Marvel Not, My Brethren, If The World Hate You
Brother Daryl R. Coats ©
Marvel Not, My Brethren, If The World Hate You
"Marvel not, my brethren, if the world hate you." (1 John 3:13)
While clearing my bookshelves, I have been reminded of how much
the world has always hated God, the words of God, the ways of
God, and the people of God.
For example, the modern Roman, Greek, Cyrillic, Arabic, and
Korean alphabets all derive from the Hebrew alphabet:
aleph and
beth became
alpha and
beta, alif and
ba, and
"a" and "b." The world at
large recognizes this truth, but refuses to credit the Jews as
originators of the alphabet, claiming instead that the world’s
writing systems owe their existence to unidentified "Semitic
peoples" who lived in Palestine.
Many Semitic peoples have lived in Palestine, but only one has
an alphabet that bears its name—only one was chosen by God to be
a blessing to the entire world—only one was used of God to give
three-fourths of His own words to the world. Because God loved
and blessed and sanctified those people, the world still hates
and despises them and will stop at nothing to discredit them and
their accomplishments.
"If the world hate you, ye know that it
hated me before it hated you. If ye were of the world,
the world would love his own: but ye are not of the world, but I
have chosen you out of the world, therefore the world hateth
you. Remember the word that I said unto you, The servant is not
greater than his lord. If they have persecuted me, they will
also persecute you; if they have kept my saying, they will keep
your’s also." (John 15:18-20)
The world regards the ancient Greek writer Herodotus (born circa
485 BC) as the "father of history"—yet Herodotus did nothing
that had not already been accomplished centuries earlier by
Moses, Joshua, and the writers of Judges, 1 and 2
Samuel, 1 and 2 Kings, and 1 Chronicles.
Why does the world credit an unsaved Greek with something that
the Hebrew prophet Moses accomplished hundreds of years before
the birth of Herodotus? The reason is obvious from the opening
words of each man’s historical account:
|
the beginning of "the books of Moses" |
the beginning of Herodotus’ The Histories |
|
"In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth." (Genesis 1:1) |
"Here are presented the results of the enquiry carried out by Herodotus of Halicarnassus. The purpose is to prevent the traces of human events from being erased by time, and to preserve the fame of the important and remarkable achievements produced by both Greeks and non-Greeks; among the matters covered is, in particular, the cause of the hostilities between Greeks and non-Greeks." |
Notice some of the differences between the historical writings
of Moses and those of Herodotus:
|
Moses |
Herodotus |
|
began with God |
began with himself |
|
went almost an entire chapter recording the creative work of God before mentioning man |
lauded "human events" in his second sentence |
|
never identified himself as writer |
identified himself before doing anything else |
|
sought to honor God |
sought "to preserve the fame" of men |
|
emphasized the role of God in the course of history |
emphasized "the important and remarkable achievements" of unsaved sinners |
|
recorded what is eternal |
sought to preserve what is temporal |
No wonder the world prefers Herodotus to Moses! Had Moses been
of the world, the world would love him; but Moses was of God, so
the world hates him and the books that God gave the world
through him.
"I understand more than the ancients, because I have kept thy precepts."
(Psalm 119:100)
Pliny the elder (AD 23-79) is widely regarded as one of the
forerunners of modern science. One 20th century
translator of Pliny claimed that science couldn’t exist until
the Greeks of the seventh century BC became "rational" (that is,
they used the discovery of "comparative religion" to justify
rejecting any supernatural explanation for the creation of the
earth and the universe, opting instead for "philosophical
explanations" of the origins of all things). The fact that the
early "rationalists" concluded from their scientific
investigations that everything in the universe was composed of
earth, air, fire, and water ought to be enough to expose the
foolishness of "science falsely so
called," but to modern monkey-men, the early
"rationalists" are heroes who started the long process of
liberating men from the fears and "irrational consequences" of
believing in God.
|
One of those early rationalists was the Greek philosopher Epicurus, whose disciples rejected the truth of the gospel and disputed with Paul in Acts 17. Among other things, Epicurus taught that "the soul, composed of atoms like the body, died with it, and that the gods did not interfere in the physical world, which owed its origin to natural causes." Obviously, none of these points can be proven or demonstrated through empirical observation and controlled experimentation, but they nevertheless were enough to cause the Epicureans of the first century to reject Paul’s preaching that "THE UNKNOWN GOD ... made the world, and all things therein [so much for Epicurus’ false claim of a natural origin of the universe], seeing that he is Lord of heaven and earth ... he giveth to all life, and breath, and all things; And hath made of one blood all nations of men ... and hath determined the times before appointed, and the bounds of their habitation ... he is not far from every one of us; For in him we live, and move, and have our being; .... but now commandeth all men every where to repent [so much for Epicurus’ false claim that no God ever interfered in the lives of men] ... Because he hath appointed a day, in the which he will judge the world in righteousness by that man whom he hath ordained; whereof he hath given assurance to all men, in that he hath raised him from the dead [so much for Epicurus’ false claim that men cease to exist when they die]." Like insane scientists of the 21st century, the Epicureans mocked Paul, dismissed him as a "babbler," and libeled him as a "setter forth of strange gods: because he preached unto them Jesus and the resurrection." |
In many ways, Pliny is an embarrassment to the scientists of
today. He is demonstrably wrong in his geographical claims and
measurements; his reports of such things as rains of blood and
idols on which it never rains hardly ring as credible among
today’s scientists; and his claim that his own empirical
observation leaves "no doubt about there being four elements"
hardly inspire confidence in "scientific observation." Pliny’s
general unreliability is especially obvious In Book 2 of his
Natural History ("Astronomy"), in which he states as fact
that
|
the moon is located 14,500 miles from the earth; |
|
the sun is located 43,500 miles from the earth; |
|
the planet Jupiter "consequently is healthy" because it is situated between (and supposedly influenced by) the "naturally cold and frozen" Saturn and excessively hot Mars (blazing hot "since it is close to the sun"); and |
|
"we must believe that the sun is the soul, or, more intelligibly, the mind of the universe, the ruling principle and divinity of Nature." (Baal, by the way, was the Canaanite name for the sun god.) |
But today’s scientists will forgive and overlook any number of
obvious errors so long as the person who makes them rejects the
God of creation.
|
Interesting fact. According to Book 2 of Pliny’s Natural History, another name for Venus is Lucifer. Venus was also known as "Diana of the Ephesians" and now is often called "the Blessed Virgin Mary." |
Hundreds of years before Charles Darwin earned a university
degree in theology (evolutionism is not a "science" but a
theological system), Pliny revealed the theological nature and
framework of "scientific rationalism." Without one shred of
empirical or experimental evidence to support his position,
Pliny said that any effort to find out about God is "a sign of
human weakness," because "Whoever God
is—provided he does exist—and in whatever religion he is, God is
the complete embodiment of sight, hearing, soul, mind, and of
himself. ...God is man helping man; this is the way to
everlasting glory. ... Moreover, it is ridiculous to think that
a supreme being—whatever it is—cares about human affairs. ...
The chief consolation for Nature’s shortcomings in regard to man
is that not even God can do all things. ... God cannot give
mortals the gift of everlasting life, or recall the dead, ...
These facts show without a shadow of doubt the power of Nature
and prove that this is what we mean by ‘God.’This digression
will not have been inappropriate since these matter have already
been widely publicized through our continuous examination of the
nature of God" (Book 2.14, 18, 20, 27). How sad to boast
of "continuous examination of the nature
of God" and yet never take time to read what the words
through which God reveals Himself (1
Samuel 3:21).
Erroneously supposing that only the weak seek after God, the
agnostic Pliny devoted his life to learning all that he could
about the "natural world," claiming that the earth is
"the one part of the world of nature on
which we have bestowed the title of ‘Mother’ out of the highest
respect because she deserves this. ... Earth receives us after
we are born and feeds us after birth and always supports us, and
at the very end embraces us in her bosom, sheltering us like a
mother especially then ... Indeed Earth may be credited with
having invented poison out of pity for us ... Thus earth, out of
pity for us, has produced a substance ... by drinking which, ...
we may effortlessly depirve outselves of life without physical
injury or loss of blood ... Earth has produced a remedy for all
all ills, ... a kind goddess ..." (Book 2.154-159). Pliny
was just one in long list of people who embraced "Mother Earth"
and suicide after they rejected God the Father.
Not surprisingly, Pliny’s studies led him to reject the doctrine
of hell: "If there were any beings in
the nether world, surely the tunnelling [sic] brought about by
greed [that is, by the mining of gold, silver, copper, and
jewels] would have dug them up" (Book 2.158).
His "scientific curiosity" eventually led to Pliny’s death. When
Mt. Vesuvius erupted in AD 79, destroying the city of Pompeii,
Pliny died because "he lingered too long observing the
eruption." The man who claimed that seeking after God was
ridiculous lost his life because he sought instead after the
things of the earth. The man who proclaimed that "Mother Earth"
was a "kind goddess" who had "pity for us" died because his
"mother" erupted in fiery fury. The man who denied the existence
of hell died as a result of fire that came up from the bowels of
the earth. "Be not deceived; God is
not mocked: for whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also
reap" (Galatians 6:7).
"Blessed are ye, when men shall revile you, and persecute you, and speak all manner of evil against you falsely for my sake." (Matthew 5:11)
Yet another revered historian of antiquity was the Roman
Tacitus, whose multi-volume The Histories and The
Annals recorded the history of Rome from AD 14-96. Only four
complete books (and one partial book) of The Histories
still survive, chronicling the events that affected Rome in AD
69-70. Since the destruction of Jerusalem was one of those
events, the first 13 sections of Book 5 are devoted to "The
Jews."
Not even the spurious Protocols of the Learned Elder of Zion
spews forth as much anti-Semitic venom as Tacitus, who accused
the Jews ("wretches of the most
abandoned kind") of slothfulness (the Sabbaths are
dismissed as mere excuses to justify laziness), wickedness,
lasciviousness, and illicit money-making (these accusations
coming nearly 2000 years before the 19th century Karl
Marx and 20th century rantings against "Jewish
bankers").
Tacitus blasphemed the religion of Israel as
"sinister and revolting" because
it didn’t conform to the paganism of her neighbors:
"Among the Jews all things are profane
that we hold sacred; on the other hand they regard as
permissible what seems to us immoral." He denounced the
worship of Jehovah as "paradoxical and
degraded"—a "paradoxical cult"—and
not "festive and happy" like the
worship of Bacchus (the god of wine and partying). He also
attacked Judaism’s belief that abortion and infanticide are
"deadly sins," maintaining that
such belief was nothing more than a justification to increase
Israel’s population.
Centuries before 21st century scholars rejected the
truth of the first nine books of the Bible for fables about
"habiru" and a supposed multi-generation and gradual settling of
the Jews in the land of Israel, Tacitus cited several first
centuries explanations for the origin of the Jews:
|
six false claims |
the supposed evidence to back up each claim |
|
the Jews were originally refugees from Crete |
"Judaei" is supposedly a corruption of "Idaei," a people who lived around Mount Id in Crete |
|
the Jews were originally the "surplus population of Egypt ... evacuated to neighboring land under the leadership of Hierosolymus and Judas [!]" |
"a few authorities hold" that this is true |
|
"the Jews are descended from those Ethiopians who were driven by fear and hatred to emigrate from their home country when Cepheus was king" |
"many assure us" that this is true |
|
the Jews were originally "a motley collection of landless Assyrians" |
"There are some who say" that this is true |
|
the Jews are descendants of Homer’s Solymi |
the Latin name for Jerusalem is supposedly derived from the Latin name for the Solymi |
But Tacitus rejected these six claims and embraced instead the
account that "Most authorities ... agree
on," namely that the children of Israel were originally
Egyptians cursed by the gods with leprosy and banished to the
wilderness by Pharaoh Bocchoris (who ruled more than 300 years
after the death of David!), who wished to purify his land of the
wasting disease! A leper named Moses supposedly encouraged these
wasted Egyptians "not to wait passively
for help from god or man, for both had deserted them,"
but instead to "trust to their own
initiative and to whatever guidance first helped them"!
That guidance supposedly came in the form of a
"herd of wild asses,"; for that
reason the Jews supposedly "consecrated" an image of an ass in
the midst of the temple in Jerusalem.
(Tacitus failed to reconcile this claim with his later complaint
that the Jews "hold it impious to make
idols of perishable materials in the likeness of man: for them,
the Most High and Eternal cannot be portrayed by human hands and
will never pass away. For this reason they erect no images in
their cities, much less in their temple. Their kings are not so
flattered, the Roman emperors not so honored." )
Tacitus used the details of this "most widely accepted" fable to
explain away everything about Judaism and to justify the Roman
destruction of Jerusalem in AD 70. In doing so, he exposed
himself for the fool that he was. Since he was of the world, the
world has received him as one her own and (as with Pliny) is
more than willing to overlook "problem areas" and obvious
falsities in his works since he was in agreement with the world
on the most important points (namely, the unanimous animosity
against the Lord God Almighty, His words, His people, and His
ways).
"Let us hear the conclusion of the whole matter: Fear God, and keep his commandments: for this is the whole duty of man. For God shall bring every work into judgment, with every secret thing, whether it be good, or whether it be bad." (Ecclesiastes 12:13-14)
Like David, any believer in the 21st century who
loves God’s words, meditates on them, keeps them, and obeys them
has more understanding than such
"ancients" as Herodotus, Pliny, and Tacitus. Only
through those words does anyone acquire true understanding—and
with that understanding comes a hatred
"of every false way" (Psalm
119:97-104). That word instructs believers not to
marvel that the world hates them. The world’s hatred of God and
of His words, His ways, and His people sometimes seems almost
overwhelming to believers, but as the writings of imbeciles such
as Herodotus, Pliny, and Tacitus shows, such hatred is nothing
new and ultimately comes to nothing.
Daryl R. Coats
14 September 2009














