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			رقم المشاركة : ( 1 )  
			
			
			
			
			
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| Next let’s read the following passages. 6. The Sermon on the Mount 1) The Beatitudes (Matt 5:3-12) 2) Salt and Light (Matt 5:13-16) 3) Law (Matt 5:17-20) 4) Anger (Matt 5:21-26) 5) Adultery (Matt 5:27-30) 6) Divorce (Matt 5:31-32) 7) Vows (Matt 5:33-37) 8) Eye for Eye (Matt 5:38-42) 9) Love Your Enemies (Matt 5:43-48) 10) Instruction About Giving (Matt 6:1-4) 11) Prayer (Matt 6:5-8) 7. The Parables of the Lord Jesus 1) The Parable of the Sower (Matt 13:1-9) 2) The Parable of the Tares (Matt 13:24-30) 3) The Parable of the Mustard Seed (Matt 13:31-32) 4) The Parable of the Leaven (Matt 13:33) 5) The Parable of the Tares Explained (Matt 13:36-43) 6) The Parable of the Treasure (Matt 13:44) 7) The Parable of the Pearl (Matt 13:45-46) 8) The Parable of the Net (Matt 13:47-50) 8. The Commandments (Matt 22:37-39) Jesus said  to him, You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with  all your soul, and with all your mind. This is the first and great  commandment. And the second is like to it, You shall love your neighbor  as yourself. Let’s  first look at each part of “The Sermon on the Mount.” What are all of  these related to? It can be said with certainty that these are all more  elevated, more concrete, and closer to people’s lives than the  regulations of the Age of Law. To speak in modern terms, it’s more  relevant to people’s actual practice. Let’s  read the specific content of the following: How should you understand  the beatitudes? What should you know about the law? How should anger be  defined? How should adulterers be dealt with? What is said, and what  kind of rules are there about divorce, and who can get divorced and who  cannot get divorced? How about vows, eye for eye, love your enemies,  instruction about giving, etc.? All of these things have to do with  every aspect of the practice of mankind’s belief in God, and of their  following God. Some of these practices are still relevant today, but  they are more rudimentary than the current requirements of people. They  are fairly elementary truths people encounter in their belief in God.  From the time the Lord Jesus  began working, He was already beginning to work on the life disposition  of humans, but it was based on the foundation of the laws. Did the  rules and the sayings on these topics have anything to do with the  truth? Of course they did! All of the previous regulations, principles,  and the sermon in the Age of Grace were all related to God’s disposition  and what He has and is, and of course to the truth. No matter what God  expresses, in what way He expresses it, or using what kind of language,  its foundation, its origin, and its starting point are all based on the  principles of His disposition and what He has and is. This is without  error. So even though now these things He said seem a little shallow,  you still can’t say that they’re not the truth, because they were things  that were indispensable for people in the Age of Grace in order to  satisfy God’s will and to achieve a change in their life disposition.  Can you say that any of the things in the sermon are not in line with  the truth? You can’t! Each one of these is the truth because they were  all God’s requirements for mankind; they were all principles and a scope  given by God for how to conduct oneself, and they represent God’s  disposition. However, based on the level of their growth in life of that  time, they were only able to accept and comprehend these things.  Because mankind’s sin had not yet been resolved, the Lord Jesus could  only issue these words, and He could only utilize such simple teachings  within this kind of scope to tell the people of that time how they  should act, what they should do, within what principles and scope they  should do things, and how they should believe in God and meet His  requirements. All of this was determined based on the stature of mankind  at that time. It was not easy for people living under the law to accept  these teachings, so what the Lord Jesus taught had to stay within this  scope. Next, let’s take a look at what’s in “The Parables of the Lord Jesus.” The  first one is the parable of the sower. This is a really interesting  parable; sowing seeds is a common event in people’s lives. The second is  the parable of the tares. As far as what tares are, anyone who has  planted crops and adults will know. The third is the parable of the  mustard seed. All of you know what mustard is, right? If you don’t know,  you can have a look through the Bible.  For the fourth one, the parable of the leaven, most people know that  leaven is used for fermentation; it’s something that people use in their  daily lives. All of the parables below, including the sixth, the  parable of the treasure, the seventh, the parable of the pearl, and the  eighth, the parable of the net, are all drawn from people’s lives; they  all come from people’s real lives. What kind of picture do these  parables paint? This is a picture of God becoming a normal person and  living alongside mankind, using the language of a normal life, using  human language to communicate with humans and to provide them with what  they need. When God became flesh and lived among mankind for a long  time, after He had experienced and witnessed people’s various  lifestyles, these experiences became His textbook for transforming His  divine language into human language. Of course, these things that He saw  and heard in life also enriched the Son of man’s human experience. When  He wanted to get people to understand some truths, to get them to  understand some of God’s will, He could use parables similar to the ones  above to tell people about God’s will and His requirements of mankind.  These parables were all related to people’s lives; there was not a  single one that was out of touch with human lives. When the Lord Jesus  lived with mankind, He saw farmers tending their fields, He knew what  tares were and what leavening was; He understood that humans like  treasure, so He used the metaphors of both the treasure and the pearl;  He frequently saw fishermen casting their nets; and so on. The Lord  Jesus saw these activities in mankind’s lives, and He also experienced  that type of life. He was the same as every other normal person,  experiencing humans’ three meals a day and daily routines. He personally  experienced the life of an average person, and He witnessed the lives  of others. When He witnessed and personally experienced all of this,  what He thought of wasn’t how to have a good life or how He could live  more freely, more comfortably. When He was experiencing an authentic  human life, the Lord Jesus saw the hardship in people’s lives, He saw  the hardship, the wretchedness, and the sadness of people under the  corruption of Satan, living under the domain of Satan, and living in  sin. While He was personally experiencing human life, He also  experienced how helpless people were who were living amongst corruption,  and He saw and experienced the misery of those who lived in sin, who  were lost in the torture by Satan, by evil. When the Lord Jesus saw  these things, did He see them with His divinity or His humanity? His  humanity really existed—it was very much alive—He could experience and  see all of this, and of course His essence, His divinity saw it as well.  That is, Christ Himself, the Lord Jesus the man saw this, and  everything He saw made Him feel the importance and the necessity of the  work He had taken on this time in the flesh. Even though He Himself knew  that the responsibility He needed to take on in the flesh was so  immense, and how cruel the pain He would face would be, when He saw  mankind helpless in sin, when He saw the wretchedness of their lives and  their feeble struggles under the law, He felt more and more grief, and  became more and more anxious to save mankind from sin. No matter what  kind of difficulties He would face or what kind of pain He would suffer,  He became more and more resolute to redeem mankind living in sin.  During this process, you could say that the Lord Jesus began to  understand more and more clearly the work He needed to do and what He  had been entrusted with. He also became increasingly eager to complete  the work He was to take on—to take on all of mankind’s sins, to atone  for mankind so that they no longer lived in sin and God would be able to  forget man’s sins because of the sin offering, allowing Him to further  His work of saving mankind. It could be said that in the Lord Jesus’  heart, He was willing to offer Himself up for mankind, to sacrifice  Himself. He was also willing to act as a sin offering, to be nailed to  the cross, and He was eager to complete this work. When He saw the  miserable conditions of human’s lives, He wanted even more to fulfill  His mission as quickly as possible, without the delay of a single minute  or second. When He had such a feeling of urgency, He was not thinking  of how great His own pain would be, nor did He think any longer of how  much humiliation He would have to endure—He held just one conviction in  His heart: As long as He offered up Himself, as long as He was nailed to  the cross as a sin offering, God’s will would prevail and He would be  able to commence new work. Mankind’s lives in sin, their state of  existing in sin would be completely changed. His conviction and what He  was determined to do were related to saving man, and He had only one  objective: to carry out God’s will, so that He could successfully begin  the next step in His work. This was what was in the Lord Jesus’ mind at  the time. Living  in the flesh, the incarnate God possessed normal humanity; He had the  emotions and the reasoning of a normal person. He knew what happiness  was, what pain was, and when He saw mankind in this type of life, He  deeply felt that merely giving people some teachings, providing them  with something or teaching them something could not lead them out from  sin. Neither could just having them obey the commandments redeem them  from sin—only when He took on humanity’s sin and became the likeness of  sinful flesh could He exchange it for mankind’s freedom, and exchange it  for God’s forgiveness for mankind. So after the Lord Jesus had  experienced and witnessed men’s lives in sin, there was an intense  desire that manifested in His heart—to allow humans to rid themselves of  their lives of struggling in sin. This desire made Him feel more and  more that He must go to the cross and take on humanity’s sins as soon as  possible, as quickly as possible. These were the thoughts of the Lord  Jesus at that time, after He had lived with people and seen, heard, and  felt the misery of their lives in sin. That the incarnate God could have  this kind of will for mankind, that He could express and reveal this  kind of disposition—is this something an average person could have? What  would an average person see living in this type of environment? What  would they think? If an average person faced all of this, would they  look at problems from a high perspective? Definitely not! Although the  appearance of God incarnate  is exactly the same as a human, He learns human knowledge and speaks  human language, and sometimes He even expresses His ideas through  mankind’s means or expressions, the way He sees humans, the essence of  things, and the way corrupt people see mankind and the essence of things  are absolutely not the same. His perspective and the height at which He  stands is something unattainable for a corrupt person. This is because  God is truth, the flesh that He wears also possesses the essence of God,  and His thoughts and that which is expressed by His humanity are also  the truth. For corrupt people, what He expresses in the flesh is all a  provision of the truth, and of life. These provisions are not just for  one person, but for all of mankind. For any corrupt person, in his heart  there are only those few people who are associated with him. There are  only those several people who he cares about, who he is concerned about.  When disaster is on the horizon he first thinks of his own children,  spouse, or parents, and a more philanthropic person would at most think  of some relative or a good friend; does he think of more? Not ever!  Because humans are, after all, humans, and they can only look at  everything from the perspective and from the height of a person.  However, God incarnate is entirely different from a corrupt person. No  matter how ordinary, how normal, how lowly God’s incarnate flesh is, or  even how much people look down on Him, His thoughts and His attitude  toward mankind are things that no man could possess, and no man could  imitate. He will always observe mankind from the perspective of  divinity, from the height of His position as the Creator.  He will always see mankind through the essence and the mindset of God.  He absolutely cannot see mankind from the height of an average person,  and from the perspective of a corrupt person. When people look at  mankind, they look with human vision, and they use things such as human  knowledge and human rules and theories as a measure. This is within the  scope of what people can see with their eyes; it’s within the scope that  corrupt people can achieve. When God looks at mankind, He looks with  divine vision, and He uses His essence and what He has and is as a  measure. This scope includes things that people cannot see, and this is  where God incarnate and corrupt humans are entirely different. This  difference is determined by humans’ and God’s different essences, and it  is these different essences that determine their identities and  positions as well as the perspective and height from which they see  things. Do you see the expression and revealing of God Himself in the  Lord Jesus? You could say that what the Lord Jesus did and said was  related to His ministry and to God’s own management work, that it was  all the expression and revealing of God’s essence. Although He did have a  human manifestation, His divine essence and the revealing of His  divinity cannot be denied. Was this human manifestation truly a  manifestation of humanity? His human manifestation was, by its very  essence, entirely different from the human manifestation of corrupt  people. The Lord Jesus was God incarnate, and if He had truly been one  of the regular, corrupt people, could He have seen mankind’s lives in  sin from a divine perspective? Absolutely not! This is the difference  between the Son of man and regular people. Corrupt people all live in  sin, and when anyone sees sin, they don’t have any particular feeling  about it; they are all the same, just like a pig living in the mud that  doesn’t feel at all uncomfortable, or dirty—it eats well, and sleeps  soundly. If someone cleans the pigsty, the pig actually won’t feel at  ease, and it won’t stay clean. Before long, it will once again be  rolling around in the mud, completely comfortable, because it is a  filthy creature. When humans see a pig, they feel it’s filthy, and if  you clean it up, the pig doesn’t feel better—this is why no one keeps a  pig in their house. The way humans see pigs will always be different  from how pigs themselves feel, because humans and pigs are not of the  same kind. And because the incarnate Son of man is not of the same kind  as corrupt humans, only God incarnate can stand from a divine  perspective, and stand from the height of God to see mankind, to see  everything. When  God becomes flesh and lives among mankind, what suffering does He  experience in the flesh? Does anyone truly understand? Some people say  that God suffers greatly, and although He is God Himself, people do not  understand His essence and always treat Him like a person, which makes  Him feel aggrieved and wronged—they say that God’s suffering truly is  great. Other people say that God is innocent and without sin, but He  suffers the same as mankind and suffers persecution, slander, and  indignities along with mankind; they say He also endures the  misunderstandings and the disobedience of His followers—God’s suffering  truly cannot be measured. It seems that you don’t truly understand God.  In fact, this suffering you speak of does not count as true suffering  for God, because there is suffering greater than this. Then what is true  suffering for God Himself? What is true suffering for God’s incarnate  flesh? For God, mankind not understanding Him does not count as  suffering, and people having some misunderstanding of God and not seeing  Him as God does not count as suffering. However, people often feel that  God must have suffered a great injustice, that the time God is in the  flesh He cannot show His person to mankind and allow them to see His  greatness, and God is humbly hiding in an insignificant flesh, so it  must have been tormenting for Him. People take to heart what they can  understand and what they can see of God’s suffering, and impose all  sorts of sympathy on God and often will even offer a little praise for  it. In reality, there is a difference, there is a gap between what  people understand of God’s suffering and what He truly feels. I’m  telling you the truth—for God, no matter if it’s God’s Spirit or God’s  incarnate flesh, that suffering is not true suffering. Then what is it  that God actually suffers? Let’s talk about God’s suffering only from  the perspective of God incarnate. When  God becomes flesh, becoming an average, normal person, living among  mankind, side-by-side with people, can’t He see and feel people’s  methods, laws, and philosophies for living? How do these methods and  laws for living make Him feel? Does He feel loathing in His heart? Why  would He feel loathing? What are mankind’s methods and laws for living?  What principles are they rooted in? What are they based on? Mankind’s  methods, laws, etc. for living—all of this is created based on Satan’s  logic, knowledge, and philosophy. Humans living under these types of  laws have no humanity, no truth—they all defy the truth, and are hostile  to God. If we take a look at God’s essence, we see that His essence is  exactly the opposite of Satan’s logic, knowledge, and philosophy. His  essence is full of righteousness, truth, and holiness, and other  realities of all positive things. God, possessing this essence and  living among such a mankind—what does He feel in His heart? Isn’t it  full of pain? His heart is in pain, and this pain is something that no  person can understand or realize. Because everything that He faces,  encounters, hears, sees, and experiences is all mankind’s corruption,  evil, and their rebellion against and resistance to the truth. All that  comes from humans is the source of His suffering. That is to say,  because His essence is not the same as corrupt humans, the corruption of  humans becomes the source of His greatest suffering. When God becomes  flesh, is He able to find someone who shares a common language with Him?  This cannot be found among mankind. No one can be found who can  communicate, who can have this exchange with God—what kind of feeling  would you say God has? The things that people discuss, that they love,  that they pursue and long for all have to do with sin, with evil  tendencies. When God faces all of this, isn’t it like a knife to His  heart? Faced with these things, could He have joy in His heart? Could He  find consolation? Those who are living with Him are humans full of  rebelliousness and evil—how could His heart not suffer? How great really  is this suffering, and who cares about it? Who takes heed? And who  could appreciate it? People have no way of understanding God’s heart.  His suffering is something that people are particularly unable to  appreciate, and humanity’s coldness and numbness makes God’s suffering  even deeper. There  are some people who often sympathize with Christ’s plight because there  is a verse in the Bible that says: “The foxes have holes, and the birds  of the air have nests; but the Son of man has not where to lay his  head.” When people hear this, they take it to heart and believe that  this is the greatest suffering that God endures, and the greatest  suffering that Christ endures. Now, looking at it from the perspective  of the facts, is that the case? God does not believe that these  difficulties are suffering. He has never cried out against injustice for  the difficulties of the flesh, and He has never made humans repay or  reward Him with anything. However, when He witnesses mankind’s  everything, the corrupt lives and the evil of corrupt humans, when He  witnesses that mankind is in Satan’s grasp and imprisoned by Satan and  cannot escape, that people living in sin do not know what the truth  is—He cannot bear all of these sins. His loathing of humans increases by  the day, but He has to endure all of this. This is God’s great  suffering. God cannot fully express even His voice or His emotions among  His followers, and no one among His followers can truly understand His  suffering. No one even tries to understand or to comfort His heart—His  heart endures this suffering day after day, year after year, time and  time again. What do you see in all of this? God doesn’t require anything  from humans in return for what He has given, but because of God’s  essence, He absolutely cannot tolerate mankind’s evil, corruption, and  sin, but feels extreme loathing and hatred, which leads to God’s heart  and His flesh enduring unending suffering. Could you see all of this?  Most likely, none of you could see this, because none of you can truly  understand God. Over time you can gradually experience it for  yourselves. | 
|  08 - 10 - 2017, 12:29 PM | رقم المشاركة : ( 2 ) | ||||
| † Admin Woman † 
   |  رد: God’s Work, God’s Disposition, and God Himself III Thanka SMSMA | ||||
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|  08 - 10 - 2017, 02:06 PM | رقم المشاركة : ( 3 ) | ||||
| ..::| الإدارة العامة |::.. 
   |  رد: God’s Work, God’s Disposition, and God Himself III Thanks smsma | ||||
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