James 4:2-4; Exodus 34:12-16; Hosea 1:2; 3:1-2; Revelation 17:3-6; 18:4-5. This sermon was preached by Pastor Marty Bonner on November 21, 2021.
We continue today talking about those who respond to the Holy Spirit by joining Christ’s Church, and yet who then fall away from the truth. Some of them walk away from the Church. However, others stay in the Church and pervert its teachings into another Gospel, and its purpose towards another Christ.
The biblical image for this is an unfaithful prostitute. Let’s get into our passages.
James 4:2-4 helps us to see that this metaphor really is being used of Christians. James refers to these believers as “adulterers,” and “adulteresses.” This is the spiritual problem of not staying faithful to Jesus and going after something, or someone, other than him. These believers wanted things in life and were fighting each other in order to get them. This adulterer metaphor is essentially the same as the prostitute, which just pictures the problem as far worse, or progressed.
This is the contrasting picture to the virginal chaste bride. That bride was faithful to her groom, but this bride has not only gone after another, but has sold herself to them. We see this picture throughout the Old Testament.
In Exodus 34:12-16, Israel is still at Mt. Sinai and Moses is going back up the mountain to have God put His commands on two new tablets of stone. The first two had been broken by Moses when he came down the mountain and found the people worshiping a golden calf. Moses had been up on the mountain for 40 days, and they didn’t think he was coming back. God tells Moses that the people have “corrupted themselves.” Here, God is warning Israel against further corruption.
Notice in verse 15 that what the other nations were doing in their religious rituals was considered spiritual prostitution as well. “They play the harlot with their gods and make sacrifices to their gods…” The nations all around Israel were not made by God to worship false gods, or pretender gods. They were made to worship the One True God alone. However, God had cast them off after the Tower of Babel incident. Israel was called and created by God in order to be different from the other nations.
This activity of worshiping other gods was a continual temptation for Israel. It did not help that sexual immorality was used in all of the ancient religious rituals. Through sex with a temple prostitute (male or female), a person could worship and connect to the power of that “god.” This is how the story of Balaam ended. He could not curse Israel, so he taught Balak how to get God to be angry with Israel. The Moabite and Midianite women came to the edge of the camp of Israel, shook their booty, and invited the Israelite men to come join them in their worship ceremonies. It was a worship ceremony that was both literally and spiritually prostitution. The sexual immorality broke the law of God, but the worshiping of these pretending gods broke His laws and His heart.
The whole book of Hosea (another way of saying Joshua or Yeshua) focuses on Israel being a wayward wife of God. It mixes the images of an adulteress and a prostitute. Israel’s sin is so bad that her spiritual adulteries had descended first into being paid for her spiritual adultery (prostitution), and then, one prophet even decries Israel for paying others, making her the John instead of the prostitute. It is best to see all of these as simply speaking to the same spiritual problem of being unfaithful to God.
In Hosea 1:2, God commands Hosea to marry a prostitute, so he marries Gomer and has three kids with her. Some scholars believe that Gomer only became a prostitute later, but the text does not tell us this. Chapter two describes the harlotry of Israel and how God would bring judgment upon them followed by mercy. Let’s look at the opening of chapter 3.
Hosea is instructed to “go again” (take back to himself) a woman who is being loved by another in adultery. We then see Hosea paying money for his wife. It is unclear what this money is for. Some believe Gomer has actually ended up on a slave block to cover her debts incurred in paying for lovers. Yet, this is not stated in the text. It is more natural to understand that Hosea is somehow buying her out of her prostitution, such as paying her an amount to quit. This would represent an unthinkable act of love from a jilted lover that would be equivalent to paying other prostitutes to leave her alone. By the way, the imagery here is not intended to project that women are the ones who commit adultery and men don’t. Remember, Hosea represents a picture of God Himself and Gomer is representative of Israel.
Do we not see the irony behind Hosea’s name being a variant of our Lord’s name, Yeshua, “Yahweh Saves?” We can pride ourselves that this is about Israel, but doesn’t it beg the question about His Church? Should it then surprise us that this metaphor would be used in regards to the Church of Jesus? Are we insulated from the problem of spiritual prostitution, to which Israel often succumbed? We clearly are not.
Back in James 4, verses 5-10 tell these adulterous Christians to repent of their wickedness and turn back to God. “Submit to God. Resist the devil and he will flee from you. Draw near to God and He will draw near to you. Cleanse your hands, you sinners; and purify your hearts, you double-minded. Lament and mourn and weep! Let your laughter be turned into mourning and your joy into gloom. Humble yourselves in the sight of the Lord, and He will lift you up.”
Repentance is the solution to spiritual adultery, turning from the false loves and towards the only true love in this universe, Jesus! Let us continually be a people clearing our lives of any sin and drawing near to God. This is a heart issue that requires vigilant maintenance.
Yet, the truth is that some adulterous hearts can’t be cured. The last words from the Apostles of Jesus come from John in Revelation. There God shows him a horrible image of a great prostitute that would be prevalent in the last days. She would even be the mother of many other prostitutes and abominations of the earth. Before we read some of it, let’s think about history for a bit.
Noah and his family step off of the boat as the saved people of God who have the true worship of God. 3 to 4 generations later, Nimrod has most of them building a tower to connect to the gods in rebellion against God. This is the Tower of Babel. The project is judged and the people are scattered. Basically, God gives them over to the spiritual entities that they were cavorting with at Babel (the Hebrew means confusion, but the original language speaks of a god gate). They were adulterous against God’s command and against Him personally as in going after other gods. It is then that God calls Abram out of this outcast community to become the new saved community that has the true worship of God.
4 centuries later, the people of Israel have corrupted themselves in Egypt. Yes, they are physical slaves, but the Bible tells us that many of them were worshiping the gods of Egypt, spiritual slavery and spiritual adultery. Yet, Moses shows up and calls them to repent and come out of Egypt. Most of them followed him. In the first century, Israel had built their own false religion in rebellion to God. In Jesus, God shows up to call out His faithful remnant. This is the historical context to the end-times harlot. Let’s look at Revelation 17:3-6 and 18:4-5.
It is important to recognize in chapter 17 that there is a historical aspect to her (Babylon), and yet she is still active. Also, she delights in drinking the blood of the saints. In other words, she loses restrain (gets drunk) on killing true believers.
It seems impossible that Christians or churches, whose Lord was put to death by people who claimed to love God, could become so corrupt. However, it is exactly what we are seeing happen in our own day, much less what has happened throughout history. Those who claim to represent God/Jesus, and love His truth, will sick the world upon believers who truly do love Jesus and want him more than the world.
This woman is pictured as riding the beast because she thinks that she is in control of it, but she is in for a rude awakening. The same chapter tells us that God has put it in the heart of the beast, and the 10 kings who back him, to burn her with fire. This leads to the warning in chapter 18:4-5.
God’s people have been continually coming out from the false religion of this world, which is just a corruption of those who earlier were brought out from an earlier corruption. Noah is brought out of the corrupt ancient world. Abram is brought out of the corrupt post-flood world. Israel was brought out of Egypt, and the Church was a remnant called out of corrupt Israel. All Gentiles are called out of the nations from which they were born.
All institutions and individuals deal with a kind of mission creep. If they will not purify themselves through repentance, then they will become corrupt. At this point, the Holy Spirit will lead true believers out of the institution, leaving it to the destruction that God will bring upon it. It is easy to look at past institutions and say that it doesn’t apply to you. Roman Catholics can look to Israel and tell themselves they are the saved group. Orthodox and Protestants can look at the Roman Catholics and tell themselves they are the saved group. Pentecostals can look at the Protestant denominations that threw them out of their churches and pat themselves on the back. However, that paves the road to destruction. This is a problem for us all.
Friend, let’s keep our hearts and our group focused on Jesus, His Word, His coming, and his truth. Let’s avoid becoming and participating in the destruction of the great prostitute that is on the horizon.