Yeshua is coming, ready or not.
What will it be like to see Him face to face?
This mighty God who
calls us
"friend”?
Have you tried to imagine it? The idea of the “face of God”
appears many times in Scripture, and can be
understood to mean Yeshua himself –
the
visible incarnation of
our invisible God.
With the escalating chaos and destruction in the world, many are wondering if we might be seeing His face sooner rather than later.
Many times in the gospels, Yeshua tells us to “watch” and to be ready.
He tells us to look out for the
signs and to be
attuned to the birth pangs as the earth groans for
redemption.
But while the people of Israel by and large missed the time of
the first visitation,
expecting a conquering king
(definitely not a suffering servant)
is today’s church in danger of making the opposite mistake?
Are we expecting an impoverished Yeshua in sandals with a
lamb hoisted on his shoulders?
Or the sword-wielding
King of the Universe
in
blood-drenched garments,
on a
rampage of vengeance?
We have become so familiar with the Yeshua of the first coming
that we forget all about the very promises and prophecies that the people of Israel knew so well – that
the
Messiah will indeed come as a mighty warrior,
to do
battle and to conquer.
Now God is no fan of violence.
The account of Noah teaches us that the hatred and violence rampant on the earth was the main reason for the cataclysmic judgement of the flood.
He is not a fan of the shedding of blood,
but clearly there are times when He deems it necessary.
He has priorities.
For example, we can see that although he is concerned with the welfare of animals (Jonah 4:11), and cares about the spilling of their blood (the life is in the blood) he requires bucket loads of it to be shed to atone for sin, because sin is even more serious than the blood of innocent animals.
One thing trumps the other.
We can see it too in our own lives.
We know that God does not enjoy
making us suffer
(Lamentations 3:33 – “He does not afflict willingly,
nor grieve the children of men”).
But we also know that
He will allow suffering in our lives
to refine us and to achieve
His higher goal of conforming us to the likeness of His Son.
His desire for our holiness trumps
His desire to keep us free from pain.
Similarly,
there are priorities that He has in
His heart when He comes again, and
drastic times call for drastic measures.
He will avenge His enemies. He will
restore justice and bring in His reign of righteousness.
Are we ready for that?!?
Have we absorbed the fact that He will
not come with an olive branch,
but a
sword?
Centuries of unholy murder and bloodshed in the
name of God have turned our stomachs,
and this idea of violence and religion
sits as easily together as orange juice and toothpaste.
It seems inconceivable to the twenty-first century thinker
that God could possibly endorse any kind of violence, let alone instigate it.
But we if we believe the Bible,
we need to adjust our mindset to align with what
it
teaches about the second coming.
Here is the picture that God
paints
of the second coming:
“Who is this coming from Edom, from Bozrah, with his
garments stained crimson?
Who is this, robed in splendor, striding forward
in the
greatness of his strength?
“It is I, proclaiming victory,
mighty to save.”
Why are your garments red,
like those of one treading the winepress?
“I have trodden the winepress alone;
from the nations no one was with me.
I trampled them in my anger and trod them down in my wrath;
their blood spattered my garments, and I stained all my clothing.
It was for me the day of vengeance;
the year for me to redeem had come.”
Isaiah 63:1-4
This picture is shadowed in Genesis 49:10-11 (a prophecy for Judah)
and
Zechariah 9, as well as Revelation 19:11-16:
“I saw heaven standing open and there before me was a white horse,
whose rider is
called Faithful and True.
With justice he judges and wages war.
His eyes are like blazing fire, and on
his head are many crowns.
He has
a name written on him that no one knows
but he himself.
He is dressed in a robe dipped in blood,
and his name is
the
Word of God.
The
armies of heaven
were following him,
riding on white horses and dressed in
fine linen, white and clean.
Coming out of his mouth
is a
sharp sword
with which to strike down the nations.
“He will rule them with an
iron scepter.”
He treads the
winepress of the fury
of
the wrath of God Almighty.
On his robe and on his thigh he has
this name written:
King of kings and Lord of lords.”
If this warrior king on the warpath
Because He is coming, whether you are ready or not.
What will it be like to see Him face to face?
This mighty God who
calls us
"friend”?
Have you tried to imagine it? The idea of the “face of God”
appears many times in Scripture, and can be
understood to mean Yeshua himself –
the
visible incarnation of
our invisible God.
With the escalating chaos and destruction in the world, many are wondering if we might be seeing His face sooner rather than later.
Many times in the gospels, Yeshua tells us to “watch” and to be ready.
He tells us to look out for the
signs and to be
attuned to the birth pangs as the earth groans for
redemption.
But while the people of Israel by and large missed the time of
the first visitation,
expecting a conquering king
(definitely not a suffering servant)
is today’s church in danger of making the opposite mistake?
Are we expecting an impoverished Yeshua in sandals with a
lamb hoisted on his shoulders?
Or the sword-wielding
King of the Universe
in
blood-drenched garments,
on a
rampage of vengeance?
We have become so familiar with the Yeshua of the first coming
that we forget all about the very promises and prophecies that the people of Israel knew so well – that
the
Messiah will indeed come as a mighty warrior,
to do
battle and to conquer.
Now God is no fan of violence.
The account of Noah teaches us that the hatred and violence rampant on the earth was the main reason for the cataclysmic judgement of the flood.
He is not a fan of the shedding of blood,
but clearly there are times when He deems it necessary.
He has priorities.
For example, we can see that although he is concerned with the welfare of animals (Jonah 4:11), and cares about the spilling of their blood (the life is in the blood) he requires bucket loads of it to be shed to atone for sin, because sin is even more serious than the blood of innocent animals.
One thing trumps the other.
We can see it too in our own lives.
We know that God does not enjoy
making us suffer
(Lamentations 3:33 – “He does not afflict willingly,
nor grieve the children of men”).
But we also know that
He will allow suffering in our lives
to refine us and to achieve
His higher goal of conforming us to the likeness of His Son.
His desire for our holiness trumps
His desire to keep us free from pain.
Similarly,
there are priorities that He has in
His heart when He comes again, and
drastic times call for drastic measures.
He will avenge His enemies. He will
restore justice and bring in His reign of righteousness.
Are we ready for that?!?
Have we absorbed the fact that He will
not come with an olive branch,
but a
sword?
Centuries of unholy murder and bloodshed in the
name of God have turned our stomachs,
and this idea of violence and religion
sits as easily together as orange juice and toothpaste.
It seems inconceivable to the twenty-first century thinker
that God could possibly endorse any kind of violence, let alone instigate it.
But we if we believe the Bible,
we need to adjust our mindset to align with what
it
teaches about the second coming.
Here is the picture that God
paints
of the second coming:
“Who is this coming from Edom, from Bozrah, with his
garments stained crimson?
Who is this, robed in splendor, striding forward
in the
greatness of his strength?
“It is I, proclaiming victory,
mighty to save.”
Why are your garments red,
like those of one treading the winepress?
“I have trodden the winepress alone;
from the nations no one was with me.
I trampled them in my anger and trod them down in my wrath;
their blood spattered my garments, and I stained all my clothing.
It was for me the day of vengeance;
the year for me to redeem had come.”
Isaiah 63:1-4
This picture is shadowed in Genesis 49:10-11 (a prophecy for Judah)
and
Zechariah 9, as well as Revelation 19:11-16:
“I saw heaven standing open and there before me was a white horse,
whose rider is
called Faithful and True.
With justice he judges and wages war.
His eyes are like blazing fire, and on
his head are many crowns.
He has
a name written on him that no one knows
but he himself.
He is dressed in a robe dipped in blood,
and his name is
the
Word of God.
The
armies of heaven
were following him,
riding on white horses and dressed in
fine linen, white and clean.
Coming out of his mouth
is a
sharp sword
with which to strike down the nations.
“He will rule them with an
iron scepter.”
He treads the
winepress of the fury
of
the wrath of God Almighty.
On his robe and on his thigh he has
this name written:
King of kings and Lord of lords.”
If this warrior king on the warpath
Because He is coming, whether you are ready or not.