The point of this article is to highlight the plain truth that the
sovereign God of the universe will not tolerate evil continually
maintaining the upper hand. His patient, long-suffering attribute does
not hold much room for the rule of evil, even though He tells us, in His
long-suffering, that He is not willing for any to perish but that all
would come to repentance (2 Peter 3:9). Eventually, as He wraps up this
age in defeat for His enemies, He will destroy that man of lawlessness
with the breath of His mouth (2 Thessalonians 2:8 and Revelation
19:11-21).
We are seeing the various factions of Islamic terrorism converge into
one of much greater cruelty and evil—Muslim Brotherhood, Hamas,
Hezbollah, Jihadists, Muslim extremists and now, ISIS or ISIL. All are
pulled from the same bag, and show us, vividly, the contrast between
evil and good that is expressed by Jesus in John 10:10:
“The thief does not come except to steal, and to kill, and to destroy. I
have come that they may have life, and that they may have it more
abundantly.”
Centuries ago the writer of Psalm 83, in making a plea that God would
intervene against Israel’s enemies by confusing and confounding them,
identified those enemies with language that is almost a repeat of what
we hear from the Middle East today. The hatred for Israel is still a
burning fire in their bosoms, only now it reaches to Christians and the
western world. That Psalm 83 has a prophetic kinship with Psalm 2, in
which the Lord responds to those in the future who would conspire
against Him and those who belong to Him in this manner in Psalm 2:4-6:
“He who sits in the heavens shall laugh; The Lord shall hold them in
derision. Then He shall speak to them in His wrath, and distress them in
His deep displeasure: ‘Yet I have set My King on My holy hill of Zion.’”
It is a certainty, then, not “if” but “when,” God will deal with this
ground-swell of evil and cruelty that is beyond most people’s
imagination. It may be that God has answered those prayers many times
over the centuries, already. Will He do it again in this current crisis?
Will the people of faith call upon Him with prayer and fasting and
surrender, as they did in those days?
This takes me back to the time when Jehoshaphat, king of Judah, was
confronted by the descendants of the children of Lot (Moab and Ammon)
and of Esau (Mount Seir), recorded in 2 Chronicles 20. From early in the
history of the Jewish people, these people, along with the descendants
of Ishmael (Abraham’s son from the slave woman, Hagar), were their
continual adversaries.
When Jehoshaphat learned that a great multitude of their enemies were
ganging up on Judah and Jerusalem, he was afraid, and “set himself to
seek the Lord, and proclaimed a fast throughout all Judah; so Judah
gathered together to ask help from the Lord; and from all the cities of
Judah they came to seek the Lord” (verses 3-4). The account continues
with praises to God for His universal sovereignty and providential care
in the past:
“Then Jehoshaphat stood in the assembly of Judah and Jerusalem, in the
house of the Lord, before the new court, and said: ‘O Lord God of our
fathers, are You not God in heaven, and do You not rule over all the
kingdoms of the nations, and in Your hand is there not power and might,
so that no one is able to withstand You? Are You not our God, who drove
out the inhabitants of this land before Your people Israel, and gave it
to the descendants of Abraham Your friend forever?
And they dwell in it, and have built You a sanctuary in it for Your
name, saying, ‘If disaster comes upon us—sword, judgment, pestilence, or
famine—we will stand before this temple and in Your presence (for Your
name is in this temple), and cry out to You in our affliction, and You
will hear and save.’
And now, here are the people of Ammon, Moab, and Mount Seir—whom You
would not let Israel invade when they came out of the land of Egypt, but
they turned from them and did not destroy them— here they are, rewarding
us by coming to throw us out of Your possession which You have given us
to inherit.
O our God, will You not judge them? For we have no power against this
great multitude that is coming against us; nor do we know what to do,
but our eyes are upon You.”
Now all Judah, with their little ones, their wives, and their children,
stood before the Lord.
Then the Spirit of the Lord came upon Jahaziel the son of Zechariah, the
son of Benaiah, the son of Jeiel, the son of Mattaniah, a Levite of the
sons of Asaph, in the midst of the assembly. And he said, “Listen, all
you of Judah and you inhabitants of Jerusalem, and you, King
Jehoshaphat! Thus says the Lord to you:
‘Do not be afraid nor dismayed because of this great multitude, for the
battle is not yours, but God’s.’
“Tomorrow go down against them. They will surely come up by the Ascent
of Ziz, and you will find them at the end of the brook before the
Wilderness of Jeruel.
‘You will not need to fight in this battle.’
‘Position yourselves, stand still and see the salvation of the Lord, who
is with you, O Judah and Jerusalem!’ Do not fear or be dismayed;
tomorrow go out against them, for the Lord is with you.’
And Jehoshaphat bowed his head with his face to the ground, and all
Judah and the inhabitants of Jerusalem bowed before the Lord, worshiping
the Lord” (2 Chronicles 20: 5-17, emphasis added).
God has not relented in His regard for Israel in all of the days since
restoring the Jews to their land. Almost from the very day of its new
birth as a nation, Israel has had to defend its right to exist. Yet,
against overwhelming odds the nation has had continual victories. Their
arsenal of weaponry as a nuclear power has not been revealed, but I am
certain that it is tremendous, and when unleashed, it would astound the
whole world. Jewish scientific advances in several categories have won
Nobel prizes in remarkable numbers. I recently read a piece on this and
found that Jewish Nobel prizes now number 127, while those for Islamic
countries, only seven.
In Zechariah 14 is a description of the effect of a future weapon of
warfare that would melt the very flesh from the bones of a person. That
is the description of a neutron bomb’s effect, which is beyond
imagination, even for this nuclear age. One can only hope that the
forces of evil are not able to get their hands on it.
But will God need to use military forces as they exist today when these
enemies of righteousness find their cup of evil filled to the brim and
ready for judgment? Will it merely be a “rustling in the mulberry
bushes” that sends fear rippling through their hearts, sending them on
the run? Or, perhaps they will begin fighting each other, to their own
deaths?
There is no prophetic announcement of a war in the imprecatory prayer of
Psalm 83, or in Psalm 2 (a debated point...Keygar,
click
HERE), but the conspiracy of purpose based on hatred
for Israel that is exposed there has fomented for all these centuries.
Will this rage explode in the prophesied Gog-Magog war of Ezekiel 38-39
when Islam marches against Israel led by Russia?
“You will come up against My people Israel like a cloud, to cover the
land. It will be in the latter days that I will bring you against My
land, so that the nations may know Me, when I am hallowed in you, O Gog,
before their eyes” (Ezekiel 38:16).
“And I will bring him to judgment with pestilence and bloodshed; I will
rain down on him, on his troops, and on the many peoples who are with
him, flooding rain, great hailstones, fire, and brimstone.
Thus I will magnify Myself and sanctify Myself, and I will be known in
the eyes of many nations. Then they shall know that I am the LORD”
(Ezekiel 38:22-23).
We see in Isaiah 17:1 that Damascus will be completely destroyed and
left in a pile of rubble. That city is among the oldest continually
inhabited cities, never having been destroyed before, so this
declaration is definitely in the future. If ISIS is dealt with
militarily in this current swelling of absolute cruelty, then Damascus
could be a target. There is the continual question of what is to be done
about Iran’s deceptive advances toward nuclear capability for warfare
and when will Israel or the West move against them. What was it that
Jesus said about wars and rumours of wars?
There is an old folk tale about a scorpion and a frog that touches on
the issue facing mankind at this point:
It seems the scorpion was held up at the bank of a swollen stream
without a way to cross when the frog arrived there as well. The scorpion
had an idea. “Why don’t you swim across and let me ride on your back?”
The frog says, “Of course not. You’ll sting me and then we both will die
out there.”
After much discussion and negotiating, with promises by the scorpion
that he would not sting the frog because it was in the best interest of
the scorpion to reach the other side, the frog relented, and they
started across the water. But halfway across, the scorpion suddenly
stung the frog!
The frog exclaimed, “Why did you do that? Now we both will die!” The
scorpion replied, “I am a scorpion; I sting things, that’s what I do!”
You can substitute ISIS for scorpion, there, and make the case for all
of the so-called peace agreements with terrorist organizations being an
exercise in futility.
Only the judgment of God will have any measure of finality to these threats and actions of hatred and cruelty. Only then can it be said that ISIS IS NOT!