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  • Dark Counsel…

    dark counsel Let’s begin with the Source of Divine Providence. The continuous activity of God sustaining, governing, and directing all things to His divine purposes. The concept of providence highlights God's omnipotence, omniscient nature, and His active role in the world. The Bible says God creates evil, not the evil of sin, not moral evil, God is not the author of that, but the evil of punishment. The very different events that befall the children of men - disaster, calamity, and hardship. The wise God has the ordering and disposing of all our comforts, and all our crosses, in this world. God asserts His sovereignty over all things, including the "bad times" and “suffering” that come to pass. Let’s understand Job 38:2. Darkening the counsels of God's wisdom with fool heartedness is a great affront and provocation to God. Satan uses this to confound and to perplex mankind with the order of God's decrees, and the designs, and reasons, and methods, of his operations of providence and grace. Dark counsel aligns with the general biblical understanding of Satan's primary strategy, which is to sow confusion, distort the truth, and deceive humanity. So, providentially, why this being? The question of why God, who is all-knowing, created Lucifer full of wisdom while foreseeing the path of rebellion he would take, treads upon sacred ground that has stirred deep reflection for centuries. At the heart of the matter lies the tension between divine omniscience and creaturely freedom. If God knew from the beginning that the covering cherub would corrupt his perfection and bring suffering into the created order, why would He allow such a being to come into existence at all? To seek an answer is to explore the mystery of love, freedom, and divine purpose in the face of evil. One of the most consistent responses through theological thought has been the defense of freedom. Love, to be genuine, cannot be compelled, and moral goodness requires the real possibility of its opposite. God, desiring love that is authentic, created beings with the capacity to choose. Knowing what Lucifer would freely choose does not mean God caused that choice; foreknowledge does not erase moral responsibility. In this light, Lucifer’s rebellion was not the unfolding of a divine script but the tragic misuse of a gift—freedom—that was necessary if love was to be more than programming. Yet freedom alone does not explain why God would still allow evil knowing the sorrow it would unleash. Here another perspective is often given: that God permits evil for a greater good. Trials, conflict, and even rebellion provide the stage upon which God’s justice, mercy, and faithfulness are displayed. Virtues such as courage, perseverance, and self-sacrificing love shine brightest against the darkness of opposition. In this sense, the fall of Lucifer, though grievous, becomes part of a larger redemptive story in which God’s glory is revealed not in shielding creation from every possibility of evil, but in overcoming evil with good and securing the universe against its recurrence forever. Theologians also stress that God is not the author of evil, for evil is not a substance He created but a privation of good—a turning away from God. The covering cherub was fashioned in perfection, but in choosing pride he diminished that perfection. God created the being and the capacities that made love and wisdom possible, but the corruption of those capacities belonged to Lucifer alone. Thus God’s holiness remains unstained even while He allows the tragic unfolding of freedom’s misuse. Schools of thought attempt to describe how God’s sovereignty and creaturely will coexist. We may emphasize divine decree, holding that God’s eternal plan includes even the fall, though creatures act with real responsibility—a mystery finite minds cannot untangle fully. We may also suggest that God possesses the power to know how free creatures would act in any possible circumstance, and thus chose to create the world in which His purposes would be fulfilled even through the rebellion of some. These approaches, while diverse, share a common insistence that God’s knowledge and sovereignty do not absolve creatures of their responsibility nor make Him the author of sin. In the end, humility tempers all speculation. Scripture acknowledges the reality of evil, affirms the goodness and justice of God, and calls His people to trust in His ultimate purposes. The fall of Lucifer, while a profound mystery, is framed by the greater certainty of God’s triumph in Christ, who has defeated the powers of darkness and promises to bring creation into a final state where rebellion can never arise again. To walk upon this sacred ground is to admit that the “why” may never be fully resolved for finite minds, but faith clings to the conviction that God’s wisdom is perfect, His love unchanging, and His victory complete. Satan’s recruitment methods combine deception, exploitation of desires, emotional manipulation, misrepresentation of God, incremental temptation, division, false security, and distraction. He adapts his approach to each person’s weaknesses and the cultural context. Satan’s recruitment to sin is subtle, strategic, and deeply personal, targeting human weaknesses and exploiting desires, pride, and emotions. He distorts truth, misrepresents God’s commands, and makes evil appear attractive or harmless, often using gradual steps rather than immediate temptation. He manipulates circumstances, relationships, and cultural influences to distract, divide, and mislead, while fostering a false sense of security or entitlement that lulls people into compromise. Ultimately, his methods aim to separate humanity from God by enticing rebellion, promoting rationalization, and dulling spiritual sensitivity, making vigilance, discernment, and submission to God essential for resisting his schemes. Satan’s ever pursuit of sin is motivated by his hatred of God. His hatred is not merely an emotion; it is a spiritual weapon forged in rebellion against the God of love. At its darkest core stands Satan, the adversary, whose very existence since his fall has been driven by hatred. Where God is love, Satan is hatred embodied. His rebellion in heaven was not fueled by ignorance but by willful malice toward the truth. He despised the humility of the Son of God, loathed the order of divine law, and hated the eternal harmony that made heaven beautiful. His pride became the soil, but hatred became the fuel of his existence. From that moment on, Satan’s every scheme has been rooted in animosity toward God, His character, and His creation. His war is not neutral; it is consumed with hatred against the image of God wherever it is seen. This hatred manifests in Satan’s relentless desire to degrade humanity. Scripture calls him “a murderer from the beginning” because his lies were aimed at bringing death to the human race. He could not strike God directly, so he struck the children made in God’s image. His hatred is not passive but active - seeking to poison minds, divide communities, and corrupt nations. The devil’s wrath is not satisfied until he has turned brother against brother, neighbor against neighbor, and entire peoples against one another. His great aim is to reproduce in humanity the very hatred that burns within his own spirit, ensuring that societies reflect his rebellion rather than God’s kingdom of peace. When viewed in this light, the national hatred rising in America is not merely political division, cultural tension, or economic stress - it is the visible outworking of Satan’s ancient motivation. The same adversary who hated heaven’s unity now seeks to tear apart earthly nations through suspicion, bigotry, and enmity. Hatred in America is being mainstreamed, normalized, and weaponized. Political leaders and media voices thrive on stirring animosity; entire platforms are built on demonizing the “other side.” What should be healthy debate has devolved into deep disdain. The seeds of Satan’s hatred are bearing fruit in mass shootings, racially motivated violence, suppression of historical truths, and the increasing celebration of cruelty as strength. The “mind of the Dragon,” as Scripture unfolds it, is not merely hostility toward God but a systematic drive to counterfeit His authority, to manipulate truth, and to enslave humanity in structures that advance rebellion against heaven. Revelation 12 shows the Dragon as a persecutor, a deceiver, and a manipulator of kingdoms. His ancient method is to use earthly systems as vessels through which his will is enacted, disguising spiritual rebellion under the cloak of human government and societal order. When this mind overlays the political landscape today, what emerges is a disturbing alignment of intent and action that mirrors the Dragon’s age-old strategies. There is the deliberate war on truth. The Dragon’s thinking is built on deception, for he cannot create, only corrupt. In today’s political discourse, lies are elevated into tools of governance. Words are weaponized, facts are twisted, and the people are trained to doubt even the most obvious realities. This is not random—it reflects the Dragon’s original craft in Eden: “Has God really said?” Just as he sought to destabilize faith by sowing doubt, political leaders now destabilize societies by blurring truth, manipulating narratives, and teaching populations to live by slogans rather than substance. There is the normalization of division. The Dragon’s mind thrives on enmity— between heaven and earth, between truth and lie, between brother and brother. Political systems today reflect this by magnifying cultural and racial hostilities, stirring suspicions, and creating adversarial camps where reconciliation could have been sought. Rather than being peacemakers, many in power profit from polarization, because a divided people are easier to control. The Dragon delights in this because it mocks God’s vision of one new humanity reconciled in Christ, replacing it with endless strife. The Dragon’s lust for control manifests through laws and policies designed not to uplift but to restrict, not to bless but to subjugate. Surveillance, censorship, economic manipulation, and the erosion of freedoms all testify to this mind at work. What is framed as “protection” or “order” often conceals the deeper motive of tightening grip over the populace, teaching people to surrender liberty for the promise of safety. This, too, echoes the Dragon’s nature, for he has always preferred domination to voluntary worship. There is the political exploitation of religion itself. Revelation 13 shows the Dragon giving power to the Beast, shaping a counterfeit union of political strength and religious deception. Today, we see sacred language borrowed by leaders to sanctify corruption, to excuse violence, and to baptize nationalism in the name of God. The Dragon’s mind is clearest here: he desires worship, and when he cannot gain it openly, he corrupts the very structures of faith until people believe they serve God while bowing to falsehood. In sum, the mind of the Dragon, overlaid upon the present political order, reveals a system bent on deception, division, domination, and counterfeit devotion. These intentions and actions are not isolated missteps but the outworking of an ancient rebellion expressed through modern power. To discern this is to see that our struggle is not with flesh and blood, but with the spiritual intelligence that inspires the fall of nations and the captivity of souls. Nowhere is this more evident than in the deliberate cultivation of racial and social hatred. For centuries, America’s history has been scarred by slavery, segregation, and systemic oppression—chains forged by the adversary to perpetuate hatred against those made in God’s image. Today, that same hatred is being rekindled, sometimes cloaked in nationalism, sometimes in religious rhetoric, but always rooted in the same demonic impulse: to divide and destroy. Efforts to erase the history of Black Americans, to vilify immigrants, or to frame compassion as weakness are not random policies— they echo Satan’s strategy of hatred. They serve his purpose of convincing people that their enemies are their neighbors rather than the spiritual powers of darkness. The hatred saturating America is also fueled by fear, which is itself a form of unbelief in God’s sovereignty. Fear of losing power, fear of demographic change, fear of cultural shifts—all become tinder for the fires of hatred. Satan whispers to hearts that self-preservation requires despising others, that survival means crushing the weak, that greatness comes only through enmity. In reality, these are lies designed to enslave nations to the same hatred that drives him. As long as hatred dominates the national conversation, America remains vulnerable to collapse not just politically, but morally and spiritually. Let’s map the prophetic mind of the Dragon directly onto the political actions and climate we see today. The Dragon’s first weapon is the lie. Today, political leaders often deliberately distort reality through disinformation campaigns, conspiracy narratives, and carefully engineered media manipulation. Instead of upholding truth as sacred, leaders reduce it to a tool for consolidating power. When entire populations begin to doubt what they see with their own eyes, they become pliable to whatever narrative is fed to them. This is the same deception by which the Dragon led angels astray in heaven and by which he seduced Eve in Eden—an assault not on facts alone, but on the very capacity of the human soul to discern truth. The Dragon was a murderer from the beginning, sowing hatred between God and man and then between man and man. In our political present, we see governments and parties nurturing division along racial, cultural, and ideological lines. Policies are shaped not to heal but to widen the gaps: immigration is framed to pit citizen against foreigner, urban against rural, Black against White, left against right. Such division strengthens political control by weakening unity among the governed. The Dragon’s fingerprints are evident—he fears any solidarity rooted in truth, because it reflects the kingdom of God. The Dragon seeks to enslave, never to free. In politics today this takes the form of surveillance systems, the restriction of speech, and the manipulation of the economy to keep the masses in dependence. Instead of justice and equity, laws are tilted to serve the elite while ordinary citizens are burdened with debt, inflation, and shrinking opportunity. This mirrors the Dragon’s own counterfeit throne: he rules by fear, coercion, and punishment, never by love. What governments call “security” is often a mask for control, ensuring compliance and silencing dissent. The most chilling aspect of the Dragon’s overlay is when religion itself is recruited into politics. Leaders invoke God’s name while passing unjust laws, or equate national identity with divine chosenness, baptizing their ambitions in sacred language. This makes people believe they are defending faith when, in fact, they are entrenching idolatry. Revelation 13 warns of this fusion—where political power is clothed in religious robes so that worship is redirected from the Creator to the creature. In our time, this is seen when political movements exalt themselves as God’s chosen instrument while denying His justice, mercy, and truth. The Dragon’s mind is not an abstract force but a recognizable overlay upon modern politics: deception weaponized in information, division engineered into society, domination cloaked as security, and counterfeit devotion wrapped in religious rhetoric. These are not coincidental patterns but prophetic fulfillments, revealing how the Dragon’s ancient rebellion is being replayed on the stage of nations, preparing the world for the ultimate confrontation between truth and falsehood. Yet the gospel offers a piercing contrast. While Satan is motivated by hatred, God is motivated by love. While the enemy seeks to destroy through division, Christ came to reconcile through His blood. In a nation divided, the call of the believers must not be to mirror the hatred of the culture but to expose its true source. The growing storm of national hatred is not simply a political battle; it is evidence that Satan’s fury is intensifying as history approaches its climax. Believers must discern that the venom of hatred is not human in origin—it is spiritual, and it must be resisted with spiritual weapons. America’s healing will not come through legislation, nor through elections, but through repentance from the spirit of hatred and a turning back to the God of love. Only then can the nation escape being a mirror of Satan’s hatred and instead reflect the unity of Christ’s kingdom. Hatred is the adversary’s signature; love is heaven’s answer. The future of the nation depends on which of these forces the people will allow to rule their hearts. The crucifixion of Jesus stands as the ultimate expression of how hatred of the truth leads to violence. Christ embodied the fullness of God’s love, and His words exposed hypocrisy, falsehood, and pride. But instead of receiving Him, the leaders of His day were consumed with hostility. Their rejection was not simply intellectual disagreement—it was the fruit of Satan’s hatred working through human hearts. They could not bear the purity of truth shining against their corruption, and so they sought to silence it by crucifying the Truth Himself. In the last days, this same hatred will rise again. Scripture declares that “the dragon was enraged with the woman, and he went to make war with the rest of her offspring, who keep the commandments of God and have the testimony of Jesus”. The final generation of God’s people will reflect the obedience and faith of Christ in such a way that the world cannot ignore them. Their fidelity will be a living rebuke to a culture that has embraced lawlessness, compromise, and deception. As in the time of Jesus, truth will be viewed as dangerous, intolerant, and divisive. Satan’s hatred is not passive; it demands persecution. It is deliberate and calculated, designed to turn creation against its Maker. The last-day elect will be accused of causing social unrest, blamed for economic collapse, and despised for standing apart from the prevailing spirit of the age. Laws will be crafted that outwardly appear to promote unity and peace, but in reality they will compel conformity to false worship. When God’s people refuse, they will become the targets of the same hatred that nailed Christ to the cross. The world’s hostility will be stirred to a fever pitch, just as it was in Jerusalem when the crowd cried out, “Crucify Him!” This coming storm is not simply the result of human anger—it is Satan’s own enmity against God, channeled through societies that have rejected the truth. His goal is to blot out the witness of those who reflect Christ’s character. Yet, just as the cross became the triumph of redemption, so the final persecution will reveal the glory of God’s people. Their steadfastness under hatred will testify that love is stronger than death, truth more enduring than lies, and God’s kingdom unconquerable by Satan’s rage. The crucifixion of Christ was not only the climax of Satan’s hatred in the first century—it was also the pattern of how that hatred will reach its full expression in the last days. The Bible reveals a prophetic sequence by which the adversary, through deception and rage, will lead the world to repeat the same crime against God’s people that was once committed against His Son. From false unity flows legislation. As the faithful refuse compliance, Satan will inflame public opinion against them. In Christ’s day, false witnesses and manipulated crowds demanded His crucifixion. In the last days, the dragon will stir the world into believing that God’s people are the cause of calamity. They will be portrayed as extremists, obstacles to unity, enemies of progress, and even threats to the survival of civilization. Revelation declares that a death decree will eventually be issued against those who will not worship the beast or its image. The hatred that crucified Christ will again cry out, “It is better that they die than the nation perish.” Racial truths, past injustices, and the biblical standards of righteousness are often suppressed because they expose sin. Just as the leaders of Christ’s day could not endure His words, many in this generation bristle at the witness of God’s commandments. The result is not neutrality but hostility: the more truth shines, the more hatred grows against those who uphold it. From this rejection arises a false unity. America, fractured by social, political, and economic crises, longs for healing. Leaders and movements promise national restoration, but their vision of unity is built on compromise rather than righteousness. Calls to “return to God” often mask agendas rooted in nationalism, exclusion, or dominion rather than true obedience to Christ. This mirrors Revelation’s picture of the world marveling after the beast: a deceptive unity forged in crisis, promoted as the only path to survival. It is Satan’s hatred of God’s authority disguised as patriotism and religion. False unity quickly produces laws of conformity. Already, debates about religious freedom, national security, and public morality are paving the way for legislation that will privilege outward conformity over individual conscience. As this minority refuses to yield, the spirit of accusation will intensify. America’s media environment already thrives on blame, portraying certain groups as obstacles to progress. In times of heightened crisis—whether economic collapse, climate disasters, or social unrest—God’s faithful will be scapegoated. Laws that began as moral guidance will harden into coercion, and ultimately into a death decree, fulfilling Revelation. At last comes the final persecution. America, once the champion of religious liberty, will become the chief enforcer of Satan’s hatred. But the prophetic sequence does not end with persecution. It ends with deliverance. Michael will stand up, Christ will return, and the faithful remnant will be vindicated. Truth cannot be crucified forever. Sin is no small trespass, no harmless indulgence of the flesh, no fleeting thought soon forgotten. It is a kingdom of rot, an empire of decay, and the throne of hell itself. To imagine sin is to imagine the blackest abyss, where every light is swallowed, where every virtue is mocked, and where truth is not merely denied but desecrated. If Satan were to write its charter, and the Devil to publish its constitution, it would be inscribed with the blood of innocence, sealed with chains of eternal despair, and read aloud by the spirits of corruption to an assembly of willing slaves—men and women who mistake chains for ornaments, and death for liberty. At its core, sin is treason against the Most High. It is not weakness—it is willful rebellion. It is not error—it is deliberate perversion. It whispers first as a choice, then it hardens as a habit, until finally it rules as a tyrant. What begins as a small surrender soon grows into an empire of bondage. In the secret councils of darkness, sin is applauded as wisdom, while those who bow to its scepter are crowned as fools. Satan and his cohorts laugh, for they know that every compromise is another strand in the net, another nail in the coffin of the soul. The worst of sin is not merely what it does to the body, but what it does to the spirit. It strips man of his dignity until he becomes less than beast, driven by appetite and enslaved to lust. It takes what God called holy and tramples it into the mud of shame. It makes leaders drunk with the wine of corruption so that their judgment is blinded, their conscience seared, and their mouths filled with lies. And still they boast as if they sit upon thrones, when in truth they are prisoners shackled in the dungeons of their own greed and arrogance. Look closely at the world today and you will see the handwriting of sin etched upon every structure of power. It wears the mask of politics but breathes the venom of tyranny. It cloaks itself in education but teaches the doctrines of decay. It disguises itself in entertainment but baptizes a generation in filth. It even dares to stand in pulpits, speaking of love while crucifying truth, promising freedom while chaining souls in darkness. This is the art of Satan—the masterpiece of the Devil—an orchestra of rebellion conducted by sin itself, with nations and rulers as its choir. And what of those who follow blindly? They march behind their leaders as cattle to the slaughter. They repeat slogans without thought, embrace lies without question, and delight in rebellion as though it were progress. They laugh at purity, scorn humility, and curse righteousness. Their souls are numbed by constant compromise, their hearts hardened by endless indulgence. They cannot see that the pit they are digging is their own grave, nor hear that the applause of their peers is but the funeral hymn of their damnation. The worst of sin is not the act itself, but the end to which it leads. It begins in pleasure, but it ends in torment. It promises liberty, but it delivers chains. It speaks of life, but it drags its slaves into death. It is a banquet where poison is served on silver plates, where the wine is mixed with blood, and where the final course is despair eternal. And the hosts of this banquet—Satan, the Devil, and all who love the lie—raise their cups in mockery as humanity drinks itself into ruin. Hear then, O leaders of this present darkness, and all who follow in your train: you sit in counsel with demons, you legislate rebellion against God, you trade justice for gain, and you pave the streets of nations with the stones of perdition. Your hands are red with the blood of innocence, your tongues drip venom, and your souls are already tasting the smoke of eternal fire. You believe you rule, but you are ruled. You imagine yourselves masters, but you are slaves. You walk proudly in daylight, but your destiny is the midnight of everlasting death. The tragic bewilderment of our time is that lies, so blatant in their distortion, are embraced by multitudes as though they were truth. This is no new phenomenon, but rather the ancient craft of Satan, who from the beginning secured his power by persuading willing minds to question and then reject the Word of God. His dark counsel thrives wherever truth is despised, for deception requires not merely a deceiver but also a people content to be deceived. In America today, the highest offices of government—executive, legislative, and judicial—have become stages upon which falsehood parades as wisdom, and power cloaks itself in corruption while mocking the very citizens it is meant to serve. That nearly half the nation can believe and defend such obvious distortions reveals not merely political blindness but a deeper spiritual malady: a people who love the soothing flattery of lies more than the piercing demands of truth. This is the satanic method laid bare— confuse the conscience, harden the heart, and exalt men who mirror the rebellion of Lucifer himself. The leaders, emboldened by the willingness of the people to ignore reality, make a mockery of justice and truth, turning the ignorance of the masses into the currency of their power. Thus, the theater of deception continues, and Satan laughs, for he knows that a nation which cannot discern truth from lies has already surrendered to the dominion of darkness. The willing ignorance of America is not an accident of history but the fulfillment of a prophetic pattern. When a people reject truth, they are given over to strong delusion. The lies that dominate the highest levels of government today are not isolated acts of political corruption but the outworking of Satan’s kingdom upon earth, preparing hearts for the final deception. The prophetic sequence begins with the normalization of lies, where the conscience is dulled and moral clarity is replaced by partisan loyalty. Next comes the exaltation of personalities who mirror Lucifer’s arrogance, turning leaders into idols while the people bow to their image. This is followed by the degradation of justice, where laws are twisted and courts are manipulated to enshrine falsehood, echoing the prophecy of Daniel that truth would be “cast down to the ground”. From this state of spiritual blindness, the nation moves into a deeper stage of coercion, where those who resist the prevailing lies are branded as enemies, marginalized, and ultimately persecuted. America, in her willing ignorance, becomes a prophetic stage upon which Satan rehearses his final masterpiece of deception—uniting political, judicial, and religious powers to mock God’s truth and enforce the worship of error. The final stage of this sequence is the persecution of the faithful, those who refuse to bow to the lies. As in ages past, truth becomes treason, and loyalty to Christ is counted as rebellion against the state. Thus, the mockery of today’s leaders is but a shadow of the greater mockery to come, when the world’s willing ignorance will culminate in a universal test of worship. The progression of deception in America unfolds with a steady and subtle drift, where lies have become normalized in the public sphere. Political speech, once expected to reflect at least some measure of integrity, is now measured by its power to persuade rather than its fidelity to truth. Citizens, weary of discernment, accept slogans and soundbites as substitutes for substance, and the line between truth and propaganda vanishes. This is the first stage of Satan’s counsel: to dull the conscience until lies no longer sting, leaving a people incapable of distinguishing light from darkness. From this dulling of conscience arises the exaltation of personalities whose arrogance mirrors the pride of Lucifer. Leaders are no longer measured by righteousness or justice but by their ability to enthrall crowds with boldness, spectacle, and defiance. The minds of today’s leaders in America reveal a continuous and relentless alignment with deception, ambition, and pride, serving a dark counsel that seeks to blind the masses and suppress truth. Their hearts are hardened, their words carefully crafted to manipulate perception, and their policies designed to fracture communities, silence dissent, and exploit fear. These leaders often prioritize personal gain, political survival, and the advancement of agendas that destabilize society, rather than serving justice, righteousness, and the common good. Their thinking is frequently marked by deception, doublespeak, and an embrace of lies that manipulate public perception, eroding trust and undermining the very principles of honesty and integrity that hold a nation together. Lies are repeated until they are accepted as reality, and justice, mercy, and righteousness are dismissed as inconvenient obstacles. This ongoing moral compromise suggests a mind shaped not by wisdom or truth, but by pride, ambition, and a subtle allegiance to dark influences that thrive in human weakness. This pattern is not merely political—it is spiritual, prophetic, and systemic, echoing the counsel of the dragon, whose influence moves through human agents to prepare society for widespread delusion, moral decay, and spiritual captivity. This relentless manipulation reflects a mindset that is fundamentally opposed to truth, justice, and the welfare of the people. The leaders’ ambition and selfexaltation create a culture where corruption becomes normalized. It is a continuous evil because it does not pause for moral reflection; it thrives in the cycles of greed, ambition, and the willing subversion of conscience, creating a leadership culture where evil becomes normalized, pervasive, and self-sustaining. It is prophetic in its consequences, preparing the nation for deception on a scale Scripture foretold. The people, having abandoned truth, now crave strength, and they project their hopes upon figures who embody rebellion. In this way, idolatry is reborn in modern dress: men and women, clothed with political power, become the images before which a deceived nation bows. With idolatry established, justice itself becomes perverted. Courts bend their judgments not to law but to ideology, and legislation reflects the ambitions of those in power rather than the moral fabric of truth. Daniel foresaw this when he declared that truth would be cast down to the ground, and so it is today as corruption becomes systematized. Judicial decisions mock righteousness, and laws are weaponized against the very people they were meant to protect. The nation that once prided itself on liberty now demonstrates the hollow shell of freedom, its substance devoured by deception. Inevitably, this progression advances toward coercion. When lies dominate, those who refuse to yield to them become enemies of the state. Already, voices of dissent are maligned, censored, and treated as dangerous threats. The unwillingness to conform to prevailing narratives brands the faithful as divisive, intolerant, or even subversive. This stage signals the growing alliance of political and social forces that seek not only to marginalize truth but to silence it altogether. The prophetic climax draws near when religious institutions, once guardians of truth, lend their voice to the lie. America’s spiritual sphere, corrupted by the same willingness to believe falsehood, will soon unite with political power to enforce a counterfeit worship. Revelation describes this unholy alliance in which the dragon, the beast, and the false prophet conspire to deceive the world, and America, once a symbol of liberty, becomes the very ground upon which this deception flourishes. In the end, persecution rises as the inevitable fruit. Those who stand fast in the Word of God will be ridiculed, restricted, and rejected by a nation that has traded its soul for lies. Truth will be branded as treason, and loyalty to Christ will be despised as rebellion against the state. This is Satan’s masterpiece: a nation intoxicated with deception, mocking its own ignorance while hunting those who bear the seal of truth. Yet even here prophecy assures that a remnant will endure, sealed in divine intimacy, whose unshakable witness will pierce the darkness and declare before all creation that God’s Word cannot be silenced. This is sin—not the toy of children, not the mistake of the weak, but the chosen weapon of hell. It is a power that consumes, a plague that devours, a poison that cannot be cured by man. It is the song of Satan and the anthem of the Devil, sung to a world that dances toward destruction. Its end is the lake of fire, and its crown is eternal loss. Let the reader understand: to embrace sin is to embrace death, to cherish it is to cherish torment, and to follow it is to follow Satan himself. There is no beauty in it, no light within it, no promise worth keeping. It is the kingdom of despair masquerading as freedom. Its wages are certain. Its end is sure. We live in a nation that is drunk on its own corruption. Dark, piercing and solemn days are being convened. Let the court of eternity be called to order. Let the Judge of all the earth sit in majesty, and let the accuser of the brethren stand silent, for his case is already condemned. And let the nations hear, particularly the people of America, for the indictment against you has been written in fire and sealed in the blood of those you have despised. You have been weighed in the balances and found wanting. You were given abundance, but you hoarded greed. You were given truth, but you smothered it with lies. You were given freedom, but you twisted it into a license for violence and vanity. You raised the torch of liberty, but you extinguished it with the smoke of oppression. Your flag waves high, but it is stained with the tears of the enslaved, the imprisoned, the forgotten, and the rejected. What is this “justice” you claim? It is a mockery in the eyes of heaven. You detain the innocent while the guilty walk free. You cage men and women for profit, feeding an economy of bondage while calling it law and order. You silence voices that cry for equity, branding them as enemies, mocking them as “woke,” as if awareness were sin and blindness virtue. You heap scorn on the very ones who pierce the veil of deception, preferring the comfort of ignorance to the pain of truth. And what of your economy, O proud nation? You strut as though your riches are eternal, but your vaults are hollow. The weight of your debt crushes the necks of your children before they draw their first breath. Your leaders play the harlot with wealth, dancing with bankers and kings, while the common man is bled dry. The crash is written in your ledgers, the famine inscribed in your markets. You will know what it means when silver and gold cannot save you, when bread is rationed, when your idols of commerce collapse into dust. But there is a deeper wound—a wound that bleeds still, though you refuse to see it. O America, you have warred against the Black man and the Black woman whom God has preserved as witnesses in your midst. You kidnapped their fathers, chained their mothers, and trafficked their children. You built your empire on their backs, yet you erase their history from your books and despise their identity with venom. You shoot their sons in the streets and cage their daughters in prisons, then dare to call yourself righteous. The cry of their blood ascends to heaven like Abel’s, and the Lord of Hosts has heard it. This is the indictment: you malign the poor, you glorify the wicked, you demonize the watchmen, you despise the truth. You laugh at prophecy, but you fulfill it with your rebellion. You think yourselves wise, but the wisdom you follow is the counsel of demons. You say, “Who can stand against us?” but the Almighty has already arisen. You boast in your armies, but the chariots of heaven outnumber your hosts. You trust in your nuclear fire, but the breath of God can extinguish it in a moment. Sin has made its throne in your courts, its pulpit in your churches, its platform in your schools, its anthem in your songs, and its scepter in your government. Your leaders are not shepherds but wolves; your people are not free but bound. And yet you love your chains. You paint them gold and call them liberty, but the rust of judgment already corrodes them. Therefore the word of the Lord comes: Repent, for the hour is late. Repent, for the plagues draw near. Repent, for the time of trouble hastens upon you like a storm at midnight. Do not say, “We are America, the light of the nations.” Your light is darkness, and your lamp is almost extinguished. The only fire that remains is the one that will burn in judgment. You leaders who scheme in hidden chambers, you builders of oppression, you merchants of death—you will face the Judge whose eyes are flames of fire. And you who follow blindly, laughing at truth, mocking righteousness, despising the very warnings sent to save you—you will stand as well. For the courtroom of heaven is not deceived by slogans, and the scales of eternity are not rigged by bribes. This is the rebuke: the kingdom of sin you have built is collapsing. The Devil whom you serve as master will leave you as prey. And unless you turn— unless you humble yourselves before the Christ you have rejected—you will drink the cup of wrath to its dregs. America and its leaders have made ready themselves for the gavel of heaven to strike, the sentence declared, and the solemn voice of God echoing against the arrogance of a guilty nation. The court of the Eternal has spoken. The Judge of all creation has risen from His throne. The witnesses are gathered, the record is opened, and the charges have been read. The time for defense is past. The hour for excuses is gone. The verdict is pronounced. America, you are guilty. Guilty of bloodshed that cries from the ground. Guilty of oppression masked as law. Guilty of mocking righteousness while enthroning rebellion. Guilty of chaining the children of Jacob and despising their awakening. Guilty of scorning the truth while courting the lie. Guilty of calling evil good, and good evil. You have taken the inheritance of freedom and sold it for profit. You have taken the torch of liberty and turned it into a weapon of empire. You have turned prisons into markets, children into commodities, and truth into propaganda. You have profaned the sanctuary of justice, polluted the sanctuary of worship, and corrupted the sanctuary of knowledge. The gavel falls: your wealth will rot, your power will collapse, your idols will be shattered. You will taste the famine of your own making, the terror of your own policies, and the darkness of your own rebellion. The very systems you exalt will turn against you, the very leaders you trust will betray you, the very armies you boast in will crumble. You have unknowingly, under the persuasion of the Devil, waged war against the Black remnant whom the Lord has preserved as witnesses of His covenant. You enslaved them, but they endure. You silenced them, but they still speak. You tried to erase their identity, but the Lord restores it. Their cry is recorded in the book of heaven, and their vindication is written in fire. To war against them is to war against the God who called them, who chose them, who elected them, who purposed them, and your war is lost before it begins. Hear the sentence: Your kingdom is divided and given to judgment. Your pride will be broken. Your towers will fall. Your markets will shake. Your people will mourn. Those who mocked the warnings will gnash their teeth in despair. Those who trusted in sin will find themselves abandoned by the very master they served. Satan will laugh at your ruin, for he used you as his throne and discarded you as dung. The books are opened, the evidence is full. The merchants who grew fat on your excess will wail when their markets crumble. You who sold souls for profit will gnaw your tongues in despair. Cities will shake with violence. Families will be torn by division. Leaders will war against one another, and the people will be scattered in confusion. The shield of your armies will fail, for no weapon forged by man can withstand the decree of the Almighty. The cries of the despised will echo in your ears. The sentence is no longer words—it is reality. America is falling as though lightning has struck the heart of its commerce. Screens once flashing with numbers went dark; trading floors that once roared with activity fall silent. Merchants are standing in the streets, promised tariffs are making the clutched papers worth less than dust. A man with pockets of gold will not buy bread, and a mother with silver in her hand will not feed her child. Cities will convulse in violence. The secrets of darkness spill forth. Hidden rooms burst open. Papers sealed in shadows are spread in the light. Contracts signed in secret reveal their venom. The machinery of prisons groan beneath the weight of its exposure. Egypt fell under the plagues…this nation is now staggering toward its fall. The wave of chaos is sized as a tsunami. Yet even now the mercy of the Judge lingers at the edge of the sentence. The Son who bore the cross still offers His blood. The Spirit still whispers, “Come out from among them, if you choose repentance to be among My people.” For though the nation is guilty, the individual may yet repent. Though the empire collapses, the soul may still be saved. The gavel has struck, but the door of mercy has not yet closed. Let all who hear this verdict tremble. Let the leaders who scheme in darkness know they have been exposed before the eyes of Him who sees all. Let the followers who march blindly after lies awaken before the fire consumes them. Let the proud nation bow low before the King of kings, for His kingdom is coming, and it will not be stopped. This is not the whisper of men, it is the voice of the Almighty. God does not err. There is no appeal. There is no delay. America, the sentence has been spoken, the vision declared, the hour hastens. Learn of prophesy. Your economic collapse is already written. The famine of your fields is sure. Do you not see the smoke rising? God’s call is not to the nation…this nation is condemned. Once more the call is to the souls scattered who yet have ears to hear, hearts that tremble. The divine decree is heard. The court is adjourned. The verdict stands. The sentence is sure. Repent, or perish. It is the dark counsel of Satan who from the beginning has sought to twist truth into lies and lure creation into ruin. The adversary’s work is not merely to tempt individuals but to organize rebellion against God’s character, accusing the Almighty of tyranny while enslaving humanity in sin. It is this destructive counsel, this deliberate spreading of deception, that ignites the holy wrath of God. The wrath of God does not spring forth in a vacuum. The bleak shadows of death brings forth this overwhelming response of love. For every chain of bondage Satan forges, God’s love burns hotter in zeal to break it; for every lie Satan sows, God’s wrath rises to defend the truth. Thus, the wrath of God is not arbitrary violence but the necessary uprising of divine love against the counsel of darkness, a love that refuses to allow Satan’s rebellion to define the destiny of God’s creation. At the heart of God’s nature lies love - absolute, holy, eternal love. Scripture declares that “God is love”, meaning every action He takes flows from this essence. Yet within this same divine heart burns wrath against sin, a reality some find difficult to reconcile. How can a God of love also pour out judgments of fire and brimstone, and finally bring an end to all rebellion? The key is not to see His wrath as a contradiction to His love, but as the very outworking of its strength. God’s wrath is not fueled by hatred of His creation, but by a love so pure that it cannot coexist with the cancer of sin that corrupts, enslaves, and destroys the souls He cherishes. It erases the reflection of God in His creation. Sin, by its very nature, is parasitic. It distorts truth, bends goodness, and perverts the reflection of God within His image-bearers. If tolerated eternally, sin would unravel the harmony of heaven and perpetuate cycles of suffering without end. Therefore, divine wrath arises not because God loses control, but because He refuses to let His creation be forever marred by rebellion. His judgments are the strength of His love acting to defend life, truth, and holiness. Just as a parent’s protective instinct may flare against anything that threatens their child, God’s wrath is love rising up against the threat of sin. To permit sin to reign would be to deny love its fullest expression. And to tolerate sin forever would not be mercy but cruelty. And love is unwilling to let evil have the final word. Throughout Scripture, we see this principle revealed. At the flood, God’s grief at human corruption was matched by His decisive judgment to cleanse the earth. At Calvary, the wrath of God against sin was poured out not on humanity but upon His own Son, who became sin for us. Here the mystery of divine love and wrath converged most powerfully. God’s hatred of sin was revealed in the suffering of Christ, while His love for sinners was revealed in the offer of salvation through that very suffering. The cross shows that God’s wrath is not a contradiction to His love, but its fierce and unyielding defender. In the final judgment, this truth will again be unveiled. Revelation speaks of the “wine of the wrath of God” poured full strength upon those who cling to sin. Yet even here, the motivation is love—for only by eradicating sin can God usher in an eternal kingdom where righteousness dwells. The destruction of the wicked is not arbitrary cruelty, but the necessary act of love that refuses to allow rebellion to linger forever. God’s wrath against sin is the cleansing fire that secures the promise of everlasting peace for those who accept His grace. Thus, to understand divine wrath rightly is to see it as the strength of divine love in motion. Love that is weak compromises with evil; love that is holy confronts it, judges it, and eradicates it. God’s wrath is not a rival to His love but its sharpest edge—the fiery zeal of a God who treasures His creation too much to leave it captive to death. In the end, the same love that sent Christ to the cross will power the final destruction of sin, ensuring that “affliction shall not rise up the second time”. What powers wrath is not rage, but love so steadfast and strong that it will settle for nothing less than eternal freedom, holiness, and life for His redeemed. In the last days, this union of love and wrath will reach its most visible expression. Scripture reveals that Satan’s dark counsel will mature into a global deception, uniting nations, economies, and religions against the truth of God. His lies will not only twist morality but will challenge the very identity of God’s people, accusing them as traitors to society because they stand loyal to the commandments of God and the faith of Jesus. In this crisis, the strength of divine love will again be revealed as God seals His people with His Spirit, fortifying them against deception. This sealing is not merely protection from wrath but the mark of intimacy, proof that their hearts are wholly aligned with the One they serve. Yet, as Satan presses the world into false worship, God’s wrath will be poured out—not against His faithful, but against the rebellion that seeks to destroy them. Just as Pharaoh’s stubbornness in Egypt drew forth the plagues that magnified God’s name and liberated His people, so the final generation will see the plagues of Revelation fall as the outworking of divine love refusing to surrender creation to Satan’s dominion. The prophetic sequence shows love and wrath moving together in perfect harmony. God’s people, sealed in His love, are preserved through the storm of judgment, while the systems of deception collapse under the weight of divine wrath. The cross will find its final echo: what Christ endured for the salvation of the faithful becomes the judgment of those who choose Satan’s counsel over God’s mercy. In the end, the wrath of God is not destruction for its own sake but the burning away of lies, injustice, and rebellion so that the universe may be forever free. And when the smoke of Babylon’s fall clears, what will remain is the unshakable kingdom of love, secured by a wrath that was always the strength of love in action. In the final days of earth’s history, the mystery of God’s love and wrath will reach its climactic revelation. Satan’s dark counsel will not remain hidden but will rise to dominate the world stage, uniting political powers, religious authorities, and economic systems in a false union of strength. Scripture portrays this alliance as Babylon, a counterfeit order built upon deception and enforced conformity. Through lies, fear, and coercion, Satan will press the inhabitants of the earth to worship the beast and its image, substituting the commandments of God for the traditions of men. Those who refuse to bow will be maligned as enemies of progress, haters of unity, and obstacles to peace. Thus the final conflict will not be over politics alone but over worship—whether the Creator or the deceiver is worthy of allegiance. The prophetic unveiling of Revelation 13 shows the Dragon giving his power, throne, and authority to the Beast. This transfer illustrates how spiritual rebellion is enacted through political systems. The Dragon himself does not rule openly, but cloaks his intent behind earthly governments, shaping their policies, rhetoric, and structures to mirror his own mind. When this lens is applied to the modern political order, the progression of the Beast and its Image comes into sharper focus, revealing the ominous direction in which today’s societies are moving. The first mark of the Dragon’s overlay is deception. Revelation describes the Beast as one that speaks great and blasphemous things, a tongue trained to manipulate perception. In our present day, deception is no longer a shadowy tactic—it has become the very currency of political life. Narratives are carefully crafted to distort truth, confuse the masses, and sow suspicion toward any voice that speaks plainly. This is not an accident but the deliberate weaponization of words. Just as the Dragon’s voice in Eden was designed to cast doubt upon God’s word, so today’s political discourse seeks to blur reality until the people can no longer discern what is true. This deception prepares the way for the Beast’s dominance, for a people untethered from truth can be easily bound by lies. The second manifestation is division. The Dragon has always thrived on enmity, and the Beast carries this forward by creating societal fractures. Revelation shows the world divided between those who worship the Beast and those who keep the commandments of God. Today we see division magnified through politics that pit neighbor against neighbor, race against race, and ideology against ideology. Leaders exploit cultural wounds not to heal them but to secure their own positions. This engineered polarization makes reconciliation seem impossible and allows oppressive policies to proceed unchecked. By keeping the people fractured, the system ensures that unity exists only around loyalty to the Beast, not around the truth of God. The third mark is domination. Revelation 13 depicts a Beast that exercises authority over every tribe, tongue, and nation, demanding universal submission. In today’s political trajectory, domination is pursued through surveillance technologies, censorship, and economic coercion. Freedoms once assumed to be inalienable are quietly eroded in the name of security. Inflation, scarcity, and controlled markets create dependence, teaching populations to trade liberty for stability. This reflects the Dragon’s own counterfeit kingship—he rules by coercion and fear, not by love and trust. The political systems of our age are steadily shaping themselves into this mold, laying the groundwork for global obedience under the guise of necessity. There is counterfeit devotion. Revelation warns of an Image to the Beast, a union of political and religious power where worship is demanded under threat of exclusion or death. The Dragon desires worship, and when he cannot receive it directly, he secures it through corrupted structures of religion intertwined with the state. Today, we see the beginnings of this counterfeit devotion in the way politics is draped in sacred language. Leaders invoke God to sanctify their agendas, equating nationalism with divine calling, and framing loyalty to the state as loyalty to heaven. Religious fervor is redirected toward political idols, and the people are deceived into believing they serve God while bowing to the Dragon’s counterfeit throne. This is the most subtle and dangerous of his tactics, for it perverts genuine faith into an instrument of rebellion. Revelation 13 does not stop with the rise of the Beast but presses further, describing the formation of an Image to the Beast. This Image is not merely a shadow of past tyranny but a replica of its spirit—an embodiment of the Dragon’s mind within a new context. The prophecy indicates that America, represented by the beast with lamb-like horns that speaks as a dragon, will be the chief architect of this Image. It is the paradox of a nation born in the language of liberty yet transformed into an instrument of coercion that reveals how subtle the Dragon’s overlay has become. The groundwork for the Image is already visible in the present political climate. At its heart, the Image to the Beast is the union of political authority with religious sanction, whereby state power enforces spiritual loyalty. Today we see the stirrings of this union in the way religion is used as a political tool. Sacred language is borrowed to frame partisan agendas, and entire movements rally under banners that fuse patriotism with divine chosenness. This fusion does not uplift the commandments of God but instead enshrines cultural identity, nationalism, or ideology as sacred. The Dragon’s counterfeit devotion advances precisely through this merging of the holy with the profane.As division continues to deepen within the nation, the appeal of enforced unity grows stronger. The Image of the Beast will rise not first through open persecution but through the promise of healing societal fractures. Leaders will argue that moral and religious uniformity is necessary to restore order. In times of crisis—economic collapse, social unrest, or external threat—the call will be made to return to “God” as a nation. Yet this return will not be to the living God of Scripture, but to a politicized god shaped by human agendas. The Dragon’s deception will be to make this appear righteous, while in truth it will be rebellion cloaked in piety. Domination will soon follow. Revelation 13 foretells that those who refuse to worship the Image will be excluded from economic participation and, eventually, condemned. Already the tools of domination are in place. Digital currencies, surveillance systems, and globalized economic networks make it possible to control buying and selling with precision. What Scripture once revealed as prophecy is now feasible as policy. The logic of “security” and “stability” will make such control appear necessary, but beneath it lies the Dragon’s intention to compel worship. What begins as regulation for the sake of order will become enforcement of loyalty to the Image. The climax of the Image will be counterfeit worship codified into law. In America, this will likely manifest in the exaltation of certain religious observances under civil mandate, with penalties for dissent. The language will be that of patriotism and morality, but the essence will be coercion of conscience. Here the Dragon’s mind is most clearly seen, for he has ever desired worship compelled by force rather than freely given in love. When a nation that once championed liberty of conscience turns to enforce worship, the Image of the Beast will have fully taken shape. Thus, the progression is clear: deception prepares the people to doubt truth, division primes them to accept enforced unity, domination supplies the tools of control, and counterfeit devotion provides the spiritual justification. America’s political system is moving steadily along this path, even while cloaking itself in the language of freedom. The prophecy of Revelation 13 is not distant but unfolding, revealing that the final confrontation between the Dragon’s Image and the Lamb’s faithful remnant is drawing near. In this light, the overlay of the Dragon’s mind upon the political order is unmistakable. Deception clouds truth, division fractures society, domination strips liberty, and counterfeit devotion corrupts worship. These are not isolated trends but a prophetic sequence leading directly into the fulfillment of Revelation 13. What is unfolding before our eyes is the preparation of the world for the final conflict, where allegiance to truth and allegiance to the Beast will stand in stark opposition. The political stage is being set not merely for human struggles over power, but for the climactic demonstration of the Dragon’s rebellion against God. To discern this is to recognize that the battle is spiritual at its core, and that the true safeguard lies not in political structures, but in the sealing power of God’s Spirit upon His faithful remnant. In this critical hour, God’s love will act to seal His people with His Spirit. The sealing marks not merely ownership but intimate preservation. It is the engraving of God’s character upon the hearts of the faithful, a testimony that they have been brought into perfect harmony with His law of love. This seal will enable them to stand unmoved while the winds of deception sweep the earth. It will also distinguish them from those who bear the mark of the beast, the sign of submission to Satan’s counterfeit order. Love will hold them fast in loyalty, even when stripped of worldly security and threatened with persecution. In them, the universe will see the triumph of divine love over the power of sin, for they will embody the faithfulness of Jesus in the most hostile environment the world has ever known. But as the sealed stand firm, God’s wrath will be unveiled against the systems that have sought to crush them. The seven last plagues described in Revelation are not random calamities but targeted judgments, each exposing the impotence of the idols and powers to which humanity has clung. Waters turn to blood, the sun scorches, darkness falls on the throne of the beast—signs that creation itself testifies against rebellion. Just as the plagues in Egypt unveiled the futility of Pharaoh’s gods and vindicated Israel’s deliverance, so these judgments will show that Babylon’s promises are empty, and that only the God of heaven reigns. The wrath poured out is the action of love defending its people and breaking the chains of deception that have bound the nations. As the plagues intensify, Satan’s counsel will be unmasked as nothing more than hatred of truth and hatred of life. The kings of the earth, once drunk with Babylon’s charms, will lament her fall as judgment consumes her in “one hour.” The cry, “Come out of her, my people,” will be vindicated, for God’s faithful will have heeded His call to separation and sealing. The wrath poured out on Babylon is not vindictive rage but the final cleansing act of love, ensuring that sin, deception, and oppression can never again rise to plague the universe. When the dust settles, the great controversy will close where it began—at the throne of God’s character. The accuser will be silenced, not only by force but by evidence: the sealed remnant will stand as eternal proof that love was strong enough to keep, and wrath was strong enough to cleanse. The cross of Christ will shine as the foundation of this triumph, for the same love that once bore wrath to save sinners will have at last eradicated sin to save creation. In that day, the song of Moses and the Lamb will be sung—not merely as a remembrance of deliverance from Egypt, but as the anthem of final deliverance from the counsel of Satan and the dominion of death. Thus the story ends where it began: God is love. His wrath was never the shadow of His nature but the strength of His love in action, defending, purifying, and restoring. Through the sealing, the plagues, and the final judgment, the universe will behold that divine wrath is love’s last work to secure eternal peace. The question is not whether wrath will come, but whether you will meet it as an enemy or be kept by love as a friend. Affliction will not rise a second time, because love, through wrath, has conquered forever. 📖 Applying the Study For ongoing spiritual encouragement and prophetical insights, visit Higher Learning.

  • Last Day Witnesses…

    Last Day Witnesses From the opening of Scripture to its closing visions, God has been moving history toward a climactic moment when His character will be fully vindicated through a prepared people. The controversy that began in heaven with Lucifer’s rebellion will conclude on earth in the testimony of men and women who, though frail in themselves, will be made immovable by the indwelling Christ. These will be the living witnesses at the end of the age—the 144,000—who will not taste death but will pass through the most fearful crisis in human history and stand unshaken in loyalty to God. The book of Revelation unveils their identity in prophetic symbols. In Revelation they stand with the Lamb on Mount Zion, bearing the Father’s name in their foreheads—a sign of intellectual and spiritual seal. They “follow the Lamb whithersoever He goeth,” reflecting His character in obedience and purity. They are described as “firstfruits unto God and the Lamb,” which points to their role as a living offering, the first completed harvest of redeemed humanity. This prophetic description links directly to the eternal controversy: Satan charged that God’s law was impossible to keep, that love could not be freely chosen in the face of trial, and that even the most exalted created beings would eventually turn from the Creator. The last generation exists for one primary reason—to answer these charges not merely in word, but in life. Their existence, sealed and sanctified in Christ, proclaims to the universe: God is true, His law is just, and His love is sufficient to hold a people steadfast even under maximum assault. To endure the concentrated fury of Satan’s final assault, these people must reach unprecedented heights of spiritual life. Yet it is important to say: their greatness is not in self-attainment but in the depth of their surrender. They live Galatians 2:20— “I am crucified with Christ: nevertheless I live; yet not I, but Christ liveth in me.” The mind of Christ becomes theirs. Every thought is brought into captivity to His obedience. Their wills are not merely aligned but fused with the divine will, so that obedience flows as naturally as breathing. This state is not an exaltation of human ability but the ultimate revelation of what God can do with humanity fully yielded to Him. As Christ Himself testified, “The prince of this world cometh, and hath nothing in me”. So too with His last people—Satan will probe every weakness, but because they are hid with Christ in God, there will be nothing left in them to answer the temptations. The time of trouble described in Daniel 12 and Matthew 24 is not simply a season of external hardship but the furnace in which the final witness is tested and revealed. These believers will face the enmity of governments, the hatred of nations, and the deceptive power of a church-state confederacy that will enforce worship contrary to God’s law. Revelation 13 outlines the coercive power of the beast system, but Revelation 14 shows the endurance of the saints who “keep the commandments of God and the faith of Jesus.” Their endurance is not stoic survival but Christlike steadfastness. Just as Jesus stood silent before His accusers, entrusting Himself to the Father, so will they – I Peter 2:23. Just as Jesus prayed in Gethsemane, “Not my will, but thine, be done,” so their lives become a continual echo of that surrender. Their victory is not escape from suffering but faithfulness through it. To be Christ-minded in the final conflict means more than imitating His actions—it means sharing His very disposition. Philippians 2:5–8 describes His humility, obedience, and self-emptying. This “mind of Christ” must reign in them so completely that self is utterly dethroned. They live for one purpose: to reveal God’s love. Where the first Adam fell under temptation, these—united to the last Adam— will stand. Where Israel faltered in the wilderness, these will endure in the wilderness of the last days. Where the disciples slept in the hour of Christ’s agony, these will keep watch in prayer, sustained by hidden manna. Their lives become a prophetic reenactment of Christ’s own path, bearing witness that the same Spirit which upheld Him can uphold them. The existence of a people who pass through the final tribulation without seeing death carries vast cosmic implications. It completes the testimony of Scripture. Hebrews 11 lists the heroes of faith who obtained a good report but “received not the promise”. The final generation, in union with them, enters into perfection. They represent the closing argument in God’s case before the universe. Their triumph exposes the lie at the heart of Satan’s rebellion. He claimed that under pressure, loyalty to God would fail. But these living saints, sustained by nothing but faith, prove otherwise. Their sealed obedience under duress declares to the cosmos: God’s government is unshakable, His covenant is faithful, His Spirit is sufficient. Their translation without death, mirrors and magnifies Enoch’s testimony. As Enoch walked with God and was taken, so the last witnesses walk in unbroken fellowship until mortality is swallowed up by immortality at Christ’s return. Ultimately, the final generation exists for God, not for themselves. Their lives are the climactic doxology of creation, the final note in the great song of redemption. Through them, the prayer of Christ in John 17 reaches its visible fulfillment: a people perfected in oneness, so that the world may know the Father sent the Son.Their witness is not to their strength but to God’s character. By enduring the fiercest hatred of men and demons while responding only with steadfast loyalty and love, they display the true nature of the God who is love. And when the heavens open and the Lamb descends in glory, they will look up without fear, for they have been living foretastes of His kingdom. The last generation is not a mystical elite but a prophetic necessity. They are the final vindication of God’s character, a living testimony that His love can hold human beings faithful even under the total assault of hell. Their heights of spiritual life are nothing less than the fullness of Christ’s mind dwelling in them, their endurance is the endurance of Jesus Himself, and their victory is the cosmic proof that the kingdom of God cannot be shaken. Through them, the universe will see the end for which creation began: a people united with their Creator in everlasting covenant, unafraid of death because death itself has been swallowed up in victory. From the beginning, God’s purpose has been to display His character through humanity. In Eden, Adam and Eve were to reflect His image as rulers and priests of the earth. But sin shattered that reflection. Ever since, God has been restoring His likeness through covenant, through Israel, through Christ, and finally, through a last-day people who will vindicate His character before the watching universe. These saints will pass through the most severe trials, endure the wrath of men and demons, and yet emerge pure, standing in the presence of God without mediator. Their nature is one of Christ- mindedness to its fullest measure. The mystery of godliness reaches its consummation in them. This is not mere external obedience but an inward transformation of such depth that their very impulses are aligned with Christ. They stand as living witnesses that God’s law is just, His grace sufficient, and His Spirit powerful enough to produce holiness in fallen humanity. To endure the trials ahead, these saints must live at spiritual heights unparalleled in history. Such qualities reveal not self-made perfection but the triumph of grace over sin in its most complete form. The trials of the last days will eclipse all that came before. Wicked men will persecute them, Satan will hurl his fiercest temptations, and nature itself will convulse under divine judgments. Yet in all this, their minds are fixed on Christ. Like Stephen, who beheld the glory of Jesus while being stoned, they will see beyond the rage of men to the interceding Christ who once stood as Advocate and now reigns as Sovereign. Their Christ-mindedness is revealed in their endurance of hatred. They meet the venom of evil men not with retaliation but with patience, as Jesus bore the cross. Their resistance to Satan is steadfast as they conquer not by argument or power but by clinging to the Word, as Jesus resisted in the wilderness. Their unwavering faith in darkness is their spiritual certainty that they belong to God. When Christ ceases His priestly mediation, they will stand in the full storm of wrath without visible support. Their faith will rest on God’s character alone. These endure to the end because their lives are a living relationship of being seen by the One who loves them. They are untouchable by deception. They have reached a point of immovability— temptation has no more lure, and fear has no more grip. They know that this relationship comes at a cost: the renunciation of every earthly idol, the death of self-will, the willingness to be despised by the world. Their spiritual height is not a sudden elevation at the crisis but the fruit of daily surrender, growing brighter unto the perfect day. Just as Jacob wrestled with God and would not let go until the blessing came, so these chosen ones wrestle in prayer, clinging to divine mercy though every outward sign suggests abandonment. Their anguish is not over hidden sin but over whether they have fully reflected God’s character. Their vindication lies in the fact that, despite the silence of heaven, they cling to faith. This is the highest revelation of Christ-mindedness: to believe without sight, to trust without feeling, to endure without answer. God has ordained that a living remnant will greet Christ at His return. Why? Because their existence testifies that His grace is sufficient not only to redeem from sin but to preserve amid the full assault of evil. Death cannot claim them, for they are already dead to self and alive to God. In them, mortality is swallowed by victory even before glorification. They become living trophies of God’s faithfulness, proving that Satan’s accusations are groundless. The last-day witnesses stand not merely for themselves but for the whole controversy. Through them, the universe sees that God is true, His law is just, and His covenant stands unbroken. Their lives witness the power of divine love. The last generation is the apex of God’s redemptive purpose: a people who have gone through the fiercest fires and come forth without the smell of smoke. Their Christ-mindedness is total; their spiritual life is unshakable; their faith is refined to purest gold. They endure the wrath of men, the malice of demons, and the silence of heaven, yet remain steadfast because Christ Himself is their life. These are they who make visible not just the vindication of God’s character, but the likeness of the Godhead. Their lives embody the culmination of all prophetic streams that came before. The faith of Abel, who offered a better sacrifice. The perseverance of Noah, who endured ridicule yet prepared an ark by faith. The obedience ofAbraham, who left all for a promise unseen. The wrestling of Jacob, whose name was changed to Israel when he prevailed with God. The steadfastness of Daniel, who would rather face lions than compromise. The courage of the martyrs, who loved not their lives unto death. All of these prophetic lives converge in the last-day witnesses. They are not greater than their forebears in themselves; rather, they are the final expression of God’s covenant faithfulness, compressed into one climactic generation. Revelation identifies them as the remnant who are morally and spiritually of the same nature as Christ. Revelation sums them up with three prophetic attributes: patience, commandment-keeping, and faith of Jesus. These are not abstractions but living realities forged under the most intense trial the world has ever seen. At the prophetic level, their Christ-mindedness is nothing less than the embodiment of the everlasting gospel. The last-day people are the vindicating proof that God’s image can be restored in humanity—even under the fiercest pressure of Satan’s rage. Prophetically, this final generation stand out with unveiled glory, because their purification has reached completion. They are distinguished from the wicked not by circumstance—they both suffer trial—but by spiritual perception. Revelation’s vision of their sealing marks them as untouchable by judgment. The seal in their foreheads is prophetic shorthand for minds fully aligned with God’s law and Spirit. Their intercessory struggle clings to God amid apparent rejection, their names are confirmed as Israel— overcomers. Indignation passes during the outpouring of divine wrath. Without these the faithful should not be made perfect, and so they become the hinge between history and eternity, completing the testimony of faith. When all the prophetic threads are woven together, a single fabric emerges: the last-day people are the living proof that God is just, His law can be kept through grace, and His covenant promises reach their climax in humanity before the end. Daniel shows them purified and wise. Revelation shows them sealed, undefiled, and faithful. The Prophets show them struggling, preserved, and vindicated. Jesus shows them enduring, unified, and faithful in prayer. The Apostles show them as the final generation, completing the testimony of faith. In them, the mystery of iniquity is uprooted, the mystery of God is finished. From Eden to Patmos, the Bible presents a progressive revelation of God’s purpose to restore His image in humanity. The final chapter of this purpose is written in a people whose existence is not incidental; it is prophetic, the fruit of all prior promises and covenants converging in one climactic generation. The book of Daniel offers one of the earliest apocalyptic portraits of the end- time saints. When Michael—Christ in His mediatorial role—“stands up,” probation closes. Intercession ends. The earth plunges into an unprecedented crisis. Yet amid this, a people are delivered. They are “written in the book,” sealed in their identity as God’s own. They are the final witnesses. The time of trouble becomes their crucible, their final purification. Unlike the wicked, who grow darker in rebellion, the wise discern God’s purposes even in anguish. Daniel thus frames the prophetic identity of the final generation: purified, wise, radiant, delivered. John’s Revelation expands Daniel’s outline into a living portrait. In one verse, endurance, obedience, and faith encapsulate their prophetic character. The words of Christ Himself bring the prophetic portrait into sharper relief. “He that shall endure unto the end, the same shall be saved.” The final saints embody this endurance amid deception, persecution, and global collapse. “Watch ye therefore, and pray always, that ye may be accounted worthy to escape all these things…and to stand before the Son of man.” Christ links vigilance and prayer to readiness for His appearing. The last generation fulfills this word, standing unshaken before the Judge. “When the Son of man cometh, shall he find faith on the earth?” The remnant provide the answer: faith not extinguished by delay or opposition, but living and unyielding. Jesus prays that His people be one, even as He and the Father are one, “that the world may know that thou hast sent me.” This prayer finds its fullest fulfillment in the last generation, whose unity in truth testifies to the world and to the universe that the Son was indeed sent by the Father. They are the response to Christ’s own intercession. The apostles add their testimony to the prophetic chorus. “Christ in you, the hope of glory.” The last saints embody this mystery in fullness. Christ is not merely with them but in them, revealed in thought, word, and deed. Paul speaks of those “alive and remain” at Christ’s coming. Finally, prophecy unveils the outcome of their existence. Their victory rests on Christ’s blood, their testimony, and self-surrender. Their character fully harmonized with God’s holiness. Their vindication blossoms into eternal fellowship: “Behold, the tabernacle of God is with men.” They are wise. They are obedient. They are preserved. They are enduring. They are overcomers. They are the testimony. They are not extraordinary by nature but by grace—ordinary humanity filled with extraordinary Christ. In them, prophecy finds its last word, and the universe beholds the eternal answer to the great controversy. Their preparation for the finale requires intimacy with God so deep that it is sealed from human sight—the mystery hidden in the seven thunders. Theirs is the indwelling presence of Christ enabling them to endure the final conflict. They have cleared consciences – blameless, no guile. Hidden manna was their sustenance preserving them. Their prayers are not passive. Christ taught the intercession in their Gethsemane experience. They are alive in the resurrected Christ having been crucified by bearing their Cross within. They stand righteously in union with Christ as his bride. They unveiled the character of God – His name written in their foreheads. The prophetic pillars and the thunders are not two different testimonies but one symphony. The pillars describe their communal destiny; the thunders reveal their secret intimacy. Together, they declare that the saints who never see death are the living temple of prophecy and intimacy, the final word of God’s covenant, the eternal vindication of His name. 📖 Applying the Study For ongoing spiritual encouragement and prophetical insights, visit Higher Learning.

  • God’s Wrath of Love…

    God's wrath of love Let’s be utmost in the reality of truth as is the baseness of man. We were made from the dust of the earth. Let truth be brought from there. Biblically there was no ethnicity in humanity. There was humanness. No sign was needed as the reflection was of the image of God. Then there was Cain. A mark was needed to declare something adverse to God. A mark that would indicate displeasure to God. A mark that was indicative of Esau’s relation to God’s way as was the mark of Cain. That mark was whiteness! Don’t get personal…retain reasonableness as a working attitude to come to truth. Whiteness divides. Separation is the goal of whiteness, and completely antithetical to the Gospel. From Genesis to Revelation, we see God reconciling all facets of the relational ecosystem that is creation to each other and to the Divine in Christ. Jesus summed up all scripture saying, “Love God and love your neighbor as yourself.” Love and segregation are incompatible; as are love and black-body racism. The scandal of Jesus’ words is that love is always located in the real. Love is particular. It is needful of the other; it’s relational and proximate; never ideological, or theological, or even religious. May each of us move through this study circumspectly for there will be some pain to endure. Let us pray for the presence of the Comforter that we not accept the lowliness of personal reasoning verses the height of spiritual vision. My emerging sense is that we cannot separate love of self from love of neighbor or from love of God. These three loves are interpenetrating, interanimating, inseparable… perichoretic, maybe? That means referring to the relationship of the three persons of the triune God - Father, Son, and Holy Spirit to one another. If you were to really love your neighbor, you would be loving God and yourself. If you were to really love God, you would be loving yourself and your neighbor. Moreover, if you were truly able to love yourself, you would already be loving God and loving your neighbor, so… “who is your neighbor? We will learn how we all flow in Christ as purposed. We will learn some of the essence of differences that will serve as a shockwave to the human senses. Pray for strength to endure. So much more needs to be said than will be said here; even more needs to be done and undone. Jesus Christ necessitates a way of holistically loving God by loving our neighbor as ourself while together discovering how to reconfigure life spiritually. Humanly speaking, it may seem impossible. “But with God…” Our intenseness…what must we do to inherit eternal life. We may want to interrogate our motives as well as our supposed privileges before we start to follow Christ. Here is a statement that must be applied generally, yet can be personally applicable. All Israel will be saved, but not all are of Israel. Not all Black or White people are of Israel. I tell you the truth, it will be impossible for a Black or White person to enter the Kingdom of Heaven based upon color. Take pause…the proof will be found in the tasting of the fruit as the amount of evil done in the name of race is staggering and beyond calculation. Yet with God all things are possible…even the salvation of compliant slaves and unremitting masters. Let nothing undercut your faith. The cross means there never can be a claim to the superiority of any people group. Salvation finds no basis in color or race and God’s love and wrath is not measured with any human quality. The most highest and commonest factor for God is that we were each…all created by Him. How we understand God’s wrath is foundational to how we perceive the atonement, the end of sin and sinners, Jesus’ intercession, and the other teachings of truth. If God is anger be kindled toward sin and sinners, ready to penalize sinners, and if in His holy antagonism against sin, He must be reconciled, then the atonement necessarily involves appeasement of His anger. If on the other hand, we are the ones who are hostile, angry, and fearful of God, and God is wholly love itself, then atonement is about God winning back our love and trust. And in the latter scenario, then, what is the nature of God’s wrath of love? God’s love for us is strong as death. Christ’s love broke through death itself. Think that our love is to be like so. Making us dead to everything else except God. Even parts between soul and body as the spirit sours with devout affection upwards though it be clothed in flesh. Was the atonement sufficient for all? Available to all, on the condition of faith? If the atonement is definite, is it intended by God to be effective for the elect? Consider this in light of the truth of election. Election granted, the question may be framed in this way: when God sent His Son to die, did He think of the effect of the cross with respect to His elect differently from the way He thought of the effect of the cross with respect to all others? The definiteness of the atonement turns on God's intent in Christ's work on the cross. For God so loved the world…yet all Israel shall be saved. I John 2:2,15-29 We are to let nothing lessen the truth, alter our vision of God, nor distort the purpose of God. God has a peculiar and effective love toward His election. Thus definite atonement is exonerated. God, with perfect knowledge of the elect, saw Christ's death with respect to the election differently from the way He saw Christ's death with respect to everyone else. We are never to introduce disjunctions where God Himself has not introduced them. The atonement is sufficient for all, yet effective for the election. God loves the world. But His election are not to love the world. That would be to remain under God’s wrath. God's love for the world is commendable because it manifests itself in awesome self-sacrifice; our love for the world is repulsive when it lusts for evil participation. God's love for the world is praiseworthy because it brings the transforming gospel to it; our love for the world is ugly because we seek to be conformed to the world. God's love for the world issues in certain individuals being called out from the world and into the family of Christ's followers; our love for the world is sickening where we wish to be absorbed into the world. But clearly the elect are to love the world in the sense that we are to go into every part of it and bring the glorious truth of the gospel to every creature. In this sense we imitate the wholly praiseworthy love of God for the world. Concerning the stage of America. Let’s hear how the testimony worded concern for our understanding of knowledge. People of Other Cultures Those close to Christ are lifted above color or caste—He who is closely connected with Christ is lifted above the prejudice of color or caste. His faith takes hold of eternal realities. The divine Author of truth is to be up lifted. Our hearts are to be filled with the faith that works by love and purifies the soul. The work of the good Samaritan is the example that we are to follow.— Testimonies for the Church 9:209. PaM 93.1 When the Holy Spirit moves, all prejudice will be melted away and we will approach God as one brotherhood—When the Holy Spirit moves upon human minds, all petty complaints and accusations between man and his fellow man will be put away. The bright beams of the Sun of Righteousness will shine into the chambers of the mind and heart. In our worship of God there will be no distinction between rich and poor, white and black. All prejudice will be melted away. When we approach God, it will be as one brotherhood. We are pilgrims and strangers, bound for a better country, even a heavenly. There all pride, all accusation, all self- deception, will forever have an end. Every mask will be laid aside, and we shall “see Him as He is.” There our songs will catch the inspiring theme, and praise and thanksgiving will go up to God.—The Review and Herald, October 24, 1899. PaM 93.2 Societal distinctions should become contemptible—The cross of Calvary should make the distinctions of society fade away and become contemptible. If the Lord is so gracious as to accept sinners from the white race, and forgive their sins, holding out to them the assurance of the higher life, the hope of a place in the redeemed family when he comes in the clouds of heaven, and the righteous dead rise from their grave to meet Him, will he not accept sinners from the black race, and will He not forgive their sins? Does He not hold out to them the same hope that He holds out to the white race? Will He not, if they believe on Him, receive them as His sons and daughters? Will He not raise them from ignorance and degradation by the working out of His plan? Does He not, through the instrumentality of the more favored white race, who claim to be children of the same Father, wish to uplift and ennoble them?—Manuscript 70, 1902. (Quoted in Spalding and Magan Collection, 220, 221.) PaM 93.3 Racial separation is not permanent—Walls of separation have been built up between the whites and the blacks. These walls of prejudice will tumble down of themselves, as did the walls of Jericho, when Christians obey the Word of God, which enjoins on them supreme love to their Maker and impartial love to their neighbors.... Let every church whose members claim to believe the truth for this time, look at this neglected, downtrodden race, that as a result of slavery have been deprived of the privilege of thinking and acting for themselves.—The Review and Herald, December 17, 1895. PaM 93.4 We dare not ignore existing racial prejudice—I am burdened, heavily burdened, for the work among the colored people. The gospel is to be presented to the downtrodden Negro race. But great caution will have to be shown in the efforts put forth for the uplifting of this people. Among the white people in many places there exists a strong prejudice against the Negro race. We may desire to ignore this prejudice, but we cannot do it. If we were to act as if this prejudice did not exist we could not get the light before the white people. We must meet the situation as it is and deal with it wisely and intelligently.—Testimonies for the Church 9:204. PaM 94.1 The work must not be hindered through prejudice caused by national customs—There must be a firm determination on the part of our laborers to break with the established customs of the people whenever it is essential to the advancement of the work of God. The work might be much farther advanced in Europe if some of those who have embraced the truth were not so wedded to the habits and customs of nationalities. They plead that the efforts of our ministers must be made to conform to these customs and prejudices, or nothing will be accomplished. This has had a binding influence upon the work from its commencement. The effort that has been made to conform to English customs, to eat and drink English, to dress and sleep English, has circumscribed the work, and it is now years behind what it might have been. The effort to keep bound about by French customs and ideas has hindered the work in France. My heart aches as I hear our brethren say, Such an one does not understand how to labor for these nationalities. Does not God know what the people need? and will He not direct His servants? Is not the truth one? Are not the teachings of the Bible one? Let God give His messengers the word to speak, and His blessing will not fail to attend their labors.—The Review and Herald, December 8, 1885. PaM 94.2 We must not build up separate interests between different nationalities—I felt urged by the Spirit of God throughout the meetings to impress upon all the importance of cultivating love and unity. I tried to present the danger of building up separate interests between different nationalities.—The Review and Herald, November 3, As a forenote to the knowledge that is intended to further our faith in the word and purposes of God please consider receiving this plate of offering in its fullness. It will be your choice to break away momentarily to verify what is written here…but please read Revelation 22:18 and 19, that your consideration may be founded in the guidance of the Holy Spirit. This forenote is not intended to preempt any purposes of God for He alone determines all things. There was and may still be effective a “theophobia” introduced into the world by a people not chosen. Ironically, the intention of this introduction was for instilling the fear of God’s wrath into a people called. Now if you are on the path where both lamp and light are valued, you may do the “google” thing and research “The Commonwealth Bible” compiled in 1807. If you are one of the few who study to show themselves approved of God you will note the very specific peculiarities of the entirety of the texts. Why are chapters 4 and 5 removed from Genesis? And why is the book of Obadiah taken away? And The Revelation? Curious for thought or reasoned for wisdom… Too many will have this thought…I know God is love and He gives me choice. So if I choose to deny Him why would He not allow me in heaven? Conscious and hardened resistance to the truth leads man away from humility and repentance, and without repentance, there can be no forgiveness. That is why “the sin” cannot be forgiven since one who does not acknowledge his sin does not seek to have it forgiven. That is why Lucifer fell! Jesus makes clear that denying Him is a serious problem. Confess Him before men, He will confess you before his Father. Deny Him… The relationship with God is affected. Turning the love that belongs to Him alone and pointing it inward toward ourselves is the ultimate consequence of sin, this rejection of God and rebellion against Him, is death. Oh, I will ask now that we pause and read the entirety of Psalms 107. We shall be altogether astonished at the superiority of the bible. The bible to us is quite infinitely wiser than every source brought forth by man, on this matter, as on others, it is so much more straight forward, and yet so much more deep; so much more rational also, and so much more true: agreeing so much more with the facts which we see happen round us: agreeing so much more with our own reason, experience, inward conscience, about what is just and unjust. God will punish sin. To reason with God is to discover that the truth of punishment is not to torment but to reform. But then the thought would come - why, after all, should God, if He be just and merciful, punish my sin by pain and misery? How can it profit God, how can it please God, to give me pain? Because it satisfies His justice? How can it do that? It would not satisfy mine. God has no passioned pleasure in the death of man. God rathers that man turn from wickedness and live. The thought would come into the mind of a wise and serious man is that because God loves me, He desires that I may be a partaker of His holiness. As soon as that blessed thought rises in any man's mind, by the inspiration of God's Holy Spirit, all the world would begin to look bright and clear and full of hope. This earth, with all its sorrows and sufferings, is the blessed purpose of God to show forth His love for the deliverance of His people. God goes on to those who have brought themselves into poverty and shame, who sit bound in misery. This is man’s falling. We have brought it on ourselves by rebelling against the word of the Lord, and lightly regarding the counsel of the Most Highest. But God does not hate us. God is not going to leave us to the net which we have spread for our own feet. When we cry unto the Lord in our troubles, He hears us in our distress. God Himself, by strange and unexpected ways, will deliver us from our darkness of ignorance and sin, and from the danger and misery which we have brought upon ourselves. Then He goes on to those who have injured their health by their own foolishness, till their soul abhors all manner of reckoning with the word of God, and they are even hard at death's door. Neither does God hate them. They, too, are in God's school-house. And when they cry to the Lord in their trouble, He will deliver them, too, out of their distress, and send His word, and heal them, and save them from destruction. Then He goes on to men who are exposed to danger, and terror, and death in their lawful calling; and his instance is the seamen, the airmen, those in foreign lands, those who go on to the sea in ships, move in the skies, and occupy their business in desert places who do the services for homebound. The storms come up, they know not when or how: but they are not the sport of a blind chance; they are not the victims of the wrath of God. The wild sea, turbulent winds, dry grounds too, are His school-house. And wonder with those who have been blessed to wander in the heights of the second heaven, to view by sight purposed to give eyes to their faith as they look upon the circle of the earth from ships in the space of darkness where they are to see the works of the Lord, and His wonders in the depth of understanding; and so, by strange dangers and strange deliverances, learn, as many of us have seen times of learning, needing a courage and endurance, a faith, a resignation, which puts those in comfortable places to shame. Then He goes on to even a deeper matter -- to those terrible changes in nature, so common today, in which whole territories, by earthquake, flood, or drought, are rendered worthless and barren. They too, he says, are God's lessons, though sharp ones enough. 'He turneth rivers into a wilderness, and the water-springs into dry ground; a fruitful land into barrenness, for the wickedness of them that dwell therein. Again, He turneth the wilderness into a standing water, and dry ground into water-springs. And there He maketh the hungry to dwell, that they may prepare a city for habitation; and sow the fields, and plant vineyards, which may yield fruits of increase.' Lastly, He goes on to political changes, which bring a whole nation low, into oppression and misery. 'They are minished and brought low through oppression, affliction and sorrow. He poureth contempt upon princes, and causeth them to wander in the wilderness, where there is no way. Yet setteth he the poor on high from affliction, and maketh him families like a flock. The righteous shall see it, and rejoice: and all iniquity shall stop her mouth. Whoso is wise, and will observe these things, even they shall understand the loving- kindness of the Lord.' And so, in all the changes of this mortal life, he sees no real chance, no real change, but the orderly education of a just and loving Father, whose mercy endureth for ever; who chastens men as a father chastens his children, for their profit, that they may be partakers of his holiness, in which alone is life and joy, health and wealth. Surely, here is the gospel, good news; news so good, that it turns what seems to the superstitious the worst of news, into the very best. For it seems at first sight the worst of news that tells us, that our original sin, in every person born into this world, deserves God's wrath and damnation. And so, it would be the worst of news, if God were merely a judge, inflicting so much pain and misery for so much sin, without any bidding to mend us and save us. But if we remember only the blessed message of this psalm; if we will remember that God is our Father; that God is educating us; that God hath neither parts nor passions; and that, therefore, God's wrath is not different or contrary to His love, but that God's wrath is His love in another shape, punishing men just because He loves men; -- then the word always will bring us the very best of news. We shall see that it is the best thing that can possibly befall us, that our sin deserves God's wrath and damnation, and that it would have been the worst thing which could possibly have befallen us, if our sin had not deserved God's wrath and damnation. For if our sin had not deserved God's anger, then He would not have been angry with it; and then He would have left it alone, instead of condemning it, and dooming it to everlasting destruction as He has done purposefully; and then, if our sin had been left alone, we should have been left alone to sin and sin on, growing continually more wicked, till our sin became the ruin which untold numbers will see. But now God hates our sin, and loves us; and therefore He desires above all things to deliver us from sin, and burn our sin up in the heat of His truth. This unquenchable fire of truth is not a passive act. If we be not spiritually assertive then we ourselves may be burned up therein. For if our sins live, we shall surely die: but if our sins die, then, and then only, shall we live. Do these words seem strange to some of you? I doubt not that they will: but if they do, that will be only a fresh proof to me, that the word of God is inspired by the Holy Ghost. Yes, nothing shows me how wide, how deep, how wise, how heavenly the bible is, as to see how far average persons are behind the bible in their way of thinking; how the salvation which it offers is too free for them, the love which it proclaims too wide for them, the God whom it reveals too good for them: so that they shrink from taking the word and trusting the author, in the fulness that is therein; and are perpetually falling back on heathen notions -- the very old heathen notions from which this psalm delivers us -- concerning what God's anger means, and what God's punishment means; because they are afraid of taking the words of scripture literally and fully spiritual, and believing honestly the blessed truth, that God is Love. They try to make God's ways as their ways, and God's thoughts as their thoughts. But do not you do so. Receive the word in its fulness. Believe that it tells you infinitely more of God's character and dealings, than you can ever tell yourselves; that God's ways are not as your ways, nor God's thoughts as your thoughts, even at their best: but that God's ways are always wider and deeper than yours, were you the most learned of men; God's thoughts are always more loving and just than yours, were you the most holy of men, and that when you have learned all that you can learn, or that any man can learn, out of the bible, there will be still left behind treasures beside, which you have not yet found out. For the riches of Christ are unsearchable; like the depth of the riches of the wisdom and knowledge of God, whose only-begotten son, and perfect likeness, he is; and the man who reads the scripture with a single eye, and an humble heart, will see that the more he finds in the word, the more he has yet to find; and that if he studied it to all eternity, he would have fresh and fresh cause for ever to cry - oh give thanks to the Lord! Both God’s love and God’s wrath are proclaimed in the truth of the word. The truth does not lie in one or the other, not does the truth lie between them, with each moderating the other. Both are proclaimed absolutely by God. We find God’s love and God’s wrath in the teachings of Christ. Matthew 5:22, 29,30;10:28; 11:23 Luke 12:5; 10:15 Matt 18:8,9; 23:15, 23 Mark 9:43-49 We should fear God as judge and trust him as Father. God is both just and loving: God judges those who turn from him, and he cares for those who turn to him. The better revelation is that where God is Judge, He is also Savior. We must be most attentive to the word and not drift away. Because God is holy, and he so loves us that he sends his holy Son to die in our place and take the punishment, judgement and wrath as our substitute; to sanctify and make holy his people. He makes a holy covenant with us, and indwells us by his Holy Spirit. This is astonishing and essential! If we are in Christ we are holy in him—with his holiness. If we are not in Christ, we are not holy. If we are in Christ, we are with God. If we are not in Christ, we are without God. The Father and Son are both wrathful toward sin, and both loving toward sinners. The fact that we were reconciled through Christ’s death must not be understood as if his Son reconciled us to him that he might now begin to love those whom he had hated. Rather, we have already been reconciled to him who loves us, with whom we were purposed electionally. Father, Son, and Spirit are one God with an undivided nature. They share the same holy wrath and same gracious love. There is a day of shocking depiction that is about to happen. A day when he will judge the world with justice by the man he has appointed. He has given proof of this to everyone. Too many people are passing judgment on God’s character. Grace and mercy, forgiveness and salvation, wrath and vengeance, are not understood to be personal attributes or dispositions in the character of God. Wrath may well be ordained and controlled by God, but is clearly no part of him…so they think. Divine wrath is righteous antagonism toward all that is unholy. It is the revulsion of God's character to that which is a violation of God's will. Indeed, some know of divine wrath as a function of divine love. For God's wrath is his love for holiness and truth and justice. It is because God passionately loves purity and peace and perfection that his anger is kindled toward anything and anyone who defiles them. Would a God who took as much pleasure in evil as He did in good be a good God? Would a God who did not know of the adversity of evil in His world be morally perfect? Surely not. But it is precisely this determined response to evil, which is a necessary part of moral perfection, that the bible has in view when it speaks of God's wrath. Think about this for just a moment. If you and I do not deserve to suffer divine wrath for our sins, we empty God’s forgiveness of its meaning. If there is no such thing as judgment, God ought to overlook our sin. Forgiveness is real and meaningful only when we believe that our sin has put us into a situation where we deserve to have God inflict upon us the most serious consequences for our unbelief and immoral behavior. When a situation demands that God should take action against sinful people in judgment and instead he takes action for them, the word grace actually means something. But if there is no such thing as the judgment of God’s wrath for sin and unbelief, grace loses all meaning and significance. With spiritual reasoning considering the Creator of the universe and the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, if our knowledge does not include a healthy confession that he is holy and righteous and will pour out wrath and judgment on those who persist in their rejection of him, it is unbiblical and unrealistic knowledge. In fact, it is an unloving understanding. For if we communicate to non-believers that they should repent and believe the gospel, but if they don’t, “aw, don’t worry about it, God will figure out a way to embrace you in spite of your unbelief,” we are treating that person with contempt. We are leaving them vulnerable to eternal damnation with the false hope of a God who is too loving ever to consign anyone to hell. The love of God provides escape from the wrath of God by sacrificing the Son of God to vindicate the glory of God in forgiving sinners. That's the gospel truth. But for those who spurn the provision of God’s love in Christ there is only a fearful expectation of the wrath of the judgment of God. We have no apology for God’s wrath. We are not embarrassed by God’s wrath. If the God of the bible is unmoved by and indifferent toward racism and perversion and rape and dishonesty, he’s not worthy of anyone’s praise. Righteous anger against sin is absolutely essential to God being God. Judgment against human wickedness and wrath poured out on unrepentant rebels is part of what it means to be holy. God’s faithful chosen will not ignore or tip-toe around what the word says on this matter in order not to offend people. The God of the Bible, the only true God, is indescribably patient and kind and compassionate and loving and gracious and merciful. God is holy and righteous and just. The wrath and righteous anger of God is filled with descriptions of God’s compassion and longsuffering and mercy and tender- hearted ways. We thank God for his wrath. Else the unrepentant might never be called to account for their deeds and never face the judgment that reconciles God’s creation to His purposed eternal plan. We must always praise and glorify God for his amazing grace that has made it possible for us to be spared this wrath. His wrath has been poured out on Jesus and altogether satisfied for those who put their trust in him as Lord and Savior. We are among the perpetrators of evil and abuse and wickedness in the earth, but if we look to God’s mercy for us in the death of Jesus we will find forgiveness. God’s wrath wasn’t set aside or ignored when it comes to the sins of world. It was revealed from heaven. It was fully and finally and forever poured out on his Son, who endured for us what we otherwise would have suffered. That’s love abounding. That’s the true love of the Lord. It is not the absence of His judgment or wrath. It is the many opportunities He gives us to choose Him—to choose eternity in heaven. The love and wrath of God can be reasoned with this thought…God gives His wrath by weight, but His mercy without measure. God is so God that His love is the incomparable conjunction of love and wrath. It sounds the truth of o’death, where is thy sting? It is the wonder of the mystery of the commingling of the Father's love and wrath in His dealings with the Son on the cross. Never can be visioned the wrath of love as is God’s until you see Jesus losing the infinite love of the Father out of His infinite love for us. It will melt your hardness. But for those of us who are of the faith of Jesus, we are not disheartened. We have this strong focus on the simultaneity of the manifestation of the Father's eternal love and divine wrath directed to the Son when He hung on the cross. The Father loved the Son with infinite and immutable love because he did not cease to be the only begotten Son, and the infinite love necessarily flowed out from the very relationship that he essentially and immutably sustained to God his Father. We must distinguish between the two kinds of love that the Father has for the Son. The first is that immutable, infinite love that flows out from the Father to the Son because of the intrinsic relationship that they sustain to one another. The second is the love of complacency that flowed out with increasing intensity to the Son because of His fulfillment of the Father's commission. This second kind of love that the Father had for the Son is captured in the words of Christ; therefore doth my Father love me, because I lay down my life, that I might take it again. From this, we must conclude that the Father loved the Son incarnate the most, precisely at the moment when he was voluntarily laying down His life in connection with the command of His Father in the counsels of eternity. Every detail of the suffering endured by the Son constrained the love and delight of God the Father because it was all endured by the Son in obedience to the Father's will and - in the performance of the Father's will - the Son committed no sin. This is that which is the incomparable conjunction at the cross - an unheard of conjunction: infinite love and divine wrath. The Son becomes the object of the commingling of the love of the Father and the unmitigated wrath of the Father. The essence of sin's curse and judgment, is the wrath of God. So, if Jesus bore sin and if he bore our curse and if he was made sin, then the vicarious fearing of the wrath of God belongs to the very essence of his atoning accomplishment. Here we see that the doctrine of propitiation is of the very essence of the truth of the Worded Gospel of truth. The truth is that it is just because the Son was the object of this immutable, infinite, and unique love that he could at the same time be the subject of the wrath of God... It was only because the Son was the object of the Father's unique and immutable love that He could be thus abandoned. No other would be equal to it. Those who will be lost in perdition will be abandoned eternally, but not one of them will be able to of have occasion to say, "My God, My God, why hast thou forsaken me?" The abandonment of Christ on Calvary's tree was abandonment in pursuance of the commission given him by the Father in the Determinate Counsel of purpose by election, and it was abandonment with the unparalleled effect of ending that abandonment. And because it was abandonment with this result, it was abandonment with inimitable agony and reality. The determinate purpose of the Father's love was the explanation for the spectacle of the Son's death. But the love that the Father bore to the Son did not diminish the severity of the ordeal that creates this spectacle - the ordeal of the cross and the abandonment vicariously born. The Father's love for those for whom the Son bears His wrath is set against the background of this wondrous conjunction of the Father's love and wrath directed to the Son. The Father loved His people with such invincible love and purpose that he executed the full toll, the full stroke, of our condemnation upon His own Son. That is the Father's love! This revelation of the reality of the Determinate Counsel’s reasoning should cause us amazement…the amazement of believing this adoring wonder. When we come to understand that the Father loved the Son the most while making the Son the object of His full and unfettered wrath - as He stood in our place as our substitutionary sacrifice - our hard hearts are smelted by the refiner. It is the "incomparable conjunction" of the Father's love and wrath directed to the Son that enables believers to grasp something of the greatness of the love that the Father has for us. The wrath of God is His displeasure against sin and evil. It is God’s just and righteous response of judgment against sin, apostasy, unfairness, and injustice both within and without the community of God’s people. In the end, God is just and the justifier of those who have faith. Of what is the significance of divine wrath? This is the time in which the existence of sin is often denied. This is rendered by the exclusion of the truth of God to accommodate people in their spiritual deception. The real tragedy is that nearly all have lost much of the knowledge of God, against whom we have sinned. Most do not even feel that they have much to repent of, because they’re not always sure about just how much they have offended God with their sins. They want grace without the cross, forgiveness without repentance. Herein justifies God’s anger…without anger, even we would watch abuse and fail to understand the seriousness of what was happening. Divine wrath is when divine love becomes angry. For divine love doesn’t dismiss sin, but deals with it in judgment. It must be remembered that God’s purpose in executing judgment is redemptive. While in judgment sin is punished, in His holy love judgment seeks to eradicate sin and establish holiness. God’s wrath is holiness’ response to sin. Holiness is repulsed at sin and must deal with it. Judgment is God’s holiness in opposition to sin. God’s love redeems in the midst of judgment to establish his holiness. Divine wrath is anchored in holy-love. His love is so great He at the cross dealt with sin in his Son. At the cross we see judgment upon sin and the redemptive love of God from sin. The judgment of God is an aspect of His love. God’s judgment and love are not opposed to one another, for there can exist no true love without judgment on sin. God is not passive in the face of sin, but is actively opposed to evil. God’s wrath against sin arises out of His nature of holy-love. Found in the character of God is the expression of wrath. Man was placed in a perfect environment, walked in harmony with his holy and loving Creator. By his own choice, man deviated from God’s moral order and sin entered the world. All creation was thrown out of balance. When that balance was violated the fall of man and a fallen creation resulted, and it threw our existence on earth out of kilter with God in its highest effect and the resounding collision within every aspect of our relations with nature, especially with the varieties of cultures that resulted in the perverted, distorted, and aberrant behavior among those whom are to be considered human. The widespread effect of the fallenness of humanity, results in the expression of God’s “wrath” being manifest against “fallenness.” How is God’s wrath expressed in love? Wrath as cause and effect of violating of God’s holiness and moral order was met with mercy and forgiveness. Wrath in the character and nature of God who actively opposes sin was wrapped in the flesh of Christ. Wrath in Christ’s great work on the cross offered redemption to all. And wrath as the consuming outpouring of God’s judgment upon unrepentant sin and sinners will see His chosen saved. It is the insight of a deeper sense of the solemn holiness of the love of God that meets us to understand that God’s wrath is a right and necessary reaction to evil. It reveals to us that right and wrong objectively exists, and points us to the consequences of our actions and need of repentance. God brings about situations through circumstances in order to bring men to repentance. In this is God’s act of love to persuade men to repent of their sin which separates them from the His grace and mercy. God can and does use situations in order to bring wayward sinners unto Himself and bring about purposes which are beyond our finite minds to grasp. God’s wrath is a present reality. It is the steadfast opposition against all sin. In that is His extending love in restoring holiness and order to a fallen world. We are to study God’s judgments as a foretaste of events more horrific to come as revealed. The judgments should arouse and alert our hearts to look for the remedy of sin in Christ Jesus. On the cross we see both God’s love and God’s wrath. On the cross our sin was dealt with, and grace is extended to all who will come and kneel before the finished work of Christ and receive God’s redemptive provision. It is at the cross we grasp the horror of our sin and holiness’ judgment against sin, but in worshipful thanksgiving we see demonstrated the vastness of God’s loving grace in His provision for our sin. The many, due to lack of reasoning, will find it difficult to reconcile God’s divine wrath and divine love. But we affirm the doctrine of God’s wrath, for if we do not, we strip God’s love of its biblical balance and power. When sin and divine wrath are taken seriously, highlighted is the enormous cost God’s love paid to secure our redemption. Understanding and acknowledging these contrasting solutions of divine love and wrath results in our exclaiming, what a Savior!” God’s love is so deeply woven into the fabric of truth, that if human love toward God and for one another were our response the bible story would be completed. Whereas God’s love is comprehensive, that which we can muster up is but a sketch. God is not a God of human emotions or human actions. God’s perspective views the perfectness of all things accountable to Him for being. God is righteous, not irrational. Weigh His patience with us to come to Him. Measure His foremost mercy in sustaining us. Notice how He prefers to chastise rather than punish. Unrighteousness has consequences. And though it is the love of God that is the power of His sovereignty, He is so loving that He permits our sin to judge us. The bible speaks of the wrath of God in high-intensity language. The bible includes some of the most violent expressions of God's wrath found in all literature. When biblical evidence is ignored people will tumble into fresh errors that touch the very holiness of God. Love is a perfection of God. Wrath is a function of God’s perfect love. Divine wrath is the right and righteous response of God to sin. Put positively, wrath, in perfect harmony with all of God’s divine attributes, is God's holy action of retribution towards those whose actions deserve reckoning. Love is always…it is God. Wrath results from sin…it will cease. Where God in His holiness confronts His image-bearers in their rebellion, there must be wrath. Otherwise, God is not the jealous God He claims to be, and His holiness is impugned. The price of diluting God's wrath is diminishing God's holiness. We must never lessen any truth of God. God has nothing but hate for sin, but this cannot be said with respect to how God sees the sinner as he stands. Though we be of all who have sinned, God hatest the workers of iniquity. For this the ungodly shall not stand in the judgment, nor the sinners in the congregation of the righteous. Please do not be caught up in cliches – cleanliness is next to godliness…God loves the sinner but hates the sin. Those are false faces. The wrath of God rests on both the sin and the sinner. Romans 1:18-23; 1:24-32; 2:5 John 3:36 God’s wrath is an entirely reasonable and willed response to offenses against His holiness. At the same time His love wells up amidst His perfections and is not generated by the loveliness of the loved. Thus, there is nothing impossible about wrath and love being directed toward the same individual or people at once. God in His perfections must be wrathful against His rebel image-bearers, for they have offended Him; God in His perfections must be loving toward His rebel image-bearers, for He is that kind of God. Both the fulness of God’s love and the fulness of God’s wrath will come to a resounding climax as at the cross in the last day. God loved us so much that He sent His Son. Perfectly mirroring His Father's words and deeds, the Son stood over against us in wrath displaying vividly when sinners will call for rocks to fall and hide them "from the wrath of the Lamb," and yet He was obedient to His Father's commission, offering Himself on the cross. He did this out of love both for His Father, whom He obeys, and for us, whom He redeems. Thus, God is necessarily both the subject and the object of propitiation. He provides the propitiating sacrifice, He is the subject, and He Himself is propitiated, He is the object. That is the glory of the Cross. Love and justice, goodness and holiness, grace and wrath are not opposites. They are complementary. Ultimately, they are interdependent. Love without justice is mere sentimentalism. Justice without love is sheer vindictiveness. In God, however, steadfast love and faithfulness meet; righteousness and peace kiss each other. Love seeks justice for those loved. Justice protects, avenges, and vindicates those loved. The cross of Christ is the perfect expression of both the love of God who saves unworthy sinners and the justice of God who requires that a just price for salvation be paid. There is a perfect harmony between the attributes of God. He is spirit, undivided, triunely singular, uncompounded. He is One, without body, parts, or passions. However man refers to God’s attributes they are but the Divine Essence of God…inseparable. Reasoning the essential unity of the divine attributes, what we can say about the relationship between what we perceive to be the softer and harsher expressions of His character, between love and wrath, between mercy and justice is this – God is love! Now reason this – God is love, yet more than love. Why? Because the equation cannot be reversed. So we can see God’s wrath of love. The God who is love is also “faithful” and “just”. Though God is infinitely benevolent, infinite benevolence is not all of God. God’s love is a just love, and His justice is a loving justice. We must not allow one attribute to overwhelm and nullify the rest. God is as severely just as if He had no love, and yet as intensely loving as if He had no justice. God’s love is not and cannot be blind and indulgent. God’s expression of love is more revealing of His inclination, or the direction of His nature, more a manifestation of His preference, than is the expression of His wrath. What we say of God’s attributes should always be expressed with humility. However much we have voiced, there is always more to be said. The finite cannot know the infinite comprehensively or exhaustively. Yet we can know God truthfully, and we can speak where the bible speaks, as it reveals a God who is both love and just, the monument to which we have at Calvary. We consider the whole weight of scripture. God has a strange act, yet He will in no way clear the guilty. 📖 Applying the Study For ongoing spiritual encouragement and prophetical insights, visit Higher Learning.

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