Chapter 6 – Seeking What You Can’t See

The End Time Church: from the Cathedrals to the Catacombs

By Dan L. White

Copyright ©2016 by Dan L. White, all rights reserved.

Scripture quotations are from the World English Bible (WEB) which is in the public domain.

Chapter 6

Seeking What You Can’t See —
With Your Whole Heart

So how do you follow an invisible God? How can you see what your eyes can’t? How can you be led by a King you can’t see?

Answer?

You have to look really, really hard.

Deuteronomy 30:9-14
Yahweh your God will make you plenteous in all the work of your hand, in the fruit of your body, in the fruit of your livestock, and in the fruit of your ground, for good; for Yahweh will again rejoice over you for good, as he rejoiced over your fathers; if you will obey Yahweh your God
s voice, to keep his commandments and his statutes which are written in this book of the law; if you turn to Yahweh your God with all your heart, and with all your soul.

For this commandment which I command you today is not too hard for you or too distant. It is not in heaven, that you should say, Who will go up for us to heaven, and bring it to us, and proclaim it to us, that we may do it? Neither is it beyond the sea, that you should say, Who will go over the sea for us, and bring it to us, and proclaim it to us, that we may do it? But the word is very near to you, in your mouth and in your heart, that you may do it.

Israel had trouble following the God they couldn’t see. The invisible God can be seen, though, by seeking Him.

Rom 1:18-23
For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men, who suppress the truth in unrighteousness, because that which is known of God is revealed in them, for God revealed it to them. For the invisible things of him since the creation of the world are clearly seen, being perceived through the things that are made, even his everlasting power and divinity; that they may be without excuse.

Because, knowing God, they didnt glorify him as God, neither gave thanks, but became vain in their reasoning, and their senseless heart was darkened. Professing themselves to be wise, they became fools, and traded the glory of the incorruptible God for the likeness of an image of corruptible man, and of birds, and four-footed animals, and creeping things.

The invisible things of Him are clearly seen —

Clearly seen

Through the things that are made.

God can be seen in his creation and we can know he is there, here, everywhere.

Israel should have known that more than anyone. They were God’s chosen people. He personally recited the Ten Commandments to them and gave them a personally inscribed copy. However, somewhere along the line they missed the obvious. They did not see Yahweh God.

Why not?

Israel didn’t see God because they werent really looking for him.

They had no image of Yahweh to look at. They had no human government to control their lives. They were led only by the invisible visible God. However, only by seeking God with their whole heart could they find him.

The whole heart.

Jer 24:7
I will give them a heart to know me, that I am Yahweh. They will be my people, and I will be their God; for they will return to me with their whole heart.

Seeking God with the whole heart can never be a half-hearted effort.

Just before Israel entered the Promised Land, Moses told them that in the future they would forsake God and then he would forsake them. After their suffering, though, they would again seek God, and then they would do it with a whole heart.

Deu 4:27-29
Yahweh will scatter you among the peoples, and you will be left few in number among the nations, where Yahweh will lead you away. There you shall serve gods, the work of men
s hands, wood and stone, which neither see, nor hear, nor eat, nor smell. But from there you shall seek Yahweh your God, and you shall find him, when you search after him with all your heart and with all your soul.

Notice — you shall find him, when you search after him with all your heart and with all your soul.

Jeremiah prophesied at the time of the fall of Judah, and he told them that after a long period of captivity, they would again search for God — with all their heart.

Jer 29:10-13
For Yahweh says,
After seventy years are accomplished for Babylon, I will visit you and perform my good word toward you, in causing you to return to this place. For I know the thoughts that I think toward you, says Yahweh, thoughts of peace, and not of evil, to give you hope and a future. You shall call on me, and you shall go and pray to me, and I will listen to you. You shall seek me, and find me, when you search for me with all your heart.

Notice — You shall seek me, and find me, when you search for me with all your heart.

David followed God with his whole heart, but Jeroboam didn’t.

1Ki 14:7-9
Go, tell Jeroboam,
Yahweh, the God of Israel, says: Because I exalted you from among the people, and made you prince over my people Israel, and tore the kingdom away from Davids house, and gave it you; and yet you have not been as my servant David, who kept my commandments, and who followed me with all his heart, to do that only which was right in my eyes, but have done evil above all who were before you, and have gone and made for yourself other gods, molten images, to provoke me to anger, and have cast me behind your back;

Jehoshaphat sought Yahweh with all his heart. His son Ahaziah did not.

2Ch 22:9
[Jehu] sought Ahaziah, and they caught him (now he was hiding in Samaria), and they brought him to Jehu, and killed him; and they buried him, for they said, He is the son of Jehoshaphat, who sought Yahweh with all his heart. The house of Ahaziah had no power to hold the kingdom.

Hezekiah sought God with all his heart and prospered.

2Ch 31:20-21
Hezekiah did so throughout all Judah; and he did that which was good, right, and faithful before Yahweh his God. In every work that he began in the service of God
s house, in the law, and in the commandments, to seek his God, he did it with all his heart, and prospered.

Josiah turned to Yahweh with all his heart, all his soul, and all his might.

2Ki 23:25
There was no king like him before him, who turned to Yahweh with all his heart, and with all his soul, and with all his might, according to all the law of Moses; and there was none like him who arose after him.

In all those examples, do you see a pattern?

When Israel sought God with their whole heart, they found him and were blessed. When they did not, they did not find him and they were cursed.

Usually, though, Israel was wholehearted —

Only when they were deep in the hole, in the pit of despair.

Why did Judah seek God with their whole heart when they were in great distress?

That’s when their hearts were humble and hungry. When they were in dire straits, then they straightened out. The urgency of emergency put their priorities back in order.

Psa 34:18
Yahweh is near to those who have a broken heart, and saves those who have a crushed spirit.

Psa 51:17
The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit. A broken and contrite heart, O God, you will not despise.

Ecc 7:2-4
It is better to go to the house of mourning than to go to the house of feasting: for that is the end of all men, and the living should take this to heart. Sorrow is better than laughter; for by the sadness of the face the heart is made good. The heart of the wise is in the house of mourning; but the heart of fools is in the house of mirth.

Joel 2:12-13
Yet even now, says Yahweh, turn to me with all your heart, and with fasting, and with weeping, and with mourning. Tear your heart, and not your garments, and turn to Yahweh, your God; for he is gracious and merciful, slow to anger, and abundant in loving kindness, and relents from sending calamity.

Seeking God with a whole heart comes from a humble heart. Not seeking God with a whole heart comes from a haughty heart, when you do what you want to do, instead of what He wants you to do.

Psa 4:4
Stand in awe, and don
t sin. Search your own heart on your bed, and be still.

Most of the time Israel was very religious. Most of the time, they did not seek God with their whole heart, and their religion helped cover that up.

When they did not seek God with their whole heart, sure enough, they didn’t find Him. When you don’t seek God with your whole heart, then you wind up following your own heart.

Pro 3:5
Trust in Yahweh with all your heart, and don’t lean on your own understanding.

And following your own heart, this is what you’re left with.

Jer 17:9
The heart is deceitful above all things, and it is exceedingly corrupt: who can know it?

Gen 6:5
Yahweh saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually.

Gen 8:21
Yahweh smelled the pleasant aroma. Yahweh said in his heart, “I will not again curse the ground any more for man’s sake, because the imagination of man’s heart is evil from his youth; neither will I ever again strike everything living, as I have done.

Mar 7:21-23
For from within, out of the hearts of men, proceed evil thoughts, adulteries, sexual sins, murders, thefts, covetings, wickedness, deceit, lustful desires, an evil eye, blasphemy, pride, and foolishness. All these evil things come from within, and defile the man.

Joh 2:23-25
Now when he was in Jerusalem at the Passover, during the feast, many believed in his name, observing his signs which he did. But Yeshua didn’t trust himself to them, because he knew everyone, and because he didn’t need for anyone to testify concerning man; for he himself knew what was in man.

If you don’t follow God with your whole heart, you’re left with your own heart. That’s what Israel was left with when they did not seek God. Following their own hearts, they got totally out of control. Then they thought that good was evil and evil was good.

However, the deceptive part is that when Israel was not seeking God with their whole heart…

They were often very religious about it!

They thought they were seeking God through their religion, but in reality their religion was keeping them from God. Formal religion is the garb of half-heartedness. It covers hypocrisy with a cloak of churchiness.

During Samuel’s time, Israel lamented after Yahweh. They knew they were not close to God and they lamented after him, yearned for him, cried out for him.

So then why weren’t they close to him?

1 Samuel 7:2-4
From the day that the ark stayed in Kiriath Jearim, the time was long; for it was twenty years: and all the house of Israel lamented after Yahweh.

Samuel spoke to all the house of Israel, saying, If you do return to Yahweh with all your heart, then put away the foreign gods and the Ashtaroth from among you, and direct your hearts to Yahweh, and serve him only; and he will deliver you out of the hand of the Philistines.

Then the children of Israel removed the Baals and the Ashtaroth, and served Yahweh only.

Israel often mixed pagan worship with Yahweh worship. Apparently they thought that any religion was good religion. Their pagan religious traditions did not help them get closer to the true God.

Seeking God with your whole heart means obeying in everything you know. If you’re mostly obedient, then you are disobedient. Obedience is obedience only if you are wholly obedient.

Israel is not alone in having great difficulty following the invisible visible God. That’s why so many are so outwardly religious, wanting to put something they can see in front of the God they can’t see. Israel used idols, an ephod, a snake, and even the temple to be religious. Today people use statues, big buildings, ceremonies, liturgies, vestments and church organizations to be religious. All these things cloak the invisible visible God.

Everybody should be able to see the invisible God in the things He has made.

Most don’t see Him. The difference in seeing or not seeing is seeking. If you don’t seek, you won’t see. If you’re not looking for God, you won’t find Him. If you are looking for him, you will find him, only if you seek him with your whole heart.

Most of all, seeking God with your whole heart means never putting someone else between you and God. Your personal guidance must come from your personal God. Religious bureaucracies are no better than government bureaucracies. Seeking God means seeking God.

You.

Him.

Whole heart.

As Christ quoted Moses: You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your mind, Mat 22:37.

So how do you follow an invisible God? How can you be led by a King you can’t see? How can you see what your eyes can’t?

You have to look really, really hard.

If you seek him with your whole heart, you can clearly see him in the things he has made. You will see that he has made you and you will see where he wants you to go. No religious authority has to tell you what to do with your life, because you have a personal connection to the Life Giver. He is your king, but he is not to be taken lightly. He is not just one of the boys. You only find him when you seek him with all your heart, and nothing else comes first.

Here is an example of whole-heart God seeking.

(Daniel 9:1-19 )
In the first year of Darius the son of Ahasuerus, of the offspring of the Medes, who was made king over the realm of the Chaldeans, in the first year of his reign I, Daniel, understood by the books the number of the years about which Yahweh
s word came to Jeremiah the prophet, for the accomplishing of the desolations of Jerusalem, even seventy years.

I set my face to the Lord God, to seek by prayer and petitions, with fasting and sackcloth and ashes. I prayed to Yahweh my God, and made confession, and said,

Oh, Lord, the great and dreadful God, who keeps covenant and loving kindness with those who love him and keep his commandments, we have sinned, and have dealt perversely, and have done wickedly, and have rebelled, even turning aside from your precepts and from your ordinances. We havent listened to your servants the prophets, who spoke in your name to our kings, our princes, and our fathers, and to all the people of the land.

“Lord, righteousness belongs to you, but to us confusion of face, as it is today; to the men of Judah, and to the inhabitants of Jerusalem, and to all Israel, who are near, and who are far off, through all the countries where you have driven them, because of their trespass that they have trespassed against you. Lord, to us belongs confusion of face, to our kings, to our princes, and to our fathers, because we have sinned against you. To the Lord our God belong mercies and forgiveness; for we have rebelled against him. We havent obeyed Yahweh our Gods voice, to walk in his laws, which he set before us by his servants the prophets. Yes, all Israel have transgressed your law, turning aside, that they should not obey your voice.

Therefore the curse and the oath written in the law of Moses the servant of God has been poured out on us; for we have sinned against him. He has confirmed his words, which he spoke against us, and against our judges who judged us, by bringing on us a great evil; for under the whole sky, such has not been done as has been done to Jerusalem. As it is written in the law of Moses, all this evil has come on us. Yet have we not entreated the favor of Yahweh our God, that we should turn from our iniquities, and have discernment in your truth. Therefore Yahweh has watched over the evil, and brought it on us; for Yahweh our God is righteous in all his works which he does, and we have not obeyed his voice.

“Now, Lord our God, who has brought your people out of the land of Egypt with a mighty hand, and have gotten yourself renown, as it is today; we have sinned. We have done wickedly. Lord, according to all your righteousness, let your anger and please let your wrath be turned away from your city Jerusalem, your holy mountain; because for our sins, and for the iniquities of our fathers, Jerusalem and your people have become a reproach to all who are around us.

“Now therefore, our God, listen to the prayer of your servant, and to his petitions, and cause your face to shine on your sanctuary that is desolate, for the Lords sake. My God, turn your ear, and hear. Open your eyes, and see our desolations, and the city which is called by your name; for we do not present our petitions before you for our righteousness, but for your great mercies sake. Lord, hear. Lord, forgive. Lord, listen and do. Dont defer, for your own sake, my God, because your city and your people are called by your name.

That is a humble, hungry heart.

Having access to the Creator of everything is an unfathomable opportunity. You wouldn’t expect this opportunity to be something you can do while you’re multitasking, would you?

No.

Frail, physical people can find the incredible spiritual God only with wholehearted effort.

(Matthew 13:44-48 )
Again, the Kingdom of Heaven is like treasure hidden in the field, which a man found, and hid. In his joy, he goes and sells all that he has, and buys that field.

Again, the Kingdom of Heaven is like a man who is a merchant seeking fine pearls, who having found one pearl of great price, he went and sold all that he had, and bought it.

Again, the Kingdom of Heaven is like a dragnet, that was cast into the sea, and gathered some fish of every kind, which, when it was filled, they drew up on the beach. They sat down, and gathered the good into containers, but the bad they threw away.

The bad fish are half-hearted. They did not sell everything to buy the treasure in the field or to buy the pearl of great price. They tried to buy at a bargain rate.

People are seekers or sneakers. Seekers want God more than anything else. Sneakers want God, along with everything else.

Israel thought they had a government problem. They actually had a God problem. Israel seldom sought their invisible King with their whole heart, so finally they just decided to dethrone him.

That happens when people don’t seek God with their whole heart. They think they have a government problem when they have a God problem. People who look directly to the King don’t want another king. People who don’t, do.

Chapter 4 – Freedom and Responsibility

The End Time Church: from the Cathedrals to the Catacombs

By Dan L. White

Copyright ©2016 by Dan L. White, all rights reserved.

Scripture quotations are from the World English Bible (WEB) which is in the public domain.

Chapter 4

Freedom and Responsibility

What was it like to live under a government where there were no taxes, no army, and no bureaucrats?

What was it like to live under a government that you couldn’t see?

What was it like to live under a government where you had to answer directly to God for everything you did — even though you couldn’t see Him?

When God was the government, you couldn’t hide behind a good lawyer. At Ai, no one saw Achan commit a crime.

Well, almost no one.

When Israel tried to take over the town of Ai, they got beat up, Joshua fell on his face and asked God why they were defeated.

God told him to get up! He had seen what Joshua hadn’t.

(Joshua 7:10-13)
Yahweh said to Joshua, “Get up! Why have you fallen on your face like that? Israel has sinned.

Yes, they have even transgressed my covenant which I commanded them. Yes, they have even taken some of the devoted things, and have also stolen, and also deceived. They have even put it among their own stuff.

Therefore the children of Israel can’t stand before their enemies. They turn their backs before their enemies, because they have become devoted for destruction. I will not be with you any more, unless you destroy the devoted things from among you.

“Get up! Sanctify the people, and say, ‘Sanctify yourselves for tomorrow, for Yahweh, the God of Israel, says, “There is a devoted thing among you, Israel. You cannot stand before your enemies until you take away the devoted thing from among you.”

Then God showed them who was guilty.

(Joshua 7:16-21)
So Joshua rose up early in the morning and brought Israel near by their tribes. The tribe of Judah was selected. He brought near the family of Judah; and he selected the family of the Zerahites. He brought near the family of the Zerahites man by man, and Zabdi was selected.

He brought near his household man by man, and Achan, the son of Carmi, the son of Zabdi, the son of Zerah, of the tribe of Judah, was selected.

Joshua said to Achan, “My son, please give glory to Yahweh, the God of Israel, and make confession to him. Tell me now what you have done! Don’t hide it from me!”

Achan answered Joshua, and said, “I have truly sinned against Yahweh, the God of Israel, and this is what I have done. When I saw among the plunder a beautiful Babylonian robe, two hundred shekels of silver, and a wedge of gold weighing fifty shekels, then I coveted them and took them. Behold, they are hidden in the ground in the middle of my tent, with the silver under it.”

Since Achan couldn’t see God, he thought that God couldn’t see him. And since God didn’t jump in right when Achan took the silver idol, he thought that he was getting away with breaking the law.

No one ever gets away with sin. Achan didn’t.

That’s the way it is when God is the government. You are personally responsible before him for everything you do.

Just as Paul wrote.

(2 Cor 10:5)
[T]hrowing down imaginations and every high thing that is exalted against the knowledge of God, and bringing every thought into captivity to the obedience of Christ;

When Israel entered the Holy Land, God gave each family their allotment of land. If a family obeyed God’s commandments, they would have such large crops they could hardly harvest them all before planting time again. Each year a tithe of that increase, but only the increase, was paid to support the priesthood; a tithe was used by each family for festival worship; and periodically a tithe was paid to support the poor. The priesthood was there to help the people, the festival tithe was consumed by each family itself, and if you needed help, the poor tithe was for you.

There was no IRS, no standing army and no government bureaucracy to support. Those Israelites had the greatest individual freedom of any people in history. The government did not try to run their lives for them.

Ultimately all human governments try to control their people — for their own good, of course. Israelites, though, under Yahweh their king, all had individual choice as to what they would do with their lives.

At the same time, those Israelites also had maximum individual responsibility. Each family and ultimately each person answered directly to God.

(Jer 16:17)
For my eyes are on all their ways; they are not hidden from my face, neither is their iniquity concealed from my eyes.

(Jer 32:19)
… great in counsel, and mighty in work; whose eyes are open to all the ways of the sons of men, to give everyone according to his ways, and according to the fruit of his doings:

Individual freedom and individual responsibility always go together. Without individual responsibility, there can be no individual freedom. If people cannot control themselves, then some type of government will step in to control them.

And —

If the people can’t individually control themselves, then they will seek some type of government to control them.

Israel’s people had the freedom to run their families and enterprises as they saw fit. If a family did well, they were blessed. Because they were blessed, they did not have to spend every waking moment striving for the Almighty Dollar, or, as it were, the Shaddai Shekel. If you have enough, why do you need more? So the people could spend more time serving God, loving family, helping others and creating beauty, to reflect the perfection of beauty working with them.

(Psalm 50:1-2)
The Mighty One, God, Yahweh, speaks, and calls the earth from sunrise to sunset. Out of Zion, the perfection of beauty, God shines out.

Under that system of maximum liberty, maximum responsibility, people could focus on letting the perfection of beauty shine through them.

As David did.

(2Sa 23:1-2)
Now these are the last words of David. David the son of Jesse says, the man who was raised on high says, the anointed of the God of Jacob, the sweet psalmist of Israel: “Yahweh’s Spirit spoke by me. His word was on my tongue.

David’s Psalms were just him reflecting the perfection of beauty.

If a family did not do well, though, things could get ugly. They might lose their property and even become indebted servants of someone who was more diligent. Then in the Jubilee year that property was returned to the original family, to give another generation the chance to do well or poorly, whichever they chose.

Whether or not a family or individual did well ultimately depended on how close they were to God. Human nature without God is destructive because it opposes God, and God destroys all who oppose him.

(Gen 6:5-7)
Yahweh saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every imagination of the thoughts of man’s heart was continually only evil. Yahweh was sorry that he had made man on the earth, and it grieved him in his heart. Yahweh said, “I will destroy man whom I have created from the surface of the ground—man, along with animals, creeping things, and birds of the sky—for I am sorry that I have made them.”

Human nature can only be turned upward by turning to God. Each and every individual in Israel had the personal responsibility of seeking God with his whole heart. If he did that, he was blessed. If he turned away from God, he was cursed.

This is the law of life.

(Mat 22:37-38)
Yeshua said to him, “‘You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your mind.’ This is the first and great commandment.

There was no national police force to coerce everyone in Israel into obedience. Obedience was an individual choice, not a government enforced duty. Each individual then received the fruit of his actions, either a blessing or a curse.

Human governments think they help people by controlling them, by not allowing individual freedom and choice. They protect the flock by doing their thinking for them.

Napoleon, the egocentric emperor who ended the French Republic almost as soon as it began, wanted to make sure that French women did not get cheated when they bought thread.

How noble of Napoleon!

Understand the thinking of that megalomaniac. He was such a micro-manager of people’s lives that he personally wanted to insure that French women did not get cheated when they bought thread. When they did their sewing, he didn’t want them to get stuck.

Rose Wilder Lane, who helped her mother Laura Ingalls Wilder write the Little House books, was in France shortly after World War I ended, more than a century after Napoleon met his Waterloo in 1815. When Rose went to buy a spool of thread, Napoleon’s rules were still in effect and this was Rose’s experience with that socialism.

Suppose that during the Armistice you bought a spool of thread in a French department store. Not that it is a spool; the thread is wound on a scrap of paper, for the thrifty French do not waste wood. It takes a few seconds to say, “A reel of cotton thread, please; white, size sixty.” With leisurely grace, the clerk takes the thread in her hand, comes from behind the counter, and courteously asks you to accompany her.

She escorts you across the store, perhaps half a block, and indicates your place at the end of a waiting line. In twenty minutes or so, you reach the cashier’s grating. He sits behind the bars on a high stool, a wide ledger open before him, ink bottle uncorked, and pen in hand.

He asks you, and he writes in the ledger, your name, your address, and—to your dictation—one reel of thread, cotton, white, size sixty. Will you take it, madame, or have it delivered? You will take it. He writes that. And the price? Forty centimes. You offer in payment, madame? One franc. He writes these amounts, and the date, hour, and minute.

You give the franc to the clerk, who gives it to the cashier, who gives you the change, looks at the thread, and asks if you are satisfied. You are. A stroke of his pen checks that fact.

The clerk then wraps the thread, beautifully, at a near-by wrapping counter, and gives you the package. You have spent thirty minutes; so has she; the cashier has spent perhaps five. An hour and five minutes, to buy a reel of thread.

French department stores were as good as the best in the world. The French are expert merchandisers. They knew pneumatic-tube systems; the Paris government owned one that carried special-delivery notes more quickly than anyone could get a telephone number. Department store owners admired the cash-systems in American stores. But if they had installed them, they would still have been obliged to keep the cashier, his ledger, and his pen and ink.

Why? Because in the markets of Napoleon’s time, sellers cheated buyers. Napoleon protected the buyers. He decreed that the details of every sale must be written in a book, with pen and ink, in the presence of both seller and buyer, by a third person who must see the article and the transfer of money; the buyer must declare himself satisfied, and the record must be kept, permanently, to verify the facts if there were any future complaint.

During this past century, French merchandising had grown enormously. It had completely changed; but not this method of protecting buyers.

I asked an owner of the largest French department store why Napoleon’s decree was not repealed. He said, But, madame, it has been in operation for more than a hundred years! It cannot be repealed; think of the sales girls, the cashiers, the filing clerks, the watchmen who guard the warehouses of ledgers. They would lose their jobs. He was shocked. He saw me as the materialist American, thinking only of profit, caring nothing for all those human beings.

I thought they were unemployed. They did not appear as unemployed on any record, but the actual unemployment in France and throughout Europe, was enormous. For every purchase in a French department store, something like an hour’s time was unemployed; millions of hours a day. And the cashiers, the filing clerks, the watchers of those records, never did a stroke of productive work.

All this enforced unemployment made it impossible to do anything quickly. European life was leisurely; it had to be. This charmed the Americans gaily passing by, all the tedious waiting done for them, all the red tape untied, all the police stamps got onto their papers by Cook’s or Amexco or their bankers or hotel porters. How serene, how cultured was European life, they said. No one hurrying, everyone with time for meditation and enjoyment, walking through the parks, sitting at cafe tables under the plane trees. How harassed, how hurried and rude and crude was American life in comparison, they said.

You recognized an American as far as you could see him, by the way he walked. Chin up, head high, briskly going somewhere, with an unconscious mastery of the earth he trod. No European moved like that. Europeans walked prudently, slowly. Their every gesture consumed time in merely letting time pass. That made their lives and their countries seem so restful, to Americans. And you can see precisely that same way of walking, that same sense of useless time, in the prisoners in any American prison-yard. (1)

Napoleon the elitist, who thought he was so much smarter than all his poor subjects that he had to protect them from themselves, never thought of the possibility that women themselves could tell when they were being cheated and then they would buy their thread elsewhere. The alternative to Napoleon’s government control was for people to have free choice as to where they bought their thread. Automatically, then, the cheaters would have been threadbare!

Monopolies protect only the monopolists.

As it was, when the government tried to keep the French women from being cheated, all French women were cheated, by having to pay more for their thread and by having to wait an hour to buy it.

Human governments think they help people by controlling them. This applies to political governments and religious governments. They want to do your thinking for you —

For your good!

A political government run by elitist central planners wants to educate your children, control your finances, control your health and decide if you live or die — all for your good!  The socialists know best. A religious government wants to decide your doctrine and establish your orthodoxy — all for your good. The theologians know best. The Church even decided that people who believe in the Bible should not even be allowed to read the Bible — to protect the people against heresy — and they burned those few men who dared to translate it into the common languages!

Governments always want to protect their flock by doing their thinking for them.

But ancient Israel did not have human government, either political or theological. Instead they had great freedom! No government oppression! With liberty and justice for all! God allowed them free choice as to what they would do. They could buy thread wherever they wanted.

The Jubilee year brought liberty in several ways.

(Lev 25:9-11)
On the Day of Atonement you shall sound the trumpet throughout all your land. You shall make the fiftieth year holy, and proclaim liberty throughout the land to all its inhabitants. It shall be a jubilee to you; and each of you shall return to his own property, and each of you shall return to his family. That fiftieth year shall be a jubilee to you.

People oppress other people, through wealth and government. At the Jubilee, wealth oppression was stopped. In Israel, some people accumulated excess wealth. But their power was limited by a natural correction. Property was regained, slaves were released, and transgressors were freed. Everybody had enough. Nobody had too much. That was liberty for all, power for none.

But that liberty always carried responsibility.

(Lev 25:17)
You shall not wrong one another; but you shall fear your God: for I am Yahweh your God.

For example, they were commanded to loan to a poor neighbor, even if they had to forgive the loan later.

(Deu 15:7-11)
If a poor man, one of your brothers, is with you within any of your gates in your land which Yahweh your God gives you, you shall not harden your heart, nor shut your hand from your poor brother; but you shall surely open your hand to him, and shall surely lend him sufficient for his need, which he lacks.

Beware that there not be a wicked thought in your heart, saying, “The seventh year, the year of release, is at hand;” and your eye be evil against your poor brother, and you give him nothing; and he cry to Yahweh against you, and it be sin to you. You shall surely give, and your heart shall not be grieved when you give to him; because that for this thing Yahweh your God will bless you in all your work, and in all that you put your hand to. For the poor will never cease out of the land. Therefore I command you to surely open your hand to your brother, to your needy, and to your poor, in your land.

If someone’s donkey took off or went down, the Israelite had to take care of that donkey.

(Deu 22:1-4)
You shall not see your brother’s ox or his sheep go astray, and hide yourself from them. You shall surely bring them again to your brother. If your brother isn’t near to you, or if you don’t know him, then you shall bring it home to your house, and it shall be with you until your brother comes looking for it, and you shall restore it to him.

So you shall do with his donkey. So you shall do with his garment. So you shall do with every lost thing of your brother’s, which he has lost, and you have found. You may not hide yourself.

You shall not see your brother’s donkey or his ox fallen down by the way, and hide yourself from them. You shall surely help him to lift them up again.

An Israelite even had the responsibility to foresee and avoid any potential harm to his neighbor, and put a railing around his roof patio.

(Deu 22:8)
When you build a new house, then you shall make a railing around your roof, so that you don’t bring blood on your house if anyone falls from there.

Israel had enormous freedom and enormous responsibility. Serving God was more than just studying doctrine. It was about changing who you are.

When God was the government, the people had liberty and responsibility.

1. They could do anything they wanted.
2. They had to answer for everything they did.

More than any other nation ever, Israel was one nation, under God, with liberty and justice for all.

Human government is the great oppressor of people. Human government is the great hindrance of God for people.

Israel did not have a human government controlling them from the outside. That meant they had to control themselves from the inside.

And that meant having the individual self control to obey a God that they couldn’t see.

Endnotes
1) Rose Wilder Lane, “The Planned Economies,” Discovery of Freedom.

 

Chapter 3 – No New Pharaoh

The End Time Church: from the Cathedrals to the Catacombs

By Dan L. White

Copyright ©2016 by Dan L. White, all rights reserved.

Scripture quotations are from the World English Bible (WEB) which is in the public domain.

Chapter 3

No New Pharaoh

In 2009 Michelle Obama broke protocol when she placed her hand on Queen Elizabeth’s royal back. That was a great gaffe. One was a queen and the other a queen wannabe. You just don’t start pawing the queen, you know.

Esther of the Bible, even though she was a queen, couldn’t even speak to her husband the king. She was the beautiful wife of King Ahasuerus, yet she couldn’t even approach him without being invited. If she so much as uttered a word to him, she was subject to the royal death penalty.

Think about that. She was the wife of the king, yet even she couldn’t get close to him. How rare it is to be close to a king!

Mordecai told Esther that Haman had ordered the killing of all the Jews in the empire. Esther knew that going to the king could cost her life. Nevertheless, she did it.

(Esther 4:16, 5:1)
Go, gather together all the Jews who are present in Shushan, and fast for me, and neither eat nor drink three days, night or day. I and my maidens will also fast the same way. Then I will go in to the king, which is against the law; and if I perish, I perish…

Now on the third day, Esther put on her royal clothing, and stood in the inner court of the king’s house, next to the king’s house. The king sat on his royal throne in the royal house, next to the entrance of the house. When the king saw Esther the queen standing in the court, she obtained favor in his sight; and the king held out to Esther the golden scepter that was in his hand. So Esther came near, and touched the top of the scepter.

The king graciously gave his wife permission to come near him and so Esther lived. ‘Thanks, dear!’

No ordinary peon can get close to a king. Yet, after Yahweh rescued Israel from Pharaoh and took them out into the wilderness, their king was always right there close by them.

The compound names of Yahweh show what he is, and one of those names is Yahweh Shammah — Yahweh is There.

(Ezekiel 48:35)
It shall be eighteen thousand reeds around: and the name of the city from that day shall be, Yahweh is there (Yahweh Shammah).

And Yahweh was there for Israel, whenever they looked for him.

(Exodus 13:21-22)
Yahweh went before them by day in a pillar of cloud, to lead them on their way, and by night in a pillar of fire, to give them light, that they might go by day and by night: the pillar of cloud by day, and the pillar of fire by night, didn’t depart from before the people.

Each night when Israel camped, Yahweh their king was always just right over there, in the pillar of fire. Anytime they wanted, they could look up and see the presence of God.

(Psalms 68:7-13)
God, when you went forth before your people, when you marched through the wilderness… Selah. The earth trembled. The sky also poured down rain at the presence of the God of Sinai — at the presence of God, the God of Israel. You, God, sent a plentiful rain. You confirmed your inheritance, when it was weary. Your congregation lived therein. You, God, prepared your goodness for the poor. The Lord announced the word. The ones who proclaim it are a great company. “Kings of armies flee! They flee!” She who waits at home divides the spoil, while you sleep among the campfires, the wings of a dove sheathed with silver, her feathers with shining gold.

Yahweh slept among Israel’s campfires, like a dove with silver wings and golden feathers.

However, Israel was afraid of God and didn’t try to get closer to him. When He personally taught them the Ten Commandments, they asked him to be quiet!

(Exodus 20:18-21)
All the people perceived the thunderings, the lightnings, the sound of the trumpet, and the mountain smoking. When the people saw it, they trembled, and stayed at a distance. They said to Moses, “Speak with us yourself, and we will listen; but don’t let God speak with us, lest we die.”

Moses said to the people, “Don’t be afraid, for God has come to test you, and that his fear may be before you, that you won’t sin.”

The people stayed at a distance, and Moses drew near to the thick darkness where God was.

Yahweh spoke the Ten Commandments with his own voice. Since he really is God, that was a really big noise. The big noise scared the little people away from the big God.

However, Moses heard the same big noise, saw the same fire on the mountain, and felt the same earthquake, but he was not scared away. Moses was closer to Yahweh than anyone on earth at that time, yet unlike Israel, Moses wanted to get still closer.

(Exodus 3:9-23)
When Moses entered into the Tent, the pillar of cloud descended, stood at the door of the Tent, and spoke with Moses. All the people saw the pillar of cloud stand at the door of the Tent, and all the people rose up and worshiped, everyone at their tent door.

Yahweh spoke to Moses face to face, as a man speaks to his friend. He turned again into the camp, but his servant Joshua, the son of Nun, a young man, didn’t depart from the Tent.

Moses said to Yahweh, Behold, you tell me, ‘Bring up this people:’ and you haven’t let me know whom you will send with me. Yet you have said, ‘I know you by name, and you have also found favor in my sight.’ Now therefore, if I have found favor in your sight, please show me now your ways, that I may know you, so that I may find favor in your sight: and consider that this nation is your people.

He said, My presence will go with you, and I will give you rest.

He said to him, If your presence doesn’t go with me, don’t carry us up from here. For how would people know that I have found favor in your sight, I and your people? Isn’t it in that you go with us, so that we are separated, I and your people, from all the people who are on the surface of the earth?

Yahweh said to Moses, I will do this thing also that you have spoken; for you have found favor in my sight, and I know you by name.

He said, Please show me your glory.

He said, I will make all my goodness pass before you, and will proclaim Yahweh’s name before you. I will be gracious to whom I will be gracious, and will show mercy on whom I will show mercy. He said, You cannot see my face, for man may not see me and live.

Yahweh also said, Behold, there is a place by me, and you shall stand on the rock. It will happen, while my glory passes by, that I will put you in a cleft of the rock, and will cover you with my hand until I have passed by; then I will take away my hand, and you will see my back; but my face shall not be seen.

A famous hymn recalls that rock cleft.

He hideth my soul in the cleft of the rock
That shadows a dry, thirsty land;
He hideth my life with the depths of His love,
And covers me there with His hand,
And covers me there with His hand.

The closer Moses got to God, the closer he wanted to get. Israel was not like Moses, though. They never wanted to get that close to their king.

And Yahweh himself was their king, the one they personally answered to.

(Psalm 29:10)
Yahweh sat enthroned at the Flood. Yes, Yahweh sits as King forever.

Yahweh was the king, and the people could get closer to him, if they wanted to.

Kicking Out the Kings of Canaan

After they escaped from Pharaoh, and after forty years of wandering in the wilderness, Israel finally made it into the Promised Land.

What did they do there?

They got rid of all the Canaanite kings.

Here is a long list of those kings.

(Joshua 12:1-24)
(1) Now these are the kings of the land, whom the children of Israel struck, and possessed their land beyond the Jordan toward the sunrise, from the valley of the Arnon to Mount Hermon, and all the Arabah eastward:
(2) Sihon king of the Amorites, who lived in Heshbon, and ruled from Aroer, which is on the edge of the valley of the Arnon, and the middle of the valley, and half Gilead, even to the river Jabbok, the border of the children of Ammon;
(3) and the Arabah to the sea of Chinneroth, eastward, and to the sea of the Arabah, even the Salt Sea, eastward, the way to Beth Jeshimoth; and on the south, under the slopes of Pisgah:
(4) and the border of Og king of Bashan, of the remnant of the Rephaim, who lived at Ashtaroth and at Edrei,
(5) and ruled in Mount Hermon, and in Salecah, and in all Bashan, to the border of the Geshurites and the Maacathites, and half Gilead, the border of Sihon king of Heshbon.
(6) Moses the servant of Yahweh and the children of Israel struck them. Moses the servant of Yahweh gave it for a possession to the Reubenites, and the Gadites, and the half-tribe of Manasseh.
(7) These are the kings of the land whom Joshua and the children of Israel struck beyond the Jordan westward, from Baal Gad in the valley of Lebanon even to Mount Halak, that goes up to Seir. Joshua gave it to the tribes of Israel for a possession according to their divisions;
(8) in the hill country, and in the lowland, and in the Arabah, and in the slopes, and in the wilderness, and in the South; the Hittite, the Amorite, and the Canaanite, the Perizzite, the Hivite, and the Jebusite:
(9) the king of Jericho, one; the king of Ai, which is beside Bethel, one;
(10) the king of Jerusalem, one; the king of Hebron, one;
(11) the king of Jarmuth, one; the king of Lachish, one;
(12) the king of Eglon, one; the king of Gezer, one;
(13) the king of Debir, one; the king of Geder, one;
(14) the king of Hormah, one; the king of Arad, one;
(15) the king of Libnah, one; the king of Adullam, one;
(16) the king of Makkedah, one; the king of Bethel, one;
(17) the king of Tappuah, one; the king of Hepher, one;
(18) the king of Aphek, one; the king of Lassharon, one;
(19) the king of Madon, one; the king of Hazor, one;
(20) the king of Shimron Meron, one; the king of Achshaph, one;
(21) the king of Taanach, one; the king of Megiddo, one;
(22) the king of Kedesh, one; the king of Jokneam in Carmel, one;
(23) the king of Dor in the height of Dor, one; the king of Goiim in Gilgal, one;
(24) the king of Tirzah, one: all the kings thirty-one.

That’s a long list, thirty-one kings in seven nations. You don’t have to focus on each name, though.

Why not?

Because Yahweh kicked them all out!

They’re not kings any more. King Yahweh got rid of them all, in a thirty-one king kick-out.

Once those Canaanite kings were dethroned, what did Yahweh do?

What would you expect him to do? Maybe put in an Israelite king?

Once those Canaanite kings were dethroned, what did God do in Israel?

He did not give his people a new king.

Repetition is said to be the strongest form of emphasis. Allow me.

When Yahweh brought Israel out of Pharaoh’s Egypt, and then kicked out the thirty-one kings of Canaan, HE DID NOT GIVE THEM A NEW KING. (All caps is also a form of emphasis.)

Nothing could be clearer.

Yahweh did not want his people to have a human king, between him and them.

He did not give them the same type of government they had just escaped in Egypt. He had just rescued them from one Pharaoh and he did not give them another Pharaoh. He did not redo what he had just undone. He did not give them a Cain or a Nimrod. He did not give them the same government that already existed in all the other nations, with a king, or a pharaoh, or a chief, or a sheik, or a fuehrer. God did not give Israel a bureaucratic, bungling, burdensome, imperfect, human royalty.

He just gave them him.

Almost everyone is familiar with Psalm 23, yet most don’t realize just how familiar this love song should make us with God. Bullinger’s Companion Bible shows how this Psalm parallels seven of the compound names of Yahweh, the names that define the name Yahweh and show what he is to his people.

(Psalm 23:1-6)
Yahweh is my shepherd: (Yahweh Roi, Shepherd).
I shall lack nothing. (Yahweh Yireh, Provider)
He makes me lie down in green pastures. He leads me beside still waters. (Yahweh Shalom, Peace).
He restores my soul. He guides me in the paths of righteousness for his name’s sake. (Yahweh Tsidkenu, Righteousness)
Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil, for you are with me. (Yahweh Shammah, Presence). Your rod and your staff, they comfort me.
You prepare a table before me in the presence of my enemies. (Yahweh Nissi, Banner)
You anoint my head with oil. (Yahweh Mekaddishkem, Sanctifier).
My cup runs over.
Surely goodness and loving kindness shall follow me all the days of my life, and I will dwell in Yahweh’s house forever.

People who have a king who is everything they need do not need another king. That’s why God got rid of all the kings of Canaan in the first place and that’s why he did not give Israel another king to take their place.

Or more accurately, to take his place.

This shows the mind of God about go-between kings. Yahweh did not give Israel the same type of government that Egypt had.

Why not?

Because he did not want them to have the same kind of government that Egypt had!

He wants his people to look directly to him. His flock should gather right under his wings.

(Deuteronomy 32:1-4)
Give ear, you heavens, and I will speak.
Let the earth hear the words of my mouth.
My doctrine shall drop as the rain.
My speech shall condense as the dew,
as the small rain on the tender grass,
as the showers on the herb.
For I will proclaim the name of Yahweh.
Ascribe greatness to our God!
The Rock, his work is perfect,
for all his ways are justice:
a God of faithfulness and without iniquity,
just and right is he.

(Verses 7–11)
Remember the days of old.
Consider the years of many generations.
Ask your father, and he will show you;
your elders, and they will tell you.
When the Most High gave to the nations their inheritance,
when he separated the children of men,
he set the bounds of the peoples
according to the number of the children of Israel.
For Yahweh’s portion is his people.
Jacob is the lot of his inheritance.
He found him in a desert land,
in the waste howling wilderness.
He surrounded him.
He cared for him.
He kept him as the apple of his eye.
As an eagle that stirs up her nest,
that flutters over her young,
he spread abroad his wings, he took them,
he bore them on his feathers.

Those wings are still there.

(Psalm 17:6-8)
I have called on you, for you will answer me, God.
Turn your ear to me.
Hear my speech.
Show your marvelous loving kindness,
you who save those who take refuge by your right hand from their enemies.
Keep me as the apple of your eye.
Hide me under the shadow of your wings, …

When the Moabite woman Ruth left her people to go with Naomi to the Holy Land, she sought refuge under the wings of the God of Israel.

(Ruth 2:11-12)
Boaz answered her, It has fully been shown me, all that you have done to your mother-in-law since the death of your husband; and how you have left your father and your mother, and the land of your birth, and have come to a people that you didn’t know before. May Yahweh repay your work, and a full reward be given you from Yahweh, the God of Israel, under whose wings you have come to take refuge.

When David fled from Saul, he winged it.

A poem by David, when he fled from Saul, in the cave.
(Psalm 57:1 )
Be merciful to me, God, be merciful to me,
for my soul takes refuge in you.
Yes, in the shadow of your wings, I will take refuge,
until disaster has passed.

A Psalm by David, when he was in the desert of Judah.
(Psalm 63:1-7)
God, you are my God.
I will earnestly seek you.
My soul thirsts for you.
My flesh longs for you,
in a dry and weary land, where there is no water.
So I have seen you in the sanctuary,
watching your power and your glory.
Because your loving kindness is better than life,
my lips shall praise you.
So I will bless you while I live.
I will lift up my hands in your name.
My soul shall be satisfied as with the richest food.
My mouth shall praise you with joyful lips,
when I remember you on my bed,
and think about you in the night watches.
For you have been my help.
I will rejoice in the shadow of your wings.

Anyone can choose to be covered with those faithful feathers.

(Psalm 91:1-7)
He who dwells in the secret place of the Most High
will rest in the shadow of the Almighty.
I will say of Yahweh, He is my refuge and my fortress;
my God, in whom I trust.
For he will deliver you from the snare of the fowler,
and from the deadly pestilence.
He will cover you with his feathers.
Under his wings you will take refuge.
His faithfulness is your shield and rampart.
You shall not be afraid of the terror by night,
nor of the arrow that flies by day;
nor of the pestilence that walks in darkness,
nor of the destruction that wastes at noonday.
A thousand may fall at your side,
and ten thousand at your right hand;
but it will not come near you.

Anyone can choose not to.

(Matt 23:37)
Jerusalem, Jerusalem, who kills the prophets, and stones those who are sent to her! How often I would have gathered your children together, even as a hen gathers her chicks under her wings, and you would not!

No wonder Yahweh kicked out the 31 kings of Canaan. Those kings didn’t have wings!
This is the most important thing to understand about why God does not give his people a go-between government. You don’t need one.

Yahweh himself was Israel’s king. He was their Shepherd, Provider, Peace-giver, Righteousness, Presence, Banner, and Sanctifier. And he was always just right over there, for those who would look up and see.

When you follow another government between you and God —

You then have something between you and God.

And it’s harder to huddle under his wings when there’s something else always getting in the way.

Chapter 2 – King Cain and the Floating Pharaoh

The End Time Church: from the Cathedrals to the Catacombs

By Dan L. White

Copyright ©2016 by Dan L. White, all rights reserved.

Scripture quotations are from the World English Bible (WEB) which is in the public domain.

Chapter 2
King Cain and the Floating Pharaoh

Adam and Cain

Why didn’t God make Adam king?

That seems like a very logical move for God to make. Adam was everybody’s father, grandfather, great-grandfather, or great-great-etc. Even Eve came from Adam. If Adam had been king, couldn’t he have kept those pre-Flood perverts a bit more in line – for their own good? Wouldn’t a strong king with firm control over the people have prevented them from falling prey to their own evil natures?

The pre-flood people really got out of control. Couldn’t a strong king have controlled them? If God had made Adam king, wouldn’t that have protected the flock?

Strangely enough, though, the Bible never states that God made Adam king.

Who was made a king?

(Genesis 4:11-17)
Now you are cursed because of the ground, which has opened its mouth to receive your brother’s blood from your hand. From now on, when you till the ground, it won’t yield its strength to you. You shall be a fugitive and a wanderer in the earth.”

Cain said to Yahweh, “My punishment is greater than I can bear. Behold, you have driven me out this day from the surface of the ground. I will be hidden from your face, and I will be a fugitive and a wanderer in the earth. It will happen that whoever finds me will kill me.”
Yahweh said to him, “Therefore whoever slays Cain, vengeance will be taken on him sevenfold.”

Yahweh appointed a sign for Cain, lest any finding him should strike him. Cain went out from Yahweh’s presence, and lived in the land of Nod, east of Eden. Cain knew his wife. She conceived, and gave birth to Enoch. He built a city, and called the name of the city, after the name of his son, Enoch.

When Cain murdered Abel, Cain was told that he would be a wanderer in the earth. Apparently Cain didn’t want to wander, so he built a city and he named it after his son.

Cain built the city. Cain named the city. Therefore Cain was the ruler, or king, of that city. God didn’t make Cain king. Cain did.

King Cain.

Noah and Nimrod

After the great deluge, why didn’t God anoint Noah as king of the earth?

Again, he was the logical human choice. Noah was everybody’s patriarch, except for his wife and his sons’ wives. If Noah had been king of the world, fighting sin and eradicating evil, wouldn’t the dried out planet have been a much better place? Wouldn’t a strong king like Noah have protected the post-flood people from repeating the pre-flood mistakes?

Even though they knew about the great flood, the post-flood people soon got out of control. Didn’t they need a controlling king to control them? Wouldn’t King Noah have protected the flock?

But the Bible does not state that God made Noah king. It does state that Noah was a vintner, who made a potent vintage.

(Genesis 9:20-21)
Noah began to be a farmer, and planted a vineyard. He drank of the wine and got drunk.

Noah was not a king. He was just a farmer.

Who was made king after the Flood?

(Genesis 10:8-12)
Cush became the father of Nimrod. He began to be a mighty one in the earth. He was a mighty hunter before Yahweh. Therefore it is said, “Like Nimrod, a mighty hunter before Yahweh.” The beginning of his kingdom was Babel, Erech, Accad, and Calneh, in the land of Shinar. Out of that land he went forth into Assyria, and built Nineveh, Rehoboth Ir, Calah, and Resen between Nineveh and Calah (the same is the great city).

Nimrod built not just one city, as Cain did, but he built Babel, Erech, Accad, Calneh, and that was just the beginning of his kingdom. Then he expanded further and built Nineveh, Rehoboth, Calah and Resen. Nimrod was not just king of a city. He was an emperor, like Alexander the Great, Caesar Augustus, or Charlemagne.

Adam Clarke’s Commentary on the Bible describes this guy Nimrod.

His name Nimrod comes from marad, he rebelled; and the Targum, on 1Ch 1:10, says: Nimrod began to be a mighty man in sin, a murderer of innocent men, and a rebel before the Lord.

The Jerusalem Targum says: He was mighty in hunting (or in prey) and in sin before God, for he was a hunter of the children of men in their languages; and he said unto them, Depart from the religion of Shem, and cleave to the institutes of Nimrod.

The Targum of Jonathan ben Uzziel says: From the foundation of the world none was ever found like Nimrod, powerful in hunting, and in rebellions against the Lord.

The Syriac calls him a warlike giant.

The word tsayid, which we render hunter, signifies prey; and is applied in the Scriptures to the hunting of men by persecution, oppression, and tyranny. Hence it is likely that Nimrod, having acquired power, used it in tyranny and oppression; and by rapine and violence founded that domination which was the first distinguished by the name of a kingdom on the face of the earth. How many kingdoms have been founded in the same way, in various ages and nations from that time to the present! From the Nimrods of the earth, God deliver the world!

Notice Clarke’s emphatic statement: From the Nimrods of the earth, God deliver the world!

That hasn’t happened yet.

Nimrod was Noah’s great-grandson, and little Nimmy ruled over a far reaching empire, eight of the biggest cities in the world, including Babel. Therefore King Nimrod controlled a lot of people’s lives, successfully keeping them in line.

His line.

That strong king controlled the people by killing the ones who got out of control.

Noah, the righteous man, ruled over only eight or ten acres of grapes, more or less, while Nimrod ruled over eight great cities. Noah was a good guy; Nimrod was a bad guy. But, just as with Adam and Cain, the good guy was not a human king and the bad guy was.

We see, then, right at the very beginning of the Bible, two very different types of government –

One from Yahweh, the God of Adam and Noah;

And one from Satan, the god of Cain and Nimrod.

The worldly kings were not appointed by Yahweh. They were allowed by him, but they were not appointed by him. And those worldly kings popped up —

All over the world.

For example, the plain of Sodom, the area around the Dead Sea before it became desolate, was filled with little human dictators.

(Genesis 14:1-2)
It happened in the days of Amraphel, king of Shinar, Arioch, king of Ellasar, Chedorlaomer, king of Elam, and Tidal, king of Goiim, that they made war with Bera, king of Sodom, and with Birsha, king of Gomorrah, Shinab, king of Admah, and Shemeber, king of Zeboiim, and the king of Bela (the same is Zoar).

That’s a lot of kings just in the small area around Sodom and Gomorrah. Even though God didn’t appoint them, human kings — or pharaohs or emperors or caesars or fuehrer or chiefs or sheiks or whatever you want to call someone who controls someone else’s life — appeared all over the world.

Practically everybody in the world had some king besides God running his life.

Abraham the Wanderer

Yahweh called Abraham out of Ur, a prominent city known for its worship of the moon goddess.

(Genesis 12:1-3)
Now Yahweh said to Abram, “Get out of your country, and from your relatives, and from your father’s house, to the land that I will show you. I will make of you a great nation. I will bless you and make your name great. You will be a blessing. I will bless those who bless you, and I will curse him who curses you. In you will all of the families of the earth be blessed.”

Yahweh told Abraham to go to the Promised Land. Abraham went, but when he got there, God did not make him a king. Actually, Abe lived his life as a foreigner in the very land that was promised to him.

(Hebrews 11:8-9)
By faith, Abraham, when he was called, obeyed to go out to the place which he was to receive for an inheritance. He went out, not knowing where he went. By faith, he lived as an alien in the land of promise, as in a land not his own, dwelling in tents, with Isaac and Jacob, the heirs with him of the same promise.

Instead of Abraham becoming a king when he got to the Promised Land, his descendants later became slaves of a king – the pharaoh of Egypt. Abraham also had some personal experience with a pharaoh.

(Genesis 12:10-13)
There was a famine in the land. Abram went down into Egypt to live as a foreigner there, for the famine was severe in the land. It happened, when he had come near to enter Egypt, that he said to Sarai his wife, “See now, I know that you are a beautiful woman to look at. It will happen, when the Egyptians will see you, that they will say, ‘This is his wife.’ They will kill me, but they will save you alive. Please say that you are my sister, that it may be well with me for your sake, and that my soul may live because of you.”

Pharaoh, the king, had the power of life and death over his people. He could choose to kill people; he could choose to let them live. That is how kings get and keep power. If you don’t bow your head to the king, he’ll break your neck.

When a king has the power of life and death, that puts him in the place of God himself. Furthermore, these rulers — of whatever type — get between you and God.

The Ten Commandments, The Prince of Egypt, and Exodus: Gods and Kings
All Missed the Point

After Israel was enslaved by Pharaoh, Moses led them out of Egypt. The old movie about that event, The Ten Commandments, contained a fundamental error. The more modern animation The Prince of Egypt and the special effects showcase Exodus: Gods and Kings repeated the same error.

This was a monumental error reflecting human understanding of God.

Or rather – human misunderstanding of God.

The error was that these movies pictured the battle in Egypt as being between Pharaoh and Moses. The battle was actually between the two kings – Pharaoh and Yahweh.

Yahweh explained that to Moses, at the burning bush.

Reading from Exodus 3:11-20 —

Moses said to God, “Who am I, that I should go to Pharaoh, and that I should bring forth the children of Israel out of Egypt?”

Moses was right. Who was he to go to the king of Egypt?

He [God] said, “Certainly I will be with you. This will be the token to you, that I have sent you: when you have brought forth the people out of Egypt, you shall serve God on this mountain.”

Moses said to God, “Behold, when I come to the children of Israel, and tell them, ‘The God of your fathers has sent me to you;’ and they ask me, ‘What is his name?’ What should I tell them?”

God said to Moses, “I AM WHO I AM,” and he said, “You shall tell the children of Israel this: ‘I AM has sent me to you.’

Moses was not the king. He was merely the one sent by the king.

“God said moreover to Moses, “You shall tell the children of Israel this, ‘Yahweh, the God of your fathers, the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob, has sent me to you.’ This is my name forever, and this is my memorial to all generations. Go, and gather the elders of Israel together, and tell them, ‘Yahweh, the God of your fathers, the God of Abraham, of Isaac, and of Jacob, has appeared to me, saying, “I have surely visited you, and seen that which is done to you in Egypt; and I have said, I will bring you up out of the affliction of Egypt to the land of the Canaanite, the Hittite, the Amorite, the Perizzite, the Hivite, and the Jebusite, to a land flowing with milk and honey.” ‘

They will listen to your voice, and you shall come, you and the elders of Israel, to the king of Egypt, and you shall tell him, ‘Yahweh, the God of the Hebrews, has met with us. Now please let us go three days’ journey into the wilderness, that we may sacrifice to Yahweh, our God.’ I know that the king of Egypt won’t give you permission to go, no, not by a mighty hand. I will put forth my hand and strike Egypt with all my wonders which I will do in its midst, and after that he will let you go.

The king of Egypt said Israel could not leave. The King of Creation said Israel could leave.

The battle was on.

Moses was used to lead Israel out of Egypt and out of Pharaoh’s control, but, again, Moses was not the king. Moses was a judge and a prophet.

(Exodus 18:13-16)
It happened on the next day, that Moses sat to judge the people, and the people stood around Moses from the morning to the evening. When Moses’ father-in-law saw all that he did to the people, he said, “What is this thing that you do for the people? Why do you sit alone, and all the people stand around you from morning to evening?” Moses said to his father-in-law, “Because the people come to me to inquire of God. When they have a matter, they come to me, and I judge between a man and his neighbor, and I make them know the statutes of God, and his laws.”

Moses judged cases according to God’s laws, and taught Israel those laws. A king makes the law. It was God who made the law, not Moses. Moses and his brother Aaron were emissaries of the king, two ambassadors who stood before the king of Egypt and delivered messages from the King of Creation.

The real battle in Egypt, then, was not between Moses and Pharaoh, but between Pharaoh and Yahweh. Those two kings — the substitute king and the real king — battled to see who would rule over Israel.

Actually, there were ten battles in that war, which were the ten plagues on Egypt. After each plague, Pharaoh hardened his heart and again rose up against Yahweh.

However –

After the tenth plague when his firstborn son died, Pharaoh let Israel go. Once more he changed his mind and pursued Israel into the sea, where he and his army were flushed down the royal toilet, as the old movie The Ten Commandments so graphically pictured.

So, even though God didn’t appoint them, the earth was filled with nasty Nimrods, kinky little kings, and puffed up pharaohs, all getting between people and their Creator. The exodus from Egypt was an epoch battle between the two greatest kings of the time, Pharaoh and Yahweh –

And Yahweh won.

(Psalms 24:1-10)
The earth is Yahweh’s, with its fullness;
the world, and those who dwell therein.
For he has founded it on the seas,
and established it on the floods.

Who may ascend to Yahweh’s hill?
Who may stand in his holy place?
He who has clean hands and a pure heart;
who has not lifted up his soul to falsehood,
and has not sworn deceitfully.

He shall receive a blessing from Yahweh,
righteousness from the God of his salvation.
This is the generation of those who seek Him,
who seek your face–even Jacob. Selah.

Lift up your heads, you gates!
Be lifted up, you everlasting doors,
and the King of glory will come in.
Who is the King of glory?

Yahweh strong and mighty,
Yahweh mighty in battle.
Lift up your heads, you gates;
yes, lift them up, you everlasting doors,
and the King of glory will come in.

Who is this King of glory?
Yahweh of Armies is the King of glory! Selah.

Who is the king of glory?

Yahweh. Not Pharaoh and not any other king. Yahweh personally led his people out of Egypt. He was their direct ruler, without any other in-between king getting in the way.

Chapter 1 – What Will the Church do for Milk?

The End Time Church – from the Cathedrals to the Catacombs

By Dan L. White

Copyright ©2016 by Dan L. White, all rights reserved.

Scripture quotations are from the World English Bible (WEB) in the public domain.

Chapter 1
What Will the Church do for Milk?

When people think of the religion of Christ, they usually think of a church. A church is usually a big organization with one or more big buildings. Both the big organization and its big buildings are very visible; the bigger the church and the bigger the buildings, the better, it is assumed. They — the organization and the buildings — are the church. It is widely believed that this, or at least some part of this, is the church that Christ himself began and leads.

In recent times, a new movement has arisen. That movement is Messianic Judaism. They are not the church. They are more likely the synagogue. As their name indicates, they carry with them into their synagogues much Judaism that did not come from the Bible, but comes from what Judaism added to the Bible. Messianics believe that this form of religion is closer to the religion that Christ began, but Judaism was the one institutional religion that most opposed Christ in his time on earth. Messianic Judaism has the problem that the Messiah and Judaism are inherently opposed.

In very recent times, another movement has exploded onto the world scene. This is a very old movement, dating back at least to the time of Christ himself. Up until recently, though, it was not so visible and volatile; in fact, it had been somewhat cloaked for nearly two millennia.

That is the anti-Christ movement.

The very term anti-Christ creates an emotional surge in everyone in the western world who hears it. The term anti-Christ most simply means someone who is against Christ.

John was the personal buddy of Christ. At the Messiah’s last Passover, One of his disciples, whom Yeshua loved, was at the table, leaning against Yeshua’s breast, (John 13:23). That disciple was John and John said that even in his lifetime many antichrists had arisen.

Little children, these are the end times, and as you heard that the Antichrist is coming, even now many antichrists have arisen. By this we know that it is the final hour. (1 John 2:18)

Now, in our lifetime also, many antichrists have arisen. That is, there are many people who are openly and adamantly against Christ.

First, this movement took the form of attacking what were called traditional values. They did not directly attack Christ. They attacked Christian values, which is what traditional values mostly were. The movement advanced the cause of divorce, women’s lib, free sex, abortion and homosexuality.

Next, the anti-Christ movement began personally attacking people who expressed opposition to their anti-Christ religious values.

The Duggar family of Arkansas became famous for their television show 19 Duggars and Counting. When Mrs. Duggar was involved in a political battle in Arkansas to overturn an anti-Christ pro-homosexual law, tens of thousands of Americans quickly signed a petition demanding that the television network cancel their show. “The Duggars have been using their fame to promote discrimination, hate, and fear-mongering against gays and transgendered people,” the petition said. “You need to take a stand on the side of justice and cancel their show.” The language often used against this upstanding Christian lady and family was the most vulgar and abusive possible. Then when one of the members of that family ran into a moral failing, the left wing roundly condemned him and the whole family because he was simply behaving as the left wing does and following their morals.

A similar attack had taken place earlier against the Duck Dynasty TV show and the Robertson family, because of their Christian views. The attackers demanded that the television network cancel their show. At first, the network yielded to those attacks, but after a surge of support for the family, reversed course.

Notice that in these cases, the attackers weren’t just trying to change the Christians’ opinions. They were trying to destroy their livelihoods.

Brendan Eich co-founded the Mozilla company, famous for the Firefox web browser. Early in 2014 he was promoted to CEO of the firm. After only one week, he was forced out of his job because in 2008, six years earlier, he had donated $1,000 to oppose gay marriage in California. He held the same view that Barack Obama espoused at that time, yet Eich’s expression of his beliefs cost him his job. The same people did not demand that Obama quit his job.

Still later, the Atlanta, Georgia fire chief was fired from his position because he wrote a book stating his Christian views. Kelvin Cochran wrote a 160 page book, and in one half of one page of that book he wrote against homosexuality. That one-half page cost him his whole job.

This anti-Christ movement attacked traditional values and then attacked conservative Christians, without admitting the underlying motive. Now, however, the anti-Christ movement has progressed – or regressed – to the point where they blatantly attack Christ himself.

One such example is the movie The God Who Wasn’t There, a documentary that Newsweek says “irreverently lays out the case that Jesus Christ never existed.”1

Another example is a book that was publicized by ABC on Good Morning America like this.

Jesus Christ, Wife Mary Magdalene Had 2 Kids, New Book Claims – A new book based on interpretations of ancient texts features an explosive claim: Jesus Christ married Mary Magdalene, and the couple had two children.2

And a third example of the open anti-Christ movement is when Lady Gaga, who some would hesitate to call a lady at all, had a hit song named “Judas,” about the disciple who betrayed Christ to death, that included these lyrics.3

I’m in love with Judas
When he comes to me I am ready
I’ll wash his feet with my hair if he needs
Forgive him when his tongue lies through his brain
Even after three times he betrays me
I’m just a Holy Fool, oh baby he’s so cruel
But I’m still in love with Judas, baby.4

Wikipedia, the community created ‘encyclopedia,’ says that “Judas” received generally positive reviews from most music critics. The song reached the top ten of the charts in most major music markets, and also reached the top of the charts in South Korea. Gaga has performed “Judas” on a number of television shows, including The Graham Norton Show, Saturday Night Live, Good Morning America ’s “Summer Concert Series”, the French X Factor as well as on The Ellen DeGeneres Show.

So not only is Lady Gaga against Christ, but their side also includes Good Morning America and The Ellen DeGeneres Show. As pointed out, the song “Judas” reached the top ten in most countries with pop music markets, so that puts an awful lot of people in those countries on Judas’s side and against Christ.

Overturning traditional values was not the ultimate goal of the ‘liberals.’ Getting rid of all conservative Christians was not the ultimate goal. The ultimate goal of these people and this movement is to attack Christ himself.

There are longstanding opponents of the Messiah. Judaism and Islam bitterly oppose each other, but they are together in being against Christ. The religions of the east have always been opponents of the risen Son of God and His Father, who accept no other gods, including none of theirs. Now, however, areas that were for Christ, to whatever degree, have become the core of the anti-Christ movement. This movement includes the whole Democratic Party in America, and much of Britain and Europe, Canada and Australia, and the whole of Scandinavia. They oppose what Christ taught, they oppose what he is, they oppose anyone who is his.

They are anti-Christ – against Christ.

However, the term anti-Christ also goes beyond meaning just anyone who is against Christ, and specifically means one unique individual at the very end time. As John said, the Antichrist is coming.

Paul described this end time figure like this.

Let no one deceive you in any way. For it will not be, unless the departure comes first, and the man of sin is revealed, the son of destruction, he who opposes and exalts himself against all that is called God or that is worshiped; so that he sits as God in the temple of God, setting himself up as God. (2 Thessalonians 2:3-4)

He opposes God, exalts himself as God, sits in the temple of God and sets himself up as God.

The Antichrist.

Just as today’s anti-Christs attack Christ’s followers, so the Antichrist will do the same, only much, much more.

It was given to him to make war with the saints, and to overcome them. Authority over every tribe, people, language, and nation was given to him. All who dwell on the earth will worship him, everyone whose name has not been written from the foundation of the world in the book of life of the Lamb who has been killed.

It was given to him to give breath to it, to the image of the beast, that the image of the beast should both speak, and cause as many as wouldn’t worship the image of the beast to be killed. He causes all, the small and the great, the rich and the poor, and the free and the slave, to be given marks on their right hands, or on their foreheads; and that no one would be able to buy or to sell, unless he has that mark, the name of the beast or the number of his name. (Revelation 13:7-10, 13-17 WEB (R)

This power will be the ultimate socialist-communist-fascist government, with authority over every person on earth. He or she will require that all those under his or her rule, which is every person on earth, to worship him or her. They must be distinctly marked as his or her worshiper, and no one will be able to even buy a quart of milk without that mark.

The purpose of the anti-Christ is to control the actions of everyone on earth, so they will worship him or her. God allows this, to see which side we are on and who we will worship.

So –

What will your church or messianic synagogue, with its big building and big organization, be doing during this time?

If no one can buy or sell anything without government approval, how will a church corporation stay in business? How will they operate, when the anti-Christ sits in the temple of God, as God, requires every individual to worship him — and requires all corporations to obey him?

If they can’t collect funds or spend money on buildings and salaries or even buy a carton of milk without official Anti-Christ permission, what will the big church corporation do for milk?

Which is to say —

When Christ returns, and wars against the worldwide government of the Antichrist, which side will the big churches be on?

Endnotes

1. The God Who Wasn’t There, Beyond Belief Media Company, Los Angeles, CA, http://www.thegodmovie.com.
2. ABC News, November 10, 2014, http://abcnews.go.com/International/jesus-christ-wife-mary-magdalene-kids-book-claims/story?id=26805418.
3. “Judas (Lady Gaga song),” 2011, Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judas_%28Lady_Gaga_song%29.
4. “Judas,” Born This Way, http://www.metrolyrics.com/judas-lyrics-lady-gaga.html.

Succeeding short chapters are forth coming.