GENERATIONAL REVELATIONS (Part 2 of 4)

4. A Lesson from Church History

Church history appears to support the point about certain encounters being unique to certain eras.  A survey of that general history shows significant highlights in each age.  For example,

  • the Holy Ghost and missionary prominence of the early 1st century, with Peter and Paul championing it;
  • the Apostolic Age of the early 2nd century with emphasis on the Holy Spirit’s empowerment and apostolic authority;
  • the Reformation Movement of the 16th and 17th centuries, emphasizing justification by faith – casting passages like Galatians 3:11 in such fresh light as never seen until then, with leading figures such as Martin Luther;
  • the Evangelical Revivals of the 18th and 19th centuries, with such names as George Whitefield and John Wesley;
  • the Missions Movement of the 19th and 20th centuries, with frontline characters like David Livingstone and Hudson Taylor;
  • the Pentecostal/Charismatic Movements of the early 20th century, for example, the Azuza Street revival, with preachers like William Seymour;
  • the contemporary Church with its faith and prosperity fad as never before, and all that cries for revival again.

To each age, a verse seemed to open up in a way that it never had, as if a first or second or third seal had been taken off of it.  To each opening of such ‘seals,’ the Church and that age cried in wonderous amazement, “Come and see!” (Revelation 6:1-7): Pentecost, missions, justification by faith, baptism by immersion, New Pentecost, the faith movement, etc.

Every dispensation, its revelation.  For instance, what did the fathers know (or thought that they knew) about Nebuchadnezzar/Daniel’s image, the antichrist, the mark of the beast, the false prophet, etc.? 

Read more

Brother Hosea

  1. Shattered Dreams

Imagine that you were Prophet Hosea, a young man in church, loving God with all your heart, hardworking, in the choir and prayer departments of the house of God, with lofty dreams of your wedding day and that pretty girl in the choir that you have been eyeing, whom you would soon marry after her graduation from the university next summer, and thereafter move to your new apartment in that quiet section of town. Then it happens. 

Read more

PRINCE CHARMING

And when Shechem the son of Hamor the Hivite, prince of the country, saw her, he took her, and lay with her, and defiled her.

Genesis 34:2.

  1. Eyes that Shouldn’t See You

That is the story of Dinah, the only known daughter of Jacob (although Genesis 34:16 speaks of “daughters”).  During the 600-mile journey from Mesopotamia (where Jacob had been on exile for about twenty years) back to Canaan (as instructed by the Lord), the family passed through Shechem, a city (or “country”) that bore the same name as its iconic prince. 

Read more

Dissecting Delilah

  1. Languishing

There is one female gender name that has entered into history with all the connotations of disdain and shame; a pretty-sounding name that no decent mother would call her loving daughter.  The name is Delilah, which, according to some Bible dictionaries, means “languishing,” and by others is translated as “delicate” – the delicate one.  It is next of kin to another kindred female name, Jezebel.  Delilah’s story is told in the Bible book of Judges, chapter 16, in the episode that saw the strong Samson ignobly put out of service by that woman’s soft touches.

Read more

Show Buttons
Hide Buttons