
- 208 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
About this book
In Jesus in the Present Tense, Dr. Warren W. Wiersbe explores the "I AM" statements of Godâfrom His burning bush conversation with Moses, to His powerful reassurances to the Israelites, to Jesus's startling claim to be the Light of the World. Many Christians find themselves mired in past regrets or future fears, but the name of God itself reminds readers that God wants them to live in the present. The more readers understand and apply God's I AM statements from the Old and New Testaments, the more they will realize God's peace and joy. Then they will be free to live, serve, and know God more richly in the present tenseâwhich is just where He wants them to be.
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Yes, you can access Jesus in the Present Tense by Warren W. Wiersbe in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Theology & Religion & Biblical Criticism & Interpretation. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
1
Moses Asks a Question
Moses said to God, âSuppose I go to the Israelites and say to them, âThe God of your fathers has sent me to you,â and they ask me, âWhat is his name?â Then what shall I tell them?â
âExodus 3:13
When Helen Keller was nineteen months old, she contracted an illness that left her blind and deaf for life. It was not until she was ten years old that she began to have meaningful communication with those around her. It occurred when her gifted teacher Anne Sullivan taught her to say âwaterâ as Anne spelled âwaterâ on the palm of her hand. From that pivotal experience, Helen Keller entered the wonderful world of words and names, and it transformed her life.
Once Helen was accustomed to this new system of communication with others, her parents arranged for her to receive religious instruction from the eminent Boston clergyman Phillips Brooks. One day during her lesson, Helen said these remarkable words to Brooks: âI knew about God before you told me, only I didnât know His name.â1
The Greek philosophers wrestled with the problem of knowing and naming God. âBut the father and maker of all this universe is past finding out,â Plato wrote in his Timaeus dialogue, âand if we found him, to tell of him to all men would be impossible.â He said that God was âa geometrician,â and Aristotle called God âThe Prime Mover.â No wonder the apostle Paul found an altar in Athens dedicated to the âUnknown Godâ (Acts 17:22â23). The Greek philosophers of his day were âwithout hope and without God in the worldâ (Eph. 2:12).
But thinkers in recent centuries havenât fared much better. The German philosopher Georg Wilhelm Hegel called God âthe Absolute,â and Herbert Spencer named Him âthe Unknowable.â Sigmund Freud, the founder of psychiatry, wrote in chapter 4 of his book Totem and Taboo (1913), âThe personalized God is psychologically nothing other than a magnified father.â God is a father figure but not a personal heavenly Father. British biologist Julian Huxley wrote in chapter 3 of his book Religion without Revelation (1957), âOperationally, God is beginning to resemble not a ruler but the last fading smile of a cosmic Cheshire cat.â The fantasies described in Alice in Wonderland were more real to Huxley than was God Almighty!
But God wants us to know Him, because knowing God is the most important thing in life!
Salvation
To begin with, knowing God personally is the only way we sinners can be saved. Jesus said, âNow this is eternal life: that they know you, the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom you have sentâ (John 17:3). After healing a blind beggar, Jesus later searched for him and found him in the temple, and the following conversation took place:
âDo you believe in the Son of Man?â asked Jesus.
The man said, âWho is he, sir? Tell me so that I may believe in him.â
Jesus replied, âYou have now seen him; in fact, he is the one speaking with you.â
The man said, âLord, I believe,â and he fell on his knees before Jesus (John 9:35â38). Not only was the beggar given physical sight, but his spiritual eyes were also opened (Eph. 1:18) and he received eternal life. His first response was to worship Jesus publicly where everybody could see him.
This introduces a second reason why we must know who God is and what His name is: We were created to worship and glorify Him. After all, only little joy or encouragement can come from worshipping an âunknown God.â We were created in Godâs image that we might have fellowship with Him now and âenjoy Him forever,â as the catechism says. Millions of people attend religious services faithfully each week and participate in the prescribed liturgy, but not all of them enjoy personal fellowship with God. Unlike that beggar, they have never submitted to Jesus and said, âLord, I believe.â To them, God is a distant stranger, not a loving Father. Their religious lives are a routine, not a living reality.
But there is a third reason for knowing God. Because we possess eternal life and practice biblical worship, we can experience the blessing of a transformed life. After describing the folly of idol worship, the psalmist added, âThose who make them [idols] will be like them, and so will all who trust in themâ (see Ps. 115:1â8). We become like the gods that we worship! Worshipping a god we donât know is the equivalent of worshipping an idol, and we can have idols in our minds and imaginations as well as on our shelves.
Our heavenly Fatherâs loving purpose for His children is that they might be âconformed to the image of his Sonâ (Rom. 8:29). âAnd just as we have borne the image of the earthly man [Adam], so shall we bear the image of the heavenly man [Jesus]â (1 Cor. 15:49). However, we should not wait until we see Jesus for this transformation to begin, because Godâs Holy Spirit can start changing us today. As we pray, meditate on the Word of God, experience suffering and joy, and as we witness, worship, fellowship with Godâs people, and serve the Lord with our spiritual gifts, the Spirit quietly works within us and transforms us to become more like our Lord Jesus Christ.
The conclusion is obvious: The better we know the Lord, the more we will love Him, and the more we love Him, the more we will worship and obey Him. As a result, we will become more like Him and experience what the apostle Peter called growing âin the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christâ (2 Peter 3:18). Paul took an incident out of the life of Moses (Ex. 34:29â35) and described it this way: âAnd we all, who with unveiled faces contemplate the Lordâs glory, are being transformed into his image with ever-increasing glory, which comes from the Lord, who is the Spiritâ (2 Cor. 3:18). Moses didnât realize that his face was radiant, but others saw it! He was being transformed.
God commands us to know Him and worship Him because He wants to give us the joyful privilege of serving and glorifying Him. Commanding us to worship isnât Godâs way of going on a heavenly ego trip, because we can supply God with nothing. âIf I were hungry,â says the Lord, âI would not tell you, for the world is mine, and all that is in itâ (Ps. 50:12). He commands worship because we need to worship Him! To humble ourselves before Him, to show reverence and gratitude, and to praise Him in the Spirit are essential to balanced growth in a normal Christian life. Heaven is a place of worship (Rev. 4â5), and we ought to begin to worship Him correctly right now. But unless we are growing in our knowledge of God and in our experience of His incredible grace, our worship and service will amount to very little.
Salvation, worship, personal transformation, and loving service are all part of living in the present tense and depending on our Lord and Savior. âAnd our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son, Jesus Christâ (1 John 1:3).
Preparation
Moses spent forty years in Egypt being âeducated in all the wisdom of the Egyptiansâ (Acts 7:22). Then he fled for his life to Midian, where he spent the next forty years serving as a shepherd. Imagine a brilliant PhD earning a living by taking care of dumb animals! But the Lord had to humble Moses before He could exalt him and make him the deliverer of Israel. Like the church today, the nation of Israel was only a flock of sheep (Ps. 77:20; 78:52; Acts 20:28), and what the nation needed was a loving shepherd who followed the Lord and cared for His people. The Lord spent eighty years preparing Moses for forty years of faithful service. God isnât in a hurry.
The call of Moses started with the curiosity of Moses. He saw a bush that was burning but not burning up, and he paused to investigate. âCuriosity is one of the permanent and certain characteristics of a vigorous intellect,â said British essayist Samuel Johnson, and Moses certainly qualified. He saw something he couldnât explain and discovered that the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob was dwelling in that burning bush (Deut. 33:16). The Lord God had come to visit him.
What did that remarkable burning bush signify to Moses, and what does it signify to us? For one thing, it revealed the holiness of God; because throughout Scripture, fire is associated with the dynamic holy character of the Lord. Isaiah called God âthe consuming fireâ and the âeverlasting burningâ (Isa. 33:14; see also Heb. 12:29). Note that Moses saw this burning bush on Mount Horeb, which is Mount Sinai (Ex. 3:1; Acts 7:30â34); and when God gave Moses the law on Sinai, the mountain burned with fire (Ex. 24:15â18).
How should we respond to the holy character of God? By humbling ourselves and obeying what He commands. (See Isa. 6.) Theodore Epp wrote, âMoses was soon to discover that the essential qualifications for serving God are unshod feet and a hidden face.â2 How different a description from that of âcelebritiesâ today, who wear expensive clothes and make sure their names and faces are kept before their adoring public. God wasnât impressed with Mosesâ Egyptian learning, for âthe wisdom of this world is foolishness in Godâs sightâ (1 Cor. 3:19). Godâs command to us is, âHumble yourselves, therefore, under Godâs mighty hand, that he may lift you up in due timeâ (1 Peter 5:6). When the Prodigal Son repented and came to his father, the father put shoes on his feet (Luke 15:22); but spiritually speaking, when believers humbly surrender to the Lord, they must remove their sandals and become bond servants of Jesus Christ.
The burning bush also reveals the grace of God, for the Lord had come down to announce the good news of Israelâs salvation. He knew Mosesâ name and spoke to him personally (Ex. 3:4; John 10:3). He assured Moses that He saw the misery of the Jewish people in Egypt and heard their cries of pain and their prayers for help. âI am concerned about their suffering,â He said. âSo I have come down to rescue themâ (Ex. 3:7â8). The Lord remembered and honored His covenant promises with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and the time had come to deliver His people.
It was by grace that God chose Moses to be His servant. The Lord wasnât disturbed by Mosesâ past failures in Egypt, including the fact that even his own people had rejected his leadership (Ex. 2:11â15). Moses was now an old man who had been away from Egypt for forty years, but this didnât hinder God from using him effectively. The Lord knows how to use the weak, foolish, and despised things of the world to humiliate the wise and the strong and ultimately to defeat the mighty (1 Cor. 1:26â31). God would receive great glory as Moses magnified His name in Egypt.
Identification
If Moses was going to accomplish anything in Egypt, he needed to know the name of the Lord, because ...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Endorsements
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Contents
- Foreword by Michael Catt
- Preface
- 1-Moses Asks a Question
- 2-The Apostle John Provides Some Answers
- 3-The Bread of Life
- 4-The Light of the World
- 5-The Door
- 6-The Good Shepherd
- 7-The Resurrection and the Life
- 8-The Way, the Truth, and the Life
- 9-The True Wine
- 10-The Neglected I AM
- 11-I Am Jesus
- 12-Living and Serving in the Present Tense
- Notes
- Bible Credits
- Ads