Daily Archives: December 2, 2020

December 2d The D. L. Moody Year Book

For I delivered unto you first of all that which I also received, how that Christ died for our sins according to the scriptures.—1 Corinthians 15:3.

YOU ask me what my hope is. It is that Christ died for my sins, in my stead, in my place, and therefore I can enter into life eternal. You ask Paul what his hope was. “Christ died for our sins according to the Scripture.” This is the hope in which died all the glorious martyrs of old, in which all who have entered heaven’s gate have found their only comfort. Take that doctrine of substitution out of the Bible, and my hope is lost. With the law, without Christ, we are all undone. The law we have broken, and it can only hang over our head the sharp sword of justice. Even if we could keep it from this moment, there remains the unforgiven past. “Without shedding of blood there is no remission.”[1]

 

[1] Moody, D. L. (1900). The D. L. Moody Year Book: A Living Daily Message from the Words of D. L. Moody. (E. M. Fitt, Ed.) (pp. 214–215). East Northfield, MA: The Bookstore.

December 2 Life-Changing Moments With God

You have an anointing from the Holy One, and you know all things.

Lord God, You anointed Jesus of Nazareth with the Holy Spirit and with power. It pleased You that in Him all the fullness should dwell. Of Jesus’ fullness I have received, and grace for grace.

You, Lord God, anoint my head with oil. The anointing which I have received from You abides in me, and I do not need that anyone teach me but as the same anointing teaches me concerning all things, and is true, and is not a lie, and just as it has taught me, I will abide in You.

The Helper, the Holy Spirit, whom You, Father God, sent in Jesus’ name, He will teach me all things, and bring to my remembrance all things that He said to me.

The Spirit also helps in my weaknesses. For I do not know what I should pray for as I ought, but the Spirit Himself makes intercession for me with groanings which cannot be uttered.

Lord God, thank You for Your Spirit who teaches me Your truth, helps me remember what He has taught me, strengthens me in my weaknesses, and prays for me!

1 John 2:20; Acts 10:38; Colossians 1:19; John 1:16; Psalm 23:5; 1 John 2:27; John 14:26; Romans 8:26[1]

 

[1] Jeremiah, D. (2007). Life-Changing Moments With God (p. 361). Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson Publishers.

December 2, 2020 Evening Verse Of The Day

Affirmation of Trust (54:4)

4 In a hymnic manner, indicated by “surely” and nominal clauses in the Hebrew, the psalm shifts from worry over the arrogant to a confident trust in the Lord. Triumphantly the psalmist exclaims, “Surely God is my help” (cf. 30:10; 72:12; 118:7). The MT further describes the Lord as one of “those who sustain me” (see RSV). But the NIV is correct in understanding the preposition be (“among”) as emphasizing the Lord as the only one who grants support to his people: “the Lord is the one who sustains me” (cf. GKC, para. 119i). Dahood, 2:23, puts it well: “The Lord is the true Sustainer of my life!” Because Yahweh is his only Helper, the psalmist looks forward with alacrity to the enjoyment of his God-given life (cf. 51:12).[1]


54:4 God is my help. Here the psalmist introduces the underlying reason that generates his request: God is his helper. It is a turning point in the psalm, with selah (see NIV footnote) at the end of verse 3 probably alerting the reader to the change. While it is quite possible that selah was not original to the text of the Psalms but was a later liturgical note, this is one place where the term indicates a change in the tone of the psalm.[2]


4. Behold! God is my helper. Such language as this may show us that David did not direct his prayers at random into the air, but offered them in the exercise of a lively faith. There is much force in the demonstrative adverb. He points, as it were, with the finger, to that God who stood at his side to defend him; and was not this an amazing illustration of the power with which faith can surmount all obstacles, and glance, in a moment, from the depths of despair to the very throne of God? He was a fugitive amongst the dens of the earth, and even there in hazard of his life—how, then, could he speak of God as being near to him? He was pressed down to the very mouth of the grave; and how could he recognize the gracious presence of God? He was trembling in the momentary expectation of being destroyed; and how is it possible that he can triumph in the certain hope that Divine help will presently be extended to him? In numbering God amongst his defenders, we must not suppose that he assigns him a mere common rank amongst the men who supported his cause, which would have been highly derogatory to his glory. He means that God took part with those, such as Jonathan and others, who were interested in his welfare. These might be few in number, possessed of little power, and cast down with fears; but he believed that, under the guidance and protection of the Almighty, they would prove superior to his enemies: or, perhaps, we may view him as referring, in the words, to his complete destitution of all human defenders, and asserting that the help of God would abundantly compensate for all.[3]


4. “Behold, God is mine helper.” He saw enemies everywhere, and now to his joy as he looks upon the band of his defenders he sees one whose aid is better than all the help of men; he is overwhelmed with joy at recognising his divine champion, and cries, “Behold.” And is not this a theme for pious exultation in all time, that the great God protects us, his own people: what matters the number or violence of our foes when he uplifts the shield of his omnipotence to guard us, and the sword of his power to aid us? Little care we for the defiance of the foe while we have the defence of God. “The Lord is with them that uphold my soul.” The reigning Lord, the great Adonai is in the camp of my defenders. Here was a greater champion than any of the three mighties, or than all the valiant men who chose David for their captain. The Psalmist was very confident, he felt so thoroughly that his heart was on the Lord’s side that he was sure God was on his side. He asked in the first verse for deliverance, and here he returns thanks for upholding: while we are seeking one mercy which we have not, we must not be unmindful of another which we have. It is a great mercy to have some friends left us, but a greater mercy still to see the Lord among them, for like so many cyphers our friends stand for nothing till the Lord sets himself as a great unit in the front of them.[4]


[1] VanGemeren, W. A. (2008). Psalms. In T. Longman III & D. E. Garland (Eds.), The Expositor’s Bible Commentary: Psalms (Revised Edition) (Vol. 5, p. 448). Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan.

[2] Bullock, C. H. (2015). Psalms 1–72. (M. L. Strauss & J. H. Walton, Eds.) (Vol. 1, p. 410). Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Books.

[3] Calvin, J., & Anderson, J. (2010). Commentary on the Book of Psalms (Vol. 2, pp. 324–325). Bellingham, WA: Logos Bible Software.

[4] Spurgeon, C. H. (n.d.). The treasury of David: Psalms 27-57 (Vol. 2, p. 441). London; Edinburgh; New York: Marshall Brothers.

December—2 The Poor Man’s Evening Portion

I sleep, but my heart waketh.—Song 5:2.

My soul! behold the Church hath fallen into a sleepy state, after having been at the banquet of her Lord; and view in her the resemblance of thyself. How often art thou in this cold and lifeless situation; and instead of seeking increasing communion and fellowship with Jesus, falling asleep, as one insensible to past enjoyments and present need! It is not indeed the sleep of death! for, through the sovereignty of almighty grace, thou hast been quickened to a new and spiritual life in Christ Jesus; and thine heart waketh to the knowledge of thy Lord. But how unsuitable and unbecoming is it, for one who hath tasted that the Lord is gracious, to be indifferent to the farther enjoyment of him! Time was, when if thou didst miss Jesus in the ordinance, or hadst not a visit from thy Lord for a short space, thou wert on the wing of love going forth in every way, and in every direction, in the inquiry, “Saw ye him whom my soul loveth?” And canst thou, my soul, be contented to live in this sleepy frame, and without the visits of thy Lord? Look up to Jesus, he is near at hand, and waiting to be gracious! Listen to his voice, in his word, in his ordinances, in all the means of his grace; hasten to the awakening ministry of some one of his faithful servants. These methods the Lord will bless. Jesus will come again: he will do by thee as he did by the Church, “He will put in his hand by the hole of the door, until that thy bowels are moved for him.” Precious Lord Jesus! keep from me all sleepy, lifeless frames! Give me day by day to be pressing after some renewed tokens of thy love; and let each mercy quicken my poor soul to desire farther manifestations: that in greater degrees, and more frequent enjoyments of thee, I may, like thy servant, the apostle, “forget those things which are behind, and reaching forth unto those which are before, press toward the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus!” Amen.[1]

 

[1] Hawker, R. (1845). The Poor Man’s Evening Portion (A New Edition, p. 335). Philadelphia: Thomas Wardle.

December 2 – Daniel & the 70 Weeks — VCY America

December 2Daniel 9:1-11:1
1 John 2:18-3:6
Psalm 121:1-8
Proverbs 28:27-28 

Daniel 9:2 – Prophecy is easier to be understood at the time when it is being fulfilled, as opposed to when it is given. Notice the interconnection of Scripture – Peter wrote about Paul’s writings (2 Peter 3:15-16), now Daniel writes about Jeremiah’s writings.

Daniel 9:5 – Compare to Nehemiah’s repentance on behalf of his nation (Nehemiah 1:7). 

Daniel 9:11 – Daniel recognizes that Moses’ prophecy is being fulfilled (Deuteronomy 27).

Daniel 9:17-19 – Daniel begs God four times to listen in these 3 verses, not because they deserve it, but “for thy great mercies” (Daniel 9:18).

Daniel 9:24 -What are the Seventy Weeks and how are they counted? From BobShelton.org:

https://bobshelton.org/charts/

Daniel 10:13 – Spiritual warfare is real. We read about it in Jude 1:9, Zechariah 3:2, and Revelation 12:7.

Daniel 10:15 – Daniel spoke much before the vision, and after God revealed His truth to Daniel, Daniel went silent. Job had much to say to God, but when God spoke, Job replied, “I uttered that I understood not.” 

1 John 2:22 – Sadly many people deny that Jesus is the Christ, the Messiah, the Everlasting Father (Isaiah 9:6). Doctrine matters – for if you do not follow the Son, you cannot claim the Father.  

Some think that all religions worship the same God, but as someone shared this explanation, if you were to ask me if I know John Smith, and I say, “Yes, and I know his wife Julie and his son Bob,” and you say “John’s never been married” – we’re probably not talking about the same John Smith. Likewise if your Jesus is not Christ, the living God, then it’s probably another Jesus.

1 John 3:1 – Behold what manner of love the Father has given unto us!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3U9GJf6B7mc&t=13s

1 John 3:2 – Wow! We shall be like Him? God is good to us!

Psalm 121:4 – Isn’t it great to know that God does not sleep nor does He slumber!

Psalm 28:27 – Doesn’t that seem contradictory? Givers won’t lack, but hoarders will suffer? Jesus followed up on that in Matthew 20:16.

December 2 – Daniel & the 70 Weeks — VCY America

December 2 On the Way to Carmel

Now bring all the people … to Mount Carmel.
(I Kings 18:19, TLB)

Elijah’s destiny was to stand on Mount Carmel and call down fire out of heaven. But he could only get there progressively—for that’s how God works. First, God sent him to a brook at Cherith, which means “covenants.” At some point in your spiritual journey, you’ve got to learn that your God is a covenant-making, covenant-keeping God. To do it, He’ll dry up rivers, make axe heads swim, and order fish into a net, but He’ll keep His promise to you, come what may. Note, God told Elijah, “… I have commanded the ravens to feed thee there” (1 Kings 17:4). Had he gone anywhere else, God wouldn’t have met his need, for a covenant is two-sided. You must fulfill your part! Take a moment and ask yourself honestly, “Have I? Am I where God wants me to be?”

Next God sent Elijah to Azrephath saying, “… I have commanded a widow woman there to sustain thee” (1 Kings 17:9). God uses ravens and widows and whatever He likes—so stop trying to second-guess Him. One day, Sarah Utterbach said to me, “Bob, since your steps are already ordered of the Lord, why are you trying to figure it out?” (See Psalm 37:23.) Good question! Zarephath means “the melting pot.” It’s where metal was refined. If you’re “going through the fire” today, rejoice. God’s just separating the gold from the impurities in your character.

 

Hang in there! When you’ve passed the tests at Cherith and Zarlphath, then you’ll be ready to go to Mount Carmel.[1]

 

[1] Gass, B. (1998). A Fresh Word For Today : 365 Insights For Daily Living (p. 336). Alachua, FL: Bridge-Logos Publishers.

2 Dec 2020 – Rapture Ready News

Daily Beast Editor Calls For “Humiliation” And “Incarceration” For Trump Supporters
“…as long as he and his foul spawn walk the earth unpunished. Only exposure, pain, humiliation, and (inshallah) incarceration will lead to a moment of reckoning for the GOP…”

Indonesia: Terrorists behind murder of 4 Christians, attack on Salvation Army post identified
Muslim extremists with the terrorist group MIT are believed to be responsible for the gruesome attack that left four Christians dead.

Dalio: The United States Is At A Tipping Point That Could Lead To Revolution Or Civil War
“It is in this stage when there are bad financial conditions and intensifying conflict. Classically this stage comes after periods of great excesses in spending and debt and the widening of wealth and political gaps and before there are revolutions and civil wars.”

Biden’s LGBT proposals aim to ban therapy for unwanted same-sex attraction, allow trans-athletes in girls’ sports
Following the media’s projection of his victory in the 2020 presidential election, former Vice President Joe Biden has made “sweeping promises” to LGBT activists, according to The Associated Press.

Tropical Cyclone “Burevi” to make landfall over northern Sri Lanka on December 2
Tropical Cyclone “Burevi” formed on December 1, 2020, in the Bay of Bengal as the 5th named storm of the 2020 North Indian Ocean cyclone season. The cyclone is forecast to continue intensifying before it makes landfall in northern Sri Lanka on December 2 (LT) as a Cyclonic Storm. A Cyclone Alert is in effect from Tamil Nadu, India to Sri Lanka.

COVID-1984 DOUBLESPEAK: New UK Vaccine Minister Says That While Coronavirus Vaccinations Will Not Be Mandatory, The Immunity Passport Will
Over in the UK where there are weeks away from rolling out the first round of coronavirus vaccines, the newly-appointed Minister for COVID Vaccine Deployment has been engaging in some decidedly Orwellian double-speak. On the one hand, he said that the UK has no plans to make the vaccine mandatory, and then follows that up with the idea that the immunity passport, something you get after receiving a vaccine, will be mandatory.

Situation Update – Dec. 1st – ROGUE government must be ABOLISHED by the people
In today’s Situation Update, we highlights the latest interview with 3-star General Thomas McInerney, who is calling for President Trump to invoke the Insurrection Act, declare martial law and initiate mass arrests of the traitors involved in this criminal election theft (which is actually an act of war against America).

COVID-1984: Nearly One-Third Of All Small Businesses In The New York And New Jersey Area Remained Closed Due To Draconian COVID-1984 Lockdown
Don’t you love when the global elites who demand you wear a mask don’t actually wear them when they think no one is watching? They do it every day. Don’t you also live when multimillionaires like Bruce Springsteen and Jon Bon Jovi lecture you about social distancing and staying at home? They shout at you to “Wear a friggin’ mask!” Unlike you, they are not suffering any economic hardships of any kind, so they don’t care if nearly 33% of New York and New Jersey small businesses have remained closed since March of this year.

Black Lives Matter? Courtesy of Record Rates of Black on Black Homicides, St. Louis Has More Murders in 2020 Than COVID-19 Deaths…
Somehow this is still the fault of white people/white flight/gentrification/redlining/white privilege/systemic racism/implicit bias and don’t forget, the legacy of slavery.

America’s Future Is Liberal Fascism Sporting A Smiley Shirt And Armed With A Syringe 
The globalists responsible for engineering a medical tyranny across much of the Western world have something valuable to teach right-wing nationalists and would-be fascists, and that is you don’t sell your damaged product out of the barrel of a machine gun, but rather dripping from the end of a syringe that promises to end all pain and misery.

Major storm hits U.S. East Coast, leaving more than 230 000 customers without power
A powerful storm swept through the U.S. East Coast on Monday, November 30, 2020, leaving more than 230 000 customers without power in the region. The storm system brought damaging winds and heavy rains, downing multiple trees and power lines and producing several tornadoes.

Majority of households with kids worried about food
Fewer than half of households with kids in the U.S. are “very confident” they can afford food over the next four weeks while 5.6 million households with children reported struggling to afford food in the last seven days, according to new Census survey data.

Source: 2 Dec 2020

Where Do We Go From Here as Christians? | Faith vs. Culture

The 2020 election was and continues to be one of the most divisive in modern history. As we begin looking at it through the rearview mirror, man of us are left wondering where do we go from here? Author and Relearn.org founder Dale Partridge joins Faithwire managing editor Dan Andros to discuss.

If your heart is grieving this season | Baptist News Global

If your heart is sitting in a place of deep lament and grief this holiday season, you are not alone. No human on the planet has been a stranger to grief or hardship this year. How it has affected each of us is different, but all of us are walking through the holidays this year carrying heavy things.

Whether you’ve lost a loved one due to this horrible virus or you’ve lost your job and financial security; whether you’ve lost a piece of your health or whether you’ve lost autonomy and struggle to manage working from home while your children learn remotely; whether you’re grieving the loss of life as we knew it or whether you’re grieving the loss of relationships due to differences in religious beliefs, political values or social distancing differences — all of us are facing hardship and we must lean on one another.

Amber Cantorna

As someone who is no stranger to hardship or grief, here are five things I believe could be helpful to implement in your life this season:

First, acknowledge and talk to your grief. This may seem unusual, or even a bit odd. At best, it’s bound to make you a bit uncomfortable. But one way to sit with your grief and allow yourself to feel the emotions your body is storing is to talk to your grief.

If you’re grieving a death or the loss of a relationship, speak as if you’re talking directly to that person. Communicate your pain and loss to them. If not (or even if you are) consider writing a letter, not about, but directly to your grief. Begin by addressing it, “Dear Grief …” and allow whatever comes next to flow freely.

Although this exercise may take some inner strength, it will help release emotions you may not realize your body is holding.

Second, manage good boundaries. Boundaries are something I talk about often in my work. This also is a topic that makes many people uncomfortable. Most of us weren’t taught to appreciate, much less practice, healthy boundaries. But healthy boundaries are an excellent way of protecting your physical, emotional, spiritual and mental health.

Boundaries may mean setting parameters around who you spend time with, how many holiday commitments you take on or how much money you spend on gifts this year. It may mean hard conversations with family regarding social distancing and what gathering does and does not look like for you in this unpredictable season.

Boundaries come in many shapes and forms, but if your heart is grieving, it would be wise for you to pull back a bit from what you would typically take on during this time of year and, instead, give your heart room to breathe and heal. You really don’t have to bake 10 different kinds of cookies and send out Christmas cards to everyone you’ve ever met and have all your gifts wrapped and delivered extra early and sign up for every gift exchange that comes your way.

“Saying ‘no’ is a basic boundary, and it is a healthy one if your soul is feeling overwhelmed by grief.”

Saying “no” is a basic boundary, and it is a healthy one if your soul is feeling overwhelmed by grief. Take on what brings you joy. Leave the rest for another year.

Third, prioritize self-care. This may seem like common sense, yet at the same time, self-care is what many of us are lacking in the most. We do all the work things, the family things, the kid things, the pet things, the house things, the other people things, and by the time we’re done with it all, we’re too exhausted for any of our things.

Prioritize self-care this season. Whatever brings you comfort and joy, do more of that. For me, it means spending time in nature; for you, it may be yoga or a walk on the beach or a hot bubble bath or a favorite movie or a blanket and a good book.

When your heart is grieving, simplifying life and tending to your heart is critical. Move self-care to the top of your list this season, and stop putting yourself last. No guilt. No shame. Give your soul room to breathe. Your family and loved ones will be glad you did.

Fourth, share your grief with another person. This may be one of the hardest to incorporate, because it requires being vulnerable with someone else about your pain. I encourage you to choose who you share with wisely. Ask them to sit with you in your pain (and not try to fix it). Then share with them what living with your particular grief is like.

There’s something powerful about sharing our burdens with another. It diffuses the power our pain seems to hold over us and instead creates a salve for our souls, leading us one step closer to healing. Pain doesn’t dissipate overnight, but sharing our grief with others allows us to be seen, heard and loved exactly as we are, where we are.

“Remember that grief has no rules.”

Fifth, remember that grief has no rules. A dear friend of mine lost her son to suicide just over a year ago. It was awful and heartbreaking in every way imaginable. In the weeks and months that followed, she began using the hashtag #griefhasnorules. This has become a beautiful reminder to me when I find myself in grief.

There is no right or wrong way to grieve. Everyone grieves differently, in different timeframes, and in different ways. Don’t put restrictions or parameters on your grief. Give your heart the permission it needs to feel and grieve deeply. For only when you fully grieve the loss can you begin to fully heal.

If you are grieving this year, listen to your inner voice and do for yourself whatever it is that you need. Lean on and check in with one another. Practice these things I’ve listed here. And know that you are not alone, even when the dark feels darkest.

Amber Cantorna grew up in the deeply conservative evangelical culture of Focus on the Family and now lives in the Denver area with her wife, Clara. She is the author of Refocusing My Family and Unashamed: A Coming Out Guide for LGBTQ Christians. She is a musician, writer and speaker.

 

Related articles:

5 ways to make the holidays meaningful in 2020 | Amber Cantorna

Searching for gratitude amid the chaos, calamity and confusion of 2020 | Marv Knox

Getting into the holiday spirit is hard this year | Ella Wall Prichard

Four stones to support your grief this holiday season | Harold Ivan Smith

Source: If your heart is grieving this season

Christian Persecution on the Rise Amid COVID Pandemic This Christmas — Faithwire

The Christmas season puts a particularly intense strain on vulnerable Christians around the world and, amid the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, the persecution believers are facing this year is even greater than usual.

“Christmas is the real focal point for celebrating the birth of Jesus and, conversely, the focal point for people who are targeting Christians for their faith,” said David Curry, CEO of Open Doors USA, a nonprofit advocating for persecuted Christians around the world.

Those persecutions, he told Faithwire, have only escalated during the COVID crisis.

The humanitarian leader pointed to northern Nigeria, for example, where he said Islamic government leaders “are keeping food from these Christian villages” amid shortages caused by the pandemic. Curry pointed to similar reports from Pakistan and India. In July, the communications director for Open Doors Asia, Jan Vermeer, told Premier Christian Radio the charity has been “inundated with reports of Christians telling us their communities would only give them food if they re-converted back to their original faith.”

“So we’re now helping to feed this Christmas season people who are withheld food and government relief during COVID because they are Christians in these communities,” Curry explained. “And some of these areas … it will touch your heart to see how much they love Jesus, how hungry they are and then, when we bring them their food, it’s a game changer for them.”

In addition, Christmas is particularly difficult for new Muslim converts who have abandoned their Islamic faith in favor of Christianity. The lives of those new believers, Curry said, have been “greatly altered,” noting many of them are shunned by their families while living in countries hostile toward their newfound beliefs. Enduring such tectonic spiritual shifts for the first time at Christmas “can be very stressful,” he added.

Continuing to provide support, though, requires money.

On average, Americans spend around $1,400 on holiday travel each year. With so many staying home this Christmas, Curry is asking people to donate some of that saved travel money to believers in need living in countries hostile toward Christianity.

“These aren’t — in most cases — toys under a tree,” Curry said of the gifts purchased for persecuted believers. “This is simple things like vocational training, like trauma care, paying for their counselors to talk about what has happened to them. Some of them have suffered really unimaginable trauma [and] difficulty because of their faith. They may have been threatened, some of them, women have been assaulted.”

“It’s an outreach of love at Christmas in Jesus’ name for people who are under tremendous discrimination and oppression for their faith,” he added.

Curry encouraged people to download Open Doors USA’s prayer app, Pray for the Persecuted, where users can learn about the “urgent needs that come up every day” and write letters and emails to vulnerable Christians around the globe.

For those interested in donating to the cause or learning more about Open Doors USA, you can visit opendoorsusa.org.

Christian Persecution on the Rise Amid COVID Pandemic This Christmas — Faithwire

Mid-Day Snapshot · Dec. 2, 2020

THE FOUNDATION

“Give up money, give up fame, give up science, give the earth itself and all it contains rather than do an immoral act. And never suppose that in any possible situation, or under any circumstances, it is best for you to do a dishonorable thing, however slightly so it may appear to you… From the practice of the purest virtue, you may be assured you will derive the most sublime comforts in every moment of life, and in the moment of death.” —Thomas Jefferson (1785)

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IN TODAY’S DIGEST

FEATURED ANALYSIS

Bill Barr Says He Hasn’t Seen Much. Yet.

Douglas Andrews

There’s been a DOJ sighting.

After weeks of wondering about the seeming disappearance of our nation’s federal law enforcement apparatus, Attorney General William Barr sat down with the Associated Press yesterday to briefly discuss a matter that’s been of passing interest to some 74 million of us: whether the Democrats stole the 2020 presidential election from Donald Trump.

We’re sure Barr and the 113,000 taxpayer-funded employees his office oversees have been busy with other things — prosecuting James Comey, Andrew McCabe, Peter Strzok, and the rest of those Spygate conspirators for one. And nailing that senior-level mastermind of the entire plot, Kevin Clinesmith, to the wall for another.

Oh, wait. But they’ve been busy. With other things. Honest.

“Disputing President Donald Trump’s persistent, baseless claims,” the AP gleefully reports, “Barr declared Tuesday the U.S. Justice Department has uncovered no evidence of widespread voter fraud that could change the outcome of the 2020 election.”

Right. Baseless claims. Like the baseless claim of the massive ballot dump of Pennsylvania votes that favored Joe Biden over Donald Trump by a margin of 570,000 to 3,200 — or 99.4% to 0.6% for you math majors. Or the similar-though-not-as-stark “spike anomalies” in — miraculously enough — three other swing states: Michigan (twice), Wisconsin, and Georgia.

As the AP piece continues, “Barr told the AP that U.S. attorneys and FBI agents have been working to follow up specific complaints and information they’ve received, but ‘to date, we have not seen fraud on a scale that could have effected a different outcome in the election.’”

“Other administration officials who have come out forcefully against Trump’s allegations of voter-fraud evidence have been fired,” notes the AP goadingly but incorrectly. “But it’s not clear whether Barr might suffer the same fate.” (Only a single administration official, DHS cybersecurity head Christopher Krebs, was fired — not the AP’s plural “other administration officials.” As for Krebs, one wonders how thorough an election-security analysis he might’ve been able to do in just a few short days — enough to have self-servingly declared it, as he did, “the most secure in American history”?)

As for the massive fraud that involves data manipulation, Barr notes, “There’s been one assertion that would be systemic fraud, and that would be the claim that machines were programmed essentially to skew the election results. And the DHS and DOJ have looked into that, and so far, we haven’t seen anything to substantiate that. … Most claims of fraud are very particularized to a particular set of circumstances or actors or conduct. They are not systemic allegations. And those have been run down.”

Barr’s assertion about the “very particularized” nature of the many fraud allegations that have been collected by the Trump legal team makes perfect sense. But all it would take to turn an election is a handful of “spike anomalies” like the ones mentioned above. We wonder whether the AG is aware of these particular allegations and has run them down as well.

And we wonder, more generally, what ever happened to the Bill Barr who gave a dire warning to CNN’s Wolf Blitzer three months ago when he was asked about the potential for fraud when massive mail-in balloting is introduced.

“This is playing with fire,” Barr warned Blitzer in early September. “We’re a very closely divided country here, and people have to have confidence in results of the election and the legitimacy of the government. And people trying to change the rules to this methodology — which as a matter of logic is very open to fraud and coercion — is reckless and dangerous. And people are playing with fire.”

As for Rudy Giuliani and the rest of President Trump’s legal team, they clearly see things a bit differently than Barr. “With all due respect to the attorney general,” Giuliani and fellow Trump lawyer Jenna Ellis said yesterday, “there hasn’t been any semblance of a Department of Justice investigation. We have gathered ample evidence of illegal voting in at least six states, which they have not examined. We have many witnesses swearing under oath they saw crimes being committed in connection with voter fraud. … As far as we know, not a single one has been interviewed by the DOJ. The Justice Department also hasn’t audited any voting machines or used their subpoena powers to determine the truth.”

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Barr Appoints Durham as Special Counsel

Thomas Gallatin

Attorney General William Barr alerted Congress in a letter Tuesday that he had appointed U.S. Attorney John Durham as special counsel under Justice Department regulations, a move he made back on October 19. Barr explained that he delayed notifying members of Congress due to “the proximity to the presidential election” and “to provide [Durham] and his team with the assurance that they could complete their work, without regard to the outcome of the election.”

Durham was first appointed by Barr in May 2019 to investigate the origins of the Russia-collusion hoax, and his probe soon became a criminal one. He had been expected by President Donald Trump and many other conservatives to not only unearth more damning evidence regarding illegal actions undertaken by members of Barack Obama’s deep state in their efforts to oust Trump but also to bring charges against some big-name players. Unfortunately, after a year and a half of investigating, only one low-level individual, FBI lawyer Kevin Clinesmith, has been held to account, as he pleaded guilty to altering an email for the FBI’s Carter Page FISA warrant application. (That’s part of the reason for Page’s lawsuit.)

Even Barr tacitly admitted his expectation had thus far gone unmet. “Although I had expected Mr. Durham to complete his work by the summer of 2020,” Barr said, “the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as additional information he uncovered, prevented him from doing so.”

It’s unclear if Barr’s action would truly prevent a Joe Biden administration from ending and closing the books on Durham’s investigation on day one of taking office. One reason is that Durham’s appointment may not hold up. As former federal prosecutor Andrew McCarthy warns, “Under Section 600.3 of the regs, ‘The Special Counsel shall be selected from outside the United States Government.’ At the time Mueller was appointed, for example, he was a private lawyer no longer in government service.” Durham was not “outside” the government.

However, Barr’s action does make it far more politically difficult for Biden to simply make the investigation disappear, as it would rightly be seen as a purely partisan and self-serving move — one that Republicans would effectively argue was intended as a cover-up to prevent the American people from seeing what Durham discovered. By ending it early, Biden would only be inviting a scandal.

Finally, while Trump and others have been clearly disappointed by Durham’s seeming slowness and lack of results, the fact that he has remained steadfastly unmoved by political pressure from either side should lend greater credibility to his findings when they are eventually released.

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Georgia Republicans Must Unify or Risk Losing Senate

Louis DeBroux

If anything, the campaign for Georgia’s two U.S. Senate seat runoffs is even more chaotic and contentious than the general election. It’s become a perfect storm of legitimate concerns, unfounded conspiracies, process ignorance, political brinksmanship, and fratricidal infighting. And it threatens to hand Democrats these critical Senate seats.

According to election results certified by Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, Joe Biden won Georgia by a narrow 12,000-vote margin. President Donald Trump has repeatedly claimed the results are fraudulent, focusing on issues surrounding signature verification on absentee ballots and the unusually low number of rejected absentee ballots.

This has stoked fierce anger and frustration among his loyal supporters. That’s certainly understandable, but it’s being directed toward fellow Republicans — Governor Brian Kemp, Secretary Raffensperger, and, shockingly, even against Senators David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler, who are now fighting for their political lives. Both Perdue and Loeffler closely tied themselves to President Trump during the election campaign, a fact that hurt them with voters in Atlanta’s northern suburbs, which hold a large number of traditionally Republican voters who simply don’t like Trump.

Unfortunately, frustration is not always properly focused and, ironically, in this case is often directed at the grassroots party officers and activists who have worked the hardest to reelect Trump.

As a GOP county chairman in Georgia, I’ve received literally hundreds of calls since the election from angry and distraught Trump supporters who feel the election was stolen. Some complaints are legitimate or understandable, like concerns surrounding the March consent decree between the Georgia Democrat Party and Secretary Raffensperger, which many argue makes absentee ballot voter fraud easier, though Raffensperger disputes that claim.

Other complaints are from people who have never been directly involved in the election process before, so they don’t have the knowledge or experience to separate fact from fiction. For example, I’ve received countless calls from people saying they received multiple absentee ballots, when what they actually received were absentee ballot applications.

Adding fuel to the fire is the fact that Democrats have spent the better part of the last decade filing lawsuits to weaken Georgia’s election security, and then dumping mountains of fraudulent voter applications on the secretary of state only to then claim racism when they are rejected. This was primarily the work of the New Georgia Project, founded by failed Democrat gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams (who, Democrats should note, has still not conceded the 2018 election to Kemp) and run by CEO Raphael Warnock — the same radical leftist currently running against Senator Loeffler.

Secretary Raffensperger is currently investigating the New Georgia Project for attempting to register non-Georgians to vote in Georgia, which is a felony.

Even so, at this point, the biggest problem is that President Trump, who loves to speak in hyperbole, is not differentiating between legitimate issues with the election process and the human error that occurs with every election. And he is attacking his Republican allies in the process.

President Trump recently tweeted of Governor Kemp, a loyal ally, “The governor’s done nothing. … I’m ashamed that I endorsed him.” For “good” measure, he added that Kemp is “hapless.” Trump’s attacks on Raffensperger for his handling of the election resulted in Raffensperger having to accept a security detail after receiving death threats.

It should be noted that Georgia law prohibits Governor Kemp from intervening in elections, which are the jurisdiction of the secretary of state, an elected, constitutional office. Elections themselves are administered at the county level and then certified by the secretary of state.

President Trump has demanded an audit of signature matches on absentee ballots, but this is impossible. Envelope signatures are verified by county elections boards before tabulating, and then the ballots are separated from the envelopes to protect ballot secrecy. There is no way to reunite them.

Lin Wood, an Atlanta attorney and Trump ally litigating voter fraud, recently tweeted to his 700,000 followers that they should motivate Senators Perdue and Loeffler to demand action regarding the November 3 election by “threaten[ing] to withhold your votes & money.” He later tweeted about boycotting the runoff election.

This is insanity of the highest order, and the danger here cannot be overstated.

President Trump rightly rejected that call, tweeting, “No, the 2020 Election was a total scam … but we must get out and help David and Kelly, two GREAT people. Otherwise we are playing right into the hands of some very sick people.” His son, Donald Jr., has launched a super PAC to win these seats and recently tweeted, “I’m seeing a lot of talk from people that are supposed to be on our side telling GOP voters not to go out & vote for @KLoeffler and @PerdueSenate. That is NONSENSE. IGNORE those people. We need ALL of our people coming out to vote for Kelly & David.”

The issues of voter fraud are now the purview of the courts. But if the courts’ decisions in litigation continue to go against President Trump, and Biden becomes president, losses by Perdue and Loeffler in these runoffs would create a 50-50 split in the Senate, giving Kamala Harris the tie-breaking vote.

Harris is currently the Senate’s most left-wing member, but it’s worth noting that neither of the Georgia Democrat candidates are remotely like old-school Southern Democrats Zell Miller or Sam Nunn. Warnock and Jon Ossoff are radical leftists who want to defund the police, socialize healthcare, raise taxes, gut the military, pass the Green New Deal, etc.

One of President Trump’s greatest successes was in motivating and inspiring millions of Americans who had not voted in years, or ever, to come out and actually do so. Many of these voters are not traditional Republicans but are instead Trump loyalists. If Trump supporters don’t turn out for Perdue and Loeffler, it could be devastating.

In 2018, with Democrat Stacey Abrams crying voter suppression, I wrote, “How fitting it would be if Abrams lost a close race because she convinced her own voters that their votes wouldn’t count.”

It would be tragic if President Trump’s legacy, all of the phenomenal good he has accomplished, were destroyed because his supporters didn’t turn out to vote in the January 5 runoffs, convinced that Georgia’s elections were rigged with the aid of allegedly traitorous Republican leaders or that their votes didn’t count.

But that is exactly what gleeful Democrats are banking on.

Republicans need to unify immediately to save these Senate seats and to save President Trump’s legacy.

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Social Media Doubles Down on Censorship

Thomas Gallatin

Following the election, Facebook and Twitter haven’t backed off their censorship practices in the least. In fact, they’ve doubled down, engaging in a blatantly politically biased effort to suppress any non-mainstream media stories that deal with election fraud. Using the tired excuse of righteously clamping down on “fake news” and misinformation, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg green-lighted the social media giant’s latest speech-squelching algorithm — its “break glass” plan.

As The New York Times recently reported, “It involved emphasizing the importance of what Facebook calls ‘news ecosystem quality’ scores, or N.E.Q., a secret internal ranking it assigns to news publishers based on signals about the quality of their journalism. Typically, N.E.Q. scores play a minor role in determining what appears on users’ feeds. But several days after the election, Mr. Zuckerberg agreed to increase the weight that Facebook’s algorithm gave to N.E.Q. scores to make sure authoritative news appeared more prominently [emphasis added].” The Times then helpful explained what constitutes “authoritative news”: The plan “resulted in a spike in visibility for big, mainstream publishers like CNN, The New York Times and NPR, while posts from highly engaged hyperpartisan pages, such as Breitbart and Occupy Democrats, became less visible.”

Nothing “hyperpartisan” about The New York Times! NopeNotAThing.

There is at least one exception to the censorship: China. Twitter merely labeled as “sensitive” a tweet from a Chinese communist apparatchik that contains a false depiction of an Australian soldier preparing to behead a child. As Gary Bauer notes, “Even though Chinese citizens are banned from using Twitter, the tech platform allows communist leaders to tweet whatever they want, while censoring legitimate news stories and almost anything President Trump says about the election.”

We in our humble shop can attest to Facebook’s abusive censorship practices. Any commentary that does not toe the mainstream media line is effectively “fact-checked” as “false” or “misleading” and the offending article or meme is removed and the rest of our account’s reach is throttled. Facebook and Twitter have been able to get away with this blatant censorship, acting as publishers while being legally classified under federal law as a neutral forum, like a public utility such as the phone company. Until this fraud is addressed and corrected, the best thing those interested in preserving free speech can do is to ditch Facebook and Twitter. As Power Line’s John Hinderaker cogently writes, “In considering whether we should leave left-wing social media platforms behind, I recall President Trump’s words, addressed to urban black audiences: what do we have to lose?”

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Horowitz: Where We Are and What We Face

Douglas Andrews

In the prologue of his 1997 memoir, Radical Son, David Horowitz shares an observation — a hard-earned lesson, really — that those on the Left continually run up against and yet can’t seem to accept.

“This is the perennial challenge,” he writes: “to teach our young the conditions of being human, of managing life’s tasks in a world that is (and must remain) forever imperfect. The refusal to come to terms with this reality is the heart of the radical impulse and accounts for its destructiveness, and thus for much of the bloody history of our age.”

There it is. The Rosetta Stone of the radical Left, as deciphered by a man who attended his first Communist Party USA political rally in 1948 at age nine; who, as a Sixties radical, made common cause with murderous Black Panthers and helped found the New Left; and who then, as a Reagan conservative, helped the rest of us understand the pathology, the destructiveness, and the dishonesty of his former colleagues on the Left.

No wonder they hate his guts.

As Horowitz now writes, “The New Left was a socialist movement that began as an attempt to rescue the ‘Old’ Communist Left from the ‘mistakes’ it had made in serving masters who murdered more than 100 million people. In peace time. ‘Mistakes’ was our weasel term for the epic crimes our fellow Marxists committed against ordinary human beings who refused to go along with their utopian schemes. Our goal was to revive the quest they had begun and finally create a world of ‘social justice.’”

Horowitz says he had two awakenings during his days as a radical. The first was his realization of the impossibility of true equality “because people are not equal, and the attempt to make them so requires taking away the freedom of most for the benefit of what turns out to be a few.”

His second awakening “came with the success of the New Left’s ‘antiwar movement,’ which forced America out of Vietnam.” He says their “anti-war” claims were actually a pair of lies that doomed 2.5 million peasants in Cambodia and Vietnam. “There wasn’t a single demonstration against the slaughter,” he writes. “Not one. I realized then that it was never an ‘anti-war’ movement. It was an anti-American movement. The Left wanted the Communists to win and didn’t care how many innocent Asians were murdered in the process.”

And that’s when he left the Left.

These days, as Horowitz notes, “We live in an atmosphere of intimidation, where people can lose their livelihoods, their careers and even their lives if they get on the wrong side of leftist crusaders. That is a terrible thing to have to say in this once free country, but it is something that has become too obvious to deny.”

Nowhere is this intimidation, this personal destruction, more apparent than in the Left’s use of race as a weapon. Leftists use it, he says, because it works.

“For 30 years before he descended the famous escalator in Trump Tower to declare his candidacy for the White House,” Horowitz writes, “Donald Trump was a well-known public figure. Everybody in America knew who he was. In all those 30 years, no one ever referred to him as ‘Donald Trump, host of “The Apprentice” and white supremacist.’ Nobody ever said, ‘This is Donald Trump, New York builder and white nationalist.’ That only happened when he ran against the Democrats.“

Horowitz notes that George W. Bush, John McCain, and Mitt Romney were all smeared with the same racist brush. Remember when, in 2012, Joe Biden warned a largely black audience that Romney and his running mate, Paul Ryan, were “gonna put y’all back in chains”? (Horowitz could’ve also included Ronald Reagan, a former Democrat whom the Left smears to this day for a speech he gave at the Neshoba County Fair in Mississippi, just seven miles and 16 years removed from the notorious murders of three civil rights activists.)

Aside from its effectiveness, though, Horowitz says there’s another reason why the Democrats keep moonlighting as race pimps: for political cover. “Democrats control 100% of every major inner-city in America,” he writes, “and have for 50 to 100 years. … Every injustice in these inner cities — real or imagined — that policy can affect, Democrats are 100% responsible for. Every rotten school system, which year in and year out fails to provide mainly black and Hispanic kids with the basic tools they need to succeed, is 100% controlled by the Democrat Party and its teacher unions.”

Donald Trump saw an opportunity here, and his outreach to the black community bore fruit. “What do you have to lose?” he famously asked. And the Left, seeing its hold on the black vote become more tenuous, redoubled its attacks on Trump with a viciousness unlike any seen by an American president.

It didn’t work. According to election exit polling, support for Trump rose among blacks, Asians, and Latinos. And not just a little. His support among black men stood at 18%, and his support among black women doubled from 2016 to 2020. (The actual numbers are probably higher, given the social risk attached to admitting one’s support for such a vile racist of a candidate.) So there’s hope, and, thanks to President Trump, there’s a blueprint for pushing back against the Left’s reflexive racism canard.

“Forty years ago,” writes Horowitz, “I left the left when I saw that it was a destructive force that would never change. Leftists do not tolerate dissenters in their ranks. They suppress politically incorrect ideas and cast out their perpetrators, demonizing them in the process.”

“The good news,” he says, “is that a patriotic movement has risen, rededicated to the propositions that all men are created equal and endowed with God-given rights to life and liberty, and is prepared to defend them.”

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Shining a Light in the Darkness

Roger Helle

I have to admit that Donald Trump was not my initial choice for president. It wasn’t until it came down to Trump or Hillary Clinton that I knew I didn’t have a choice.

I also have to admit there were numerous times over the last four years when I cringed at Trump’s loose-cannon approach to social media. Many times, I prayed he would restrain himself from his “ready, shoot, aim” use of Twitter. But it was not to be. During the campaign, I prayed he would stay focused on voters, not make everything about him. But that didn’t happen, did it?

Now, as the nation awaits the results of recounts and legal challenges, I realize the brilliance of Trump’s strategy. Conservatives have known for years the mainstream media was biased. It treated President Ronald Reagan like he was an idiot, as it did with George W. Bush. It kissed Barack Obama’s ring, even as he spied on the media and prosecuted more “leakers” than any other administration.

Then came the abnormal presidency of Donald Trump. After all of Hillary’s dirty campaign deeds failed, mainstream media outlets lost their collective minds! “Trump Derangement Syndrome” is a very real thing. We had four years of nonstop hatred, distortion of facts, and outright lies to twist Trump’s record of accomplishments. Never has any president been so viciously attacked by the media. He received no respect or courtesy from Day One. Recall The Washington Post on the day of his Inauguration: “The campaign to impeach President Trump has begun.”

Trump’s behavior revealed the Left’s absolute contempt for the truth, the Rule of Law, and any sense of fairness. Democrats could not believe Trump beat them and became president. Their arrogance and condescending attitude led them to believe their own propaganda. They launched an all-out attack on our democracy and nothing seemed to work. I believe the election was stolen, but that’s a subject for another time. No one else could have done what Trump has done. Not Ted Cruz or Marco Rubio, and certainly not Jeb Bush.

What Trump did succeed at was exposing the Left and the media (but I repeat myself) for who they are. In their blind hatred for Trump, they revealed themselves for everyone to see. Because they hated Trump so bitterly, they believed everyone else felt the same way. This delusion caused them to take dangerous steps to overthrow the will of the people.

But a good portion of America — we bitter clingers and Bible-believing, deplorable chumps — stood by him anyway. Trump kicked over the wasp’s nest and they came out in full view of all Americans. Now they have nowhere to hide. They were exposed! If we are honest with ourselves, regardless of our political affiliation, we now see them clearly for who they really are. There’s no going back to the tactics they used to subvert justice and the Rule of Law.

This is not over, and millions of American Patriots are praying for the truth to be revealed. I don’t know who will be Inaugurated on January 20th. But I do know one thing: Patriots will not sit on the sidelines while the very foundation of our Republic is undermined by those whom, I believe, committed treason!

Something to think about?

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NEWS EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

Jordan Candler

Government & Politics

  • New York congressional race, where the Republican led with 12 votes, now in doubt after 55 “apparently mislaid and never counted” ballots are miraculously found (Fox News)
  • Bipartisan group of senators unveils $908 billion stimulus plan — with no checks for Americans (Daily Wire)
  • Biden’s education transition team leader said the ChiComs have done “magical work” (Free Beacon)
  • Hillary Clinton warns Trump’s not going to go away (Daily Mail)

And neither did Hillary.

Leftmedia

  • James O’Keefe crashes CNN daily call with Jeff Zucker, reveals months of recordings (Daily Wire)

According to CNN, “Legal experts say this may be a felony. We’ve referred it to law enforcement.” To which Donald Trump Jr. responded: “It’s amazing that CNN had no problem aggressively running with secretly recorded audio tapes of the First Lady non-stop for weeks, but has a serious problem when someone does the exact same thing to them!”

  • CNN, which has cheered China all throughout the pandemic, now has questions for its handling of the virus (Washington Examiner)

Health

  • UK is the first nation to clear Pfizer coronavirus vaccine for mass rollout (Axios)
  • CDC panel announces its vaccine apportion hierarchy (NY Post)
  • Coronavirus was spreading in the U.S. by December 17, weeks before China admitted people there were being infected (Daily Mail)

“Blood collected by the Red Cross between December 13 and January 17 was later sent to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to be tested for antibodies to coronavirus. Testing revealed antibodies to the virus that causes COVID-19 in 39 samples from blood donated between December 13 and December 16. Those donations were made in California, Oregon, and Washington.”

Education

  • Harvard study shows the dangers of early school enrollment (FEE)
  • Top 20% gets six times more benefits from student debt cancellation than the bottom 20% (FEE)

“Economists Sylvain Catherine and Constantine Yannelis crunched the numbers to conclude that full student debt cancellation would be a ‘highly regressive policy’ and award $192 billion to the top 20 percent of income earners, yet just $29 billion to the bottom 20 percent.”

National Security

  • Trump vows to veto defense bill unless Section 230 shield for Big Tech is scrapped (NPR)
  • Bad idea: Europe charts path for U.S. to rejoin nuclear deal with Iran (Washington Times)
  • Iranian parliament approves bill to stop nuclear inspections (AP)

Business & Economy

  • Cyber Monday sales reach $10.8 billion, the biggest-ever e-commerce day (CNBC)
  • Americans flocked to gun stores on Black Friday (Free Beacon) | November 2020 gun sales jump 45.2%, almost two million more firearms sold (The Truth About Guns)
  • Facebook’s bots ban thousands of small businesses from advertising at height of retail season (TechSpot)

“The genius of the internet is that it created a level playing field where one-man shops could compete toe-to-toe with established players. The evil genius of social media is that it allows established players to snuff out the one-man shops before they have a chance to compete.” —Stephen Green

Annals of the “Social Justice” Caliphate

  • NBA commissioner dismisses China’s human rights abuses as just “one issue” (Washington Examiner) | While lecturing Americans on racism, Big Business opposes ban on using foreign slave labor (The Federalist)
  • Who’d a thunk it? Seattle homicides highest in over a decade as council cuts police budget (NY Post)
  • Nasdaq unveils new push to mandate “diversity” in corporate boardrooms (ABC News)
  • Sanity at last: Britain’s High Court protects young children from “transgender” chemical castration (PJ Media)

Double Standards

  • San Francisco mayor warns “more restrictive action” may come to city after her French Laundry visit (Fox News)
  • San Jose mayor attends Thanksgiving party after telling citizens to “cancel big gatherings” (Daily Caller)
  • Here’s a list of all the Democratic officials who have defied their own coronavirus restrictions (Washington Examiner)

Stranger Than Fiction

  • Lack of self-awareness: Director of Pennsylvania’s racist Planned Parenthood hit with allegations of racism (Daily Mail)
  • COVID has turned breathing into a deadly event and all of us into potential serial killers (Detroit Free Press)

Even more scary? The guy who penned this drivel was a federal prosecutor for 25 years. Our creative director Ron Locke adds, “There’s more breathlessness in the coverage of COVID-19 than there is from the disease itself.”

On a Lighter Note…

  • This video of Kenneth Copeland set to heavy metal guitar is possibly the most amazing thing ever (Not the Bee)
  • Grandma learns to shoot AK-47 to protect herself from reindeer this Christmas (Not the Bee)

Closing Arguments

  • Policy: To reform health insurance, let employees be in charge (The Federalist)
  • Policy: Family decline is our real systemic problem (National Review)
  • Humor: Dominion voting machines switched votes to Taco Bell in 2018 Best Mexican Food election (Genesius Times)

For more of today’s editors’ choice headlines, visit Headline Report.

The Patriot Post is a certified ad-free news service, unlike third-party commercial news sites linked on this page, which may also require a paid subscription.

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VIDEOS

Joe Biden Is Coming for Your Guns — “You’re gonna take care of the gun problem.” —Biden to Beto O’Rourke, 2019

Woke Vanderbilt Fires Black Coach After Female Kicker Debut — Here are Anthony Brian Logan’s thoughts regarding last weekend’s cringefest.

Illegals Shouldn’t Be Counted for Congressional Apportionment — Particularly when their allegiance isn’t to the U.S. The Heritage Foundation’s Mike Howell explains.

Don’t Return to the Disastrous Iran Deal — The Heritage Foundation’s Nile Gardiner on how appeasement failed while maximum pressure succeeded.

BEST OF RIGHT OPINION

 

 

For more of today’s columns, visit Right Opinion.

SHORT CUTS

Upright: “We need to pay a lot of attention to the diverse communities of this country, and that diversity includes people who supported Trump and people who are not in our camp. One of the things I did over and over was just sit and listen to people.” —Democrat Congresswoman-elect Carolyn Bourdeaux

Demo-gogue: “My message to everyone struggling right now is this: Help is on the way.” —Joe Biden (“The nine most terrifying words in the English language are, ‘I’m from the government, and I’m here to help.” —Ronald Reagan)

Grand delusions: “So somebody decided they had a bright idea to pass a piece of legislation that would allow for guns and concealed weapons to be carried in churches. … Whoever thought of that had never been to a church meeting.” —Georgia Senate candidate Raphael Warnock, who perhaps has never heard of the church meeting in South Carolina where nine black church members were murdered — to pick just one instance where church members wished they could have defended themselves

Alpha jackass: “It’s not enough merely to enjoy their agony and humiliation. It’s not enough to hope they’ll be shamed and correct their behavior. … Only exposure, pain, humiliation, and (inshallah) incarceration will lead to a moment of reckoning for the GOP. It should start at the top and work down from there.” —The Daily Beast’s Rick Wilson

Non compos mentis: “When you hear that holiday music … think ‘COVID Grinch’ and be on alert.” —Supreme Governor Andrew Cuomo

And last… “It takes only a small amount of caring to recognize how much the free market has lifted the poorest in the world, but that’s too much caring for people who like feeling self-important.” —Frank Fleming

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TODAY’S MEME

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For more of today’s memes, visit the Memesters Union.

TODAY’S CARTOON

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For more of today’s cartoons, visit the Cartoons archive.

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December 2 The Missing Jewel

Psalm 45:11

He is your Lord, worship Him.

Once A. W. Tozer called worship the “missing jewel” of the modern church. There are too many churches, too many Christians that do not know how to worship God, or even why worship is our primary responsibility before Him. We have churches that emphasize preaching, churches that stress evangelism, and churches that highlight body fellowship, but worship is the priority commandment from God. We are called to love the Lord our God with all our heart, soul, mind, and strength, and we develop our love for Him in worship.

Our lives are changed and our spiritual walk is strengthened as we come before God and worship Him. It is the priority commandment in His Word. We will never truly know God until we worship Him, and we will never really worship Him unless we know Him. He is sitting on the throne in heaven, worthy of honor and glory and praise, awaiting our worship. He inhabits the praises of His people and can be found there with them as they worship Him. He is a great God, a King above all gods who will be gloriously worshiped throughout all eternity. And He wants you to know Him.[1]

 

[1] Jeremiah, D. (2002). Sanctuary: finding moments of refuge in the presence of God (p. 353). Nashville, TN: Integrity Publishers.

December 2 Thoughts for the quiet hour

When I am weak, then am I strong

2 Cor. 12:10

This is God’s way. We advance by going backwards, we become strong by becoming weak, we become wise by being fools.

F. Whitfield[1]

 

[1] Hardman, S. G., & Moody, D. L. (1997). Thoughts for the quiet hour. Willow Grove, PA: Woodlawn Electronic Publishing.

December 2 The Interpreter: Spurgeon’s Devotional Bible

December 2.—Morning. [Or November 1.]
“Work out your own salvation with fear and trembling.”

Philippians 1:27–30

ONLY let your conversation be as it becometh the gospel of Christ: that whether I come and see you, or else be absent, I may hear of your affairs, that ye stand fast in one spirit, with one mind, striving together for the faith of the gospel;

28 And in nothing terrified by your adversaries: which is to them an evident token of perdition, but to you of salvation, and that of God. (He was most anxious that they should be united in eager zeal for the spread of the gospel, and present a bold front to their persecutors. Men call the courage of the saints obstinacy, and reckon them to be hardened heretics; but such boldness is to believers a token of divine favour.)

29, 30 For unto you it is given in the behalf of Christ, not only to believe on him, but also to suffer for his sake; Having the same conflict which ye saw in me, and now hear to be in me.

It would cheer the Philippian saints to remember that they suffered in good company, and were comrades with the apostle himself. Glad enough may we be to be ridiculed for Jesus’ sake, since we are thereby made partakers with the noble army of martyrs.

Philippians 2:1–16

IF there be therefore any consolation in Christ, if any comfort of love, if any fellowship of the Spirit, if any bowels and mercies, Fulfil ye my joy, that ye be likeminded, having the same love, being of one accord, of one mind. (How urgently he pleads! How he multiplies expressions! Love among Christians is so precious that he begs for it as if for his life. Be it ours never to fan the flames of party-feeling, but always to increase the holy affection of our Christian brethren.)

Let nothing be done through strife or vainglory; but in lowliness of mind let each esteem other better than themselves.

4–11 Look not every man on his own things, but every man also on the things of others. Let this mind be in you, which was also in Christ Jesus: Who, being in the form of God, thought it not robbery to be equal with God: But made himself of no reputation, and took upon him the form of a servant, and was made in the likeness of men: And being found in fashion as a man, he humbled himself, and became obedient unto death, even the death of the cross. Wherefore God also hath highly exalted him, and given him a name which is above every name: That at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of things in heaven, and things in earth, and things under the earth; And that every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father. (Jesus is the divine example of love and self-denial, and as we hope to be saved by him we must diligently copy him. He is now exalted to the highest glory as the reward of his voluntary humiliation, and by the same means must his disciples rise to honour. We must stoop to conquer. He who is willing to be nothing shall be possessor of all things.)

12, 13 Wherefore, my beloved, as ye have always obeyed, not as in my presence only, but now much more in my absence, work out your own salvation with fear and trembling. For it is God which worketh in you both to will and to do of his good pleasure. (We work out what the Lord works in. The grace of God is not a reason for idleness, but for diligence. As both will and work are given us of God, let us will with firm resolution and work with dauntless perseverance; for so shall we fulfil the good pleasure of the Lord.)

14, 15 Do all things without murmurings and disputings: That ye may be blameless and harmless, the sons of God, without rebuke, in the midst of a crooked and perverse nation, among whom ye shine as lights in the world;

We cannot be blameless if we murmur and dispute, for such things naturally lead to sin. Our lights cannot shine if instead of trimming them we occupy ourselves with blowing out the lamps of others.

16 Holding forth the word of life; that I may rejoice in the day of Christ, that I have not run in vain, neither laboured in vain.

We do not wish to rob faithful ministers of the result of their labours, and yet we shall do so unless we join heartily with our brethren in spreading the gospel, and do our best to live in holiness and Christian love.

December 2.—Evening. [Or November 2.]
“Stand fast in the Lord.”

Philippians 4

THEREFORE, my brethren dearly beloved and longed for, my joy and crown, so stand fast in the Lord, my dearly beloved.

I beseech Euodias, and beseech Syntyche, that they be of the same mind in the Lord.

He pleads with these two good women to end their differences. The worst results may arise from a quarrel, even when there are only two engaged in it, and those two are women.

And I entreat thee also, true yokefellow, help those women which laboured with me in the gospel, with Clement also, and with other my fellowlabourers, whose names are in the book of life.

Rejoice in the Lord alway: and again I say, Rejoice. (We cannot have too much holy rejoicing; we are to joy and re-joy, and then to rejoice again. See that this be done in this house all day long. Alas, none can truly rejoice but those who are in the Lord! Are we all in him?)

Let your moderation be known unto all men. The Lord is at hand.

Be careful for nothing; but in every thing by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known unto God.

Be not careful, but prayerful. Prayer is the cure for care.

And the peace of God, which passeth all understanding, shall keep your hearts and minds through Christ Jesus.

Finally, brethren, whatsoever things are true, whatsoever things are honest, whatsoever things are just, whatsoever things are pure, whatsoever things are lovely, whatsoever things are of good report; if there be any virtue, and if there be any praise, think on these things.

Here is a mass of matter for thought. Take each word and study it, and then put it in practice. Every member of the family should learn this verse by heart; it is much in little, a catalogue of the practical virtues.

Those things, which ye have both learned, and received, and heard, and seen in me, do: and the God of peace shall be with you.

10–13 But I rejoiced in the Lord greatly, that now at the last your care of me hath flourished again; wherein ye were also careful, but ye lacked opportunity. Not that I speak in respect of want: for I have learned, in whatsoever state I am, therewith to be content. I know both how to be abased, and I know how to abound: every where and in all things I am instructed both to be full and to be hungry, both to abound and to suffer need. I can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me.

14 Notwithstanding ye have well done, that ye did communicate with my affliction.

Paul knew how to be poor, but he did not know how to be ungrateful. True ministers will work for the Lord, however badly their people may support them, yet it is well to treat them generously, and win their gratitude, for their Master is pleased when his servants are kindly used for his sake. Is there any deed of love which we can do for our pastor?

15, 16 Now ye Philippians know also, that in the beginning of the gospel, when I departed from Macedonia, no church communicated with me as concerning giving and receiving, but ye only. For even in Thessalonica ye sent once and again unto my necessity.

17 Not because I desire a gift: but I desire fruit that may abound to your account.

18 But I have all, and abound: I am full, having received of Epaphroditus the things which were sent from you, an odour of a sweet smell, a sacrifice acceptable, wellpleasing to God.

19 But my God shall supply all your need according to his riches in glory by Christ Jesus.

This is a grand assurance. God is the giver, his infinite glory is the store, Jesus is the channel, and the supply knows no limit. What more can the most expanded desires wish for? This promissory note from the Bank of Faith makes all believers rich beyond a miser’s dream.

20 Now unto God and our Father be glory for ever and ever. Amen.

21 Salute every saint in Christ Jesus. The brethren which are with me greet you.

22 All the saints salute you, chiefly they that are of Cæsar’s household.

23 The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you all. Amen. (Thus with an affectionate wish this fragrant letter of love comes to its close. May more of the tender spirit which it breathes be found in each one of us.)[1]

 

[1] Spurgeon, C. H. (1964). The Interpreter: Spurgeon’s Devotional Bible (pp. 714–715). Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Book House.

Advent- Thirty Days of Jesus: Day 5- The Babe has arrived! — The End Time

Answers in Genesis: Separating myth from biblical fact, No Room For an Inn

GotQuestions: What does it mean that baby Jesus was wrapped in swaddling cloths?

Thirty Days of Jesus series-

Introduction/Background
Day 1
Day 2
Day 3
Day 4

Advent- Thirty Days of Jesus: Day 5- The Babe has arrived! — The End Time

December 2, 2020 Morning Verse Of The Day

the human perspective

to the end that we who were first to hope in Christ … In Him, you also, after listening to the message of truth, the gospel of your salvation—having also believed, (12a, 13a)

In the Greek text this passage is continuous, the last part of verse 12 leading directly into verse 13. Here we see the believer’s divine inheritance in Jesus Christ from our own human perspective. Throughout Scripture there is tension between God’s sovereignty and man’s will, a tension that, in his limited and imperfect knowledge, man is incapable of fully reconciling. As with all the other antinomies and paradoxes in God’s Word, our responsibility is to believe both sides of them without reservation, just as they are revealed. We know the truths are in perfect accord in God’s mind, and that knowledge should satisfy us.

Someone has pictured the divine and human sides of salvation in this way: When you look toward heaven you see a sign that reads, “Whosoever will may come,” and after you enter heaven you look back to that same sign and read on the other side, “Chosen in Him before the foundation of the world.”

Whatever God’s reasons for designing such humanly irreconcilable truths, we should thank and praise Him for them. For the very reason that they are completely true while seeming to be contradictory, we are humbled in His presence as we stand in awe of that which to us is incomprehensible. To the trusting believer such truths are but further evidence that Scripture is God’s doing, and not man’s.

To the end that we who were first to hope in Christ is the first statement given here about the human side of our divine inheritance in Christ. The Greek has a definite article before Christ, and a more literal translation is hope in the Christ. The meaning is not changed, but the definite article emphasizes the uniqueness of our hope: it is in the one and only Savior, Jesus Christ. It also stresses the idea that the apostles and other first-generation Jewish believers were the first to receive the Messiah.

A rich factor in man’s believing the gospel is the hope He is given in His Savior and Lord. Though Paul mentions hope before belief in this passage, the chronological as well as theological order is faith and then hope. In this context, however, hope is used primarily as a synonym for faith. The first to hope in Christ were the first to believe in Him.

Therefore, Paul continues, In Him, you also, after listening to the message of truth, the gospel of your salvation—having also believed, … As the apostle explains in his letter to the Romans, “Faith comes from hearing, and hearing by the word of Christ” (10:17). Faith comes from a positive response to the message of truth, the gospel (cf. Gal. 1:6–9)—the good news that God has provided a way of salvation through the atoning work of His Son, Jesus Christ. To “as many as received Him, to them He gave the right to become children of God, even to those who believe in His name” (John 1:12). Man-made systems of religion, which rely on ritual or works or both, not only do not lead to God but can become great barriers to finding Him. The only way to come is through His Son. “For with the heart man believes, resulting in righteousness, and with the mouth he confesses, resulting in salvation. For the Scripture says, ‘Whoever believes in Him will not be disappointed’ ” (Rom. 10:10–11). Having also believed not only stresses the means by which salvation is appropriated but also the uniformity of such means by the use of also.

Faith is man’s response to God’s elective purpose. God’s choice of men is election; men’s choice of God is faith. In election God gives His promises, and by faith men receive them.

The Guarantee of Our Inheritance

you were sealed in Him with the Holy Spirit of promise, who is given as a pledge of our inheritance, (1:13b–14a)

Men have always wanted assurances. Because the promises of other men are so often unreliable, we demand oaths, sworn affidavits, surety bonds, guarantees, warranties, and many other such means of trying to assure that what is promised is received.

God’s simple word should be sufficient for us, but in His graciousness He makes His promises even more certain—if that were possible—by giving us His own guarantees. Here the Lord guarantees His promises with His seal and with His pledge. This is reminiscent of Hebrews 6:13–18, in which God gives His promise of blessing and then confirms it with an oath to provide what the Holy Spirit calls “strong encouragement” (v. 18) to all who hope in Christ.

god’s seal

Because we do not directly and immediately receive the fullness of all God’s promises when we first believe (since it is “reserved in heaven for us,” 1 Pet. 1:3–4), we may sometimes be tempted to doubt our salvation and wonder about the ultimate blessings that are supposed to accompany it. While we are still in this life our redemption is not complete, because we still await “the redemption of our body” (Rom. 8:23). Because we have not yet received full possession of our inheritance, we may question its reality or at least its greatness.

As one means of guaranteeing His promises to those who have received Jesus Christ, God has sealed [them] in Him with the Holy Spirit of promise. Every believer is given the very Holy Spirit of God the moment he trusts in Christ. “You are not in the flesh but in the Spirit, if indeed the Spirit of God dwells in you,” Paul declares (Rom. 8:9a). Conversely, he goes on to say, “If anyone does not have the Spirit of Christ, he does not belong to Him” (v. 9b). Incredibly, the body of every true Christian is actually “a temple of the Holy Spirit who is in [him]” (1 Cor. 6:19).

When a person becomes a Christian, the Holy Spirit takes up residence in his life. Life in Jesus Christ is different because the Spirit of God is now within. He is there to empower us, equip us for ministry, and function through the gifts He has given us. The Holy Spirit is our Helper and Advocate. He protects and encourages us. He also guarantees our inheritance in Jesus Christ. “The Spirit Himself bears witness with our spirit that we are children of God, and if children, heirs also, heirs of God and fellow heirs with Christ” (Rom. 8:16–17). The Spirit of God is our securing force, our guarantee.

The sealing of which Paul speaks here refers to an official mark of identification that was placed on a letter, contract, or other important document. The seal usually was made from hot wax, which was placed on the document and then impressed with a signet ring. The document was thereby officially identified with and under the authority of the person to whom the signet belonged.

That is the idea behind our being sealed in Him [Christ] with the Holy Spirit of promise. The seal of God’s Spirit in the believer signifies four primary things: security, authenticity, ownership, and authority.

Security. In ancient times the seal of a king, prince, or noble represented security and inviolability. When Daniel was thrown into the lion’s den, King Darius, along with his nobles, placed their seals on the stone placed over the entrance to the den, “so that nothing might be changed in regard to Daniel” (Dan. 6:17). Any person but the king who broke or disturbed that seal would likely have forfeited his life. In a similar way the tomb where Jesus was buried was sealed. Fearing that Jesus’ disciples might steal His body and falsely claim His resurrection, the Jewish leaders obtained Pilate’s permission to place a seal on the stone and to guard it with soldiers (Matt. 27:62–66).

In an infinitely greater way, the Holy Spirit secures each believer, marking him with His own inviolable seal.

Authenticity. When King Ahab tried unsuccessfully to get Naboth to sell or trade his vineyard, Queen Jezebel volunteered to get the vineyard her way. “So she wrote letters in Ahab’s name and sealed them with his seal” and sent the letters to various nobles who lived in Naboth’s city, demanding that they arrange false accusations of blasphemy and treason against him. The nobles did as they were instructed, and Naboth was stoned to death because of the false charges. The king then simply confiscated the vineyard he had so strongly coveted (1 Kings 21:6–16). Despite the deceptions contained in the letters Jezebel sent, the letters themselves were authentically from the king, because they were sent with his approval and marked with his seal. The seal was his signature.

When God gives us His Holy Spirit, it is as if He stamps us with a seal that reads, “This person belongs to Me and is an authentic citizen of My divine kingdom and member of My divine family.”

Ownership. While Jerusalem was under seige by Nebuchadnezzar and Jeremiah was under arrest by King Zedekiah for prophesying against the king and the nation, the Lord gave special instructions to His prophet. Jeremiah was told to buy some land in Anathoth for which he had redemption rights. The contract was agreed on, and the stipulated payment was made in the court of the palace guard before the required number of witnesses. In the presence of the witnesses the deed was signed and sealed, establishing Jeremiah as the new legal owner of the property (Jer. 32:10).

When the Holy Spirit seals believers, He marks them as God’s divine possessions, who from that moment on entirely and eternally belong to Him. The Spirit’s seal declares the transaction of salvation as divinely official and final.

Authority. Even after Haman had been hanged for his wicked plot to defame and execute Mordecai, Queen Esther was distressed about the decree that Haman had persuaded King Ahasuerus to make that permitted anyone in his kingdom to attack and destroy the Jews. Because the king could not even himself revoke the decree that was marked with his own seal, he issued and sealed another decree that permitted and even encouraged the Jews to arm and defend themselves (Esther 8:8–12). In both cases the absolute authority of the decrees was represented in the king’s seal. Those who possessed the sealed decree of the king had the king’s delegated authority set forth in the decree.

When Christians are sealed with the Holy Spirit they are delegated to proclaim, teach, minister, and defend God’s Word and His gospel with the Lord’s own authority.

god’s pledge

who is given as a pledge of our inheritance, (1:14a)

The Holy Spirit not only guarantees our inheritance in Jesus Christ with His seal but also with His pledge. An arrabōn (pledge) originally referred to a down payment or earnest money given to secure a purchase. Later it came to represent any sort of pledge or earnest. A form of the word even came to be used for engagement ring.

As believers, we have the Holy Spirit as the divine pledge of our inheritance, God’s first installment of His guarantee that the fullness of the promised spiritual blessings “in the heavenly places in Christ” (v. 3) will one day be completely fulfilled. They are assured and guaranteed with an absolute certainty that only God could provide. The Holy Spirit is the church’s irrevocable pledge, her divine engagement ring, as it were, that, as Christ’s bride, she will never be neglected or forsaken (cf. 2 Cor. 1:22; 5:5).

The Goal of Our Inheritance

with a view to the redemption of God’s own possession, to the praise of His glory. (1:14b)

Although our divine inheritance in Christ is a marvelous, awesome, and guaranteed promise to us from the Lord, it is not the primary purpose of our salvation. Our salvation and all of the promises, blessings, and privileges we gain through salvation are first of all bestowed with a view to the redemption of God’s own possession, to the praise of His glory.

The great, overriding purpose of God’s redemption of men is the rescuing of what is His own possession. All creation belongs to God, and in His infinite wisdom, love, and grace He chose to provide redemption for the fallen creatures He had made in His own image—for His own sake even more than for their sakes, because they do not belong to themselves but to Him.

As Paul has already twice declared (vv. 6, 12), God’s ultimate goal in redeeming men is the praise of His glory. We are not saved and blessed for our own glory but for God’s (cf. Isa. 43:20–21). When we glorify ourselves we rob God of that which is wholly His. He saved us to serve Him and to praise Him. We are saved to be restored to the intended divine purpose of creation—to bear the image of God and bring Him greater glory.

This is fully accomplished at the believer’s glorification, when we receive full glory and redemption and are made the perfect possession of God.[1]


Salvation’s Seal

Ephesians 1:11–14

In him we were also chosen, having been predestined according to the plan of him who works out everything in conformity with the purpose of his will, in order that we, who were the first to hope in Christ, might be for the praise of his glory. And you also were included in Christ when you heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation. Having believed, you were marked in him with a seal, the promised Holy Spirit, who is a deposit guaranteeing our inheritance until the redemption of those who are God’s possession—to the praise of his glory.

As I was preparing this study of Ephesians 1:11–14 late one year, the Philadelphia papers and the news broadcasts were filled with talk of the move of the city’s professional football team, the Eagles, to Phoenix, Arizona. The story broke on a Tuesday, and for the rest of the week every minor development was reported exhaustively. On Friday night one television channel gave the first fifteen minutes of its thirty-minute news allotment to this story and even returned to it later in the program. This is the kind of thing that interests the people of this world.

In Ephesians 1 Paul presents the greatest news story there has ever been, as he traces the plan of salvation that began in the mind of God even before the beginning of this world and which will be continued throughout all eternity. As he tells it, it is bigger and wiser and grander than anything we can possibly imagine. This story has three movements, like a symphony. The first movement is the sovereign election of God according to which he has chosen to bless a special people with every possible spiritual blessing in his Son Jesus Christ. The second movement is the accomplishing of that purpose through the redeeming death of Jesus. It is through that death that these especially chosen people have forgiveness of sins and are brought under Christ’s lordship.

The final movement—the one we are to study now—concerns the work of the Holy Spirit by which those who have been chosen by the Father and redeemed by the Lord Jesus Christ are actually “linked up” to salvation. The theological term for this is “application.” The Holy Spirit is said to “apply” the benefits of Christ’s work savingly.

The Effectual Call

We have already seen enough in our study of the opening paragraph of Ephesians to appreciate how comprehensive and profound this is. As I pointed out earlier, Ephesians 1:3–14 is actually a single sentence that embraces most of the essential doctrines of Christianity. It deals with the doctrines of God, the Trinity, election, the work of Christ, forgiveness, the gospel, grace, creation, the consummation of world history when all things are brought together in subjection to Christ—and others besides. In this collection of doctrines Paul also talks about the Holy Spirit, and his elaboration of this subject is even more comprehensive than the ideas presented previously. What we have in verses 11–14 is a rich statement of the chief doctrines of the Holy Spirit and his work.

The first work of the Holy Spirit is what theologians term “the effectual call.” It is what is referred to in verse 11: “In him we were also chosen, having been predestined according to the plan of him who works out everything in conformity with the purpose of his will.” At first reading, this seems to be saying the same thing as verse 4, where Paul wrote that God “chose us in him before the creation of the world.” That is, it seems to refer to the eternal election of believers to salvation. But that would be redundant. Actually, in this verse Paul is carrying the argument a bit further, showing how, having first “predestined” to salvation, God now chooses those who have been chosen, thereby working out his purposes in their particular lives. This is accomplished by the Holy Spirit, who opens our eyes to understand what Christ has done for us, grants faith to believe on him, and moves our wills to embrace him as our personal Savior.

This effectual call by the Holy Spirit is necessary because, apart from it, no one would turn from sin to Christ. Instead, all would turn from Christ, deeming his lordship something to be repudiated and the just demands of God something to be abhorred. Apart from the Holy Spirit the world crucifies Christ. That is why Jesus sent the Holy Spirit: to “convict the world of guilt in regard to sin and righteousness and judgment: in regard to sin, because men do not believe in me; in regard to righteousness, because I am going to the Father, where you can see me no longer; and in regard to judgment, because the prince of this world now stands condemned” (John 16:8–11).

Glorification of Jesus

The second function of the Spirit, according to these verses, is the glorification of Christ. In verse 12 Paul continues the thought of verse 11, saying that the Spirit calls God’s elect “in order that we, who were the first to hope in Christ, might be for the praise of his glory.” That sentence is written of Paul and his companions, but the same thing is said later of all Christians. All this is “to the praise of his glory” (v. 14).

In some ways the most important thing that can be said about the Holy Spirit is that it is the Holy Spirit’s work to glorify Christ, as he himself said in John 15:26 (“When the Counselor comes, whom I will send to you from the Father, the Spirit of truth who goes out from the Father, he will testify about me”) and John 16:13–14 (“He will not speak on his own; he will speak only what he hears.… He will bring glory to me by taking from what is mine and making it known to you”).

Whenever the church has forgotten this it has tended to call attention to the Holy Spirit rather than Christ and has fallen into an unhealthy and often divisive subjectivism. When people ask, “Do you have the Holy Spirit?” “Have you had a second experience of the Holy Spirit?” “Have you received the gift of tongues [or whatever other evidence of the presence of the Spirit is being particularly stressed at that time]?”—then the church is divided! When the church has remembered that the role of the Spirit is to glorify Christ, then all the other activities of the Holy Spirit—sanctification, inspiration, the giving of gifts, even the work of creation and anything else that might be mentioned—are seen within that framework, and the church is drawn together around Jesus.

We can learn a practical lesson at this point. Since the work of the Holy Spirit is to glorify Christ, we may conclude that any emphasis upon the person and work of the Holy Spirit that detracts from the person and work of Christ is not of the Spirit. It is the work of another spirit, the spirit of antichrist (see 1 John 4:2–3). On the other hand, wherever Christ is exalted—in whatever way—there the third person of the Trinity is at work, and we may recognize that work and thank him for it.

We may notice one more thing, namely, that the work of the Holy Spirit in glorifying Christ is not apart from us since, as Paul says in verse 12, “we … [are] for the praise of this glory.” Sometimes Christians fall into an overly subjective approach to Christianity, making their faith chiefly a succession of experiences. Sometimes they also commit the opposite error of making their faith abstract and viewing the work of God apart from their own involvement in it. They forget that God works through means. In conversion he works through the Bible and the Spirit who illumines its teachings to us. In glorifying Jesus he works through the Spirit and ourselves—by leading us to Christ and by increasingly producing the character of Jesus in our lives.

Are you glorifying Jesus in what you say and by the way you live? If not, you have no part in the Spirit, since that is what he is sent to do in Christians.

One New Man of Two

The third work of the Holy Spirit is the making of one new people, the church, out of those who were diverse peoples beforehand. This theme comes in for full and repeated treatment in chapter 2. But even here it is so prominent that John R. W. Stott, for one, organizes the outline of Ephesians 1 around it. He speaks of “the future blessing of unification” in verses 9 and 10, and of “the scope of these blessings” in verses 11–14, showing that the blessings given by God through Christ belong equally to Jewish and gentile believers. The parallelism is perfect. In verses 11 and 12 Paul speaks of himself and other Jewish believers, saying that such were “chosen … for the praise of his glory.” In verses 13 and 14 he speaks of the gentile believers, to whom he is writing the letter, saying that they “also were included … to the praise of his glory.”

This was an important thing in Paul’s day because of the hostility that existed between Jews and Gentiles—between Greeks and Romans, rich and poor, slaves and free men, too, for that matter. In Paul’s day (as in ours) the world was sharply divided along many scores of lines. People were divided by distrusts and hatreds. But into this divided world came a new breed of people, people whose lives were transformed by the Holy Spirit and who were united in Christ in spite of their differences. In chapter 2 Paul speaks of a “barrier,” a “dividing wall of hostility.” But that has been broken down by Jesus Christ. Now those who once were many rival peoples have become “one new man” and “one body” (Eph. 2:15–16).

What a great thing this is! And what a great way for the Holy Spirit to glorify Jesus Christ, in whose name this new society is founded!

I am sorry for churches made up of one class of people, as many American churches are, for they lack opportunity to show this new unification of people effectively. Church growth specialists tell us that this is the best way for churches to grow, people being most attracted to those who are like themselves, and it may be so. Churches may grow fastest when everyone they are working with is alike. But at what cost is this growth purchased! I would rather have less growth and more glory given to Christ. I would rather have smaller totals but a larger body in the sense of a larger number of the types and conditions of people who are included in it.

Word and Spirit

The fourth aspect of the doctrine of the Holy Spirit in these verses is the connection between the Holy Spirit and the Word of God, the Bible, which Paul alludes to here in speaking of “the word of truth, the gospel” (v. 13). Just as the Holy Spirit glorifies Christ and may not be separated from him, so also does the Holy Spirit always speak through and with the Word of God, the Bible, and is not to be separated from it. The Holy Spirit never speaks or works apart from Scripture.

This was one great discovery of the Protestant Reformers. Luther, Calvin, and others had a strong belief in the work of the Holy Spirit in bringing men and women to faith and in leading and preserving them in that faith once they had believed. They believed in the Holy Spirit’s work because the Bible taught it. They rejoiced in such verses as John 3:8 (“The wind blows wherever it pleases. You hear its sound, but you cannot tell where it comes from or where it is going. So it is with everyone born of the Spirit”), 1 John 5:6 (“The Spirit … testifies, because the Spirit is the truth”) or 1 Corinthians 2:12–14 (“We have not received the spirit of the world but the Spirit who is from God, that we may understand what God has freely given us. This is what we speak, not in words taught us by human wisdom but in words taught by the Spirit, expressing spiritual truths in spiritual words. The man without the Spirit does not accept the things that come from the Spirit of God, for they are foolishness to him, and he cannot understand them, because they are spiritually discerned”).

But when they thought of these verses, with their strong emphasis on the work of the Holy Spirit, the Reformers also remembered many other verses that taught the importance of the Bible in knowing the mind of God, and they recognized that it is through the Bible, as the Holy Spirit illumines it to our minds, that God speaks.

Apart from a general revelation of God in nature (which by itself saves no one), we may say that God reveals himself in three ways: (1) there is a revelation of God in history, centered in the atoning work of Christ; (2) there is a revelation of God in writing, the Bible, which tells us of God’s acts; and (3) there is a revelation of God to the mind and heart of the individual by the Holy Spirit, who interprets the written revelation to us and applies its blessings to our hearts. None of this happens apart from the Bible or the truth of the gospel, which it contains, which is what Paul says here. So we can never give too much attention to the Bible. The Bible is the means God uses to call and bless people, as the Holy Spirit, who is God, reveals the Lord Jesus Christ and his work through its pages.

Marked with a Seal

The final work of the Spirit mentioned here is his work of sealing God’s people. The text says, “Having believed, you were marked in him with a seal, the promised Holy Spirit, who is a deposit guaranteeing our inheritance until the redemption of those who are God’s possession” (vv. 13–14).

In his commentary Charles Hodge points out rightly that there are three purposes for which a seal is used and that each illustrates the Spirit’s work: (1) a seal is used to confirm an object or document as being true or genuine, (2) a seal is used to mark a thing as one’s property, and (3) a seal is used to make something fast or secure. The first may be illustrated by the seal of the United States which appears on paper currency or by the seal affixed to a passport. The second is like a nameplate on the flyleaf of a book. The third is illustrated by the seal of the Sanhedrin placed upon the tomb of Christ.

Each of these illustrates something important about the Spirit’s work. The Holy Spirit verifies that the one receiving him really is God’s child, as Paul says in Romans 8:16 (“The Spirit himself testifies with our spirit that we are God’s children”). D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones thinks that this is the chief point of Paul’s reference in Ephesians 1:14 and spends five chapters on it.

The Holy Spirit is also God’s claim on us that we truly are his possession. The phrase “God’s possession” is used explicitly in verse 14.

Finally, the Holy Spirit makes the Christian secure in his new faith and relationship. This comes through in the idea of the Spirit’s being “a deposit [or down payment] guaranteeing our inheritance” until our full redemption. Like a down payment on the purchase of a property, he is proof of God’s good faith and an earnest of the full amount to come.

Sealing with the Holy Spirit answers to all our needs. It assures us of God’s favor. It shows that we belong to him. It renders our salvation certain.

To God Be Glory

The last words of this great opening sentence of the apostle Paul are “to the praise of his glory.” It is an appropriate end, just as it was an appropriate beginning. In verse 3 Paul began by exclaiming, “Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us in the heavenly realms with every spiritual blessing in Christ.” Then, after he has enumerated those blessings, he returns to the place from which he set out, saying that this is “to the praise of his glory.”

And there is this too. When Paul began to speak of God’s blessings to us in salvation he went back before the creation of the world to God’s eternal will, saying that salvation began when God chose us in Jesus Christ (v. 4). He then showed how that will of God unfolded itself in history, first in the work of the second person of the Godhead in providing redemption from sin, and then in the work of the third person of the Godhead in applying that work to the individual. At this point he introduces the idea of God’s purpose, showing it to be that God himself might be glorified. In other words, everything we have in Christ comes from God and returns to God, beginning in his will and ending in his glory. It is God-centered from beginning to end.[2]


The Spirit’s Seal or Down Payment (1:13–14)

13 Paul explains yet another facet of the readers’ inclusion “in Christ.” Twice more he repeats the prepositional phrase “in whom” (i.e., in Christ); this final action occurs in the same arena as the prior ones. After the first “in whom,” Paul inserts the conjunction kai (“also,” functioning as an adverb) and the emphatic personal pronoun “you” (hymeis) as though to shout, You also were sealed. Not only are the previous acts accomplished, but you, yes you, were also sealed with the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit is not an agent who stamped us with a seal; the Spirit is the seal. Believers possess the Spirit.

The central verb in this verse, sphragizō, “seal,” has two participial modifiers; the verb and the participles are all in the aorist tense. The position of the participles prior to the main verb and the tense probably signal contemporaneous actions: sealing, hearing, and believing (cf. Hoehner, 237). The passive voice of “seal” no doubt implies the divine agent: God sealed the believers. The relationship between the participles and the main verb could be causal or temporal, i.e., God sealed either when or because they heard and when or because they believed. Though these present different nuances, the resultant meaning remains certain. Hearing the word of truth, i.e., the gospel of salvation, and believing it result in God’s sealing. When and because coalesce.

Thus Paul clarifies the means by which a person secures salvation, namely, hearing and believing. It matters what is heard and believed, for truth is at stake. They have heard the word (logos, GK 3365) that may also be termed “the truth.” Paul was strongly committed to following the way of truth (2 Co 4:2) and to proclaiming a saving message that embodied God’s truth. In 2 Corinthians 5:19 Paul terms his message the “word” (logos) of reconciliation and in Philippians 2:16 “the word of life,” both salvific terms. Paul defines the word of truth here as “the gospel of your salvation.” Employing the term “gospel” (euangelion, GK 2295), made famous by Mark (1:1), Paul believes the “word” represents “good news” about salvation. Consequently, Paul saw his entire career as propagating this gospel that brought salvation (Ro 1:1, 16; 15:16, 19). As 1 Thessalonians 5:8 makes abundantly clear, Paul saw “salvation” in ultimate and eschatological terms. People were headed to one of two outcomes—wrath or salvation. So Paul labored to bring people to God’s eschatological rescue (2 Ti 2:10).

But only hearing the salvation-bringing word is insufficient; people must believe the word, or more specifically, believe in Christ. Confession of and belief in Christ are the bases for salvation (Ro 10:9–10). For Paul, belief was no mere assent to a proposition or even to an acknowledgment that Jesus was Messiah or Lord. Belief entailed accepting not only that the gospel of Christ is true but that it is true for me. That is, saved ones live out in their experience the reality that Christ is Lord. Accordingly, in the second half of Ephesians we find Paul’s insistence on the lifestyle that must characterize true believers: “live a life worthy of the calling you have received” (4:1). So here the two processes must combine: hear and believe the word, for that word of truth is the good news that alone brings salvation.

When and because the believers heard and believed, God sealed them with the Holy Spirit of promise. The Spirit has an important role in this letter (2:18, 22; 3:5; 5:18; 6:18). Elsewhere Paul links the gift of the Holy Spirit to the point of acquiring salvation (Ro 8:9–11; 1 Co 12:13; Gal 3:2). A “saved” person possesses the Holy Spirit (Ro 5:5; 1 Co 6:19). Paul may be thinking of the gifts of the Spirit or the fruit of the Spirit (or both). Some see a hint of baptism here, but no evidence in the text suggests that rite. But what is the point of sealing here? “Sealing” could pinpoint a security measure or the need to seal something up, but probably here Paul intends the seal as a mark of ownership or possession (cf. BDAG, 980). In that case, the presence of the Spirit in the believers’ lives marks them out as God’s property (also confirmed in 2 Co 1:22). The Spirit here is called literally “the Holy Spirit of promise.” This genitival connection probably conveys a descriptive meaning (as in the NIV)—the promised Holy Spirit (Gal 3:14; cf. Ac 1:5, 8; 2:4, 17). As he promised, when God takes ownership of a person he marks that person with the Spirit, a seal for the day of redemption (Eph 4:30). The Ephesian believers enjoy the same status as all members of Christ’s body. They have God’s seal on them, the same one that identifies all believers.

14 Paul calls the Spirit the arrabōn (a Semitic word that passed into Greek; GK 775) of our inheritance (see also 2 Co 1:22; 5:5). BDAG, 134, describe this entity as the “payment of part of a purchase price in advance, first installment, deposit, down payment, pledge.” The sense is clear enough. The Spirit in believers’ lives constitutes God’s “earnest money,” a kind of deposit from him by which he assures that he will give them their full inheritance. In v. 18 Paul speaks of the “riches of [God’s] glorious inheritance in the saints.” The Spirit is the down payment; the remaining riches will follow. A Spirit-filled life is a foretaste of what heaven will be like (cf. 5:18–21).

The verse ends with more tortuous grammar—two prepositional phrases with genitival modifiers that describe the down payment of our inheritance. The first explains what will happen (and possibly when): (until) God redeems his possession. The second expresses its significance: God’s glory will be praised. Paul revisits the theme of redemption (recall v. 7) and adds an interesting descriptor for those redeemed: they are God’s possession or property (cf. 2 Pe 3:9). At the grand finale when God “pays up,” he will redeem his property—us—and we will acquire our inheritance. The response to this exorbitant grace comes as no surprise if we have followed Paul closely: God’s glory is praised! This repeats the outcome of v. 12 (cf. v. 6).[3]


13  But God’s portion is not confined to Jewish believers. “We who first placed our hope in Christ” have now been joined by “you also”—that is to say, by Gentile believers. It is to Gentile believers that this letter is specifically addressed, assuring them that their share in God’s heritage is as full and firm as that of their brothers and sisters of Jewish birth. Gentiles also heard the gospel, and realized that the salvation of which it spoke was for them as well as for Jews. The gospel is “the message of truth”—“the true message of the gospel,” as it is called in Col. 1:5—because it has God for its author; it is “the gospel of God” (Rom. 1:1). The communication of the gospel to Gentiles was undertaken reluctantly by the first believers, who could scarcely entertain the thought that the fulfilment of God’s promises to Israel should embrace outsiders within its saving scope. Apart from Peter, who required a special revelation from heaven before he could bring himself to accept Cornelius’s invitation to visit him and tell him and his household the way of salvation, Gentile evangelization began as the result of private enterprise, when unnamed Hellenists of Cyprus and Cyrene came to Antioch and told the story of Jesus to Gentiles as well as Jews.92 From then on, throughout the provinces of the eastern Roman Empire, many more Gentiles than Jews believed the gospel, and the terms on which they might be admitted became a matter of serious concern in the mother church at Jerusalem. When, as Luke records, “the apostles and the elders” at Jerusalem “were gathered together to consider this matter,” Peter argued that it would be wise to follow the example of God, who gave proof of his acceptance of Gentile believers by “giving them the Holy Spirit just as he did to us; and he made no distinction between us and them, but cleansed their hearts by faith” (Acts 15:6–9).

There is a remarkable similarity between Peter’s argument at the Council of Jerusalem and what is said here. The Gentiles, on believing the gospel, were “sealed with the Holy Spirit of promise.” The figure of sealing is used by Paul in relation to the Spirit in 2 Cor. 1:22 where, associating his Corinthian converts closely with himself and his colleagues, he says, “it is God who establishes us with you in Christ and has anointed us; he has also sealed us and given us the guarantee of the Spirit in our hearts.” Of the three figures used there—the anointing, the seal, and the guarantee—two reappear here: the seal and the guarantee.

The seal of the Spirit was received by the Gentiles here addressed as it had been received earlier by Jewish Christians—when they believed. The verbal form used here is identical with that found in Acts 19:2, where Paul at Ephesus asks a group of “disciples” if they received the Holy Spirit when they believed; it is a participial form meaning “having believed” or “on believing.” By giving believers the Spirit, God “seals” or stamps them as his own possession. The Spirit is variously called “the Spirit of God” or “the Spirit of Christ”; “if anyone has not the Spirit of Christ, he does not belong to him” (Rom. 8:9). Here he is called “the Holy Spirit of promise.” This might mean “the promised Holy Spirit” (cf. Acts 2:33, “the promise of the Holy Spirit”); but more probably it indicates that the Holy Spirit brings with him when he is received the promise of glory yet to come. So, in Eph. 4:30, believers are said to have been sealed with the Spirit “for the day of redemption”—a statement which summarizes the words that follow in our present context.

14  The word rendered “guarantee” is of Semitic origin; it was probably borrowed by the Greeks in the early days of trade with the Phoenicians. It was a commercial word denoting a pledge—some object handed over by a buyer to a seller until the purchase price was paid in full. The Hebrew word (identical with the Phoenician) is used in Gen. 38:17–18 of items of Judah’s personal property which he handed over to Tamar for the time being, until he had opportunity to send her the agreed price. In the NT it is used only in the Pauline writings, and only with reference to the Spirit. In 2 Cor. 5:5, where Paul looks forward to the “heavenly dwelling” which is to replace the present mortal tenement, he says, “he who has prepared us for this very thing is God, who has given us the Spirit as a guarantee.” The gift of the Spirit, then, is the guarantee of coming immortality. This is Paul’s distinctive contribution to the NT doctrine of the Holy Spirit. Another term which he uses to express the same thought is “first fruits”: in Rom. 8:23 the Spirit is the “first fruits” of the eagerly awaited “adoption, the redemption of our bodies,” where the resurrection of the people of Christ at his parousia is meant. The same word for “redemption” is used there as here, and the same future hope is in view.

The Spirit consciously received is “the guarantee of our inheritance,” the pledge given to believers by God to assure them that the glory of the life to come, promised in the gospel, is a well-founded hope, a reality and not an illusion. The word “inheritance”103 is used in this chapter both of God’s portion in his people (vv. 11, 18) and of the everlasting portion which he has reserved for them. They can enter into the enjoyment of this everlasting portion here and now by the ministry of the Spirit. Redemption is already theirs through the sacrifice and death of Christ (v. 7), but one aspect of that redemption remains to be realized. On the day of resurrection God will “redeem” his own possession, and the evidence of his commitment to do so is given in his “sealing” that possession with the Spirit.

The word translated “possession” occurs in the same sense in 1 Peter 2:9, where believers (again, as it happens, Gentile believers) are called “a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people for [God’s] possession.” Language is there deliberately applied to Gentile believers which in the OT is used of God’s people Israel—notably in Exod. 19:5, where Yahweh calls Israel “my own possession among all peoples.” The verb corresponding to the noun “possession” is used in a similar sense in Acts 20:28, where Paul directs the elders of the church of Ephesus to “feed the church of God, of which he obtained possession through the blood of his own [Son].” These words also echo an OT passage—Ps. 74:2, where God is entreated: “Remember thy congregation, of which thou hast obtained possession long since.” That such language should now be applied to Gentile believers is a token of the security of their new standing within the community of God’s own people, fully sharing present blessing and future hope with their fellow-believers of Jewish stock.

As those who first placed their hope in Christ are designed “for his glorious praise,” so it is with “you also”—believers of Gentile origin. Here too there is perhaps an echo of OT language—more particularly of Isa. 43:20–21, where God speaks of “my chosen people, the people whom I formed for myself that they might declare my praise.”

The liturgical note on which this eulogia opened in v. 3 has been sustained throughout, not least by means of the recurring refrain of glorious praise. Such a liturgical passage does not lend itself well to comparative analysis in terms of epistolary usage, whether Paul’s or anyone else’s. But it strikes the keynote for the rest of the letter, with its emphasis on the inclusion of Gentiles together with Jews within the new society of the people of God.[4]


His Present Faithfulness (1:13)

After recounting God’s purpose for “we [Jews] who were the first to hope in Christ,” the apostle speaks to the Ephesian Gentiles and says, “And you also were included in Christ” (Eph. 1:13). Whereas the earlier portion of this passage was the “we who …” section, this is the “you, too” section.

Expanding His Covenant (1:13a)

“In Christ” we were chosen and you, too, were included, says the apostle. The plan that was worked through the Jews to glorify Christ has now been extended to other nations. In the Greek both verses 11 (focusing on Jewish believers) and 13 (focusing on Gentile believers) begin the same way: “In him also.” Both Jew and Gentile are found to be “in Christ” (also see Eph. 1:12). This says much about how Paul conceived of the nature of salvation, of the Christian life, and of the covenantal promises to the Jewish nation extended to the Gentiles. This co-inclusion in Christ also serves as a theological basis for Paul’s argument that Jews and Gentiles now are fellow members of the body of Christ (see Eph. 2:13–22).

The plan “to bring all things … together under one head, even Christ” (Eph. 1:10) is being worked out in this present age. This is Paul’s reason for using the continuing present tense to say that God “works out everything in conformity with the purpose of his will” (Eph. 1:11). God’s plan is for the present age, our time. We who hear the gospel now are as much in God’s purpose of bringing praise to Christ as were the Jews. From the beginning God purposed to work everything together in order to bring all things under the headship of Christ. This includes past and present, heaven and earth, Jew and Gentile (as is stated more explicitly in Eph. 3:6).

Extending His Mercy (1:13b)

God’s involvement of “all things” in his plan is more than an expansion of the covenant; it is an extension of mercy. What did the Jews do to be the chosen people? Nothing. God’s blessing was based in his mercy, not on their merit. And what do Gentiles now have to do to qualify for this mercy and be granted the same privileged status as the covenant people?

Will Gentiles have to swim seven seas, perform feats of great sacrifice, or read a hundred books? No. The apostle’s language is very precise. “You also were included in Christ when you heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation” (Eph. 1:13). The Gentiles’ inclusion does not even rest on their doing what the Jews were supposed to do. But simply hearing—actually having the ears to hear and really hearing—the gospel marked these Gentiles as those included in the covenant. Note that they could not have heard spiritually, if God had not already worked in their hearts and tuned them to receive his Word (John 6:44, 65). Truly hearing the message of God’s mercy was itself a sign of inclusion in the covenant before anything else had been, or could be, done.

This unconditional covenant inclusion is a great mercy. The greatness can be comprehended only by remembering the pagan context of the Ephesians’ world. Human pride, false morality, and deceitful idolatry all thrived in Ephesus. For God to call people from this place his own before they had done anything to qualify for his love is a sign of great grace—of God’s willingness to be faithful in the face of great human frailty and sin. And thus, just as Paul can say that it was for “the praise of his [God’s] glory” that those who first believed were from the Jews, the least distinguished of the peoples of the world (Eph. 1:12), so also when Paul concludes his thought about the Ephesians, he says that their inclusion in Christ is likewise to the praise of God’s glory (Eph. 1:14). Christ is glorified both because more persons are subject to him and also because his caring for them signals the wonders of his mercy.

There are many ways that these truths apply to us. First, there is the big picture: if we are included in Christ, then we are part of the eternal plan that began with the covenant people of old. All things are being worked out so that we, too, will be for the praise of his glory. Everything is being worked out for our good and his glory.

Second, there is a big mercy. More are being included who do not get everything right. We are part of the big picture because of God’s mercy, not our merit. Our accomplishments would never qualify us for his mercy. There are forces greater than we that are at work throughout history, and presently, to make us God’s own. Our salvation could never be dependent on our getting everything right—not yesterday, not today, not ever.

Third, we are part of the big plan to make everything right. There is a type of Calvinism that so emphasizes God’s sovereign eternal plan that it virtually shuts out any role of human participation in the spread of the gospel. But when we properly understand what the apostle says here, we are compelled to put our lives in God’s service for the sake of the gospel. We are instruments of his glory, not mere observers of his sovereignty.

When Calvin preached in Geneva, he did not push merely for doctrinal understanding. Visit his church and you can still learn how the great expounder of God’s sovereignty welcomed people from all over the world, and then prepared them to gush forth from Geneva to take the gospel to others. Where confidence in the sovereign working of God was greatest, there were the greatest delight and zeal to participate in God’s plan.

Paul says that the Jews were chosen in order that they might be to the praise of God’s glory, and that when those who first believed from among the Jews told others, they might help fulfill God’s plan to bring all things under Christ. God’s people can be a part of extending God’s mercy and glory. Those who have apprehended how great is the mercy of God desire that his glory spread, and they recognize that God uses human means to do this. Those most aware of the eternal plan are those most anxious to be a part of it, because they know that their efforts are not futile and even their failures are not determinative of God’s final intentions. God will still use people who believe that they are part of his design to bring glory to his Son—and who know that his design will prevail.

I am always chasing rainbows. When a rainbow appears in the sky, I will run for a camera as well as whatever family member or pet I can get to pose in the picture. The beautiful colors, the contrast of darkening rain and glistening sun, the wonder of light in nature’s prism, the reminder of God’s mercy and covenant—all call to me to pay attention and relish the glory of God’s design. But my ability fully to appreciate the glory is always incomplete. Because of the way that rainbows are formed I will never see a complete rainbow from the ground. You may be thinking that you have seen a complete rainbow because you have seen either all its colors or a complete arc that touches the ground on both sides. But from the ground you have not seen a complete rainbow. Because of the sheering effect of the rain and the angle of the sun, a person beneath the rainbow cannot see all of God’s design where the legs come together and the rainbow is a complete circle. As long as our view is from the ground, earth gets in the way and we never see God’s complete design.

Yet, you can see a complete rainbow. I have. If you get above the earth in a plane or on a mountaintop, when the sun is just at the right angle, you can see the whole rainbow, the full circle—the completeness of God’s design. When earth does not get in the way, you can see all of God’s design.

In this portion of Scripture, Paul moves earth aside so that we can see God’s entire plan. He lifts us above earthly perspectives and lets us see our lives from the perspective of heaven. There we see the whole design of human history. We are raised above the limitations of our sin and finitude so we will see that from the beginning God chose to love us. He made a people for his very own and promised that from them would come those who would believe in Christ. These would be his instruments for telling others, so that all the world would come together in praise of his glory. And just as it was from the beginning, so it is now: all things are being worked together in conformity with Christ’s purpose so that by his mercy all is to the praise of his glory.

The Bible’s claim of divine purpose in all things puts Christians at odds with differing earthly viewpoints. First, it puts us at odds with the secular world. We do not accept the premises of the secular scientist at the university who refuses to let students use language of purpose and design in describing the world around us. Everything is part of God’s design—not random, not developed by chance, but divinely designed.

Second, a heavenly perspective puts us at odds with much in our personal world. Our limited and finite perspective does not always confirm divine purpose for us. We question and doubt God’s design because the things of earth get in the way: our troubles, our questions, our sin—yes, even our pain and suffering. How can they fit into his purpose? It is so hard to see divine designs when your child is ill, when the church seems troubled by needless debate, when you are struggling to hold a family together, or simply to make financial ends meet. Yet when our eyes see the full rainbow in Scripture—the completeness of God’s plan—and know by faith that our lives are a part of God’s design no matter what happens, then we can take whatever comes because we know that we are for the praise of his glory.

Our hearts naturally and understandably question, “Is there really purpose in all of this?” The apostle answers by taking us to heaven’s heights to let us see from God’s perspective the complete picture of his working all things together for Christ’s glory and our good through no merit of our own. From the beginning he made a world good and to his glory. But then, like a balloon punctured and deflated, the glory was left in crumpled remains of human misery and earthly corruption by the fall of Adam. But ever since, according to the nature that is in him, the Lord has been following a predetermined plan to refill the balloon with his mercy, ever expanding and extending the balloon to its original glory. First, the mercy was extended to a chosen people through no merit of their own. From them came those who were the first to believe in Christ, and they carried the message of mercy to other nations who now also are included in the plan of mercy until the expansion of the kingdom purposes of God are fulfilled.

Paul writes this epistle so that we would grasp that such a vast, intricate, and, at the same time, intimate plan is true and applies to us. What a difference it makes in my life and yours when we believe that the trials as well as the accomplishments, the difficulties as well as the joys, are not simply the products of brute forces in the universe but actually are all part of God’s eternal plan for his glory and our good. Do we have any assurance that such astounding truths do apply to us? Yes. Our assurance of God’s abiding care rests not only in his past and present promises, but also in his Spirit’s faithfulness.

His Spirit’s Faithfulness (1:13c–14)

Paul says to the Ephesians, “You were marked in him with a seal, the promised Holy Spirit, who is the deposit guaranteeing our inheritance until the redemption of those who are God’s possession—to the praise of his glory” (vv. 13b–14). Those who are part of God’s redemptive plan are marked with a seal that guarantees their receiving the full rights of God’s heirs in a kingdom redeemed and made right.

The “inheritance” concept is found elsewhere in Paul’s prison epistles (Eph. 5:5; Col. 1:12; 3:24) and in his speeches in Acts (20:32; 26:18). This is an important continuity. Jesus spoke of the inheritance of the kingdom and of eternal life (Matt. 19:29; 25:34), and his followers continued this expression (1 Cor. 6:9–10; 15:50; Gal. 5:21; Heb. 1:14; 9:15; 1 Peter 1:4). But Jesus’ words do not originate the concept. The Old Testament people were also promised an inheritance from God. Now, as God’s people, this inheritance is “ours,” but we are not the sole recipients of blessing. God also has his own inheritance in the saints (Eph. 1:18; and see comments on verse 11 above).

The “seal” image that Paul is calling to mind is that of the wax that was affixed to an official document whose promises are guaranteed because of the authority of the one who marked the seal with a signet ring. The sign was the guarantee that what was promised would be fulfilled for those to whom it was promised.

But Paul is not ending the imagery there. The Holy Spirit is not just a mark of God that we are his possession; the Spirit also is a deposit guaranteeing the redemption that is to come. This deposit is similar to a down payment on a house that secures your position as the buyer, or the first fruits of a crop that indicate that the rest of the harvest is coming.5 The Spirit is the first evidence of the full grandeur of God’s completed purpose in our lives.

It all sounds so great. The Spirit marks us as God’s own and serves as the guarantee of God’s purpose for our lives. But does this satisfy all of our questions? No. We want to know how the Spirit marks us. What are the evidences of the deposit to assure us that God’s plan applies to us? The answer lies in the portion of the text not yet addressed: “And you also were included in Christ, when you heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation. Having believed, you were marked in him with a seal, the promised Holy Spirit” (Eph. 1:13).

It is important to remember that in the original language (despite the periods in our English versions) this portion of our text is part of one long sentence that extends beyond this verse. If this sentence structure is forgotten, then one is likely to create a time sequence for this verse that reflects our preconceptions rather than what the words actually say. If one’s preconception is that some special expression of the Holy Spirit, such as charismatic gifts, will arrive in a second blessing weeks or even years after conversion, then the words might be read this way: “You were included in Christ, when you heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation. Having believed that, then at a later time you were marked in him with a seal, the promised Holy Spirit.”

But what if the words are put as close together in time as the Greek sentence places the terms? Then the words do not indicate so much a separation of time as a sequence of logic. In this case, the words would be read this way: “You were included in Christ, when you heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation. Having believed that, then you were at that time marked in him with a seal, the promised Holy Spirit.” In this case, the proof of the presence of the Holy Spirit is not indicated by a distant expression of extraordinary charismatic gifts, but rather the immediate fact that God has brought the person to saving faith. Belief itself indicates the presence of the seal (mark) of the Spirit of God that guarantees we are God’s children because without the Spirit we could not and would not believe (Rom. 8:6–9; 1 Cor. 2:14).

We fail to recognize belief as the indication of the seal of the Spirit when we fail to remember how supernatural is the gift of our faith. The gospel says you are a sinner, and Jesus, the Lord of all and Lamb of God, died for your sins. The world doesn’t believe that. The gospel says that even when you are faithless, the faithful God has forgiven your past, laid claim on your life, and secured your future. The world doesn’t believe that. The gospel says that though you were dead in your trespasses and sins, Christ died for you, rose from the dead as the victor over your sins, gives purpose to your life now, and is coming to claim you eternally. The world cannot believe that. Not until the Holy Spirit comes and supernaturally changes a heart can anyone believe the truths of the gospel. Thus, says the apostle, your believing is the evidence that the Holy Spirit is in you.

The Holy Spirit who has already enabled you to taste the sweetness of God in the gospel of your salvation is giving you a foretaste of the glory that awaits you, guaranteed by his mark of belief in you. Already by the Holy Spirit’s using the gospel, your spiritual world has been turned upside down and made new. Your belief is the proof that the Bible speaks truth when it says that you are a new creation. In addition, this testimony of God’s Spirit in your heart affirms that what the Bible says about God’s work throughout creation can be trusted. The Bible says the entire creation is being conformed to God’s purposes and for his glory. Because we have witnessed the re-creating work of God in our hearts, we are able to trust that what the Bible says about God’s ultimate renewal of all things is also true.

These are precious truths that give meaning, purpose, and courage to our lives. I can know that nothing in my life is without purpose because I believe that the Savior died for me and now, as my risen Lord, he lives in me by his Spirit so that my life will be used for his glory. Such belief is itself the evidence (and guarantee) of the Spirit’s presence in my life and God’s purpose for my life. God has a purpose for me in all my weakness, frailty, sin, and fear. Does Paul say this because he does not understand the real challenges that we face? He is claiming that we can know everything will work out for God’s glory and our good simply because of the evidence of our belief as the Holy Spirit’s claim upon us. Does Paul live in the real world? Yes, he writes this letter while under Roman guard and awaiting trial. He knows the real world. And because he believes the gospel, he believes that even his suffering is part of God’s purpose of spreading the message of his faithfulness past and present until all of God’s precious people are gathered in to the glory of his name.

Because our weakness before the world outside of us, and our sin caused by the world inside of us, are so evident, we need the blessed assurance that our lives are not fruitless and that what we fail to achieve is not disqualifying of God’s love. Ultimately our confidence has to turn away from anything that we would offer and, instead, toward the faithfulness of our God that is confirmed by his Spirit’s work in us. Without these assurances the things that we must face until Christ comes again would be unbearable. But with the assurance that his purposes are secure and that we are in that plan, we can face whatever he calls us to endure and be secure even when our weaknesses are apparent.

A friend of mine recently shared that the high school graduation of his son Robby was filling the family with “new degrees of terror.” The reason for the terror was that Robby was born with multiple mental and physical handicaps. Once school was over, much of the government support for Robby would disappear, and it was not clear how the family would take care of him.

Robby was on my mind when, a few days later, the pastor of my church was pronouncing that Sunday’s benediction—the promise of God to give his blessing to his covenant people. As our pastor finished the benediction, a slurred voice rose in the back of the sanctuary and joined him in saying the final, oft-repeated words: “… to our God is the power and authority, now and forever, amen.” It was Robby, who, from his wheelchair, was testifying of the power and sovereignty of his God—past, present, and forever.

How could Robby believe such things, and how could his parents? His suffering and their anguish have been so great. There is little on this earth that would confirm the truth of the words he repeated. Only faith affirms that Robby’s hope is not in vain. But such faith rises above the earth and sees all things from God’s perspective. There he shows himself to be the God of all power who is able to conform all things to his purposes. There he promises that every valley shall be lifted, every injustice will be made right, every tear will be wiped away, hearts will be healed, bodies will be made whole, and all that now happens will lead us and others to an eternity of these blessings with our Savior. The weakest of vessels and the vilest of sinners are part of this eternal plan, as are all who believe in him. How do you know that you are included? Because you believe in him and, having believed, you have the testimony of his Spirit in your heart that he is able to bring all things together for his glory and your good.

The universe of your soul is already different, and this is the work of the Holy Spirit. He is the deposit of God of the full redemption that is ahead, given to assure you that what you face is not without purpose and what you most cherish is not in jeopardy. Neither is in your hands. Rather, all is in the hands of the wonderful God who called and made you his own out of his mercy alone. Even when you cannot do everything right, even when things seem all wrong, you are all right with God because he who chose you is working out everything in conformity with the purpose of his will, to the praise of his glory.[5]


1:13 / Here the author turns to the Gentiles and affirms that they, too, were included in Christ. He then proceeds to outline the steps that were involved in their coming to Christ:

First, they heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation. On some occasion these readers heard the message of the gospel, which resulted in their salvation. In this context, salvation probably signifies inner renewal and all the blessings and privileges available to believers because of their status in Christ (cf. 2:1ff.) rather than preservation from the wrath of God (cf. Rom. 5:9).

The phraseology of this opening statement is similar to Colossians 1:5 and to the ideas in Romans 10:14 and 17, which show that the proclamation of the gospel precedes faith in the gospel. A similar sequence takes place during Peter’s sermon on the day of Pentecost when he summons those who heard the gospel to repent and be baptized (Acts 2:37ff.).

Second, they believed in Christ, literally, “in whom also having believed.” Although the content of belief is not mentioned, it definitely must include the person of Christ (“If you confess with your mouth, ‘Jesus is Lord,’ and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved,” Rom. 10:9) or the gospel that bears witness to him.

Third, you were marked in him with a seal, the promised Holy Spirit. The imagery behind this phrase comes from the ancient custom of sealing (sphragizō), in which personal possessions (e.g., animals, household goods, slaves) received a mark or stamp of ownership in much the same way that things are branded or identified today. This act also confirmed or authenticated something as genuine. A seal on a letter or document, for example, declared that it was legally valid. People belonging to religious cults often were sealed with marks that bore the image of their god(s). The Book of Revelation talks about those who have or do not have “the seal of God on their foreheads” (Rev. 9:4; cf. also 7:2–8; 22:4; 2 Tim. 2:19).

In the nt, there are a number of references that indicate that the Holy Spirit is the Christian’s seal: In Romans, Paul relates the inner witness of the Spirit to the believer’s sonship (8:15, 16; cf. Gal. 4:6), thus affirming that the presence of the Holy Spirit in the believer is a sign that he or she belongs to God. The apostle is even more explicit in 2 Corinthians 1:22, “[God] set his seal of ownership on us, and put his Spirit in our hearts as a deposit, guaranteeing what is to come.” Ephesians 1:13 confirms this by assuring the believer that the seal is the possession of the Holy Spirit. It is a visible attestation that one belongs to Christ.

Although Paul connects the giving of the Holy Spirit to the acts of “hearing” the gospel and “believing” in Christ, there are credible reasons to believe that verse 13 has the baptismal event in mind, even though the term is not mentioned explicitly. First, there is an inseparable connection between faith and baptism in the nt. Baptism is believers’ baptism, and those who believed in Christ expressed their faith almost immediately in baptism (Acts 2:38, 41; 8:12, 35–38; 9:18; 10:47, 48; 19:5). Faith and baptism went so closely together that they were regarded as one act rather than two. Peter, for example, instructs his hearers to repent, that is, to have faith, believe, and to be baptized for the forgiveness of sins (2:38). When Paul becomes a Christian, he is told to “Get up, be baptized and wash your sins away, calling on his name” (Acts 22:16). Within the framework of the nt, one was not baptized unless one believed; nor did one believe without being baptized.

Second, the nt connects baptism with the reception of the Holy Spirit. Peter summons his audience to be baptized and receive “the gift of the Holy Spirit” (Acts 2:38). Paul associates baptism and the Holy Spirit on several occasions in his letters (1 Cor. 6:11; 12:13; Titus 3:5). And when Luke describes some of the major epochs in the life of the early Christian church, he includes faith, baptism, and the reception of the Holy Spirit as essential parts of becoming a Christian, that is, of Christian initiation (Acts 2:38ff.; 8:12–17; 19:1–6; cf. 10:44–48). There is no need for a “Spirit baptism” or a rite of confirmation apart from the reception of the Holy Spirit at the time of water baptism.

On the basis of these observations it appears legitimate to interpret 1:13 within the context of baptism. The aorist participles “having heard” (akousantes) and “having believed” (pisteusantes), followed by the aorist passive (“you were sealed with the Holy Spirit of promise”), are reminiscent of the faith, baptism, Holy Spirit pattern noted above. The author does not envision a sequence of events separated by a long period of time.

Although the Holy Spirit is the seal (1:13; 4:30; 2 Cor. 1:22), and 1:13 is a strong allusion to baptism, it is by no means certain that sealing is used as a technical term for baptism in Ephesians. The first definite reference to the “seal of baptism” occurs in the second century (ca. a.d. 150) in the Second Letter of Clement (7.6; 8.6). From this time onward, sphragis is the seal received by all Christians at baptism and thus becomes a term for baptism itself.

The effect of the Holy Spirit is to mark the believer with a seal. As a seal, the Spirit marks one out as belonging to Christ. It is interesting to note that this is virtually the same effect that baptism “into Christ” has. To be baptized into the name or person of Christ is to become Christ’s possession, to be placed under the Lord’s authority and protection.

1:14 / In addition to ownership, the Holy Spirit is a deposit guaranteeing that believers will receive God’s promises. Most commentators suggest that the idea of guarantee (arrabōn) came into the Greek world from the Phoenicians who, in matters of trade, often would make a deposit or an installment as earnest money with the balance to be paid in full at some later date. This act obliged both buyer and seller to complete the transaction. But “the deal” included a sense of “quality” as well, for the person receiving the down payment looked forward to receiving full payment with goods of the same quality (Mitton, pp. 62–63). In the Christian life, the Holy Spirit is a pledge that God will complete his promise to deliver our inheritance. The statement in 2 Corinthians 5:5 is more specific about this idea: “God … has given us the Spirit as a deposit, guaranteeing what is to come.” One’s present life in the Spirit is a foretaste of one’s future and eternal life with the Spirit!

Beyond guaranteeing one’s inheritance, the Holy Spirit assures believers of the redemption of those who are God’s possession. Included in this translation are the two important theological concepts of redemption (apolytrōsis) and possession (peripoiēsis). Some commentators (cf. Abbott, p. 24) believe that the context (our inheritance) requires that possession likewise be “our possession.” Thus, believers are redeemed, but await a future time when they will take full possession of their redemption. This view has led to the ambiguous and inadequate translation in the rsv, “which is the guarantee of our inheritance until we acquire possession of it, to the praise of his glory.”

Most commentators—and as a result most English translations, like the niv—think the verse is stressing that God is the agent of redemption and that believers are God’s possession (niv, nasb), “his own” (neb), or “those who are his” (gnb). Although redemption is a present gift, the Holy Spirit assures the believer that ultimately God will redeem completely those who are his; he is a guarantee until the complete freedom (redemption) of God’s own people (cf. 1 Pet. 2:9).

These thoughts recall the “already” and the “not yet” aspect of the Christian life. Believers have been given the Holy Spirit, enjoy new life in Christ, have been redeemed, but still await the fulfillment of these blessings at the second Advent. The sealing of the Holy Spirit has an eschatological function that points toward the final day, when their bodies will completely be freed (redeemed) from all the effects of sin. Ephesians 4:30 expands this concept more fully when it refers to “the Holy Spirit of God, with whom you were sealed for the day of redemption.” A similar thought concerning redemption is expressed in Romans 8:23, where Paul discusses the future glory of God’s people and God’s creation: “We ourselves, who have the firstfruits of the Spirit, groan inwardly as we wait eagerly for our adoption as sons, the redemption of our bodies.”

This great hymn of praise (vv. 3–14) ends with a note that has been sounded several times before with respect to God’s elective purpose for humanity. Hence, election and sonship are to the praise of his glorious grace (v. 6); redemption, and all of its benefits (vv. 7–11), are to culminate in a life of praise (that we … might be for the praise of his glory—v. 12); finally, the pledge of the Holy Spirit is presented in relation to the unfolding plan of God. This, also, is to the praise of his glory (v. 14).[6]


[1] MacArthur, J. F., Jr. (1986). Ephesians (pp. 32–36). Chicago: Moody Press.

[2] Boice, J. M. (1988). Ephesians: an expositional commentary (pp. 27–32). Grand Rapids, MI: Ministry Resources Library.

[3] Klein, W. W. (2006). Ephesians. In T. Longman III & D. E. Garland (Eds.), The Expositor’s Bible Commentary: Ephesians–Philemon (Revised Edition) (Vol. 12, pp. 54–55). Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan.

[4] Bruce, F. F. (1984). The Epistles to the Colossians, to Philemon, and to the Ephesians (pp. 264–267). Grand Rapids, MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co.

[5] Chapell, B. (2009). Ephesians. (R. D. Phillips, P. G. Ryken, & D. M. Doriani, Eds.) (pp. 49–58). Phillipsburg, NJ: P&R Publishing.

[6] Patzia, A. G. (2011). Ephesians, Colossians, Philemon (pp. 157–161). Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Books.