One verse of the Bible was formerly quoted more often than it is today ---
although today we are arriving at the time of its fulfillment: that is I Peter
4:17, "For the time is come that judgment must begin at the house of God: and if
it first begin at us, what shall be the end of them that obey not the gospel of
God?" But strangely enough, this verse is almost always used by the ministers to
threaten their own congregations with judgment and condemnation, as though it
was the Christians who should be in fear of this judgment. Perhaps that does get
more money in the offering that Sunday: but is this a correct use of the word of
God? Let's examine this subject in detail.
This is a Christian nation: it was founded by Christians, who came to this
continent when it was an untamed wilderness, peopled by fierce savages; but they
came here, as their own records tell us, to establish Christian communities
where they could worship God without interference. Even today, although we have
allowed the entrance of millions of people who hate our God and everything we
hold sacred, yet the great majority of our people are still Christian. They are
not completely perfect, of course: people were never sinlessly perfect at any
time --- that is why there was need for Jesus Christ to come and save us by His
sacrifice made for us on the cross. But His death and resurrection were not in
vain: He has cleansed us of the guilt of our sins: if He had not, then He would
have died in vain. But God's purpose can never fail: He has saved us from the
judgment for our sins, and redeemed us as His children, who had strayed like
lost sheep. Therefore, it is not the Christians who need fear the judgment:
indeed, I John 4:17 tells us, "Herein is our love made perfect, that we may have
boldness in the day of judgment: because as He Is, so are we in this world."
Now it is still true that "Judgment must begin at the house of God"---but we see
that it is not judgment upon the Christians. Who, then, are to be judged, among
those who are found in this nation which is the household of God?
Those who hate our God are loud in their denunciation of us for our supposed
sins --- which consist mostly in not helping them to commit their own sins on a
scale as great and profitable as they desire. Should we hang our heads in shame
and plead "guilty" to their accusations? Never! Isaiah 54:17 gives the answer:
"No weapon that is formed against thee shall prosper; and every tongue that
shall rise against thee in judgment thou shalt condemn. This is the heritage of
the servants of the Lord, and their righteousness is of Me, saith the Lord."
Yes, our righteousness is of Him: the righteousness which God imputed to
Christians because Jesus Christ died and was resurrected to accomplish this
very thing. Therefore, "every tongue that shall rise against thee in judgment
thou shalt condemn."
In many places, the Bible tells us that God's judgment will fall upon the
ungodly, upon those who hate Him and refuse His sacrifice made for us upon the
cross. One of these many Is I Samuel 2:10, "The adversaries of the Lord shall be
broken to pieces; out of heaven shall He thunder upon them: the Lord shall judge
the ends of the earth; *** " and there are many more to the same effect. Those
nations which are not Christian must face the final accounting for their
wickedness: and since they have refused to accept the salvation offered them by
Jesus Christ, what can possible remain except the judgment of complete justice?
And what a heavy penalty complete justice will require for their many centuries
of continuous wickedness!
Then why are we told that "Judgment must begin at the house of God?" There is
time enough to get to the other nations in their own turn: meanwhile, let them "
stew in their own juice." But the household of God, His people, the Aryan,
Scandinavian, Germanic Israel, must be cleansed at the beginning of this period
of judgment which we see already coming over the horizon: we must be made ready
to receive Him. And since the Christians are not the people against whom the
Judgment Is coming, then why does it begin with our own nation?
Precisely because we have allowed those who hate our God to come here and live
among us in great numbers: they ceaselessly attack every mention of the name of
Jesus Christ; they constantly strive to prohibit all mention of His name in the
schools, in any public or governmental proceedings; they even want to remove the
slogan "In God We Trust" from our money (although in all other respects they
love our money with a greed which has been proverbial for many centuries!) No
nation can be righteous with such people in its midst: so the judgment must
begin at this nation in order to remove those who fight against our God in His
own houeshold.
Psalm 1:5 tells us, "Therefore the ungodly shall not stand in the judgment, nor
sinners in the congregation of the righteous." Note that this is completely
different from the judgment upon the other nations, those who reject God and all
His commandments, and could never be called "the congregation of the righteous".
This speaks of a judgment which falls upon those who are sinners while they are
among the congregation of the righteous: obviously, they could not be part of
the congregation of the righteous, for then they would not be sinners; but they
are found among the congregation of the righteous, as an unassumilable, forever
alien element among them. Having rejected Jesus Christ, they must therefore face
the judgment they have earned. Jesus Christ Himself tells us, in John 12:48,
"He that rejecteth Me, and receiveth not My words, hath one that judgeth him:
the word that I have spoken, the same shall judge him in the last day".
It should not be hard to identify those who must be removed by this judgment.
Jesus Christ, as well as many other prophets, tells that their rejection of Him
leaves them no escape from judgment. And Isaiah 3:9 completes the
identification. It is very appropriate that this should come in verse nine, as
nine Is a number always associated with judgment in the Bible. Isaiah 3:9 points
out, "The show of their countenance dcth witness against them: and they declare
their sin as Sodom, they hide it not. Woe unto their scull For they have
rewarded evil unto themselves."
Today, our nation is flooded with corrupting influences: salacious movies and
books; a false psychology taught In many of our schools which undermines the
confidence of the youth in their own parents; liquor dealers who grow rich
selling whiskey to youths; a vast, well-financed campaign to break down all
moral standards in the rising generation; politics wherein nothing counts but
getting public office, no matter what kind or degree of corruption is needed to
win; merchandise sold by advertising which cleverly contrives to mislead the
buyer to expect better quality than he receives.
Surely none of this could have come from truly Christian sources: it is the very
antithesis of Christianity. Yet we find It here, wealthy, powerful, numerous,
and utterly corrupt. It is the work and the evidence of sinners who are
physically present in, but not a part of, the house of God, the congregation of
the righteous. This element must be removed before we can be ready to enter into
the Kingdom of God as the congregation of the righteous, the household of God.
It is upon them that the judgment falls, not upon us. It is this very process
which Jesus Christ was describing to us in the parable of the tares among the
wheat, in Matthew 13:24-30., 36-43, where He told us of the tares growing among
the wheat --- but being no part of it: they were the children of the Devil (as
He also identified them in the 9th. chapter of the Gospel of John), living among
God's own children, and who must be weeded out to be burned in the fires of
judgment.
When this is completed, we shall have a glorious nation which is truly fit to be
the Kingdom of God, the Congregation of the Righteous, with nothing remaining
that can tarnish our glory. Indeed, Jesus Christ concludes His explanation of
the parable of the tares amon § the wheat with the statement that, as soon as
the tares are removed, Then shall the righteous shine forth as the sun In the
kingdom of their Father.
The time of judgment Is at hand: the tares themselves are publicly declaring
their fear of the national resentment rising against them, bitterly attacking
every attempt to reinstate the moral and political values of the days when this
nation was morally great, attacking all this as t1a movement of "the extreme
right". Be glad that you are extremely right---for only thus can you be in the
company of God. Let judgment begin at the house of God as quickly as possible,
so that we can be cleansed and made ready to receive our God !
The End
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AMERICAN REFORMATION MINISTRIES
KELTIC KLAN KIRK
PASTOR JOE JOHNSON P.O. BOX 1166 MALVERN, ARKANSAS 72104
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