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Mourning and Encouragement
“Blessed are those who mourn, for they will be encouraged.”
Ordinarily, when we see these words, we reflect on them in the context of the larger pericope. In other words, those who recognize their own spiritual poverty (due to sin) will naturally grieve their sin and thus be comforted by our Almighty Father. And, indeed, there is great truth for the individual in this reading. Yet, remembering that Jesus is speaking to a large group of His disciples at this point — essentially the church — we also must ask how these words apply to the corporate body.
To understand that, we must look at the words translated here as “mourn” and “encouraged,” respectively. The word we render as “mourn” is the Greek word πενθέω (pentheo). It can refer to someone being sad, grieving, or mourning (typically over a death that has taken place). Arguably, as a church body, there are two ways of thinking about this mourning. We certainly mourn the death of those who have died from amongst our numbers. This mourning is not for the one who has died, for their spirit has passed into the presence of Christ. This mourning is for our loss in their absence. The second way of looking at this language in the corporate sense is to reflect on our own nature and the sin we commit when we are tempted. Sin not only grieves the believer who engages in it, but sin grieves the body as a whole, for when one part suffers, the whole suffers.
The word found in the latter part of this verse puts the earlier part of the verse in context. Here we find the word παρακαλέω (parakaleo). The most basic definition of the term is to call or summon someone into your presence. It can mean “to invite” or “to summon.” It can also mean “to exhort, to encourage, or to request.” This may seem like a wide range of meanings for a single word until you realize that for someone to be encouraged or exhorted, they first must be present. So, in a sense, the picture we are being given here is that of the King summoning His people to Himself (John 6:44) and then speaking to them both to exhort and encourage. Furthermore, the people of God are comforted not only in the encouragement of Christ, but also in the exhortation, for indeed, God disciplines those that He loves (Hebrews 12:6).
Historically, one of the marks of the True Church is that they practice discipline for the chastising of sin. True, as Paul writes in Hebrews 12, none of us likes discipline at the time it is administered, but the fruit of discipline is holiness. If the church is indeed to embrace holiness, it must also embrace discipline. When churches reject discipline according to the Word of God, they reject the means by which they will grow and mature in godliness. Further, they disobey their King.
Exhortation: Stand Firm
Feb 22
Posted by preacherwin
“But you, beloved, yourselves being built up in the most holy faith, praying by the Holy Spirit, keep yourselves in the love of God, receiving the mercy of our Lord, Jesus Christ—eternal life.”
(Jude 20-21)
He begins the exhortations with guides for spiritual health within the congregation. We are to build ourselves up in the faith. This is different than the puffing up that the false teachers were doing. But building up is done through teaching, Bible study, fellowship, worship, and prayer. It is the laying of a sure foundation upon which our faith can be solidly built.
Secondly, we are to pray by the Holy Spirit. It is a reminder of what Paul teaches us that the Holy Spirit is a guide to our prayers and it is a reminder the Holy Spirit is the third part of the Trinity and an integral part of our salvation, actively working in our lives through the process of sanctification.
Thirdly, we are to keep ourselves in God’s love. Jude is not trying to replace God’s grace, but is linking grace and love together as one goes hand in hand with the other. And he is not suggesting that those who are truly saved can lose their salvation, rather he is saying that when we walk in disobedience, we earn God’s rebuke; we are to walk faithfully, striving for a “well done, my good and faithful servant.”
And Fourthly, we are to rest in the final salvation that Jesus Christ has assured. The judgment of God against unrighteousness means salvation for those who have been saved. What does the mercy of God look like when it is applied to a person’s life? It fully manifests itself in eternal salvation—eternal life in the presence of God himself. What more could we hope to ask?
Posted in Expositions, Jude
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Tags: assurance of salvation, Commentary on Jude, exhortation, jude 20-21, Jude Commentary, pray with the Holy Spirit, stand firm in faith