"Dark Angel of Light" October 24 Readings: 2 Corinthians 10:1-11:15

 


Reading the Bible Chronologically in 2022

This year, instead of reading from Genesis to Revelation, we will read the Bible as the story flows, as it happened and was written. There are several plans out there and I have worked to combine them into a plan that lets the Bible tell its own story "as it happened." Remember, the Bible is inspired, but not in the order the books appear in our Bibles. The Old Testament is approximately 3/4 of the Bible, but I have divided it so that we will spend half the year in the OT, and half the year in the NT. 

Bible Readings:  2 Corinthians 10:1-11:15  


Background:   

This begins the intense part of Paul's letter, continuing through the end of chapter 13. In fact, some believe this is actually the "painful letter" Paul refers to in chapter 2, added on to the end of this book. I do not believe that, but the intensity of this section certainly gives rise to those theories.

Corinth was rife with false teachers who were attempting to lead the people astray and Paul here ratchets up the defense of his ministry and his attacks on the false apostles.

Daily Devotional: Dark Angel of Light 

In Genesis 3, when the Serpent tempts Adam and Eve, it uses (abuses) the words of God to do so. When Satan tempts Jesus he quotes (misquotes) Scriptures in the attempt. Our enemy is a "scholar" of God's word who uses it freely. The problem is that he always twists it.

In 2 Corinthians 11, we are told about false teachers in the church of Jesus. Guess what. They don't preach from the Bhagavad Gita! Like Satan, they use and abuse God's word and the people of God need to be wary of their presence. 

Almost every Scripture that speaks of the end times warns us of the proliferation of false Christs (who would claim to be God’s new representative on earth), false apostles (claiming new authority over God’s church), false prophets (claiming new revelation to add to or clarify what God’s perfect Word already says) and false teachers (who lead God’s people astray by twisting truth for their own reasons – generally money and power). We are duly warned that such will always be within the church (yes, that is right – INSIDE the church) trying to lead God’s people astray from the inside.

But this spirit of antichrist was already at work in the church of Corinth. There were those who had come in among the brethren there and tried to undermine Paul’s authority and call the gospel of grace he proclaimed into question. It was the presence of these men, these false apostles, that caused Paul to deal so harshly with the Corinthian church. He was worried that they would follow the lies into spiritual destruction.

Wouldn’t it be great if liars and deceivers wore signs and marked themselves clearly? I was reading today of a well-known “evangelical” writer who has now compromised on pretty much every doctrine and moral standard that we hold dear. Yet he never says, “I’ve left the faith and am no longer a Christian.” He continues to maintain that he is both a Christian and faithful to God’s Word. He is pleasant, a great writer, charismatic (in the personality sense) – seems all around like a nice guy. But his doctrine is increasingly poisonous. Wouldn’t it be nice if he owned his doctrine deviation and admitted it, so that no one would be confused?

That is not the way of false teachers, false prophets, false apostles or false Christs. Paul addressed this in 2 Corinthians 11:13-15. He begins by describing those against whom he contended, in verse 13
For such men are false apostles, deceitful workmen, disguising themselves as apostles of Christ.”
Then, in verse 14, he explains the reason for this.
“And no wonder, for even Satan disguises himself as an angel of light.”
He makes this conclusion in verse 15.
“So, it is no surprise if his servants, also, disguise themselves as servants of righteousness.”
Satan is not a hideous creature of with grotesque features – like he is presented in fiction. He is an being of light who presents his ways as beautiful, wonderful and happy. “God wants you to be happy,” he whispers as you try to decide whether to do the right thing or not.  “It’s all about you.” “Just follow your heart and do what you feel is best.” Satan whispers sweet things to us and tells us what we want to hear.

It is all a masquerade. His purpose is to kill and to destroy. From the beginning of time his strategy has been to lie to God’s creation and to get us human beings to choose what is wrong instead of choosing obedience. By shining his lying light on us, he induces us to choose the wrong path and bring the consequences of sin on our lives.

He seems fair and happy and beautiful but he pays off in death and destruction. Don’t be fooled by the light. It can be simply a means of being induced into the darkness.

When his false teachers enter the church, they follow his pattern. They tell us nice things, things we want to hear. They tell us to stop talking about sin, to ignore biblical standards that might make us or others unhappy, to cast off the yoke of Christ and to maintain control of our own lives. It all sounds so good but it is a mirage, a lie. It brings the death of the church instead of the blessing of God.

We must be deep in the Word of God and sensitive to the Spirit of God so that we can identify these false workmen who would lead us astray from the inside.

Father, help me to be a proclaimer of truth and righteousness, to identify and expose those who would lead the Body of Christ astray.

Consider God's Word:


Do you assume that every person who quotes God's word is a true man or woman of God?
Do you exercise discernment, judging teachings against the clear teachings of God's word or do you just accept what you are taught and assume that there is no such thing as a false teacher?




BONUS ARTICLE - Weapons of Our Warfare

(This is a favorite post from my blog, based on today's reading)
Then Simon Peter, having a sword, drew it and struck the high priest’s servant and cut off his right ear. (The servant’s name was Malchus.) So Jesus said to Peter, “Put your sword into its sheath; shall I not drink the cup that the Father has given me?”

What was Peter thinking?  A detachment of soldiers, led by Judas, found Jesus and the disciples in the olive grove across the Kidron Valley, to arrest him.  Peter, for reasons that escape me, had brought a sword to the prayer meeting, and he swung it. Badly. Being a fisherman, not a soldier, the best he could do was lop off the ear of the High Priest’s servant.  Jesus told him to put away the sword, healed the servant’s ear, and presented himself to the soldiers, to “drink the cup the Father has given me.”

It would be easy to judge Peter if we did not so often emulate him.  He misunderstood the situation and reacted in the wrong way.  All Peter did by his sword-swinging attempt to help Jesus was tobecome an obstacle to God’s work.

Peter failed to realize that the arrest of Jesus was part of God’s sovereign plan of salvation.  God was working through the tragedy, accomplishing his redemptive purpose.  It just didn’t look that way to him.  Peter was sure things had gone very wrong.  Somebody had to do something about it.  Peter took up his sword and went to work to make things right.

Because Peter forgot that God was still in control, he also forgot that human weapons and human ways do not accomplish the work of God.  He swung his sword in full confidence that Jesus would applaud his courage and bless his efforts.  But Jesus did not applaud Peter, he rebuked him.  In Peter’s attempt to “do something for Jesus” he only made a bad situation worse and caused pain for others.

What If Peter Had Succeeded?

Consider this: what if Peter succeeded?  What if he had been able to fight off the soldiers and free Jesus?  What would have been accomplished?  He would have stopped the Cross!  His attempt to help could have doomed us all to eternal hell.   God would never let that happen, but it makes you think.  How often do we cause kingdom chaos in our efforts to help God?  We pick up human weapons of power politics, persuasion, control, manipulation, gossip, and strife, thinking we can do good.

Peter assumed that Jesus was unarmed.  But Jesus did have weapons.  Jesus was fighting with the most powerful weapon in the world – God’s love.  He was on his way to the cross to lay down his life for sinners.  By obedience, by submission, by sacrificial love, Jesus did what Peter’s puny sword could not.  Jesus, by laying down his life, conquered sin, and death, and hell.  He redeemed lost humanity and stepped on Satan’s neck.  He accomplished all of that without Peter’s sword.
God has made the weapons of Christ available to us.  “The weapons of our warfare are spiritual,” said Paul.  When we love our enemies, when we return good for evil, when we lay down our lives for the sake of others, we wield powerful weapons that God uses in mighty ways.

Peter, trying to do good, did evil, because he operated on his own judgment, by his own power, with his own weapons.  Jesus was operating on the Father’s agenda, by the Father’s power, with the Father’s weapons.  Peter messed up.  Jesus saved the world.
“For the weapons of our warfare are not of the flesh but have divine power to destroy strongholds.  We destroy arguments and every lofty opinion raised against the knowledge of God, and take every thought captive to obey Christ.”  2 Corinthians 10: 4-5 
Frankly, I’m not sure that we in the Christian world understand this.  I forget it way too often.  We have weapons, but they are not the weapons of the flesh.  Anger.  Vitriol.  Scheming.  Political organization. Gossip.  Slander.  These are the weapons people in the world use to accomplish that which they desire.  But those are not our weapons.  We have different weapons – better weapons – weapons that actually accomplish mighty and powerful works.

I would like to point out three things about these weapons.

1)  Our Weapons are Not Worldly

We do not fight with the weapons of the world.  Power politics won’t get the job done.  Legalism is pointless.  Trying to follow the rules of religion in the power of the flesh is futile.  And we don’t do battle with anger and condemnation.  These fleshly weapons have no power.  They seem effective but they accomplish nothing of eternal significance.

2) Our Weapons are Spiritual and Powerful

When we use the weapons of God, we fight with “divine power.” Did you get that?  When I use God’s weapons, I fight Satan with God’s power.  Wouldn’t that wipe the smirk off the devil’s face?  We are so used to doing much and accomplishing little.  We jump in with a great splash but we are seeing little real spiritual transformation.  Could it be that we are using the wrong weapons, fighting with the force of the flesh instead of the power of the Spirit?

3)  Our Warfare focuses on the Mind

Satan works to spread lies and deceive us into defeat.  God speaks truth to our spirits and casts down the strongholds of Satan’s lies.   It is not religion that will change us, nor our good works.  We cannot try our hardest and succeed.  Victory comes when the Word of God casts down the lies of Satan in our minds and we begin to walk in the victory of God.

Our Weapons

Paul makes it clear what kind of weapons we have.
 ”By purity, knowledge, patience, kindness, the Holy Spirit, genuine love; 7 by truthful speech, and the power of God; with the weapons of righteousness for the right hand and for the left.” 2 Corinthians 6:6-7
The purity that is produced in us by the Spirit, the knowledge that banishes Satan’s lies, the spiritual fruit of patience and kindness which replaces anger and vengeance, the truth of God applied to our lives – these are the weapons of warfare that the Spirit of Christ gives us that have real power to make a real difference.

May we stop fighting the right battles with the wrong weapons.

A Not So Subtle Allegory

Once upon a time, the nation of Homino found itself constantly under attack by the armies of Skotos.  Homino’s fighters were armed only with bows and arrows, swords and spears.  They fought the best they could, but were no match for the modern army of Skotos, whose soldiers were equipped with machine guns, artillery, even an air force of bombers and fighter planes.  No matter how hard Homino fought, they could not stand against the power of Skotos.

One day, an emissary from the great king of Ouranos came to visit Homino.  “I can help you,” he promised.  “If you will swear your allegiance to our king, he will take you as part of his kingdom.  He will protect you and give you weapons more powerful than any of your enemies have.”  The people of Homino wanted that very badly, so they agreed to swear fealty to the King of Ouranos, and became part of his kingdom.  They were excited to see the new weapons they had been promised.
The king was as good as his emissary’s word.  Each soldier in Homino received body armor that would protect them from all the weapons of Skotos.  The king sent them the most modern weaponry.  He supplied them with an air force; with fighters that could evade Skotos’ fighters and shoot them down.  The new bombers had the most sophisticated smart bombs which could target the enemy and destroy them.  The people of Homino were amazed at the arsenal put at their disposal by the King of Ouranos and were excited to see what a difference they would make in their battle.

The next day, they were attacked by Skotos.  The army of Homino quickly gathered its bows and arrow, its swords and spears and went out to battle.  They were soundly defeated.  Day after day, the same thing happened.  They went to battle against the army of Skotos armed with their primitive weapons while the powerful weapons given them by the king sat idle.  Day after day, they returned from battle in defeat.

Some of the commanders of Homino’s army gathered to confront the emissary of the king of Ouranos.  “Nothing has changed,” they complained.  “Since we gave our loyalty to your king, we have not won a single battle.  All of your promises are empty.  In spite of all you have promised us, we are still defeated.”

The emissary shook his head slowly.  “My friends, the king’s weapons do no good unless you use them.  He has given you body armor, but still, you face the armies of Skotos unprotected.  He gave you powerful weapons to fight them, but still, you use your swords and spears.  You have an Air Force with the most sophisticated warheads in the universe at your disposal, but the only thing that flies is your bows and arrows.  The king has given you every weapon you need to defeat the forces of Skotos but you do not use them.”

Suddenly, it clicked.  They were supposed to use the king’s weapons in the battle.  The next day, when Skotos attacked, the people of Homino took up the weapons of the king.  They were shocked at what happened.  The armor the king gave them deflected every bullet fired by their enemies.  They bounced off harmlessly.  Their new weapons overcame the enemy and their bombers strafed them until they fled in terror.  For the first time, the forces of Skotos were defeated.

Today, in Homino, the battle still rages but the outcome is very different.  Sometimes, the people forget themselves and pick up their old weapons.  When they do that, they are defeated.  But more and more now, they are remembering to take up the weapons given them by the Great King of Ouranos.  And when they do, the bullets fired at them bounce off harmlessly.  Their weapons send their enemies fleeing every time.

And every time, they stop to give thanks to the king for the weapons of victory.

Father, may I never shy away from fighting the good fight of faith, and may I always fight with the weapons of warfare you have given to me!






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