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Followers
Monday 11 May 2015
The Persecuted
~ The Persecuted
~Blessed Are the Persecuted
~ by John W. Ritenbaugh
Forerunner, "Personal,"
Persecution! The very word can generate
vivid images of hiding in terror of pursuing,
implacable foes; of being found and
resolutely facing the excruciating pain of
torture meant to cause renunciation of
cherished beliefs; and finally—hopefully—
following faithful resistance to every
agonizing constraint to deny the faith, of
death. Others imagine a courtroom scene
where one endures a penetrating
inquisition before ecclesiastical or civil
authorities. Some think of the Roman
Coliseum filled with people raucously
cheering as hungry lions chase down
defenseless Christians; of people lashed to a
stake as piled wood is lighted beneath
them; or of a person chained in a dark, dank
jail with rats scurrying about his feet. Each
of these images can be a dreadful,
unwanted result of our faith in God, yet
Jesus calls those persecuted for
righteousness' sake "blessed." Such people
will be greatly rewarded!
This seems far removed from God's
multitudinous promises of peace, prosperity
and deliverance. Some think it an enigma or
contradictory that a God of endless love and
limitless power can even say such things, let
alone seem to do nothing while His innocent
and faithful children are undeservedly,
cruelly and painfully harassed, tormented
and mocked. As unjust as this seems on the
surface, it is part of God's Word and His way
of life. In no way does it invalidate His love
or negate His purpose or care of His
children. The Bible records so much
persecution of His servants that, understood
in the right context, we can see that it
serves a vital role in the outworking of His
purpose.
Strong's Concordance reveals that
"persecute" (Greek dioko) means "to pursue,
follow after or press toward." Vine's
Expository Dictionary adds "to put to flight
or drive away." Only within certain contexts
does it take on the sense of oppression, ill
treatment, abuse, tyranny and even
martyrdom and murder. Persecution is
aggressive and injurious behavior carried
out in a hostile, antagonistic spirit, normally
by a group, but occasionally by one
individual toward another. It is often carried
out with fiery zeal, as Paul remarks about his
persecution of the church (Philippians 3:6),
but the persecuted must always remember
that the fiery zeal bent against them is,
according to Romans 10:2, "not according
to knowledge." Thus Jesus, while dying on
the stake, asks His Father to forgive His
persecutors, "for they do not know what
they do" (Luke 23:34).
Source and Focus
In the Bible, especially in the New Testament,
persecution is so pervasive that it is
presented as a more or less expected terror.
Jesus, the epitome of righteousness, is also
the focal point of persecution. As such, He
clearly reveals persecution's source. In John
8 the Pharisees challenge Jesus' assertion of
who He was, and the ensuing discussion
leads to revealing its source.
The Jews claim to be Abraham's
descendants and never in bondage to any
man (though at the time they were subject
to the Romans). Their statement is partly
true. Jesus readily acknowledges they are
physically Abraham's descendants, but He
adds in verse 40, "But now you seek to kill
Me, a Man who has told you the truth which
I heard from God. Abraham did not do this."
He implies that, if they were truly Abraham's
children, their conduct would display his
characteristics, and they would not be
persecuting Him. He continues:
You do the deeds of your father. . . . You are
of your father the devil, and the desires of
your father you want to do. He was a
murderer from the beginning, and does not
stand in the truth, because there is no truth
in him. When he speaks a lie, he speaks from
his own resources, for he is a liar and the
father of it. (verses 41, 44)
Satan the Devil is the source of persecution
of those bearing and living the truth of God.
At times he undoubtedly works through
people whom he has duped and inflamed to
unrelenting anger toward God's people so
that the persecution appears to be entirely
of men. But the Bible reveals the reality of
Satan as the source.
Revelation 12:3-5, 13-17 confirms this:
And another sign appeared in heaven:
behold, a great, fiery red dragon having
seven heads and ten horns, and seven
diadems on his heads. His tail drew a third
of the stars of heaven and threw them to
the earth. And the dragon stood before the
woman who was ready to give birth, to
devour her Child as soon as it was born. She
bore a male Child who was to rule all nations
with
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