3/1/26

Cain Builds His Name; Seth Brings Repentance to God's Name

 AIM: Our sin nature leads to broken relationships. God alone can repair them.

Opening Reflection

  • As we worship with our whole lives today, we praise the One who gave us life, ability, desire, and forgiveness. He gave us new life. That truth makes any sacrifice pleasing to Him.
  • Lord, let our spirits leap for joy in praise for what you have done and continue to do. May everything we say and do point to you, so that many will come to saving knowledge of your work through the life, death, resurrection, and return of Jesus Christ. Amen.

A) The Blessing of Family Turns to Murder, Grief, and Banishment (vv. 1–16)
vv. 1–2. Adam and Eve bear two sons: Cain who works the soil and Abel who tends flocks.
vv. 3–5. Both bring offerings. God rejects Cain's offering. God accepts Abel's firstborn and its fat portions. Cain becomes angry.

  • Their offerings reveal the heart. Cain said, “Look what I did.” Abel said, “Look what you did, Lord.” Jesus calls us to worship in spirit and truth. Paul urges us to offer our bodies as living sacrifices that please God. Romans and Titus clarify that no one is righteous apart from God. Cain’s heart displays that truth.

vv. 6–7. The Lord warns Cain. “If you do what is right, you will be accepted. If you do not do what is right, sin is crouching at the door. It desires you, but you must rule over it.”

Principle: Doing what is right protects us. Sin behaves like a predator that waits to control us.

vv. 8–9. Cain kills Abel. When God asks where Abel is, Cain deflects.
vv. 10–12. God says, “Your brother’s blood cries out.” The ground will no longer produce for Cain. He will be a wanderer.

  • Jesus, the one who mediates the new covenant between God and people, and to the sprinkled blood, which speaks of forgiveness instead of crying out for vengeance like the blood of Abel…Be careful that you do not refuse to listen to the One who is speaking... Heb 12:10-29
vv. 13–14. Cain protests that his punishment is too much.
vv. 15–16. God places a sign on Cain to protect him. Cain leaves for Nod, east of Eden.

Application: What sin in my life needs to leave my home?

B) Cain's Line Builds Success; Lamech Builds a Bigger Name (vv. 17–24)
vv. 17–18. Cain’s wife bears Enoch. Cain builds a city and names it after him. The line continues to Lamech.
vv. 19–22. Lamech takes two wives.
Adah bears Jabal and Jubal, the fathers of herding and music.
Zillah bears Tubal-Cain, who forges tools of bronze and iron, and Naamah.

vv. 23–24. Lamech commits murder and boasts about it. He twists God’s protection of Cain and claims a greater right to revenge.

Vengeance vs. Forgiveness. Cain’s line magnifies revenge. Jesus reverses it. “Forgive seventy-seven times.” The Old Testament already taught this ethic.

  • One of the greatest barriers to Christian maturity is knowing what to do with forgiveness. Jesus' use of exaggeration makes the point that one forgives and forgives. There is no limit. How long does it take until you have worked through forgiveness? Until you can want the well-being of the other who has trespassed against you. The import of Jesus' teaching here is that our lack of willingness to forgive our neighbor acts as a barrier to accepting God's forgiveness of our own sin.

Sidebar: Forgiveness and Unresolved Conflict

  • Reading C. S. Lewis this week reminded me how unresolved childhood wounds damage adult relationships. Scripture warned us early. “Do not hate your brother in your heart.” The New Testament does not invent forgiveness. It clarifies and perfects it.
  • Lewis notes the continuity between the Testaments. Jesus repeats and fulfills Old Testament ethics.
  • Help your enemy. Do not celebrate his downfall. Feed him when he is hungry.
  • Scripture shows seven as a number of grace. God uses it throughout the story for cleansing and restoration.
  • Lewis also warns that religious zeal without repentance produces great harm. A high calling can fuel humility or self-righteousness. There is no neutral ground.

C) Seth Is Born. People Begin to Call on God’s Name (vv. 25–26)
vv. 25–26. Adam and Eve bear Seth. Eve says, “God has granted me another child in place of Abel.” Seth fathers Enosh. At this moment people begin to call on the name of the Lord.

Principle: Our testimony shapes others. Eve’s words of faith over Seth set in motion a renewed movement of worship.

Questions for reflection

  • What fruit has forgiveness produced in your life?
  • How can we teach our children and ourselves to live in the light of forgiveness instead of the shadow of unresolved conflict?

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2/28/26

The Certain Triumph of the Lamb (Rev 17)

"The Lamb will overcome them… and those with Him are called and chosen and faithful." - Revelation 17:14

Victory Belongs to Christ

The outcome of history is settled. Revelation 17:14 states the verdict before the battle: the Lamb will overcome because He already has. The cross and resurrection lock in that victory. Colossians 2:15 shows Christ disarming the powers at Calvary stripping them of authority, leading them in open shame like conquered enemies in a Roman triumph. What looked like defeat was conquest.

Scripture anticipated this for centuries. Psalm 2 shows nations raging while God laughs, because His King is already installed on Zion (v. 6). The laughter of God is not cruelty, it is the settled confidence of absolute sovereignty. Psalm 110:1 is the most-quoted verse in the New Testament and guarantees every enemy will become His footstool (Acts 2:34–35; Hebrews 1:13; 10:12–13). The present tense matters in Hebrews 10:13: Christ is seated, waiting, because the outcome requires no further action on His part. Daniel 7:13–14 confirms the everlasting dominion given to the Son of Man, a kingdom that does not pass to another. Revelation simply unveils what was decreed long before.

  • Isaiah 9:6–7: the government rests on His shoulders, and of the increase of His peace there will be no end. The prophet announces an expanding reign, not a contested one. The zeal of the Lord of hosts will accomplish it, the guarantee is God's own passion.
  • John 16:33: "I have overcome the world." The perfect tense is decisive. Jesus speaks this before the cross, treating it as already accomplished. The disciples will have tribulation, but they enter a conflict whose verdict is already in the record books.
  • Genesis 3:15: protoevangelium sets the trajectory from the very beginning. The seed of the woman will crush the serpent's head. The wound to His heel and the crushing of Satan's head are both foretold here, the entire arc of redemption compressed into one verse. Every subsequent promise in Scripture is an elaboration of this first word of gospel.
  • 1 John 3:8: "The reason the Son of God appeared was to destroy the works of the devil." The incarnation was not merely rescue, it was invasion. Christ entered enemy-occupied territory with a specific mission: demolition.
  • Hebrews 2:14–15:  through death He destroyed the one who had the power of death, and freed those who through fear of death were held in slavery their whole lives. The cross was not where Satan won; it was where Satan was undone.

The End Already Decided

Revelation 17 reveals a sovereign God who even directs His enemies. Verse 17 explains the paradox, "God has put it into their hearts to carry out His purpose." The beast and its allies act freely. They intend nothing but rebellion. Yet their rebellion still fulfills God's purpose. History bends toward His decree, not despite the freedom of its actors, but somehow through it.

This is the consistent pattern. Isaiah 46:9–10 declares the end from the beginning, and from ancient times things not yet done. God is not watching history to see how it resolves, He announced the resolution before history began. Ephesians 1:11 says He works all things according to the counsel of His will. The Greek boulē here is deliberate, settled intention, not reactive management. Proverbs 19:21 reduces the equation to its simplest form: many plans exist, but only the Lord's purpose stands.

Romans 8:28 is the pastoral application. The same sovereignty that governs empires governs the details of our lives. The "all things" of Romans 8 and Ephesians 1 refer to the same sovereign hand, operating at every scale simultaneously.

  • Genesis 50:20: human evil bends toward God's good purposes. What Joseph's brothers meant for destruction, God meant for salvation. This is the theological hinge of the Joseph narrative and a template for understanding all providential reversal. Evil does not frustrate God's plan, it becomes the instrument of it.
  • Psalm 33:10–11: the Lord frustrates the plans of the nations and brings the counsel of peoples to nothing, but the counsel of the Lord stands forever, the plans of His heart to all generations. The contrast is absolute: human schemes, however powerful, are temporary. God's counsel is permanent.
  • Proverbs 21:1: the king's heart is a stream of water in the hand of the Lord; He turns it wherever He will. Even the most powerful human authority operates within sovereign constraint. This is not tyranny over human freedom, it is the quiet governance that ensures history arrives where God intends.
  • Isaiah 10:5–7, 15: God calls Assyria "the rod of my anger," used to punish Israel, yet Assyria intends no such thing and serves no such purpose consciously. The axe does not direct the one who swings it. Instruments of judgment remain instruments, no matter how powerful they appear.
  • Acts 4:27–28: Herod and Pilate and the nations gathered against Jesus "to do whatever your hand and your plan had predestined to take place." The crucifixion, the worst crime in history, is simultaneously the most precisely planned event in eternity. The worst human act and the greatest divine act are the same moment. Sovereignty does not merely permit evil; it overrules it toward redemption.
  • Job 42:2: "I know that you can do all things, and that no purpose of yours can be thwarted." Job arrives at this confession through suffering, not despite it. The theological knowledge becomes doxological only through the furnace, which is itself part of the sovereignty being confessed.

The Church Moves from Militant to Triumphant

The church now is the ecclesia militans, armed for real conflict (Ephesians 6:10–18). We wrestle against principalities and powers, against cosmic forces of darkness. Paul does not say "understand" or "study", he says wrestle, the most intimate and exhausting form of combat. Scripture never softens that reality.

But the war ends in glory. Revelation 19:7–8 shows the Bride ready for the wedding. The fine linen, bright and pure, is identified as the righteous deeds of the saints, but they are given to her to wear. Even her righteousness is His gift. The church becomes triumphant because her Husband has already won.

Hebrews 12:1–2 holds both realities together. The triumphant surround the militant. The great cloud of witnesses who have finished the race are not absent from the story, they encircle it. One body, running one race, at different points in the same narrative, bound together in a solidarity that death does not dissolve.

Jude 24–25 promises the final outcome. God will present His people blameless before His glorious presence with great joy and the joy is His, not merely ours. 1 Corinthians 15:54–57 says death itself will be swallowed by the Lamb's victory: "O death, where is your victory? O death, where is your sting?" Paul quotes this as future fact, then breaks into present-tense thanksgiving. "thanks be to God, who gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ."

  • Matthew 16:18: the gates of hell will not prevail against Christ's church. Gates are defensive, not offensive. Hell is the one on defense; the church is the advancing force. The assault runs from the church toward the stronghold, not the other way around.
  • Romans 8:37: "in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us." The phrase hypernikōmen: "more than conquerors" suggests not merely winning but winning with surplus. Overwhelming victory, not narrow escape.
  • Zechariah 4:6: "Not by might, nor by power, but by my Spirit, says the Lord of hosts." The ecclesia militans fights, but the weapons and the power are not its own. The battle belongs to the Lord, and He lends His people His arm.
  • 2 Corinthians 2:14: "But thanks be to God, who in Christ always leads us in triumphal procession." The Roman triumph metaphor is striking: Paul sees the church not as soldiers marching to uncertain battle but as captives already being led in a victor's parade, behind the One who has already won, spreading the fragrance of that victory everywhere.
  • 2 Corinthians 10:3–4: "Though we walk in the flesh, we are not waging war according to the flesh. For the weapons of our warfare are not of the flesh but have divine power to destroy strongholds." The militancy of the church is real, but its arms are categorically different from worldly power.
  • Philippians 1:6: "He who began a good work in you will bring it to completion at the day of Jesus Christ." The militant church is not left to sustain itself to the finish line. The same God who began the work will complete it. The guarantee of the triumphant church is rooted in the faithfulness of God, not the endurance of the church alone.
  • Revelation 12:11: "And they have conquered him by the blood of the Lamb and by the word of their testimony, for they loved not their lives even unto death." The weapons of the militant church in its darkest hour are not force but fidelity, the blood already shed, the word faithfully spoken, the life willingly offered. This is what conquest looks like in the kingdom of the Lamb.

Why This Matters Now

Christ's triumph reframes the church's courage. We do not fight for victory. We fight from victory. Those who are "called and chosen and faithful" (Revelation 17:14) endure because the Lamb has already secured the end. The calling grounds the election; the election grounds the faithfulness. None of the three is self-generated, all three flow from the Lamb who overcomes.

This is why the believer can face an uncertain future with settled confidence, not because the path is clear, but because the destination is fixed. The same God who declared the end from the beginning has also declared us His, and nothing in creation will separate us from that love (Romans 8:38–39). The story is already written. We are simply living toward its last page.

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2/27/26

God’s Sovereign Reign over All The Doctrine of the Kingdom of God

 "The Lord will be king over the whole earth. On that day there will be one Lord, and his name the only name" Zechariah 14:9

  1. The Kingdom is here and still coming
    Jesus announces a real arrival in the present (Mark 1:15. Luke 17:20–21. Matthew 12:28). Yet Scripture also points to a future moment when all kingdoms yield to Christ (Revelation 11:15. Daniel 2:44. Matthew 25:34). The kingdom has begun. It is not finished. This tension is the framework for Christian hope and mission.

  2. The Kingdom comes from above and works on earth
    Jesus tells Pilate His kingdom is not from this world’s power structures (John 18:36). Yet He teaches us to pray for it to shape earthly life (Matthew 6:10). When the disciples heal the sick and announce the kingdom’s nearness (Luke 10:9), heaven’s authority touches human reality. The source is heavenly. The impact is earthly.

  3. The Kingdom carries a moral and spiritual character
    Paul defines the kingdom by righteousness, peace, and joy in the Spirit (Romans 14:17). This protects against legalism and license. The kingdom has standards. It also has Spirit-given life. Those who practice unrighteousness do not inherit it (1 Corinthians 6:9). Kingdom life is moral transformation fueled by the Spirit.

  4. The Kingdom requires a response
    Jesus begins His ministry with “repent” (Matthew 4:17. Mark 1:15). John adds that entry requires new birth from above (John 3:3). The kingdom does not open through effort or heritage. It opens through the Spirit’s regenerating work. The response is humility, surrender, and changed allegiance.

  5. The Kingdom reorders priorities
    Jesus addresses daily anxiety by shifting first things (Matthew 6:33). Seek the kingdom and its righteousness first. Provision is real, but it is secondary. Kingdom-first people make different choices with time, money, vocation, and relationships because loyalty has been reset.

  6. The Kingdom is eternal and cannot be destroyed
    Daniel sees a kingdom that will never fall (Daniel 2:44). Revelation declares that Christ’s reign endures forever (Revelation 11:15). Matthew reveals that this kingdom was prepared before creation (Matthew 25:34). The church does not invent the kingdom. It participates in an eternal plan that will outlast every human regime.

  7. The Kingdom must be proclaimed boldly
    Acts ends with Paul announcing the kingdom in Rome without hindrance (Acts 28:31). Jesus gives His followers real authority to open and close through the keys of the kingdom (Matthew 16:19). The Great Commission continues this mandate. The kingdom spreads through proclamation, compassion, and Spirit-empowered witness, even in hostile spaces.

Summary
The kingdom of God is the Bible’s organizing center. It is present and future. It comes from heaven and transforms earth. It has ethical clarity and Spirit-filled power. It demands repentance and reshapes priorities. It stands forever. To grasp the kingdom is to understand Jesus’s mission, the church’s calling, and the trajectory of history.

When I do not believe that God will establish His kingdom, I remain entrapped in a world system marred by corruption and pain without God’s rightful rule. With only fleeting pleasure as my goal, I fail to thrive as God intends. 

When I believe God rules His creation and will establish His eternal kingdom, I yield to His rightful authority over my life. I recognize God’s call to seek His purposes in every facet of life. Under God’s rule, I realize who I am and the greatness of the God I serve.

God’s people surrender to Him now as His purposes pervade their lives and they anticipate eternity. 

– How will you assume a heaven-focused perspective in your life today?

https://www.openbible.info/topics/kingdom_of_god

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Praising God for life change (Ron Williams)

 My friend Ron Williams has been recovering from cancer surgery over the past few months. When I serve guys in Teen Challenge I see into their future the potential of a good dad, grand father and pastor. Someone who can help people heal and find true hope in God. He's line is that he went from a "hopeless dope addict" to a "dopeless hope addict."

As I've praying for him I was thinking about the church he pastors outside of his work at Teen Challenge and googled him. This was the results:

Ron Williams is a chaplain at Minnesota Adult and Teen Challenge based in the Minneapolis area, celebrating five years in this role as of late 2023. After overcoming personal struggles with addiction, homelessness, and incarceration, he now guides others toward recovery, serving as a mentor and coach. 

Key Details About Ron Williams (Chaplain/Minneapolis):

Role: Chaplain and recovery coach at Minnesota Adult & Teen Challenge, helping men overcome addiction.

Background: Graduated from the Teen Challenge program in 2007 after serving time in prison.

Focus: Uses his life experiences to provide hope and guidance, with over 18 years of sobriety.

I'm healing, Hebrews 13:5, "God will never leave us or forsake us." he means that. People asked him about the Bible at his nightstand, this opened the opportunity to testify about God's intervention in his life. Night and Day, Day and Night - visions and presence (Zech 14). Ron's Facebook message


 

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2/26/26

Biblical Foundations for Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)

I had the honor of hosting a meeting with Paul Abney at my work for SALT, STRIVE, VETNET. He shared his story of trauma, recovery and advocacy for people to move from suffering to true healing. This morning my friend shared Trauma, Addiction and Recovery: Concurrent Treatment of PTSD and Addiction which got me thinking about CBT and the Bible. 

CBT says our thoughts shape our emotions and behaviors. Scripture taught this long before modern psychology. The Bible presents a coherent model of the mind that mirrors CBT’s cognitive-behavioral architecture.

1. Change begins with the mind
Paul frames transformation as cognitive renewal.
Romans 12:2 — “Be transformed by the renewing of your mind.”
Philippians 4:8 — Directing attention toward what is true.
Colossians 3:2 — “Set your minds on things above.”
This is cognitive restructuring in biblical language.

2. Identify and challenge distorted thoughts
CBT teaches monitoring and reframing automatic thoughts.
2 Corinthians 10:5 — “Take captive every thought.”
This is an active evaluation of internal narratives, not passive acceptance.
Applied to trauma: Scripture confronts harmful core beliefs (“I am damaged,” “I am unsafe”) rather than baptizing them.

3. Thought → emotion → behavior
Scripture treats the “heart” as the integrated center of thought, feeling, and action.
Proverbs 23:7 — “As he thinks… so is he.”
Proverbs 4:23 — “Guard your heart, for everything you do flows from it.”
Matthew 15:18-19 — Behavior originates in the inner thought-life.
This is the cognitive model stated plainly.

4. Action reinforces belief
CBT uses behavioral activation. Scripture does the same.
James 1:22 — “Do what it says.”
1 Timothy 4:7-8 — Spiritual maturity is trained, not felt.
Behavioral practice reshapes the inner life.

5. Exposure over avoidance
CBT teaches that avoidance feeds fear; courage rewires it.
2 Timothy 1:7 — A “sound mind” in fear-based situations.
Psalm 23:4 — Healing comes by walking through the valley, not around it.
This parallels trauma-focused exposure therapy.

6. Rumination and anxiety
Scripture addresses anticipatory fear and catastrophic thinking.
Matthew 6:34 — “Do not worry about tomorrow.”
Philippians 4:6-7 — Petition + thanksgiving produces cognitive peace.
1 Peter 5:6-7 — Anxiety is “cast” — a deliberate cognitive release.
This aligns with mindfulness-based CBT.

7. Identity reconstruction
CBT reshapes core beliefs. Scripture does too.
2 Corinthians 5:17 — A new identity redefines self-schema.
Ephesians 4:22-24 — Put off → renew the mind → put on.
A full cognitive-behavioral sequence is embedded here.

8. Community as change catalyst
CBT uses group reality-checking and accountability.
James 5:16 — Confession externalizes distorted beliefs.
Proverbs 27:17 — Others help correct our thinking.
Scripture embeds change in relational systems, not isolation.

Synthesis
Scripture and CBT converge on three truths:
• Thought is the driver of emotional and behavioral life (John 8:32).
• Truth dismantles distortion and brings freedom.
• Lasting change requires both renewed cognition and practiced obedience.

For clinicians or pastors working with believers, this alignment is not cosmetic. It gives CBT a deeper moral and theological backbone and offers clients meaning, hope, and a worldview that reinforces clinical progress.

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