Before you begin your Bible study, as a believer
in the Lord Jesus Christ, be sure you have named your sins privately to God the
Father.
If we confess our sins, He is faithful and righteous to
forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness. (Known, Unknown
and Forgotten sins) (1Jn 1:9)
You will then be in fellowship with God, Filled with the
Holy Spirit and ready to learn Truth from the Word of God.
"God is spirit, and those who worship Him
must worship in Spirit and Truth," (Joh 4:24)
Quartet of Fools
There is no more
beautiful sound in all the world than four people blending their voices in
perfect harmony. Reversed, the most sorrowful utterances, emanate from voices
clashing in a discord of sound. Such is a quartet of fools described in the
following paragraphs: three members cannot sing, cannot harmonize, yet the
fourth produces the finest harmony in the world!
The first member of
the quartet is the atheistic fool.
The fool has said in his heart, “There is no
God...” (Psa
14:1)
The ancient Hebrew
language makes no distinction between the heart and the head as a source of
thought. Correctly paraphrased this verse should read “The fool has thought in his mind, there is no
God.” What is this “mind” that says there is no God? An
insignificant thing called human intellect, a mind with it's finite limitations
does not perceive God and therefore says, “God does not exist.”
There are five
methods of perception to acquire human knowledge. The first is known as
occultism --- through demon influnce by means of the old sin nature. The second
is known as rationalism, the pursuit of knowledge by reason alone. The third,
empiricism, this is the pursuit of knowledge by observation and
experimentation. The fourth is human faith, this is how we learn most things
--- by what someone tells us, and we believe it. And fifth Spiritual faith, the “assurance of things hoped for”, the
conviction of things not seen. (Heb 11:1) Though faith is the most commonly used method of perception in the world of everyday
experience, saving Spiritual faith in the Lord Jesus Christ and growth by faith
in His Word are extremely rare. (1Co 2:1-14)
The atheistic fool
uses the wrong means to learn of God; he utilizes rationalism instead of faith.
Yet, faith is the only tool with which to dig into the realization of eternity,
the only path leading to Knowledge of God, the only means of eternal Salvation.
The Scripture specifically states.
Believe in the
Lord Jesus and you shall be saved... (Act 16:31)
Inscribed on the
front of the mantle of the ancient Hind’s Head Hotel at Bray, England is the
legend: “Fear knocked at the door. Faith answered. No
one was there” It was written during England’s darkest hour, the battle
of Dunkirk, and typifies the potency of national faith. The power of Spiritual faith directed specifically toward the uniquely
born Son of God, the Lord Jesus Christ, establishes an eternal relationship
with God. The atheistic fool needs that faith which “comes from hearing, and hearing by the Word of Christ.” (Rom 10:17) Faith is the key to the fool’s
problem.
There is one
question that needs to be asked of this fool: What is he going to do with, (Joh 3:36)?
"He who
believes in the Son has eternal life; but he who does not obey (The Command to
believe in) the Son will not see life, but the wrath of God abides on
him." (Joh 3:36) cf. (1Jn 3:23)
The second member
of this quartette is the rich fool.
And
He told them a parable, saying, "The land of a rich man was very
productive. "And he began reasoning to himself, saying, 'What shall I do,
since I have no place to store my crops?' "Then he said, 'This is what I
will do: I will tear down my barns and build larger ones, and there I will
store all my grain and my goods. 'And I will say to my soul, "Soul, you
have many goods laid up for many years to come; take your ease, eat, drink and
be merry."' "But God said to him, 'You fool!
This very night your soul is required of you; and now who will own what you
have prepared?' (Luk 12:16-20)
This man was rich
in material goods, but his false sense of values made him a fool. His deadly philosophy of eat, drink and be merry could not
satisfy the immutable demands of a just and righteous God. Building
larger barns to store his earthly wealth could not solve the problem of his
eternal future.
Whether
consciously or subconsciously, every man has established in his mind a scale of
values. Have you ever thought to yourself, “Suppose my house was on fire and I
could retrieve only one or two articles from the consuming flames? What are the
possessions that I would bend every effort to rescue?”
This type of
thinking indicates the subconscious development of a scale of values. Every
man’s scale of values includes material and philosophical considerations.
However, most people have a false scale of values because they omit Spiritual
matters. Such is the story of the man who owned an automobile and desired to
purchase a number of accessories for his car, although he lacked the necessary
money. He sold his car so that he could buy the
accessories. Likewise, people sell their souls
in order to have the accessories of life.
Have you ever
seen a baby with a dollar bill in his hand? A dollar has a definite; monetary
value, but to the baby it is just another toy. Where Spiritual things are
concerned, many people are babies with a dollar bill in their hand.
One of the most
suggestive paintings by George Frederick Watts is entitles, Sic Transit.
Translated from the Latin, sic transit
gloria mundi means, “So the glory of the world
passes away.” http://www.georgefredericwatts.org/Sic-Transit-large.html
The passing glory is portrayed in the utmost simplicity.
Upon a casket lies a shrouded figure. All is silent in this chamber of death.
The long, horizontal lines of the painting give the impression of intense
stillness; the very heart has ceased beating. Here, life is over forever. What,
then, does life amount to? What does death mean? These are the questions the
still figure impresses upon us. On the ground around we see all that the world
had accredited to him: plumed casque, shield, spear, and gauntlet denote the
warrior. “He has loved,” says the rose; “He has traveled”, says the scallop
shell. “He has been honored,” says the ermine coat that once adorned him. He is
not without culture, for surrounding him lies the musician’s lute and the book
of the scholar portray that he has drunk of the rich wine of life. Now he is dead, and all these things lie around him unused
and useless. Death terminates the accessories of life. Before death’s clutching
hand the material and the superficial things of life disintegrate.
There is one
question we would ask this fool who would build greater barns, “For what does
it profit a man to gain the whole world, and forfeit his soul?” (Mar 8:36)
The third member
of this quartette is the shameless fool.
Fools mock at
sin... (Pro 14:9)
This fool feels no
guilt of sin. Sin, that infection which has destroyed man since the beginning
of time, is a cancerous plague which infiltrates every portion of our being,
destroying our Spiritual fiber and the eternal life tissues of our souls. Sin brings
the barrage of God’s judgment upon us and no slit trench of human philosophy
and reasoning is a defense against His Divine judgment.
The Scripture
presents three important facts concerning sin. First, sin is universal.
For all have sinned and fall short of the
glory of God. (Rom 3:23)
Indeed, there is not a righteous man on
Earth who continually does good and who never sins. (Ecc 7:20)
Second, sin is judged by a just and righteous God.
For the wages of sin is death... (Rom 6:23)
Therefore, just as though one man sin
entered the world, and death through sin, and so death spread to all men,
because all sinned. (Rom 5:12)
Third, sin is
remedied by the atoning death of the Lord Jesus Christ on Calvary’s cross.
But God demonstrates His love toward us, in
that while we were yet sinners, Christ died
(As a substitute) for us. (Rom 5:8)
Hence, we would ask
the shameless fool one question: “How can he neglect so great a Salvation:”
The fourth member of the quartette is the Christian
fool.
We are fools for
Christ’s sake. (1Co 4:10)
This statement
was written by a man named Paul. Who was Paul? He was formerly Saul of Tarsus,
a man who had every advantage in life including, wealth, education, prominence
and ability. But one day, treading in the dust of the Damascus road, Saul met the
Lord Jesus Christ. From that moment he became the Apostle Paul, a man who
devoted the rest of his life to
spreading the Gospel of the grace of God which is faith alone in the Lord Jesus
Christ As Paul traveled about the world in the service of the Lord, he suffered
many unbearable hardships—flayed with the biting
stings of the Roman lash, bruised with stones cast from self-righteous Hebrew
hands, drifted in the deep for a day and a night only a ship’s plank from
death, robbed, hungry, thirsty, cold, naked and exhausted. Why was Paul a fool,
willing to suffer these things? Because
he realized there was a God; because he recognized the awfulness of sin;
because he had come to the cross of Calvary; because he had found eternal life,
and because he realized the harmony of joy and peace in his life. And so
it is with Christians today! To us, the Lord Jesus Christ is God’s only
begotten Son who died on Calvary’s Cross for our sins, rose again from the
dead, and now sits on God’s right hand interceding on our behalf. To the
Christian,
And we know that God causes all things to work together for
good to those who love God. (Rom 8:28)
Every circumstance
of life has a pattern and purpose. Life is full of “the peace of God, which
surpasses all comprehension” (Php 4:7)
Look at the birds of the air, they do not
sow, neither do they reap, nor gather into barns, and yet your heavenly Father
feeds them. (Mat 6:26)
During a shelling
from Japanese naval vessels off the coast of Guadalcanal, a member of the First
Marine Division sought shelter in a trench. While running for the trench he saw
a lonely bird sitting on a palm tree log unconcerned with the tremendous chaos
caused by the Japanese bombardment. Huddled in his field fortification, nerves
quivering with the detonation of each shell, the Marine began to consider the
fate of the poor bird exposed to the storm of solid lead. Several hours later
when the Japanese had departed and he came out of his shelter, a tragic scene
of devastation met his eyes. Lying about in the grotesque attitudes of death
were many of their former comrades. Where several trucks has stood before, only
a few bent and twisted bits of steel lay smoldering in the ruins. Homes had
been obliterated, trees had been uprooted; the landscape was literally changed
as a result of the Japanese shell fire. In spite of the havoc and destruction,
the same bird was sitting on the same log with not even a feather ruffled. In
like manner the Lord Jesus Christ
takes the Christian through the shelling of life undisturbed.
Are not two
sparrows sold for a cent? And yet not one of them will fall to the ground apart
from your father. But the very hairs of your head are numbered. Therefore do
not fear; you are of more value than many sparrows. (Mat 10:29-31)
To the Christian,
man's foundation of wealth, intellect, and power are insecure, but God's foundation, Jesus Christ, is abiding, immoveable,
ageless. The attacks of intellectual termites cannot crumble this
foundation; hurricanes of mundane anxiety cannot prevail against it; the acid
of ridicule cannot dissolve it.
For no man can lay a foundation other than
the one which is laid, which is Jesus Christ. (1Co 3:11)
So, here are four
fools for your consideration: the atheistic, the rich, the shameless, and the
Christian. The question for you is, “Where do you fit into this quartette?”
End
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