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There is yet another mark of the Great Harlot's identity that we must explore, if only briefly, and that is going to be found beginning in Revelation 17:6.
This is something that is kind of repulsive to us, to think that Israel could be involved in something like this. But Israel, to its great shame, has a history of killing those sent by God to get them to change from their whorish ways. I'm going to take you back into the book of Jeremiah. We're going to begin there. I'm not going to be expounding these verses at all, but just showing you that they exist and showing you that Israel's history of doing something like this is long.
It's gory to think of that. Turn to Luke 13:34, where Jesus stated the following:
The Bible is replete with examples of the persecution of God's people. There are yet more. Another one is in the book of Hebrews, chapter 11.
Where do you think all this persecution that Paul mentions here took place? It took place in Israel. The apostle Paul was drawing on Israel's history to put those 3 or 4 verses of examples together. It's very easy for us to look at the histories of Israel covering the last 200 years, and say, "Well, Israelites today would never do such a thing!" We wouldn't think such a thing would occur in Israel with the advent of Christianity. But brethren, human nature never changes, and all that it needs is the right set of circumstances and once again persecutions and martyrdom will occur. The even in Acts 7:54 took place after the beginning of the Christian Church. Notice that the circumstances here are just right.
Notice that "stopped their ears." Do you think that it's still possible for Israelites to "stop their ears" when the circumstances get just right?
My Bible has in its margin, for the word "slaughter," "murder." Threats and murder. Persecution will happen once again in Israel. Perhaps you might think that this sorry performance was stopped at the end of the first century. Not so. Many of you are familiar, or at least familiar with the title of a book called "Fox's Book of Martyrs." Some of you may have even read it. I did at one time, about 30 or 40 years ago. It's a book that focuses on the persecution, including martyrdom, that raged against Evangelical groups. I have another book in my library titled "Martyrs Mirror." I'm showing it here to the congregation. It's almost as large as Strong's Concordance. "Martyrs Mirror" is a comprehensive history of 1600 years of persecution, including martyrdom, perpetrated against Anabaptists groups. Not Evangelical, but Anabaptists. The Evangelical was different in most respects from the Anabaptists. Anabaptists is a name attached by the world at large against any Christian group that opposes infant and child baptism. Ana, meaning "against"against infant and child baptism. The Anabaptists did not call themselves Anabaptists. The world called these people Anabaptists. You might wonder why Anabaptists refused to baptize infants and children. It was because the biblical requirements for baptism are repentance and faith, and no infant or child can meet those requirements. One must be an adult of considerable living experience in order to seriously consider baptism. The most prominent Anabaptists groups in the Western world today are probably the Amish, the Mennonites, and the Hutterites. There are many others though that are smaller, but all of these groups have been fairly active, even up to the beginning of the 20th Century. By definition, the term "Evangelical" and the term "Anabaptists" can, and did, include groups like the Baptists, and most importantly, the Church of God. We are, by their definition, Anabaptists. Martyrs Mirror begins its story of the martyrdom of the apostles, because they were, by definition, Anabaptists. Religious persecution periodically raged in Holland, France, and Englandall Israelitish countriesfor long periods of time during the Middle Ages. Those persecutions only waned after the Protestant Reformation was underway for over a century, and was then joined by the Catholics' Counter Reformation. Anybody who knows any American history should be able to understand that very many of the early settlers of this country came because of religious persecutions in Northwest Europe. The Puritans and the Pilgrims are the prime example. They first fled England, and then left for Holland. They then left Holland and came to the United States. Now to think that the Israelitish people are somehow above perpetrating religious persecution is not historically accurate. The Bible shows that it clearly has happened before, and it will happen again. Just in the last ten years the entire nation witnessed the Branch Davidian group massacre in Waco, Texas. And interestingly, the Branch Davidians were Sabbath keepers.
There is before us a period of time so great in its awfulness, that despite what we might think about what has happened in the pastwe are aware of those thingsit is going to be worse than any time-period that man has ever experienced in the history of mankind. Persecution of true Christians will occur again. How do I know that? Why can I be so positive? It's because of the book of Revelation.
Just like the persecutions from the time of Christ on, it's going to be against the Evangelicals and the Anabaptists. An awful lot of people who are not part of the Church of God are going to get caught in it, and the Church of God is going to get caught in it.
God's word does not lie. Though God does not go into all of the gory details, He does let us know that persecutions are going to occur, and because of the history of the past, and because we know what is coming on Israel as a result of the day of "Jacob's trial," it is going to happen in Israel too. Israelites will kill their fellow-Israelites because of what they believe, and because of what they practice. Now that is the end of that subject, but just a little bit of a summary here as we bridge over into yet another aspect. Virtually the entire Bible, including Revelation, is devoted to Israel and to the Church. The Harlot is not a Gentile nation or church, because neither one had a covenant relationship with God. The elegant clothing, the jewelry and precious metals illustrate Israel's wealth, and therefore its power among nations. The Harlot is depicted as ONE people, as God sees her, but led by the Joseph tribes. The Beast has many diverse people in a loose confederation, and the Woman is pictured as a huge manufacturing and merchandising power, and martyrs' blood was, and will be on the Harlot's hand. Before we leave the identity of the Harlot Woman of Revelation 17 and 18, I want to take one final look at how the Bible describes prostitution, or harlotry (if you prefer that). I'm doing this so that we might see more specifically how an entire nation can be guilty of harlotry. I want us to look into what is at the very base, motivating it, what it appears to promise, and what it actually delivers, and then by comparing these by what nations do, the harlotry, I think, will be clearer. Always remember though that at the base of Israel's harlotry is Israel's special relationship with God through the Old Covenant agreement. There are very few prostitutes actually named in the Bible. Delilah is certainly the most prominent. There is Gomer, who is Hosea's wife, and is directly called "a wife of whoredom." As we begin I want you to just see this so that you will understand a bit more about the book of Hosea. God put this man through hell, because it was God who told him to marry a harlot. Hosea's life then became a parallel of God's relationship with Israel.
Hosea's wife Gomer is a wife of whoredom. Another possible prostitute named in the Bible is Tamar, who was Judah's daughter-in-law. She may only have been playing a harlot in order to get Judah's attention. There is also Rahab. There are inferences about her, but I think the final verdict is still out on Rahab as well. Whether she and Tamar were prostitutes is moot, because the Bible treats both of them with sympathetic dignity, because if they were harlots, it appears that they overcame its pull. But such is not the case with prostitutes in general. The Bible views prostitutes as dangerous, and to be stringently avoided. On this list of prostitutes is the most prominent prostitute in the entire Bible, and that is Israel. Now by looking at biblical prostitutes we're going to understand what is driving much of the Israelitish culture. There is no doubt though that the fountain of Israel's despicable behavior is what Paul mentions in Hebrews 3:12.
"An evil heart of unbelief" is the fountain source of Israel's behavior. Despite the fact that God voluntarily revealed much about Himself to Israel, Israel simply doesn't believe what God says. We are seeing this acted out before our very eyes in the United States in the media in all these cases that involve the Bible, as it is being banned, bit by bit, all across the land in places that are offensive to others who don't look upon the Bible with any sort of belief like you and I do. If those people really believed that the Bible is God's word, they would be afraid to do something like that, because it would be for them blasphemy against God, and something that is just that far from being the unpardonable sin, to ban the very word of God. The "evil heart of unbelief" is the fountain, but it's quite general. At the beginning here we're going to explore one particular step in the process of sin beyond the "evil heart of unbelief." I also want us to understand that I am not dealing with women living in cultures who have been forced into prostitution. That does occur. Such a circumstance is far more understandable, and these women are truly victims and it calls for our mercy for those who are trapped in this sort of circumstance. What we are exploring are those women who were free to pursue other courses of life and deliberately choose to prostitute themselves, whether in service at a pagan temple as part of the worship of that god, or in order to make a living. Israel deliberately chose to prostitute herself. A prostitute is a person who is usually a woman. Pay attention to that. She is described in dictionaries as one who provides sexual activity in exchange for material security. Prostitution can also be defined as debasing one's self for personal gain. Additionally, it is defined as the misuse of one's gifts, talents, and skills. We are getting very close to members of Church of God with these last two definitions; that is, into areas where prostitution by us can be entered into. Because of this, in its broadest sense, prostitution is not confined to either sexual activity, or to women alone. The selling of sex by a woman is only the best-known form. A prostitute is anybody who, as we would say today, sells herself/himself out, or makes compromises for personal gain; makes compromises with principles, with law, for personal gain. The gain, brethren, does not have to be in the form of money. It can be power. It can be status. It can be recognition. However, biblically, the description of prostitution and examples are confined to the illicit sexual activities of women, because of Israel being symbolized as a woman. That is going to be the focus of what is said in the Bible. A woman prostitute is distinguished from an adulterer because of the lack of discrimination in choosing her partners. "Anybody will do." This lack of discrimination is important because it reveals a mind-set, an attitude toward what we might call today, "an air-head." I don't care how intelligent they are, the people who get involved in prostitution are air-heads. There is a serious ignoring of the harsh realities of her sin. What it reveals is a stubborn addiction to gambling on sin's outcome. The prostitute justifies the sin on the basis of her immediate needs. All sin follows a pattern. The actual act is the next to last step in a process that sometimes doesn't involve a great deal of time to complete once it starts. We're going to begin with some scriptures that Martin used a couple weeks ago.
Here, simply stated, is the process of sin. (1) Temptation triggers desire. (2) Desire stirs the yearning for gratification. (3) The failure to consider the end(this is where the "air-head" part comes in, the gambling)and discipline one's self brings forth the sinful act. (4) The sinful act brings forth death. Now repeated frequently enough, the process becomes habitual. The Bible pinpoints the force of sin in yet another way.
This series of verses is just another way of saying that sin is within the very nature of mankind. It is in the very nature of mankind to sin. That's just another way of putting it. This is not a justification for sin, because the nature can be disciplined far better than mankind exhibits, and if sin is going to be stopped, this is where it must be stopped. It must be stopped right there. The carnal mind is at war against God, and it is not subject to the law of God because of sheer unbelieving stubbornness. It will not permit itself to be completely submissive. This answers why God says in the Old Testament that He's going to have to give us a new heart. That deceitful heart cannot be changed! But that's where sin comes from. Sin comes from that heart that cannot be changed. The Bible uses the word "heart" to represent all of the intangibles of human personality. Today we might say it's the heart that makes us "tick." It is the spirit that motivates us, that drives us to conduct ourselves the way we do. The Bible shows that the prostitute has a specific spirit, or heart, that is driving her. Let's go back to Hosea again. We can begin to understand why God said that Gomer had a spirit of prostitution.
"Spirit" is the word the Bible uses in a context like this to indicate an immaterial force or power. It's an attitude, a leaning, an inclination. It's a position. It's an outlook, a propensity, a proclivity to move, to act, or conduct one's self in a certain manner or direction. The spirit is one of those intangibles that make up human nature, and its direction of conduct is clearly to be disloyal and unfaithful to a commitment to God sealed in the Old Covenant when she [Israel] vowed by saying, "All the Eternal has said, we will do." She didn't have the spirit to follow through with what she vowed to do. Her spirit was driving her into whoredom. Let me remind you again that what we're looking at here is something the entire nation is guilty ofboth men and women. We're only looking at the streetwalker type of prostitution because the Bible gives a clear picture of what drives them. We can then transfer this picture to the whole nation and also to ourselves individually because we have been part and parcel of the same system, and its drive still lingers in us. This is what makes it so hard to overcome this spirit of whoredom that is driving us. When I say ourselves "individually," please understand that I'm not accusing anybody of being a streetwalker. Remember again that two of the definitions of prostitution are (1) to abase one's self for personal gain and (2) to abuse one's gifts, talents, and skill for the same. I have read occasionally in biographies of famous personalities that the author writes that the personality (especially an artist) is felt to have prostituted his gifts in order to become wealthy. One of the personalities that I remember reading this about was Picasso, the painter. I don't know whether you have ever seen any of Picasso's paintings, but to this man's eyes, they are weird! What his biographer said was that Picasso was capable of doing really beautiful work, but early in his life he discovered things that would sell, and what would sell was these weird pictures. He spent his life doing these weird pictures because it made money for him, and he became a wealthy man. Picasso prostituted himself by neglecting his gift to use it to draw things, to paint things that were truly beautiful the way God created them. He stands, in my mind, as sort of an icon for this, because what his biographer said was so clearly visible to me. In principle though, all of us are capable of doing this to some degree or another.
God's punishment of Israel is directly linked, in this case, to the fact that they had a relationship. They knew one another, and He expected then more and better from them. But Israel prostituted herself for what she considered personal gain. Among the greatest of all gifts that she was given is the knowledge of God given in order to produce both abundance and skill in living. Now are we going to claim that we have not debased ourselves by indiscriminately expecting the personal gain of the immediate gratification of an unlawful desire, ignoring and shoving aside the gift of our knowledge of God? All of us, brethren, have done this. All of us, because once we have knowledge of the truth, and our ignorance of God and His way and His law is removed, if we didn't prostitute ourselves, there would be no sin in our lives. But the sad truth is that we don't discipline, we don't control ourselves, and instead we indulge ourselves, and sin occurs. God gives us a clear picture of how He perceives a prostitute's characteristics and what is driving her. As we read these I want you to transfer what He says to Israel, because Israel is the worst prostitute in the history of mankind. Let's go back to the book of Proverbs, chapter 6. I'm not going to spend a great deal of time in going into these things in detail. Proverbs 6 begins a fairly long section that is devoted to prostitution. I want to start here because of a comment that is made.
I think we understand that the father here is God. His commandments are His law, and the mother here is the Church. The subject is going to be prostitution.
The first concern is not about our body. It's not even about the act itself. It's about the protection of the heart, because it is the wellspring of conduct. If the heart is protected there is a much better chance that we are not going to prostitute ourselves. A much higher likelihood is that we will go on from there and avoid the trap that is set for us by the prostitute. Let's jump all the way to chapter 7 and verse 10. I'll just read through this in one jump.
If we would spend time carefully studying this, we would find that she is described as "deviously sly." If you get a bunch of commentaries out and look at these things, and look at the way they define these words, this is what you would find. You would find this is the way temptation is. It is "deviously sly." It knows how to play on our feelings. She is described as "deviously sly." She is cunning. She feigns love. She knows how to pull a man's strings, as we would say today. She is purposefully seductive. That's part of her attraction. She is somewhat immodest in the way that she dresses. The King James says that she is "loud." That's a very poor translation. Rather it means that she is turbulent. Now we're looking on the inside of her, at what her mind is really like. She is turbulent, flighty, confused, inconstant, unstable. She lacks dignity and gravity. In the King James it says that she is stubborn. Rather though, she is defiant, brazen, deliberately obstinate and headstrong. She is impudent, contemptuous, presumptuous, and disrespectful. All of these characteristics appear in one form or another between verses 10 and 21. It's there to show you how seductive temptation to sin is. It doesn't have to be a woman that is the alluring trap. It can be all kinds of things besides a woman that might attract a man into sin. Now apart from these in Israel, there is in the biblical record one woman who epitomizes the harlot, and in so doing helps us to zero in on what it is that is driving most harlots. The woman is Delilah. It will take us only two verses in the book of Judges 16:4-5.
You can go through the whole story and see how cunning she is. She was undoubtedly attractive, seductive to him. But what was driving her? It was money. She saw a way for personal gain. Again, what it is that allures the prostitute into this is not necessarily money, but it does serve a purpose. We can see this very clearly. Harlotry has at its base deceit, treachery entered into, executed or performed for personal gain. Not every case of harlotry follows exactly the same pattern as Delilah's, but one thing never changes, and that is the desire for personal gain. We commit harlotry, or prostitution, because we feel we are going to get something out of it that is going to be satisfying to us, gratifying to us, but there has to be the temptation that precedes it. Delilah is the temptation. She is working her entice JWR/smp/cah
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