Does the Devil Rule Hell?

In Greek Mythology Hades is the god of the dead and he rules over the underworld. In Roman Mythology his name is Pluto. And somewhere along the way people have taken these myths and applied them to the Biblical Devil. 

images.png

Now when people think of Satan they picture a pitchfork wielding, horned, red, god-like being sitting on a throne in the pit of Hell, controlling the flames which surround him. They imagine him sneering maniacally as he finds new ways to entertain himself by torturing the poor souls whom he has claimed as his own.

But is this actually how the Bible describes Satan? Does the Devil really rule Hell?

Well the Bible does actually answer this specific question in the book of Revelation:

Revelation 20:10: And the devil, who deceived them, was thrown into the lake of burning sulfur, where the beast and the false prophet had been thrown. They will be tormented day and night for ever and ever. (ESV)

The Devil doesn’t get to rule over Hell in the afterlife. Instead, it is a place of torment and punishment for him as well.

The Hades of Greek Mythology may be of comparable power to Zeus, along with a myriad of other gods. But in the Bible God is the only being who is all-powerful, all-knowing, and all-present. The Devil is simply a created being whose power does not even come close to God’s power. At some point Satan used his own God-given free-will to act in defiance of God and--in the end--he will be punished for it. In fact, the Bible even says that the lake of fire was prepared specifically for that purpose:

Mathew 25:41 Then he (God) will say to those on his left, ‘Depart from me, you cursed, into the eternal fire prepared for the devil and his angels.’ (ESV)

The widespread idea that the Devil rules over Hell is just one example of how some cultural perceptions about what the Bible teaches could be terribly misguided. It is important to read through the Bible, yourself. This way you can know for certain what it does or doesn’t say and no one will be able to lead you astray. 

2 Timothy 2:15: Study to shew thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth. (KJV)

2 Timothy 3:16-17: All Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, that the man of God may be competent, equipped for every good work. (ESV)


This series of blog posts titled, “Holding on to Reason”, is named after Amanda’s favorite C.S. Lewis quote: “Faith is the art of holding on to things your reason has once accepted, in spite of your changing moods.”

Click here for more things written by Amanda Hovseth.

What's New at Cross Reference Library - How to raise kids, and books for youth

Library pics 06.17.21 2.jpg

Every one of us has tremendous power to either build others up or tear them down through the words we speak every day, and nowhere is this more evident than in our families. Are you being purposeful in how you use the power of your words to speak encouragement, strength, and love - breathing life into the heart of your children? Or are careless words having a negative impact on both your kids and your family legacy? Matt and Lisa Jacobson want you to discover the powerful ways you can build your children up in love with the words that you choose to say every day--words that every child needs to hear. 100 Words of Affirmation Your Son Needs To Hear and 100 Words of Affirmation Your Daughter Needs To Hear offer you one hundred phrases to say to your son or daughter that deeply encourage, affirm, and inspire. Start speaking these words into their lives and watch your children - and your relationship with them - transform before your eyes.

The Prince and Friends by Susan Schaneman: The prince wasn’t allowed outside the castle much. After his mother had passed away the prince and his father grew very close in his seven years. His father knew it was time for the prince to have some adventures and meet some friends. New friends. Well, new friends for the young prince anyway. Friends who were characters of sort, but loyal and loving. Friends who had been waiting for him! The prince would become friends first with his most beloved groundhog-like buddy George. Then he meets Cindy, the neighbor girl and her beautiful horse, Lucy. There is Master Lo Lo, master fairy of the forest. Fred the king frog, a delightful large jolly frog down by the river and Princess Pamalea who was so warm and glowing. She could make the most amazing glass fireballs! They laughed and loved along the way. They shared adventures nearly every day. From fishing to horseback riding to having mud fights and more, the prince learned a lot about his friends and the special gifts they each possess. Even in a very sad time, the prince learned how friends are able to come together and know that they would have each other’s backs, until the very end.

Want children who are patient, kind, humble, thankful, and respectful? Who have a good work ethic, strong character, and a healthy self-image? Who succeed in all areas of life - personally, professionally, and relationally - to the best of their ability? You can’t force your kids to be grateful for everything you do, but you can raise successful, responsible kids who grow into adults you can be proud of. With his signature wit and wisdom, international parenting expert Dr. Kevin Leman reveals eight no-nonsense strategies that build on the foundations of character, good behavior, respect, discipline, and a winning attitude. It is possible to raise a successful child in a “whatever” generation - 8 Secrets to Raising Successful Kids makes it simple.

Time is on the move. It is galloping by at an amazing speed. What is really important in life as the seconds tick by? Are the shocking events happening around the globe getting your full and complete attention? Life is a vapor that vanishes right before your eyes. What if you are looking at life from the wrong angle? What if you are actually looking at life from the wrong side? If you are making such a fatal error, wouldn’t you want to know that before you take your last breath? The Last Ride by Mark Cahill is reminding you that history is rushing towards its final conclusion. The finish line is in sight. Your days are winding down. Do you need a strong wake up call? Are you ready to meet the King? Are you getting others ready for Judgement Day? The hour is late, and it is just about time for the last ride!

Cross Reference Library is located at 209 East 15th Street in Scottsbluff, NE,
and is open Monday through Friday from 9:00am-5:00pm.

New Music Monday - Jonathan Traylor, Elevation Worship, new band The Rock Music, and more

new to our rotation

“You get the glory from this
You get the glory from this
No matter what I have to go through in this world
As long as You get the glory from it”

“Your love is all around, all around, all around
Your love is all around, all around, around us now”

the top 25 contemporary christian countdown - saturdays at 6:00pm

“This is the sound of dry bones rattling
This is the praise make a dead man walk again
Open the grave, I'm coming out
I'm gonna live, gonna live again
This is the sound of dry bones rattling”

the 180remix countdown - saturdays at 9:00pm

“You said why would you lose your soul?
Give it all just to gain the world?
I’m lookin for a love that won’t run out
No it won’t run out
Love that won’t run out
No it won’t run out”

What's New at Cross Reference Library - Raising sons and new novels from Ashley Clark

Library pics 06.17.21 1.jpg

In The Dress Shop on King Street by Ashley Clark, Harper Dupree has pinned all her hopes on a future in fashion design. But when it comes crashing down around her, she returns home to Fairhope, Alabama, and to Millie, the woman who first taught her how to sew. As Harper rethinks her own future, long-hidden secrets about Millie’s past are brought to light. In 1946, Millie Middleton - the daughter of an Italian man and a Black woman - boarded a train and left Charleston to keep half of her heritage hidden. She carried with her two heirloom buttons and the dream of owning a dress store. She never expected to meet a charming train jumper who changed her life forever… and led her yet again to a heartbreaking choice about which heritage would define her future. Now, together, Harper and Millie return to Charleston to find the man who may hold the answers they seek… and a chance at the dress shop they’ve both dreamed of. But it’s not until all appears lost that they see the unexpected ways to mend what’s frayed between the seams.

In Paint and Nectar by Ashley Clark, a spark is forming between Eliza, a talented watercolorist, and William, a charming young man with a secret that could ruin her career. Their families forbid their romance because of a long-standing feud over missing heirloom silver. Still, Eliza and William’s passion grows despite the barriers, causing William to deeply regret the secret he’s keeping… but setting things right will come at a cost. In present day Charleston, a mysterious benefactor gifts Lucy Legare an old house, along with all the secrets it holds - including enigmatic letters about an antique silver heirloom. Declan Pinckney, whom Lucy’s been avoiding since their disastrous first date, is set on buying her house for his family’s development company. As Lucy uncovers secrets about the house, its garden, and the silver, she becomes more determined than ever to preserve the historic Charleston property, not only for history’s sake but also for her own.

Dads today are often overwhelmed with both the responsibility and the complexity of raising sons in this challenging culture. At the same time, self-initiation is killing our young men. Without strong mentors, boys are walking alone into a wilderness of conflicting messages about who they should be as men. It’s no wonder that our sons are confused about what the world expects from them and what they should expect of themselves. The Intentional Father is a helpful antidote. This concise book is filled with practical steps to help men raise sons of consequence - young men who know what they believe, know who they are, and will stand up against the negative cultural trends of our day. Jon Tyson lays out a clear path for fathers and sons that includes specific activities, rites of passage, and significant “marking moments” that can be customized to fit any family. It’s not enough to hope our sons will become good men. We need them to be good at being men. This book shows fathers, grandfathers, and other male mentors how to lead the way.

Cross Reference Library is located at 209 East 15th Street in Scottsbluff, NE,
and is open Monday through Friday from 9:00am-5:00pm.

Examining "Truth Be Told" by Matthew West - Ask The Pastor

You can listen to Ask The Pastor every weekday at 9:00am MST on 97.1FM Hope Radio KCMI! You can also listen and subscribe to Ask The Pastor in your favorite podcast feed. Listen on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Stitcher, Amazon Music and most other podcast services.

This edition of Ask the Pastor features Pastors Andy Griess and Bruce Peterson.

Andy Griess

We had another question come in and I think it's one that'll be interesting to you. You guys listen to KCMI on the regular, and while you're listening you may run across this Matthew West song called Truth Be Told. And a listener sent us a question about some of the things they were wrestling with that were brought up in this song. And so we're just going to read through some of the thoughts here in this song and interact with them as pastors, and just give you our perspective. So the song begins with line number one: "You're supposed to have it all together. And when they ask how you're doing just smile and tell him never better." And so this song is dealing with some of the things you sometimes see in the church that might be off putting to somebody who has some hurts, has some needs, has some baggage, and they're coming into the church expecting something from God that can bring peace, joy and love into their life. But when they come through the door, they see this vision of something that they're not sure if this is the place for them.

Bruce Peterson

Or they don't even come in the door because it's what they expect.

Andy Griess

Yeah. Our culture definitely gives us the conception that this is what you're going to find. If you come to a church, you're going to find people like this, who they act like they've got it all together, they smile, and you ask them how they're doing and they just say "Oh, never better. Life is good."

Bruce Peterson

And in my experience, I think part of that's true. So let's just deal with this, right? A lot of churches are judgmental. Certainly today, a lot of churches that get quoted or are in the news are there because the news loves to paint us as a group of judgmental people. Right? So they find the bad case scenarios and make us seem more judgmental. But to be fair, I grew up in judgmental churches. I certainly know judgmental people that go to church. I would also like to say a lot of people who don't go to church are judgmental as well.

Andy Griess

Yeah. (chuckles)

Bruce Peterson

Humans are judgmental. So the question is, is it okay if we take that judgement and put it on God and say that God therefore is judgmental because people are? So lie number one: Are you supposed to have it all together? Do you have it all together?

Andy Griess

No. No, but I look nice on Sunday morning. And that's what we do - we put on what we call our Sunday best. And if it's not dressing up, on the way to church you might have fights going on in the car, you might have arguments. Everything might be falling apart, but you step out of that car and you walk into church, you're gonna have it together.

Bruce Peterson

If your kids act out, it's like "You're gonna get it." (laughs)

Andy Griess

Of course we're going to do that. But the problem is, if you carry that over and act like spiritually and relationally I've got to be that way too. I think one of the things that the church doesn't do a good job of, because we put on those airs, is we don't open up to one another and we don't share our hurts and our struggles and our failures, and the efforts that we're making to overcome those failures. Those are things we don't talk about until we're on the other end of them and we got it all figured out.

Bruce Peterson

That's right. And I think this is a real shame. I think it's true that this is the expectation, we act like we have it all together. I think it is terribly detrimental. The message we should be talking about with every fiber of our being is that we are a group of people sojourning together on our way to heaven. We are learning from each other, we're mentoring each other, we are growing... which implies that we have growth to do. I don't have it all together, but I have it way more together than I did 30 years ago, right? I mean, there's progress. And yet I can say without any hesitation that I have farther to go. If this is a marathon, I'm about two miles in.

Andy Griess

And I think part of the struggle for a pastor and for a church member is remembering if you're 30 years into this journey, you didn't learn all those lessons and make that growth overnight - it's been 30 years of that. And more importantly, remembering that the starting point of that was God calling to you in your sin and saying "You are broken. You are my enemy because of your resistance and your rebellion. Are you ready to leave all of that behind and accept the forgiveness that I have for you? Let's start here with faith in Jesus." And if, 30 years out, you look at where you are today and you're only concerned about your own progress, then you're not part of a church because there's people coming in that are brand new every time, and they need that very first lesson.

Bruce Peterson

And I think when we have that attitude, we look at the church and we don't see how we fit in when the fact is, if you have 15 years in you have advice you can give. You have support you can give. You've made progress. How did you make it? Sit next to someone who's clearly entering the church and say, "Listen, I'm not here to judge you. I'm here to tell you if you hang in there for 15 years, here's what it took me. You can do this!" We can all be encouragers instead of judgers. We can all own our sojourning progress and really contribute significantly to other people's lives.

Andy Griess

Yeah, and I think we should have the attitude that "If it took me 15 years to learn this, I want to make sure it doesn't take that guy 15 years because I'm going to take those things that I learned the hard way and give him a hand up."

Bruce Peterson

Yeah. And the other side of that coin is, I'm not going to expect him to make in four months the progress that took me 15 years. Or, I'm not there yet, I'm faking, and he better really turned around and yet I have all this secret stuff going on. So we agree that's a lie - you shouldn't have it all together, but we do also agree that the church is a place where you can make progress.

unsplash-image-ShCVvQbQBDk.jpg

Andy Griess

Yeah, absolutely. Line number two says that "everybody's life is perfect except for yours". I think that's what comes out of church, people pretending they got it all together. It leaves people coming in with this idea that everybody's got it figured out. And so it says, "You keep your messes and your wounds and your secrets safe behind closed doors."

Bruce Peterson

That's right. So the idea is if I come to church believing that everyone's telling me the truth and I'm going to church to find help because I have problems, but I get there and they're all saying they're fine, then somehow God has forgotten about me. They have power I don't have, they have blessings I don't have, somehow there's a gap between me and God because clearly if you're doing fine, you're healthy, you're wealthy, you are blessed, your children obey you every time, you have perfect self discipline...

Andy Griess

This must be a place for people who have it all together.

Bruce Peterson

...or God has lost me somehow. So that's terribly detrimental. Again, James says to confess your sin to one another because love covers a multitude of sins. Love like church should be a place where we acknowledge that we're sojourners. Paul says, "Listen, I know you want to give up. I know your tears. And I'm telling you, hang in there, suffer with me. Do the long haul." Paul himself says "I haven't arrived yet, but I have to get up every day and forget yesterday and press on to what God has called me for." Like, this is hard. Living by faith is hard. The world does a great job trying to suck us in. And if it's a war, there must be a battle. Like God describes it, our battle is not against flesh and blood. But again, if there's a real battle and none of us are struggling, then it's not even a battle.

Andy Griess

And this is one of the key reasons why the church is so important - because if every one of us has to start off that huge battle with just whatever we've got, it's overwhelming.

Bruce Peterson

It's overwhelming.

Andy Griess

When I do pre-marriage counseling, when I'm getting a couple ready for marriage, I'm gonna tell them marriage is the hardest thing that you've ever done, but you're not the first person that's had to go through all of that. This church is filled with people who've been married 20 years, 35 years, 60 years. And if you're a part of this body and you're getting to know these people and your lives are connected and you're raising kids together, somebody here has gone through that and failed, and they can tell you why they failed or did it successfully. And they can tell you what the keys to success were. But being connected to a group that isn't just pretending, we've got it all together, that's open and sharing, that's the thing.

Bruce Peterson

Honest, open and growing, that's our theme, right? But getting people to actually do it is much trickier than putting it on the wall.

Andy Griess

In the question that was sent to us, they keyed in on the second verse which says "There's a sign on the door that says come as you are, but I doubt it. Because if we live like that was true, every Sunday morning pew would be crowded. But didn't you say the church should look more like a hospital, a safe place for the sick, the center and the scared and the prodigals like me."

Bruce Peterson

And that's going to come out of passages like this. Jesus in Matthew 9:10-12 says this: "While Jesus was having dinner at Matthew's house, many tax collectors and sinners came and ate with Him and His disciples. When the Pharisees saw this, they asked his disciples, 'Why does your teacher eat with tax collectors and sinners?' On hearing this, Jesus said 'It is not the healthy who need a doctor but the sick. But go and learn what this means - I desire mercy and not sacrifice. I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners'." So out of that idea comes this idea that churches should be hospitals. How do you react to that?

Andy Griess

It comes from this idea that Jesus said, "I came for those who are sick." And I take that to mean - we're all sick.

Bruce Peterson

Yeah, that's right.

Andy Griess

He came for those who are willing to recognize that they are sick.

Bruce Peterson

When he says "I'm not here for the righteous". He means the self-righteous.

Andy Griess

If you consider yourself to be righteous, you don't need any help, you're going to stay where you are for the rest of your life - Jesus has no help for them. His help is for those who recognize that they're sick, that's why you go to a hospital. And the church was founded with people who recognize that they're sick. They found that Jesus had the answer. He's forgiven their sins, His spirit now lives in them, they've been given new life. They have now a mission to be the light of the world to take the message of Jesus to the world. They're to go to the rest of the sick and say, listen, if you recognize you have needs Jesus is the answer. We found him. We're learning to be what he called us to be. And we want you to join us wherever you're at. Jump right in and let's go. So it should be in some sense, a functional hospital.

Bruce Peterson

A functional hospital, that's the key. So the full range of a hospital is not just an emergency room, right? Our message isn't just, "Hey, Jesus forgives sin, so just sit in the pews, be as sinful as you want with no expectation of health, you're here simply for forgiveness." I think that's wrong, the church isn't just an emergency room. A hospital's not just an emergency room. You have the emergency room, and people who need real help should feel totally welcome, that's where they can go for help. Then you go from the emergency room to a care room, you get your own room maybe on floor two and three. And then four, you go to rehab. The goal is to leave the hospital healthy or at least relatively healthy, right? It's the whole gamut. So yeah, you should have people who aren't judged. You should be able to come in because you don't know the message of grace and what God's love can do for a person. At the same time we're all patients, but we're all also doctors, we need to help and we should have an expectation of growth, and we are the light of the world. So we can't stay people who need an emergency room. We have to move all the way to people who are just coming for a little rehab and we're leaving healthier to go reach our world.

Andy Griess

And just to kind of wrap things up: if the church is going to be that kind of a hospital, the goal of everybody should be, "I'm gonna take what Jesus has done for me, and I need people in this town to know that if they're broken and sick they don't have to stay there. There's a place where they can come." And so the people that have been healed are the ones who reach the rest.

Bruce Peterson

That's right. In this whole song. I think Matthew West is pushing the church to be real. Be sojourners, don't be fake. If we all own our issues, then we can demonstrate a real process and real progress, and then we can actually be real help to those who need it. So people who need help - all of us, but some desperately - should be able to come sit in our pews, get our healing, get our help, because we have all gotten help. We should offer help instead of judgment, and we should have a "in" door and "out" door. You come in sick and you leave a little healthier. And if we do that for the course of our life, we'll make a huge difference.

Andy Griess

And I think the reason this song kind of conveys a sense of sadness is because the world knows this is what the church should be. It should be our vision as the church that we want to be the light that Jesus intends us to be.

New Music Monday - Cain, Jeremy Camp, Riley Clemmons and more

new to our rotation

“Did He move every mountain?
Did He part every sea?
Yes, He did
So yes, He can
Did He defeat the darkness?
Did He deliver me?
Yes, He did
So yes, He can
Yes, He did
So yes, He can”

Whatever May Come - Jeremy Camp and Adrienne Camp

“I will call
I will call upon You
Whatever I face
You are with me
I will fall
I will fall on my knees
For every heartbreak
You will hold me
You will hold me”

“Come on and keep on hoping when the days get dark
Keep on singing, don't you ever lose heart
Lift your eyes, the One who gave you life will give you
Strength to keep on going, so keep on hoping”

the 180remix countdown - saturdays at 9:00pm

“You're here tonight
You're here tonight
Yeah You are here tonight
I can feel You fill the room
When You hear us calling you
Our praises all to You
Yeah You are here tonight”

Why Does God Let People Die?

Over six years ago I lost my dad to lung cancer which had traveled to his brain. He was a healthy forty-nine year old man, he never smoked, and he worked out twice a day. Then one afternoon, seconds after hanging up the phone with me, he had a seizure, and that started our year long journey of slowly losing him. 

It seemed unjust--he took good care of his body, why would cancer take root in him? And he was more than just physically healthy, he was spiritually healthy. I have never met anyone who burned so passionately for God. My father was tireless and relentless-studying the Bible every chance he got. He loved apologetics and kept up to date with all the new scientific, historic, and even emotional evidence for God. And he NEVER missed an opportunity to talk to someone about God’s truth. Quite frankly being around him could be exhausting--the man literally only slept four hours a night. But the point is, when my dad passed away, my world became impossibly quiet and empty. Who would be there to fight the battles he never shied away from? Who would be there as backup for me when I took on battles of my own? Why would God see fit to take this type of man--my father--out of the world?

Not only did this question rise up in my own soul--it came at me from almost everyone I talked to after his death. Everyone around me was worried I would lose my faith in God because he had let my father die. And many of them were struggling with their own faith because of this as well. Fortunately for me, my dad--and his love for apologetics--had already prepared me to know the answer to this question. And I was incredibly grateful he had, because as C.S. Lewis said:

“Faith is the art of holding on to what our reason has once accepted, in spite of our changing moods.”

In times of emotional turmoil we need to hang on to the truth that keeps us anchored. So, let me share with you the truth that anchored me: 

I’ll ask the question again:

if God is real, why does He let people die?

Well there is one huge problem with this reasoning--God never promised us that we wouldn’t die. In fact, He promised exactly the opposite--everyone dies. First we die; and after that we live forever.

Hebrews 9:27 (KJV) And it was appointed unto men once to die; but after this the judgment.

Everyone dies. God has not broken any promises when He lets people die. He has simply allowed what He said would happen, to happen. Ever since Adam and Eve brought death and decay into our world, death has been part of the bargain. 

Some people claim death is proof that God doesn’t exist. But that is unreasonable, it means their logic would have to go something like this:

God says everyone dies → People die → So God doesn’t exist

It’s like saying:

The weatherman says it will rain → it rained → So the weatherman doesn’t exist

These are illogical conclusions. Death, if anything, is proof that God is real and is honest with us about what is coming our way. And God gave us the Bible to help prepare us for that death.

Of course, this leads us to another question:

What’s up with the timing? Why would God take one of His most prolific “players” out of “the game” while he was still so young?

I know it’s hard to understand why God chooses to extend some lives while seeming to cut others short. The only answer I have for this is to say we have to find a way to put things into perspective. To see things--not from our own grief-riddled opinions--but from the lens of the reality we exist in. We need to focus on the truths we know:

1) God is all-knowing: He sees things we cannot see. He knows the big picture. We are finite beings who can’t even know what the next hour of our life will bring us. But God existed before time began. He created time and brought us into being. He knows how each of our lives's threads weave together to create a marvelous tapestry. 

Colossians 1:17 (ESV) He is before all things, and in Him all things hold together.

Psalm 100:3 (NASB) Know that the Lord Himself is God; It is He who has made us, and not we ourselves; We are His people and the sheep of His pasture.

2) God is all-loving: For reasons I cannot even begin to comprehend--God loves us. He has proven time and time again that He loves us. He even went so far as to suffer and die on the cross for us. 

“God is Love” Voss Creative Artworks

“God is Love” Voss Creative Artworks

Romans 8:35, 37-39 (NLT) Can anything ever separate us from Christ’s love? Does it mean He no longer loves us if we have trouble or calamity, or are persecuted, or hungry, or destitute, or in danger, or threatened with death? ... No, despite all these things, overwhelming victory is ours through Christ, who loved us. And I am convinced that nothing can ever separate us from God’s love. Neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons, neither our fears for today nor our worries about tomorrow — not even the powers of hell can separate us from God’s love. No power in the sky above or in the earth below — indeed, nothing in all creation will ever be able to separate us from the love of God that is revealed in Christ Jesus our Lord.

I know it can be extremely hard to do, but since God knows things about the world’s timeline that we don’t have any clue about--and since we know beyond a shadow of a doubt that He loves us--we have to trust that God knows what He is doing and has our best interests at heart, even when life hurts.  

This is when people come across a pitfall:

Does being sad about death mean my faith is weak?

No, it is not wrong to cry or mourn. The reality that God is in control and it will all work out in the long run, doesn’t discount the pain we feel here and now.

God understands how terrible and painful dealing with death can be. We get a good example of how God views death from John 11:1-44 when Jesus raised Lazarus from the dead.

Even before Jesus heard Lazarus was sick, He knew He would raise Lazarus from the dead. He says in John 11:4, “...’This sickness will not end in death. No, it is for God’s glory so that God’s Son may be glorified through it’” (NIV).  Lazarus’ death and resurrection were part of the plan so that people could know Jesus was God and had power over death.

Jesus even took His time traveling to Lazarus to make sure Lazarus would be dead when he got there. When Jesus finally arrived He explained the situation in John 11:25-26. It says, “Jesus told her (Martha), “I am the resurrection and the life. Anyone who believes in me will live, even after dying. Everyone who lives in me and believes in me will never ever die. Do you believe this, Martha?” (NIV).

“Jesus Wept” by James Tissot

Jesus could have healed Lazarus before he died. But He chose to let him die. And Jesus knew He would be raising Lazarus from the dead. Yet, when Jesus stood in front of His friend’s tomb--He still wept. Jesus cried because of the pain and suffering death was causing the people He cared about. Even though Jesus knew death was not the end, Lazarus’ family and friend did not know and their pain was very vivid. Jesus hated seeing them in pain and empathized with the sorrow they were feeling, so, in that moment, Jesus wept. 

God does not like to see his people struggle. He does not like to see His creations decay and die. But death is a direct result of free will. And free will is necessary if we are going to have any sort of real and valuable relationship with God. This is because you cannot force someone to love you; they have to have the ability to choose love all on their own.

All this to say--If Jesus can weep at Lazarus’ tomb, then of course we can mourn our own losses. 

Unfortunately, God did not promise us easy lives. 

Throughout the Bible God constantly refers to life as being hard. However, He did make us some promises: 

He promises to be by our sides and help us through the pain. 

Isaiah 41:13 (NIV) For I am the Lord, your God, who takes hold of your right hand and says to you, Do not fear; I will help you.

Psalm 54:4 (NASB) Behold, God is my helper; The Lord is the sustainer of my soul.

Psalm 118:6 (NASB) The Lord is for me; I will not fear; What can man do to me?

1 Peter 5:10 (NIV) And the God of all grace, who called you to his eternal glory in Christ, after you have suffered a little while, will himself restore you and make you strong, firm and steadfast.

God also promises that death is not the end--it’s only the beginning. And people who have accepted Jesus as their Savior can look forward to an amazing afterlife. 

John 11:25-26 (NIV) Jesus said to her, “I am the resurrection and the life. The one who believes in me will live, even though they die; and whoever lives by believing in me will never die. Do you believe this?”

1 Corinthians 15:42-44 (NIV) So will it be with the resurrection of the dead. The body that is sown is perishable, it is raised imperishable; it is sown in dishonor, it is raised in glory; it is sown in weakness, it is raised in power; and it is sown a natural body, it is raised a spiritual body. If there is a natural body, there is also a spiritual body.

Revelations 21:4 (NIV) He will wipe every tear from their eyes. There will be no more death' or mourning or crying or pain, for the old order of things has passed away.


Christians are called to have an eternal perspective. 

Losing people to death is the greatest struggle this life throws at us. Mourning their loss and feeling the pain is healthy and normal. Even Jesus allowed Himself to weep over death. But death does not discount the existence of God. It only reinforces our need for Him. We should lean on God in times of trouble, because He wants to help us through them. Turning away from Him, and facing the pain alone, will only make it harder. And in the end, remember, you will see your loved ones again. I will see my father again. And the time spent without them in this life will feel like a tiny blip compared to the everlasting life that is to come on the other side of death. 

2 Corinthians 4:17-18 (NIV) For our light and momentary troubles are achieving for us an eternal glory that far outweighs them all. So we fix our eyes not on what is seen, but on what is unseen, since what is seen is temporary, but what is unseen is eternal.

Romans 14:8 (NIV) If we live, we live for the Lord; and if we die, we die for the Lord. So, whether we live or die, we belong to the Lord.

Romans 8:18 (NLT) Yet what we suffer now is nothing compared to the glory he will reveal to us later.


This series of blog posts titled, “Holding on to Reason”, is named after Amanda’s favorite C.S. Lewis quote: “Faith is the art of holding on to things your reason has once accepted, in spite of your changing moods.”

Click here for more things written by Amanda Hovseth.

New Music Monday - Matty Mullins and Newsboys

new to our rotation

“I'll show you the cross
With Jesus lifted high
I'll show you the grave
Where death was left behind
I'll show you a Savior
Who paid the highest cost
Show me all your scars
And I'll show you the cross”

the 180remix countdown - saturdays at 9:00pm

“But every time
I'm in that fight
Your love keeps pulling me back
Pulling me back
It's magnetic
I've pushed away
But I can't escape
Your love keeps pulling me back
Pulling me back
It's magnetic”

How Should Christians Respond to Government Involvement In Our Faith? - Ask The Pastor

You can listen to Ask The Pastor every weekday at 9:00am MST on 97.1FM Hope Radio KCMI! You can also listen and subscribe to Ask The Pastor in your favorite podcast feed. Listen on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Stitcher, Amazon Music and most other podcast services.

This edition of Ask the Pastor features Pastors Jeff Banks, Andy Griess and Bruce Peterson.

Bruce Peterson

So this week we have an absolutely tough, tough question. It reads easy enough, but the answer is tough. The basic question is: In the political environment that we are in as Americans, how many liberties should we as Christians be willing to give up? The question went on to talk about the vaccines are coming around, and as this person wrestled with the Bible they went to the character of Daniel. And in their estimation, they said, "Do I think that Daniel would get the vaccine? I think Daniel would get the vaccine, but then Daniel wasn't American." So as we live in our unique political environment, with our absolute unique word of God, how should we think through all of the liberty issues in our culture today? How do we respond to them as Christians?

Andy Griess

And I would add specifically that this question was in this context: What if the government doesn't give you the option of taking the vaccine, or what if they were trying to take away the freedom to make that choice?

Jeff Banks

So mandating the vaccine. And maybe we could preface it with - this isn't new, right? I think American Christians have been grappling with constitutional freedom, religious freedom through history, but certainly we can all agree over the last year that this has just come to the surface.

Andy Griess

It is a hot topic.

Jeff Banks

It's hot, and we know it's polarizing, and I don't think we want to add to that. Like, I think we've had enough - I've had enough - of some of that happening. And so we want to try to bring some pastoral care and yet - I'll be honest - I think we're all wrestling through it ourselves personally.

Bruce Peterson

Right now it is 4:36. The three of us started this at 3:00 and we've been talking for over an hour and a half on this subject just between the three of us, trying to really wrestle through what our perspective is. So we don't in any way want to suggest this is simple, or suggest that we have a definitive answer that you can take and never think about it again yourself.

Jeff Banks

And I guess even as we say that, I appreciate that we can do that. And maybe that's a good starting point - hopefully we can model that, even with different perspectives, we're sitting at the table and having a discussion and it's good. I think that's good.

Andy Griess

Yeah. And one of the things that I was just thinking about is as we've thrown out all of our different viewpoints and how we handle this, we kind of have different ways of coming at this. And that would come out if somebody came into my office as a pastor and asked this question, I'm wrestling right now with the idea that I think I know how I would handle this specific question, but I'm not certain that's the advice I would give for the person sitting across the desk from me, because their situation and their way of thinking might be different than mine. So I think there should be a lot of freedom for Christians to have different ways of coming at this and that's one of the trickier things - in the Western world and in the United States, as we seem to be having less and less and less freedom, there might be points where you got to make some hard decisions. And if I would be willing to stand up and make a hard decision that might put me in a situation where I would have to defend myself, or be arrested, or whatever - if I would be willing to make that choice, I don't know that I would look at the person across the table and say they should have to make the same choice.

Bruce Peterson

As pastors, we bear a unique responsibility and serve in a special role, so we might lay our lives down in a different way than congregants necessarily would. Here's something I think we all three do agree on, let's start with this. There is a major, major distinction between being an American and being a Christian.

Andy Griess

For certain.

Jeff Banks

Absolutely.

Bruce Peterson

Different kingdoms, different agendas, different morals, different responsibilities, different goals.

Jeff Banks

Absolutely. And I think it's difficult because there can be a climate where we're trying to merge some of those too closely.

Bruce Peterson

And we live in both worlds.

Jeff Banks

And sometimes they're opposed, right? So I think we have to acknowledge that.

Bruce Peterson

So I think we'd all agree that our, our primary fight - maybe that's just that they're separate ideas. And we aren't called in the Bible to be good citizens of whatever country you live in, right? America wasn't around when the Bible was written. We're called to be good citizens everywhere. But literally of everywhere. Wherever you live, you should be a good citizen there.

Jeff Banks

Yeah. That's not distinctively American, right? Christians and other countries, be a good citizen in the country you live.

Andy Griess

And that's where I would say my goal personally has to start individually. I want to live as a resident of the kingdom of God. Jesus is my king. I want to live in service to him. And then I want to take that to my family. I would love for him to be the King of everybody living in my household.

Bruce Peterson

Especially my twins, yeah.

Andy Griess

And then beyond that as a pastor, I'm going to go to my church family. I think all of these run together between my family and my church. I want everybody there to know that Jesus is King and want to live with Him as their king. I would love for that to spill over into a nation who wanted to live with Jesus as their king. That's not the nation that we live in. So how do we work towards seeing more and more of our nation wanting that? If we have a nation that's going to try to limit our freedoms, how do we handle all that? I'm starting back with myself, my family, and my church family. That's the area where I have influence. And that's honestly the only area where I want to put all of my focus, teaching the gospel in such a way that I'm hopefully inspiring other people to see that they want to live with Jesus as King. I think the only freedoms that I'm really worried about, is the freedom to not be able to do that, as long as I have the freedom to do that I can operate in any other kind of system.

unsplash-image-nSn5Labyy-M.jpg

Jeff Banks

I think if someone's coming into my office and asking this question, the two-minute version is to address these two distinct places or tensions that we live in as American citizens, and to be thankful - grateful - for the freedom that we have, grateful for those who have fought and died for freedom, to exercise the freedom you have as a citizen, to use the avenues that you have available to you - which includes voting - and whatever the blessing of living in this free country may be, to embrace that. And then I would transition to, you know, we are also citizens of this kingdom, right? And so I would just invite them to prayerfully discern with Jesus as your King, and not allow your American citizen freedom and the loss of that to trump that aspect of it. Jesus is King. If you lose your freedom, if America derails, Jesus is still King and Jesus is still building his church, and the church can flourish regardless of that. So that's my initial approach right there.

Bruce Peterson

I would say this: I think it's a wonder to live in America. Our constitution is very liberating and has caused wonderful things on this planet and in our personal lives. I can't imagine being in a dictatorship that's going south or something like living in Cuba 30 years ago. So I'm super thankful. But with that comes responsibility, right? I mean, it's been handed to us and we should try to the best of our ability to hand it down. I appreciate our government, but I think that can get in the way of our gospel presentation because politics divides. So here's what I would say: I believe that God will lay it on the hearts of certain Christians to rise up and to be politicians. They should follow that lead. They should go, they should stand, they should fight, they should argue, they should try to pass laws that keep our freedoms and keep it possible to spread the gospel. But we're not all called to politics. If we were all called to politics, we would be a political party. We're not, we're the church of God. In Daniel's prophecy, the church of the kingdom of God is going to wipe out other governments, including ours. But this government should last as long as it can.

I think we should vote for those people - we should know them, we should know the issues, we should vote - but the freedoms that they're fighting for, we should use. We fight over the freedom itself, but we don't use the freedom. The vast majority of Christians should be in the business of trusting God with our politics, voting, and then using our freedom to spread the Gospel without a false hurdle. If you first have to agree with me politically before I think you're a Christian, or if I'm so loud politically that you won't hear the Gospel from me because I've alienated you, I think I've done a disservice to the kingdom of God. Maybe I have served the United States but I won't hear, "Well done, good and faithful servant. You really defended America." I am called to spread the kingdom of God, and I'm with Paul - I don't put any hurdles in the way of that.

Andy Griess

As I imagine somebody coming into my office to ask me this question, "What do we do with this issue that I think is limiting my freedom? I think the government has overreached and is trying to make me do something that they don't have the authority to do." I think I would sympathize with them to a certain extent and say they're in a tough spot and they've got to think through a lot of things. And I think part of me would share with them how I think about the subject, but I don't know how specific I would get regarding what I would do. I would point them to the fact that within the systems we have now in America, there is a legal, civil way of making your protests heard. If you feel like this is overreach, then there is an outlet for you to do that. But the truth is, you would probably have to put yourself in a position where you are going to defy a mandate, which means that you may be charged with something, you may be fined, you may have to go through some kind of a civil trial ordeal, where that begins the process where you can challenge it.

So you've got to count the cost. Is it worth me trying to go through the legal mechanisms to do this? And that's where I would say, "I could tell you what I might be willing to do, but I would not want to tell you what to do." I try to make them aware of what they would have to go through to take it through all those legal channels, and then I would not center on that. I would say the worry you have that freedoms are eroding, there's things that Christians haven't liked for generations about the direction our nation is headed. But at every step of the way it's the gospel of Jesus Christ that we have to focus on, it has to be central to everything that we're doing. And fighting every one of these political battles, politically I don't think that has served us well. I think it's taken our attention away from is Jesus, our King first and foremost. And are we conveying to the people around us that he should be their king too? Here's why, here's how awesome He is. Here's what he can do for you. Here's what he wants to do for the world. That's the message that I want to make sure people have at the forefront of what they're trying to accomplish.

Bruce Peterson

I think the gospel can thrive in any political government, and has for 2000 years. It is the one kingdom that has the promise of God that it will conquer all other kingdoms, including democracy.

Andy Griess

And I think if that would have been our focus as the church all the way through, to focus on the Gospel rather than trying to fight these fights politically, maybe there would have been a slide in a different direction, where things could be a lot different. So if we're going to make the changes we want to make, it starts with being serious about that. That's what I would say.

Bruce Peterson

I think you're right. If you're afraid of anything, be afraid of not being serious about the Gospel.

New Music Monday - CeCe Winans, Pat Barrett, and more

new to our rotation

“Move the immovable
Break the unbreakable
God, we believe
God, we believe for it
From the impossible
We'll see a miracle
God, we believe
God, we believe for it”

“Act justly
Love mercy
Walk humbly
With You God
In all things
In all ways
Walk humbly
With You God”

the 180remix countdown - saturdays at 9:00pm

“I can finally see it, now I can finally feel it
Yeah, You’ve been after my heart, after my heart
Before I was breathing, before my heart was believing
Yeah, You were there from the start, right from the start
And now it s clear that you will never leave
Over and over you keep coming for me
I can finally see it, now I can finally feel it
Yeah You’ve been after my heart, after my heart”

“Oh, nobody
Loves me like You love me
You say I'm somebody
Someone You love (You love, You lovе)
Heaven open
Crash in like an ocean
You say that I'm chosen
And someone You love”