The Ultimate Question: Do I Fear God and Keep His Commands?
Jan. 13, 2025
Host: Hon. Sam Rohrer
Guest: Renton Rathbun
Note: This transcript is taken from a Stand in the Gap Today program aired on 1/13/25. To listen to the podcast, click HERE.
Disclaimer: While reasonable efforts have been made to provide an accurate transcription, the following is a representation of a mechanical transcription and as such, may not be a word for word transcript. Please listen to the audio version for any questions concerning the following dialogue.
Sam Rohrer:
Hello and welcome to Stand In the Gap Today as we officially begin the second full week of January. A week ago, I began this program asking for us all to pray for those involved in the fires in California, incited numerous costly human choices that have led to this extraordinary devastation still ongoing in a week, the devastation has only grown and as of today threatening to expand as another round of hurricane force Winds are predicted to begin in nearly every case thus far that I have seen, and I’ve tried to follow this pretty closely, as I’m sure you have as well. The commentary has been to find someone like Governor Newsom or LA Mayor Karen Bass for their clearly foolish choices like cutting firefighting funds for the firefighters last year, or refusing to fill water reservoirs, causing the fire hydrants to run out to insurance companies, canceling over 70,000 home policies, leaving people with no financial means at all to rebuild other controlled media.
Pundits are blaming everything on climate change. I heard that this morning, but as my stand in the gap minute programs all last week emphasized when circumstances arise, both blessings and judgment, be it in circumstances due to weather or other things. We must look in the fear of God to God above who controls weather and speaks his will. We know from scripture in the tornado, the whirlwind or in the rains, in the snow and in the flood and the fire and in that light we must not overlook a couple of facts. Now here’s one first as Michael Snyder, a recurring stand in the gap today, guest just wrote yesterday, he said this quote, what is the one thing that sets Los Angeles apart from any other city in the world? Needless to say, it is the entertainment industry. Los Angeles is known as the entertainment capital of the world and the entertainment that it produces has an enormous amount of global influence.
In fact, LA has more of an impact on the culture of the world than any other city by a wide margin. The entire planet has been corrupted by the movies, television shows, and music that comes out of Los Angeles. On top of all of that, LA is the epicenter for the global pornography industry. And according to the pornography industry themself I’m citing they had written, it has estimated that 200 firms, 6,000 workers and 1200 actors produce four to 7,000 adult films a year in Los Angeles. Yes, there are more porn related adult industry jobs than software jobs in this town with 4.3 billion in sales in rentals, which is still nothing compared to the 12 billion made from toys and books. The adult entertainment industry puts $4 billion in revenue back into the local economy. That was the porn industry and they’re glad for what they do. That’s the first thing.
Now, the second thing I must mention, and this is from my perspective, it was on Sunday evening, January 5th, just one day before the LA fires began, that in brazen and blasphemous words, the moderator of the Golden Globes held in LA said this quote, some of tonight’s acceptance speeches have been on fire. Think of this that night, the night before the fires began, she said, quote, some of the tonight’s acceptance speeches have been on fire. So who got a shout out the most? Let’s look at the numbers. And then they posted a thing up on the screen and she said, God, the creator of the universe got zero mentions, ha ha, no surprise in this godless town. And everybody laughed. Yet in the ensuing days thus far over 60 celebrities, most of those reportedly were there that night have lost their homes entirely. That is no laughing matter. And to me, this demonstration of creating destructive pornography to blaspheming God above demonstrates to me the antithesis of a fear of God. And it’s this theme I’ve chosen to frame this program today with returning guest, Dr. Renton Rathbun regular speaker on matters of apologetics for and consultant to BJU press on biblical worldview instruction. My title for today is this, the ultimate Question, do I Fear God and Keep His Commandments? And when I, welcome to the program right now, Dr. Renton Rathbun, thanks for being back with me.
Renton Rathbun:
Oh, thanks for having me.
Sam Rohrer:
Renton. The word of God’s filled with references, the fear of God, necessity for it, the consequences personally and nationally where there is no fear of God. Just want me to read one verse and then ask you to give your thoughts. I go When I think of this, Ecclesiastes 1213, king Solomon sums it up his whole life, wisest man ever to live. God said that. He said this, let us hear the conclusion of the entire matter. The matter of life said fear of God and keep his commandments for this is the un entire duty of mankind. He said, for God will bring into judgment, every deed into judgment with every secret thing whether good or evil. So Renton, here’s my first question to you and don’t have much time I know, but give thoughts to if we need to carry it over, we will overall sense. Could you illustrate or describe the concept of the fear of God and why understanding and living it is so important to all mankind?
Renton Rathbun:
Well, as you mentioned LA and what it’s known for with all its movies and things like that, since the movie Oppenheimer came out, people have been reintroduced to the awesome power of the Adam Bomb and these kinds of bombs for its time was this unthinkable power, this unthinkable explosion of fire that just seemed to keep on traveling and traveling and it was just amazing to them. Today we have bombs that are much more destructive and what we find is that destructive power requires an ultimate authority and writes over that, which suffers under that kind of power. And what we need to understand when we think of the fear of God is we need to be thinking of God’s massive power. The fear of God is the realization of his all consuming power and his authority to consume all those He has rights over, in other words, his creation.
So what makes these bombs that we create so morally difficult for us to deal with is we ask ourselves, do we have the right, the authority to use these over other people? And that is a moral question for sure, but when you are the creator of the universe, you do have the moral right over what you have created. The potter has right over the clay. And so the fear of God is the realization of that all consuming power and realizing that he has a right to use that power over those he has created and at heart that is at the root of the fear of God.
Sam Rohrer:
Ladies and gentlemen, do you fear God? I asked myself that same thing. Do I fear God? King Solomon said the whole duty of man is to fear God and keep his commandments. There’s a reason for that because God will bring into judgment every secret thing, every person must consider. Well, what’s it mean to fear God? We come back, we’ll continue our theme today. The ultimate question, do I fear God and keep his commands? Well, if you’re just joining us today, we’ve begun the program on a very important theme. The title is this, the Ultimate Question, do I Fear God and Keep His Commandments? And I’ve taken that from Ecclesiastes chapter 12 and verse 13, where King Solomon at the end of his life looks back over all of everything that he had gained and God himself said he was the wisest person to live and he made that statement, let us hear at the conclusion of the whole matter, fear of God and keep his commandments for this is the entire duty of man or mankind.
And Dr. Renton Rathman right now is with me again today. He’s an apologist, apologetics and biblical worldview consultant to BJU Press and Renton. So as we continue in this, you spoke just briefly in the last segment as I did talking about using the examples of what’s happening in California as in la, a city given to the defiance of God, both as an entertainment industry throwing off God the pornography capital of the world, comments from those at Boston Globe making a mockery of God himself just the day before the fires began. I think not coincidentally my own opinion, but in addition to what King Solomon said in CLE 1213, which I just commented on his commandment there, said that it’s fear God keep his commandments, the whole duty of man. One would think that if that being stated in scripture that everyone would logically think and do what he said but people don’t and to their own hurt. So if we could right now, let’s define some of the terms a little bit further. Let’s just start again. You define some with fear of God, but what does build out a little bit fear God, what does fear of God mean? And on the flip side, what does to not fear of God look like?
Renton Rathbun:
Well, a lot of people try to tone down the rhetoric of scripture, if I can put it that way. What they want the fear of God to mean is just that we respect God. I think everyone’s afraid of what that word really means, and I can go into the Hebrew and the Old Testament and the Greek and the new, but that doesn’t seem very convincing to people either. So let’s just see what the Bible says in plain old English. In Jeremiah 5 22, the Lord says, do you not fear me, declares the Lord, do you not tremble before me? The whole idea of fearing the Lord has this idea of trembling a kind of terror before the Lord or before his power, if you can put it that way. Luke 12 five says, but I will show you who you should fear. Fear the one who after you have been killed has authority to throw you into hell.
Yes, I tell you, fear him Isaiah 57 11, whom have you dreaded and feared so that you lied and failed to remember me or take this to heart? And so this is the Lord saying, you’re not dreading my power. You are thinking light of me and that’s why you think you can act this way. And so what we see is yes, there is a sense in which there is reverence when we talk about the fear of the Lord, but oftentimes scripture is talking about the fear of the Lord in terms of real trembling and terror before the Lord. Now what this doesn’t mean is that the fear is an unresolvable terror. In fact, what we’re trying to get across is that reconciliation that’s made on the cross is made magnificent. When you see what God is capable of and has the authority to do, he is able to pour out all that power in a rage against us and we can feel the full power of God come down upon us in wrath, but instead he poured that wrath out on his son Jesus Christ. And gratitude cannot be there unless we see the magnitude of God’s power, which would fill us with terror. And in that terror there is real gratitude in his mercy where he holds back that power against us.
Sam Rohrer:
God as judge is the concept that runs through my mind standing in front of a judge who can say, go to prison before God to hell or to my kingdom. Wow. Now that’s the kind of thing we’re talking about here. Solomon also takes and connects fearing God and keeping his commandments, keeping God’s commands. What does that mean and how does that link therefore to the fear of God?
Renton Rathbun:
Well, we see in second Corinthians seven, one, it talks about perfecting holiness in the fear of God. So keeping God’s commands is not this stale kind of neutral place we sit, but we obey these commands like some kind of robot, but rather our holiness is perfected in the fear of God, in other words. Second Corinthians seven, one is kind of saying from Ecclesiastes, not only are we to fear God and keep his commandments, but we keep his commandments by fearing God. Proverbs eight 13 says, to fear God is to hate evil. Proverbs 16, six says, by the fear of the Lord, one turns aside from evil. Job 28 28 talks about turn away from evil is understanding. It says, behold the fear of the Lord that is wisdom and to turn away from evil is understanding. So keeping God’s commandments is not this arbitrary blind to obedience to some kind of quirky God that makes these random demands, but keeping his commandments is how we become holy as he is holy. It is the practical work of engaging what is real and becoming something in truth and not finding one’s identity in a lie, it is turning toward understanding. So this work of keeping God’s commandments really is at the heart of what God means when he says, be holy for I am holy because his commandments is understood in his very character. So when God makes a command to us, again, it’s not this arbitrary activity he is saying, this is what my character looks like, be like me.
Sam Rohrer:
So fearing God linked clearly with keeping God’s commandments. It’s kind of like the why but I guess coming out of that, but in that passage there, Ecclesiastes 1213, it also connects the concept of the duty of all mankind, the whole duty of mankind. Duty is a word little used or understood I think today in our postmodern culture. What does that mean and how does that connect with fear of God and keeping the commandments of God?
Renton Rathbun:
It’s interesting you mentioned our postmodern culture. What that really means is that we have a culture that views the world as this random event. The world was born in a random event of a random explosion that none of them can describe how that happened. And then through the process of dust settling and combining, we end up with planets and then evolution. And so everything is random. There’s no real actual moral law that we are accountable to. We just kind of make things up as we go along and we’re okay with that. But in the end duty, how I would define it is duty is loyalty to a law, whether that law is a moral law, a cultural law, a sociopolitical law, this loyalty eclipses all other factors and causes someone to act out of obligation to that law. So if you live in a world that you don’t believe, there is no overarching moral law that all men are obligated to, then duty doesn’t mean much to you.
I think you’re right in seeing that connection that as we have a society whose morality declines duty and the use of the word declines because it becomes a useless word, why would we find loyalty a law if it doesn’t apply to everyone and everyone’s just doing their own thing, but duty to God’s law is the outward work that demonstrates our loyalty to God himself. There is no loyalty to God outside of one’s duty to imitate God’s character and our duty to imitate God’s character is that duty to keeping his commandments as Ecclesiastes says, that’s the whole duty of man, be loyal to the law of God which is the character of God so that we might be holy as He is holy. In other words, this comes down when we talk about holiness is not just mindless duty to Allah but a loving connection our God that drives us to this obedience. But it’s also that love for us anyway comes from the realization of the power of God. What we deserve is that devastating power of fire and brimstone against us. But instead he sent his son and just like Ephesians tells us, even though we were filled with sin and this terrible background, but God and that’s the most important two words of the Bible, I
Sam Rohrer:
Think. Excellent. Dr. Renton Rathman, ladies and gentlemen, stay with us. Hope to. You’re thinking carefully if we walk through this, a lot of information being given today, but I think perhaps nothing more relevant to come back. We’re going to talk a little bit, go further and talk about the impacts of what’s it look like when there is a fear of God and what does it look like when there is no fear of God? Well rent Renton. Let’s continue. What an important topic we’re talking about today. Here is the fear of God, the ultimate question, do I fear God and keep his commands? Ladies and gentlemen, as we’re walking through that, that’s what I would like to pose before all of you listening to me right now, I pose that to myself and I have before in actually putting the program together. Do I fear God?
Do I keep the commands of God? That’s the question we must ask the ultimate question. Now, Renton, we’re going to talk about consequences here in this segment and like all aspects of scripture and God’s design for mankind, there are consequences for both keeping and consequences for rejecting God’s design, his plan. That’s what we have in the word of God, the biblical world of view. Properly done ladies and gentlemen will be that we will do what God says and for the reason he says it, that’s what we talk about all the time. I don’t care about what the world thinks actually I do. I don’t want to do what the world thinks. I do want to do what God thinks though. And one aspect of doing a God once is fearing God. And one of the leading characteristics is that as it pertains to me in my past as God called me into civil authority, was how that concept of fearing God as an example affects people in positions of authority and one of those that the Bible says about them in that capacity for all of us, but it says that they fear God.
And that’s one thing I learned when I was in office for almost 20 years because what I saw around me was that a people in a system that had no fear of God and they didn’t look to scripture for what God said, but I did as I knew the Lord and I said, Lord, what do you want me to do? What am I supposed to do? And now share just a couple of examples here on the positive side. For instance, Exodus 1821 says, Moses told the people there to appoint men who number one feared God and said if they feared God, they would be men of truth and if they feared God, they would hate greed and covetousness, which is the downfall of ungodly leadership. Then in various places in Leviticus it talks about that if the leaders and the people fear God, that one of them was that one in Leviticus 25 17 2 it said that they would not oppress and take advantage of others.
Boy, wouldn’t that be nice? Secondly, they would not charge undue interest on loans so as to fulfill their greed. Leviticus 25 36 says that a third one would be that they would not rule with a heavy hand, they would not be oppressors of the people. Leviticus 25 43 says that, and then a fourth one said, if the leaders and the people were to live in the fear of God and keep his commandments, God would bless and extend their life personally and nationally. Deuteronomy six, two and 24 says that. So anyways, Renton, I just took an example there. The principles of fearing God have an enormous set of consequences. Let’s take these principles and apply them to certain aspects of American culture today. For instance, here would be my question, how does the clear lack of fear in our nation today, how has it led to what we see today in our culture?
Renton Rathbun:
I think we can narrow this down to one thing. The lack of the fear of the Lord in American culture has brought us to a place where we no longer value shame. In fact, when I even say that even to Christians, I’m sure that sounds strange, we should not value shame. I mean shame is looked upon so negatively today, but when you look at what shame is, shame is actually the feeling of worthlessness that comes from realizing the wrong you have done. And when you get rid of fearing the Lord and walking away from caring about his character, you have everything we see in the LGBTQ plus community where there is no longer any shame back. Just maybe when I was a kid 40 years ago, the idea of homosexuality was shameful. No one would if a young man wanted to look like a young lady.
I mean he would never live it down. And of course there’s negative ways of responding to that that shouldn’t be done. But the shame was there. There was a time where politicians would lie because they knew that the recording devices weren’t there. We live at a time now where people have recorded everything the politician has said publicly and they still lie and they still say, no, I never said that. Or they’ll say something completely on the contrary and it doesn’t matter. There’s no shame in this outright lying. Nowadays, the legal system is absolutely weak when it comes to children. Whether we have decided murdering children in the womb is okay, or even when people abuse children sexually and you see what kind of sentences are brought their way where they don’t even do a full year of time in the prison because our legal system has no shame when it comes to how we treat our children. Tech communities are profiting huge amounts of money, billions upon billions of dollars to watch young people post what should be private and making it common and public to everyone because we live at a time where there is no shame and there’s no shame because we have stopped fearing the one who has the power to destroy us all with fire.
Sam Rohrer:
Renton, and boy, there are so many other things that you could identify as well that come as a result in a culture our nation as a result of no fear of God, but shame is a big one. That’s such an important one. How about this area? How has our clear and deep lack of fear culture wise in our nation affected the church at large?
Renton Rathbun:
The church has, when you look at the first book of Roman, the first chapter of Romans, what you see is probably the greatest chapter in apologetics ever. But what you also see in verse 16 is this first part that we have to grasp before we go into any kind of apologetics, which is for I am not ashamed of the gospel, for it is the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes. And what we have found in our culture today, especially in our church culture, is that we have become ashamed of the gospel. We do not want to call particular sins of the LGBT community actual sin. And if I can be more specific, try and find a church that sees same sex attraction as an actual sin as opposed to a burden that some people have and have to deal with. How many churches have become ashamed of Ephesians five that men are to lead their homes and their wives are to submit to their husbands?
How many times have we heard pastors preach on one Timothy two where male leadership in the church is commanded? How many times have we seen people fearing the fundamentals of our faith to the point where we are ashamed of the word fundamentalist? We are ashamed of the fundamentals, we’re worried about being too mean, whatever that means. We’re afraid of showing the world what we believe and not being ashamed of the gospel of Christ. We have redefined our relationship with God by changing what God should be to us. In other words, we see ourselves as victims and God is going to help us relieve ourselves of our oppression so we no longer see ourselves as evil sinners that are worthy of nothing but hell itself. What we see are victims, we are a victim and God is going to come and take this oppression off us.
You can see it in our Christian songs, you can see it in our Christian churches, how pastors are now talking about this. They don’t say that you are sinful, that this is your fault and you need a God who’s going to be merciful to you. Instead, what you hear is you are broken people that need some kind of help and the Lord can help you through your addictions or help you through a bad marriage and he becomes our self-help guide to a better life instead of realizing that we should fear the wrath of God, that’s what we’re really saved from. We’re not saved from a bad life. We’re saved from God’s wrath on us that he poured on his son. Instead. Once we miss that, the gospel becomes something skewed and no longer the gospel and that’s what we want. That’s what we really want. We want that gospel because the real gospel is something we’ve become quite ashamed of.
Sam Rohrer:
Renton, I tell you. So excellent. We could go so much further on that. I don’t have time to complete this, but we’re talking about the church, but specifically now Christian education is something that is dear and to all of our hearts you’re involved in that has the lack of fear crept into Christian education as we know it as well? If you don’t finish, we’ll continue that.
Renton Rathbun:
Okay? Yeah. Christian education has wanted biblical worldview for a long time, but what they’ve found is that a lot of Christian educational institutions want biblical worldview without taking a stand on biblical authority. So they like the idea of the Bible guiding us through our education, but what they don’t want to say is the Bible is the authority over the very knowledge that we have as humans. It is the source of our knowledge they want nowadays. If you can’t take a stand on that, you’re lost. And if you lose that, you have no real biblical worldview in your institution at all.
Sam Rohrer:
Ladies and gentlemen, fearing God does start with is God. Truth is the word of God. All true. All of these things connect together. Fear God, keep his commandments for it. It is truth, it is the very word of God. Do we approach it that way and do we fear and tremble when we don’t do what God says? We come back. We’re going to say right now, how can we get the fear of God? Alright, Renton, as we walk into the final segment now ladies and gentlemen, as we always do, again, thank you for listening today. I want to encourage you to go back and listen to the program again. There have been some programs that I think stand out in practical application, very relevant. One of the former programs that Dr. Renton Rathman and I did was on the matter of forgiveness. It’s amazing how many comments we’ve heard from people literally all around the world on the practical application of the importance of forgiveness.
But I’m going to submit that concept of forgiveness and everything related to it has its linkage to the fear of God. The fear of God goes to the heart of what we’re talking about today. It’s the summation of King Solomon’s evaluation of life. Fear God, keep his commandments, obey what God says. It’s your whole duty and when you put those pieces together, we deliver our lives differently, don’t we? So that’s the question and the reason for the title today, the ultimate question is do I fear God and keep his commands? So let’s do some practical application here. Renton. How does a lack of the fear of the Lord affect us individually? We’ve talked about a little bit as a nation, as a church, you come in just briefly how it’s impacted Christian education and how if you take out the fear of the Lord, you’ve got big trouble. How does it affect us individually?
Renton Rathbun:
Well, without the fear of the Lord, you cannot be holy. Holiness is at the heart of what it means when Ephesians at the beginning, Ephesians five says to imitate God, be imitators of God. Well, what does that mean? It means to be holy. Well, there is no holiness without the fear of God. And in fact, that’s kind of what we’ve done with God. We we’ve wanted to make him what we want him to be and then we’ll follow him. But rather we must accept the Lord for who he is in all his power, authority, and ownership of us. And in that we are able to begin understanding holiness without a fear of the Lord. At the heart of holiness is this desire to kill our sin, not to put it off for a while knowing we’ll come back, not to just ask God to forgive us, knowing that in the future we have no plan, no strategy, and how to avoid that sin.
We’re just sorry right now. Killing sin involves the strategy and planning of how I will avoid it, and that is at the heart of real repentance and all of that is needed. All of that is possible when we are able to fear the Lord, and let me even say on an individual basis without the fear of the Lord, we will change whatever we need to make us feel better even if we have to become victims instead of those that are guilty before the Lord. And in that it affects our children without the fear of the Lord, we will not take our obligation for our children’s education with fear. I don’t mean just seriously, but with fear, which means if you really take that obligation with fear, then what you’re thinking is this obligation is so incumbent upon me, I have a duty to this. I’m going to be very careful how I educate or how I have my children educated.
In other words, I’m going to look at a place where my kids are going to be educated. I’m going to ask, do you have biblical worldview? And it’s not just a sales point. Maybe they’ve even gotten rid of it because that’s all it was and they just don’t even talk that way anymore. But get down to the bottom of it. If you send your kid to a Christian school, you want to know how is it that you are educating my kids with biblical worldview? And that’s what’s so nice about BGU press is that easily with those textbooks, you can look right in there and see where in the very core of all of the instruction as biblical worldview, but I think that is one of the most important parts of the obligation we hold as parents, that when we as individuals stop fearing the Lord, it affects even the next generation.
Sam Rohrer:
It does indeed. And ladies and gentlemen, can I just read a quick verse? I want to read it from Revelation chapter 14 and seven. During a tribulation period, God will send out as part of judgment and warning to the people angels, they will fly about, they will communicate. And do you know what the first thing that they are communicating to a God rejecting world? Verse seven says, saying with a loud voice, the angels are fear God and give glory to him for the hour of his judgment has come and worship him that made heaven and earth and the sea and the fountains of water fearing God will give glory to God and it will cause us to worship the God of heaven. So anyway, I just wanted to throw that in there. It speaks directly to what a biblical world view does and right curriculum teaches and what the word of God undergirds in all of our lives. Lemme finish with this Renton. Alright? There are people who fear God. There are people who do not fear God. The angels go out and say fear God. So it’s obviously a choice. How does a person actually develop a fear of God and then teach it to the next generation, which we must do.
Renton Rathbun:
We have moved from my generation, generation X people born in the late sixties, early seventies. We’ve moved from that generation where knowledge, we were very knowledge heavy. Everything was about memorization and knowledge, and it probably admittedly was kind of more weak on relationships in our relationship to the Lord. But what has happened was today what we have is a very strong desire to have some kind of emotional relationship with God. And we are very weak on knowledge. And so what I’ve seen is this pendulum effect, well, all that knowledge didn’t do any good. What I need is an emotional relationship with God, and knowledge just is this stumbling block. And so we’ve kind of gotten proud of not knowing very much and feeling a lot knowledge must be driven by a love for God. I think what we’ve misunderstood is knowledge is never there for its own sake because wisdom, understanding and knowledge come from the mouth of God and you have to love God from whose mouth this comes from.
And so knowledge must be driven by love for God. But love for God must be developed through conversation. I mean, I think it would not surprise anyone that a good relationship, a marriage is when the two people communicate well and when they’re talking to each other. And I know this sounds very basic, but it’s not basic. It is at the heart of why we keep ruining ourselves. We do not speak to our God daily work at prayer. If you try to pray longer than five minutes, I bet you will find it very difficult to get to that sixth minute when we are, some of our church fathers would pray for two, three hours at a time before their day. And we have lost that ability to talk to our God. And we’ve also lost our ability to listen to our God by making real time in God’s word.
I struggle with both of those things and as we think, oh, you just mean your devotions. I don’t mean just my devotions. I mean, we have lost our ability to have a conversation with God where we speak to him for long periods of time and we listen to him for long periods of time through His word. Because the minute either of those are suspect in our mind, right at any time where we come to start having this war between relationship and knowledge, we have actually made both a stumbling block and we’ve got to change that.
Sam Rohrer:
And ladies and gentlemen, obviously we’ve just touched the surface, but do you fear God? If you fear God, do you worship God? Do you keep His commandments? I hope and pray that we’d reconsider and consider this thought as it is so critically important. If we know the Lord, we will fear God. We will keep his command. We will worship him in our hearts and in our demons.
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