Sunday, March 29, 2009

Meditations on Jude - Part 1

The pastor of my church, Dave Roberson, teaches people to meditate on the Word by reading one book at a time, over and over, either out loud, or while praying in tongues. He recommends starting with one of the shorter books in the New Testament, such as 1 John.

I started with Jude. I also began writing down my observations and things I have learned. Here are some of the first entries:

22 SEP 08

At first, you might think that the theme of Jude's letter is to contrast ungodliness with godliness. But his primary message is the purity of the Church.
In verse 3, he says he was going to write concerning salvation, but he felt the need to encourage them to contend for the faith. You might think he's talking about evangelism, contending for the faith with non-believers. But in verse 4, he mentions the ungodly who have snuck into the Church, and they, by perverting the Good News into licentiousness, are subverting the Church (vs. 4, 12, 19). if such people had ever believed in the Good News, they no longer believed it, and by perverting it, they have denied Christ. These are the ones Jude tells us to contend with.

23 SEP 08
The reason for Jude's exhortation to contend for the faith is seen in vs. 5 - 6. He reminds the people of those who perished in the wilderness due to their unbelief despite seeing God deliver them from Egypt by the miracles He performed. Jude also points out that the angels are also subject to God's judgment.
Jude's message wasn't intended to terrorize the people, but to illustrate the seriousness of the faith.

25 SEP 08
Verse 8 points to an important influence on behavior. In speaking about the ungodly men who had crept into the Church to corrupt it, Jude says they defile the flesh, reject authority, and revile angelic majesties, and they do this by dreaming!
What is a dream? A dream is an image that at the time it is seen, it is not real.
A dream can become real, or it can remain just a dream. Dreams become real either through self-effort or answered prayer.
A dream can symbolize something inside you: some issue you are dealing with, or some desire you have.
Dreams, especially the ones Jude is talking about, are not necessarily the images you see when you sleep. These dreams are images that respent desires, goals, and purposes. They are images that people create as a guide for their behavior.
The good news about this is, even as evil men guide their behavior by their dreams, godly men can guide their behavior by their dreams.
For Christians, the fulfillment of a dream will involve both action and faith. The action is not self-effort based on the flesh or one's own capabities. The action begins with faith, and is done in faith.

27 SEP 08
We hear much about praying in the Holy Spirit and building ourselves up on our most holy faith. And we also hear about keeping ourselves in the love of God. (vs. 20 and 21)
What we might not see is that the two are connected. You pray in the Spirit (in tongues) to build yourself up on your faith, so that you can remain in God's love.
As we remain in God's love, we wait for the mercy of Jesus Christ unto eternal life. And as we wait for mercy in God's love, we show mercy to those in need - doubters and those headed for eternal fire (vs. 23 - 24) (v. 7)

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