Showing posts with label Word became flesh. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Word became flesh. Show all posts

Saturday, March 4, 2017

Christ Will Come in the Clouds!

Photo by Laurie Collett 2017


As we saw last week, Old Testament appearances of God to His people were always veiled in clouds, for no man in his mortal flesh can experience the full glory of God and live (Exodus 33:20; Judges 13:22). When God came to earth in the Person of Jesus Christ, His glory was shadowed in the earthly tabernacle of human flesh (John 1:14).

God is light, and in Him is no darkness at all (1 John 1:5). Jesus, as part of the Triune God (1 John 5:7), is the true Light Who lighted and gave life to all men in the darkness, even though that darkness could not understand and therefore rejected Him (John 1:1-9)

Only by becoming man could Jesus, Who Himself was without sin (Hebrews 4:15), experience physical pain and death, offering His suffering as the perfect sacrifice to reconcile sinful man to holy God (2 Corinthians 5:18). As He died to pay the price for our sins in full, was buried, and rose again on the third day (1 Corinthians 15:1-4), He forever conquered sin, death and Satan for those who trust Him as Lord and Savior (1 Corinthians 15:55-57).

But as a newborn babe He lay humbly in a manger, wrapped in swaddling clothes, while the glory due Him appeared to the shepherds as the angelic host filled the skies. That glory from Heaven empowered the shepherds, once they saw the Infant, to be His first witnesses (Luke 2:7-20).

The glory of the Spirit had entered their mortal bodies much as sunlight veils itself with clouds, setting them on fire to tell others what they had seen. How strange it must have been for those who knew these rough-mannered men to see their faces aglow with reverence and zeal as they spoke of the newborn Messiah!

And yet this phenomenon was not unique to the shepherds, but is shared by all born-again believers (John 3:3-8) until He comes again! God not only commanded the light to shine out of darkness (Genesis 1:3) as He created the universe, but He has shined in our hearts, to give us the “light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ” (2 Corinthians 4:6).

When Jesus was baptized, the heavens opened and the Spirit of God descended like a dove and lighted upon Him, suggesting that the clouds parted momentarily to reveal the glory of God the Spirit illuminating God the Son. Then the voice of God the Father proclaimed that Jesus was His beloved Son, in whom He was well pleased, yet the Father was not visible, for clouds presumably shielded Him from view (Matthew 3:16-17).

At Jesus’ transfiguration (Matthew 17:1-8; Mark 9:2-8; Luke 9:28-36), His inner circle briefly beheld the pristine brilliance of Jesus, Moses, and Elijah in all their glory until Peter interrupted their ecstatic vision by returning to the mundane, offering to build tents for the three!

At that point a cloud overshadowed them and they were terrified. Perhaps the (no doubt unintended) irreverence of Peter’s suggestion caused the Deity to veil Himself in mystery once more. The voice of the Father boomed forth from a bright cloud, which blocked Him from view as He expressed His pleasure with His beloved Son.

Until we see Him face to face in glory, we must see Him as if through a glass darkly (1 Corinthians 15:12). The apostle Paul here refers to a window pane that is cloudy, allowing some light but not visual details to pass through, because of impurities and uneven thickness resulting from the glass blowing process.

Because of our sin nature (Romans 5:12), our vision and knowledge of Him is impure and clouded. But praise God, He has redeemed us, blotting out our sins as if with a thick cloud! (Isaiah 44:22)

Until He comes again or He calls us home, we are surrounded by a great cloud of witnesses, like a heavenly cheering section! Angels and those who have gone home to the Lord rejoice when we trust and serve Him! Knowing this should encourage and strengthen us to refrain from sin and even from distractions so that we can patiently and faithfully run the race Christ has set before us (Hebrews 12:1).

Jesus told His disciples and the priests that questioned Him that He would come to earth a second time, but not as a helpless infant laid in a manger. He would return in the clouds from the right hand of the Father (Matthew 26:64; Mark 14:62) and appear “in the clouds of Heaven with power and great glory” (Matthew 24:30; see also Mark 13:26).

When Jesus ascended into Heaven in His glorified body, His disciples saw a cloud receive Him, and the angel told them that He would one day return in the same fashion (Acts 1:9-11). 

The prophet Ezekiel’s describes His vision of God in His heavenly chariot as a whirlwind and fire emerging from a great cloud, and he compares it to the brilliance of a rainbow appearing in a cloud of rain (Ezekiel 1:1-4,28). Daniel also experienced a vision of the Son of Man coming with the clouds of heaven (Daniel 7:13).

In contrast to the Lord’s brightness, the Day of the Lord, Christ’s Second Coming to judge the earth, will be “a day of darkness and of gloominess, a day of clouds and of thick darkness” (Joel 2:1-2; see also Zephaniah 1:15).

But once we are saved by His grace through our faith (Ephesians 2:8-9), we need not fear that day. If our mortal body dies before His return, we shall be absent from the body and present with the Lord (2 Corinthians 5:8). And if we are still living when Jesus calls us up to meet Him in the skies, we shall receive our glorified bodies that will never experience pain, sickness, death, aging, sorrow or sin (1 Corinthians 15:42-53).

First those who died in Christ will rise from their graves into glorified bodies, then we who remain will be instantly transformed into our glorified bodies and meet with them and with Christ in the clouds, to be with the Lord forever! (1 Thessalonians 4:13-17).

Approximately seven years after this Rapture, at the conclusion of the Tribulation, Christ the King will return with clouds to defeat His enemies and judge the earth (Revelation 1:7). He is described as the mighty angel coming down from heaven, clothed with a cloud, as was the Shekinah Glory filling the temple. He has a rainbow, which is the symbol of His faithfulness, upon his head; His face resembles the sun; and His feet are like pillars of fire (Revelation 10:1).

After the two witnesses testify and display God’s great power, they are beheaded by enemies but resurrected by the Spirit in three and a half days. They ascend to Heaven in a cloud after a great voice calls, “Come up hither,” (Revelation 11:12) much as God’s children will be summoned in the Rapture (Revelation 4:1).

From His vantage point on a white cloud in Heaven, the Son of man, wearing a golden crown signifying that He is King of Kings, views the earth before threshing it with a sharp sickle (Revelation 14:14). When the bloodshed is over, and all Christ’s enemies are defeated by the word of His mouth (Revelation 19:15-21), He will reign with perfect peace and justice in the Millennial Kingdom (Revelation 22).

The prophet Isaiah foretold that when Christ does return, the presence of the Lord will inhabit every dwelling in Mount Zion as a cloud and smoke by day, and as the shining of a flaming fire by night (Isaiah 4:5).

I have always liked the Judy Collins song “Clouds” and its refrain “I’ve looked at clouds from both sides now – from up and down.” Thanks to airplane travel, we can now look down as well as up at clouds. But I eagerly await that day when Christ returns for his children (1 Corinthians 15:51-54), raises us up to meet Him in the air, and we are literally walking on the clouds in our glorified bodies!

© 2017 Laurie Collett
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Saturday, November 23, 2013

Triplets of Unity: Triune God, One Will – Christ’s Earthly Ministry and Church


As we saw last week, each member of the Trinity played a special role in the incarnation. God the Father gave His only begotten Son (John 1:14; 3:16, Hebrews 1:5-6), Jesus Christ, Who was conceived through the Spirit’s power (Luke 1:35). The Word, or Christ, was God (yet distinct from God the Father) and present from the beginning (John 1:1-2), He was the Creator, the Life-Giver, and the Light Who overcame the darkness (John 1:3-5)

The Word became flesh so that man could experience His grace and truth (John 1:14) and see the image of the invisible God (Colossians 1:15). God the Father was pleased that in Jesus Christ the Son would be the fullness of the Godhead, or all Three Persons of the Trinity bodily (Colossians 1:19; 2:8,9), As Isaiah foretold, the Name of the Son would also be the Counsellor (the Spirit Who guides us) and the Everlasting Father (Isaiah 9:6-7).

Those who walked the earth with Jesus were privileged to see God in the flesh, and subsequent believers have been blessed to read of Him in Scripture. When we realize that we are sinners in need of a Savior (Romans 3:23) and that Jesus Christ died for our sins, was buried, and rose from the dead (1 Corinthians 15:1-4), we are indwelled from the moment of salvation by the Holy Spirit (Ephesians 1:13-14) Who teaches us that we are children of God the Father (Romans 8:16).

Just as we now know Christ through the revelation of the Spirit, it is through our knowledge of and relationship with Jesus that we can know the Father (John 14:8-9). From an early age, Jesus knew that He must do His Father’s business (Luke 2:49), and in His earthly ministry, His very food was to do His Father’s will and to finish His work (John 4:34).

The Scriptures are largely silent on much of Jesus’ childhood, but Luke tells us that the Child grew not only physically but strong in Spirit, filled with wisdom, and the grace of God (the Father) was upon Him (Luke 2:40). Thus we see in Jesus the effects of and interaction with the other Two Persons of the Trinity

Jesus faithfully honored His Father (John 8:49), did good works in His Father’s name (John 10:25,32), and prayed to the Father (Matthew 11:25; Luke 10:21; John 11:41). In His model prayer, He also taught His disciples to pray to the Father (Matthew 6:9; Luke 11:2). He told the Samaritan woman at the well to worship the Father in Spirit and in truth, just as she was coming to realize that He was the Messiah, or Christ (John 4:21-26).

At Gethsemane, Jesus prayed to the Father for the cup to pass from Him if that were possible; for the Father’s will to be done; and for the Father to keep you and me (John 17), giving us eternal life by knowing “thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom thou hast sent.” (v. 3). Thus, Jesus Himself clearly recognized the distinction between Himself and the Father.

When Jesus was on the cross, He prayed to the Father to forgive those who crucified Him (Luke 23:34), and His last words acknowledged the other Two Persons of the Trinity, as Jesus commended His Spirit to the Father (Luke 23:46).

Yet at that moment that He became sin to appease God’s wrath at all sinners (2 Corinthians 5:21), Jesus could not call out to His Father, but only to His God (Matthew 27:46; Mark 15:34), because Holy God the Father could not look on all the sin Jesus Christ bore for us. After Jesus died, the Father raised Him from the dead through the power of the Holy Spirit. Without the Trinity acting as Three distinct Persons united in one will, the crucifixion and resurrection that is the defining miracle of Christianity would not be possible.

After He arose from the dead, Jesus Christ told Mary Magdalene that He would ascend to His Father (Who was also her Father), and to His God (Who was also her God; John 20:17). Jesus told His followers that after He ascended to Heaven, the Comforter, or Holy Spirit, would be with them always, remind them of Jesus Christ, and teach them (John 14:16,26;15:26; 16:7). This promise was realized at Pentecost, when the Spirit descended on the apostles like cloven tongues of fire (Acts 2:1-4), giving power to Peter and the others to preach truth. .

By Divine inspiration, Peter then spoke clearly of the Trinity: This Jesus hath God raised up, whereof we all are witnesses. 33 Therefore being by the right hand of God exalted, and having received of the Father the promise of the Holy Ghost, he hath shed forth this, which ye now see and hear (Acts 2:32-33).

Paul also clarified that God the Father raised Jesus from the dead using the power of the Holy Spirit, and that same Spirit gives believers new life and power to mortify the flesh (Romans 8:10-11) when they trust in the death, burial and resurrection of Jesus Christ (1 Corinthians 15:1-4) as the only Way to the Father (John 14:6).

Since His ascension, Jesus Christ the Son has been seated at the right hand of God the Father (Hebrews 1:3), mediating and interceding for us, hearing the prayers brought from believers to Him through the Holy Spirit. Paul tells us that through Christ, we have access by one Spirit unto the Father (Ephesians 2:18).

In Paul’s ministry to the Gentiles, he was constantly led by the Spirit, Who inspired his preaching (Acts 18:5)  and instructed him not only in spiritual matters (Acts 17:16) but in highly practical decisions regarding his ministry, such as where to travel and where not to go (Acts 19:21; 21:4). Paul describes the mystery of God, and of the Father, and of Christ (Colossians 2:2,3) which was not revealed before the incarnation.

2 Corinthians 13:14The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the communion of the Holy Ghost, be with you all. Amen. 


© 2013 Laurie Collett
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