, no minds to influence, no iron dungeon nations to manipulate. His kingdom is silent, and his throne is drowning in the ashes of its own lies. The prison in which he is bound is not a dungeon made of iron and walls, but the absolute failure of rebellion. The chains are the consequences of his own choices. The silence of the world is his accusation. The emptiness is his torment. This is where the wisdom of God shines. For if God had destroyed Satan immediately, the universe would not have seen the end result of sin. Some could have wondered whether Satan might have been correct, whether another system of government might have been viable if given the chance. But here, in the thousand years, the universe sees what Satan’s world truly is when he finally has everything he demanded: the throne, the dominion, the right to rule, the absence of God’s restraint. And what remains? A universe without life, without joy, without peace, without beauty. The great deceiver stands as the only citizen of his own kingdom. The silence of the earth is heaven’s final testimony: the wages of sin is death. When the thousand years are ended and the wicked are raised, the final scenes of history unfold with clarity that silences every shadow of doubt. The wicked rise, not to receive a second chance, but to see the truth they once refused. They see the New Jerusalem descending. They see the glory of Christ. They see the redeemed standing within the walls of the holy city, not as a separated, privileged class, but as those who once suffered, believed, and clung to God through darkness. Then the books are opened. Every life is reviewed—not for the sake of God, who needs no information, but for the sake of the lost, who must understand their own judgment. There are no arguments, no debates, no objections. Every knee bows. Every tongue confesses that Jesus Christ is Lord. This is not salvation; this is acknowledgment. The humility of the wicked is temporary and compelled by the undeniable reality of truth. Then fire comes down from God. This is the second lake of fire, “the lake of fire,” the final end, the true completion. It consumes sin at every level— individual and systemic, visible and invisible, branch and root. The beast and false prophet were removed at the beginning of the thousand years as the visible leadership of deception. Now the wicked, the fallen angels, and Satan himself are consumed in the full burning that Malachi saw. The fire burns until nothing remains. No conscious torment endures. No wicked soul survives. No remnant of rebellion lives. Sin ends by ceasing to exist. The ashes cool. The universe exhales. The long war is over. Then God speaks, not with thunder, not with trumpet, but with creation. ashes cool “Behold, I make all things new.” The earth is recreated—this time not as a garden to be guarded, but as a kingdom secured by truth understood. Every blade of grass carries the memory of the cross. The redeemed walk not as those afraid of falling again, but as those who know why love is eternal. Nothing in eternity contains the desire or capacity to sin, because every mind has seen its full cost, and every heart has been healed by the Lamb. This is the triumph of God’s government. Not that He destroyed His enemies, but that He revealed Himself so completely that rebellion became impossible forever. *** In the unfolding of the great controversy between Christ and Satan, history does not merely move forward; it moves toward a determined and holy conclusion shaped by the immutable counsel of God. Every prophecy, every act of divine restraint, every permitted trial, every unveiling of truth and unmasking of deception converges upon the closing scenes revealed in the Revelation of Jesus Christ. The Lamb who was slain steps forth as the King of kings and Lord of lords, not in the gentleness of invitation as He did in His first advent, but in the righteousness of judgment, the completion of His mediatorial work, and the vindication of the holiness of God before every created being. The heavens open, not to reveal possibility, but to reveal finality. Creation itself becomes witness to the justice and faithfulness of the One who has borne the sin, shame, rebellion, and accusation of ages in infinite patience and love. For the One who rides forth on the white horse in Revelation 19 is not coming to persuade, nor to debate, nor to reason with unbelief, but to reveal the truth of what already stands eternally decided in the hearts of all beings. The time for choice is past. The time for revelation has come. The beast and the false prophet, representing Papal Rome and Apostate Protestantism, stand not merely as religious systems but as the climax of religious rebellion in human history. They are the embodiment of counterfeit worship, the merging of earthly political authority with spiritual deception, the final expression of Satan's desire to sit in the temple of God, showing himself that he is God. They led multitudes, not by force alone, but by appeal to the conscience in distortion, by the imitation of holiness without the surrender to God’s transforming grace, and by crafting a Christless religion clothed in the language of salvation. They convinced the nations that rebellion was righteousness, that human works could equal divine favor, and that the authority of God could be replaced by the authority of the creature. And because the world loved religious power more than divine truth, they followed the beast and the false prophet to the very moment of their destruction. These two are cast alive into a lake of fire at the appearing of Christ, because their rebellion is not merely personal—it is structural, systemic, and completed. Their judgment begins before the thousand years because there is nothing more that can be revealed about their character; their deception has reached its fullness, their influence is sealed, and their destiny is fixed. They become the beginning of the final removal of sin’s governance from the universe. Yet Satan himself is not destroyed at that moment, for his role in the full revelation of sin is not yet complete. He is bound by the conditions of a shattered world shattered world, a world reduced to the desolation described in Jeremiah 4. The earth stands in the aftermath of divine judgment, a silent witness to the cost of rebellion. The cities lie without inhabitant, the mountains tremble, the birds have fled, and darkness hovers where once life rejoiced. Satan walks this ruined world not as a master of kingdoms, but as the lonely ruler of death, the architect of his own collapse. His chains are not material, for no physical restraints could bind a fallen seraph; his prison is the earth itself, emptied of life, emptied of voice, emptied of influence. The thousand years serve not to torture him but to reveal him. Every rebellion that ever rose against God ends in the same silence. Every kingdom built on pride collapses into the same dust. Every lie spoken against the character of God ends in the same void. God does not need to destroy Satan's argument in a courtroom; history has destroyed it fully. During the thousand years, the redeemed dwell with Christ in heaven, not as spectators but as participants in the final phase of divine justice. They are given seats in judgment, not to alter verdicts, but to see with perfect clarity the justice of God’s decisions. Every case is opened, every motive laid bare, every deception exposed, and every question answered. Those who were lost are not forgotten, nor are they erased from the memory of those who loved them; they are understood. The pain of earthly separation is not diminished by disinterest but healed by revelation. The redeemed come to see that God withheld nothing, offered everything, labored infinitely, and lost none who could be saved. Love is vindicated, mercy is vindicated, justice is vindicated. Heaven is not merely a place of reward; it is the completion of understanding. No one in the kingdom will ever again ask why. The thousand years complete the work of transforming love into comprehension. At the end of the thousand years, the wicked are raised, not as penitent seekers, but as the unchanged, unrepentant, self-bound servants of the rebellion they embraced. There is no conversion in the resurrection of the lost, only continuation. Character does not change in death; death merely pauses the movement of time while preserving the direction of the heart. The nations gather as they once gathered in life, still bearing the imprint of their loyalties, still drawn to the authority of the one who deceived them. Satan approaches them not as a fallen being but as one who presents himself again as ruler, arguing that the kingdom they behold—New Jerusalem descending from heaven—is an invader upon what they believe to be their world. And though the evidence of their failure stands in the desolation of the earth beneath their feet, they choose him again, proving before all creation that the issue was never misunderstanding, never lack of evidence, never weakness under pressure, but the fixed choice of self-exaltation over the law of love. Then comes the final judgment, when the city is encircled, not in battle, but in testimony. The books are opened once more, not for the saints, but for the lost. They do not deny the truth that is revealed; they see it, they understand it, they feel its righteousness, and they bow not in worship but in acknowledgment. Every knee bows, every tongue confesses, but confession is not conversion. The justice of God shines in unclouded brilliance, and all see that the kingdom stands secure not because God crushed dissent but because truth has fully revealed itself. Only then, when the entire universe stands in complete moral clarity, does fire come down from God out of heaven. This is not an act of rage but of preservation. Sin cannot be permitted to flicker as even a memory of desire. Malachi reveals that the wicked are burned as stubble, leaving neither root nor branch, neither the origin of sin nor its final expressions. Ezekiel 28 is fulfilled, for Satan, the originating root of rebellion, is reduced not to suffering forever, but to eternal nonexistence. He is brought to ashes upon the earth, the most complete demonstration that rebellion carries within itself the seed of its own annihilation. There will be no sorrow in the redeemed as they witness the final end, for sorrow belongs to uncertainty. There will be remembrance, but not regret; memory, but not suffering; identity, but not loss. Love will remain, but without the shadow of pain. And when the fire has done its work, when death and hell, meaning every expression and consequence of sin, are cast into the lake of fire and exist no more, then the universe will breathe with unspeakable clarity. Nothing remains that can corrupt. Nothing remains that can tempt. Nothing remains that can question the goodness of God. Eternity rises not as an extension of time, but as a new creation where existence itself is defined by truth. Sin will never rise again because there will be nothing in the heart of any being that contains even the faint echo of self-exaltation. The controversy is not only ended; it is ended forever. ** When the redeemed stand within the Holy City and the wicked stand outside wicked stand outside its walls, and every being in the universe is gathered in the final convergence of history, there opens before all creation a revelation so complete, so perfect, and so absolute that no being can ever afterward question the goodness of God. This is the moment when Isaiah 40:5 is fulfilled, when the glory of the Lord is revealed, not in part, not in symbol, not in prophetic shadow or sacrificial type, but in full, unfiltered radiance, and all flesh sees it together. This glory is not merely light, nor splendor, nor beauty; it is truth made visible. It is the unveiling of God’s character, the revelation of His ways, His patience, His mercy, His justice, His suffering, His love, and His long endurance in the face of rebellion. It is the comprehensive display of everything He did to save, everything He offered, everything He bore, and everything He restrained for the sake of freedom. Nothing remains hidden. Nothing remains misunderstood. The universe does not merely observe the truth; it perceives it. In that moment, every saved soul is shown the story of their own life in a panoramic unfolding, not for judgment, for their redemption is already sealed, but for understanding. They see how the hand of God moved in childhood, in temptation, in grief, in failure, in joy, in confusion. They see where angels intervened when death was near, where the Spirit whispered when the heart was restless, where the Savior stood when they thought themselves alone. They see how love pursued them when they did not even know they were being sought. They see that every answered prayer, every unanswered prayer, every delay, every closed door, every sorrow permitted, every deliverance granted, was not random but the precise work of eternal wisdom. And the redeemed will weep—not in sorrow—but in awe. They will know they were never unseen, never abandoned, never forgotten. They will know that heaven was nearer to their breath than they ever imagined. Their joy will not be merely the joy of salvation but the joy of understanding love. But the wicked, too, receive the panoramic revelation. Yet what they see is of a different nature, though no less complete. Every moment in which God reached for them rises into view. They see the times they were moved to kindness, the moments their conscience softened, the prayers spoken in fear, the sermons they heard, the warnings they dismissed, the tears of those who pleaded with them, the scriptures they encountered, the providences that blocked their path, the sickness that made them question their life, the tragedies that tried to awaken them to eternity. They see that they were pursued with the same relentless love that pursued the redeemed. They see that no one was ever overlooked. They see that the cross was not an abstraction but a personal call. And they see that every rejection of God’s voice was a deliberate act, not of confusion, but of self-trust and pride. Their condemnation is not imposed; it is recognized. They do not argue. They do not defend themselves. They simply understand. This is the final truth: that God never condemned them; they condemned themselves by refusing the life that was freely offered. The unfallen worlds see this revelation as well—the angels who never sinned, the children of worlds that never fell. And for the first time, they understand the depth of the divine suffering, the cost of free will, the weight of redemption. They see Satan’s rebellion not merely as an event in heaven’s distant past, but as the agonizing grievance it has inflicted upon God for ages. They see Ezekiel 28 fulfilled, where the once-anointed cherub stands exposed before all creation, stripped of the beauty that covered his rebellion. His lies fall apart under the weight of truth. He stands not as a misunderstood revolutionary nor as a tragic figure, but as one who saw the face of God and chose to raise himself above Him. His fall is not seen as necessary justice alone, but as the self-inflicted ruin of a being who could have carried the glory of God like a crown forever. The universe beholds and understands: sin did not need to exist. It was not foreordained. It was chosen.And in that understanding, something happens that seals eternity. The redeemed do not fear sin’s return, nor do they assume it impossible merely because God destroys it. They see that sin has no origin outside the heart that chooses self above love. And having seen its consequences, they recognize that no being who understands love could ever choose self again. The security of eternity is not founded on force, nor control, nor the erasure of memory. It is founded on comprehension. When Malachi 4 is fulfilled, when the wicked become as stubble and are consumed root and branch, the finality of sin is not simply that it is destroyed, but that no desire for it remains anywhere in the universe. Eternity is not held in place by fences but by clarity. There is no fear in heaven because there is no confusion. When the fire falls—not raging from wrath, but descending with the calm inevitability of truth—it consumes what no longer has any place in existence. The wicked do not scream in repentance; they do not long for salvation; they do not seek life. They simply cease. Their end is the natural termination of the path they chose. Death and hell, meaning not places but conditions, are cast into the lake of fire. The fire does not cleanse creation; truth does. The fire simply finalizes what truth has already revealed. And when the last ember fades and the ashes return to nothing, creation stands in a purity that has never before existed, not even at Eden. For Eden was innocence, but the new creation is understanding. Innocence can fall; understanding cannot. ** With the panorama of truth complete and the verdict of reality understood by every conscious being, the distinction between the first judgment and the last becomes radiant in clarity. The first lake of fire, into which the beast and the false prophet were cast at the appearing of Christ, was a judgment upon systems, structures, and organized rebellion. It was the termination of counterfeit worship and the collapse of institutions designed to obscure the knowledge of God. It was not a judgment upon individuals merely, but upon the machinery of deception itself. The beast and the false prophet embodied the culmination of rebellion’s religious expression, and their destruction before the thousand years ensured that never again could humanity or angelic beings be deceived by a counterfeit priesthood. The first lake of fire was the beginning of the removal of false worship from the universe. Yet the second lake of fire is not the same. It is not temporary. It is not partial. It is not selective. It is final. This lake of fire, revealed at the conclusion of the thousand years, is not aimed at systems but at the very existence of sin. The difference is of infinite significance, for in the first lake of fire, God removes deception; in the second, He removes the deceiver and all who have chosen his path. In the first, God destroys the counterfeit voice of religion; in the second, He ends the very capacity of rebellion to ever arise again. The first lake cleans the surface of history. The second cleans the roots of the soul of creation itself. In this final scene, God does not reveal wrath as uncontrolled anger but as the perfect and holy abhorrence of anything that corrupts love. Wrath is not the opposite of mercy. It is the guardian of all that mercy has restored. Wrath is love refusing to allow suffering to exist forever. Wrath is holiness defending the goodness of eternity. Wrath is righteousness ensuring that no sorrow can enter the world to come. The intensity of divine wrath is not the intensity of rage; it is the intensity of purity. It is the blazing certainty that love must be protected. Sin is not burned because God chooses violence; sin is burned because it leaves no other possibility of existence. When holiness confronts unrepentant rebellion, fire is simply what truth becomes. And now the final act unfolds. The fire descends not with noise of chaos but with the final quiet of inevitability, for sin has already died in meaning before it dies in being. The wicked do not curse God as the flames rise; they recognize the righteousness of their end. They acknowledge that life in the presence of divine love would be torment to a heart shaped by self. The lake of fire does not prolong suffering; it ends it. It does not echo pain; it extinguishes it. The wicked are consumed as stubble in the moment of full revelation, leaving neither root nor branch, neither memory of authority nor seed of recurrence. Sin is undone down to the principle that made it possible. As the flames complete their work and the ashes of rebellion settle into silence, a new stillness fills creation. The silence is not empty but full. It is the silence of a completed victory. The silence of a creation in which every being knows with unshakeable certainty that love is the foundation of existence. The silence of a universe in perfect harmony with its Creator. Then God speaks, not to command, but to begin. Creation is not restored to what it was before sin. It is raised into something greater than innocence. Innocence could fall, for innocence had not yet understood. But the eternal kingdom stands upon understanding, upon the comprehensive, lived, seen, and revealed reality of what rebellion is and what love is. The universe will not remain holy because it is prevented from sinning. It will remain holy because it understands God. Eternity is not secured by walls or threats, but by truth so full and so radiant that no heart can ever again desire anything but God. The new earth rises not as an echo of the old, but as the fulfillment of what the old was always meant to become. Life expands without decay. Growth continues without corruption. Knowledge increases without pride. Worship flourishes without compulsion. Identity deepens without rivalry. Joy grows without fear. The redeemed do not forget the story of redemption; they remember it with gratitude so deep that worship becomes the natural expression of existence. They see God not merely as Creator but as Deliverer, Sustainer, Father, Bridegroom, and Eternal Companion. The unfallen worlds, too, grow in the knowledge of God, for eternity is not static. It is becoming. It is unfolding. It is the infinite discovery of love. And never again will the universe question the holiness of God’s wrath or the necessity of the two lakes of fire. The first lake marked the end of deception. The second marked the end of sin itself. And both stand forever as the testimony that love is not fragile, nor passive, nor uncertain. Love is the strongest force in all existence. Love outlasted rebellion. Love endured accusation. Love carried the cross. Love restored the lost. Love purified the universe. Love secured eternity. And love will be all-in-all, forever, world without end. ** In the eternity that follows the final purification of creation, the redeemed awaken to themselves in a fullness of being that could not have existed under the shadow of sin. Identity is not erased but perfected. Memory is not lost but healed. Every scar becomes testimony, but no scar carries pain. The past is known without the sting of regret, for regret belongs to uncertainty, and there is no uncertainty in the kingdom of God. The redeemed remember what was, but they remember it through the gaze of the Lamb who carried them through their story. Every moment of darkness, every season of grief, every struggle, every prayer uttered in the night becomes not a wound but a jewel of understanding. The story of their salvation is not something they recall occasionally; it becomes the foundation of their eternal joy. For those who know what they were saved from know in their being the wonder of what they have been brought into. The resurrection body is not a return to what once was, but the unveiling of what humanity was always destined to be. Strength is not raw power but harmonious vitality. Beauty is not ornament but the radiance of character expressed through form. The limitations of decay are gone, not because the body is no longer physical, but because it has been freed from corruption. The mind does not forget, does not dull, does not tire; understanding grows without frustration. Thought and love and worship align in perfect unity. No redeemed soul questions whether they belong, for belonging is written into the structure of eternity. Every life finds its true meaning not in comparison with others but in the unique reflection of God they were designed to reveal. Memory does not fade because memory is the foundation of the eternal bond between God and His people. Without memory, love could not be chosen; without memory, worship could not be truthful; without memory, eternity would not be rooted in reality. The redeemed do not fear the remembrance of sin, for sin no longer threatens. God remembering sin no more means there is never again any debt against the redeemed. They remember that rebellion was real, but they also remember how God overcame it. That memory becomes their eternal strength. It is the assurance that the universe stands forever on the side of love, not by force but by understanding. And because all remember, sin can never return. The redeemed are not idle in eternity. They are ambassadors of the character of God throughout a creation that continues to unfold in glory. The new earth becomes the capital of a universe restored, the place where the throne of God and the Lamb dwells among His people. From this world, the redeemed journey throughout the unfallen worlds, not as conquerors, but as living witnesses of the faithfulness of God. The story of redemption becomes the eternal education of creation. The cross becomes the center of thought, the heart of song, the foundation of meaning. The redeemed speak not of what they have earned but of what they received, not of their endurance but of God’s faithfulness, not of their victory but of grace’s triumph over all. Their testimony becomes the language of the universe. Worship in eternity is not confined to moments. It is the natural state of existence when existence is aligned with love. There are times of gathering when the redeemed join in uncountable number around the throne, their voices rising in harmonies not yet imagined by any earthly ear. But worship is also found in work, in discovery, in fellowship, in thought, in song, in the movement of living itself. Every act is worship because every act proceeds from a heart fully at peace. Meaning is no longer sought; it is lived. Joy is no longer chased; it is breathed. The new earth is alive in ways Eden only foreshadowed. Life grows without threat of decay or disease. Every field sings with the presence of God. Rivers flow without scarcity. The trees yield fruit without season. There is no fear of loss, no shadow of night, no memory of dread. The city shines not because of gold or jasper, but because God is there. Light does not merely illuminate; it is the environment in which existence takes place. The Lamb is the everlasting Sun. And the redeemed walk in that light without barrier, without veil, without distance. In this eternal communion, love matures forever. Relationships do not stagnate; they deepen without wound. Families are reunited, but their unity is not based on earthly roles but on the sacred bond of having been redeemed by the same Savior. Friendships bloom in infinite variety. The redeemed recognize that every soul was created to reveal a unique facet of the glory of God, and eternity becomes the ever-expanding discovery of one another in the presence of God. No one is lost in the multitude, and no one stands alone. Community becomes the natural expression of existence. And at the center of eternity stands the Lamb. His scars remain, not as wounds but as the eternal testimony of love proven. The nail prints do not speak of suffering now, but of identity. They are the everlasting covenant engraved into the being of God Himself. The redeemed gather around Him not because they are commanded, but because they love Him. And love in eternity has no fear, no hesitation, no doubt. It is whole. The memory of sin remains only as the revelation of what love has overcome. The two lakes of fire stand forever as the demonstration that God did not merely forgive sin; He removed it. He did not merely limit rebellion; He ended it. He did not merely restrain suffering; He eliminated its possibility. And in that final act, the holiness of God and the joy of His people became inseparable forever. ** Yet though the lake burned with an intensity beyond any human imagining, its heat did not speak of divine cruelty. It spoke of divine honesty. Fire is the most truthful of all elements. It does not flatter. It does not negotiate. It does not alter its nature to spare what cannot endure. And in that final conflagration, as the wicked and the fallen powers reaped the harvest of their own choices, the fire bore witness to the uncompromising holiness of God, the God who had spent all eternity giving, calling, pleading, healing, restoring, rescuing. Those who perished did not perish because God was unwilling to forgive them, but because they could not tolerate the life of love He offered. The life of love was joy to the redeemed but torment to the rebellious, and so the fire, in the end, was only the outward expression of an inward truth that had already long been chosen. Their destruction was not God turning against them. It was the final unfolding of what they themselves had become. This is why the righteous, though they wept, did not accuse God. For each soul, every moment of their life was opened like a book, as Isaiah said: “And the glory of the Lord shall be revealed, and all flesh shall see it together”. Nothing was hidden. Nothing was excused away. The righteous reviewed each providence of mercy, each whispered call of conscience, each rescue from unseen danger, each moment when God had stood near them in joy and in grief. They saw with clarity how every moment of their journey had been shaped by a Love that never once withdrew Its hand. And the wicked saw the same truth, but without agreement. They too saw the Love that had pursued them, but their hearts recoiled instead of confessing. The fire did not harden them. They were hardened before they entered it. And in the final collapse of Babylon’s pride, in the final silence of Satan’s accusations, in the last breath of rebellion, something remarkable was revealed: the fire did not merely consume. It purified. Not the wicked, for they could not bear redemption, but creation itself. For the lake of fire, like the fire of Malachi’s furnace, did not rage only to destroy. It raged to refine. The elements themselves melted, releasing every scar of sin’s distortion. The earth, which had groaned under the burden of corruption, was being cleansed down to its foundations. The very atoms of existence were being reset, renewed, made young again. The fire that consumed the final imprint of sin became the womb of new creation. And so it may be said with deep reverence: the flames of the lake of fire did not only end what was wicked; they fueled the birth of what would forever be holy. From what seemed an ending came a beginning. From ruin came renewal. Just as a forest, once burned, births richer soil and seed, so the fire that ended the old world prepared the way for the new. The fire did not create the new earth, but it cleared a space so the voice of God could say again, as in the beginning, “Behold, I make all things new.” For sin had not merely caused moral disorder. It had infiltrated matter itself. Every tree, every shore, every wind, every star nearest to this fallen sphere had tasted corruption’s breath. And so the lake of fire was not vengeance without purpose. It was the Great Physician cauterizing the wound of the universe. It was holiness removing the infection once and for all. It was love, refusing to allow suffering to live forever. The final fire did not destroy love. It revealed what love really is. It is here, when the flames at last settle into silence, that the redeemed step forward upon the renewed ground of the earth made young again. No ash remains to accuse memory. No shadow lingers to haunt. No echo of the serpent's voice can be heard. And the universe, once wounded, breathes. We may continue from here into the unveiling of the new creation, the joy of eternal purpose, and the intimacy of the redeemed with the Lamb. *** *** At the closing of human probation, the panorama of God’s providential care and man’s response is laid bare before the universe. From the foundations of creation, the Lord’s plan had been a tapestry of mercy, justice, and opportunity, each thread representing the freedom of the creature to accept or reject His will. Papal Rome and the apostate Protestant churches, embodiments of spiritual corruption, had for centuries led multitudes into error, each bearing a weight of responsibility as those who deceived others, knowingly or willfully, fell under the same judgment they imposed upon their followers. Yet even as they exercised dominion and influenced nations, their transgressions were never outside the scope of God’s deliberate and infinitely wise governance. Every falsehood, every perversion of divine truth, every idol erected in hearts and nations, was contained within a framework every idol erected in hearts & nations that ultimately served the full revelation of God’s character and His triumph over sin. In the final scenes, Revelation 19 illuminates the precision with which justice is executed: the beast and the false prophet, representative of these corrupted religious powers, are seized and cast alive into a lake of fire, an “a lake of fire” that inaugurates the thousand-year reign of Christ in heaven, the period in which the saints rest in the fulfillment of God’s promises and reflect upon His unwavering faithfulness. The swiftness and decisiveness of their punishment bear no hint of caprice, for every opportunity for repentance had long since been afforded and refused. The flames that consume the agents of deception do not burn merely in wrath, but as instruments of divine purity, separating and confining the corruption that sought to taint creation, a visual testament to the holiness that abhors sin with infinite intensity. During the thousand-year reign, Satan is loosed upon a world that lies devoid of life, wandering in futility across a desolate earth. Jeremiah’s vision of desolation mirrors this cosmic desolation, as the tempter, once exalted, now wanders, revealing the utter collapse of all schemes that opposed God. Ezekiel’s lament over the King of Tyre finds its fulfillment in this moment: the exalted cherub, crafted in beauty and wisdom, whose pride brought ruin, now sees the consequence of rebellion in vivid reality. He attempts once again to prove his lies, to excite defiance in the hearts of those bound in the tomb, but time itself has been seized by God, and every stratagem fails under the weight of divine sovereignty. Meanwhile, the saints, shielded in heaven, review in panoramic clarity every instance in which God’s providence worked for their salvation, and every temptation overcome becomes a jewel in the tapestry of eternal victory. The unfallen and the redeemed behold the glory of God’s wisdom, seeing that the timeline of sin, rebellion, and restoration was never chaotic but a determinate unfolding of justice and mercy. Every spark of human pride, every turn from truth, every defiance of divine law, had been accounted for, and the reflection of these truths deepens the awe and joy of the saved, who witness the totality of God’s unerring plan. As the thousand years draw to a close, Revelation 20 portrays the resurrection of the wicked, whose names are absent from the book of life. They rise to face the judgment that reveals the panoramic truth of their existence: every moment in which God’s grace beckoned and every refusal thereof is laid bare, and the horror of sin’s rebellion becomes unmistakably evident. Death and hell, united in their finality, yield these souls to the lake of fire, “the lake of fire,” which differs in intensity and permanence from the earlier lake of fire that consumed the beast and false prophet. The first lake, immediate and targeted, confines the specific agents of deception; the second, eternal and total, engulfs the full manifestation of sin and rebellion, demonstrating that the ultimate purpose of God’s wrath is not mere punishment but the total obliteration of all that would corrupt creation. The flames of this lake are instruments of refinement, burning with the power to destroy sin utterly while also purifying the very fabric of the universe, clearing the way for the newness of things. Nothing that bore the stain of rebellion, pride, or falsehood remains; the cosmos, freed from every trace of sin, becomes a vessel prepared to reflect the unending radiance of God’s glory. Throughout this final judgment, the contrast between Papal Rome, apostate Protestantism, and the collective wickedness of humanity is striking. The former two represent organized and deliberate deception, ideological and systemic corruption that misled countless souls, while the latter reflects the universal human propensity toward rebellion when unrestrained by truth. Yet all are subject to the same ultimate law: mercy, opportunity, and warning are afforded, but judgment is sure when the rejection is final. The brilliance of God’s judicial act is revealed not in sorrow, for sorrow implies uncertainty or error, but in resolute justice, the exacting outworking of His eternal plan. Every decision, every act of rebellion, is laid bare in the panoramic review, and the righteous perceive the profound care with which God balances freedom and accountability, opportunity and consequence. Here, Malachi’s vision of the refining fire becomes fully realized: the sun of righteousness rises with healing in His wings, yet for those who have scorned the mercy offered, there is burning, unmitigated, complete. This duality underscores the inevitability of sin’s eradication: justice and mercy coexist, each serving the ultimate goal of God’s creation—an existence entirely free from the corruption that once sought to distort it. Satan’s final consignment follows, an act both judicially solemn and cosmically revealing. After the thousand years, he is released from his wandering, only to be led into the eternal lake of fire. Here, the unfallen, the redeemed, and the universe witness the finality of rebellion, a revelation that echoes Isaiah’s pronouncement: every eye shall see the glory of God, and all flesh shall witness the purification of creation. The former prince of heaven, once the model of perfection, now suffers the consequence of pride and envy, the culmination of Ezekiel’s lament, and the eternal lesson that no creature, however exalted, can usurp the sovereign will of God. The flames that engulf him are not vindictive in a human sense but carry the essence of divine holiness, the fullness of God’s abhorrence of corruption, and the refinement necessary to make way for the totality of creation’s newness. This final act demonstrates that God’s wrath is never arbitrary; it is integrally tied to the restoration of all that is good, true, and unblemished. From this cosmic panorama emerges the profound truth of eternal restoration. Every being and every event has contributed to a universal understanding of divine justice and mercy. The lakes of fire, while instruments of destruction, are simultaneously the furnaces of refinement; the end of sin is the genesis of a universe untainted by rebellion. The redeemed, having observed the fullness of God’s providential plan, enter into eternity with unbroken hearts, understanding the brilliance of God’s counsel in providing opportunity, enforcing accountability, and ultimately restoring the cosmos to a state of perfection. The new heavens and new earth, purified and vibrant, reflect the fruits of the divine orchestration, and the narrative of sin, judgment, and redemption becomes a testament not only to what was destroyed but to what has been gloriously renewed. The entirety of this plan—from the first rebellion in heaven, through the rise of Papal Rome, apostate Protestantism, and human wickedness, to the final execution of judgment—is an exposition of God’s infinite wisdom, an eternal declaration that sin’s dominion is forever ended, and that the universe is now prepared for unbroken communion with its Creator, where the brilliance of holiness illuminates all and no shadow of corruption remains. ____________________________________________________________ At the close of time, when the final moments of human probation draw to their ordained conclusion, the panorama of divine justice and mercy is fully revealed to all created beings. From the very foundation of the universe, God’s plan was meticulously orchestrated, balancing infinite love with perfect justice, and granting every soul a complete opportunity to choose life or death, obedience or rebellion. Papal Rome and the apostate Protestant churches emerge in this narrative as stark embodiments of systemic deception, powers that for centuries guided multitudes away from the truth. Papal Rome, through centuries of doctrinal corruption, political entanglement, and persecution of the faithful, misled nations and enmeshed entire populations in spiritual darkness. Apostate Protestantism, though born of reformative zeal, compromised truth through worldliness, doctrinal distortion, and the abandonment of the prophetic warnings given to God’s people. Together, these two great religious powers represent concentrated forces of spiritual corruption, but they are only part of the broader landscape of human rebellion, for all the nations and peoples who have embraced sin and rejected the light are accountable to the same unchanging law of God. Each choice, each act of deception, each deliberate turning from God’s mercy is recorded in the books of heaven, preserved with infinite accuracy, awaiting the time when the totality of each life’s decisions will be revealed before the universe. Revelation 19 unfolds the first act of judgment upon these corrupted powers, portraying the beast and the false prophet cast alive into “a lake of fire.” Here, the lake of fire is specific, judicially precise, a manifestation of divine wrath contained within holiness, an instrument to remove the agents of organized deception from the theater of human history. The purpose is not arbitrary vengeance, but the protection of truth and the purity of God’s plan. The saints, seated with Christ in His heavenly kingdom during the thousand-year reign, witness the immediate and decisive execution of justice. Every deception, every lie propagated through centuries, is seen as it truly is, and the brilliance of God’s counsel in permitting, limiting, and ultimately condemning these powers becomes a source of praise, for even in the removal of evil, the purpose of redemption is displayed with clarity. The flames of the lake of fire are instruments of purification as well as punishment, burning away that which cannot be reconciled to holiness, preparing the cosmos for the era of perfect peace. There is no sorrow in heaven for the punishment of the wicked; sorrow implies imperfection or doubt, and God’s law and justice are flawless. Every opportunity for repentance has been granted and refused, and the finality of judgment reveals the wisdom and perfection of God’s eternal plan. During the thousand-year reign of Christ, Satan is bound not in the lake of fire but upon the desolate earth, wandering amidst ruin and confusion, powerless to deceive but fully aware of the ultimate futility of rebellion. Jeremiah’s prophecy of desolation finds its fulfillment in this moment, as the tempter experiences the full impotence of his efforts and the desolation his lies have wrought. Ezekiel’s lamentation over the King of Tyre, once exalted in beauty and wisdom yet corrupted by pride, is seen enacted in the wandering of Satan; the universe witnesses the tragic results of arrogance and rebellion, and the contrast between his former splendor and his current impotence underscores the magnitude of God’s justice. Meanwhile, the redeemed in heaven review the entirety of human history from creation onward, observing the interplay of divine providence, human choice, and the outcomes of obedience or rebellion. The righteous behold each moment in which God’s providence guided, protected, and provided, every act of grace extended to humanity, and every refusal of that grace. The panoramic vision of Isaiah 40 comes alive, as all flesh witnesses the glory of God and every event is displayed in the full light of truth. This review deepens the understanding and joy of the saints, who perceive not only the faithfulness of God but also the inexhaustible wisdom by which He governs the universe, balancing freedom with accountability, mercy with justice, and opportunity with consequence. As the thousand years draw to a close, the scene shifts to the resurrection of the wicked dead, those whose names are absent from the book of life. Revelation 20 portrays the final judgment in which death and hell yield their captives, and the full measure of God’s justice is made manifest. These souls rise to witness their own histories, seeing every moment where they rejected divine guidance, ignored the pleading of conscience, and embraced sin and rebellion. The lake of fire, “the lake of fire,” awaits them, a vastly different manifestation from the first lake, not immediate and selective but eternal and comprehensive. It is here that sin meets its ultimate end, and its corruption is permanently removed from the universe. The intensity of God’s wrath, contained within His holiness and righteousness, abhors the stain of sin, and the flames of this lake serve both as instruments of destruction and as agents of cosmic refinement, burning away the remnants of rebellion and corruption while paving the way for the restoration of perfect order. Nothing that bears the taint of sin can remain, and the universe is thus purified for the eternal communion of the redeemed. This second lake, in contrast to the first, demonstrates the inexorability of God’s law: the agents of deception are punished at the outset of the millennium, and the collective wickedness of humanity and Satan himself meet their ultimate doom at the conclusion, revealing the full temporal and eternal consequences of rebellion. The contrast between Papal Rome, apostate Protestantism, and the collective human wickedness is stark and instructive. The religious powers exemplify organized deception, intentional perversion of truth, and leadership that misleads the masses, while the general wickedness of humanity reflects the pervasive tendencies of pride, greed, and rebellion in individual hearts. Yet all are equally subject to God’s law, and all are accounted for in His judicial plan. Malachi 4’s prophecy becomes vividly realized as the sun of righteousness arises with healing for the faithful and refining fire for those who have rejected the covenant. The duality of the two lakes of fire underscores the meticulous design of God’s providence: first, the targeted removal of those who led others into error, and second, the comprehensive destruction of sin in its entirety. In this way, the brilliance of God’s counsel is revealed, for nothing is lost, nothing is wasted, and all events are instruments in the manifestation of His justice, mercy, and omnipotent wisdom. Satan’s ultimate consignment follows, after the resurrection and judgment of all wicked, when he is cast into the eternal lake of fire alongside the devilish forces that rebelled against God. This final act is judicially solemn yet free of sorrow, for every chance for repentance has passed and the universe now witnesses the perfection of God’s law enforced. The flames that consume Satan and his cohorts are both destructive and purifying, obliterating sin entirely and serving as the refining fire that enables creation to enter its intended state of perfection. Ezekiel 28’s lamentation over the pride and fall of the anointed cherub reaches its ultimate conclusion here, and the cosmic narrative demonstrates the consistency of divine justice across angelic and human realms. The universe observes the finality of rebellion, the certainty of God’s promises, and the brilliance with which He maintains order, justice, and holiness. Nothing that once bore the stain of sin remains, and the foundation is laid for the new heavens and the new earth, purified and vibrant, prepared to sustain life without corruption, error, or rebellion. Throughout this cosmic unfolding, the flames of the lakes of fire serve not merely to destroy but to refine, to remove all remnants of corruption and prepare the cosmos for eternal communion with its Creator. The refinement of creation is achieved through the total eradication of sin and rebellion; the brilliance of the divine plan shines in the clarity with which justice is executed and mercy is displayed. Every event, from the rise of Papal Rome to the apostate Protestant movements, to the widespread rebellion of humanity, is incorporated into a panorama that demonstrates God’s providential control, His wisdom, and the perfection of His justice. The redeemed behold these acts with understanding and joy, witnessing the ultimate consequence of disobedience and the glory of obedience fulfilled. Every moment in history, every act of deception, every choice of rebellion, serves to illuminate the magnificence of God’s plan and the inevitability of His triumph. Finally, the universe enters into a state where the newness of things, purified and radiant, stands as the permanent reflection of God’s glory. The totality of sin’s dominion has ended; the agents of deception have been removed, the wicked have been judged, and Satan himself lies powerless, confined to the eternal lake of fire. The redeemed now exist in unbroken communion with God, free from temptation, corruption, and sin, and the entirety of creation participates in the restoration of God’s original intent. The judicial brilliance, the holiness of the divine wrath, the perfection of God’s mercy, and the meticulous orchestration of providence reveal a cosmos transformed by the interplay of justice and redemption. The panoramic review that began in the heavenly throne room and extended to every soul now reaches completion, and the universe stands as a testament to the truth that sin’s dominion is forever ended, that rebellion is utterly destroyed, and that the brilliance of God’s eternal plan has been fulfilled in full. 📖 Applying the Study For ongoing spiritual encouragement and prophetical insights, visit Higher Learning.

  • We Know Not the Time or the Way…

    We Know Not the Time or the Way… The beginning of sorrows is now. Global persecution and danger are found worldwide. Universal mourning is prevalent among all of God’s people. How are God’s watchmen to convey the timing and the methods that will so desolate humanity as to erase all identifying differences except that of the godless who continue in their opposition to God and are purged at his coming or the faithful watching for his return. Knowing the time is not the objective of our studies. Our objective must be our readiness. This can only be accomplished in our clinging to every word of God. National security, emerging diseases, global governance, racial crisis, will seem as meager matters compared to the besetting demonic conditions to be imposed upon the human race. The horrors of war and famine will display the depravity of mankind. The purpose…to reveal the character and corruption of the influence that Satan has upon those who utter hatred for God. We must now compare the prophetic accounts and get the fullest picture of reality that we have clear commentary as the book comes to a close. There will be an awful torment to be experienced. Most targeted by the world and by the enemy will be those that God has ordained to accomplish His purposes through His calling. The timing is settling around the abomination. It is the way that the events will present themselves that will overwhelmingly surprise us. We offer no speculation. God will reveal to His as the more time we spend with God, the more teachable we become concerning Him and the more truth we discover about God, the more profound He becomes to us and the more we seek to maintain a biblical balance between looking forward to his coming and living in holiness in the present, the more we bring glory to our God. winepress Life experiences will approach unto such spiritual calamity as to deeply empty the soul. The valley of sorrow will see the end of human strength as the trials, the troubles eat away spiritual self-confidence. The only hope will come from knowing and depending on God alone. We must be sufficiently advanced in grace to be ready to behold the mysteries of the time and the agony of the ways of the winepress. There will be an inner chamber of grief shut out from human knowledge. It would not be possible for any believer, however experienced, to know for himself all the mental suffering and hellish malice to be set forth. We will surely drink of the master’s cup and be baptized with his baptism. We will know unutterable woe. In enduring the immersing into sorrow’s depths, we will be driven to the very verge of distraction by the intensity of our anguish. Grief will be of a most extraordinary character. No sorrow like this sorrow has been since the will of Jesus was tried in the garden. Wisdom itself rebukes us with the question, can we understand the ways of agonies upon us? We cannot do more than look at the revealed causes of grief as we fully comprehend the meaning of sin and see it as a thing exceeding sinful. It is as though the shadows of death cover us. This is not the wrath of God that is determined upon the wicked. This is the trial of faith for the redeemed who will have not the desire to sleep in the grave. This time, these ways are sin in its natural blackness. But oh, thank God for the thought that at this hour our spirits may be encouraged as heaven is looking upon us. The foresight of the trials will not match the grievousness of the trials. This, ere we pass from the contemplation. We know this is but the shallow streams of sorrow—ahead of the buffeting with the swellings of Jordan. It is not possible for us to lift the veil of what revelation will permit to fall, but we can form some faint idea because of the hate speech, hate crimes, ethnic violence, and wars seen today. Hate is the mantra of our time. The bible foretells us of this…the love of many shall wax cold…perilous times shall come, without natural affection, fierce despisers. The level of hatred today reflects the malicious and wicked influence of Satan the Devil upon the minds of many. There is a purposed reason revealed why God says, “Esau I hate.” God hates wickedness…their thoughts, their evil ways, their pretended worship, the seduction of God’s people. Wickedness is first a mark of the deepest rebellion against God and against His law. Because these sinful people cannot storm the gates of heaven to dethrone and destroy God Himself, they turn on what is dearest to Him and nearest to His image. And so, they act out their wickedness against other people. They hurt them, harm them, main them, and will kill them. Every attempt will be put forth to put us to shame. We will be brought low becoming a prey to death because of our faith in every word of God. God hates the wicked because their wickedness is expressed particularly against God’s elect. Wicked people turn their fury against God’s people, mocking them, persecuting them, putting them to death. God’s people choose not to hate those who hate them. The enemy will find nothing in us that fouls the character. We will not be alone. Heaven is with us. Angels of God will be sent to attend us. May we pause for consideration of God’s calling His election for purpose. God must allow the enemy’s request to move forward less there be any question to His fairness. There must never be any casualness or disregard to our studying the word of God. We are to prove the strength of the atonement of Jesus. As stars of God, the light given us of His glory must never be quenched. We must do our all to fill the courts of heaven with choristers of God. As we are smitten, others will be gathered. Recall how Jesus was beheld as the only begotten of the Father. This does not mean that Christ was like the only-begotten of the Father…He is really so. And as we are the purposed election called and chosen by God, we are not just an expression in the bible, not a mere likeness to a thing, but the very thing itself. In the darkest of times, in every way of trial and trouble, we will be that very better thing. We will be the faith of Jesus. This is the phenomenon of the revelation of the mystery. We will be unrivalled as a people of God. As Christ proved the mighty power of his love in great drops of blood, the very observation of our faith will show the nourishing of the Spirit in our inner being as we pass through the trials. This will be our lot, and this we are to teach others. This is not something we seek. Therefore, our unceasing prayer, our prayer in loneliness, is “Lord, in the power of your word, help me through this thing…for your name’s sake.” This is the sword in our solitude. This is God exalting us in due time. This is our stronghold in the day of trial as we are confident to plead our adoption. This is our faith in our Intercessor. The events we know. The time we know not. The ways we know not, but his advent we know of a certainty…therein is our hope needed for the terrific struggle upon us. Herein is our victory in the battle. His enduring suffering and choiced death bears record that atonement was made not only at the cross. For this purpose the restraints upon the enemy are loosened. The enemies of God will be allowed to touch our bones, our flesh, their fiendish energies will be united…but our heart…our soul…our spirit…We will face in each one conflict all that craft could invent, all that malice could devise, all that infernal practice could suggest. We will face the devil in the form of men. It is quite likely that many of God’s people will die in the final days before the close of probation. Some will come to this time and loose something else. One of the most serious losses to affect some of the professed people of God will a loss of trust. How could a person spend all that time with Jesus and still be willing to betray Him? Because God loves us there are some particularized challenges that He will deliver to each of us. God gives us truth teachings that are revealed so that as we meet them, we shall know that we have felt them, because we will feel them deeply and keenly and pervasively. The way of these trials will be so exquisite and so severe. We are not forgotten, never forsaken. For the sake of righteousness, to endure, to be patient in the midst of affliction, in the midst of being misunderstood, and in the midst of suffering - that is being purposed by determination to be called as God’s chosen to display His great love and electing grace, He chose us, and through the power of the indwelling Holy Spirit, is transforming the thoughts and actions of His people now and to become. Ultimately, all of God's purpose in election is done to the praise of His glorious grace. We show His love even when there is no reciprocity. It is hard doctrine, but we will be tried in all things being prepared for the worthiness of the kingdom. It is the trial of our faith that will write our true witness. It is the leaving us in this world, even though we are not of it, for a moment that prepares us for the better world. His will will be done in, by, for, and through us. Every seemingly unconnected past moment, as we look back, take form and pattern. For there is in each of our lives this kind of divine design, this pattern, this pattern this purpose that is in the process of becoming, which is continually before the Lord but which for us, looking forward, is sometimes perplexing. Do nothing to escape the calling that comes to us. The reality of the purpose will be revealed in the truths studied for approval. The adversary will press particularly in the areas of our vulnerabilities. Let this not take us unaware. Think not that our lot is so hard or that when we feel our selves misunderstood, that it is right for us to indulge ourselves in feeling some self- pity. There will be times when the enemies of God darken the light with false coverings…so much the better for God. We will fight in the shade! We must be ready to fight in the shade of circumstance. One of the ways we can have perspective that will permit us to fight in the shade of circumstances is to study the scriptures and have involvement - intellectually and spiritually. We may know and understand that God is totally serious about His purpose to bring to pass the immortality and eternal life of His election. That His chief concerns are but for the growth of souls, the celestializing of the souls with whom He purposed by election. Brothers and sisters, we discern that something special is happening in our lives but are not able to sort it out with sufficient precision and clarity that we can articulate it to someone else. That is so often the truth of the gospel. Its truths are too powerful for us to entertain them ceremoniously or as a special event as though they are only truths sometimes. Truths move us beyond personal motivation to purpose for favorable opportunity in significant events during times of trials. This trouble will help many to understand that the truth of God is real, because He is warning all about it now. So why not bypass this time and the atrocious ways that will accompany it. The attitude of the world today makes most obviously why there must be a time of trouble like none other. Satan’s accusations that God is presented as a withholding, untrustworthy being who can hold His creatures in submission only by death threats is to be revealed for the deceptive purposes devised to impress the rebellious human race that freedom is not based on obedience but rather on imagined superiority. The purpose is to cause our standing to be closer to eternity. The existence of God, the character of God, the love of God and the true consequences of sin are etched out powerfully by God's working in history. But remarkably, the lessons are all too often lost on the defiant people who are of disbelief. amnesia The power of the sin illusion is that amnesia sets in quickly and dark minded people use such displays of sin as a power that works as evidence against God. Many say they can’t trust God in the small challenges of life, how will we have confidence in Him in the large things? The punctuated episodes of dreadfulness and conflict throughout history has been allowed by God to potently impact the chaos to come upon the earth. God has patiently blunted the full impact of sin's destructive power. But here finally at the end of time, in ways that will once and for all vindicate the character of God, God must lift the restraint and expose the true reality that is the dark underside of the cosmic rebellion. While this lifting of restraint is an act of divine judgment and revelation, like all manifestations of the wrath of God, there is a component of "letting alone" for those who hold the truth in unrighteousness and are given over to a reprobate mind so that the true principles of God's enemy and the natural outworking of the sin principle are revealed. Then under God’s guidance Satan will then plunge the inhabitants of the earth into one great, final trouble. As the angels of God cease to hold in check the fierce winds of human passion, all the elements of strife will be let loose…a time of trouble in a way that never man could imagine or devise. This will precede the universal close of probation and the rendering of the final plagues. Before it is all over everyone alive will have made a decision about whom they will worship. Everybody is shouldered off the fence by these happenings. Multitudes offer allegiance to the beast creature while a remnant worship the Creator God. As the world polarizes, a stark clarity emerges. The seductive principles that have mesmerized most of the world are revealed as horrific, destructive lies. The trustworthiness of God is vindicated. May I advance this thought? This is to be the greatest time in history to be alive. For God’s people and those who come to Christ will be His elect and very elect. In the face of tribulation, distress, and persecution we are overcomers powered by our faith in the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord. We will experience an unprecedented sense of purpose during this time. Life will come into focus like never before. The earth will be in complete upheaval. Crucible crisis will recede into nothingness. The one truly important issue…the matter of supreme faithfulness. Who is worthy of our worship? Is Jesus truly Lord or not? Is He Lord of our lives? As during this awful time, we experience His Lordship in new and powerful ways, as the "latter rain" of the Holy Spirit drenches us, and a host of distractions fall away, this will be a time never known before. We will experience profound personal transformation during this time. The purpose of this time goes beyond the unmasking of the heavy blackness of evil and confronts us with the ways in pressure which it has taken root in the hearts of man. We will experience absolute spiritual exhaustion in this prologue to endless joy. For six thousand years, God’s people have known “times of trouble” and “days of distress” would continue to the last days. The scriptures describe the faithful not as those who never saw trouble, but as those who cried out to God in their crises. The believer who worries that they want to escape trials and trouble through death is in danger. They don’t have faith in God to strengthen and protect them even when times are rough before the great time of trouble. Faith can conquer any situation. Faith in God will be tried to the uttermost. Persecution of believers who have this level of faith reflects God’s power, truth, and grace even while being burned at the stake. In the end of time, the strong in Christ will endure the pressure of the beast’s power, the political and religious entity. They are faithful and obedient to the commands of God. As a result, they are recognized specifically as those who suffer for the purpose of revealing God’s glory. The bible emphasizes the terrible conditions during the great tribulation predicted by Daniel and Jesus. These were written as warnings for future generations. They paint a dark, bleak picture for those who will not heed the truth. There is no precedence for the type of situations coming. In the time of the deepest turmoil on earth, God will have a people who demonstrate to the universe staying faithful to God even amid extreme difficulty showing the glorification of God working through us. The bible tells us that Jesus stands up for his people. The bible gives us this powerful allusion to strength, decision, and finality of our Savior. It tells us that Jesus has had enough. This is not a deliverance from the time of trouble but through the time of trouble. We will not escape persecution; we will endure it. There is a people at this time who spue hatred in torrents of flames that are intended for destruction. These are those thinking they are living in peace and safety in this society and are a sensitive narcissistic generation who could care less about God. They are caught unaware when the Lord “stands up.” Because of their subconscious darkness they have no understanding of the time. They are lords of their own nightmares. These unbelievers wrapped up in everyday life apart from God are contrasted with those who stay faithful to God. Our eyes are looking upward. We are covered. The others are looking to nature to save them. We don’t know the time, we don’t know the way. We are tempted to ask when God, when, and how God, how. God wants us to live by discernment - revelation knowledge, not head knowledge. We learn to trust God by going through many experiences that require trust. By seeing God's faithfulness over and over, we let go of trusting ourselves, and we place our trust in Him. We see how timing plays an important part in learning to trust God. The exact timing of His plan will be perfect. The ways of His plan will fulfill His every purpose. We must began to see major fulfillment of what God has called us to do. God’s timing is often a mystery. His trouble has purpose…to fit us for the kingdom. 📖 Applying the Study For ongoing spiritual encouragement and prophetical insights, visit Higher Learning.

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