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The Wheat and the Tares

As we go through the Bible we can see clearly the type of wickedness we are speaking about, the wickedness that is personal ambition leading to envy. We will notice that such people, the destroyers of the work of God, did not hear from the Lord, did not confess their own sin, were without understanding of God and His ways, and often were proud and ambitious. Yet for some unexplained reason they strove for pre-eminence in the Kingdom of God.

The Lord’s people often are naive, simple of heart and mind. We shall notice in the following accounts that they were unable to distinguish between who was of God and who was acting from his own spirit. Their inability to separate the precious from the vile continues to this day.

Adam and Eve. Let us think for a moment about our original statement concerning the difference between righteousness and wickedness. There is a righteousness of loving and seeking God and walking in His will. There is a wickedness of loving and seeking our own gain and walking according to our own desires.

Usually we think of wickedness as being murder, robbery, drunkenness, profanity. These are wicked actions and often reflect the influence of Satan and his demons. The wickedness which we are emphasizing in this booklet, the destroyer of the work of God, is none of these, although it may lead to murder, robbery, drunkenness, and profanity. Rather it is the wickedness of loving and seeking our own gain and walking according to our own desires. We stated that this type of wicked person is characterized by not hearing from the Lord, by being unwilling to confess his sins, by a lack of understanding of God and His ways, and by striving for pre-eminence.

We can see the beginning of wickedness in Adam and Eve. Satan tempted them to love and seek their own gain, to walk according to their own desires. Instead of walking with God in the garden they attempted to gain wisdom by eating of a forbidden tree. Notice that they were unwilling to confess their sin. Adam blamed the woman. The woman blamed the serpent. Perhaps the serpent in his heart blamed God. The wicked often do!


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