Unlimited Government

“Of the increase of His government and of peace there will be no end, on the throne of David and over His kingdom, to establish it and to uphold it with justice and with righteousness from this time forth and forever more. The zeal of the Lord of hosts will do this.” Isaiah 9:7

In this passage, Isaiah speaks of the coming Messiah and of the kingdom He will inaugurate. I did not have time in last week’s sermon to speak to the important hope of the coming government of the Kingdom of God. I spoke last Sunday about the necessity of striving for limited government in this fallen world because the unlimited government of sinful people will always come into conflict with the final perfect authority of God. If we are always striving to keep civil government in check, how is the idea of the unlimited government of God a blessing? It’s worth considering!

At the second coming of Christ, Jesus will return as a conquering King. The Kingdom of God will not be a democracy, but a perfect monarchy with a perfect King. Monarchy, as a form of government, never works in this fallen world because the king is always sinful. As Lord Acton famously stated, “Power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely!” He’s right because no king that has ever ruled has been able to escape his own corrupt heart. Apart from real accountability, sinful people will abuse power for their own self-interest. In contrast, the perfect kingship of Jesus will work in the opposite direction. Jesus in His glorious redeeming perfection will be worthy of worship – unlike the hollow praise directed toward human monarchs.

Jesus will not use His throne to enrich Himself. Instead, from His inexhaustible perfection and riches will bestow upon His people places of inheritance prepared for them (John 14:1-3). King Jesus will go well beyond the material to fully glorify the body and souls of His people. In the Kingdom of God our hearts will be rid of the presence of sin and clothed in the righteousness of Christ. King Jesus will conquer Satan, our great adversary and accuser, ushering in an eternal reign of peace. To His reign of peace there will be no end. There will be no enemy from without or within that can come against King Jesus. In the eternal living triune existence, Jesus will never grow old, tired, or senile. He will forever be wise, good, and just.

This same glorious coming reality is hinted at throughout Scripture. In 2 Samuel 7:13 King David is told by the prophet Nathan that the Lord God will establish the throne of his kingdom in a way that will never end. David rejoices in this news but cannot understand from his perspective how this could be. All the dynasties of earthly kings come to an end. But in Matthew 1 we are given a tracing of the linage of Joseph, the “the husband of Mary, of whom Jesus was born, who is called Christ” (Matthew 1:16). Jesus is the fulfillment of the word of the Lord to David. In Luke 1:32-33 this is clearly spelled out. Jesus will reign “forever, and of His kingdom there will be no end.”

In Daniel 7:13-14 we read about Daniel’s vision of the “Son of Man” (the most common name of Jesus in the gospels) being given everlasting dominion over all the nations. The dominion of Jesus is an authority that will not pass away and cannot be destroyed, but this dominion will be for the blessing and joy of those that are brought into His kingdom. In verse 27 we are told how the saints of God will reign with the Son of Man in this coming kingdom.

We are not used to hearing of the Kingdom of God in our day. Most of the emphasis of the “good news” of the message of Jesus is related to benefits in this life. But this was not so in the ministry of Jesus. Jesus was constantly directing people to consider the coming Kingdom of God – the divine, promised, and eternal rule of God. Most of the parables of Jesus worked to relate known realties to the unknown reality of the Kingdom of God. It is very important that we reset our thinking about heaven to relate to this idea of eternal life. Heaven is over and over expressed as the eternal reign of the resurrected and glorious King Jesus, not a nebulous undefined endless existence.

Let’s hear the command of Jesus and seek first His kingdom and His righteousness. Let’s be reminded that the corruption of the governments of this world will one day come to an end. We struggle now against evil and those that reject the authority of Jesus – but it will not always be this way. Render to Caesar the tax due Caesar, for in the end these earthly things will all pass away. Live in service to Jesus to gain an eternal reward that nothing can destroy. Be grateful and offer to God acceptable worship with reverence and awe for receiving by grace alone a kingdom that cannot be shaken (Hebrews 12:27-29). Let us walk by faith, never losing hope in the coming of the Kingdom of Jesus Christ!

As Jesus has come once, He will come again,

Pastor Vic

Recommended Reading

2022 Recommended Reading

As we enter into 2022, I would like to continue to challenge us as a church to be a reading people. Various forms of video and audio technology are threatening to completely press out of people’s lives the discipline of reading the written word. Yet God has revealed Himself to us by the written word. This is not a coincidence and cannot be effectively “evolved forward” into a better form of revelation. We must discipline our minds to be critical, thoughtful, and effective readers. Reading other books regularly will help you read the Bible more clearly and thoughtfully. Every year around this time I will share with you some of the books I most enjoyed last year. Also this year, other leaders from around the church will share their recommendations.

Most of these books are available in the church library. We maintain a church library to facilitate the reading of good Christian books. Many thanks to Karen Robinson for managing this effort. I would ask that as you take books from the library that you follow the basic lending procedures and return the books you have read in a timely manner, so others can enjoy them as well. Part of the library ministry is giving away Bibles. We want everyone to have a Bible to read. If you know someone that does not have a Bible, please ask Karen for one from the library and give it to the person in need. If you struggle to understand the Bible, Karen can give you a study Bible to help you better understand what the Bible is about and how it is organized.

May you love the Lord your God with all your mind! Let’s all aim to read more quality books in 2022.

  • Pastor Vic

Favorites from Pastor Vic:

Setting Our Affections Upon Things Above; Nine Sermons on the Gospel and the Church, by D. Martin Lloyd Jones. Insightful, inspiring, and Christ-honoring sermons by one of the greatest preachers of all time.

Evangelism; How the Whole Church Speaks of Jesus, by J. Mack Stiles. This is a very encouraging and practical book on how our entire church must work together to bring lost people to Jesus. You’ll hear more from me this year on this book. Let’s have a joyful and mission focused heart toward the lost!

George Whitfield, by Arnold A. Dallimore. This outstanding biography examines the inspiring life of one of the greatest evangelist to ever be used by God. Whitfield was one of the most important figures in the first great awakening. He preached to more people without voice amplification than any other person that has ever lived. This biography is available in a two volume set, or a condensed one volume paperback.

Martin Luther; The Man Who Rediscovered God and Changed the World, by Eric Metaxas. This up to date and very well written biography helps the reader understand the evolution of one man’s life from lost in religious formalism to salvation by grace alone through faith alone in Jesus Christ our Lord. Martin Luther is one of the most important characters in church history. If you are unfamiliar with his life, you should read this book.

Gentle and Lowly, by Dane Ortlund. This book explores the often neglected aspect of the character of Jesus in being gentle, merciful, and kind. The fruits of the Spirit include gentleness, kindness, and goodness. These qualities won’t get you very far in the high pressure competitive world we currently live in. However, they are a central part of the character of Jesus and must be a central part of our spiritual development.

Out of Many, One; Portraits of America’s Immigrants, by George W. Bush. In this inspiring book President Bush paints a (literal) portrait of each immigrant then briefly tells their story. This book will inspire you and bring you to tears as you read story after story related to courage, intense hard work, hope in the goodness of God, and the merciful helping hands of one neighbor helping another make a better life. This book will reset your mindset toward immigration, love of neighbor, and how, as Christians, we must relate to these important issues.

Alongside; Loving Teenagers with the Gospel, by Andrew Hill. This very passionate and practical book will help parents and grandparents understand how to bridge the gap between the generations to effectively love our teens and share Jesus with them. If you have a teenager, you need to take your time reading this one.

Other Recommendations:

Mike Patterson – Elder

Autobiography of George Muller, George Muller. This is the story of George Mueller and his journey from a life of sin and rebellion to his glorious conversion. In the middle of both struggles and triumphs, he established orphan homes to care for thousands of poor children of England. He depended upon God’s daily miraculous responses to his prayers to supply all their needs. George Mueller’s unwavering faith and childlike dependence upon his heavenly Father inspired me to confidently trust the God of the impossible to meet my needs in every area of my life. George Mueller was an ordinary man who did great things because he trusted in an extraordinary God.

Prayer, by John Onwuchekwa. Of all the books that have been written on prayer, this one had a very specific purpose: examining how prayer shapes the life of the church. The author goes on to explain how a church’s commitment to prayer is one of the greatest determiners of its effectiveness in ministry. This book is personal and practical yet interesting and easy to read; mostly about corporate prayer in the church but loaded with personal stories and illustrations. 

The author makes the most compelling statement on prayer when he says, “To be a Christian without prayer is no more possible than to be alive without breathing.” Breathing, like prayer, is necessary for everything that we do.

Bob Sawyer – Elder

The Pursuit of God – Updated Edition, by A.W. Tozer

Sherry Morgan – Children’s Ministry Director

Twelve Extraordinary Women, by John MacArthur. This book highlights some of the best known women in the Bible. The women he chose to write about are: Eve, Sarah, Rahab, Ruth, Hannah, Mary, Anna, The Samaritan Woman, Martha & Mary, Mary Magdalene and Lydia. MacArthur writes a chapter about each woman with Martha and Mary sharing a chapter. The single, central, dominant truth that emerges is that their faith and hopes were completely Christ-centered. They were ordinary women who were made extraordinary because of their life-changing faith in God. None of the women were perfect, but their stories are comforting because they are a reminder

that God has always used imperfect people, “that the excellence of the power may be of God

and not of us” (2 Corinthians 4:7)

Rodney Swann – Men’s & Missions Ministry Director

What is Reformed Theology? Understanding the Basics, by RC Sproul. In this book Dr. Sproul explains the biblical basics of this often misunderstood system of doctrine. He examines the Bible to bring clarity to many passages that are often skipped or wrongly understood by the church.

Loneliness

“No longer do I call you servants, for the servant does not know what the master is doing; but I have called you friends, for all that I have heard from my Father I have made known to you.”  –John 15:15

This past week I read a disturbing, lengthy article documenting the loneliness that is dominating our period of American history. It explored the way Americans are constantly around other people in daily work and on social media looking in on other people’s lives, but how there is a deeply isolating lack of real and personal friendships. It has come into stark focus over these years of COVID that God created us for real, face to face, regular, and meaningful personal relationships. I would like to spend some time in this newsletter and the next outlining what I understand the Bible to teach about the ordering of relationships. This ordering cannot be broken. The extent to which you reject God’s plan for relationships will determine the level of relationship disfunction in your life. The more you reject and rebel against God’s relationship designs, the more pain and sadness you will bring into your life. However, the more you accept and pursue God’s design for relationships, the greater happiness and blessing will develop in your life. The order of relationships are as follows: God – spouse – children – local church – general friends / non-Christian family – pets.

By far, the most important relationship in your life is your personal relationship with Jesus Christ. This is a relationship entered into by faith, through the grace of Jesus toward you. When you confess your sins to Jesus they will be forgiven. When you believe that Jesus is who He said He was – the Son of God – you will enter into relationship with Jesus. You are no longer an outsider, but a friend. You are no longer a stranger, but an adopted son or daughter of God. The Bible continuously uses personal language of relational nearness to describe our relationship to God through Jesus Christ. Christianity is not a matter of learning facts about God. Jesus is not a curiosity to be studied, but a Savior to be loved and cherished.

Prayer is personally speaking to God. The great characters of the Bible authentically poured their hearts out to God. They asked God deep and heart-troubling questions. They praised God in times of blessing, gave thanks in times of abundance, and called out for deliverance in times of need. They knew God by name and were known personally by Him. Does this describe your relationship with God?

This God-to-person relationship is the supreme and guiding relationship of your life. If your life at its core is characterized by rebellion against God, every other relationship will be out of order. You cannot be at odds with God and at peace with other people. However, being at peace with God will create peace in all the descending relationships in their order.

The second most important relationship in a person’s life is their relationship to their spouse (husband or wife). Statistics were recently released documenting that America now has the lowest marriage rate since statistics have been kept on the subject. The national population is increasing, but fewer people are getting married than ever before. The causes of this are many, but at the core, people are rejecting God’s plan and normal purposes in Christian marriage. The Bible has no category for long-term ‘recreational’ singleness. I define recreational singleness as putting educational, career, or pleasure goals ahead of God’s clear commands toward sexual holiness. Recreational singleness is the path of being sexually involved with various partners, but not marrying, in order to accomplish goals you have set up as supremely important. The non-Christian world has trained generations to accept this as normal.

However, this pattern violates the first relationship – the relationship with God. You cannot live in sexual sin and have peace with God. The countless cohabiting couples in America are saying that their greatest happiness will come from their self-defined partner relationship, rather than from a personal relationship that honors God and believes by faith that marriage is good. Marriage is a step of faith. It’s a step that says, “I believe God’s ways are best. I will act in purity and faith and pray for God’s blessing on this relationship.” A husband and wife that individually love Jesus Christ and then love each other in marriage will be blessed. A marriage where a husband or wife idolizes the other person will fail. This means that one spouse is seeking from the other spouse something that only God can give. When we ask of our spouse something that we should be asking of God, we ask too much of our spouse and will drive them away. When, instead, we go to Jesus with the deepest struggles and pains of our life and are forgiven and filled up by the Holy Spirit, we can then love and serve our spouse instead of wear them out.

Concerning singleness, the biblical category for singleness is a person so devoted to Jesus in personal relationship that Jesus meets all their deepest personal relationship needs. This rare person can live happily doing God’s work fully without the normal need for a spouse or children. This is an exceptional category in the Bible and one primarily for devoted vocational Christian service. Singleness that has resulted through fear, selfishness, or laziness has no biblical category. If a single is lonely and desires marriage, it is right that they should take this to God (the first order relationship) and actively seek marriage. The normal pattern of God is for people to desire and enjoy marriage and children.

The third order of relationship is children resulting from marriage. The Lord God is clear that children are to be considered a blessing. Children are never convenient or easy, but they are a blessing. They are often a spiritual blessing that work toward our holiness by forcing spiritual growth in our lives. However, children will only be the full blessing they are designed to be if the first two ranks of relationship are in order. If dad and mom love Jesus individually, and they love each other sacrificially and with joy, the children will thrive in such a home. Children that are raised in homes where God is rejected and the marriage is broken or without love, will struggle greatly. Parents that don’t look to God and don’t look to each other, but expect from their children what they should be seeking from God or their spouse, will drive their children away by placing too great a relational burden on them.

The fourth level of relationship consists of friendships in the local church. Friends in the local church are closer, ultimately, than non-Christian blood kin because we share with Christian brothers and sisters the chief relationship – the love of Jesus Christ. What does light have in common with darkness? Nothing. However, we have all experienced the instant bond of Christian love with Christians that we just met but are otherwise strangers. In the same way as stated before, there is an ordering here. If we expect of our Christian friends an intimacy of friendship that should be coming from our spouse, we expect too much from the friendship. The misplaced expectation will destroy what could have been a joyful relationship given the correct proportional weight.

Fifth is non-Christian friends and family members. We have all felt the awkward distance between ourselves and those with no love of Christ. We cannot actively talk with them about what matters to us most. Our relationship with them will always be severely limited. We work to reach them with the gospel, never enjoying their friendship without deep concern for their soul.

Sixth is pets. America has reached the place of radical relational disfunction where people have sinfully chosen to isolate themselves from, and reject, every personal relationship from God all the way down. These people will often take in a pet and call it their child. They will walk the dog on Sunday rather than worship the risen Jesus. They have taken a non-human being and projected onto it human qualities. A pet has a place to be loved, but it is the last place. A pet can be enjoyed and rightly loved after we love God, our spouse, our children, our church members, and our fellow man. Only then can a pet be truly enjoyed. People who are deceived into thinking their pet is a human child or is able to take the place of a spouse will be bitterly disappointed.

I’ll discuss more next week some of the implications of these things, but let it suffice for now to say that we are all sinners. Every one of our situations is scarred by sin and brokenness, but this must not cause us to give up and abandon God’s design. I urge you to examine this divine ordering of relationship and pursue it. Begin by seeking to earnestly renew your personal relationship with God, then work down from there. At each level, work to prioritize according to God’s design. When we work with the Lord, instead of against Him, there is joy and blessing.

May the Lord God strengthen and protect our personal relationships for His glory and our happiness,

Pastor Vic

Mike Eudy–Obituary

“I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the faith. Henceforth there is laid up for me the crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous judge, will award to me on that day, and not only to me but also to all who have loved His appearing.” – 2 Timothy 4:7-8

Michael Eudy died yesterday. He was seventy-three years old. He was a beloved husband, father, grandfather, neighbor, church elder, and he was my father-in-law. Mike grew up in the humble house of a western North Carolina textile worker. He was a smart, determined, and independent young man that with very little financial means made his way to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. At UNC, Mike met a young nurse, Linda, and the two married. When Mike graduated from the School of Pharmacy, he and Linda moved to the mountains of NC to begin his lifelong work as a Pharmacist.

After college Mike and Linda became Christians and began a family, eventually having twin sons and a daughter. Much could be said to describe the details of his life, but I prefer to ask, “Who was Mike Eudy?”

Mike was a Christian. Everything about Mike’s life was shaped around being a faithful follower of Jesus Christ. Mike was serious about knowing and understanding the Bible. He was devout in holiness, full of joy, and a man of prayer. Mike was a founding member of Grace Alliance Fellowship, where he faithfully served as an elder and Bible teacher for decades. Mike was a pillar and support of the truth, loving Jesus His Savior and serving the people of the local church with persevering joy.

Mike was a loving husband and father. He was devoted and faithful to one good Christian woman his entire life – his wife of fifty years – Linda. Enduring love of this type has always been rare, and only comes to pass as a work of the Lord. Mike and Linda went through many of life’s struggles but took heart always in Jesus Christ who has overcome this world (John 16:33). Mike led and provided, while Linda made a true home full of hospitality, education, home cooked food, and Christian fellowship. Mike’s twin sons would eventually join their father in his local pharmacy business, working together in prosperous partnership for many years. Mike had a special and tender love for his only daughter, Maria, my wife.

Mike was an independent man, a hard-working risk-taking businessman. He was smart with numbers, frugal with his money, and exacting with details. Through many years of discipline and industry, he and Linda achieved many of their life-long dreams without debt. Mike sought after the classic American dream – a good plot of land all his own, some cattle, a tractor to cruise around on, and a pond to fish in. By the grace of God, he and Linda achieved these goals, including building his own home. Much of the house he built himself, including a walnut paneled library which was paneled by walnut cut from his land and milled by his own hand. A long journey of success from where he began!

Mike was a great American and a passionate patriot. He loved, and fought to preserve, the Christian constitutional foundations of this great country. He zealously encouraged others to learn about the founding of America and care about principled governance. He understood the necessary connection between Christian moral character and constitutional government. One cannot exist without the other.

Mike did not plan to die this week. Man knows not his time (Ecclesiastes 9:12). He was suddenly taken to the Emergency Room and had to be put on a ventilator due to aggressive pneumonia. He didn’t have any final conversations with anyone – but he didn’t need to. He didn’t need to resolve things or make things right. He had lived with resolution and conducted himself with honor. His wife knew he loved her and was left well provided for. He had no embarrassing secrets to hide, instead a long line of people coming forward to speak of his Christian character and goodness. He was an honorable man that finished his life well. He went out with his boots on, which was the way he wanted it.

He is now unquestionably with Jesus Christ. Not by some vague notion, but by faith in the finished atoning work of Jesus Christ on the cross. Because of the resurrection power of Jesus, Mike now also lives, even though he has died (John 11:25-27). What was faith is now sight. What was seen dimly and from afar, is now seen face to face (1 Corinthians 13:9-13).

“Though you have not seen Him, you love Him. Though you do not now see Him, you believe In Him and rejoice with joy inexpressible and filled with glory, obtaining the outcome of your faith, the salvation of your souls.”– 1 Peter 1:8-9

We all miss you Mike, but we will see you again soon in glory!

Vic