| |

075 罗马书12章17至21 以善胜恶

👉 罗马书证道录音mp3

075 罗马书12章1721 以善胜恶

    • 小孩子:什么是以牙还牙、以眼还眼? 
    • 旧约(出21:24、利未记24:20、申19:21):新约:(太5:38-39)[1]
    • 问:我们是否能以牙还牙、以眼还眼? 

    • 12:17-21
    • 问:当人以恶待你时,你会做什么?
    • 1.以牙还牙、以眼还眼? 2.避开这种人,不再来往“井水不犯河水” 3. 即使交往也不会恩待他,也不恶待他   4. 留心找机会向他行善,希望双方能够和睦。

    • V17 不可以恶报恶[2]
    • Pic e.g.许多电影都是以复仇为内容。是否看见仇恨被报,心里叫好?
    • 信主后,知道主不喜悦我报复。刚开始觉得很委屈
    • 后来我做到后,但却发现主的要求是更高的。还要对那人好
    • V17 大家以为美的事,要努力【留心】去作。18 可能的话,总要尽你们的所能与人和睦。
    • 要努力【留心】去做“大家” 以为美的事
    • 不只是做自己认为美的事。而是去做“大家” 以为美的事
    • e.g.有时我们认为美的事,在别人眼里不是美事
    • e.g.你认为你是好意帮助人,但对方不这样认为
    • 努力【留心】行美事时,能使到大家能和解、和睦。
    • 问:那人对你不好,还要努力【留心】对他好???
    • 问:这样做不是很笨?自找苦吃?
    • 问:难道就这样放过恶人?
    • V19亲爱的啊,不要为自己伸冤,宁可等候主的忿怒,因为经上记着,主说:“伸冤在我,我必报应[3]
    • 信:主会伸冤报应(审判)
    • e.g.亚比米勒(士师基甸的儿子)为了夺权,杀了自己的兄弟七十个人
    • 9:56 这样,上帝报应了亚比米勒向他父亲所行的恶事,就是他杀了自己的兄弟七十个人。57上帝也把示剑人的一切恶事,都报应在他们的头上;耶路巴力的儿子约坦的咒诅,也归到他们身上。

    • e.g.亚哈王与王后耶洗别,为了菜园谋害拿伯[4]

    • 王上21:19 你要对他说:‘耶和华这样说:你杀了人,又占有他的产业吗?’你又要对他说:‘耶和华这样说:狗在什么地方舔拿伯的血,也必在什么地方舔你的血。’”。。。23  至于耶洗别,耶和华也说:‘狗必在耶斯列的地方吃耶洗别的肉

    • 不要为自己伸冤,要学习等候主为我们伸冤
    • 为自己伸冤,是在扮演上帝的角色作“审判与伸冤者”
    • 不要误以为主的审判,只在将来而不在今世
    • 有时后先知们,等了许久:
    • û119:84 你仆人的日子还有多少?你什么时候才向那些逼迫我的人施行审判呢?
    • 有时如果主不在今生刑法那恶人,将来那恶人要面对更严厉的审判(太11:24)

    • V20 相反地【所以】,“如果你的仇敌饿了,就给他吃;如果渴了,就给他喝。
    • 引致:箴言 25:21-22[5] LXX
    • 仇敌饿了,就给他吃;如果渴了,就给他喝
    • 主耶稣要我们“爱”我们的仇敌 (太5:44、路6:27-28)
    • 智慧:“爱他们”也不是叫我们继续被他们欺负。
    • 问:为什么要这样做?

    • V20…因为你这样作,就是把炭火堆在他的头上。
    • 问:把炭火堆在他的头上,是什么意思?难解经文
    • 解释 A 炭火指向上帝的忿怒
    • 一些教父们解释,我们恩待仇敌时,他们若不悔改是为自己堆积上帝审判的炭火[6]
    • 炭火:五处经文指向上帝忿怒审判 (撒下 22:9、 22:13 、诗 11:6、18:8、18:12、120:4、140:10)
    • 140:10 愿炭火落在他们身上;愿他们掉在深坑里,不能再起来。
    • 11:6 耶和华必使火炭落在恶人身上,烈火、硫磺和旱风是他们杯中的分。
    • 解释A我们对恶人行善时,他们若还是不悔改,炭火就不断堆在他们的头上。
    • 小心错误应用:我对他更好,这样我就堆积更多炭火让他死

解释B[7]

“炭火堆在头上” 指向那人的羞愧与悔改

    • 许多牧者认为解释 A 有许多不妥之处
    • 1.以色列邻国埃及[8]:“炭火堆在头上” 指向那人的羞愧与悔改
    • 2. 我们对仇敌好,不是为了让他们积蓄上帝的忿怒与审判。
    • 3. 符合下文 20节。 保罗要我们以善胜恶。
    • 我个人接受解释 B,但也深知这是更难做到的
    • a.p.尽量去爱他们,希望他们回转,希望能与他和睦。

    • 问:如果有人杀了你的老公,使你孩子没有父亲,你能饶恕他吗?
    • 问:如果有人杀了你的老公,你能去爱他吗?
    • Pic在厄瓜多尔(南美洲)印度安人是极其凶残。
    • Pic吉姆·艾略特 James Elliot 与5位宣教士 在厄瓜多尔1956年被杀
    • Pic伊利莎白·艾略特Elisabeth Elliot 1926-2015,丈夫:吉姆·艾略特 James Elliot[9]
    • Pic艾略特带3岁的女儿与 Rachel saint另外一位被杀宣教士的姐姐回到厄瓜多尔(南美洲)
    • Pic她们恩待那10位杀害他们亲人的印度安人。后来有2位信主。

    • e.g.弟兄被妻弟(小舅子)羞辱。
    • e.g.弟兄当时候很伤心也很生气。
    • e.g.2年后,孩子诞生时。他带着妻子孩子与礼物回岳父母家。后来妻弟与他和解。
    • 有时当我们继续向对方行善时,只要对方还有良心,都可能后来与我们和解的。
    • 这些弟兄姐妹都以善胜过恶。
    • “可能的话”【若是能行】 (V18) if possible,尽量去行。
    • V21 不可被恶所胜,反要以善胜恶。
    • 【和合】箴25:21你的仇敌若饿了,就给他饭吃;若渴了,就给他水喝;22  因为,你这样行就是把炭火堆在他的头上;耶和华也必赏赐你


[1] 旧约“以牙还牙、以眼还眼”指当判官审判时当公允。新约禁止的是个人私下的 “以牙还牙、以眼还眼” 报复。

[2] Here we have what belongs to the essence of piety. The essence of ungodliness is that we presume to take the place of God, to take everything into our own hands. It is faith to commit ourselves to God, to cast all our care upon him and to vest all our interests in him. In reference to the matter in hand, the wrongdoing of which we are the victims, the way of faith is to recognize that God is judge and to leave the execution of vengeance and retribution to him. Never may we in our private personal relations execute the vengeance which wrongdoing merits. We see how the practical details of the Christian ethic reveal the soul of piety itself. How appropriate likewise is the word of Peter in pleading the example of Christ: “who, when he was reviled, reviled not again; when he suffered, threatened not; but committed himself to him that judgeth righteously” (1 Pet. 2:23; cf. Psalm 37:5–13). Murray, J.

[3] 申32:25、32:43、诗94:1-3、鸿1:2-3、来19:30

Paul backs up his injunction with a quotation from Deuteronomy 32:35 in a form identical to that in Hebrews 10:30 but differing from LXX (it is like that in the Targum of Onkelos; see SBk). Perhaps both Paul and the writer to the Hebrews used a translation that has not survived. Morris, L.

[4] 王上21:2 亚哈对拿伯说:“把你的葡萄园让给我,我可以用作菜园,因为你的葡萄园靠近我的王宫。我要把一个更好的葡萄园与你交换。如果你喜欢,我也可以按市价给你银子。”

王上21:10  又叫两个匪徒坐在拿伯的对面,作见证控告他说:‘你曾经咒诅上帝和君王’;然后把他拉出去,用石头把他打死。”

[5] A quotation from Proverbs 25:21–22; Paul omits the concluding clause: ‘and the LORD will reward you.’ The original force of the admonition may have been: ‘Treat your enemy kindly, for that will increase his guilt; you will thus ensure for him a more terrible judgment, and for yourself a better reward—from God.’ Another view is that the proverb refers to an Egyptian ritual in which a man testified publicly to his penitence by carrying a pan of burning charcoal around on his head. In any case, by placing the proverb in this context and omitting the last clause, Paul gives it a nobler meaning: ‘Treat your enemy kindly, for that may make him ashamed and lead to his repentance. Bruce, F. F.

The parallels in Egyptian instruction literature and in the ritual of repentance substantiate this traditional understanding. However, commentators accepting that meaning of the expression do not agree about its significance. Some think that heaping coals of fire upon a person’s head is a form of punishment and of appeasing one’s need for vengeance, but the parallel, “the LORD will reward you” negates that interpretation.139 In the Book of Psalms, the psalmist prays the LORD will revenge the wrong, but never himself pours the coal on his enemy’s head. The book of Proverbs rejects any form of personal revenge (17:13; 20:22; 24:17, 18). Both Old and New Testaments instruct the covenant community to love, not hate, their enemies (Lev. 19:17–18; Ps 35:13; Matt 5:43). Waltke, B. K. The Book of Proverbs,

Most commentators agree with Augustine and Jerome that the “coals of fire” refers to “burning pangs of shame” which a man will feel when good is returned for evil, his shame producing remorse and contrition. Waltke, B. K. (The Book of Proverbs)

But heaping coals of fire elsewhere in the Old Testament means to produce terrible pangs of pain as part of a God’s avenging judgment (cf. Pss. 11:6; 140:11 and 4 Esdras 16:54), not pangs of remorse. However, Morenz validated the majority interpretation from an Egyptian penitential ritual. According to the narrative of Cha-em-wese, the thief Cha-em-wese returned a book of magic stolen out of a grave by carrying a basin of fiery coals on his head. Carrying the fire signified his consciousness and attitudes of shame, remorse, repentance and ultimately correction. Morenz also thought that the penitential rite was confined to Egypt, but that the metaphor as it exists in Israel should be elucidated by it.141 The Egyptian background for the forms of other motifs the Proverbs support his view.142 Whether Solomon and his audience knew the origin of the figure is a moot and irrelevant point.143 “The reward from Yahweh is presumably for achieving reconciliation between the two persons involved. This could only be due to a change of heart on the part of the enemy.”144 Our Lord exemplified and established the precept. Through his life and death for his enemies, he reconciled them to God (Rom. 5:8; 2 Cor. 5:17–21).Waltke, B. K.

[6] The quotation, taken from Proverbs 25:21–22 (basically LXX), urges the reader to give food and drink to an enemy who is in need. ….From early times some have drawn attention to Old Testament passages expressing the idea of punishment (e.g., 2 Sam. 22:9, 13 = Ps. 18:8, 12; Ps. 11:6; 120:4; 140:10). The thought then would be that by doing your enemy kindness you were increasing his guilt and magnifying his punishment. But to most commentators this seems an impossible way of understanding the passage. The context is dominated by thoughts of love, and indeed the whole paragraph (vv. 9–21) is an expression of what Christian love means in practice. For reasons like this most agree that something like Moffatt’s translation gives the sense of it: “for in this way you will make him feel a burning sense of shame”. William Klassen, however, has made a detailed examination of the problem and rejects such solutions. “The interpretation so widely accepted by interpreters that the coals of fire refer to shame, remorse, or punishment lacks all support in the text.” He points to a custom attested in Egyptian literature whereby a penitent person carried coals of fire in a bowl on his head and to contacts between Proverbs and Egyptian writings and says, “In the Egyptian literature and in Proverbs the ‘coals of fire’ is a dynamic symbol of change of mind which takes place as a result of a deed of love.” Whether we prefer to go along with Moffatt or with Klassen, there can be no doubt that Paul is referring to the change in the enemy which deeds of love effect. As Barrett, Bruce, and Barclay all say in one form or another, we should use deeds of love to turn the enemy into a friend. Morris, L.

[7] One interpretation relates the coals of fire to the execution of God’s vengeance and recompense (vs. 19b). This would require the thought that our deeds of kindness minister to this end and that, instead of being the executioners of vengeance, we are to be consoled by the fact that kindness only promotes that result. There are two objections to this view. (1) No warrant can be elicited from Scripture by which the execution of God’s vengeance could be pleaded as the reason for bestowing kindness upon our enemies. That vengeance belongs to God is the reason why we are not to mete out vengeance but not the reason for acts of beneficence. (2) Verse 21 is closely related to verse 20 and points to the result of our acts of mercy: it is that evil may be overcome. A second view, with slight variations respecting the state of mind induced in the enemy, is the one most widely held. It is, that heaping coals of fire on the head refers to the burning sense of shame and remorse constrained in our enemy by the kindness we shower upon him. If the first view mentioned is not acceptable, then this must be the direction in which the interpretation must be sought. Murray, J.

The expression ‘coals of fire’ is found nine times in the OT, and in five cases it is related to judgment (2 Sam 22:9, 13; Pss 18:8, 12; 140:10). This has led some of the early church fathers and recent commentators to interpret Paul’s statement, ‘you will heap burning coals on his head’, as a reference to God’s judgment upon those who persecute his people. The problem with this interpretation is that it requires an understanding of heaping coals of fire on one’s enemy’s head that is in conflict with the kindness of feeding him if he is hungry and giving him something to drink if he is thirsty. To do this with a view to bringing judgment upon him renders the acts of kindness hypocritical. Kruse, C. G.

Thou shalt heap coals of fire, etc. As we are not willing to lose our toil and labor, he shows what fruit will follow, when we treat our enemies with acts of kindness. But some by coals understand the destruction which returns on the head of our enemy, when we show kindness to one unworthy, and deal with him otherwise than he deserves; for in this manner his guilt is doubled. Others prefer to take this view, that when he sees himself so kindly treated, his mind is allured to love us in return. I take a simpler view, that his mind shall be turned to one side or another; for doubtless our enemy shall either be softened by our benefits, or if he be so savage that nothing can tame him, he shall yet be burnt and tormented by the testimony of his own conscience, on finding himself overwhelmed with our kindness. Calvin

[8] However, Morenz validated the majority interpretation from an Egyptian penitential ritual. According to the narrative of Cha-em-wese, the thief Cha-em-wese returned a book of magic stolen out of a grave by carrying a basin of fiery coals on his head. Carrying the fire signified his consciousness and attitudes of shame, remorse, repentance and ultimately correction. Morenz also thought that the penitential rite was confined to Egypt, but that the metaphor as it exists in Israel should be elucidated by it. The Egyptian background for the forms of other motifs the Proverbs support his view. Whether Solomon and his audience knew the origin of the figure is a moot and irrelevant point. “The reward from Yahweh is presumably for achieving reconciliation between the two persons involved. This could only be due to a change of heart on the part of the enemy.” Our Lord exemplified and established the precept. Through his life and death for his enemies, he reconciled them to God (Rom. 5:8; 2 Cor. 5:17–21).Waltke, B. K.

[9] “华欧拉尼”/ 厄瓜多尔(Huaorani or Waorani)的印第安族

Similar Posts

  • 013 罗马书3章21至24 信靠耶稣基督,就白白地称义

    👉 罗马书证道录音mp3                       013 罗马书3章21至24  信靠耶稣基督,就白白地称义 3:21-24 3:21-31 是非常、非常重要。道出了福音的核心 背景:犹太人与外邦人 上文:(罗3:9-20)全世界(外邦人与犹太人)都在罪中 罗3:10 正如经上所说:“没有义人,连一个也没有 Pic 没有人能靠行为、道德、修行来被上帝称为义 保罗开始罗3:21解释福音 罗3:21 现在But now,有律法和先知的话可以证明:上帝的义在律法之外已经显明出来, “现在But now” 律法和先知们,之前讲的,如今已经显明出来! 保罗所传的福音不是他想象出来的!,而其实是律法和先知讲的 问:圣经(律法和先知)指明的义是谁的? 圣经指控我们人都是不义。唯有上帝是义的,祂能拯救我们 拒绝接受自己是不义的人,就无法接受福音 e.g.病人对医生说,我很健康我没有事。否认实况 e.g.15岁偷人的巧克力吃,还认为自己是对的 e.g.人一直就陷入这种自我欺骗的状态中,不肯面对事实 直到圣灵透过圣经把内心的黑暗照出来 问:上帝的义δικαιοσύνη表达什么? 上帝的义表达: (1)上帝道德上的完美 (诗92:15,145:17,申32:4) 诗145:17 耶和华在他一切所行的事上,都是公义的,他对他一切所造的,都存着慈爱的心。 (2)上帝是全地公义的审判者 (诗9:7-8,50:4-6;51:4,96:10,98:9) 诗9:8 他必以公义审判世界,按正直判断万民。 诗50:6 诸天必表明他的公义,因为神是施行审判的。(细拉) (3)上帝的义,救赎我们 (主是信实的,祂遵守祂的约救赎我们)(诗36:6,40:10,51:14,71:2,98:2 ,赛45:8,45:24-15, 46:13, 51:5-6,51:8,56:1,耶23:6,33:16,撒上12:7-11,尼9:8,约壹1:9) 赛46:13 我使我的公义临近了,必不远离;我的救恩必不迟延。… 诗98:2 耶和华显明了他的救恩,在列国眼前显示了他的公义。 复习: 上帝的义的三个层面 V21 现在,有律法和先知的话可以证明:上帝的义在律法之外已经显明出来,…

  • | |

    082 罗马书14章18至15章6节 忍耐与容让的秘诀

    👉 罗马书证道录音mp3                       082 罗马书14章18至15章6节  忍耐与容让的秘诀  新冠状疫情,祷告:代下20:9『倘有祸患临到我们,或刀兵灾殃,或瘟疫饥荒,我们在急难的时候,站在这殿前向你呼求,你必垂听而拯救,因为你的名在这殿里。』 V18-23 我原想快速带过,但保罗非常看重此事! 14:1- 15:7 篇幅之长与预定论的篇幅差不多! 上段落V1-17:教会为食物的事情上有不同看法  differences even on food! Pic 说只能吃蔬菜(信心软弱的)vs  什么都可吃(坚强的人 15:1) Pic 说只能吃蔬菜 (神学错误)vs  什么都可吃(神学正确) Pic 说只能吃蔬菜的弟兄“论断”吃肉的 vs 认为可以吃肉的弟兄“轻看[1]”只吃蔬菜的 背景有可能:一群敬畏爱主的人,怕市场所卖的肉祭拜偶像,所以他们选择只是吃蔬菜。 保罗劝坚强的弟兄迁就,那些反对吃肉的弟兄 V18 这样服事基督的人,必蒙上帝喜悦,又得众人嘉许。 为了主而让步的人,必蒙上帝喜悦,是在服事基督! Pic 秘诀(一):我若为了主包容,我必蒙上帝喜悦 人看见时,也会赞许他们 V19 所以,我们总要追求和睦的事,与彼此造就【建立德行】的事。 事奉的其中两个原则是(1)追求和睦的事(2)彼此造就 事奉容易变得自我为中心,造成教会不和睦 事奉容易变得悄悄荣耀自己,结果不是为了造就别人 V20 不可因食物的缘故拆毁上帝的工作[2]。一切都是洁净的,但人若因食物绊倒弟兄,对他来说,这就是恶事了【就是他的罪了】。21 无论是吃肉,是喝酒,或是什么使你的弟兄跌倒的事,一律不要作才好[3]。 使人跌倒=离开主,是拆毁上帝的工作 问:为什么吃肉会使他们绊倒? 可能心里受伤,觉得不信也罢。 OR   被影响违背自己的良心去吃[4] e.g. 有一位牧师认为不能喝酒(他原是回教徒)。幸好他没有跌倒 问:“一律不要作才好”。难道永远停止吃肉? 不要在他们面前吃,也不要与他们争论。 Pic…

  • 约翰福音:015 敬拜的真谛 约4章19至24

    👉 约翰福音 mp3录音 敬拜的真谛 (约4章19至24) Pic小孩子: Q1 敬拜。 Q2活水预表什么? (活水预表圣灵7:38-39) 活水赐生命 约4章19至24[1] 背景:避开人群正午才出来打水(V6)以前有五个丈夫,现在有的不是丈夫(V16) V19 妇人说:“先生,我看出你是先知[2]。20 我们的祖先在这山上敬拜上帝,而你们却说,敬拜的地方必须在耶路撒冷。” 耶稣揭开她的秘密,她意识到耶稣是先知(申18:15)[3]。 她问耶稣,到底谁的敬拜才对?是基利心山上[4](申11:29),还是耶路撒冷? Pic耶稣把敬拜的真谛 true meaning 给了撒马利亚妇人 主没有把敬拜的真谛给耶路撒冷的精英分子(法利赛人) 没有嫌弃她是撒马利亚人妇人,她以前有五个丈夫,加一个男人。 A.p.无论你这一生有多失败,只要你愿意寻求,主都愿意教你 e.g.我有许多以前不为人知的秘密与失败,但主没有嫌弃我。我开口求主,主赐给我 CALL只要你愿意,你们祈求,就给你们 (太7:7-11) 真理不是局限在精英分子、或高智商。你们向神祈求好东西,主把真理赐给你。 .(I)敬拜的真谛:敬拜神不受地界局限 背景:所罗门时代,神的名在耶路撒冷的圣殿。(王上8:29、9:3) V21耶稣说:“妇人,你应当信我,时候将到,那时你们敬拜父,不在这山上[5],也不在耶路撒冷。 Impl 不再需要为哪一个地方敬拜上帝而争吵了 Impl 基督徒不需要去耶路撒冷敬拜或朝圣。 Impl 今天主日,万国中神的子民都能敬拜(超越了地界) 如今基督徒的耶路撒冷是属天,不是属地上的(加4:25-26、来12:22、启3:12、21:2、21:10) .(II)敬拜的真谛:救恩是从犹太人耶稣基督出来的 V22 你们敬拜你们所不知道的,我们却敬拜我们所知道的[6],因为救恩是从犹太人出来的[7]。 注:耶稣没有讨好撒马利亚妇人。他说他们敬拜他们所不知道的。 可怜:【你们所拜的,你们不知道】You worship what you do not know 问:为什么救恩是必须从犹太人出来的? 因神与犹太人的始祖立约:与亚伯拉罕立、以撒、雅各立永约。(创22:18、26:4、35:11-12) 这是为什么耶稣基督必须降世成为犹太人 (加3:16) .(III)敬拜的真谛:用心灵与诚实,圣灵与真理来敬拜主…

  • 022罗马书5章15至19 在基督里恩典比过犯更大

    👉 罗马书证道录音mp3 022罗马书5章15至19 在基督里恩典比过犯更大 罗5章15至19 亚当在约中代表我们人类 Adam is our covenantal Federal Head e.g.国家的元首 e.g.军队的将军 e.g.家中的父亲 我们在亚当里是一体的。Corporate solidarity e.g.教会:神视教会为一体。(罗12:5、林前12:27) V14 … 亚当正是要来的那一位的预表。 pic亚当Adam is the type(预像“影子”[1] shadow ), 基督Christ is the antitype(本像“实体”substance) Pic 归算 covenantal imputation (V15-19解释耶稣一人如何救我们) V15-19 保罗解释上帝如何透过主耶稣一人拯救我们 V15 但恩赏和过犯是截然不同的【只是过犯不如恩赐】… 保罗要解释,如何不同。 保罗要解释,恩典如何胜过过犯。 V15 …如果因着那一人的过犯,众人都死了,… 保罗重复:你与我面对死是因为亚当的罪而来 (罗5:12-14) 人人都有一死,不是因为基因 根本原因:不是因身体衰坏 也不是因你与我都犯了罪! Not because of our sinful acts…

  • 064 罗马书 12章8 劝慰【劝化】的恩赐

    👉 罗马书证道录音mp3 064 罗马书 12章8  劝慰【劝化】的恩赐 Pic问小孩子:别人责骂你与妈妈责骂你有什么不同? 问小孩子:为什么妈妈处罚你,你不生怨恨? 罗12:6-8 罗12:8 劝慰【劝化】παρακαλέω parakaléō(动词)的,就应当照着恩赐劝慰παράκλησις paráklēsis (名词)… 字源:παρα  身旁/旁边 to one’s side καλεω 呼召call [1] 圣灵是那παράκλητος  paraklētos (名词)保惠师helper帮助者, comforter安慰者, Counselor辅导者, Advocate辩护者[2] 上帝是安慰者παράκλησις (林后1:3-7) 辅导者效法主,劝慰【劝化】 (1)恳求 plead (太8:5、8:31、路7:4) (2)鼓励/劝勉exhort, encouragement (罗12:8、15:30、提前5:1) (3)劝慰/安慰 comforts (太5:4、林后1:3-7、2:7) Pic亚当斯 Jay E Adam圣经辅导Nouthetic counselling[3]  经常使用这词汇νουθετέω  nou-the-te-o νουθετέω  (verb)劝诫、警戒admonishing , warning , exhort [4] 罗15:14 我的弟兄们,我个人深信你们自己也满有良善,充满丰富的知识,也能够彼此劝导【劝戒】νουθετέω[5]。…

  • 016 传福音 约4章25至42

    👉 约翰福音 mp3录音 016 传福音 约4章25至42 Pic小孩子:传福音时你会告诉人你所作的坏事,然后告诉人耶稣救你吗? 约4:25-42 Pic 上文:耶稣揭开她的秘密(以前有5个丈夫),她意识到耶稣是先知 (V19) 她问耶稣有关敬拜的事(V20),主把敬拜的真谛教了她(心灵与诚实、圣灵与真理)V24 .1. 传福音:需信耶稣就是那要来的基督 约4:25 妇人说:“我知道那称为基督的弥赛亚[1]要来;他来了,要把一切都告诉我们。”26  耶稣说:“我这现在跟你说话的就是他[2]。” 背景:撒马利亚人只接受摩西五经,基督弥赛亚观念=「复兴者」或「再來者」Taheb 申 18:15 耶和华你的神要从你们弟兄中间给你兴起一位先知,像我,你们要听从他。… 传福音之前必须信耶稣所说,祂就是基督!不然你传的只不过是宗教。 .2. 传福音:主能使用我们的失败、软弱、苦难的经历来见证祂 V27正在这时候,门徒[3]回来了,见耶稣和一个妇人说话,就很希奇[4];但是没有人问[5]:“你要什么?”或说:“你为什么跟她说话?”28 那妇人撇下了她的水罐[6],进到城里去,对众人说:29“你们来,看看一个人,他把我所作的一切都说出来,难道这人就是基督吗?”30众人就出城[7],往耶稣那里去。 惊人:撒马利亚妇人却大胆开始传福音 注:她竟然撇下她的水罐。她的行动表露出了喜乐与迫切。 V28 那妇人撇下了她的水罐,进到城里去,对众人说… 她之前躲避群众(正午打水),现在竟然跑到众人面前作见证! V29“你们来,看看一个人,他把我所作的一切都说出来,难道这人就是基督吗? 她竟然用她的人生悲剧、黑暗,来见证耶稣 V39  因着那妇人作见证的话:“他把我所作的一切都说出来了[8]”,那城里就有许多撒玛利亚人信了耶稣。 a.p.很多人不明白,以为苦难、人生悲剧不能成为我们见证主的方式 e.g.一些不明白神的作为的弟兄姐妹!误以为要成功、财富、健康、才能见证主 e.g.我见证过许多人遇到悲剧后,却全家人信主! Pic e.g.假设你现在怀孕但医生告诉你,你怀的孩子是残疾人士,没有手脚。你会如何? e.g.假设是你失去手脚,你认为你还是有用的人吗? Pic 力克·胡哲 Nick Vujicic 神使用他的人生悲剧向千万人布道! 不要自怜、埋怨神,不要认为你的悲惨的一生,无法荣耀神 赛 55:8 耶和华说:我的意念非同你们的意念;我的道路非同你们的道路。9  天怎样高过地,照样,我的道路高过你们的道路;我的意念高过你们的意念。 林后 12:9  他对我说:「我的恩典够你用的,因为我的能力是在人的软弱上显得完全。」。。 问:你是否愿意说:主我愿意,我在这里,请差遣我?…