March 19
Gathering of Vultures by David C. Grabbe
“For wherever the carcass is, there the eagles will be gathered together.” Matthew 24:28
“I tell you, in that night there will be two men in one bed: the one
will be taken and the other will be left. Two women will be grinding
together: the one will be taken and the other left. Two men will be in
the field: the one will be taken and the other left. And they answered
and said to Him, Where, Lord? So He said to them, Wherever the body is,
there the eagles will be gathered together." Luke 17:34-37
In
addition to a wake of vultures being a symbol of God's judgment of
shame, a gathering of vultures also indicates a diseased spiritual
condition. In Revelation 18:2, Babylon the Great is described as being
“a dwelling place of demons, a prison for every foul spirit, and a cage
for every unclean and hated bird.”
Vultures are undoubtedly at
the top of the list of unclean and hated birds! End-time Babylon is the
focal point of demonic spirits, which are likened to unclean birds.
Both of them prey on the sick and the injured, and they gather where
death is.
Even so, our greatest threat is not the Tribulation at
the end! As bad as it will be, far worse is being spiritually
unprepared when Christ returns and being judged as unworthy to enter the
Kingdom.
This is what the Parable of the Ten Virgins and the
Parable of the Wedding Feast describe. This is the substance of the
warnings about Christ's return being like a thief in the night—coming
when He is completely unexpected.
This is why He warns us
against neglecting so great a salvation and against being led astray by
the cares of the world, the deceitfulness of riches, and the pleasures
of life. Jesus warns us to keep us on the path of life, so that we do
not fall to the birds of prey that stalk the spiritually dying.
We are given the charge to come out of Babylon, so we do not share in
her sins or in her judgment (Revelation 18:4). If we have a discerning
heart, we should have a good idea of what will attract the vultures, as
it will be giving off the smell of spiritual death. God gives us that
discerning heart, so we can make good choices.
Do we really
believe the scriptures about the swiftness of Christ's return? It is
easy to look at world events and compare them to our understanding of
prophecy; we know that things are bad and getting worse—but the end
still seems to be just over the horizon. Because it is not here yet, it
is easy to conclude, even subconsciously, that there is no need to
become serious just yet.
However, this conclusion is filled with
assumptions. One is that our understanding of end-time events is
correct! A second assumption is that, even if we do have correct
understanding, we will never lose it through deception. A third is that
our faith will remain constant until the end. A fourth is that, when we
do decide to get serious, that we will have ample time to build
character, take on the image of God, and complete our sanctification. A
fifth is that our Creator will go along with our agenda of pushing Him
off until the last minute.
These are a lot of assumptions! If we are
misjudging these things, we may hear those terrible words, “I never
knew you; depart from Me” (Matthew 7:23)!
If we are delaying the
time to start seeking God, the vultures may be eyeing us as ones who may
not spiritually survive what lies ahead. Perhaps all of us have seen
this happen to people we care about. If we are spiritually sick or
injured, there is no time like the present to seek our Healer and
Protector to beat off the hated birds!
In the Parable of the Ten
Virgins, the foolish ones thought they had more time. They were
probably aware that their reserves of oil were not as full as they could
be, but they may have assumed that they could always attend to that
later. They did not count on falling asleep. They did not count on
life happening, that something would prohibit them from taking care of
preparations they had put off.
A lesson we can draw is that, if
we are not putting everything we have into our calling right now, how
much time is left does not matter. If that is the case, we may find
ourselves, like the foolish virgins, suddenly awake and realizing we
cannot get ready in time. What we claimed we wanted will have slipped
through our grasp, one day at a time.
Judgment is coming on the
world, but it is on the house of God right now (I Peter 4:17). A
gathering of eagles—a wake of vultures—is a symbol of God's judgment on
those who stubbornly resist coming into alignment with Him.
Vultures will literally gather for those who rebel against God in the
final battle (Revelation 19:17-21), and they are metaphorically already
circling those who cannot tear themselves away from Babylon—those who
are on such good terms with the world that they are giving off the scent
of spiritual death.
The multitude of warnings and prophecies
means that it is a possibility for us, because it is a certainty for
some. Yet, with all that God makes available, there is no good reason
for that judgment to fall on us.
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