Sunday, April 26, 2026

When the Family Fights: Abraham’s House and the Trouble in the Middle East

I’ve heard it said more than once, and maybe you’ve heard it too—

“That war in the Middle East started with Abraham, Hagar, and Sarah.”

Now I understand what folks mean when they say it. There is a truth buried in that statement. But like many things in this world, if we don’t handle it carefully, we’ll end up with something that sounds right… But it doesn’t quite line up with the whole counsel of God.

So let’s sit a spell and walk through it—Bible open, heart steady, and truth in hand.

The House of Abraham

The story begins where many great stories begin—in a home.

Abraham, the friend of God, was given a promise. But like many of us, he got ahead of the Lord.

“And Sarai Abram’s wife bare him no children… And she had an handmaid, an Egyptian, whose name was Hagar.” — Genesis 16:1 (KJV)

Out of that situation came Ishmael.

Later, by the power of God and not the plan of man, came Isaac.

“For in Isaac shall thy seed be called.” — Genesis 21:12 (KJV)

Now mark this down clearly:

  • Ishmael was blessed
  • Isaac was the child of promise

God never cursed Ishmael—but He chose Isaac as the line through which the covenant would flow.

A House Divided

Trouble came early.

“And Sarah saw the son of Hagar… mocking.” — Genesis 21:9 (KJV)

Before long, Hagar and Ishmael were sent away. And just like that, a fracture ran through Abraham’s house.

Now here’s where folks jump ahead too quickly.

They say, “That’s where the war started—and it’s been going ever since.”

But hold on.

The Bible tells us something many forget:

“And his sons Isaac and Ishmael buried him.” — Genesis 25:9 (KJV)

They stood together at their father’s grave.

That ain’t the picture of a never-ending war. That’s a picture of a broken family… but not beyond all reconciliation.

From Sons to Nations

As the years rolled on, those sons became nations.

  • Isaac’s line became Israel
  • Ishmael’s descendants spread through Arabia
  • Esau (Isaac’s other son) became Edom
  • Others came through Keturah

And yes—there were conflicts.

But here’s the part we must not miss:

Not every enemy of Israel came from Ishmael.

Not every battle was a “family fight.”

Some wars were about land.

Some were about power.

Some were about plain old sin in the heart of man.

Same as today.

The Trouble With Our Time

Now we look at the Middle East today and try to draw a straight line back to Abraham’s tent.

But the world has changed a great deal since then.

Empires have risen and fallen. Borders have been drawn and redrawn. People have mixed, migrated, and multiplied.

The conflicts we see today are shaped by:

  • Politics
  • Nationalism
  • Religion
  • Resources
  • And human pride

So while the roots may stretch back into Scripture, the branches we see today have grown in many different directions.

Who Are the Children of Promise?

Now here’s where the preacher in me wants you to lean in close.

Because the New Testament takes this whole matter and lifts it out of bloodlines, placing it squarely in the heart.

“They which are the children of the flesh, these are not the children of God: but the children of the promise are counted for the seed.” — Romans 9:8 (KJV)

And again:

“If ye be Christ’s, then are ye Abraham’s seed, and heirs according to the promise.” — Galatians 3:29 (KJV)

Friend, that changes everything.

The promise is no longer about who your father was on earth

It’s about whether you have been born again from above.

The true children of Abraham today are not marked by genealogy…

They are marked by faith in Jesus Christ.

Will the Fighting Ever End?

You don’t need to read the headlines long to know this world is still at war.

Jesus said it plainly:

“And ye shall hear of wars and rumours of wars… but the end is not yet.” — Matthew 24:6 (KJV)

There will be conflict. There will be unrest. There will be nations rising against nations.

But let’s be careful not to say more than Scripture says.

The Bible does not teach that every modern conflict is simply Isaac versus Ishmael carried forward unchanged for 4,000 years.

What it does teach is this:

Man, left to himself, will fight.

Kingdoms, built on pride, will clash.

And peace will not fully come…

Until the Prince of Peace returns.

A Final Word From the Porch

I’ve sat with folks who were convinced the whole Middle East could be explained by one family argument.

But the truth is deeper than that.

Yes, Abraham’s house echoes through history.

Yes, there were divisions.

But the greatest division today is not between Isaac and Ishmael…

It is between those who know Christ and those who do not.

And the greatest promise is not land…

Not borders…

Not nations…

But this:

“For ye are all the children of God by trust in Christ Jesus.” — Galatians 3:26 (KJV)

When the dust settles and the wars are done,

it won’t matter whose bloodline you came from.

What will matter is this—

Do you belong to Christ?

That’s the promise that never fails.

Saturday, April 25, 2026

A Restless Spirit in the Church

I do not say that lightly. I do not say it to stir fear, nor to make every troubled soul feel condemned. There are many sincere Christians who are weary. They have watched wars increase, prices rise, families divide, churches weaken, and truth become a stranger in the public square. They are tired. They are troubled. Some are confused.

But beneath all that weariness, something deeper is taking place. There is a spirit in this age that is causing many to question the old foundations. Some are asking whether the Lord will truly come for His people. Some are wondering whether He will rapture the church out of the chaos they see coming. Others have gone further and begun to question whether a real Lord is coming back at all.

That is not a small matter.

The Apostle Paul warned us plainly:

"Let no man deceive you by any means: for that day shall not come, except there come a falling away first..."

2 Thessalonians 2:3, KJV

Paul did not tell the church to be surprised when men departed from the faith. He told them to be watchful. He said there would be a falling away. He said deception would come. He said a spirit would arise that would prepare men to receive something false in place of the truth.

And I believe we are seeing the edge of that spirit now.

Not in every church. Not in every believer. God has always had a remnant. There are still saints praying, preaching, loving, serving, and standing on the Word of God. There are still pulpits where Christ is lifted. There are still homes where children are being taught the Scriptures. There are still knees bowed in prayer when nobody else sees.

But in the visible church world, something has changed.

Many are no longer asking, "What saith the Lord?" They are asking, "Who can save our way of life?" Many are no longer looking first to Christ. They are looking to politics, personalities, armies, money, technology, and strong leaders. They still use Christian language, but their hope has shifted.

That is where the danger lies.

Jesus said:

"My kingdom is not of this world..."

John 18:36, KJV

That one verse ought to humble every Christian movement that tries to turn the kingdom of God into a political machine. Christ's kingdom is not built by worldly power. It is not defended by hatred. It is not advanced by fear. It does not need a national flag to make it holy, nor a political party to give it authority.

The church may love its country. A Christian may be thankful for his homeland, pray for his leaders, honor lawful authority, and desire righteousness in the nation. But when love of country becomes greater than love of Christ, something has gone wrong. When the flag becomes heavier on the heart than the cross, the soul is in danger.

Nationalist Christianity says, "Give us power, and we will save the nation."

Biblical Christianity says, "Give us Christ, and we will be faithful even if the nation falls."

Those are not the same spirit.

The old saints used to sing, "This world is not my home." But now many Christians speak as if this world is all they have. That is why they are so afraid. That is why they are so angry. That is why they are ready to follow anyone who promises peace, safety, prosperity, and revenge.

But the Bible warns us:

"For when they shall say, Peace and safety; then sudden destruction cometh upon them..."

1 Thessalonians 5:3, KJV

Those words should make us sober. The world is tired of war. Tired of inflation. Tired of crime. Tired of corruption. Tired of lies. Tired of broken promises. Tired of chaos. The world is looking for someone to fix it.

And that is exactly what makes this hour so dangerous.

According to Scripture, the Man of Sin will not appear to the world as a monster. He will come offering what fallen men already desire. He will offer peace without repentance, unity without truth, prosperity without holiness, security without liberty, and salvation without the cross.

Paul wrote:

"And then shall that Wicked be revealed... Even him, whose coming is after the working of Satan with all power and signs and lying wonders."

2 Thessalonians 2:8-9, KJV

The final deception will not be crude. It will be persuasive. It will be religious. It will be political. It will be economical. It will offer answers to a frightened world.

That is why the church must be awake.

The danger is not only that a deceiver may arise one day. The danger is that the hearts of men may already be prepared to receive him. A fearful people will trade freedom for security. A hungry people will trade conviction for bread. A confused people will trade truth for unity. A spiritually weak church will trade Christ for influence.

And when the church loses its first love, it becomes vulnerable to every false promise.

Jesus said to the church at Ephesus:

"Nevertheless I have somewhat against thee, because thou hast left thy first love."

Revelation 2:4, KJV

That may be one of the most needed verses for our day. The problem is not that the church has no activity. We have programs, music, buildings, livestreams, conferences, statements, and movements. But activity is not the same as anointing. Noise is not the same as truth. Crowds are not the same as revival.

The question is not whether we are busy.

The question is whether we still love Christ.

Do we love His Word?

Do we love His holiness?

Do we love His appearing?

Do we love His people?

Do we love His truth more than our tribe?

Do we love His kingdom more than our country?

Do we love His cross more than our comfort?

Paul warned Timothy:

"For the time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine; but after their own lusts shall they heap to themselves teachers, having itching ears."

2 Timothy 4:3, KJV

That time is not hard to imagine. It is here in many places. People want sermons that confirm their anger. They want teachers who share their politics. They want prophets who tell them they will escape every hardship. They want preachers who promise victory without suffering, blessing without obedience, and heaven without holiness.

But Christ never preached that kind of gospel.

Jesus said:

"In the world ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have overcome the world."

John 16:33, KJV

Notice what He did not say. He did not say His people would never see trouble. He did not say the church would never suffer. He did not say the world would grow kinder as the end approached. He said there would be tribulation. But He also said, "Be of good cheer; I have overcome the world."

That is where our hope belongs.

Not in escaping every storm, but in belonging to the One who rules over the storm.

Some Christians are restless today because they were taught an escape-centered rather than a Christ-centered faith. They were told more about getting out of trouble than being faithful in trouble. They were taught to look for comfort more than holiness. So now, when the world shakes, their doctrine shakes with it.

But the saints of old knew better.

They knew how to suffer and still sing. They knew how to be poor and still rejoice. They knew how to bury loved ones and still believed in resurrection. They knew how to face prison, persecution, sickness, and hardship without surrendering their hope.

Paul said:

"For to me to live is Christ, and to die is gain."

Philippians 1:21, KJV

That kind of faith cannot be manipulated easily. You cannot frighten a man who has already died to self. You cannot buy a saint whose treasure is in heaven. You cannot deceive a people who are rooted in the Word of God.

That is why the enemy wants the church shallow, angry, distracted, divided, and afraid.

Fear is one of the great tools of this age. Fear makes people impatient. Fear makes them suspicious. Fear makes them cruel. Fear makes them willing to bow before strong men. Fear makes them forget the Shepherd's gentle voice.

But the Bible says:

"For God hath not given us the spirit of fear; but of power, and of love, and of a sound mind."

2 Timothy 1:7, KJV

If the spirit moving in the church makes us fearful, hateful, proud, reckless, or blind, we had better test that spirit. The Holy Ghost does not produce panic. He produces holiness. He does not make men worship nations. He exalts Christ. He does not lead the church into confusion. He guides into truth.

John wrote:

"Beloved, believe not every spirit, but try the spirits whether they are of God..."

1 John 4:1, KJV

That command is needed now. Try the spirits.

Try the spirit behind the sermon.

Try the spirit behind the movement.

Try the spirit behind the political promise.

Try the spirit behind the fear.

Try the spirit behind the anger.

Try the spirit behind the demand for control.

Does it exalt Christ?

Does it agree with Scripture?

Does it produce holiness?

Does it lead to love of God and neighbor?

Does it humble the heart?

Does it prepare the soul for the coming of the Lord?

Or does it make men proud, suspicious, cruel, worldly, and willing to excuse evil as long as their side wins?

That is the test.

The church must not be naïve. Evil is real. Corruption is real. War is real. Deception is real. There are powers in high places that do not fear God. Some leaders lie, systems that oppress, and movements that use Christian language while denying the spirit of Christ.

But we must also remember this: the answer to deception is not paranoia. The answer to deception is truth.

Jesus said:

"Sanctify them through thy truth: thy word is truth."

John 17:17, KJV

The church does not need more hysteria. The church needs sanctification. We need clean hearts, clear minds, open Bibles, bent knees, and steady faith. We need men and women who can look at a shaking world and say, "Christ is still Lord."

We need pastors who will preach the whole counsel of God.

We need homes where Scripture is read again.

We need churches that teach children, not just slogans.

We need believers who can discern the difference between patriotism and idolatry.

We need Christians who can love their country without worshiping it.

We need saints who can prepare for hard times without being ruled by fear.

There is nothing wrong with preparing. Joseph stored grain in Egypt. The Proverbs praise wisdom and foresight. A man should care for his household. But preparation without faith becomes fear, and fear without Christ becomes bondage.

Jesus said:

"Let not your heart be troubled: ye believe in God, believe also in me."

John 14:1, KJV

That is not a suggestion. It is a command from the Lord to troubled hearts.

So what do we do in a restless hour?

We return to Christ.

We return to the Bible.

We return to prayer.

We return to holiness.

We return to loving one another.

We return to the blessed hope.

Paul wrote:

"Looking for that blessed hope, and the glorious appearing of the great God and our Saviour Jesus Christ."

Titus 2:13, KJV

The blessed hope is not a political leader. It is not a military victory. It is not a financial reset. It is not a world government. It is not America being great. The blessed hope is the appearing of Jesus Christ.

That is what the church must recover.

If the Lord comes today, let Him find us watching.

If He delays, let Him find us faithful.

If trouble increases, let Him find us steady.

If deception multiplies, let Him find us rooted.

If the world bows to another, let Him find us standing with Christ.

Jesus said:

"And when these things begin to come to pass, then look up, and lift up your heads; for your redemption draweth nigh."

Luke 21:28, KJV

That is not the language of panic. That is the language of hope.

Yes, there is a restless spirit in the church today. Yes, there is a falling away from the original teachings of Christ in many places. Yes, there is a growing temptation to trade the cross for political power and the gospel for national identity. Yes, many are ready to bow to anyone who promises what they feel is missing.

But the true church must not bow.

We have one Lord.

We have one Savior.

We have one King.

We have one gospel.

We have one hope.

His name is Jesus Christ.

And until He comes, the church must stand—not in fear, not in pride, not in hatred, not in confusion—but in truth, holiness, love, and patient faith.

The wind may be restless, but the Rock has not moved.