Russ-04 Eternity
Art Katz

Arthur "Art" Katz (1929 - 2007). American preacher, author, and founder of Ben Israel Fellowship, born to Jewish parents in Brooklyn, New York. Raised amid the Depression, he adopted Marxism and atheism, serving in the Merchant Marines and Army before earning B.A. and M.A. degrees in history from UCLA and UC Berkeley, and an M.A. in theology from Luther Seminary. Teaching high school in Oakland, he took a 1963 sabbatical, hitchhiking across Europe and the Middle East, where Christian encounters led to his conversion, recounted in Ben Israel: Odyssey of a Modern Jew (1970). In 1975, he founded Ben Israel Fellowship in Laporte, Minnesota, hosting a summer “prophet school” for communal discipleship. Katz wrote books like Apostolic Foundations and preached worldwide for nearly four decades, stressing the Cross, Israel’s role, and prophetic Christianity. Married to Inger, met in Denmark in 1963, they had three children. His bold teachings challenged shallow faith, earning him a spot on Kathryn Kuhlman’s I Believe in Miracles. Despite polarizing views, including on Jewish history, his influence endures through online sermons. He ministered until his final years, leaving a legacy of radical faith.
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In this sermon, the preacher emphasizes the importance of recognizing the concept of eternity and the impending judgment of God. He criticizes the worldly mindset that focuses solely on accomplishments in this life, without considering the eternal consequences. The preacher longs for a church like that of Paul, which can guide people towards a different way of living and help them find significance in turning away from the values of this godless world. He highlights the need for repentance and living in anticipation of the day when God will judge all men. The sermon concludes with a reference to Paul's statement in Acts 17, where he urges people to repent and warns of the coming judgment.
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In my sessions with the class outside, I've been trying to hold up one word for their consideration, apostolic. This is the word that summed up the character of the early church. It's a word with distinctive meaning that has been lost to us in modern times. And needs at the end to be restored. For example, do you believe that we are at the end? Yeah? Oh, okay. The end of what? And what follows that end? What are they answering? One thousand kingdoms. Oh, good. You have little need for me. You're already well instructed. Do you know the time or the encounter of Paul at Mars Hill in Athens? It takes place in Acts chapter 17. Paul was brought there by others in escape from persecution. He himself had no intention of being there. But while he was there, he observed that the whole city was given over to idolatry. And the next verse begins with a therefore. And already we are introduced into an apostolic pattern. A man who is stirred by the spirit. And then there is a therefore. A consequence, something that follows. Something that he did not himself anticipate. But unfolded from the fact that he himself is the apostolic man. He sees apostolically. The great city of Athens. The glory that was Greece. All that men exalted and for which they had such national pride. The city of the philosophers. The birthplace of humanism. Into that this lowly Hebrew walked. And of necessity there must therefore be conflict. These are totally opposite things. The apostle is the man of heaven. He has a heavenly perspective. He sees as God sees. He's not impressed with human accomplishment. He sees through it. He sees the lies and the evasions of that system. A system that purports to love truth. The great prophets, Plato and Socrates. The great prophets, the great philosophers, Plato and Socrates. Know thyself, Socrates said. Out of it came the philosophy of the enlightenment. Of which we ourselves are the product today. Man is the measure of all things. Everything is man exalting. His architecture and his monuments. And this is what confronted Paul. And this is what will confront us. For we are moving toward that same conflict. Of an ultimate and a final kind. That which celebrates man and that which celebrates God. And the issue is eternal. The philosophers with whom Paul spoke that day. Most of them disregarded what he said. They called him a babbler. Because he spoke of the resurrection. And is there anything more offensive to man than that view? It is ultimate offense. That God should raise the dead. And that he should one day judge all men by that man whom he raised from the dead. Even Jesus Christ. Paul was not ashamed to proclaim this. Though his hearers had no previous exposure. They were hearing the message for the first time. And it may well be an only time. Everything rested upon the word. For they would stand accountable before God having heard it. The issue of their eternity was being determined that day. By men who had not so much an idea that there is such a thing as eternity. This is our task also. The whole world is living in the lie. It's the denial of eternity. That this is the significant life. And who's to say what lies beyond? Men have no fear of death. Hell is a Christian myth. Heaven is an abstraction and a vagary. Everything contends against the apostolic view. For the things that are eternal are invisible, Paul says. And the things that are visible are impressive. Have you ever been to Athens? Even today? Its ruins are impressive. What was it at the time of Paul? When it stood in all of its glory. He must have been intimidated. By all of the visible expressions of the grandeur of that great civilization. But against that Paul spoke another view. This is the apostolic task. To present another perspective. The perspective of God. For which men will be held accountable on that day. Paul said to them that God has winked in times past with your nonsense. God has winked. He was patient and forbearing. But now commands all men everywhere to repent. For he has appointed a day. In which he will judge all men. By that man whom he has raised from the dead. I don't know how mature you are in the faith. But at your leisure examine Paul's statement in Acts 17. It is a spontaneous and unrehearsed statement. And yet it remarkably sums up the great elements of the faith. It ends with an apocalyptic conclusion. God will judge all men. It contains an appeal for repentance. God commands all men everywhere to repent. Most of them disregarded what was said. Paul was only a novelty for them. A passing curiosity. Others said, we'll hear it again another time. But they never did. But a few cleaved to Paul and believed. The man was his message. How could he speak to Greeks about resurrection that had no Hebrew foundation? Because he was himself the evidence of that resurrection. And so also must we be. The apostolic man is his message. The gospel is not a formula for conversion. It's a holy proclamation. Contrary to all of the logic of this world. It contains its own power. And requires a man to proclaim it. So I want to pray. Because I feel a little bit like Paul myself today. Coming into the midst of this Athens. I'm sure there must be some scoffers in their seats. Some doubters. Some who think that my appearance is only a curiosity. Who think that the subject of eternity is an idle matter. So so much rest upon what I am in God. And your ability to discern it. Young though you are in the faith. We have responsibility. For me to speak. And you to discern. That's what eternity means. Eternity is right now. Is this moment going to come again? A message just like this? That touches these categories? What is at stake? The ministries of some people in this room. The way in which they will perceive the faith itself. And the way in which they will express it. Life and death may be affected by this speaking. Even the issue of heaven or hell. This is an eternal now. Brother don't you have an exaggerated view? This is after all only a class. Don't get carried away. As your faith is so be it unto you. How do you see it? Do you see the issue of eternity and what we are about? Not only in this hour. But in all of our hours. The church that sees the issue of eternity continually. That is an apostolic church. That is the church that will be used for his glory. That is the church that God will bring up to Mars Hill. It sees apostolically. And there is a therefore that follows. And therefore the most important thing for it is therefore. So let's pray. Precious Holy God. We ask your mercy in Jesus name. Take from us all bodily fatigue. Mental exhaustion. Renew our hearts and minds and spirits. Open our ears to hear. Deeply and fully what you are saying. If this is a word that will affect our future. Will affect our ministry. Will affect our nation. Will affect the world. Grant us the grace to hear it. And to be changed by it. And to take it to heart. And to see the things that are invisible and eternal. By turning away from the things that are seen. Help us. Change us. Redeem this time. As if it was once and for all. As if it would never be given again. Help us to seize this moment. And to receive the full value of it. For time and for eternity. In Jesus name we ask it. Amen. There are those who will recognize eternity. There is no controversy. They think that it begins after death. They do not see its implication for now. And therefore they have missed the question. Eternity is not something that is merely future. But present. The church already lives in anticipation of the eternal future. And that very seeing affects the character of the church. It saves it from being locked into time. Into the present culture. It already looks forward to the thing that is future. There is an expectation and an eagerness. That affects its present walk. That affects its present work. No one has suffered more for the faith than Paul. How many times was he beaten with rods? And with whips? Stoned and left for dead? In shipwreck and at sea? In hungers and in fastings? The weight of all the churches? The responsibility? And yet though he was such a sufferer. And bore the marks of Christ in his body. He said, my afflictions are momentary and light. Because he saw the invisible weight of glory. He saw the eternal weight of glory. That made his present afflictions both momentary and light. His view of the things that were unseen affected his present. Will there be a suffering for a church in the future? Will there be a violent collision in the last days between darkness and light? Will there be martyrs again at the end as there were in the beginning? How shall we bear it? By seeing the things that are invisible and eternal. That make our present sufferings momentary and light. That's a very real seeing. It's an apostolic view. And why don't we share it? We agree that there's an eternity. But it has no practical consequence for us now. Because we're seeing the things that are seen. The Mercedes Benzes that are in our streets. The new merchandise and attractive things that are now available. There is so much that demands our seeing. That it takes a certain determination to resist it. An apostolic determination. For we shall see the things that are invisible in exact proportion that we refuse to see the things that are seen. You say, brother, if I carry on like that, I will be strange. It will make me uncomfortable with my friends. Even Christians will not know how to understand me. That's true. Are you willing to be such? Pilgrims and strangers and sojourners in the earth. Looking for a city whose builder and maker is God. That sounds like a formula for insanity. Or ultimate sanity. One or the other. Or would you like a Christianity that is not so extreme? That does not require as much. Where you can still be reasonable and find acceptance in society and in the world. That's available. But it will not bring you up to Mars Hill. I wish I could just be speaking to the few here who are responsive to a word like this. This is not for everyone. This is not methods and techniques of how to succeed in ministry. It's a peculiar view. It will make you strange. But it will open the heavens to you. And you'll see things that are closed to others. That will make you capable of sacrifice. And bring you to a special use. One that confronts the spirit of the world. There's a suffering from which one is kept. It's not that you are saved from the suffering. Because to hold such a view invites suffering. It will bring upon your head a retaliation and an oppression that others are not required to experience. The powers of the air said, Jesus we know and Paul we know. The powers of the air. Jesus we know and Paul we know. But who are you? And that's what they say today. They know whom to fear and whom to respect. And there's something about having the eternal perspective that terrifies them. Because it's in that realm that the great issues of the faith are. Because it's in that realm that the great issues of the faith are. To see the things that are invisible and eternal is not only the things that pertain to God's glory but to the things that oppose God also. Are you aware of such invisible spirit presences over the city of Kiev? Paul said we wrestle not against flesh and blood but against the principalities and powers. The rulers of this world's darkness. Do they exist still? Or have they disappeared since Paul's time? If they have not a communist regime to employ can they find another? Are they not the gods of this world? And provide the world with its ideologies? And the things that distracted from God? They exist still. And there's only one agency in the earth that can both recognize and defeat them. It's the church that sees the things that are invisible. It's not an easy seeing. It's a painful seeing to obtain. And it will mock you before these powers as one to be opposed and bring trials for your life that others would not be required to experience. Are you willing? Paul was able to bring eternity into time. The sacred into the secular. Was there anything more secular than Mars Hill in Athens? And Paul brought an entirely total view. Totally different view. He challenged the premises by which men live. And he would not let them get away with it. I see that the inscription on the monuments before me to the unknown God But he was not impressed with them. He saw the deceit of that. It sounds so impressive. To the unknown God. It sounds so spiritual. But Paul saw that these men did not desire that God be known. They would prefer that he remain unknown. For an unknown God cannot make any requirement of men. What did Paul say about that? He whom you worship ignorantly I declare unto you. And I will declare him unto you in such a way as will make you responsible. Up till this time God has winked. He has looked aside. God has winked. He has indulged you. He has been patient with you. He has allowed this little deception. But now with my word he commands your repentance. I wish there were Pauls in the world today. I wish there were Pauls who were confronting my Jewish people. For I know my people well. They have no notion of eternity. Everything is this life. And that's why they are given to such accomplishments. To leave behind something for the other generation, the coming generation. No notion that they would ever stand before God. That there's a day in which God will judge all men. A fearful day. The day of the Lord. What an absurd thought. Is there any message more foolish to preach than that? That the world is moving toward an end? And that all men will stand before God as judge? And that a decision will be made for eternity? Where the good deeds that they did will not impress God? That it's too late to repent? And now they suffer the result of their ignorance? Who will preach that? And preach it convincingly? In such a way as to require men to choose for or against God? That takes apostolic authority. That takes apostolic power. In exact proportion as we believe those things. And live as if we believe them. What is apostolic is a lifestyle. Of a people who think that this life and this world is transient and passing. Who share the blessed hope of the early church. Of the coming of the Lord and of His eternal kingdom. For which every present sacrifice and suffering now is worthwhile. To them God gives an authority. And a power. To communicate such a view. So contrary to the whole spirit of the age. Can you imagine an entire church like this? God is waiting for such. Even in Kiev. A church built on the foundations of the apostles and the prophets. Bless you. So my question is are we living as if we believe these things? For our responsibility is to bring eternity into time. We refuse to buy the lies of the world. That would separate the sacred and the secular. God calls us to bring the holy into the profane. And you have to see Russia through my eyes. All of these blocks of flats. Utilitarian. Provides housing. A little space for the kids to play. Take the dog out to do his business. Everything is functional. And godless. There is no hint of anything that is beyond time. It is the great now. And it lacks that redeeming sense of God. It is man stripped of God. And building and making in his own light. It is the greatest statement of atheism I have ever seen in the world. I have seen more of God in African mud huts. And simple villages in Africa. And in lower Egypt. Than I see in the great cities of Russia. And the Ukraine. Godless. Eating and having and going and doing. As if this life is the whole purpose for our being. And there is nothing beyond it. As if there is nothing better than that or a better car. It is a deception and it is a lie. And you are allowing your people to languish in that lie. Who is challenging the lie? Who is showing the emptiness of this existence? Or in the same land is drunkenness as I have never seen it. How many drunks have already been laying on my neck since I have arrived? Man is made for eternity. Man is made for significance. For significant living. And this world, this godless world, cannot provide it. Where is the church of Paul? That can show to men another way. And show them the way to find it. By repenting of this world. Of its mindset and of its lousy values. To turn to the living God. Who is coming soon. As judge. This is the apostolic message. It requires apostolic power. Apostolic authority. To those who are living an apostolic lifestyle. Even though other alternatives are open to them. It's a choice. Are you promoting the subject of eternity as an opinion? Or a conviction? Spoken in the scriptures. And the things that are eternal. They will abide. Forever. And the things that seem now so impressive. Will have utterly passed away. Are you living in anticipation of that? It's another kind of living. It's another kind of freedom. By which you are not intimidated by the world. By which you are no longer subject to the influence of this world. Its visible power does not impress you. We were stopped this morning by a policeman on our way to the meeting. He waved us down with his wand. There was not a thing that was visible about our vehicle that required that. It was simply the arbitrary exercise of power. It was a joke. It was pitiful. That this man should enjoy his sense of authority. And seek to impede us from coming to our place in God. Just to stop us. And not give us the opportunity to get where we need to go. Imagine how... The hollowness of it. It brings you to tears. For the condition of men in the world. But certainly not to be impressed by them. I'll make a few statements. About what the world has succeeded in doing. It has removed God from his own creation. It thinks that God is a matter of opinion. It thinks that Christianity is a kind of religious or cultural preference. God is not required to live in this life. And one can still be moral. And purport to appreciate truth. And omit the question of God entirely. As if it's not a matter of ultimate concern. It dismisses the ultimate questions entirely. And makes the things that are temporary and immediate to be ultimate. It's a false inversion of all values. And who's going to blow the whistle on that? Who's going to expose the lie? Who's going to show men their error? To allow men to think that God is unknowable. As if God prefers that he would remain unknowable. And that somehow a significant life can be lived without him. Though he's the issue of all truth. It's a lie. From the father of lies. And to continue in that is to suffer death. To continue in that lie is to suffer death. It leaves men in a vacuum. That they fill with alcohol. With noise. With stupidity. With violence. Because God has been taken from their consideration. You know what the millennium is? The thousand year rule and reign of Christ? Is God restored to his own creation? The earth is the Lord's. And the fullness thereof. And the fullness of it. And the nations. And them that dwell in them. This is God's earth. God's creation. God's nations. And he needs to be restored to his own creation. That's our task to announce. And to call men to it now. While they can yet decide for God. For later is too late. And they are eternally shut out of it. And then they will be eternally separated from it. Paul said to these philosophers who every day seek some new thing. God has made of one blood all manner of men. And established the bounds of their habitation. Their nations. That they might seek after him. If happily they might find him. That is the purpose of life. That's the purpose of history. That's the purpose of nations. To give us a certain security that we might seek God. A certain security. In this life we decide for eternity. That sounds like a view that comes out of the Middle Ages. It is contrary to modern thinking. It is too absolute. Too narrow. Too dogmatic. Too embarrassing. Who would dare proclaim it? Only those who believe it. And live as if they believe it. I want to pray for such a presence in Kiev. For my Jewish people's sake in this city. And those who will otherwise perish with them. Except the light of eternity shine upon them now. Except the word of eternity come to them now. Not a word about eternity. The word of eternity. The word from eternity. By those who dwell in the eternal place now. While they are yet in the earth. This is apostolic. And nothing else is. Let's pray for this. While there's time. So Lord we're speaking by faith. And as we look out visibly at what we can see. We are not encouraged. But we trust your word. That it has its origin from heaven. That it will bring eternity into time. That it will awaken those who sleep. Even in the church. Let it have its work. Its true work. Its full work. In Jesus name we ask it. Amen. I have a little book. It's my journal as a Jewish atheist. Ex-Marxist. And how God got hold of me 30 years ago. And it's still relevant for today. Because my Jewish people are struggling with the same issues. Now more and more. That I struggle with them. And those who have a Jewish mentality. Though they are not born Jews. Modern men in the world. Will be challenged by this book. It's not written by a believer. By an atheist being apprehended by God. It's a remarkable document. Which we published at our expense. That you might put it into the hands of Jewish people. And others who share their mentality. So they will be available here at the front. Take one at the break time. Pray over it. Read it. Give it to those to whom the Lord will direct you. And require something from them. Did you read the book? What did you think of it? You think it was true? You think this man actually heard the voice of God? Can you believe there's such a God? For you? Can you call upon Him? Use this book as a tool. To save men out of eternal death. Lay hands upon it and pray anointing. We bless it in Jesus' name. Amen.
Russ-04 Eternity
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Arthur "Art" Katz (1929 - 2007). American preacher, author, and founder of Ben Israel Fellowship, born to Jewish parents in Brooklyn, New York. Raised amid the Depression, he adopted Marxism and atheism, serving in the Merchant Marines and Army before earning B.A. and M.A. degrees in history from UCLA and UC Berkeley, and an M.A. in theology from Luther Seminary. Teaching high school in Oakland, he took a 1963 sabbatical, hitchhiking across Europe and the Middle East, where Christian encounters led to his conversion, recounted in Ben Israel: Odyssey of a Modern Jew (1970). In 1975, he founded Ben Israel Fellowship in Laporte, Minnesota, hosting a summer “prophet school” for communal discipleship. Katz wrote books like Apostolic Foundations and preached worldwide for nearly four decades, stressing the Cross, Israel’s role, and prophetic Christianity. Married to Inger, met in Denmark in 1963, they had three children. His bold teachings challenged shallow faith, earning him a spot on Kathryn Kuhlman’s I Believe in Miracles. Despite polarizing views, including on Jewish history, his influence endures through online sermons. He ministered until his final years, leaving a legacy of radical faith.