Therefore God gave them up in the lusts of their hearts to impurity, to the dishonoring of their bodies among themselves, because they exchanged the truth about God for a lie and worshiped and served the creature rather than the Creator, who is blessed forever! Amen. Rom 1:24-25
As weโve said, every worldview is reducible to one or more empirically unprovable presuppositions. The belief in empirically unprovable presupposition is by definition,
Faith.
Now faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen. Heb 11:1
As a Christian, I subscribe to biblical presuppositionalism as the basis for my worldview. Everything in my life is based on one absolute. Jesus is Lord and His Word is inerrant and true.
For the love of Christ controls us, because we have concluded this: that one has died for all, therefore all have died; and he died for all, that those who live might no longer live for themselves but for him who for their sake died and was raised. 2 Cor 5:14-15
Most other people place their faith in a subconsciously assumed inerrancy of the media.
Like it or not, the crossroads of righteousness and truth versus that of deception and sin is a choice. We serve God or we exchange the truth about God for a lie and worship and serve the creature. The word creature in Rom 1:25 is
Ktรญsis – (figuratively) building, creation, creature, ordinance.
Worship is sebรกzomai –venerate, adore, to fear, be afraid.

We can debate the war in Israel, and Ukraine. We can obsess over left versus right. We can freak out over COVID, and climate change. We can place our hope or our greatest fear in a President or the WEF’s Great Reset. We can become a proverbial altruistic “world changer” and spend our livse building and doing things to eradicate what we see as the greatest problems in the world. We can place our hope in the greatest church or ministry or ministry idea and still spend our lives in utter futility if we do not correctly differentiate between creature and creator.
For what happens to the children of man and what happens to the beasts is the same; as one dies, so dies the other. They all have the same breath, and man has no advantage over the beasts, for all is vanity. All go to one place. All are from the dust, and to dust all return. Ecc 3:19-20
As for those who reject God and refuse to worship Him as God, the futility of their thinking is eventually made clear…
โFAMOUS ATHEISTS’ LAST WORDS BEFORE DEATH:
- ANTON LEVEYโAuthor of the Satanic Bible and high priest of the religion dedicated to the worship of Satan. One of his famous quotes was: โThere is a beast in man that needs to be exercised, not exorcisedโ. His dying words were: “Oh my, oh my, what have I done, there is something very wrong. . . there is something very wrong.โ
- GANDHIโAt his death, he said, โFor the first time in 50 years, I find myself in the slough of despond. All about me is darkness. . .I am praying for light.โ
- THOMAS PAYNEโThe leading atheistic writer in American colonies: “Stay with me, for God’s sake; I cannot bear to be left alone , O Lord, help me! O God, what have I done to suffer so much? What will become of me hereafter? I would give worlds if I had them, that The Age of Reason had never been published. 0 Lord, help me! Christ, help me! No, don’t leave; stay with me! Send even a child to stay with me; for I am on the edge of hell here alone. If ever the Devil had an agent, I have been that one.”
- SIR THOMAS SCOTTโChancellor of England: “Until this moment I thought there was neither a God nor a hell. Now I know and feel that there are both, and I am doomed to perdition by the just judgment of the Almighty.”
- VOLTAIREโfamous anti-christian atheist: “I have swallowed nothing but smoke. I have intoxicated myself with the incense that turned my head. I am abandoned by God and man.โ He said to his physician, Dr. Fochin: โI will give you half of what I am worth if you will give me six months of life.” When he was told this was not possible, he said โThen I shall die and go to hell!” His nurse said: โFor all the money in Europe I wouldnโt want to see another unbeliever die! All night long he cried for forgiveness.โ
- ROBERT INGERSOLLโAmerican writer and orator during the Golden Age of Free Thought: “O God, if there be a God, save my soul, if I have a soul!” Some say it was said this way: “Oh God, if there be a God, save my soul, if I have a soul, from hell, if there be a hell!
- DAVID HUMEโAtheist philosopher famous for his philosophy of empiricism and skepticism of religion: He cried loud on his death bed “I am in flames!” It is said his desperation was a horrible scene.
- NAPOLEON BONAPARTEโFrench emperor who, like Adolf Hitler, brought death to millions to satisfy his greedy, power-mad, selfish ambitions for world conquest: “I die before my time, and my body will be given back to the earth. Such is the fate of him who has been called the great Napoleon. What an abyss between my deep misery and the eternal kingdom of Christ!โ
- SIR FRANCIS NEWPORTโHead of an English Atheist club, to those gathered around his deathbed: “You need not tell me there is no God, for I know there is one, and that I am in his presence! You need not tell me there is no hell. I feel myself already slipping. Wretches, cease your idle talk about there being hope for me! I know I am lost forever! Oh, that fire! Oh, the insufferable pangs of hell! Oh, that I could lie for a thousand years upon the fire that is never quenched, to purchase the favor of God and be united to Him again. But it is a fruitless wish. Millions and millions of years will bring me no nearer the end of my torments than one poor hour. Oh, eternity, eternity forever and forever! Oh, the insufferable pangs of Hell!โ
- CHARLES IXโThe French king. Urged on by his mother, he gave the order for the massacre of the French Huguenots, in which 15,000 souls were slaughtered in Paris alone and 100,000 in other sections of France, for no other reason than that they loved Christ. The guilty king suffered miserably for years after that event. He finally died, bathed in blood bursting from his veins. To his physicians, he said in his last hours: “Asleep or awake, I see the mangled forms of the Huguenots passing before me. They drop with blood. They point at their open wounds. Oh! That I had spared at least the little infants at the bosom! What blood! I know not where I am. How will all this end? What shall I do? I am lost forever! I know it. Oh, I have done wrong.”
- DAVID STRAUSSโLeading representative of German rationalism, after spending a lifetime erasing belief in God from the minds of others: “My philosophy leaves me utterly forlorn! I feel like one caught in the merciless jaws of an automatic machine, not knowing at what time one of its great hammers may crush me!”
- JOSEPH STALINโSoviet Georgian revolutionary and politician. In a Newsweek interview with Svetlana Stalin, the daughter of Josef Stalin, she told of her father’s death: “My father died a difficult and terrible death. . .God grants an easy death only to the just. At what seemed the very last moment, he suddenly opened his eyes and cast a glance over everyone in the room. It was a terrible glance, insane or perhaps angry. His left hand was raised, as though he were pointing to something above and bringing down a curse on us all. The gesture was full of menace. . .the next moment he was dead.”
- CAESAR BORGIAโItalian nobleman, politician, and cardinal: “While I lived, I provided for everything but death; now I must die, and am unprepared to die.”
- THOMAS HOBBSโPolitical philosopher: “I say again, if I had the whole world at my disposal, I would give it to live one day. I am about to take a leap into the dark.”
Years ago I worked as a nursing assistant on a hospital medical oncology floor. I watched scores of people die. One thing that I was told during my training and later found to be true is that,
people die the way they have lived.
While I was not a Christian at the time, I invariably watched those who died in Christ go with a peaceful quiet exhale. Those who had rejected him died in fear, agony, tears and sometimes screaming.
Compare the last words from atheists, with these last words, from these saints of God:
THE APOSTLE PAUL: โO death, where is thy sting?โ
KING DAVID: โYea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no Evil.โ
AUGUSTUS MONTAGUE TOPLADY (1710-1778): Toplady will ever be famous as the author of one of the most evangelical hymns of the eighteenth century, “Rock of Ages,” which was first published in 1776.
During the final illness, Toplady was greatly supported by the consolations of the gospel: “The consolations of God, to so unworthy a wretch, are so abundant that he leaves me nothing to pray for but their continuance.”
Near his last, awaking from a sleep, he said: “Oh, what delights! Who can fathom the joy of the third heaven? The sky is clear, there is no cloud; come Lord Jesus, come quickly!” He died saying:”No mortal man can live after the glories which God has manifested to my soul.”
Lastly, Jesus said:
โI Am the Resurrection and the Life. He that believeth on Me, though he were dead, yet shall he live.โ John 11:25
The fool says in his heart, โThere is no God.โThey are corrupt, they do abominable deeds; there is none who does good. Psalm 14:1
MARANATHA
Jesus has come. Jesus is coming.




