Are People Cast into Hell Immediately After Sinning in the Millennium Kingdom?

“I heard a pastor say that when lost people sin in the Millennium, they’re cast into hell instantly. If so, what would be the purpose of the sin offering?”

The prophet Zechariah predicts that sin in the millennial kingdom will be punished by “a flying roll” (5:1). The entire Bible was written on rolls (Jer. 36:6,14), but this roll must be a copy of the law of Moses, for it is described as a “curse” (Zech. 5:3 cf. Gal. 3:10). The mention of “this side” and “that side” (Zech. 5:3) suggests that this roll specifically bears the words of the ten commandments, which were written on “two tables” of stone “on both their sides” (Exod. 32:15).

The first four of the ten commandments address sins against God, while the other six deal with sins against men. The roll will punish sinners who violate laws in both categories, as we see when the examples given are “every one that stealeth” (Zech. 5:3 cf. Exod. 20:15) and “him that sweareth falsely” by God’s name (Zech. 5:4 cf. Lev. 19:12; Deut. 5:11). The prophet quotes God as saying that the flying roll “goeth forth over the face of the whole earth” looking for offenders, “and it shall enter into the house of the thief, and into the house of him that sweareth falsely by My name: and it shall remain in the midst of his house, and shall consume it with the timber thereof and the stones thereof.”

But a thief can’t steal something in his own house, for he owns everything in the house. So he must not be “cut off” (Zech. 5:3) immediately after his sin, as Ananias and Sapphira weren’t in a type of millennial judgment (cf. Acts 5:1-10). Instead, he must be given a chance to offer a sacrifice for his sin. For more information about sacrifices in the kingdom (Isa. 56:6-8; Jer. 33:15-18; Ezek. 43:18-46:24), see the March 2016 issue of the Berean Searchlight.

To the Reader:

Some of our Two Minutes articles were written many years ago by Pastor C. R. Stam for publication in newspapers. When many of these articles were later compiled in book form, Pastor Stam wrote this word of explanation in the Preface:

"It should be borne in mind that the newspaper column, Two Minutes With the Bible, has now been published for many years, so that local, national and international events are discussed as if they occurred only recently. Rather than rewrite or date such articles, we have left them just as they were when first published. This, we felt, would add to the interest, especially since our readers understand that they first appeared as newspaper articles."

To this we would add that the same is true for the articles written by others that we continue to add, on a regular basis, to the Two Minutes library. We hope that you'll agree that while some of the references in these articles are dated, the spiritual truths taught therein are timeless.


Two Minutes with the Bible lets you start your day with short but powerful Bible study articles from the Berean Bible Society. Sign up now to receive Two Minutes With the Bible every day in your email inbox. We will never share your personal information and you can unsubscribe at any time.

The Twelve Memorial Stones – Joshua 4:1-13

In Chapter 3, God parted the Jordan River so the Jews could cross it to enter the Promised Land. God instructed that Israel’s priests lead them across, carrying the ark of the coven-ant, the presence of God in the Old Testament. They stopped in the middle of the river, holding back the wrath of that raging overflowing river (Josh.3:15), a type of how Christ held back God’s wrath on our sins when He died for them.

But now that they have crossed over, God tells Joshua to have 12 men go back to the middle of the river and pick up 12 stones to leave on the shore where they were camped (4:1-3) as a “memorial” (v.7) of their deliverance. Those 12 men were types of the 12 apostles, making their memorial a type of the Lord ’s Supper, which was done “in remembrance” of the Lord’s death, burial and resurrection (Luke 22:14-19).

There’s something we can learn about the Lord’s Supper from this type. It wasn’t the stones that held back the river’s wrath, they were just memorials of God who held it back. And the bread and cup don’t save us from our sins, they are just memorials of Christ who saves us from our sins.

Joshua 4:6,7 shows God didn’t just want the Jews to remember what He did for them that day. He wanted their children’s children to remember it as well, even though they hadn’t seen the deliverance. That’s a type of how the Lord’s Supper memorial will help Tribulation Jews remember the Lord who delivered them, “whom having not seen,” they will love (I Peter 1:6-8). The way that Tribulation Jews will get through their trials and temptations will be by remembering the Lord. It helps us get through our trials and temptations as well. Any difficulty you have in life can melt away if you put it in perspective by remembering you’re sure you are going to heaven because Christ delivered you from God’s wrath. And one of the things that helps us remember

Him and what He did for us is the Lord’s Supper.

Next, Joshua took 12 stones from the middle of the river and made a memorial there, where the priests’ feet stood. They were types of Christ (Heb.3:1). Israel’s priests offered animal sacrifices, but Christ offered Himself as a sacrifice (Heb.10:11,12). Priests could never sit down because people kept sinning, and bringing them animals to sacrifice to pay for their sins. But after Christ ascended into heaven, He sat down at God’s right hand to prove His work was finished. Joshua 4:10 says Joshua parked those memorial stones where the priests stood “until everything was finished that the Lord commanded Joshua.” The work of the priests that day was a type of the finished work of Christ (cf. John 19: 30). He finished all the work needed to pay for our sins.

When Israel’s high priest offered sacrifices, he wore an ephod that had “stones of memorial” on it, bearing the names of Israel’s 12 tribes (Ex.28:1-12). That symbolized how—as far as anyone knew—Christ was only supposed to die for Jews (Isa.53:5,8; Mt.1:21; 20:28). The apostle Paul revealed the mystery that He would die for Gentiles too (ITim.2:5,6).

The Jews “hasted” to cross the river (Josh.4:10) because a raging river is a fearsome thing. But drowning wasn’t the only thing they feared, as we see when 40,000 armed Jews led the crossing (Josh.4:12,13). They were anticipating the battle they’d encounter from the demonic giants who dwelt in Canaan, who did not want them to inherit their land. As we saw in our study of Chapter 1, those two and a half tribes were types of Old Testament saints who will rise from the dead to lead the charge against Antichrist and his armies at Armageddon, so saved Jews can enter the kingdom.

Did you ever wonder why God didn’t tell Moses to put a stone memorial in the midst of the Red Sea after they crossed it? It’s because God’s enemies “sank into the bottom as a stone” (Ex.15:4,5; Neh.9:11). They always sink to rise no more (Jer.51:63,64; Rev.18:21), so there was no stone memorial on the shore to commemorate their resurrection either!

A video of this sermon is available on YouTube: “The 12 Memorial Stones” Joshua 4:1-13

A Reverse Rapture

“But as the days of Noe were, so shall also the coming of the Son of man be. For as in the days that were before the flood they were eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage, until the day that Noe entered into the ark, And knew not until the flood came, and took them all away; so shall also the coming of the Son of man be. Then shall two be in the field; the one shall be taken, and the other left. Two women shall be grinding at the mill; the one shall be taken, and the other left” (Matt. 24:37-41).

These verses are often mistakenly applied to the Rapture of the Church, the Body of Christ, when in truth they refer to the Lord’s Second Coming at the close of the seven-year Tribulation period (Matt. 24:29-30).

The Lord taught His disciples about people’s preoccupation with everyday living—eating, drinking, getting married—when judgment suddenly fell on them in the days of Noah. They had received warnings in the form of Noah’s preaching and the building of the large ark itself which testified of the judgment to come (Heb. 11:7; 2 Pet. 3:5-6). But they were unconcerned, unbelieving, and did not respond, so they were swept away when the flood came.

The Lord taught His disciples that it will be like this at the end of the Tribulation, when two men will be working in the field, and one will be taken and the other left; two women will be grinding at the mill, and one will be taken and the other left.

While this might sound like the Rapture, these verses are not referring to the Lord’s coming to take believers to heaven. It is important to note that the Lord compares His Second Coming to the judgment of the days of Noah, when “the flood came, and TOOK them all away” (Matt. 24:39).

Who were the ones “taken” away in Noah’s day? Those who perished in the flood. Who were the ones “left”? Noah and his family. They were the only ones left after the judgment. The flood waters took the rest of the world away. The ones “taken” away in Noah’s day were not taken to blessing, but rather they were taken in judgment and they died.

Like the ones who were taken away in Noah’s day, the ones “taken” at the Second Coming are not taken to heaven. So, where are they taken? That’s what the disciples asked the Lord as we learn from Luke’s account of the Olivet Discourse.

“Two women shall be grinding together; the one shall be taken, and the other left. Two men shall be in the field; the one shall be taken, and the other left. And they answered and said unto Him, Where, Lord? And He said unto them, Wheresoever the body is, thither will the eagles be gathered together” (Luke 17:35-37).

The Lord’s answer to where these people will be taken is a direct reference to the Battle of Armageddon, where the eagles and other birds will gather together to feast on dead carcasses. At that battle, John tells us in Revelation 19:17-18,

“And I saw an angel standing in the sun; and he cried with a loud voice, saying to all the fowls that fly in the midst of heaven, Come and gather yourselves together unto the supper of the great God; That ye may eat the flesh of kings, and the flesh of captains, and the flesh of mighty men, and the flesh of horses, and of them that sit on them, and the flesh of all men, both free and bond, both small and great.”

“All men, both free and…small,” refers to the humble laborers who will be grinding at the mill or working in the field when Christ returns at His Second Coming. At that time, unbelievers will be taken to Armageddon where they will perish and birds will eat their flesh, but believers will be “left” (Matt. 24:40-41).

At the Rapture, the believer is removed from the earth and caught up to heaven prior to the Tribulation, and the unbeliever is left behind (1 Thes. 4:13-5:3). Just the opposite takes place at the Second Coming: unbelievers will be removed in judgment at the Battle of Armageddon. The one who is “left” at the Second Coming is the believer, who will enter into the blessings of Christ’s earthly Kingdom. And it is logical that Tribulation believers are left on the earth because that’s their hope (Jer. 23:5-6). Believers in the true Messiah who endure to the end of the Tribulation will be able to walk right into the Millennial Kingdom.

The Rapture is part of the revelation of the mystery made known first to Paul (1 Cor. 15:51-53). Old Testament prophecy and the Olivet Discourse have nothing to say about believers being caught up to heaven. Instead they reveal how Israel’s Messiah will return to earth, and unbelievers will be taken away in judgment, while believers will remain to enter His earthly kingdom. In this sense, the Second Coming is a reverse Rapture!

To the Reader:

Some of our Two Minutes articles were written many years ago by Pastor C. R. Stam for publication in newspapers. When many of these articles were later compiled in book form, Pastor Stam wrote this word of explanation in the Preface:

"It should be borne in mind that the newspaper column, Two Minutes With the Bible, has now been published for many years, so that local, national and international events are discussed as if they occurred only recently. Rather than rewrite or date such articles, we have left them just as they were when first published. This, we felt, would add to the interest, especially since our readers understand that they first appeared as newspaper articles."

To this we would add that the same is true for the articles written by others that we continue to add, on a regular basis, to the Two Minutes library. We hope that you'll agree that while some of the references in these articles are dated, the spiritual truths taught therein are timeless.


Two Minutes with the Bible lets you start your day with short but powerful Bible study articles from the Berean Bible Society. Sign up now to receive Two Minutes With the Bible every day in your email inbox. We will never share your personal information and you can unsubscribe at any time.

The Crossing of the Jordan River – Joshua 3:9-17

 

Summary:

God was about to part the Jordan for the people of Israel, and “hereby” they could know He’d defeat the giants for them as well. Their fathers saw Him part the Red Sea, but the Jews were like us and needed constant reminders of God’s love and care for them. We find those reminders in Romans 5:8!

But how could Joshua say God would “without fail” conquer the giants, when He usually said, “If you obey, I’ll conquer your enemies”? It was because going into Canaan was a type of going into the kingdom, when God will “cause” His people to obey Him (Ezek.36:27), like He did at Pentecost (Acts 2:4) when they couldn’t sin (IJo.3:9). That’s how God will without fail give them the kingdom, by making them obey Him, so He could bless them with the kingdom. And that’s how Joshua could say God wouldn’t fail to give them the land despite the giants in this type of entering the kingdom.

Last week we saw that the ark was a type of Christ. So when it leads the Jews across Jordan into Canaan, that typifies how Christ will lead the Jews across it again into the kingdom (Isa.11:15,16). It doesn’t say Christ will lead them, but we know He will by this type. Some things can only be known by the types. Only the type of Noah said Christ would rise from the dead “on the third day” (Mt.12:40cf.ICor.15:3,4).

Just as the parting of Jordan assured the Jews that God would conquer the giants, it will assure Tribulation Jews that God will conquer Antichrist and his armies at Armageddon (Isa. 50:2). But verse 2 is the Father talking to His Son on the cross (Isa.50:3 cf. Mt.27:35,45; Isa.50:6 cf. Mt.27:63,64). So Isaiah 50:2 is God assuring Christ He’d deliver Him from the unseen demons that surrounded Him on the cross (Ps.22: 12,16) by raising Him from the dead. Since He did, that will encourage Tribulation Jews that He’ll deliver them as well.

The ark represented the Lord, so the 12 men of Joshua 3:12

represented His apostles, who will rise from the dead to help Him lead Israel across the Jordan. The priests’ feet were resting (3:13), but their arms were working, holding the ark. That symbolizes how salvation worked when it was by faith plus works like bringing a sacrifice, etc. If men did the work of baptism, they could rest in the assurance they were saved (Acts 2:38; Heb.10:22). In the Tribulation, if saints work to feed those who can’t buy food without the mark, they can rest in the knowledge they’re saved (IJo.3:17-19).

The Jews treasured the ark, but will forget it (Jer.3:16) when the One the ark typified sits on Jerusalem’s throne (v.17). Christians today should forget the type of baptism now that we have the cleansing in Christ it typified, and the type of the sabbath now that we have the rest in Christ it typified.

The Jordan stood in in flood stage (Josh.3:15), a type of the Antichrist (Isa.59:19), who will also stand in Israel’s way be-fore Christ returns (v.20). The “standard” God will raise against him will be the battle flag of the saints (Num.10:9,14, 18 cf. Ps.149,6,7,9), who won’t fear the beast (Is.43:1,2).

The “harvest” (Josh.3:15) typifies the harvest of unsaved men at Armageddon (Joel3:9-13cf.Rev.14:14-20). That harvesting of lost people into the fire of hell will be followed by the harvest of saved people into the “barn” of the kingdom (Mt.13:24-30). The Lord said the world was ripe for this 2,000 years ago (John 4:34,35) when He looked around and saw saved Jews ready to believe, and even more unsaved Jews and Gentiles ready to be harvested into the fires of hell.

The priests carrying the ark stopped in the middle of Jordan (Josh.3:17), holding back the wrath of that raging overflowing river. That’s a type of something Job could only wish for, a “daysman” who could stand between him and God and mediate their differences (Job 9:33). That makes the ark they carried a type of Christ, who stood between us and God, holding back His wrath on our sins by dying for our sins.

A video of this sermon is available on YouTube: “The crossing of the Jordan” Joshua 3:9-17

The Grecian Formula

Have you ever asked anyone how they were doing, only to hear them say, “I can’t complain”? When that happens to me, I usually respond, “Sure you can, you’re just not trying hard enough!”

Of course, things were going so well at Pentecost that you would think no one would have any complaints. The Lord’s disciples were living “with one accord” and were “of one heart and of one soul” (Acts 1:14; 2:1,46; 4:32). What could saints who were living in such perfect harmony possibly have to complain about?

But as we come to Acts chapter 6, some people known as “Grecians” had a grievance, and the twelve apostles had to come up with a formula for dealing with their complaint:

“And in those days, when the number of the disciples was multiplied, there arose a murmuring of the Grecians against the Hebrews, because their widows were neglected in the daily ministration” (Acts 6:1).

Now to begin with, I should point out that Grecians weren’t just people who spoke Greek. The Bible calls a Greek-speaking person “a Greek” (Mark 7:26). Everyone in the known world spoke Greek after Alexander the Great conquered the nations 300 years before Christ. But people of the Jewish nation who spoke Greek were called Grecians. They were Jews who were raised in other countries, and who grew up speaking Greek instead of Hebrew, like the Jews in Israel did.

And the Grecian widows in the kingdom church here were being neglected in something called “the daily ministration” (Acts 6:1). What’s that? Well, remember, at Pentecost the disciples “sold their possessions and goods, and parted them to all men, as every man had need” (Acts 2:44,45). So the daily ministration must have been an appointed time each day when they parted their goods and possessions to the poor “as every man had need.” But for some reason, the needs of the Grecian widows were being neglected.

The question is: how did that happen? You wouldn’t think that it was a deliberate, sinful neglect, for “they were all filled with the Holy Ghost” (Acts 2:4) and were being given a taste of what the kingdom of heaven on earth will be like (Heb. 6:4,5). In that kingdom, saved Jews will be “caused” to walk in God’s ways (Ezek. 36:27) and physically incapable of sinning (1 John 3:9; 5:18).

So it is more likely that these Grecian widows were an unintentional casualty of the sheer volume of people that were involved in this burgeoning distribution system. Any time you get multitudes of people together, as they had at Pentecost (Acts 4:32; 5:14), it multiplies the chances something will go wrong. Things don’t work as efficiently as they do when fewer people are involved, and honest mistakes are often made as a result.

A Mistake Made in Heaven?

But if those Jews were experiencing a taste of the kingdom of heaven on earth, does that mean men will make mistakes like this oversight in the kingdom? And will those mistakes lead to complaining like we’re seeing among the Grecians?

Believe it or not, the answer to both questions is yes! There are going to be mistakes and even disagreements in the kingdom of heaven on earth, disputes that will be serious enough to warrant the need for judges to settle the murmuring that will arise between men. Why else would the Lord have promised the twelve apostles that someday, when they rose from the dead to enter the kingdom, they would “sit upon twelve thrones, judging the twelve tribes of Israel” (Matt. 19:28). He was talking about the kind of judging that Moses used to do in Israel to settle complaints among God’s people. As he himself explained to his father-in-law,

When they have a matter, they come unto me; and I judge between one and another, and I do make them know the statutes of God, and His laws” (Exod. 18:16)

The law of Moses had all the answers to any and all disputes that could possibly have arisen in Israel, but the people needed someone like Moses to “make them know the statutes of God” that applied to their particular issues. When his father-in-law pointed out that doing all that judging on his own would send him to an early grave (vv. 17-23), Moses took his advice and enlisted the help of some lesser judges to help him with lesser matters (vv. 24-26). And God promised Israel that in the coming kingdom, “I will restore thy judges as at the first” (Isa. 1:26).

That means that the people of Israel will have matters of disagreement in the kingdom that will require judges to resolve their complaints. God is going to “purge away” (Isa. 1:25) the dross and tin of their sins in the kingdom, but they will still have disputes and complaints that will require judging (v. 26).

What kind of complaints? The kind we see illustrated here with the neglect of these Grecian widows, the kind prompted by an oversight. You see, sinless men are not perfect men. Only God makes no mistakes.

This means that the Bible commentaries that say the kingdom program is starting to break down here in Acts 6 are wrong. They insist that the murmuring here proves that the perfect harmony these disciples were enjoying was beginning to unravel. What they fail to see is that this is a picture of how that harmony is going to be maintained in the kingdom by the twelve apostles.

But if there are going to be complaints that need judging in the kingdom of heaven on earth, doesn’t that suggest that there will also be complaints that will require judging in God’s kingdom in heaven? The answer is yes! Why else would Paul tell us members of the Body of Christ that “we shall judge angels” (1 Cor. 6:3). The reason angels will need judging is that there is going to be murmuring among them. You see, angels are also sinless, but they too lack God’s ability to never make a mistake. And mistakes and oversights can lead to disputes, disputes that the angels are going to look to you to settle.

In a Perfect World

Now if all this messes with your idea of what heaven is going to be like, and I’ve got you thinking that heaven won’t be as perfect as you thought, do you remember that old television show The Twilight Zone? In one episode, a criminal gets shot and killed by police, and wakes up in heaven, where everything is perfect. I mean, he wins every poker game he plays, women are showing great interest in him, and nothing ever seems to go wrong.

Just as he starts to get bored, he sees a pool table. He chalks up a cue, breaks—and every ball finds a pocket on the break. At this point he blurts out to his spirit guide, “Heaven is boring! I want to go to the other place!” To which his guide replies, “Heaven? Whatever made you think you were in heaven? This is the other place!”

I think there’s something we can learn from that show. I would submit to you that if heaven were perfect in the way that most people think of perfection, you’d soon be bored out of your gourd, as we used to say when I was a boy.

By the way, the title of that episode was called, “A Nice Place To Visit”—and you know why! It is because the rest of that old saying says, “but you wouldn’t want to live there!” And you know what? If heaven was “perfect” in the way most people think of it, it would be a nice place to visit. That criminal was enjoying himself in the beginning of the show. But you wouldn’t want to live there, for you’d soon be bored to tears.

Heaven is going to be a lot like earth—just without the sin! Most people think that in heaven, they won’t have to go to work. And you have to admit that on some days, it sounds pretty heavenly to not have to go to work. But I’m sure you’d agree that things were perfect in the Garden of Eden, yet after God created Adam, He gave him a job when he “put him into the garden of Eden to dress it and to keep it” (Gen. 2:15). I think it is safe to extrapolate from this that heaven is going to be perfect, but you’ll still have to go to work! Being a judge is a job, and to do our job we’ll have to go to work, and not lay back in a recliner while some angel dangles grapes over our open mouths for us to munch on at will, as heaven is sometimes portrayed.

But now that you know that it’s not inconsistent for someone to be complaining here in this taste of heaven on earth in Acts 6, let’s see how the twelve apostles responded to the saints’ complaint.

“Then the twelve called the multitude of the disciples unto them, and said, It is not reason that we should leave the word of God, and serve tables” (Acts 6:2).

Now here it sounds like the apostles didn’t care about this problem. But that’s not what they meant when they said that it wasn’t “reason” that they should get involved. A man’s reason is his ability to think. When we tell people to “listen to reason,” we’re saying that we’ve thought something through, and we want others to listen so they can think it through as well. And the apostles reasoned that they shouldn’t stop studying and teaching the Word in order to investigate the cause of this neglect and correct it.

Now that’s not because they thought that serving tables was beneath them. Berean Bible Society founder Pastor C. R. Stam was one of the best Bible teachers of his day, but one year at the Berean Bible Fellowship Bible conference at Cedar Lake, Indiana, he volunteered to be one of the men who helped distribute the communion elements. I will never forget the moment when this legend in the grace movement served me the communion elements.

Criminal Neglect

And I’m sure that serving food to Grecian widows on their “tables” wasn’t something the
apostles thought was beneath them. It’s just that they were apostles, and apostles had all the gifts of the Spirit, including the gift of “teaching” that we read about in Romans 12:7. So to look into the neglect of the widows, the apostles would have had to neglect one of their spiritual gifts, something Paul cautioned Timothy not to do in I Timothy 4:14.

If you want to know how important it is for spiritual leaders to not neglect the teaching of the Word, the apostles felt it was more important than even the feeding of hungry widows! If your church teaches the Word, don’t let anyone convince you that you’re not doing anything important because you’re not feeding the homeless, etc. Teaching the Word feeds the souls of God’s people, and God says it isn’t reasonable to stop doing that to start feeding people physically. If your church can do both, great! But if you can only do one, teach the Word.

Pastors and other spiritual leaders can’t let anything distract them from studying and teaching the Scriptures—not the stripes that men might lay on their backs, as happened to the apostles in Acts 5, nor the problems that are always rising within a church, as we see here in Acts 6. You see, the study and preparation of Bible messages takes a significant amount of time and focus.

A few years ago Dave Stewart, the Adult Sunday School teacher at my church, did a series on the typical significance of wind and water in the Bible. He mentioned that the word “water” appears nearly 400 times in the Bible, and he told us that he had read all those verses more than once. Then he said he also looked at all the references to streams, and rivers, and fountains, and pools. Add to that the Bible’s hundred references to wind, and Dave’s example provides us with the kind of dedication to the Word that God blesses and uses to edify His people, the kind of attention that the apostles chose not to neglect.

Rather than neglect their gift of teaching, let’s read on to see what they proposed to do about this legitimate complaint on the part of the Grecian widows:

“Wherefore, brethren, look ye out among you seven men of honest report, full of the Holy Ghost and wisdom, whom we may appoint over this business” (Acts 6:3).

So this is the formula the apostles chose to deal with the murmuring of the Grecian widows. I entitled this article “The Grecian Formula” because there’s a hair coloring product for men that goes by that name. And just as it solves the problem of gray hair in men, this formula solved this problem here at Pentecost, as we see later in this passage.

Delegating Is Not Relegating

If this solution sounds familiar, it’s because the world has a name for it. It’s called “delegating authority,” and it’s something every smart boss does. Here at Berean Bible Society, if BBS president Pastor Kevin Sadler had to do all of our jobs, in addition to studying the Word to prepare for our Transformed By Grace television broadcast, and all the other speaking and writing that he does, he’d be dead in a week! Instead, he wisely delegates authority to all of us.

And we know that God knows this principle, for we saw Moses adopt it back when God “multiplied” the people of Israel in his day (Deut.1:10-17), just as the disciples were multiplied in Acts 6. Moses picked men to help him judge the multitude in his nation, and when the apostles did that here in Acts 6, it freed them up to do what they declared they would do instead of neglecting their gift:

“But we will give ourselves continually to prayer, and to the ministry of the word” (Acts 6:4).

This determination on their part addresses another misconception that Christians have about heaven. I often hear believers say that they can’t wait to get to heaven, where they’ll know the Bible perfectly from cover to cover the moment they get there. But if these disciples here at Pentecost were being given a taste of the kingdom of heaven on earth, and the apostles gave themselves to the teaching of the Word, that must mean that the disciples to whom they ministered needed to learn the Word in that taste of the kingdom of heaven, right? And from this it seems safe to say that we’ll need to continue to learn the Word in God’s kingdom in heaven.

Hey, if you want to talk about being bored in heaven, how boring would it be to know the Bible perfectly, backwards and forwards, the moment you get to heaven, with nothing else to learn about God for all eternity? Compare that to how interesting and exciting heaven will be as we continue to learn the Scriptures for all eternity. The Bible is an eternal Book, and we are going to spend eternity learning it, as we’re seeing in this picture of the kingdom of heaven on earth here in Acts 6.

In closing, what we’re seeing in this chapter is an example of something that often happens in churches, even today. These disciples survived the attacks raised against them by their religious leaders in chapter 5, they weathered that storm of resistance raised against them from without, only to have problems from within rise in their midst, threatening to dismantle the church just as surely as any attack from without. But unlike some churches today, this church knew what to do about it. They let their leaders give themselves to the Word of God and prayer!

What an example of how it doesn’t matter what the question is, or what the problem is, the Bible is the answer. And what an example of the preeminence that every grace church and every grace pastor should give to the prayerful study of God’s Word, and the teaching of His Eternal Book.


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Berean Searchlight – March 2022


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