I am currently delving into a deeper understanding of the true meaning of the cross of Christ, how it relates to salvation and how it reveals God's heart.

Saturday, February 2, 2008

What Really is Babylon?

And I saw another angel flying in midheaven, having an eternal gospel to preach to those who live on the earth, and to every nation and tribe and tongue and people; and he said with a loud voice, "Fear God, and give Him glory, because the hour of His judgment has come; worship Him who made the heaven and the earth and sea and springs of waters." And another angel, a second one, followed, saying, "Fallen, fallen is Babylon the great, she who has made all the nations drink of the wine of the passion of her immorality." (Revelation 14:6-8)

The conviction is beginning to emerge that the call to come out of Babylon has far greater meaning and implications than most have ever imagined. As I have been paying close attention and taking notes and trying to assimilate the deeper concepts in some presentations by a researcher of ancient civilization, I am starting to realize that Babylon involves far more than simply worshiping on the wrong day of the week or subscribing to wrong doctrines as I have been taught all my life. I now see that this can potentially be terribly self-serving interpretations of prophecy that completely miss the much greater warning in all the passages related to Babylon.

As I say, I am only just beginning to perceive the enormity of what this means so there is far more that I don't see than what I do at this point. But as my mind applies what I have been learning to real life situations, I suddenly see its practical application quite literally everywhere. The phrase, “Babylon is a system of thinking” is far more powerful and deeper than just having a wrong set of doctrines. It is the whole basis on which we found our thinking, our logic and all of our relationships. It is the Bible's code word for the antithesis of the Kingdom of Heaven as displayed in the life and teachings of Jesus. It is the very sum and substance of what we hail as civilization and progress in our world and society.

Babylon in God's eyes represents the whole system of living that we take for granted based on the three foundations of Economics, Law and Kingship that all emerged from the earliest cultures in Mesopotamia. This apparatus now completely encompasses every aspect and detail of life on this planet and completely skews our perception of reality. We really do not have a correct concept of the real meaning of the warnings that we sometimes quote about the difference between being a real Christian and our old way of living. But God's ways really are not a modification or improvement of the old ways but a radically, revolutionary, completely separate way of thinking and living. We usually apply this primarily in the “spiritual” realm of religion but fail to see its far more pervasive applications to every aspect of our perceptions of reality. In reality there is no separation between religion and secular – our life is our life and our spirit is involved in every aspect of our life. The distinctions between secular and religious are all part of the Babylonian way of discriminating.

Our idea of religion has become so infected with the basic principles of Babylon that it is like a wheat field full of weeds mingled all throughout completely entangled at the root level. It is impossible to pick through and pull up the weeds of Babylonian thought without damaging the good wheat and that job must be left to the angels. But Jesus gave a stronger metaphor when He said that you simply can't patch an old garment with new material or put new wine into old wineskins. He stated emphatically that new wine must only go into new wineskins.

We are fast coming to that point in history. The system of Babylon has hopelessly infected all religion beyond restoration or reformation. Reforms have been attempted by many throughout history with varied degrees of success and I do not discount them. But the final solution I believe will be different in important aspects, some of which still remain hidden from us. In the final events of earth there will be a polarization and a complete separation as those who cling to the roots of fear will be drawn inexorably deeper into the deceptions of Babylon while those who follow their heart attracted by the beauty of the real truth about God and His ways will find themselves expelled forcibly from the structures of civilization in this world.

The results will be shocking at the very least. It will become more obvious that the makeup of those who are truly following the Spirit and are drawn out of Babylon are often many who are least suspected to be spiritual by those who consider themselves most religious. At the same time, the majority of those who themselves have championed their assumed knowledge of truth and may have even spent their life energetically promoting the message to come out of Babylon, but who failed to perceive that the spirit with which they worked was actually in harmony with Babylon, will be baffled and confused by a sudden turn of events. Sadly, many of them will be found protesting to Jesus, 'Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your name, and cast out demons in your name, and do many deeds of power in your name?' Then I will declare to them, 'I never knew you; go away from me, you evildoers.' (Matthew 7:22-23 NRSV)

It is not just important but it is a life and death crisis if we do not understand at the heart level as well as the head what the real meaning of Babylon is. What I am starting to realize is that everything that grew out of literal Babylon and that now makes up all of civilization as we know it is suspect at best and defilingly deceptive on average. That means that the whole legal model of thinking and relating to one another is Babylonian thinking. That means that the whole system of economics and all the artificial value and exchange system that permeates every aspect of our lives is Babylonian living. That means that all relationships that have any element of comparison or value based on anything other than equality and unity, honor and humility in the body of Christ is Babylonian relationships. Babylon is all about power and control – that is the obsessive center of focus for those who live in Babylon.

After these things I saw another angel coming down from heaven, having great authority, and the earth was illumined with his glory. And he cried out with a mighty voice, saying, "Fallen, fallen is Babylon the great! She has become a dwelling place of demons and a prison of every unclean spirit, and a prison of every unclean and hateful bird. "For all the nations have drunk of the wine of the passion of her immorality, and the kings of the earth have committed acts of immorality with her, and the merchants of the earth have become rich by the wealth of her sensuality." (Revelation 18:1-3)

Babylonian living means viewing anyone else better or worse than yourself. Babylonian living means feeling low self-worth and not believing the inestimable value that God has for every individual. Babylonian living means feeling better or worse than others in any way. Babylonian life is the whole structure of human designed authority, all the power structures in politics, commerce and religion.

Babylonian living is believing that things and people can be artificially valued and compared and subsequently inflated or deflated according to the whims of society. The whole idea of economics, money, real estate, ownership, capitalism, greed, selfishness etc. is all Babylonian through and through. That is why it is revealed in Revelation that those who come out of Babylon in the end will not be able to buy or sell unless they receive the mark of the beast. Because the beast is the power of Babylon and if you don't want to participate with the spirit of the beast you are not welcome to participate in the activities within that system. Instead of being afraid of not being able to buy or sell we should be rejoicing that we will finally be outside the oppressive, deceptive system of life that has held us in fear and bondage for all of our days. It will actually be another step toward final liberation for us, not a restriction.

Babylonian thinking also involves all the system of law and legal thinking that has been the most pervasive element of Babylon to permeate religion in my opinion. The reason we struggle so much with legalism and all its terrible effects on our spiritual lives is because we have been deceived by the enemy of truth to think that God operates His Kingdom under the rule of law just like we do on earth. This is possibly one of the most subtle deceptions that is most difficult to address and it raises the most violent and fierce antagonism from those who benefit most from its structures.

The whole Babylonian system of law is artificial in nature and is a counterfeit of the reality seen in God's true kingdom. It is based on arbitrary rules designed to fix any problems in the system of economics and reinforce the structures of discrimination among people. To work properly, it has to have added incentives in the way of arbitrary punishments. But that is not enough to make it really effective and so a massive organization of enforcers has to be put into place to impose the artificial punishments on anyone neglecting or refusing to live within this whole artificial system of life.

God's last call as seen in the mighty angels of Revelation is to come out of Babylon. If we allow our minds to really take hold of the implications of this call and begin to understand the bigger view of what is meant by Babylon we will either shudder with horror and then immediately go into denial or we will see a glimmer of the freedom that God is inviting us into by joining His family and becoming real children of the Most High.

Babylon is the whole structure of thinking and living as we know it on this earth. It is based on fear, force and deception and most of all control. It is massive, pervasive and unavoidable. To choose to leave Babylon is to risk losing everything we are familiar with and depend on for survival. It is far more radical than almost anyone dares to talk about publicly because it challenges all of our assumptions. But we are quickly moving toward a point in history where we will all be forced to decide between depending on Babylon and those around us for life or whether we will place all our bets on the Creator God who invites us into a completely different system of living totally separated from Babylonian thinking in every aspect.

To live in Babylon is to live in the external world and base our view of reality on the externals.

To live in God's family is to live from the heart and be led by the Spirit of God.

To relate to others in Babylon is to measure and compare ourselves with each other and treat people according to their position or esteemed value based on performance or roles.

To relate to others is God's system is to realize that every person is infinitely valuable in God's family and that all are created equally important. It is to treat others without any distinctions or discrimination of any type knowing that we are all brothers and sisters, co-partners in the grace of Jesus Christ.

To succeed in Babylon a person measures life and values things according to the benefit they can personally derive from them. They seek to manipulate the system and others though economic leveraging to improve their personal sense of worth and their relative position of wealth as determined by the artificial measurements of money.

To participate in the kingdom of God one must die to self and to the Babylonian way of living and be born again into a radically different way of thinking and relating to other beings. They depend on God alone to provide for their needs based on His promises to do so, trusting Him as a kind, caring Father to protect and provide for His cherished children. They live in a spirit of selfless service filled with the kindness and compassion and love that they receive from their own loving Parent in heaven.

Flee from the midst of Babylon, And each of you save his life! Do not be destroyed in her punishment, For this is the LORD'S time of vengeance; He is going to render recompense to her. Babylon has been a golden cup in the hand of the LORD, Intoxicating all the earth. The nations have drunk of her wine; Therefore the nations are going mad. Suddenly Babylon has fallen and been broken; Wail over her! Bring balm for her pain; Perhaps she may be healed. We applied healing to Babylon, but she was not healed; Forsake her and let us each go to his own country, For her judgment has reached to heaven And towers up to the very skies. The LORD has brought about our vindication; Come and let us recount in Zion The work of the LORD our God! (Jeremiah 51:6-10)

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Shedding Blood in Resistance

You have not yet resisted to the point of shedding blood in your striving against sin. (Hebrews 12:4)

I have been pondering this verse for days and suspect I may be off and on for a very long time. I am listening to any insights that the Spirit has to bring to me at any time and I sense that there is much more in here than meets the eye as is often the case in texts that on the surface seem very disturbing or conflicting.

As I grapple with this verse and the surrounding context I see many different ways in which to view it, some rather legalistic and others somewhat tentative. This may be one of those places that is so unclear it leaves God a lot of room to maneuver and convey a number of different messages depending on my needs at the time. If I am not too dogmatic and insist there is only one right interpretation I suspect I may be able to see more light through this keyhole.

I am presently working on a contrast chart of this whole passage and came to this verse this morning. One thing that I see here is that I have not been required to be the point man against sin and shed my own blood in resistance. Jesus has taken that role and there only needs to be one. But if I ever do find myself being threatened to that extent I will have been empowered inside with the peace and the compassion of Jesus for those who threaten me because He lives in me. It is His Spirit of love – free of resentment – for His enemies that enables anyone to endure that level of hostility.

Other texts come to my mind as I look at this and I wonder how they interrelate with it. In Matt. 5:39 Jesus says, But I say to you, do not resist an evil person; but whoever slaps you on your right cheek, turn the other to him also. I find the contrast of these two verses interesting because one says to not resist and the other talks about resisting, though I am not convinced it is telling us to do so or not. It simply states that we have not done it yet. Anything beyond that seems to be an assumption which can often get us into trouble understanding Scripture. They may very well be talking about resisting two very different things also. Resisting sin can be very different than resisting the evil brought against us by sinners. Our underlying assumptions about what sin really is also greatly affects our ideas of what it means to resist it.

This verse is bounded on two sides by other verses that I believe contribute heavily to finding its true meaning. The two before it emphasize our need to keep focused on Jesus who has endured more antagonism from sin than anyone else ever will, and the next verse which launches into a section about viewing life through the perspective of a child of God accepting discipline. I have to believe that there is a very significant reason this verse is sandwiched between these other thoughts but it is not all real clear to me yet. So I keep looking.

One thing that comes to mind is the comparison of Jesus as the Son of God and viewing myself as also a son of God. On the other hand, what Jesus did may not be required of me to do. I may not necessarily need to shed my blood because my role in the Great War is not to try to save all of humanity like Jesus did. Then again, Jesus wants to live His life in and through me in such a way as to attract others to the love of God and the real truth about Him in similar ways to what He did in person while here on earth. And if that at some point involves persecution against me by those who are intolerant and resistant to the love and compassion of God toward them, then my resistance will be because I am compelled from a heart full of the presence of the One who is the source and supplier of all love, not because I have achieved some level of perfection.

I am currently have a major paradigm shift in my thinking and understanding of the real reason Jesus suffered and died for humanity. It is an intense change of perspective that I am not completely familiar with yet but it is becoming more clear each day. This new view of the cross and the real strategy of God in the Great Controversy is much more consistent with many other things I have been learning about God and the bigger issues of the Controversy than all of the other explanations put forth by theologians and religionists that I have ever heard. But to simplify it into a few words without peripheral understandings in place makes it appear to be heresy of the highest order to some. But I am feeling more and more convicted that it is closer to the real truth than much of what I have been taught all of my life and I am continuing to study and pray and analyze it trying to grasp as many implications and insights as I can.

I am very resistant to allowing one or two people or a given organization to being an authoritative source for what I believe. I have certainly been blessed by many different ministries that have contributed to much of my transformation in thinking over the past 15 years, but I do not depend on any of them as the last word on anything. I have gained very important insights from their teachings and compared them to what has proven true and reliable from my own study and what the Spirit has been leading me to see. At the same time I try to remain willing to keep open even my own settled conclusions, for I believe that real truth never fears examination and reexamination, it only becomes better for it. And sometimes what I have believed was settled truth is found to be in need of updating when the Spirit convicts me that it is time to move to a higher view of reality.

But truth is always consistent with itself and will always reinforce the goodness of God. If anything brings into question the foundational belief in God's goodness, compassion and consistent love, then I have to view that idea with suspicion myself. It may contain some truth that I need to be aware of but quite likely it also contains some perversion that is designed to detract from the real glory of God.

So when I look at this verse about shedding of blood in resistance and striving against sin, my mind is very cautious to not jump into any ideas that sympathize with any self-focused efforts of spirituality. Coming from a background saturated with religion focused on perfectionism I am always extremely wary of anything that would attempt to lead me back in that direction. At the same time I have to be careful to not overreact from that to another extreme and lose sight of important truths that God wants to impress on me. I want God Himself to be the real and final authority for the revelation of truth above all other claimants.

Another thing I notice now is that this whole section comes just after a long listing of people and their experiences of faith demonstrated in their lives from chapter 11. This verse is very likely a reference back to some of those who really did shed their blood in striving against sin. Paul is likely saying that most of us reading this have not really experienced the depth of faith available to us as those in the past who were so devoted to staying connected to God's heart that they preferred torture and death than to betray the only Source of real life for them. They came to a point in their lives where they knew God so well that their trust in Him and His character surpassed anything men could do to distract them from that attachment.

These people are our examples of what it looks like to focus the eyes on Jesus, to consider Him who also endured the hostility of sinners against Him even though they were not personally able to have the example of Jesus because they lived before He came to earth as a man. Even with that disadvantage they responded to God's attractiveness to the point of loyalty to Him above anything else. In light of that, this verse becomes an invitation to follow their example of devotion and enter into a much deeper intimacy with God that will enable us to live from an enriched heart fully devoted to the ultimate Source of love Himself.

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