LIVING IN THE KINGDOM OF GOD JULY 3, 2025
July greetings to all the lovely Saints in every corner
of God’s vineyard,
Does anyone remember the old song, “Sixteen Tons?” You
are telling your age if you do as it was written in 1946, but that is beside
the point. There are a few lines in the song that we might want to look
at.”Saint Peter, don’t you call me, cause I can’t go. I owe my soul to the
company store.”
The lyrics are not scripturally correct, as is the case
with secular songs and even some religious hymns, but prompts us to ask
ourselves, here at the midpoint of 2025 and approaching another Sacrament of
the Lord’s Supper, to whom or what do we “Owe our souls?” I’m sure every
“Christian” in the world would quickly say, “God, of course.” However, the
quick answer is not always the real answer. The real answer is in our heart
which is reflected in our daily life. The whole ministry of Jesus Christ was and
still is to show us that we can be friends of our Lord rather than slaves to
the world.
Who are the ones to be blessed in the Beatitudes? Those
who believe on him, come down into the depths of humility, are baptized in his
name and receive the Holy Ghost, those who come unto Him and are poor in
spirit, those who truly mourn due to their sins, those who are meek, hunger and
thirst after righteousness, are merciful, pure in heart, peacemakers, those who
are persecuted and reviled for his name’s sake. All these things plus many more
are what defines who owns our souls.
A ministry of music sang at Waldo Avenue RB last Sunday,
taken from Joshua 24 where Joshua is challenging them Israelites before going
into the Promise Land. He reminded them of all God’s blessings and then told
them to choose that day whom they would serve. His response was “As for me and
my house, we will serve the Lord.” The immediate response of the Israelites
was, basically, “Of course, we will serve the Lord.” You know the rest of the
story. They did not serve God except when they got themselves in trouble, then
they cried out to God. Many of us are just like the Israelites. We say one
thing and do another. Thus, Zion waits. Thus we still wait for “Thy kingdom
come, Thy will be done, on earth as it is in Heaven.”
I was shaken in my complacency last week in a small group
meeting when a person mentioned Earl Curry’s “Endowment “ experience in 1957.
She wanted to know when the priesthood were going to do something about it.
While a significant part of it refers to the priesthood, it also involves all
those who
anticipate, yet are waiting, for “The Endowment.” We each
have a role to play in the fulfillment of God’s kingdom on earth, now and
later.
In the Endowment experience, God made some statements
that should have really caught our attention in 1957, surely in 1984, or 2001,
but definitely in 2025. In question 1, “When shall the day of marvelous
Spiritual Endowment be?” “Endowment COULD come to the
church surely within ten years (1967) and even less: IF God’s
people will make themselves aware of the world’s great need, IF
they will become aware of the church’s desperate need for mighty
spiritual power, and IF they will go up to the mountain of the
Lord’s House.”
A line from the hymn, “A Calm and Gentle Quiet” by David
Smith, reminds us, “We must not wait, FOR NOW the time is OURS. And if I wait,
another waits for me…”
God bless
Paul Gage
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