The
Scripture teaches us that the end times will be filled with chaos. In
the midst of all the turmoil, all the shaking stands the Church, the
Body of Christ. The Church is the vehicle chosen by Christ to carry
the Gospel to the world. The hope of this world is Jesus Christ as He
is manifest in and through the Body of Christ. Jesus will equip and
empower His Body to rise up in His Name and do great things even in
the midst of darkness and evil. He will preserve the Church until she
has completed her mission in the earth and then He will rapture her
away.
The
Lord Jesus will preserve His Bride through all the unrest and
destruction coming upon our world. But, to accomplish this task the
efforts of the enemy must be thwarted and his uncontrolled exercise
of influence inside the churches must be curtailed. Therefore, the
Body of Christ must be joined together in an undivided resolve to
bombard heaven with prayer, seek for and embrace the anointing of the
Holy Spirit and thrust forward in the unbridled power of obedience in
the Holy Ghost. The days ahead will call for unprecedented allegiance
to and trust in the promises of Jesus Christ.
Mark
13:5, “And Jesus answering them began to say, Take heed lest any
man deceive you: 6For many shall come in my name, saying, I am
Christ; and shall deceive many. 7And when ye shall hear of wars and
rumours of wars, be ye not troubled: for such things must needs be;
but the end shall not be yet. 8For nation shall rise against nation,
and kingdom against kingdom: and there shall be earthquakes in divers
places, and there shall be famines and troubles: these are the
beginnings of sorrows.”
First,
we must look at the context of these verses in relation to their
immediate application. Christ was alluding to the immediate future
when many of these circumstances would occur but also at the end of
the age. We can conclude that these scriptures were partially
fulfilled when the Romans destroyed the Temple and Jerusalem in AD
70. The Jews were scattered to every corner of the world and only
began to return to their homeland in 1948. Since that time, God has
been bringing them home.
The
tribulations and calamities which preceded and accompanied the
overthrow of Israel at that time are a sign and warning of the great
and universal woes which will bring in the great day of the Lord and
the judgment of God. The reference alludes to the beginning of
something much worse which is yet to come.
Ellicott's
Commentary states that the words, “the beginning of sorrows” mean
strictly, the beginning of travail pangs. Paul speaks of the whole
creation as travailing in pain together. So a time of national
suffering and perplexity is one in which the children are come to the
birth. Romans 8:22, “For we know that the whole creation groaneth
and travaileth in pain together until now. 23And not only they, but
ourselves also, which have the firstfruits of the Spirit, even we
ourselves groan within ourselves, waiting for the adoption, to wit,
the redemption of our body.”
At
one point in my conversations with the Lord, He said to me that “this
judgment is as natural a breathing.” In light of these scriptures
in Matthew and Mark, I am convinced that the Holy Spirit is connecting the “natural as breathing” to the birthing process.
The term “beginning of sorrows” is associated with childbirth and
literally means the beginning of travail pangs. If that is correct,
we can conclude that the judgment we are seeing (which is the result
of sowing sinful seeds) and will see in the immediate future is a
prelude to the birthing process which will bring forth a new Israel
reborn, a new kingdom (the implementation of the literal Kingdom of
God) and a new world (new heaven and earth).
Let
us understand that God will preserve His Church, the Bride of Christ
through all the unrest and destruction coming upon our world. He will
equip and empower His Church to rise up in His Name and do great
things even in the midst of darkness and evil. He will preserve the
Church until she has completed her mission in the earth and then He
will rapture her away. In both Matthew and Mark’s writing, the
“beginning of sorrows” described by Jesus are a prelude to the
beginning of something much worse which is yet to come.
Mark
13:19, “For in those days shall be affliction, such as was not from
the beginning of the creation which God created unto this time,
neither shall be. 20 And except that the Lord had shortened those
days, no flesh should be saved: but for the elect's sake, whom he
hath chosen, he hath shortened the days.”
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