Romans 13:8-10 - Corps - March 26,1980
Format: mp3
Publication Date: March 26, 1980
On Ephesians 4:25 where I want to begin tonight, or where we will begin tonight , the first part of what the Research Team gave me is the work that Walter Cummins published in our wonderful Way Magazine on "The Spoken Word." Also, as we cover Ephesians 4:28 tonight, I had all the information in front of me from another article that Walter Cummins has in the... has had in the Magazine. The first article on Ephesians 4:25 is entitled "The Spoken Word." The one on Ephesians 4:28 is "Workers for God." Both of these pieces of work by Walter are absolutely superb. And I believe that they should appear and will appear in our research journal GMIR whenever we begin publishing that. {GMIR Aramaic word meaning ' to perfect, accomplish , mature, complete, arithmetically to be divisible without any remainder.}
And I noticed again that some of the things that were stated are just so beautifully and logically presented, I'm truly thankful for, not only Walter, but the whole Research Department. I think our Biblical Research Department is just second to none. And it' s even going to be better by God' s mercy and grace next year and in years to come than it is at this time. And right now I do not believe that our Biblical Research Department needs to take a back seat for any academic institution or work in the world.
And I thought today, I have never... I've never thought of Walter Cummins in any other capacity than to be my assistant. I know Vince Finnegan, you know, on the books is my assistant. And that' s great. But I've never thought of Walter Cummins in any other capacity for so many years as always being my assistant. And I think he' s just the most wonderful person that any president could have as his assistant. And also to be chairmen of the Department of Greek, and then the coordinator of the Biblical research of The Way International. For any one man to have that position and that responsibility is an awesome reality and I'm real proud of Walter and real thankful for him. But I am also thankful for the rest of our wonderful men and women in the Research Department.
I would like for the Corps all over the country to go to the Magazine and find "The Spoken_Word," that's the title of it, dealing with Ephesians 4:25 and other scriptures, and before the next Corps meeting next week, you endeavor to master that great piece of work by Walter Cummins. It's just, you know, the spoken Word. Over fifty Greek words are used in the New Testament in connection with the faculties of utterance. Over fifty. And then he takes the most important ones and he lists them and it' s just. .. it' s just a piece of research work that you should really as a Corps master in your heart and in your life.
Ephesians 4:25 in the King James reads, Wherefore put away lyin g, speak every man truth with his neighbor: for we are members one of another.
The ' putting away' was interesting to me again because of the Greek word aniko, a-n-i-k-o.
And this word is ' the putting away,' this word ' put away,' aniko, is the same root word as in 4:22, where we use the word ' rest,' meaning ' to rest.' Is that right? Yep, that is right. I taught you that,
didn't I? Did I or didn't I? Doesn't look right to me. It is the same root. What chapter am I missing? Am I missing anything? I don't know. Right now I'm screwed up, ha ha. First time today. You check the word again and I'll do that, too and see what I'm missing here.
But a-n-i-k-o is the word for ' putting away from you. ' To put away. And it' s the same root as the word ' rest.' I don't know where the word appears, but it's got to be in there.
Now, that word ' speak,' every man speak. That word ' speak ' is from the Greek word
laleo, l-a-l-e-long-o. And that' s where Walter' s article on "The Spoken Word"_c omes in because that is.. .he uses that word laleo in here, which I teach in Corinthians when I teach the Foundational Class. And he says the word is employed 24 times in I Corinthians chapter 14. I had forgotten that.
This word is truly significant. I couldn' t quite understand it Research Department, what you said on page 26B 16, where you defined it ' to make vocal utterance,' ' to babble,' 'to talk,' 'to exercise the faculty of speech without reference to the words spoken.' I just wondered if there might not be another word that could be substituted or utilized at this point. I know that Zachariah 8:16 is the quotation that is used here, or spoken of. And that Zachariah 8:16 adds force to what is said by using a quote, a quotation. That' s why my question to the Research Department is, How can it be without reference to what is spoken if it is truth plus the quotation of the Word of God that's given. It doesn't quite fit for me.
'With his neighbor' has to be a believing neighbor. This 'speak truth with his neighbor' is a figure of speech gnome, g-n-o-m-e, which simply is a citation. And that' s a citation from Zachariah 8:16.
There are a series of figures of speech, Corps, in chapter four which just put the 00mph, the highlight, to the particular things that are set whereby you put off the old man. This phrase here 'speak every man truth with his neighbor' is one of them. The other one appears in verse 26, 'be angry and sin not.' ' Steal no more' is another one. 'Corrupt communication' is the fourth one. 'Grieve not the holy spirit' is the fifth one. ' All bitterness, wrath, anger, clamor, evil speaking' is the sixth. And then ' be kind' and so forth, is the seventh.
You see, the last phrase in that verse, in King James, For we' re members one of what? [Another] And it' s relative to the neighbor. Now you just look at that. Wherefore put away lying, speak every man truth with his what? [Neighbor] For we are members one of another. That doesn't mean just a neighbor who lives next door, but it has to be a believing neighbor because we are members one of what? [Another]. You could not be a member ' one of another' ifhe was an unbeliever. That's how I know this is going to work. This tells me that the neighbor is a believer. And this ' we' re members one of another' continues the imagery of the Body of Christ.
The literal according to usage of this verse is as follows: Wherefore put away the lie... and I believe in my heart, before I go on with the literal that until man is born again, it's all a lie anyways. And that' s why I believe that this translation will fit in the light of that knowledge. Because when a man is not born again, his whole life is just a lie. Now you're born again, and that ' s why I think the text states it ' wherefore put away the lie,' the life you' ve been living , the screwed up life you have lived outside of God. It' s been just a life of a lie. It' s not truth. It' s just the opposite of truth and that's my reason for translating it this way... Wherefore put away the lie.
You've got to go with that translation. You have no other text to go by both from Aramaic and Greek it's 'lie.' Not 'lying.' If the Research Department has anything to share in the light of that, I'd be blessed to hear, but you' ve heard my reasons for translating it, Research Department, this way.
Now since they're born again, their whole life is changed, so the life of lying, and living a lie, and being a lie, and being false, is to be put away.
And every man... this is the translation ... and everyone, everyone. The word ' man' you could use because it's an inclusive noun, but I prefer to use the word ' one.'
Wherefore put away the lie and everyone speak the truth with his neighbor for we are members one of another. That is literal according to usage.
Now for the expanded according to understanding. It's not bad. Because of this... What we coughing for? Everybody sick?...Because of this... and the reason I went in the expanded along this line is because verse 24 last week told us that we are created by God in righteousness and in true purity, through holiness. Twenty four.
That's why 25, Wherefore ... 'wherefore' can be translated 'because of this.' Because of this what? Being created in righteousness and truly pure. See it's an inside job.
Because of this being created in righteousness and truly pure by the grace and the love of
God.. .Because of this being created in righteousness and truly pure, you put away, completely lay to rest the lie that you have been and were living and each one of you speak the truth using a quotation from the Word with his believing neighbor for we are members one of another in the Body of the Church.
Robinson {Edward} said, he translated, 'speak every man truth with his neighbor' and he said it's from Zachariah 8:16 which adds force to what is said by using a quote. That's why I translated that. I think that' s great. It adds force to what is said. If you're speaking to someone, it adds force to what you say by using a quote, a quotation from God's Word. In other words, ' you share the Word with them.' That' s why I went with that translation. I want to give it to you again in this sense.
Speak the truth using a quotation from the Word, which means 'share the Word.' Quote the Word to them. Tell them what the Word says, with his believing neighbor. Why? For we are members one of another in the Body of the Church. This verse is just mind blowing.
Here, you have a born-again believer neighbor who needs to grow up a little more. So what do you do? Each one speak the truth to that neighbor, that believer, using the Word, quoting the Word because we' re members one of another in the Body of the Church. It's a real positive thing to do.
Verse 26 in King James reads, Be angry.. .ha ha... we like that one, don't we. Be ye angry and sin not: let not the sun go down upon your wrath.
Here is a verse of Scripture that' s very, very difficult for most people. And it' s not too easy for us either. But I think we are able to share the truth of the greatness of this and it's been burning in my heart for a long time to do this with our people.
Everybody has problems with ' how can you be angry and not sin?' You know, how can raise hell with something and not be sinful in doing it? Teed off and not be sinful. And how can you go... and what does it mean 'don't let the sun go down upon your wrath?' See.
In the context, here, verses 26 and 27 deal with your believing neighbor, specifically. Then the Greek word for ' anger' which is from the root orge, o-r-g-long-e means 'anger together with the desire of revenge .' That' s bad. That' s a heavy. The Hebrew word means ' to kill, and all the tumults of passion that terminate in killing.' So it's a real heavy word when it said ' be angry.'
And the way I believe it's used in God' s Word, ' be ye angry' means ' it's a long time anger with your believing neighbor until a change has ensued.' The desire to... of revenge is a change. And I, knowing the Word in the light of the new birth, it's where a change finally comes about. Until that time, you just, long-term, you just stay put witnessing the Word, sharing the Word. You do not dislike the believing neighbor; you simply dislike that he is not fully accepting the Word and walking on it. So it' s a long-term anger until a change has ensued. You just stay faithful.
I don't know what else to do with those words. It is a righteous anger. Yet it is a righteous anger without sin.
Among the scholars, there is a disagreement on these words. Well, I don't know about my being a scholar; that I don' t anything about being about. But it's simple to me because righteous anger is commanded by God's Word when it says ' be ye angry.' Well, the scholars can fight about it. I don' t care. It' s a command. Not just permitted to get teed once in a while when somebody' s off of God' s Word, a believer is off of God's Word. You' re always teed off righteously at any believer, born-again believer, who is off of God' s Word. And for those of us in the Way Ministry, it' s been a lifetime.
Get into it with them on... Oh what subject do you want to talk about? Baptism? Food? One God? See. All that stuff.
The Aramaic is accurate in the words ' and sin not.' It literally translates ' and you will not sin.' Again, this ' be angry and sin not' is that figure gnome. Quotation. A citation from the Old Testament. It' s from Psalm 4:4. But in King James, Psalm 4:4, it's translated 'stand in awe.' The real sense of the Hebrew is ' one of admonition;' sin not. Where we' re admonished to not sin. Sin not.
' Let not the sun go down on your wrath. ' Ha ha. That again is beautiful. People went to bed when the sun went down, when it got dark. That's when they went to bed. So what that simply is saying, ha ha, ' don't go to bed teed off.' Don' t let the sun go down on your wrath. In other words, go to bed; don' t go to bed mad. ' When you go to bed' is what it means. Let not the sun go down when you go to bed. And they went to bed when the sun went down. When it got dark, they went to bed, see.
' Upon your wrath.' And the word ' wrath' here is basically ' irritation.' Ha ha. Previously when I taught Ephesians, I made mention of this fact, ' don' t let righteous anger shake you, wondering if it was right on. When you go to bed, go to sleep.'
Now, this is what we have done with it in the literal, ha ha, according to usage. I got more papers up here than Carter has liver pills, or something. Then, I can' t find my... whatever it is I take off of it.
Okay, verse 26. You be righteously angry.. .this is literal according to usage.. .and you will not be sinning. Don't go to bed even with a momentary irritation, ha ha.
I don't think you get nearly as much fun out of this as I do. It's neat. It's absolutely scrumptious, see. At the opening, is that heavy word, remember? Anger. So it's a real heavy time. So what he is saying, in the heavy time, when your standing on God' s Word and sharing that with the believing neighbor, you' re righteously angry... you're not sinning. And you don't even go to bed with a momentary irritation. In other Words, when you go to bed, thank God the day is over. Say your last prayer and start snoring.
Boy, that would save a lot of sleeping pills, wouldn' t it? Practicing that principle. Boy, oh boy, what a tremendous Word. And hardly anybody understands verse 26. They argue about it, but they don' t get the understanding.
Now this is the expanded one according to understanding, I hope. And again, I would like to just lay some things before the Corps, and especially before the Research Department. I translated the first part of verse 26, You always stay angry with an all-out desire to have them to change which anger will not be sin on your part.
Then I have another translation of that first part of it: You be righteously angry, 'teed off' with sin... 'Teed off' I put in quotes. But don't you sin by acting ' holier than thou' vaunting yourself by acting so righteously like you never sin.
I do not know which one of those two the Research Department feels would be the better. The last part of the phrase that I translated which would go with both of these that I have given you here on the expanded one for understanding. This, the last part, goes with that first one and with the second ... also.. .even if it is only a momentary irritation. When you go to bed, go to sleep. That's what I did with it.
Now, verse 27. King James says, Neither (or neither) give place to the Devil. The word 'place' is simply a portion, a part. No believer will give full place to the Devil, but he may be giving a part, a portion. He' ll mark off a spot, ' this is Devil' s permission over here, over here, no permission, you know. And you really give the Devil a portion or a spot if you stew about it after you go to bed and you toss and you tum and can' t sleep.
This word 'the Devil,' ' the Devil' in the Aramaic is a very interesting and exciting Word to me and it blesses my heart. It' s a compound word where the first part means ' to eat' or ' to devour.' The latter
' to slander' or ' to accuse. ' So when I got to translating this, literally according to usage, verse 27 reads: Do not give any portion or space or an opportunity to the Devil. So I used those three words synonymously: portion, space, opportunity. Do not give any portion or space or an opportunity to the Devil.
The expanded according to understanding: And you will not give a toehold, an opportunity or an occasion for the Devil to eat you. Ha ha. I get more fun than you ever will out of working this stuff, huh.
You see, and to me, that communicates to my understanding. John 10:10. The thief cometh not but for to what? [Steal, kill, and destroy] Right. To eat you out. To beat you. And that's why that Aramaic word, on the word ' Devil' really thrilled me.
And that ' s why I put it into the expanded translation: And you will not give a ' toehold.' Now, at L.E.A.D., you know how important it is to get a what? [Toehold] Ha ha. And when you' re really climbing in, you' re blessed for a toehold. How thankful you are when you get a foothold. Now the adversary can never get a foothold in a believer' s life until he first has a toehold. That's why I translated it that way.
Do not give... and you will not give a toehold ... shave all the rocks off... an opportunity or an occasion for the Devil to eat you. And that' s exactly what he likes to do to believers.
Now we go to verse 28. King James says, Let him that stole steal not more: but rather let him labor, working with his hands the thing which is good, that he may have to give to him that needeth. And here again, is another great work that I believe should be in our research journal GMIR, Walter' s work on " Workers for God."
It' s just tremendous where he... you know... he just goes into God' s men are called many things in the Word. They' re called: fellow workers, ministers, or servants, slaves, fellow slaves, partners, messengers, soldiers, fellow soldiers, athletes, fellow athletes, stewards, ambassadors, witnesses, all of those. And he covers them so beautifully. And I love very much how he covered the word ' slave,' because it' s a much stronger word than to be a minister, or to be a servant. It is to be one who is branded, marked out, sold out. And baby, from that day on, there are no ifs, and' s, or but' s. You never budge on it. You are branded. Most believers are never branded. They may be servants, they may be ministers, but they are not branded. When you' re branded, you stay faithful. You do not budge. You do not change. You stay put. If all hell breaks loose, you still live the believing Word.
I think the prophet once said, If I was in the midst of hell, God I know you' d be there. (Psalm 139:8) He' d be there. That' s the doulos. That, of course, is just a tremendous piece of work.
And the other great part that I think... and this is a second piece that I want the Corps to master before next Wednesday night, " Workers for God," the work on ' witness.' You see, it's the same word basically that's translated ' martyr,' see. And we got a lot of those canonized. That's not at all what a witness is. A witness is a living example, not a dead one. The word 'martyr' simply means that you lay down your life in witnessing. And boy, when you put the doulos together with ' witness,' then you' ve got power for abundant living. It's just a fantastic work by Walter and I' m real grateful that it was published. Because once it' s in print, people can take a look at it if they want to.
I'd like a cup of coffee, please.
Now, we are in verse 28. The Aramaic translation is ' and he who was stealing.' I understand it from the English, ' let him that stole,' past tense. The Aramaic is real simple, real strong. ' And he, the one who is born again, who was, past tense, stealing.'
Thank you.
His whole life was one of those before he was born again.
Whenever you bring a cup of coffee to a right-hand man, you put the handle to the right. When you serve a cup of coffee to a left-hand man, you put it on the left-hand side and put the handle to the left. Corps principle number seven or something, ha ha. Mrs. Wierwille would say, Well, be thankful you even get a cup of coffee. [Laughter] Ah, you're wonderful.
See, ' let him who stole, steal no more.' 'Stole and steal,' that' s a figure of speech and is polyptoton p-o-l-y-p-t-o-t-o-n. It' s a repetition of the same root word in different parts of speech or reflections. But, that's not earth shaking right now in my heart.
You see, in some Eastern culture, it was not considered a sin or a shame to steal because that's the way they lived, the only way they lived. Somebody told me... or not only told me, one of our people, but it was in a national magazine, that the basic culture of Russia today is to steal. And in some respects I can understand this. If you don't have anything and you're starving to death and there' s a loaf of bread you can get a hold of... steal the dam thing. I understand that.
So this verse is really sharp, really sharp. Let him who stole, even though that man previously considered it the way to live and there was no shame in it, no sin in it. He said, Well, let that fellow who stole, steal no more. Something has happened on the inside of that man. Something that happened, where He is able to meet all of our need according to His riches in glory. Christ in you, the hope of glory. More than conquerors.
A record in the Old Testament, I forget where it is, but it's in there, that it' s never, you never need to borrow or steal bread or... what is that in the Old Testament? Begging bread. One person stand and tell me. {Psalm 37:25, I have been young and now am old; yet have I seen the righteous forsaken, nor His seed begging bread.} Psalm 27:25 who? {Psalm 37:25} 37:25. All the years, he's never seen the righteous to have to do what? {Beg bread} Beg bread.
First of all, I wish the Christian world could hear this. Secondly, I wish our government in the United States could understand it. The Word says, If you don't work, you don' t eat. A lot of that stuff. Well, what we've been doing is stealing from the people who are willing to work to give to the people who don' t want to work. That's a bunch of crap. That's stealing. That's why this verse is so hot in my soul tonight. Let him who stole, quit stealing, dang it. See.
Many years ago I was really knocked for a loop along some of this line in India, from Dr. Williams. I think he loved India maybe like I love the United States, I don' t know. Because only a man knows how much he loves his own country, I guess.
But... as we were traveling together, he said to me, Dr. Wierwille, I hear you have whores in the United States.
You know, I never had given it a thought. I just took it for granted. [Laughter] And I said, yeah. He said, Why does a rich country like the United States have whores?
And I said, I don't know.
And he said, I can't understand it. Cannot your women make enough money to live? Yeah, but they figure that' s cheaper and more pleasurable or something, I don' t know. And he said, Well, I think it's sinful that the United States has whores.
And I said, What do you mean?
And he said to me, why, I can understand India. He said we don' t enough food, we don' t have enough of anything hardly for a lot of people. And we have whores because that' s the only way they can continue to live physically.
And I thought to myself, well boy, that' s slapping me in the face good. And I took it as a wonderful lesson. There is no excuse in the United States for any women being a whore because she doesn' t need to get screwed and paid for it in order to get money so she can live. There's plenty of work available and if there isn' t she ought to get born again, then there' s a guarantee of work. ..other work, available. I tell you, when you' re honest, some of these men in other countries have some real logic behind their thinking. How would you have liked to have handled that? I just simply admitted, Well, I think we' re wrong in the United States. But I said, I think you' re wrong in India, too, because no reason to have whores here if you get them born again.
So I don' t know. But this verse today as I worked the final working on this verse 28 is when my heart really went back and burned with that truth that Dr. Williams had stated. Because in many Eastern cultures, it was not considered as sin or as shame to steal, if it was a matter of livelihood. You sometimes wonder who will live in the greatest condemnation before God and justice and judgment when the time comes.
For in most of what are called poor countries even, there is sufficient money, food, and other things for the people to live if those in positions of authority were not so selfish and egotistical, and want it for themselves , and let the rest of the world die... or a country die.
The word ' labor' in verse 28 is the word which literally means ' hard work resulting in fatigue.' That's how I felt coming from the woods last night. And I didn' t do anything. It was just hard work being there with the rest of you. Today I got so tired of being with some, I came home. Ah, you' re wonderful.
' Working with his hands' is an Eastern cultural type of thing. Today in our culture, you could have it, you know, the truth is working with your mind or working with your hand, whatever you' re working at. But in Eastern culture, every son was to be trained to work with his hands, even if he was the son of a king. Had to learn a trade, a profession of business.
Jesus Christ was a saddle maker. He made them to ride, I guess, what do you want? Tennessee Walkers , or? See. I think not only did he do that, Paul did it, too, you know. Someday I'm going to find a...or Walter, or some of those, are going to find me a manuscript to prove it. .. and a wonderful carpenter by trade. Many times doing carpentry work and being a saddle maker were sort of in the same household, because building carpentry and having saddles to use for their business and carrying on, were very, very closely aligned. Well, I won' t argue the point, but I wish we' d keep looking.
II Thessalonians.. .Do your hands ever get so dry you can hardly hold anything? Golly, mine are so dry tonight, I wonder why? II Thessalonians, chapter 3:10... this we commanded you that if any would not work, neither should he what? [Eat] Right. Even unemployment is no excuse for stealing. He just doesn' t eat. Goes and gets work. Boy, when I first saw the greatness of these principles many years ago, and then of course, I uniquely by God' s grace, inculcated that into our W.O.W. program and very dynamically in the Corps leadership.
ROMANS 13:8-10
March 26, 1980
These three verses of scripture are so fantastic, and I’m all excited about the joy of sharing
some of these things with you tonight.
Romans 13:8-10
I Peter 1:23-25
All of the flesh of man, the natural man of body and soul, all the glory that man ever gets is
just momentary. But the Word of the Lord endureth forever.
II Peter 1:4
“Whereby are given unto us” – His own which are given unto us.
“corruption” – getting worse and worse
“partakers” – common to all
“divine nature” – When we’re born again, not of corruptible but incorruptible seed, by the
Word of God which liveth and abideth forever, we are given a. divine nature.
I John 4:8b
I John 4:18
No fear in love, and God is love, and we are partakers of His divine nature, born again.
Having this divine nature, we have Christ in us, the hope of glory. God having put this in
us, and this perfect love casts out fear. Most men are controlled by, and they live by fear.
Fear is being used. Love never uses. Things are to be used, but people are to be loved. You
never use people, you use things. Yet, in “the world, roost people are things. Even in the
so-called Christian world, most people are just things. You use people. Fear is always
being used. Fear can be forced. Fear makes cowards of us all. God is love. We have
partaken of His divine nature when we were born again. Love is a mental attitude. It is also
a mental action by the freedom of your will, and when this love is a mental action by the
freedom of your will, you can make it become your heart style. This is the word agapaō, or
agapē. Agapaō is the love of God in the renewed mind. In here, in the inner man, the
divine nature when you were born again, it was by grace, not of works, lest any man
should boast. This divine nature is Christ in you, the hope of glory. When you put on that
divine nature in your mind, which is the love of God, agapaō, by the freedom of your will,
put on in your mind, it’s the love of God in the renewed mind in manifestation. That’s the
word agapaō every place it is used in the Word.
There are a number of other words that you will be able to work in the Word that relate
very closely to it. For instance, the word “good,” “gladness,” “well doing,” “joy,”
“rejoicing.” All the gifts of God are God given, not of the works of man, but because of
God’s grace and God’s mercy. They are God given, perpendicular, God to man. Eternal
life is a gift of God. God given, not because you and I were so good we deserved it, but
because we were so miserable we needed it. Gift ministries in the body of the church, I
think we discussed that last week with the Corps in Ephesians. Apostles, prophets,
evangelists, teachers and pastors. These gifts of God are God given. The respect for you as
a believer or a man or woman with a gift is earned. Gifts are given, respect is earned. If
anybody respects you for being a believer or respects you for having a God given gift of a
ministry, if they respect you, it’s earned. If you have the ministry of a teacher and you
screw up all the time, you are not going to earn people’s respect. People’s respect is
something you earn by your ability and by being the kind of man or woman you are
supposed to be. Then the respect is earned. Gifts are God given. Respect is earned.
Today on this Wednesday night historically is one week before the crucifixion and death of
our lord and savior Jesus Christ. I want to teach the Corps this agapaō love. Remember a
couple of weeks ago when we began working this in Romans 13, that’s when I showed you
it’s the believer living with the renewed mind, renewed mind love, without hypocrisy. And
we’re still there in Romans 13:8-10 tonight. It’s the believer living with renewed mind love
without hypocrisy. That’s the love of God, agapaō, the love of God in renewed mind in
manifestation.
Every scripture that I’m going to work with you tonight uses agapaō or agapē.
In relationship to Romans 13:8-10, I want to handle same general scriptures.
Matthew 5:46
I’m going to go through the gospels and epistles systematically in order. This does not
mean that this is more important that another one. I think this is the way I want to do it for
time’s sake, to give you the greatest amount of learning available in the time allotted for
this evening. Later on you can separate this all out to suit yourself.
Matthew 6:24
You’ll have to watch these truths build up.
Matthew 24:12
Mark 10:21
Luke 6:32
John 3:16
John 12:43
John 13:34
John 14:21
John 15:9
John 15:12
John 21:15
Romans 5:5,8
I Corinthians 2:9
I Corinthians 8:1
I Corinthians 16:14
II Corinthians 9:7
Galatians 5:13
Ephesians 3:17-19
Ephesians 4:15
Ephesians 5:2
Ephesians 5:25,28
Philippians 2:2
Colossians 2:2,3
I Thessalonians 5:13
II Thessalonians 2:10
I Timothy 1:5
II Timothy 1:7
Without that love of God in renewed mind you’ve got to be insane. Insanity is not a sound
mind.
II Timothy 4:8
II Timothy 4:10
I Peter 2:17
I Peter 4:8
I John 2:5
I John 3:1
I John 3:16
I John 3:17
I John 4:7-12
I John 4:16-21
I John 5:1
I John 5:3
Those are the general scriptures. Now we go to the specifics.
Matthew 22:36-40
This is exactly what Romans 13:8-10 is talking about.
It is interesting how these scriptures from Romans 13:8-10 relate back to Matthew 22, and
how when you check context, there is fantastic learning about this love that we are talking
about.
Matthew 22:15
Matthew 22:17
“tribute” – Number one, tribute, money, government, pay taxes, internal revenue service,
right at the top. Remember, they took counsel how they might entangle him, mess him up
in his talk. Right? So they came up with that question.
Matthew 22:18
Love without hypocrisy. Here we have hypocrisy. Right in the context of love God with all
your heart, soul, mind, and neighbor as yourself. But they want to entangle him up. As he
said, hypocrites.
Matthew 22:23, 24
In verse 15 the Pharisees; verse 23 the Sadducees. Both deeply religious groups. Both great
religious leaders, top echelon, top brass. These two groups always fought like cats and
dogs, but when it was to their advantage or their convenience, they, as a religious group,
united forces because they were hypocrites.
Verse 24, Moses. Top religious people and they went back to the great Moses.
Matthew 22:26-28
I thought these were the Sadducees. They want to talk about the resurrection, and they
don’t even believe in it. They’ve got to be one thing, hypocrites.
Matthew 22:29, 30
He’s not the God of dead Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. He’s the God of the living. When? At
the time of the resurrection. Abraham, Isaac and Jacob are dead now. At the time of the
resurrection, they’re going to get up.
Matthew 22:33-35
“Tempting” (verse 35) means to see what Jesus Christ would say, not desiring to know
what he really said so they could change and ask accordingly. They were just simply
tempting him. That’s why they were hypocrites. Really something.
Matthew 22:36-40
That’s the record I just read.
Matthew 22:41
Jesus asked them a question.
Matthew 22:42-45
See the context of agapaō, love of God?
Matthew 23:1-11
Matthew 23:13
Hypocrites. Were they religious? Were they the top brass of religion? You bet your life.
Jesus Christ said, hypocrites!
Matthew 23:14
Matthew 23;15
Matthew 23:23
You must finally be convinced that at least the Bible says they were hypocrites.
Matthew 23:24-38
Mark 12:28,29
Mark 12:30
“strength” – actions
Mark 12:31-33
Mark 12:35
Mark 12:38-40
Mark 12:41-44
Look at the context of love God with all your heart, soul, mind and strength and your
neighbor as yourself. Go back to Chapter 12 and pick it up.
Mark 11:27, 28
Mark 12:12
They would have taken him but they were afraid.
Mark 12:13
You already know they are going to be hypocrites. Herodians were religious leaders who
were in favor of the continuing role of the Herodians, a line of Herod.
Mark 12:14, 15
Mark 12:16, 17
Caesar does deserve something, but he doesn’t deserve nearly as much as the people are
told he deserves. Hypocrites. The whole psychology of Caesar is still fear.
Mark 12:18, 19
Then comes the record of not knowing the scripture regarding the resurrection again.
Mark 12:28, 29
See the greatness of the setting of those scriptures?
Luke 10:25-27
Here the lawyer answers him. In all the other records Jesus quoted it, right? Here it’s the
lawyer.
Luke 10:28, 29
“Justify” – Tempting him in verse 25 and justifying himself in verse 29.
Luke 10:30-32
Priest, Levite – religious leaders
Luke 10:33
Samaritan – not a religious leader, but a despised person.
Luke 10:34-37
Look at the record as it relates to love God with all thy heart, soul, mind and neighbor as
yourself.
Luke 10:38-42
What was the good part? She sat at Jesus’ feet and heard his what? All within the context
of love God and love your neighbor as yourself. Look at the pre-record in Chapter 10.
Luke 10:1
Luke 10:16-25
408 Romans 13:8-10
There’s your record, both pre and pro within the context of the greatness of that truth. The
scribes were lawyers. They were teachers of the law. And if you have carefully observed
and watched what I’ve read with you tonight, you will notice that these verses of loving
God and loving your neighbor are all set within the context of deeply religious people,
people who has a religious formalism, people who were traditionalists. Secondly, they
were highly intellectual people. Thirdly, there were two groups represented, those who
believed in the resurrection, and those who did not believe in the resurrection. But those
who believed in the resurrection, the Pharisees, also believed that when they died, they
were already over at a happy place living it up. Like the church, for the most part, teaches
today. The other group was the Sadducees, who said there is no resurrection. This life is
the end of it all. When this life is over with, that’s all there is. Sounds like God wrote this
just this afternoon just for the Corps. It’s that alive tonight. On the one hand, you have
people by the barrel full today who teach that there’s nothing beyond this life. The other
group teaches that when you die, you’re already up in heaven or you’re a spirit up there
floating around. Both are lies.
Then the other great thing that came up every place we read, this was about tribute, money.
In the light of all these great records from God’s Word that I’ve shared with you tonight, I
want to sort of not only recapitulate, but I want to put all this stuff together so that you
have a knowledge of God’s Word so that you can really utilize it and put into practice in
your life.
One of the things you have to work in the light of all of this is who is really your enemy.
Matthew 10:36
Who is basically man’s enemy? Those of his own household. The Pharisees, the scribes,
the Sadducees, the Herodians, everyone we read about, were so-called, members of the
household.
Matthew 12:48-50
That’s the Word of God. Who’s man’s enemy? Who is your mother, your father, your
sister, your brother? Those who do what?
Matthew 13:57
Luke 4:24
John 4:44
A man’s enemies are they of his own household. Who is your mother, father, brother,
sister? They that do what? The will of the Lord. And a man is without honor in his own
country, his own house. Why?
One verse of scripture will explain so many things if you believe it. We have seen a lot of
hypocrisy, we’ve seen all the tempting, all this other stuff tonight. I could have gone other
places, like the temptation of Jesus. There are many other places I could go. But I Timothy
6:10 capsulizes all the truth in one verse.
I Timothy 6:10
It’s always there. It’s always at that point. The love of money is the root of all evil. There
it is. That’s all you need to know. So wherever you see evil, in the background of it, there
will always be that love of money. Now there’s nothing wrong with money; it’s people.
The reason it’s the love of money that’s the root of all evil is because they never get
enough money or what money stands for, or what it buys; power, glory. They don’t get
enough of it.
If he’s the governor, he wants to be president. If he’s president, he wants to have one world
government. Love of money the root, the root, the root. Nothing wrong with money. It’s
the love of money he’s talking about. You never get too much love, whether it’s the true
love of God or the opposite, the love of money. There is one thing no individual ever gets
too much of, and that’s love. I cannot love you too much. You can always stand more.
You cannot love me too much. I can always take more. But I can hurt you and harm you
and give you enough evil very quickly. But love, you never get too much of. A man can
tell his wife all day that he loves her, and she can still stand more at night. Love you never
get too much of. Bitterness, hatred, devilishness, cursing at you, that you get too much of
the first time it happens. That’s why the love of money is the root. You never get enough
of it. Always want more. That’s the love of money, and the love of money is the root of all
evil. If you have watched tonight what I’ve read, it will fit completely.
“love of money” – philarguria; The first part of the word is the word from which we get
the word “Philadelphia.” Arguria is from the root agros, a field. The money is root of all
evil. It’s in the whole field of the so-called brother love. It is used of covetousness in II
Timothy.
II Timothy 3:2
The love of money is the root of all evil. These evils are just manifestations of the evidence
of the love of money.
Luke 16:14
Luke 22:5
Talking about Judas Iscariot.
Matthew 28:12, 13
Money the root of all evil, a payoff to the soldiers to lie.
Acts 8:18
Wanting to buy a ministry.
Acts 8:20
The love of money the root of all evil. Judas, the soldiers, trying to buy a ministry.
Acts 4:37
Acts 5:1
Acts 24:26
Talking about Felix.
II Timothy 4:10
I Timothy 6:17
Mark 10:24
Proverbs 11:28
Because the love of money is the root of all evil, for where a man’s treasure is, there is
where his heart is also.
Psalm 146:3
Princes are bought with money, all that stuff. You cannot put your trust in there.
Jeremiah 17:5
Romans 13:8-10
Who is my neighbor? From all the scriptures we have done tonight, it’s not necessarily the
person who lives next door to you. These were all part of the household, of the fellowship,
Aaronites, Levites, scribes, Pharisees, Herodians, Sadducees. Quite a record. When you
translate that into the body of the church to which you and I belong, you love God with all
your heart, soul, mind and strength. And those who are born again of God’s spirit, that’s at
the most who could be your neighbor. You love them. That doesn’t mean you have to like
what they’re doing, because some of those may be hypocrites. They are. Covetous, all the
rest, and they would use you because the very enemies are those of your own household.
When you put all of this together, then you’ve got the greatness of Romans 13:8-10. And
you’ve got an understanding which makes it possible for you to live a life which is more
than abundant. If we’re ever going to have the Word of God to multiply and prevail, men
and women will have to get rid of all their ballast and came back to the simplicity of God’s
Word and to love God with all your heart, all your soul, all your mind and all your
strength, and to love your neighbor as you love yourself. On these two commandments
hang all the law and the prophets. Love is the fulfilling of all the law. That love, as we read
so many places tonight, covers a multitude of sins.
I wrote this for the conclusion tonight.
Life for some is like a mill pond. It’s teeming with life, yet when the turbulent storms hit, it
causes confusion and havoc. Life for others is like the sea, teaming also with life. Yet
when the turbulent storms hit, only the upper layer of the sea is touched, for its strength
and its heart is in its depth. The life in the deep goes on, hardly affected at all by the
turbulence above. God never promised life without storms. But for the believer with God’s
Word dwelling deep within, He maintains the quiet seas of the soul and the hurricanes of
life pass over as simply gentle breezes because you have the love of God in renewed mind
in manifestation without hypocrisy. That’s Romans 13:8-10.