01 -- CHICKENS COME HOME TO ROOST

        In the Book of Exodus, the first chapter and twenty-second verse, we read that Pharaoh
commanded that Moses be drowned in the river Nile. But Moses being God's favorite child, and a
child that was predestined to do a great work for God and for God's people, God's eye was on this
remarkable boy. The reader will understand that this boy Moses was to give the law to the world.
And when Pharaoh laid his plans to drown Moses, God was much displeased with Pharaoh's plan.
We read that God had Pharaoh take Moses and educate him until he was taught in all the wisdom
of the Egyptians, and he was the most mighty man intellectually in the whole nation. After the
education of Moses was complete we read again in the Book of Exodus, at the fourteenth chapter
and twenty-seventh verse, that God had Moses drown Pharaoh, so we See that the very kind of
death that Pharaoh planned for Moses, God and Moses planned for Pharaoh. So, my beloved, don't
plan something evil for your neighbor, for it is possible that the very death that you plan for your
neighbor, God will allow to come to you. For "chickens come home to roost."

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HUNG ON HIS OWN SCAFFOLD

        Again we read in the Book of Esther, in the fifth chapter and fourteenth verse, that Haman
had a gallows built fifty cubits high, to hang Mordecai on. Mordecai was a holiness man and was a
man with such spiritual insight that God's peculiar love and protection were thrown around this
remarkable Jew. He was a man of great wisdom and piety, while Haman, sorry to say, had neither
one. But we see that the plans of Haman were all defeated; God's hand was with the holiness man
and against the holiness fighter. So we read again in the seventh chapter of Esther and ninth verse
that Haman himself was hanged on the same gallows that he had erected to hang Mordecai on. This
is another proof of the fact that "chickens come home to roost." The reader will remember that
Pharaoh planned to drown Moses, and God had Moses drown Pharaoh; now Haman built a
gallows to hang Mordecai on, and God planned and worked the plan successfully, and to the
surprise of everybody in Babylon, Mordecai hung Haman on the gallows that Haman built to hang
Mordecai on.

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CAUGHT IN THEIR OWN TRAP

        We read again in the opening of the sixth chapter of Daniel that all the presidents and
governors and princes had laid a plot that was very dirty and subtle. This scheme was so subtle
that even the king was deceived by it.

        This plan was to catch Daniel, the only holy man in the city of Babylon at that time. These
holiness fighters and holiness haters and God-rejecters pretended to be great friends of the king,
and now they rushed to the king as though they were much interested in him and his affairs, and
said, "O King, live forever!" Then they notified him that all the governors and princes and
presidents desired to bring great honor to him, and now they said, "King, we want to pass a
decree, and sign it with your ring, which is, according to the Medes and Persians, unchangeable.

And this is the plan: for the next thirty days no man shall ask a petition of any god except thee, O
King."

        And the king, being completely caught with their guile, never once mistrusted their
sincerity, but was blindly led into their scheme, passed the decree, and sealed it with his ring.
Here is their piece of deception. And the decree was this, that if any man asked a petition in the
name of any other god except the king, he was to be cast into a den of lions. Now, reader, doesn't
that look a good deal like the plans of a holiness fighter of the twentieth century ? Where is there a
man of any traveling experience that has not seen and heard just such dark, muddy, secret,
mysterious plans worked out to get rid of some good, holy man or woman because of their
beautiful testimony?

        But, thank the Lord, we read that when Daniel knew that the decree had been signed, he
went into his room, as he had been doing before, with his windows open toward Jerusalem, and on
his knees he made his petition to Almighty God, three times a day, just as he had done before. And,
behold, the governors and princes and presidents caught Daniel on his knees in prayer, and then
they raised a shout and said, "We've got him! We set the trap for Daniel, and he is caught in it. The
decree cannot be changed, therefore Daniel must go into the den of lions. We will get rid of this
disturber of the peace of Zion." And it was made known to the king that Daniel was caught in
prayer, asking petition from God instead of him. At that time this subtle, black, mysterious,
unbelievable, unthinkable scheme of the governors and princes and presidents was made plain to
the king. He saw that they had not only caught Daniel, but they had caught him, for he loved Daniel,
and he never even suspected that their plans were to catch Daniel.

        So we read that he labored until the going down of the sun that Daniel might be delivered.
But as the decree had been signed and sealed with his own ring, the decree could not be changed.
Therefore Daniel must go into the lions' den, and into the den of lions Daniel went.

         But, bless your heart, we read immediately following that God had sent an angel, and had
locked the lions' mouths, and so Daniel spent the night in the lions' den, and the king was so sad
that he had all music and dancing and feasting suspended for the night. At break of day he hurried
to the lions' den, and cried with a loud voice and said, "O Daniel, has thy God delivered thee?"
And Daniel shouted back, "O King, live forever! The God that I serve has delivered me," and
Daniel came out of the lions' den without a mark on him. Then we read that the king had the
governors and princes and presidents brought, and had them cast into the den of lions, and we read
that the lions had the mastery of them and before they ever reached the bottom of the den their
bones were broken. So we see again that "chickens come home to roost."

        Beloved reader, don't forget this remarkable piece of history; keep it clear in your mind,
that the death that Pharaoh planned for Moses, the same death came to Pharaoh; the death that
Haman planned for Mordecai came to Haman; and the death the governors, princes, and presidents
planned for Daniel came to them.

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THE DOGS LICKED UP HIS BLOOD

       We want to notice that in Genesis, ninth chapter sixth verse, God said, "Whosoever
sheddeth man's blood, by man shall his blood be shed." God said it was because man was made in
the image of God. As far as I can find, this is the only reason why one man shouldn't kill another,
because God said that man was made in His image. And that proves that any being who is made in
the image of God is not to be killed by man. Now we will see that these Scriptures were fulfilled,
for we have just read that he that "sheddeth man's blood, by man shall his blood be shed."

        We read in I Kings, twenty-first chapter, that Ahab and Jezebel wanted to buy a vineyard
that belonged to Naboth, and Naboth did not desire to sell his vineyard, and refused to take their
offer, whereupon Queen Jezebel laid a plan whereby they might get Naboth's vineyard. She
notified the leaders of Israel to proclaim a great feast. While the feast was on, they were to prefer
charges against Naboth, as though he had committed some bad crime, and take him out and stone
him to death. They stoned him at the pool of Samaria, and the dogs licked up his blood. Whereupon
Jezebel called Ahab, and told him to go down and take possession of Naboth's vineyard, for said
she, "Naboth is dead, and is not alive."

        God sent the prophet Elijah to meet Ahab at Naboth's vineyard, and Elijah said, "In the
place where dogs licked the blood of Naboth shall dogs lick thy blood, even thine" (I Kings
21:19). And we read that Ahab was killed in battle, and brought back to the pool of Samaria in a
chariot. The blood was washed out of the chariot, and the dogs licked it up where they did the
blood of Naboth.

        Then Elijah declared again that the dogs would eat the flesh of Jezebel. We turn and read in
II Kings, the ninth chapter and the thirty-sixth verse, that when Jehu was anointed king and went
into Samaria and had a great feast, that Jezebel dressed up and looked down from the upper story
at the young king. He commanded his servants to go up and pitch her out of the window head
foremost into the streets and kill her. When his dinner was over, he told the servants to go and bury
her, but, behold, the dogs had eaten her up, and nothing remained but her head and feet and palms
of her hands. Then Jehu said, "This is the word of the Lord, that the dogs shall eat up Jezebel."

        "Chickens come home to roost."

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