Another
Coffee Break:
Dealing With Fear, Part 7
October 3, 2014
When we began this series, we
opened up with the initiating place for the families of fear at the time of the
temptation of Eve and Adam's subsequent partaking of the fruit of the Tree of
the Knowledge of Good and Evil, and the consequences that followed. In #5, we talked about David's song in Psalm
34, and his statement, "and
He delivered me from all my fears." Let's consider a few more
of David's songs.
One
of the most significant Psalms all of us are familiar with is the 23rd
Psalm. I’ve often been a critic of
preachers who use this Psalm at funerals because it is not a Psalm for dying;
it is a Psalm for living. Fifteen
separate statements occur in this Psalm.
Each of the fifteen represent steps that describe the process through
which the Lord takes His people – those that continue to respond – from the
initial point of their relationship with Him (The
Lord is my Shepherd)
to maturity (and I will dwell in the
House of the Lord forever).
One
of the most important steps in our overcoming and growth process is being
delivered from the Fear of Evil.
David
makes the statement, “Yea, though I walk through the Valley of the Shadow of Death,
I will fear no Evil…”
No
one was more qualified than David to speak from experience with such a
statement of faith. Today’s coffee break
is not about the 23rd Psalm (maybe we will get a chance to talk more
about that in later coffee breaks) but about what David learned about the
nature of the Fear of Evil.
We’ve
already discussed in a couple previous coffee breaks the fact that the Fear of
Evil is rooted in eating from the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil. We’ve already mentioned that religion is one
of the primary symptoms of this fear.
There are a whole lot more symptoms, and David gives us some real
insight.
Take
a look at the 49th Psalm. In
verse 5, the KJV translators erred in translating the Hebrew aw.kabe as
“heel.” It actually properly translates
as “a lier in wait.” Let me therefore
retranslate the verse for you like this: “Why should I fear evil in the
midst of days when I am surrounded by those who lie in wait for me.”
It
suddenly becomes clear that one of the usual symptoms of the Fear of Evil is
focusing on whether one is surrounded by those who seek their life. I’ve got a description for this, and maybe
you see it as well.
--
Conspiracy.
--
Conspiracy theories. How about the
“black helicopter crowd?” How about
Y2K? We can really take this to
extremes, but you get the picture.
Without
breaking down every single verse of the 49th Psalm, it quickly
becomes clear that some of the symptoms of the Fear of Evil are:
--
Trusting in wealth or riches. From this
we can extrapolate
--
Worrying about not having enough.
--
Boasting of one’s abundance.
--
Prolonging one’s lifespan by whatever means and avoiding death. (Hence, the Fear of Death.)
--
Making sure that their names are put on monuments, buildings, plaques,
carvings, statues and the like so that posterity remembers their names.
--
Leaving their wealth to foolish causes.
--
Attempting to ensure that their heirs remember the things they’ve said, no
matter how foolish those sayings.
Skip
back to the 41st Psalm, and you get some more of what David saw.
Beginning
in verse 5 (Amplified Bible), “My enemies speak evil of me saying, ‘When
will he die and his name perish?’ And if
one comes to see me, he speaks falsehood and empty words, while his heart
gathers mischievous gossip [against me]; when he goes away, he tells it abroad. All who hate me whisper together about me;
against me do they devise my hurt – imagining the worst for me. An evil disease, say they, is poured out upon
him and cleaves fast to him; and now that he is bedfast, he will not rise
again. Even my own familiar friend in
whom I trusted [relied on and was confident in], who ate of my bread, has
lifted up his heel against me.”
Once
again, we see the fear of conspiracy against the one who fears evil. The list of symptoms of the Fear of Evil
continues in this short passage:
--
Excessive focus on the activities of one’s enemies.
--
Worry about Gossip and whispering behind one’s back.
--
Fearing false accusations.
--
Being afraid of being cursed – particularly with diseases.
--
Fear of Betrayal.
In
the 56th Psalm, David rather humorously, but in a strong declaration
of faith in God, arrests his own fear of evil like this:
“By
the help of God I will praise His Word; on God I lean, rely, and confidently
put my trust; I will not fear; what can man who is flesh do to me? All day long they twist my words (the Fear of Man) and trouble my affairs; all their thoughts are against me
for evil and my hurt. They gather
themselves together, they hide themselves, they watch my steps, even as they
have (expectantly) waited for my life. (Fear of Death)
They think to escape with iniquity, and shall they?”
Thus
we see that these fears come directly from the Fear of Evil:
--
The Fear of Conspiracy.
--
The Fear of Man.
--
The Fear of Death.
Let
me break away from the Psalms, now, and take a different approach.
In a
Coffee Break series published some eight years ago, I noted that in the midst
of some studies on the makeup, nature and character of the seven condemned
nations that occupied ancient Canaan, I discovered a direct parallel between
each of the characteristics of these nations, God’s command to Israel to wipe
them out, and John’s seven letters to the seven Ekklesias in Revelation 2 &
3. I won't revisit that discussion today
other than very briefly in the following observations.
The
seven nations that once occupied Canaan were: the Hittites, the Hivites, the
Amorites, the Jebusites, the Perizzites, the Girgashites and the
Canaanites. Each of them had certain
national characteristics, methodologies, military tactics and lifestyles that
differed from one another. Though they
shared a pretty common heathen worship of the same gods, each of these nations
had distinctive characteristics that differentiated themselves from each other.
The
Hittites were a fierce, militaristic, barbaric people who doted on using the
Fear of Death over their people and over the enemies they subdued. The Amorites feared evil of every kind. They preferred the mountains and hills where
their elevated dwelling allowed them to see any encroachment or approaching
enemy. They used the Fear of Evil as a
weapon against their enemies, and were a proud, arrogant, extremely religious
people. The Perizzites, on the other
hand, were a controlling people who parlayed a form of “democracy” as a means
of ruling their populace. The Fear of
Man was their hallmark. Each of the seven nations suffered from the three
families of fear, but the three just named had these fears as their central
identifying characteristic.
I’ve
said all that to say this.
The
Amorites expanded their worship of Baal, Ashteroth and a pantheon of minor
false deities into an art. They played
it to the hilt. Many of their kings were
also high priests of Baal. One such
Amorite king was Ethbaal, whose name literally meant, “living with and under
the favor of Baal.” Ethbaal had a
daughter whom he gave in marriage to the king of Israel in order to secure a
covenant of peace between their two nations.
The daughter’s name was Jezebel, and she was given to Ahab, the king of
Israel. (We discussed the Spirit of
Jezebel in an in-depth series about a year ago.)
Jezebel
– like all of the Amorites – not only suffered from the Fear of Evil, she used
it like a weapon against her husband, and against all who rose up against
her. She was a usurper of authority –
and particularly, the authority of God.
Jezebel, more than any other person in Scripture, epitomizes the
extremes to which the Fear of Evil takes people. She parlayed the Fear of Evil into deception
as an art.
One
of the first events we see her making use of that fear is with Naboth, the
Jezreelite.
The
story goes like this (see 1 Kings 21):
Ahab, the king of Israel and Jezebel’s husband, sees a very fruitful
vineyard that catches his eye and decides he wants to buy it for himself. He approaches Naboth to sell it, and Naboth
declines to sell because it was passed on to him as an inheritance from his
father. Ahab starts pouting over
Naboth’s refusal to him. I mean, after
all, Ahab was the KING! No one should
refuse his request!
Jezebel
sees her husband's pout, asks him what the problem is, and once she finds out
the situation says to Ahab, “No problem, Hon!
I’ve got this one taken care of.
Stand by. I’ll give you this
vineyard as my gift to you.”
Whereupon
Jezebel sets about to conspire against Naboth.
Remember what we talked about earlier – where conspiracy is a hallmark
of the Fear of Evil? Anyhow, Jezebel
finds a couple of citizens of good standing in the community, leaders with
reputations to uphold, and persuades them to make accusation against
Naboth. Meanwhile, she proclaims a fast
in the city where Naboth lives.
Then
she calls for a great public gathering where the city is going to honor Naboth
as “Man of the Year,” or some such tommyrot.
Naboth, of course, gets suckered into attending this public
gathering. After all, he is going to be
honored before his peers! Right?
Nope. The two men of standing in the community, who
themselves had been deceived by the letters they had received from Jezebel,
rose up at this public celebration and accused Naboth of treason. Well!
Suddenly the Man of the Year ceremony turns into a stoning by the
gathered crowd, and just like that, Naboth is dead!
See
what the Fear of Evil does to a person?
They get sucked into committing murder under the guise of “doing
good.” Well? Wasn’t it a good thing to put a traitor to
the king to death?
Having
been accused and put to death for treason, Naboth’s vineyard is now available
for legal seizure by the government.
Jezebel, of course, takes the property and presents it as her gift to
her husband, Ahab, who instantly becomes her slave for life.
See
what the Fear of Evil does to a person?
The picture of Jezebel as a manifestation of the Fear of Evil takes on
many other dimensions, however. In II
Kings 9, we have the picture of the king of Judah, Jehu, executing the judgment
of God upon Jezebel. When the king of
Israel, Joram, who is one of Ahab and Jezebel’s sons, sees Jehu coming, he says
to Jehu, “Is it peace, Jehu?” Jehu answers him directly and says, “What peace so long as the
whoredoms of thy mother, Jezebel, and her witchcrafts are so many?”
That
simple and direct answer of Jehu’s gives us a glimpse of a woman who took
sexual perversion to such extremes as can hardly be imagined. Linked to her sexual perversion, and the
idolatry she led Israel into, was the practice of witchcraft, manipulation, the
casting of curses, and the putting to death of many hundreds of the prophets of
God who had populated Israel as God’s representatives.
Today
isn’t the time to get into the nature of witchcraft, nor the many forms of it
seen in Scripture, but suffice it to say that Jezebel introduced a horrific
dimension of this evil as an extension of the Fear of Evil into the life and
culture of the nation of Israel – a dimension that ultimately caused Israel’s
disintegration as a nation and its carrying away into captivity. The sexual perversion she brought included
homosexual activity, lesbian activity, bestiality, sado-masochism, and
virtually every licentious and lustful sexual act one can imagine as the fruit
of fear, incorporated into the worship of Baal.
In
Revelation 2, we see the Fear of Evil manifested as the spirit of Jezebel when
John writes to the Ekklesia in Thyatira saying, “Notwithstanding, I have a
few things against thee because thou sufferest that woman Jezebel, which
calleth herself a prophetess, to teach and seduce my servants to commit
fornication and to eat things sacrificed unto idols…”
This
is where this spirit affects the body of Christ terribly in this age. The Fear of Evil works hand in hand with and
through the spirit of Jezebel, usurping the Word and the authority of the Lord
Jesus Christ in churches and fellowships in the form of preachers and teachers
who lead people astray with doctrines of demons and teachings that entice them
into a “comfortable” Gospel.
This
spirit parades in evangelical churches, traditional churches, Pentecostal
churches, home fellowships and informal gatherings – and let us not forget the
cult groups and churches with the oddball doctrines – foisting itself as the
authority of the Lord, often uttering prophecies that make folks’ ears tingle, and
their flesh feel good – all the while leading them down the primrose path to
death and destruction, and cheating them out of a genuine love-relationship
with the Lord Jesus Christ.
John’s
prophecy to Thyatira was dead on! He
said that Jezebel teaches and seduces “my servants” to commit fornication. While one could easily imagine that as
preachers going out and having affairs with women other than their wives,
that’s probably the last possible usage of this phrase. John wasn’t talking about physical acts; he
was talking about spiritual fornication:
spiritual adultery.
Put
very simply, spiritual fornication or adultery is the effort to force folks to
live under legalism, laws and commandments – in short, the Law – while
preaching Grace, Mercy and Love. One is
supposedly “married” to the Lord, but living under legalistic conditions and
traditions of man. In truth, one either
lives in a love-relationship with the Lord, or they live under the Law. To try to do both causes one to commit
adultery or fornication against the Lord.
This
is the single greatest attribute or symptom of the Fear of Evil and it
permeates the body of Christ today. No
fear is greater than this one, and no deliverance from any evil spirit is more
dramatic in the change it effects in the lives of people than to be set free
from the Fear of Evil. Deliverance from
the Fear of Evil is available to every single person, and it simply begins by
saying, “Father, in the name of Jesus Christ, I submit myself to you totally
for your guidance, your direction, and your Truth. Deliver me from every symptom, and every evil
and wicked spirit that comes from this family of the Fear of Evil.”
That’s
the beginning place. Experiencing the
freedom that follows, and walking it out, is an adventure you’ll never forget!
Again, if you are in
need of healing -- especially if you have some terminal disease or prognosis of
a very short time to live from the doctors -- please join our prayer conference
calls on either Monday or Wednesday of each week at 7:00 PM Eastern. Once
again, the number to call is (805) 399-1000. Then enter the access code: 124763#. To get into the queue for prayer, when Randy
opens the call up for everyone, hit *6-1 on your keypad. Let us minister to
your need for healing!
Blessings on you!
Regner
Regner A. Capener
CAPENER MINISTRIES
CAPENER MINISTRIES
RIVER WORSHIP CENTER
Sunnyside, Washington 98944
Sunnyside, Washington 98944
Email Contact: Admin@RiverWorshipCenter.org
Our book, A
Tale of Two Brides, published by Destiny Image, is now available on
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