Questions
and Answers About the Church Desolation: For
years, we feel an emptiness in our church. We’ve lost the faith and
love we had at the start, and become weaker and negative. The
preachers sometimes feel lost and don’t know what to talk about. We
feel we’ve lost the work of the Holy
Spirit.
We’ve looked everywhere for a church with the Holy Spirit’s work,
but every church we see is as desolate as our own. Why are so many
churches hungry and desolate?
Answer: The
question you’ve asked is an important one. We all know that we live
in the late period of the
last days.
The Lord
Jesus once
prophesied, “And
because iniquity shall abound, the love of many shall wax cold”
(Matthew 24:12). Lawlessness in the world of religion is growing.
Religious leaders don’t abide by the commandments. They abide by
men’s traditions. They only preach biblical knowledge to show off
and testify themselves. They don’t testify or exalt God at all.
They’ve completely departed from the Lord’s way, which is why God
rejects and eliminates them. This is mainly why the religious world
has lost the work of the Holy Spirit. But also, it’s because the
Lord Jesus has returned to flesh, and begun the work of “judgment
beginning with the house of God.” When Christ of the last
days—Almighty
God expresses
the truth of saving man to purify all who accept God’s work of the
last days, the work of the Holy Spirit will turn to God’s work of
the last days. Those who accept Almighty God’s work of judgment in
the last days will receive the work of the Holy Spirit, and receive
the living water of life that quenches their thirst. God will make
those who return before His throne overcomers, and bring them into
accordance with His will. While those who remain in religion and
refuse to accept God’s work of the last days will be left in dark
desolation. This proves a prophecy in the Bible,
“And
also I have withheld the rain from you, when there were yet three
months to the harvest: and I caused it to rain on one city, and
caused it not to rain on another city: one piece was rained on, and
the piece whereupon it rained not withered. So two or three cities
wandered to one city, to drink water; but they were not satisfied:
yet have you not returned to me, said the LORD”
(Amos 4:7-8). Here, “one
piece was rained on”
refers to churches who accept and obey God’s work of judgment in
the last days. They have accepted the present words of God, and so
enjoyed provision of the living water of life that flows from the
throne. “…
and
the piece whereupon it rained not withered”
refers to the religious pastors and elders who refuse to practice the
Lord’s words and disobey His commandments, and reject, resist, and
condemn Almighty God’s work of the last days, which leads the
religious world to be rejected and cursed by God, to lose completely
the work of the Holy Spirit and access to the living water of life,
and become trapped in desolation. Just like at the end of the Age of
Law, when the temple, once so full of Jehovah’s glory, became
desolate, the Jewish people didn’t hold to religious laws. They
made improper sacrifices, and the temple became a place of trade, a
den of thieves. Why did this happen? Primarily because the Jewish
religious leaders didn’t abide by Jehovah’s laws and didn’t
fear God in their hearts. They abided by men’s traditions, but
rejected God’s commandments. They departed completely from the way
of God and so lost the work of the Holy Spirit. And another reason
was that God had been incarnated to do the work of redeeming mankind
in the Age of Grace. God’s work had changed. All those who accepted
the Lord Jesus’ redemptive work received the work of the Holy
Spirit, and had a new way to practice, but those who rejected and
resisted the work of the Lord Jesus were eliminated by God’s work
and fell into dark desolation. If you want to receive the work of the
Holy Spirit and gain provision of the living water of life, the most
important thing you have to do is seek and investigate Almighty God’swork of the last days. That will solve the darkness in your spirits
and the desolation in your church at the root of the problem. Don’t
you think so?