Intending to write a letter to the Church on 				the subject of salvation, Jude was prompted instead to write 				about the false teachers that were already infecting the church 				with their lies.  He 				was just getting nicely wound up as we finished our first 				installment.  Let's 				rejoin him now as he releases the full force of his torrent 				against them. And as we saw last time, he wasn't just writing 				about his times, he was also writing about ours. 
				These men are blemishes at your love 				feasts, eating with you without the slightest qualm—shepherds 				who feed only themselves. They are clouds without rain, blown 				along by the wind; autumn trees, without fruit and 				uprooted—twice dead. 				 They are wild waves of 				the sea, foaming up their shame; wandering stars, for whom 				blackest darkness has been reserved forever. (Jude:12-13)
				The phrase love feast refers to the early 				church's practice of eating together and sharing communion at 				their weekly gathering. 				It was an adaptation of the Passover Jesus celebrated 				with His disciples.  				Jude said the false teachers didn't belong there because unlike 				shepherds who understood their responsibility to feed their 				flock, these people are only interested in feeding themselves.				
				Clouds with out rain fail to fulfill their 				promise of bringing relief from the drought. 				They get our hopes up but don't bring us comfort. Trees 				that don't bear fruit are uprooted. Jude called them twice dead 				because by bearing no fruit they produce no offspring and by 				being uprooted their own life is ended. 				The wild waves of the sea come from odd directions. 				They can knock a boat off course or even cause it to 				capsize.  Wandering 				stars are unreliable and cannot be used for navigation. Anyone 				following them is in danger of becoming lost.
				These four analogies show that false teachers 				are not just wrong, they're dangerous. 				And they're most dangerous to those who are least able to 				defend themselves. Like wolves, they feed off the weak and the 				stragglers. 
				Jude said the darkest blackness has been 				reserved for them forever, indicating they're not saved. John 				confirmed this when he wrote the following 				about them;
				They went out from us but they did not 				really belong to us. For if they had belonged to us, they would 				have remained with us; but their going showed that none of them 				belonged to us. (1 John 2:19)
				False teachers who deny the deity of Jesus or 				the sufficiency of His sacrifice, who blaspheme the creation and 				lend support to the murder of the preborn, who teach what they 				know to be false because it profits them, and who rebel against 				the authority of Scripture are not just mistaken. 				Jude and Paul say they know in their hearts they're 				wrong, and John said by their words and deeds they're proving 				that they never belonged to us. 				
				Paul said, “such men are false apostles, 				deceitful workmen, masquerading as apostles of Christ.				 And 				no wonder, for Satan himself masquerades as an angel of light.				 It 				is not surprising, then, if his servants masquerade as servants 				of righteousness. Their end will be what their actions deserve.”				(2 Cor. 11:13-15)
				When you're masquerading you're pretending to 				be someone you know you're not. 				Just like Satan knows he's not an angel of light, his 				servants know they're not servants of righteousness. These men 				are not merely deluded, they are consciously deceptive. 
				Enoch, the 				seventh from Adam, prophesied about these men: “See, the Lord is 				coming with thousands upon thousands of his holy ones 				to judge everyone, and to convict all the ungodly of all the 				ungodly acts they have done in the ungodly way, and of all the 				harsh words ungodly sinners have spoken against him.”				 These 				men are grumblers and faultfinders; they follow their own evil 				desires; they boast about themselves and flatter others for 				their own advantage. (Jude: 14-16)
				Some commentators use this passage to support 				their view that the book of Enoch belongs in the Bible. 				But Jude was writing under the inspiration of the Holy 				Spirit and would have known that the book of Enoch a) was 				not written by Enoch, and b) has a number of historical 				and theological errors. 				Jude was very specific in identifying Enoch as belonging 				to the seventh generation after Adam. 				The Book of Enoch wasn't written until several thousand 				years later. 
				Jude:14 is similar to 1 Enoch 1:9. 				But even if Jude was quoting it, that wouldn't indicate a 				blanket endorsement of the book. 				Jude could have had confirmation from the Holy Spirit 				that the original Enoch actually said what Jude had written. 				That would explain why Jude attributed the statement to 				Enoch rather than the book by that name. The important thing to 				remember here is that the Lord will come to judge the false 				teachers for the way they've twisted and distorted the truth of 				His word.
				But you don't have to depend on Jude's quote 				from Enoch to verify the judgments that await the godless false 				teachers. Peter said the same thing. 
				 But 				there were also false prophets among the people, just as there 				will be false teachers among you. They will secretly introduce 				destructive heresies, even denying the sovereign Lord who bought 				them—bringing swift destruction on themselves. Many will follow 				their shameful ways and will bring the way of truth into 				disrepute. 
				In their greed these teachers will exploit 				you with stories they have made up. Their condemnation has long 				been hanging over them, and their destruction has not been 				sleeping. (2 Peter 2:1-3)
				In Old Testament times there were false 				prophets pretending to speak for the Lord. 				Now we have false teachers who twist His word into 				something it was never meant to be. 				What they teach denies the fact that the Lord died for 				all our sins and just by receiving His free gift we can live in 				eternity with Him.  				Instead they use their influence to introduce destructive 				heresies that lead their followers astray. 				Peter added his voice to Jude and John saying,
				These men are springs without water and 				mists driven by a storm. Blackest darkness is reserved for them.				(2 peter 2:17)
				And Jesus will seal the fate of these 				pretenders saying, “I never knew you. Away from me you evil 				doers.” (Matt. 7:23)
				 A Call to Persevere
								 But, dear friends, 				remember what the apostles of our Lord Jesus Christ foretold.				 They 				said to you, “In the last times there will be scoffers who will 				follow their own ungodly desires.” 				 These are the men who 				divide you, who follow mere natural instincts and do not have 				the Spirit. (Jude:17-19)
				Here Jude referred us once again to Peter who 				warned that these scoffers would taunt us. “Where is this 				‘coming’ he promised? Ever since our fathers died, everything 				goes on as it has since the beginning of creation.” 				( 2 Peter 3:4) 				These advocates of evolution contend that things always 				have been and always will be. They laugh when we talk about the 				2nd Coming, as if we're being naive to think such 				thoughts.
				But they deliberately forget that long ago 				by God’s word the heavens existed and the earth was formed out 				of water and by water. By these waters also the world of that 				time was deluged and destroyed. (2 Peter 3:6) 
				It's not that they never heard how things 				began. They've made a conscious decision to ignore what God said 				about creating the Heavens and the Earth, and how he destroyed 				it when men became evil. Against all the evidence they've 				decided to believe that God doesn't get involved in the workings 				of men and therefore won't be coming back, ever.   				
				But you, 				dear friends, build yourselves up in your most holy faith and 				pray in the Holy Spirit. 				 Keep yourselves in God’s 				love as you wait for the mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ to bring 				you to eternal life. (Jude:20-21)
				Building faith is like building our muscles. 				It takes practice. Jude's brother James said it this way. 				
				Consider it pure joy, my brothers, 				whenever you face trials of many kinds, 				because you know that the testing of your faith develops 				perseverance. (James 1:2-3)
				 
				An athlete looks for chances to test 				himself and faces them joyfully because it's an opportunity to 				make himself bigger, faster, stronger. We should be the same, 				thinking of the trials we face as opportunities to build our 				faith.  We know in 				advance that the outcome will be in our favor, so we can 				consider these tests pure joy. They bring us closer to the Lord 				and help us look to that day He's promised will come. 
				 
				Be merciful to those who doubt; 				snatch others from the fire and save them; to others show mercy, 				mixed with fear—hating even the clothing stained by corrupted 				flesh. (Jude:22-23)
				 
				Like the seasoned veteran encourages the 				rookie, we can reach out to those who doubt while we wait. 				I believe Jude had Zechariah 3:1-10 in mind here. 				It was a vision, one of eight Zechariah had in the same 				night. The Angel of the Lord was there, along with Joshua the 				High Priest and Satan. When Satan began to accuse the High 				Priest, God said, “The Lord rebuke you Satan. 				The Lord who has chosen Jerusalem rebuke you. Is not this 				man a burning stick snatched from the fire?
				 
				Joshua was dressed in filthy (literally 				excrement bespattered) clothing. 				The Angel of the Lord said, 				“Take off his filthy clothes”, and told Joshua He 				had taken away his sin. Then He had Joshua clothed in rich 				garments and said he was symbolic of things to come. 				He was referring to the day when the Lord would come to 				take away the filthy garments of our own righteousness and 				clothe us in rich garments of His 				righteousness. 
				 
				“I will remove the sin of the people in 				a single day,” the Angel said, thereby identifying Himself 				as Jesus.  It's an 				incredible model I call the Gospel in Zechariah, and I think 				Jude was calling it to our attention for a reason. We need to 				remember what we were before and who we are now.
				 
				As we build our faith and wait for the 				Lord, we'll become so heavenly minded that our earthly clothes 				will remind us of the High Priest's filthy robes and we'll long 				to be clothed with our heavenly garments.
				Doxology
				To him who 				is able to keep you from falling and to present you before his 				glorious presence without fault and with great joy — 				to the only God our Savior be glory, majesty, power and 				authority, through Jesus Christ our Lord, before all ages, now 				and forevermore! Amen. (Jude:24-25)
				Jude's letter ends the way it began, with an 				assurance that Jesus will obey His father's will and not lose 				even one of us (John 6:38-40), but is able to keep us 				from falling and to present us to Himself without fault, as 				though we'd never sinned at all.  				
				Summary
				At the beginning I said the Epistle of Jude 				could be called the Acts of the Apostates. 				This is because of the author's focus on the false 				teachers.  And 				remember they all claim to be part of the Church, even though 				their teachings are far from the Gospel.  				
				Some of them say Jesus is not the way at all. 				They deny His deity, doubt the fact that He died for our sins 				and rose again, and dismiss His claim that you have to be born 				again.  You have to find 				the way yourself, by living a good life, or learning secret 				knowledge, or joining their group. 
				Others say He's not the only way. 				There are many ways to God and as long as you're sincere 				in what you believe you'll find yours. 
				Still others say He's not all the way. 				He made it possible for you to begin your journey to God, 				but you have to complete it by your own efforts, living a 				righteous life according to their standards.
				These are all branches of the broad road with 				its wide gate. They lead to destruction because in the final 				analysis they make you the author of your salvation. These are 				the acts of the apostates. 
				The Bible says Jesus is the the way, the only 				way and He's all the way. Only by trusting exclusively in His 				completed work on the cross can we hope to see the Kingdom. 				Faith in His substitutionary death is the only thing we can do 				that isn't counted as work, and it alone is credited to us as 				righteousness (Romans 4:5) This is the narrow road with 				the small gate, because it makes Jesus the sole author of our 				salvation. 
				It's exciting to be part of a big crowd all 				praising God and caught up in the stimulation of a great musical 				production.  There's 				a feeling of self satisfaction that comes from being seen by 				your peers as a shining example of what it means to live a 				victorious life.  And 				there's an unparalleled sense of fulfillment to be found in 				expressing the love of the Lord to the less fortunate through 				missionary or social justice programs.
				But if you're not also a born again believer, 				none of that will get you even one step closer to the Kingdom. 				You'll just be one more victim of the acts of the 				apostates. It's what you believe in your heart that saves you, 				not how you behave in your life. 				02-05-11