Provoke to Love
Provoking someone isn't a good thing is it?
When we hear the term provoke we automatically associate it with an antagonistic action.
'Don't provoke me!'
'Don't provoke your sister!'
'Stop provoking your brother!'
'He provoked her, that's why she did what she did.'
'Because you were provoked we'll take that into consideration while discussing your situation.'
'The dog was provoked, that's why he bit her.'
Provocation.
provoke (pre-vok´) verb, transitive
provoked, provoking, provokes
1. To incite to anger or resentment.
2. To stir to action or feeling.
3. To give rise to; evoke: provoke laughter.
4. To bring about deliberately; induce: provoke a fight.
We tend to focus on the inciting to anger and resentment, inducing a negative action when we think of the word provoke.
Provoking also means stirring to action- or feeling, to give rise to; not necessarily bad things in and of themselves.
Read this...
Hebrews
{10:24} 'And let us consider one another to provoke unto love and to good works'
Provoke unto love and to good works.
Provoke unto love.
Provoke to good works.
Another action word, yes? Provoke.
We provoke someone to anger by doing something to upset them, right? A brother can tease a sister, a sister tease a brother and they're provoking them to anger, teasing to get a response of anger. How often do we see someone provoking another to love? It's there, we just don't call it provoking. Helping another is provoking them to love isn't it? Being kind provokes others to kindness, or it can. Provoking to love.
How can *you* provoke someone to love?
How can you provoke someone to good works?
Hebrews
{10:24} 'And let us consider one another to provoke unto love and to good works'
{10:25} Not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together, as the manner of some is but exhorting one another and so much the more, as ye see the day approaching'
Exhorting one another.
We have to get together, we have to exhort one another-
exhort (îg-zôrt´) verb
exhorted, exhorting, exhorts verb, transitive
To urge by strong, often stirring argument, admonition, advice, or appeal
We have to urge each other, admonish one another, appeal to each other.
{10:24} 'And let us consider one another to provoke unto love and to good works'
We need to get together and exhort one another- we have to provoke one another unto love and to good works.
Do you see?
This provoking one another to love and to good works, getting together to do so is necessary.
We have to help each other.
When we get together we have to do it with the purpose of provoking love and good works.
May God help us to do this because it's so needed.
It's so easy to provoke to anger, and yet provoking to love is a whole other story.
I sit here and think - 'How can I provoke someone to love?' And I come up short. We're not provoking to 'be in love' or to 'love us romantically', but love in the way God intended. The loving of our fellow man, the loving others as we would be loved by them is the provoking we are to do. I can easily come up with ways to provoke to anger, and yet to provoke to love?
Provoking emotions.
Or is it more than provoking emotions?
Love isn't just an emotion in this way is it? We're not just provoking a 'good' feeling. Love goes beyond that starry-eyed, that prideful, that self-absorption type of love we get caught up in. It goes beyond the 'I love you because you're family', it's a way of life. When Jesus told us to love them that hate us, to love our enemies did he mean for us to get all gushy inside over them, or feel happy about them? God loves us and we know how exact His love can be. God loves us in all He does, in His admonitions, in His guidance, in His chastising, it's all love. We can punish and still love, love does mean not recognizing wrong. Turn the other cheek, do good to those who use you, these are actions-
Matthew {5:44} 'But I say unto you, Love your enemies, bless them that curse you, do good to them that hate you, and pray for them which despitefully use you, and persecute you'
Love, bless, do good, pray...
All actions- the looking beyond the feeling. We treat those we love with respect, we care for them and want what is best for them. We can bless someone without having overwhelming affectionate feelings for them. Loving our enemies doesn't mean liking what they do that makes them our enemies, the evil they do rightfully should sadden us. Sadden us more than anything because of the sin involve, the lack of love involve. Us choosing to do good to those who hate us, praying for those who use us despitefully, are choices we make. We're not going gush over them, and force *feelings* of love. We're going to treat them as we would be treated, treat them as God would treat them in love and forgiveness, and let God Himself mete out the punishment they deserve. We're not going to let any of those who are sinful towards us control our actions and work sin in us, or rather we shouldn't. When we choose to hate, to despise, to revile others in return for the way they treat us we are just as bad as they are in what they do to us. We try to justify it by saying they did it first but that's not something that can be justified. Sinning because we've been sinned upon. What a vicious cycle that would be, vicious and ultimately deadly.
Love is a choice, it doesn't have to be an emotion.
We choose loving ways, loving actions, loving deeds not out of feeling but out of a sense of right doing, of doing what is right, what is good; which is what God would have us do.
The ONLY way for us to find any sort of contentment on earth is in Christ, not others, not in our lives here and now. Love is a choice, a choice we make all the time in all our actions.
Provoking to love.
If we are loving we provoke others to love, right? They can choose to be unloving, but as long as we choose to love and be loving in our actions we call upon God to be loving through us and we can hope that the love we show through Christ is a love that will provoke others to the same, not to be like us, oh nooooo, but to be like God.
God help us all to let Him work in us, help us to provoke to love not to anger or hate, not to sin.
By the grace and mercy of Jesus.
Amen.
Revelation 14
Excerpts from--
Daniel and the Revelation by Uriah Smith
Revelation Chapter XIV
God's Final Warning to a Wicked World
Verse 1 And I looked, and, lo, a Lamb stood on the mount Sion, and with Him an hundred forty and four thousand, having His Father's name written in their foreheads. 2 And I heard a voice from heaven, as the voice of many waters, and as the voice of a great thunder: and I heard the voice of harpers harping with their harps: 3 And they sung as it were a new song before the throne, and before the four beasts, and the elders: and no man could learn that song but the hundred and forty and four thousand, which were redeemed from the earth. 4 These are they which were not defiled with women; for they are virgins. These are they which follow the Lamb whithersoever he goeth. These were redeemed from among men, being the first fruits unto God and to the Lamb. 5 And in their mouth was found no guile: for they are without fault before the throne of God.
*
A wonderful feature of the prophetic word is that the people of God are never brought into positions of trial and difficulty, and there abandoned. After taking them into scenes of danger, the voice of prophecy does not leave them there to guess their fate, in doubt, perhaps despair, as to the final result. Rather, it takes them through to the end, and reveals the final triumph of the faithful.
The first five verses of Revelation 14 are an example of this. The thirteenth chapter closed with a view of the people of God, a small and apparently weak and defenseless company, in deadly conflict with the mightiest powers of earth which the dragon is able to muster to his service. A decree is passed, backed up by the supreme power of the land, that they shall worship the image and receive the mark, under pain of death if they refuse to comply. What can the people of God do in such a conflict and in such an extremity? What will become of them? Glance forward with the apostle to the very next scene in the unfolding drama, and what do we behold?--The same company standing on Mount Zion with the Lamb, a victorious company, playing on symphonic harps in the court of heaven. Thus are we assured that when the time of our conflict with the powers of darkness comes, deliverance is not only certain, but will immediately be brought to the people of God.
The 144,000--
We believe that the 144,000 here seen on Mount Zion are the saints who were in Revelation 13 brought to view as objects of the wrath of the beast and his image.
They are identical with those sealed, as described in Revelation 7, who have already been shown to be the righteous who are alive at the second coming of Christ.
They are "redeemed from among men" (verse 4), an expression which can be applicable only to those who are translated from among the living. Paul labored, if by any means he might attain to the resurrection from among the dead. (Philippians 3: 11.) This is the hope of those who sleep in Jesus--a resurrection from the dead. A redemption from among men, from among the living, must mean a different thing, and can mean only one thing, and that is translation. Hence the 144,000 are living saints, who will be translated at the second coming of Christ. (See comment on verse 13.)
On what Mount Zion does John see this company standing?--
The Mount Zion above; for the song of harpers, which no doubt is uttered by these very ones, is heard from heaven. This is the same Zion from which the Lord utters His voice when He speaks to His people in close connection with the coming of the Son of man. (Joel 3: 16, Hebrews 12: 25-28; Revelation 16: 17.) An acceptance of the fact that there is a Mount Zion in heaven, and a Jerusalem above, would be a powerful antidote for the false doctrine of a second probation and a millennium of peace on earth.
Only a few more particulars respecting the 144,000, in addition to those given in Revelation 7, will claim our attention:
They have the name of the Lamb's Father written in their foreheads. In Revelation 7, they are said to have the seal of God in their foreheads. An important key to an understanding of the seal of God is thus furnished, for we at once perceive that the Father regards His name as His seal. That commandment of the law which contains God's name is therefore the seal of the law. The Sabbath commandment is the only one that contains the descriptive title which distinguishes the true God from all false gods. Wherever this was placed, there the Father's name was said to be. (Deuteronomy 12: 5, 14, 18, 21; 14: 23; 16: 2, 6; etc.) Therefore whoever truly keeps this commandment has the seal of the living God.
They sing a new song which no other company is able to learn. In Revelation 15: 3, it is called the song of Moses and the song of the Lamb. The song of Moses, as may be seen by reference to Exodus 15, was a song of experience and deliverance. Therefore the song of the 144,000 is the song of their deliverance. No others can join in it, for no other company will have had an experience like theirs.
They "were not defiled with women." A woman is in Scripture the symbol of a church, a virtuous woman representing a pure church, a corrupt woman, an apostate church. It is, then, a characteristic of this company that at the time of their deliverance they are not defiled with the fallen churches of the land, nor do they have any connection with them. Yet we are not to understand that they never had any connection with these churches, for it is only at a certain time that people become defiled by them. In Revelation 18: 4 we find a call issued to the people of God while they are still in Babylon, to come out lest they become partakers of her sins. Heeding that call, and leaving her connection, they escape the defilement of her sins. So of the 144,000: though some of them may have once had a connection with corrupt churches, they sever that connection with corrupt churches, they sever that connection when it would become sin to retain it longer.
They follow the Lamb whithersoever He goeth. We understand that this is spoken of them in their redeemed state. They are the special companions of their glorified Lord in the kingdom. Of the same company and the same time, we read, "The Lamb which is in the midst of the throne shall feed them, and shall lead them unto living fountains of waters." Revelation 7: 17.
They are "first fruits unto God and to the Lamb." This term appears to be applied to different ones to denote special conditions. Christ is the first fruits as the antitype of the wavesheaf. The first receivers of the gospel are called by James a kind of first fruits. (James 1: 18.) So the 144,000, being prepared for the heavenly garner here on the earth during the troublous scenes of the last days, being translated to heaven without seeing death, and occupying a pre-eminent position, are in this sense called the first fruits unto God and the Lamb. With this description of the 144,000 triumphant, the line of prophecy which began with Revelation 12 comes to a close.
*******
May God bless us and help us to be among those who make up the 144,000, or those who sleep in Christ. Whatever our lot, may God help us because the last days are going to be unlike any other time. We can imagine how awful times past were and we find it hard to believe things can get to that point let alone worse. We live in civilized times, we cry out! Yet, while others were living in their times they didn't live thinking they were uncivilized. For their time they were what they were and while in some respects things were atrocious, in many respects really, people haven't changed- just their ability to hide their awfulness and cover it up under layers and layers of pretense and fallacies, and we call it civilized.
There is so much in the prophecy of Revelation that seems improbable, but even Nebuchadnezzer believed that his kingdom would never fall- history proves it did. The same with all the kingdoms that followed, down to a time when there is no one predominant kingdom- which was also predicted. So if all that history was predicted we have only one conclusion-- the rest of the prophecy will become history and we are part of that as yet unfulfilled history.
May God bless and keep us now and always, by His mercy and His grace in Jesus.
Amen.
10/4/10
10/4/11