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Unveiling The End Times In Our Time
Rapture, Revelation, And The End Times: Exploring The Left Behind Series
Rapture, Revelation, And The End Times
The Genesis 6 Conspiracy (How Secret Societies And The Descendants Of Giants Plan To Enslave Humankind)
Divine Revelation Of Gods Holiness And Judgement
Afterlife
In My Father's House
Within Heaven's Gates
When Do I See God
From Daniel To Doomsday
About the Book
"Living in the End Times - Study" by John Edmiston explores the signs of the end times according to the Bible and how Christians can prepare for the coming of Christ. The book delves into topics such as the Antichrist, the rapture, and the Second Coming, offering insights and practical advice for navigating these turbulent times with faith and hope.
Oswald Chambers
Oswald Chambers (24 July 1874 â 15 November 1917) was an early twentieth-century Scottish Baptist and Holiness Movement evangelist and teacher, best known for the devotional My Utmost for His Highest.
Family And Education
Born to devout parents in Aberdeen, Scotland, Chambers moved with his family in 1876 to Stoke-on-Trent when his father, Clarence Chambers, became Home Missions evangelist for the North Staffordshire Baptist Association, then to Perth, Scotland when his father returned to the pastorate, and finally to London in 1889, when Clarence was appointed Traveling Secretary of the Baptist Total Abstinence Association. At 16, Oswald Chambers was baptized and became a member of Rye Lane Baptist Chapel[3] Even as a teenager, Chambers was noted for his deep spirituality, and he participated in the evangelization of poor occupants of local lodging houses. At the same time, Chambers also demonstrated gifts in both music and art.
From 1893 to 1895, Chambers studied at the National Art Training School, now the Royal College of Art and was offered a scholarship for further study, which he declined. For the next two years he continued his study of art at the University of Edinburgh while being greatly influenced by the preaching of Alexander Whyte, pastor of Free St. Georgeâs Church. While at Edinburgh, he felt called to ministry, and he left for Dunoon College, a small theological training school near Glasgow, founded by the Rev. Duncan MacGregor. Chambers was soon teaching classes at the school and took over much of the administration when MacGregor was injured in 1898.
Ministry
In 1911 Chambers founded and was principal of the Bible Training College in Clapham Common, Greater London, in an âembarrassingly elegantâ property that had been purchased by the Pentecostal League of Prayer. Chambers accommodated not only students of every age, education, and class but also anyone in need, believing he ought to âgive to everyone who asks.â âNo one was ever turned away from the door and whatever the person asked for, whether money, a winter overcoat, or a meal, was given.â Between 1911 and 1915, 106 resident students attended the Bible Training College, and by July 1915, forty were serving as missionaries.
In 1915, a year after the outbreak of World War I, Chambers suspended the operation of the school and was accepted as a Young Menâs Christian Association (YMCA) chaplain. He was assigned to Zeitoun, Cairo, Egypt, where he ministered to Australian and New Zealand troops, who later participated in the Battle of Gallipoli. Chambers raised the spiritual tone of a center intended by both the military and the YMCA to be simply an institution of social service providing wholesome alternatives to the brothels of Cairo.
Death
Married to Gertrude (Biddy) Hobbs, Oswald Chambers was stricken with appendicitis on 17 October 1917 but resisted going to a hospital on the grounds that the beds would be needed by men wounded in the long-expected Third Battle of Gaza. On 29 October, a surgeon performed an emergency appendectomy, but Chambers died 15 November 1917 from a pulmonary hemorrhage. He was buried in Cairo with full military honors.
The last six years of his life were spent as principal of the Bible Training College in London, and as a chaplain to British Commonwealth troops in Egypt during World War l. After his death, the books which bear his name were compiled by his wife from her own verbatim shorthand notes of his talks.
what would judas do
Wednesday plants the suicidal seed of Holy Week: betrayal. Before there could be a Garden, there had to be a seed â the inception of insurrection. Jesus gloriously paid for our redemption with blood, but his blood was murderously bought with money. The promised Savior sold for just thirty pieces of silver. Jesus had taught his disciples, including the one who would betray him, âNo one can serve two masters, for either he will hate the one and love the other, or he will be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve God and moneyâ (Matthew 6:24). No one. Not Judas. Not you or me. The Love of Money Murdered Jesus The Pharisees loved money (Luke 16:14), feared men (Matthew 26:5), and hated Jesus (Matthew 26:4). That formula may be lived out before you more than you realize. The love of money often looks merely practical. The fear of men can hide behind masks. But the Bible is clear: If you love money and fear men, you cannot love God or escape hell (Luke 16:13; John 5:44) â and you become a card-carrying member of the crowd who crucified the Author of life (Acts 3:15). The cross â that horrifying drama of hatred â was only a symptom of the Phariseesâ craving for money, approval, and power. It was as if they bought a billboard to advertise their love for money, and set on a hill for all to see. But they would never do something so obvious. What would the people say? They âfeared the peopleâ (Luke 22:2). In fact, the peopleâs love  for Jesus was half the reason the religious leaders hated him so much. The authorities were cowards with cravings. They had to find a way to kill him quietly (Matthew 26:3â5). They had to find a way to murder an innocent man without losing any esteem or influence. First they needed an insider â someone close enough to Jesus to betray him, but far enough from Jesus to betray him. In other words, they needed a perp dressed like the Pope. âThen one of the twelve, whose name was Judas Iscariot, went to the chief priests and said, âWhat will you give me if I deliver him over to you?ââ (Matthew 26:14â15). âWhen they heard it, they were glad and promised to give him moneyâ (Mark 14:11). They found their man, someone who loved money as much as they did, someone who was willing to offend and ostracize even his closest friends for a pay day. The market had opened against the Messiah, and Judas was there to profit. As Randy Alcorn writes, âSatan works on the assumption that every person has a price. Often, unfortunately, he is right. Many people are willing to surrender themselves and their principles to whatever god will bring them the greatest short-term profitâ ( Money, Possessions, and Eternity , 41). Judas sold out the Savior, and for just thirty pieces of silver (Matthew 26:15). The Love of Money Makes a Name If you love money â value money and what it can buy above all else â you cannot love God. You will hate him, maybe quietly or privately and hypocritically â but you will hate him. And that hatred will mark you and follow you everywhere. That kind of divine rejection and betrayal renames a person. It defines you. For example, look at how Judas is talked about in the Gospels. â . . . Simon the Zealot, and Judas Iscariot, who betrayed him .â (Matthew 10:4) âJudas, who would betray him , answered, âIs it I, Rabbi?â He said to him, âYou have said so.ââ (Matthew 26:25) â . . . and Judas Iscariot, who betrayed him .â (Mark 3:19) â . . . and Judas the son of James, and Judas Iscariot, who became a traitor .â (Luke 6:16) âBut Judas Iscariot, one of his disciples ( he who was about to betray him ), said,â (John 12:4). âHe spoke of Judas the son of Simon Iscariot, for he, one of the Twelve, was going to betray him .â (John 6:71) âJudas, who betrayed him , was standing with them.â (John 18:5) Instead of being a faithful disciple guiding people to follow Jesus, he âbecame a guide to those who arrested  Jesusâ (Acts 1:16). What will be the testimony of your life â of your spending and giving? Will it be clear to others that you used what God had given you to lead others to  his Son, or will it be plain that you surrendered to the gods of the material and drew people away from  Jesus? Did you guide the blind to sight, or help blind them to death? The Love of Money Leads to Regret Judasâs affair did not fair so well for him. âThen when Judas, his betrayer, saw that Jesus was condemned, he changed his mind and brought back the thirty pieces of silver to the chief priests and the eldersâ (Matthew 27:3). Drowning in shame, he screamed for a refund. Confronted with the horror of his exchange, the money had lost its allure. What have I done?! What awful trade have I made?! Take it all back, and give me Jesus! There was no turning back for Judas, no return policy on this rejection. He killed himself in the overwhelming waves of regret and remorse (Matthew 27:5). However, there is time to turn back for you. Luke quotes Jesus for the greedy today, âTake care, and be on your guard against all covetousness, for oneâs life does not consist in the abundance of his possessionsâ (Luke 12:15). When life begins to seem like one long mission to make more money, someone is lying to you. Wake up and give back the silver before it crucifies you. John Piper writes, âWhen you are dying . . . money walks away from you. It abandons you. It will not go with you to help you. And nothing that you bought with it can go eitherâ ( Money, Sex, and Power , 65). And again later, â[The love of money] substitutes a dollar bill for the divineâ (71). The love of money leads only to regret and loss. Reject Judas, Receive Joy Ask yourself what Judas would do in your situation. How would he feel about your current income, shopping habits, and retirement savings? How uneasy would he be about your generosity? Does your budget begin to look like his, just two thousand years later? Refuse to follow Judas in his betrayal, and reject all that money promises to be in place of God. Find your security and satisfaction in something supernatural, eternal, and free. Piper goes on, reflecting on Paul in Philippians 4:11â13, When the stock market goes up or he gets a bonus, he says, I find Jesus more precious and valuable and satisfying than my increasing money . And when the stock market goes down or he faces a pay cut, he says, I find Jesus more precious and valuable and satisfying than all that I have lost . The glory and beauty and worth and preciousness of Christ is the secret of contentment that keeps money from controlling him. ( Money, Sex, and Power , 65) When our joy is no longer in our money but rather is in God . . . our money becomes the visible extension of joy in God, directed toward others. . . . Treasuring God above all things turns money into the currency of worship and love. ( Money, Sex, and Power , 123) Instead of surrendering to our cravings for more, letâs pour ourselves, every penny, into telling the world God  is our treasure â right now, later in retirement, and forever in eternity â and spending whatever it takes to bring others into that joy and security with us.