Thursday, October 19, 2017

OCTOBER 19 THE JESUS QUESTIONS JQ#31-04 >>> Lessons, Lifestyle, and Parables of Jesus <<< JQ#31 “Who then is a faithful and wise servant, whom his master made ruler over his household, to give them food in due season?” (Matthew 24:45)

LIVING FOR JESUS --- Daily Devotional

OCTOBER 19  THE JESUS QUESTIONS  JQ#31-04  >>> Lessons, Lifestyle, and Parables of Jesus <<< JQ#31 “Who then is a faithful and wise servant, whom his master made ruler over his household, to give them food in due season?”  (Matthew 24:45)


293 of 365 - Prayers to JESUS    
Jesus, one day at a time — each day I start with Your Word and by this prayer to start my day, and each day is a blessing and regardless of the circumstances of the day  You are there and I can say, “Yeah though I walk through the valley of the shadow  of death that I will fear no evil for Thou art with me” and when I think of the circumstances that I find myself in that they fall into one of two categories, either “Your rod” or “Your staff” is either correcting a wayward course or You are pulling me to safety so I take comfort in the fact that You are with me and there is no circumstance that You cannot use to keep and protect us with Your Grace and Mercy. Thank You Lord for coming to earth and suffering in the flesh so that when we are suffering we can rest assured You have won Victory over suffering for our sakes. Forgive me for my daily sins and lead me in paths of righteousness for Your Name’s sake!!!   AMEN


THE JESUS QUESTIONS

OCTOBER 19  THE JESUS QUESTIONS  JQ#31-04  >>> Lessons, Lifestyle, and Parables of Jesus <<< JQ#31 “Who then is a faithful and wise servant, whom his master made ruler over his household, to give them food in due season?”  (Matthew 24:45)  Jesus has started His lead-up Lessons to His next Question by asking us to “learn this parable from the fig tree” (Matthew 24:32) and with a minimum amount of research on fig trees themselves we find an unusual behavior about the fig tree that is not common among what we modern Walmart-age-westerners know about fruit trees. I know I expected that the life cycle would be for the fruit tree to go dormant and lose its leaves in the fall and then in the spring there would be leaves and then flowers which turn into fruit that ripens in the summer and then the cycle repeats itself so when I read about Jesus cursing the fig tree for the first time I took the position that many people who don’t know (or have not “learned” about the fig tree) about the unusual thing about figs is that in the late fall, figs that do not ripen before the fig tree goes dormant and sheds its leaves, these remaining fall figs are called the “late” figs and they too will go dormant but they do not fall off but instead they “winter over” and then when the tree begins to come out of the winter dormancy which is observed by the fig tree branches becoming tender and starts to put forth leaves, that the “late” figs actually ripen and are used as food! The other odd thing about the fig tree is that the blossoms of the fruit appear before the leaves so if the fig tree has nothing but leaves then the tree is not producing fruit! Furthermore, if the tree does not have any “late” figs ripening along with the tree putting forth a new crop of “blossoms” then the tree had not produced any fruit the previous year either, hence when Jesus observed the fig tree outside Jerusalem’s Eastern Gate in the village of Bethphage (Bethphage means “house of unripe figs”) then He observed that there was no “fruit” and it was for this reason that Jesus cursed the fig tree that was “fruitless” and the fact that Jesus as His first order of business as the Messiah making His Triumphal Entry into Jerusalem was to “drive out all who bought and sold in the temple” and returned it to a “house of prayer” as God had intended it then Jesus cursing the fig tree makes sense and it gives us insight on the end times as well to consider that Jesus again uses the fig tree as a sign of the end of the age. If Jesus cursed the fig tree because it was not bearing fruit we can assume that it was a symbolic gesture by Jesus which was an indictment on the rulers God had put in place over His House of Prayer which actually resided outside Jerusalem’s Eastern Gate in the village of priests known as Bethphage. When all this is considered together we can surmise that Jesus is pronouncing a “judgement” on the nation Israel and their “rulers” because they were proving themselves to be unwise and unfaithful servants who had let God’s temple become a den of thieves. We know from history that the temple was destroyed in 70 A.D. after Jesus cursed the “fig tree” and the nation Israel was taken into captivity as the Scriptures had prophesied and now Jesus is using the Fig Tree which is representative of the nation of Israel to give us a sign that can only be understood by those that have “learned” the parable of the “fig tree” and know that at the end of the age that the nation Israel will be converted and will start producing “kingdom fruit” which will be a major event in the religious history of Israel who prayed for thousands of years for the Messiah and then had Him crucified  when He came! So when you see the nation of Israel recognize Jesus Christ as the Messiah, then you will “know that summer is near. So you also, when you see all these things, know that [the end of the age and Jesus coming again] is near—at the doors.” (Matthew 24:33) Just as Israel becoming a nation again was a sign of the beginning of the end times, so will Israel recognizing Jesus as the Messiah be a sign that we are in the last generation of this age!

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