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WE FORGET WHAT GOD HAS TOLD
US
"Are you not in error
because you do not know the Scriptures
or the
power of God?@ - Mark 12:24
Before we can realistically begin to conserve our environment and restore
the damage to it, we must have a proper understanding of it. However, most of
those involved in these efforts consider the idea of God forming the creation
out of nothing to be preposterous. Matter
and energy in the universe are theorized to have existed from eternity and
extend into eternity. The idea that
"In the beginning, God created the
heavens and the earth" (Gen.
1:1), space and matter, is unworkable to them.
Such historic acts of divine intervention cannot be proven or measured
with any of the tools that modern man has at his disposal.
It requires faith that what God has said is true.
Because of this modern science has assumed God does not exist, or at
least that he is unable to act in any way to influence the universe.
A theory is only as good as its initial assumptions. If God was an active force in the universe, any theory used
to reconstruct what occurred in the past which was limited to only scientific
observations of processes we can see today would be questionable. Without that
initial assumption there would be no technical basis for saying that nature has
always behaved in the manner that we measure it today.
If we assume that what we see today is all that ever existed, we will
have a false confidence that we understand more than we actually do.
Was the universe "created" in the Big Bang?
Is the earth really billions of years old?
Is nature progressively advancing or is it in decline from its original
advanced state because of the curse? Has
"survival of the fittest" always been a part of nature?
Have people always lived for less than a century?
Late in the First Century, the Apostle Peter was already warning about
such logic. Knowing he was soon to
die, he expressed his concern to those who had been under his care as a teacher:
"I will always remind you of these
things, even though you know them ... I think it is right to refresh your memory
... I will make every effort to see that after my departure you will always be
able to remember these things."
(2 Pet. 1:12-15)
What things was he so concerned we would forget?
"We did not follow cleverly
invented stories when we told you about the power and coming of our Lord Jesus
Christ, but we were eyewitnesses."
(2 Pet. 1:16) But in the future when these eyewitnesses are gone: "there
will be false teachers among you. They
will secretly introduce destructive heresies, even denying the sovereign God ...
Many will follow their shameful ways and will bring the way of truth into
disrepute. ... these teachers will exploit you with stories they have made up." (2 Pet 2:1-3)
Many people are trying to live a life on the fence.
They recognize that God created the world, but rather than accepting
God's explanation of how he created it, they accept whatever people tell them
and imagine the hand of God was somehow involved in it.
What these well-meaning people consider to be merely differences of
perspective concerning the origins of man, Peter warned against here with strong
language. These are "destructive
heresies" that will allow people to "exploit you."
What heresies does he foresee which will be "denying the sovereign God" and undermining belief in "the
way of truth"?
Peter cautions us that these teachers will tell people that God did not
accurately tell Moses the manner that He created the world.
Neither will they teach that Jesus will return to judge his creation.
Instead these facts would be replaced by imaginative theories about the
past. Peter continued: "you
must understand that in the last days scoffers will come ... They will say, '...
Ever since our fathers died, everything goes on as it has since the beginning of
creation.' But they deliberately
forget that long ago by God's word the heavens existed and the earth was formed". (2 Pet.
3:3-5)
Inspired by the Holy Spirit, Peter warned that people would voluntarily
choose to ignore God's version of how the universe was created.
Instead, by using what they can see with their own eyes, men would
disregard such a historical record and instead trust their own logic, "scoffing
and following their own evil desires." (2 Pet. 3:3)
Here we have Peter, a man who was a handpicked student of Jesus, now
writing one last letter to his own students to remind them about the dangers
ahead. What single issue does he
focus on? He tells them to remember
that God created the world just as the Scriptures declare, and to not believe
those who will ridicule that point of view.
Peter was looking ahead to the mind-set of our day and sending a warning
which the Bible has preserved for us.
In their daily lives, people don't act as though they believe in the
inspiration and authority of the Bible. This
even includes many whose lives have been changed by their belief in the
resurrection of Christ. As a
people, we generally refuse to believe the testimony of others concerning what
God has done to prove himself in the past.
We do not want to hear the first-hand accounts that the prophets and
apostles have recorded for us. We
each want to see the parting of the Red Sea and the wounds in his hands and feet
for ourselves before we will trust him. Yet,
if we continually demand that God prove himself, then there would be no need for
faith. We forget that the Bible
repeatedly tells us, "The righteous
will live by faith" (Hab. 2:4 & Rom. 1:17) and Jesus said, "blessed are
those who have not seen and yet have believed." (John 20:29)
By Maurice Hamel
16B122900
www.healingtheland.org
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