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| Copyright © 1999 by The Voice of Prophecy |
| David B. Smith |
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P.O.
Box 53055 |
| August 27, 1999 |
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MORE THAN A GOOD TEACHER #10 FRIEND FROM A DISTANT GALAXY We're recording here in June, so there's kind of a Phantom Menace buzz
still going on throughout most of North America. And there was a tiny
story in the L.A. Times magazine last Sunday, which described how a graphic
designer named Dan Perri, back in 1977, came up with a celluloid image
that people will remember for a long time. For the original George Lucas
film, Star Wars, they wanted to copy the opening title sequence from an
old 1939 film, Union Pacific, where the words seemed to go down the railroad
tracks. A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away . . . And if what this unique Man named Jesus said about Himself was true,
He has a similar "Star Wars" story to tell. Because the Bible
tells us that before Christ was born in Bethlehem, before His brief 33-year
life on this earth, He was already in existence in a galaxy far, far away:
in heaven. "In the beginning was the Word [referring to Jesus], and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was with God IN THE BEGINNING." Over in the Gospel of Luke, chapter two, you remember the story where this 12-year-old boy, Jesus, is lost for three days. His parents find Him in the temple, and He quietly reminds them that He has a mission to accomplish. And then these words: "I must be about My Father's business." In other versions: "I had to be in My Father's house." Of course, all through His public ministry, Christ said over and over that His Father had sent Him. He and the Father were one. He was returning to the Father. If you really want to study carefully this Christian doctrine of the Incarnation meaning that Jesus existed before, up in heaven with His Father read through John chapter eight, which culminates in this bold statement: "I tell you the truth,' Jesus answered, before Abraham was born, I AM!'" Well, friend, we close our series with this question, because here again
is a cardinal teaching of the Christian faith which is under attack. Liberal
theologians discount entirely the Virgin Birth, and the Resurrection,
and all statements by Jesus along the line of "My Father sent Me."
In their moral framework, Christianity is based on the good teachings
of a good man, nothing more. All such Bible references to "a long
time ago and a galaxy far away" and "a former life with My Father"
are after-the-fact inventions pasted into the Bible by good copywriters. "The Son of God was not eternal but created by the Father from nothing as an instrument for the creation of the world; and that therefore He was not God by nature, but a changeable [mortal] creature, His dignity as Son of God having been bestowed on Him." Just about a week ago we received here in the mail a letter that must have run 15 typed, single-spaced pages. And the writer took us to task for believing and teaching the Christian doctrine of the Trinity meaning that God the Father, and God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit are three co-equal, eternally existent members of the Godhead. Well, I'm going to say right here on the radio, without equivocation, that we at The Voice of Prophecy DO believe and teach the Trinity. We believe the words of Jesus Himself: that He has always been with the Father, that He always has existed with the Father, and that He always will exist with Him. To use a classic line from one of our Adventist pioneers: "In Christ is life, original, unborrowed, underived." As we've said now for two weeks, so many truths flow from the acceptance
of this belief that Jesus Christ is more than a man, that He is in fact
God. His Lordship in my life depends on His being God. His ability to
answer prayers, His promise to return again. And of course, friend, my
very salvation rests upon this Bible assurance that Jesus, the Lamb of
God, was sent by God. There was a plan in place before Calvary, before
Bethlehem, before Moses and Abraham, before Cain killed Abel, before Eve
ate from the tree. And Jesus was in that plan from the beginning. "If, in fact, it is true," he writes, "that almighty God, creator and sustainer of all that exists in heaven and on earth, has at a known time and place in human history so humbled Himself as to become part of our sinful humanity, and to suffer and die a shameful death to take away our sin, and to rise from the dead as the first-fruit of a new creation, if this is a fact, then to affirm it IS NOT ARROGANCE." If it's that important, he says, if it is truly a life-or-death decision every man and woman must make, then it is not arrogance to shout it from a street corner, or to proclaim it from a pulpit, or to tell your neighbor, or even to buy radio airtime so that you can tell as many neighbors as possible all at once. And here's Newbigin's last line:
There was a sermon recently that I didn't get to hear firsthand, but
David told me about it after he heard it. And I guess we're borrowing
from Hollywood's big epics today, because this innovative Christian pastor
played a clip from the blockbuster, Titanic, where the lifeboats are drifting
in the Atlantic, and the last cries of the drowning victims are slowly
fading to a icy death. And no one will go back. The half-filled boats
are just yards away, but in case after case, when someone suggests, "Maybe
we should try to rescue someone," the others say no. It's too risky.
They might swamp and all drown. As the aged Rose would say later, all
they could do was wait. Wait for rescue and for an absolution that would
never come. |