Category Archives: Morning Thoughts

Philip Conley's Morning Thoughts

Morning Thoughts (Genesis 3:22-24 – “Mercy in Judgment”)

“Mercy in Judgment”

Genesis 3:22-24, “And the LORD God said, Behold, the man is become as one of us, to know good and evil: and now, lest he put forth his hand, and take also of the tree of life, and eat, and live for ever: Therefore the LORD God sent him forth from the garden of Eden, to till the ground from whence he was taken.  So he drove out the man; and he placed at the east of the garden of Eden Cherubims, and a flaming sword which turned every way, to keep the way of the tree of life.”

This morning, man constantly stays in a state of desire.  We want something all the time.  As we mature, we begin to realize the folly of many of these desires, but throughout our lives, we can look back at a time when we got something that we wanted only to discover that it brought ruin rather than pleasure.  Due to our fallen condition, we seem to repeat this cycle far too often.  Rather than learn to temper our desires, we repeatedly fall victim to them.  During these times, we find that others can see the situation better than we can sometimes.  Parents know that a child’s desire is not good for them or in their best interest.  Friends may tell us that our path is one of destruction.  Whatever the case may be, the party involved in the desire many times is the least able to determine what is really good for them or not.

The verses above detail the tail end of events in the Garden of Eden.  Man has fallen by breaking God’s singular commandment, and as a result, many evils on the world today can be traced to this event.  Women’s pains in child bearing, sweat in working, weeds in the ground, and ultimately death itself all began on this dreadful day.  When God handed down these curses and judgments, He also gloriously referenced the coming cure to His people’s problems in the person of His Son (Verse 15).  Finally, God speaks within the Godhead and bars the tree of life from man.  This final judgment was specifically stated to keep man from eating the tree of life and living forever.

Many years ago, I was at a meeting, and an older and wiser elder than me was called to fill the stand.  In his discourse, he said something to the effect, “What a mercy this was from God!  Can you imagine what life on this earth would be like if you lived perpetually after sin was here?”  The statement was so different than anything I had heard about this event before that I was at first a little credulous about it.  However, upon much reflection, I have come to the conclusion that his thinking was indeed correct.  Imagine for a moment all the problems that we have in our own little lives now?  What if those problems never had an end?

Having watched loved ones lie on beds bearing the afflictions of cancer and other diseases, I cannot imagine the heartbreak that would come with watching loved ones suffer with no end in sight.  What if the ravages of cancer lasted for 6,000 years or longer?  Some people live with fear of what blood thirsty evildoers can or will do to them.  People living in large cities must cope with gang violence, drug peddling, and a myriad of other social evils.  What if these bloodthirsty devils could perpetuate their depravity forever?  These people’s fears would never cease if we all lived forever in these conditions.

All of the problems outlined above would not be in existence without the presence of sin in the world.  Because sin is in the world, these problems will continue as long as the earth stands.  When God barred the way to the tree of life, these problems – though not yet manifested to the degree they are now – were potentially present in the life of man.  These problems shortly appeared on the scene when Cain murdered Abel, and they have been ceaseless since then.  Would any of us deign to live forever like that?

We might say that the world was such a bad place that we would simply stop eating the tree of life, but man’s desires to live and exist would trump those.  Much like the child who keeps foolishly wanting the thing that is not good for them, we would keep desiring to live and live and live, even though it was not good for us.  Therefore, God mercifully kept His people from such a condition, while knowing that He had already made provision for a better and endless life that is free from bondage.

God opened the way to the true Tree of Life by having that flaming sword smite His Fellow (Zechariah 13:7), and thereby opening the door to the sheepfold so that the sheep would be admitted into the portals of eternal life and bliss.  This endless dwelling differs from perpetual life here, as the one there will not be tainted with the problems, afflictions, and sorrows that sin produces here.  That life is such that Paul would describe it as “far better” in Philippians 1.  Though God’s mercy is great to us here, the greatest mercy is being with Him in perfection where nothing ever defiles.  Why would we want to prolong this, when the better way has been ushered in by the Son Himself?

Though it was a great judgment to drive man from what he previously had access to, God’s mercy is still seen by not allowing us to make even more ruin of our lives with perpetual misery.  Death – though not desired by the flesh – is a great blessing for God’s children.  We get to leave the problems and trials of this life, which is why God’s children should have no fear of death. (Revelation 14:13) To those that Christ has granted entrance into heaven through His precious blood, death is not the end but the opening into a far better and blessed existence.  God has had mercy on us here, continues to have mercy on us, and will have mercy yet in the future.  He had mercy in keeping our dust from a life of perpetual misery.  He has mercy on us now by keeping our dust from multitudes of evil and problems.  He will have mercy on us by raising our dust to a plane of existence that is free from all the encumbrances and problems of this world.

In Hope,
Bro Philip

Philip Conley's Morning Thoughts

Morning Thoughts (Revelation 1:3 – “Blessed Condition”)

“Blessed Condition”

Revelation 1:3, “Blessed is he that readeth, and they that hear the words of this prophecy, and keep those things which are written therein: for the time is at hand.”

This morning, we frail mortals fail to consider what great blessings are afforded to us.  Man’s nature consistently desires more than he currently possesses, and as a result, fails to be thankful for the plentitude that he has.  Many years ago, I heard a minister comment on the “unseen thanks” through what we are thankful for.  One of his examples hit me squarely, “We hear about people being thankful for a good night’s rest, and we should be.  But, when was the last time you thanked God for a bed to get that good night’s rest in?”  Though we should be thankful for daily bread, do we thank Him for a table to eat it on?  Having a good job to provide for our families, do we thank Him for a comfortable vehicle to drive to and from said employment?  So, often we thank God for salvation and redemption, but how often are we contemplative to thank Him for our “place” in knowing that?

In opening the book of Revelation, John sets many foundational principles in place, and one of them is a blessed condition to those who have the opportunity to employ it.  This opportunity has been afforded to me, and if it applies to you, dear reader, then we have every reason for supreme thanks to God for His untold goodness to us.  The condition that John describes is such that not every heir of grace will have such opportunity to be so blessed.  While their salvation and redemption is secure in Jesus Christ, their condition here on earth could be more blessed with the description that John gives.

The first principle of this condition is “Blessed is he that readeth.”  Following the sentence structure of the verse, the reading under consideration is the words of this prophecy.  Someone who has access to these words to read is blessed beyond the condition of someone who does not.  The words of the book have the ability to transform our lives through the gleaned information within the pages.  Years ago, I remember my natural father saying, “I’m really glad we’re blessed to read, for if it took full understanding, then I would be left out.  But friends, I can be blessed in the reading, whether I fully understand everything or not.”  Consider our state today.  Currently, I have a Bible in just about every room of my house.  Of my four children, the two oldest are already in possession of their own copy of Holy Writ.  How blessed we are!

Looking through the accounts of church history, many of the saints of old were forbidden from owning Scriptures or even had to share them due to their poor and destitute condition.  Today we have ready access to the blessed word, and by opening and reading, we are blessed to grow in knowledge of the workings of our Lord for and to us.  Notice for a moment what it does not say.  Not only does it not say that blessedness comes from understanding, it also does not say that blessedness comes from possessing the words.  Though I have a Bible in most rooms of my house, that ownership does not transform me into the blessed condition without the actual reading of it.

The next phrase “they that hear the words of this prophecy” shows one of those subtle shifts of focus in Scripture.  The first phrase focused on the individual, but the second phrase focuses on a group.  We can read and learn while by ourselves, but John furthers the discussion on the blessed condition by describing a group activity of hearing the words of this prophecy declared.  As Paul said about this activity in I Corinthians 1:18, it is the “power of God” for those that are saved.  For the child of God, nothing in this world compares to hearing the words of this prophecy declared with gospel authority for the comfort and edification of the soul.

The setting of the preaching of the gospel or declaring of these words occurs within the context of the “they” rather than the “he.”  However, notice the order, which I do not believe is arbitrary.  The reading precedes the hearing, and the benefit of the gospel always expands when we have been putting forth due diligence beforehand as individuals.  A fervent brother told me recently, “Every sermon you’re preaching lately is touching on things that I’ve been reading.”  My reply was rather obvious, “The more you read, the more likely that is to happen.”  While my reply is a statistical probability, the reality is that the more prepared we are for the heralding of the gospel, the more we will rejoice and get out of it.

Just like I have possession of so many Bibles, I was brought up all my life going to church and listening to the truth of the gospel declared.  Sometimes I feel rather ashamed that I had to work so little to find the church and hunt for the truth as it was laid before me over and over.  However, I try now to be thankful that God has been so good to me to present such an opportunity as I have had in my life to be so blessed.  I could not number up the amount of gospel sermons that I have heard, nor could I begin to fathom the depths of benefit that it has given me that I would not have otherwise.  Truly, I have been supremely favored to have these opportunities that so very many in the family of Almighty God have not ever been exposed to.

Lastly, John finishes by showing the end product of reading as individuals and hearing as congregations with “keep those things which are written therein.”  So often, we get shortsighted about the impact of our reading and hearing.  The goal is not to say, “Well, I have read my Bible, and I went to church this week.  Check!”  The goal in our reading and hearing is to then keep those things which we are exposed to.  It starts with David’s declaration in Psalm 119:11.  We keep these commands when we hide the Lord’s word in our heart.  The end result?  So that we would not sin against Him.  With our reading, we should treasure and keep those things close, and by so doing, we will find ourselves better informed to deal with the situations that life throws at us.  By keeping in memory what is preached, we will save (deliver) ourselves from a myriad of problems. (I Corinthians 15:4)

Coupled with this last condition of blessedness is the statement about the time being at hand.  Without getting bogged down about what the time at hand is not about, what is John describing in the context?  John’s thrust at the outset of the book is to declare that this book is about Jesus Christ, and what John saw pertains to Him.  In conjunction with the book being about Christ, we are blessed if we have been exposed to these things through reading, preaching, and keeping – particularly keeping.  Part of the zeal we experience in keeping these things is that the time is at hand.  Notice how the statements of John line up Paul and Hosea.  In Romans 13:11 and Hosea 10:12, both writers encourage their readers in much the same way that John does.

The time we have before us is to seek the Lord.  Do we know how to do that?  If we have read, heard, and strive to keep, then yes we do know how to do that.  Is that blessed?  Absolutely!  Not only does our conscience bear witness to these things, but we have a plethora of knowledge to corroborate what our conscience tells us between right and wrong.  Have we read or heard lately?  It is time!  Have we been keeping?  It is time!  So much of my life mirrors the old songwriter of that wonderful hymn “Thus Far the Lord Has Led Me On.”  He said, “Much of my time has run to waste, and I perhaps am near my home.  But He forgives my follies past and gives me strength for days to come.”  The fact that we still have breath and life means that we should seek to redeem what we have rather than consistently throw it to waste.  Others have not the opportunity to read the words of this prophecy.  Let us who own these words read them faithfully and regularly.  Others have not the opportunity to assemble with the saints to hear the gospel proclaimed.  Let us who know the joyful sound be instant to appear in His courts when the doors are open.  And, let us who have been blessed with these truths of knowledge seek the Lord in the keeping of His word.  Shall we seize these opportunities?  It is time…

In Hope,
Bro Philip