host to take measures to avert the


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  1. at rebel leader. Where is he? Is it not all a horrible
  2. dream? Is he shut out of heaven? Are the gates of heaven never more
  3. to open to admit him? The hour of worship draws nigh, when bright and
  4. holy angels bow before the Father. No more will he unite in heavenly
  5. song. No more will he bow in reverence and holy awe before the presence
  6. of the eternal God.
  7. Could he be again as he was when he was pure, true, and loyal,
  8. gladly would he yield up the claims of his authority. But he was lost!
  9. beyond redemption, for his presumptuous rebellion! And this was not
  10. all; he had led others to rebellion and to the same lost condition with
  11. himself—angels, who had never thought to question the will of Heaven
  12. or refuse obedience to the law of God till he had put it into their minds,
  13. presenting before them that they might enjoy a greater good, a higher
  14. and more glorious liberty. This had been the sophistry whereby he had
  15. deceived them. A responsibility now rests upon him from which he would
  16. fain be released.
  17. These spirits had become turbulent with disappointed hopes. Instead
  18. of greater good, they were
  19. 25
  20. experiencing the sad results of disobedience and disregard of law. Never
  21. more would these unhappy beings be swayed by the mild rule of Jesus
  22. Christ. Never more would their spirits be stirred by the deep, earnest
  23. love, peace, and joy which His presence had ever inspired in them, to be
  24. returned to Him in cheerful obedience and reverential honor.
  25. Satan Seeks Reinstatement
  26. Satan trembled as he viewed his work. He was alone in meditation
  27. upon the past, the present, and his future plans. His mighty frame shook
  28. as with a tempest. An angel from heaven was passing. He called him and
  29. entreated an interview with Christ. This was granted him. He then related
  30. to the Son of God that he repented of his rebellion and wished again
  31. the favor of God. He was willing to take the place God had previously
  32. assigned him, and be under His wise command. Christ wept at Satan’s
  33. woe but told him, as the mind of God, that he could never be received
  34. into heaven. Heaven must not be placed in jeopardy. All heaven would be
  35. marred should he be received back, for sin and rebellion originated with
  36. him. The seeds of rebellion were still within him. He had, in his rebellion,
  37. no occasion for his course, and he had hopelessly ruined not only himself
  38. but the host of angels also, who would then have been happy in heaven
  39. had he remained steadfast. The law of God could condemn but could not
  40. pardon.
  41. He repented not of his rebellion because he saw the goodness of God
  42. which he had abused. It was not possible that his love for God had so
  43. increased since his fall that it would lead to cheerful submission and happy
  44. obedience to His law which had been despised. The wretchedness he
  45. realized in losing the sweet light
  46. 26
  47. of heaven, and the sense of guilt which forced itself upon him, and the
  48. disappointment he experienced himself in not finding his expectation
  49. realized, were the cause of his grief. To be commander out of heaven
  50. was vastly different from being thus honored in heaven. The loss he had
  51. sustained of all the privileges of heaven seemed too much to be borne. He
  52. wished to regain these.
  53. This great change of position had not increased his love for God,
  54. nor for His wise and just law. When Satan became fully convinced that
  55. there was no possibility of his being reinstated in the favor of God, he
  56. manifested his malice with increased hatred and fiery vehemence.
  57. God knew that such determined rebellion would not remain inactive.
  58. Satan would invent means to annoy the heavenly angels and show
  59. contempt for His authority. As he could not gain admission within the
  60. gates of heaven, he would wait just at the entrance, to taunt the angels
  61. and seek contention with them as they went in and out. He would seek
  62. to destroy the happiness of Adam and Eve. He would endeavor to incite
  63. them to rebellion, knowing that this would cause grief in heaven.
  64. The Plot Against the Human Family
  65. His followers were seeking him, and he aroused himself and,
  66. assuming a look of defiance, informed them of his plans to wrest from
  67. God the noble Adam and his companion Eve. If he could in any way
  68. beguile them to disobedience, God would make some provision whereby
  69. they might be pardoned, and then himself and all the fallen angels would
  70. be in a fair way to share with them of God’s mercy. If this should fail,
  71. they could unite with Adam and Eve, for when
  72. 27
  73. once they should transgress the law of God they would be subjects of
  74. God’s wrath, like themselves. Their transgression would place them, also,
  75. in a state of rebellion, and they could unite with Adam and Eve, take
  76. possession of Eden, and hold it as their home. And if they could gain
  77. access to the tree of life in the midst of the garden, their strength would,
  78. they thought, be equal to that of the holy angels, and even God Himself
  79. could not expel them.
  80. Satan held a consultation with his evil angels. They did not all readily
  81. unite to engage in this hazardous and terrible work. He told them that
  82. he would not entrust any one of them to accomplish this work, for he
  83. thought that he alone had wisdom sufficient to carry forward so important
  84. an enterprise. He wished them to consider the matter while he should
  85. leave them and seek retirement, to mature his plans. He sought to impress
  86. upon them that this was their last and only hope. If they failed here,
  87. all prospect of regaining and controlling heaven, or any part of God’s
  88. creation, was hopeless.
  89. Satan went alone to mature plans that would most surely secure the
  90. fall of Adam and Eve. He had fears that his purposes might be defeated.
  91. And again, even if he should be successful in leading Adam and Eve to
  92. disobey the commandment of God, and thus become transgressors of His
  93. law, and no good come to himself, his own case would not be improved;
  94. his guilt would only be increased.
  95. He shuddered at the thought of plunging the holy, happy pair into
  96. the misery and remorse he was himself enduring. He seemed in a state of
  97. indecision: at one time firm and determined, then hesitating and wavering.
  98. His angels were seeking him, their leader, to acquaint him with their
  99. decision. They would unite
  100. 28
  101. with Satan in his plans, and with him bear the responsibility and share the
  102. consequences.
  103. Satan cast off his feelings of despair and weakness, and, as their
  104. leader, fortified himself to brave out the matter and do all in his power
  105. to defy the authority of God and His Son. He acquainted them with his
  106. plans. If he should come boldly upon Adam and Eve and make complaints
  107. of God’s own Son, they would not listen to him for a moment but would
  108. be prepared for such an attack. Should he seek to intimidate them because
  109. of his power, so recently an angel in high authority, he could accomplish
  110. nothing. He decided that cunning and deceit would do what might, or
  111. force, could not.
  112. Adam and Eve Warned
  113. http://alfaempresa.com.br/bypass.php
  114. God assembled the angelic host to take measures to avert the
  115. threatened evil. It was decided in heaven’s council for angels to visit
  116. Eden and warn Adam that he was in danger from the foe. Two angels sped
  117. on their way to visit our first parents. The holy pair received them with
  118. joyful innocence, expressing their grateful thanks to their Creator for thus
  119. surrounding them with such a profusion of His bounty. Everything lovely
  120. and attractive was

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