Friday, May 23, 2014
Love, Marriage and Eternal Security
"I have loved you with an everlasting love." -Jeremiah 31:3
I love my wife. I mean, I really love her, and because I love her there is nothing that she can do, no sin that she can ever commit, that will make me stop loving her, that will ever make me abandon her. Truly, I do and I will love her no matter what. Whether she really understands this I can’t say for sure, but I hope that she does, because although she has never tested this fact, it is important to me that she understand it, that she is confident in my love and without fear that I would ever cease loving her, liking her, desiring her, being with her. I will never leave her, nor forsake her. And because this is true of me, a mortal, I know that it is true of God. Whatever good, merciful or loving qualities we possess as fallen creatures, they are a poor reflection of the reality of the endless, deep love of God for us. Can we ever, as believers, cause God to stop loving us, liking us, or being with us? Absolutely not. There is no action, attitude or sin that a believer can commit that will ever cause God to abandon them. And let us not speak of us abandoning God, as though there were any place we could go to get away from his loving presence; it is not possible. God’s love is more persistent and steadfast than any human emotion, and is strong enough to endure all wrongs. Rather, consider: although I cannot say whether she truly believes that there really is nothing she can do that will end my love for her, I know that my wife “fears” to displease me for the same reason all lovers fear to do wrong by the ones they love: because they cannot abide the thought of hurting the one they love so much. After all, love seeks good for its object, not harm. Indeed, if an individual actively sought to harm, to take advantage of and to use the one that it claims to love, is there anyone who would say that there was any love present at all? Certainly not.
There is no danger, friends, in helping people to understand that God’s love, care and compassion, indeed the salvation he offers as a result of these things, will stand firm no matter what they may do. No danger in helping them to understand that these things are eternal and unmoving. Rather, the danger (and it is a very real danger) is that they should not understand these things, that they should assume that at some point God might abandon them, revoke his compassion and salvation that are born from his love. Those who claim salvation and live as they please with no thought for what God desires prove by their actions that they have no love for God at all, for such actions are in no way loving, and if they have no love for God, how can they claim to have received his salvation, at the point of which God transforms the heart, makes alive what is dead and places his Spirit within them? If God places his Spirit, indeed his love, within our hearts, that is a change that cannot be undone. That love will burn and grow though at times it may be subject to the harshest climates. God will stand by his children, he will work for their good, and it is an abominable thing to say that he will ever give one of them up, as though he were as frail and fickle as we are. Indeed, if men and women can stand by each other despite what seem to be earth-shattering wrongs, as many have, God will do no less but will instead show by his example just how small our grandest acts of love have always been, and so he will be glorified in all and through all.
The Blessedness of the Virgin Mary
"a woman in the crowd raised her voice and said to him, "Blessed is the womb that bore you, and the breasts at which you nursed!" But he said, "Blessed rather are those who hear the word of God and keep it!" -Luke 11:27,28
The above exchange was not a statement by Jesus that Mary is not to be regarded as blessed. The angel Gabriel told Mary she had found favor with God, and afterwards Mary noted that "all generations will call me blessed". Rather, Jesus is giving context for Mary's blessedness and at the same time extending an invitation that all can enter into it. Mary heard the word of God, and she kept it; she found favor with God and believed in the message delivered to her by the angel. Her response to the incredible revelation that she, being a virgin, would nonetheless bear a child, and not just any child but the holy Savior, was to reply in a spirit of faith and submission to God's will "behold, I am the servant of the Lord; let it be to me according to your word." (Luke 1:38). Jesus' words to the woman reflect those of Mary's aunt Martha, who said to her "blessed is she who believed that there would be a fulfillment of what was spoken to her from the Lord.” (Luke 1:45). Mary is blessed, not because she gave birth to Jesus, but because she believed in and kept the word of God. In so doing, she was given the most honored position of anyone past, present or future: she was made the earthly mother of God himself. Blessed indeed are those who hear the word of God and keep it, and blessed we will also be if we follow in her footsteps.
Salvation is for All
“For God loved the world so much that he gave his one and only Son, so that everyone who believes in him will not perish but have eternal life.” –John 3:16
Did you ever stop to consider how many stipulations there are in the above verse? How many rules you need to follow, what kind of person you need to be in order to gain eternal life? Let me help you out: one. You need to believe. You need to believe in who Jesus is and what He did, and that belief naturally presupposes a certain degree of trust. If you believe something, you trust in your belief. If you believe a chair will hold your weight, you sit in it. If you believe that Jesus is the Son of God and that He paid the price for your sins, then you must accept that if the Son of God paid the price, the price has been paid. That’s it. Done. If you really believe that, love and thankfulness will follow.
There are a few people in the world who believe themselves to be just fine as they are, fairly decent folk who believe that they don’t need to be forgiven for their sins. These people need to start with a solid look at themselves and who they really are before they can trust in a savior they don’t think they need. Others, however, realize the sinfulness that lurks inside of them, even if they don’t always act on it: that dark shadow of a person they could easily become or, perhaps, that dark shadow they have already become, which they see staring back at them every day in the mirror.
Let’s be honest with ourselves. We don’t measure up to God’s standard. We all have a dark side just waiting to dominate our lives if we will allow it. Perhaps we even have specific, dark secrets we are afraid others will find out about, but there is one person whose rejection we need not fear: God. “If we confess our sins to him, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all wickedness.” -1 John 1:9
Nobody is capable of cleansing themselves, of gaining their own forgiveness. All forgiveness and cleansing comes from God. We may be able to stop a bad habit, but we cannot erase our wickedness from our past, nor ensure we will not repeat it in the future. Only God can do so, and it all starts with belief; belief in what He has already accomplished on our behalf through Jesus. It doesn’t matter where or who you are: sex, nationality, family or history, God will welcome you into eternal life if you only just let go and trust in Him. No hoops to jump through, no tasks to accomplish, just belief in His son who died because He loves you so much.
Lest we become discouraged with our continuing propensity to do evil, consider; the God who welcomed you into his eternal family without any requirement beyond your belief will not then kick you out because you fail to live up to His standard. Indeed, He will slowly begin His work in your life, and we need only be receptive to it: “And I am certain that God, who began the good work within you, will continue his work until it is finally finished on the day when Christ Jesus returns.” –Philippians 1:6
Remember that it is God’s work, not our own. When we resist his efforts to mend our lives, we require Him to take stronger measures. God’s love for us will not allow us to stay as we are. When we cooperate with His work in our lives, we make it easier on ourselves. But one way or another, God will see what is dark and vile lifted out of us. So if you shudder at your own failings, small wonder…just be thankful that God has forgiven and is at work cleansing us. As you begin to feel his gentle prodding in this or that area, go along with it; but never worry that He will cast you out. “Just as a parent disciplines a child, the Lord your God disciplines you for your own good.” –Deuteronomy 8:5 If He disciples us for our failings, He does so because we are His children. A parent does not discipline a child to destroy it, but to amend it for its own good and benefit. God will never cast out His child.
In short, believe in who He is and what He has done, and believe in His ability to carry out His work within you. Never allow guilt or fear to pull you away from Him; anything that pulls you away from God does not come from Him, no matter how we justify it to ourselves.
The Perfect Love of God
“I have loved you, my people, with an everlasting love. With unfailing love I have drawn you to myself.” –Jeremiah 31:3
The love of God is something all believers give lip service to, but I am convinced that few really understand it or take seriously what it means. When we walk around with guilt on our shoulders, feeling convinced that we are unlovable, that God is angry with us, or fed up with our continual failings, we do not understand the love of God. When we feel that God is not active in our lives, not answering our prayers or meeting our needs, we do not understand the love of God. When we feel afraid that we may do the wrong thing and God will not listen to us or come through for us, we do not understand the love of God.
Let me tell you what the love of God is: the love of God is the unconditional love of a parent for a small, helpless child, a child who is sick and hurt and weak. The parent does not begrudge the child its childishness, or punish it for being ill, or refuse to help it because it cannot help itself, or cast it away because throws tantrums in its discomfort. The parent nurtures the child, cares for it, stays up late at its side, pouring love and care over its small feeble frame, protecting it and guarding it unto death. This is the love of God. It is a love that does not care for your past or your present, but the direction of your future. It is a love that has no end, that guards its beloved with a furious jealousy against all that seeks to draw it away or do it harm. It is a love that seeks to lift up and heal the broken, sick spirit within us all.
It is a love that loved you while you were unlovable, far from God, far from hope, with no power or desire in your spirit to turn to God. As broken, sinful souls it was impossible that you could have turned to God unless He first drew you to Himself; God chose you before you chose Him. His saving work began in your life before you responded to Him, because the only response you could have given Him before His Spirit poured grace on you was to turn away from Him. He made you alive while you were dead, made you a new creation and placed His Spirit within you, filling you with His love, a love He will never take away. He did not turn from you when you were altogether without God, lost in sin and unwilling to turn to Him; He will not turn from you now when He lives within you. You may at times fight and resist His Spirit, but “God is working in you, giving you the desire and the power to do what pleases him.” (Philippians 2:13). Take note of that: it is God who is at work in you to do what is right; those good things do not come naturally from yourself.
The point is this: If you don’t think you are good enough, you’re absolutely right. But it’s not about how good you are, it’s about how good God is. God knows you and chose you for Himself when nothing good existed within you, and He will not let you go now. God is not angry with you, and if you have an idea of God waiting on high ready to strike you down if you do the wrong thing, ready to withhold good from you and ready to turn His ear away from your prayers, that idea does not come from Scripture. When your mind and heart tell you that you are a failure, that everything is your fault and that you are not good enough for God, remember: “God is greater than our feelings, and he knows everything.” (1 John 3:20). What is it that God knows? God knows that He loves you, that He saved you, and that He will see you through to the end of your days. “I will never fail you. I will never abandon you.” (Hebrews 13:5): that is the love of God.
The Forgiveness of God
“Create in me a clean heart, O God. Renew a loyal spirit within me. Do not banish me from your presence, and don’t take your Holy Spirit from me.” –Psalm 51:10,11
This psalm was authored by David, and was a prayer of repentance after he had committed adultery with Bathsheba and had her husband killed to cover his tracks when she got pregnant. David came to terms with his own wicked actions after the prophet Nathan took him to task over it. This verse was brought to my attention during a discussion on repentance at church, where it was noted what a fearful thing it would be to have God abandon someone because of their misdeeds. Consider, however, the source of the statements: God is not speaking, David is. David, realizing the weight of his offense before God, is fearful and begging not to be cast out. This is because David recognizes the punishment that his crimes deserve, and he knows that God is holy and just; how can a holy and just God let such a matter slide? His guilt is upon him, and he knows it is grace alone that can save him now.
However, David’s fears, though justified by human logic, are less justified by God. God has not threatened to cast David out. That He punishes disobedience is clear; His justice cannot allow David a free pass. But David’s fear is that God will abandon him as King Saul, his predecessor, was abandoned. Saul, however, was a different case. Saul had a heart filled with rebellion against God. He desired to do things his own way, and assumed that he knew best how to handle situations, frequently choosing to disobey direct commandments of God. In so doing, the testimony of his life proves that, although God used him at various points in time, his heart was not right before God. He lacked the humility that God required, and this kept him from having a true relationship with the Lord. Thus, God’s “abandoning” Saul was an abandonment of him to his own self. Had Saul’s heart been humble before God, none of his crimes would have been beyond the reach of divine grace, and God would have molded him, slow though the process may have been, into His image. David is a different case. His crimes were great, but his heart was humble. His relationship with God was fundamentally different, and his fear of offending God proves this. His crimes led him to fear lest God should treat him as He did Saul. Whereas Saul, who was punished thus, responded not with repentance but with anger that God would take away his kingship.
Consider now the words of God, found throughout the scriptures: “Though your sins are like scarlet, I will make them as white as snow. Though they are red like crimson, I will make them as white as wool.” (Isaiah 1:18), “I will never abandon you.” (Hebrews 13:5). The testimony of God is clear; there is no crime too great for His grace to overcome. David’s heart, though fearful, accepted the grace God extended, recognizing that even for him, God’s love still flowed freely, and he picked himself up and moved on. But it could have been different…David could have allowed his fear of God’s wrath to consume him. Though God had not abandoned him, nor threatened to do so, had David trusted more in his emotions and in human reason than in the love of God, he could have despaired of salvation, believed that God had abandoned him, and his life would have spiraled downward into depression and self-loathing. Many today fall into this trap, even within the church; their own sins become too great in their own minds for them to accept the forgiveness of God. Ladies and gentlemen, NEVER suppose that your sins are too great. Bring them to God with a sincere heart, turn from them, and then (this is a point all-to-often missed) forgive yourself. What God has forgiven, what right have we to hold against anyone, including ourselves? Let it go, and move on.
The Unmerited Love of God
“And behold, some men were bringing on a bed a man who was paralyzed, and they were seeking to bring him in and lay him before Jesus, but finding no way to bring him in, because of the crowd, they went up on the roof and let him down with his bed through the tiles into the midst before Jesus. And when he saw their faith, he said, “Man your sins are forgiven you.” –Luke 5:18-20
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I love this story because it so clearly shows the love of God. Consider a few things; the people in question knew Jesus could heal the paralyzed man, and took pretty bold action to get him near Jesus. That action showed their faith in what he could do. But also consider, Jesus doesn’t begin with healing him. He begins with forgiving him for his sins. Wiping his slate clean, right there, no questions asked. That’s the best part: no questions asked. Not even “will you forgive me”. The man did not ask, his friends did not ask. Jesus just saw that they believed that he could heal this man, and that was enough for him; he would not only heal him, but pardon him of every wrong action, every wrong thought he had ever had before God. He would welcome him into eternal life before the man even had a chance to ask for it.
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Folks, God desires to save us from our sins more deeply than we can comprehend. He wouldn’t have endured the torturous death of crucifixion at the hands of his own, comparatively insignificant creation if he hadn’t desired it more intensely than anything else. He could have started over with humanity, but he wanted the humanity that he had first created, loved us without us ever asking him to, indeed without us ever desiring him to, and rescues each of us from our sins before we even come to a place where we are able to ask. His love and his action came first. Never, EVER believe that God is fed up with you; he loves you more than you can comprehend, and there is nothing you can do to change that. His love is as unchanging, unending, and impervious to all of our best attempts to thwart it.
I hope that if one thing sticks with each of us, it will be the incredible knowledge of just how deeply we are loved by God, no matter who we are or where we come from.
God's Protection and Casting Out Devils
One side-effect to growing up in charismatic circles was the notion of casting out or "binding" Satan and demons. I can't attribute this to my parents, but as a kid I listened fairly well in church and was a favorite among my Sunday School teachers because of it. I gradually formed a theological understanding of prayer, spiritual authority and demonic powers that was accurate to what was being presented, taught and believed within the realm I found myself. The result was that I would often begin or end prayers, or address my fears (I was quite afraid of the dark as a kid), or even address my struggles by "binding" whatever devils or demons I felt were either present or responsible. I invoked the name of Jesus and casted them out of my bedroom the basement, or wherever else I thought they might be hiding.
This is not a good thing. If anything, this "understanding" of the spiritual world around me did nothing to create within me a confidence of who I am in Christ, but only left me, as a child, with an increased sense of foreboding and insecurity. This placed a lot of the responsibility for my circumstance upon MY shoulders, not God's. God was not protecting me...I was protecting myself. God was like a distant figure whom demons were afraid of, but they had free reign to do as they please until someone invoked His name, and therefore I invoked it all the time. God was a gun, not a Father, and I had to wield His name in order to protect myself and those around me from the demons which were, apparently (given the frequency with which they were continually addressed in church settings), absolutely everywhere, unseen but present, the dark reality that was watching you from the shadows.
How much better it would have been if I had never once been introduced to this idea of casting out and binding the powers of darkness, but had instead heard more of how God is present, watching and guarding us personally, taking care of His children before they even ask, caring for and loving us more deeply than any earthly parent. This is the truly Biblical view of God and His care; if I could run to the arms of my mother when I was afraid, how much more into the arms of God? Instead, I was standing in fear supposedly binding demons left and right, but never feeling secure or particularly protected. This is a travesty.
Don't teach your kids to cast out demons, to bind them or to talk to them in any respect at all. Teach them to talk to God, because He is actively watching over them. There is absolutely no need for them to get directly involved with any dark being...in fact, I'd say that goes for us adults, too. God takes care of His own, and it is enough that we go to Him.
The Grace of God and the Eternal Security of the Believer
"...he chose us in him before the foundation of the world, that we should be holy and blameless before him. In love he predestined us for adoption as sons through Jesus Christ, according to the purpose of his will, to the praise of his glorious grace, with which he has blessed us in the Beloved." -Ephesians 1:4-6
I often ponder over the grace of God that He reveals to us through His work of salvation, and it never ceases to amaze me. I continually come back to the fact that, were salvation in my own hands, it would be impossible for me to see Heaven. As a child, I grew up with the commonly taught idea that salvation can be lost, and it scared me to think that at any point I might cease being saved and wind up in Hell. Upon consideration, I realize that I was quite right to be afraid; if this were true, it is a certainty that salvation would be absolutely impossible, or at least, impossible to keep. The moment salvation depends upon the frailty of human decision, whether to obtain it or to maintain it, it is altogether doomed. We disappoint God so many ways every single day, and just where is that line drawn that says "this far, and no farther?" Here's what I've learned: there is no line. It is not possible for a believer, one who has been saved by the grace of God, one who has been made a "new creation", to revert back to an "old creation".
I've heard a lot of people comment on passages from the book of Ephesians, arguing that the predestination of God described in the first chapter is actually dependent upon the also-mentioned foreknowledge of God. I.e., that because God foreknew that we would willingly come to Him, He therefore predestined our salvation. It cannot be. God knew you before you were created because from the very beginning you were in His mind, as was His plan of salvation for you. He both foreknew AND predestined you because that was the intended roll you were to play within the story He is telling through creation. If God predestined you to salvation, is that plan that obtained salvation for you thwarted by your disobedience at any point in time? Does God set the stage but then give us the chance to veto His will?
Consider it this way: how many parents cease to love their children? A parent's heart may be broken, shattered even, by the choices a child makes, but only the worst of parents ever cease to love their child. God is our parent, and He is certainly not the worst of parents. Indeed, His love is greater than that any human parent bears for a child, so certainly if human parents maintain their love, God will do no less. No, He will do far more, and love more greatly than humanity is capable of. Will He discipline His children? Certainly. He will do so for their correction and to force hard-headed and stubborn children to learn to do good, and not evil. But no child of God will ever see Hell, nor will any child of God be given up to his or her own selfish will. Once saved, once truly redeemed by God, God will never allow that to happen.
When we realize this...when it truly begins to dawn on us how incredible the love and grace of God is, to have set in motion our salvation before we ever had the chance to earn it (and certainly we never could), and when we realize that His love extends beyond all of our faults, failures, and every petty, childish desire or action we could ever take, the effect is certain: it is one of awe, of thankfulness, of humility, gratitude and love. I am altogether convinced that the opposing view, that our salvation is initiated by ourselves, maintained by our own will and may, should that will change, cease to be, is altogether one of the greatest evils present within the church today, for by it, the confidence, faith and gratitude of Christians is lessened or shattered altogether, as now they must base their hope upon the frailest of creatures: themselves. What can we say to that? God save us!
Sparrows, Eagles and Lions
In an old book by one Dr. Herbert Lockyer that I found tucked away in what remains of the library of a now non-existent Church of God, in an essay that makes comparison between spiritual life and thought and the animal kingdom, I found the following passage:
“Let us not live according to the scale of the sparrow, always hopping around the doors of the world for a few paltry crumbs. God means us to set our affections above, to have the heavenly eye of the eagle.”
Now, it is truly unfair of me to abuse Dr. Lockyer for his use of metaphor, as his comparison between an eagle and a sparrow served his point, and the point has merit. But I must consider that sparrows have a quite-unmerited, poor reputation as weak creatures. I do not derive this from Dr. Lockyer’s use of the sparrow alone, rather he merely jogged my memory to other pastors and professors whom I have heard make similar allusions to sparrows as weak and beggarly animals. It seems when one wishes to make a positive spiritual comparison to avian creatures (which happens often enough if you pay attention to it), the sparrow is generally the butt of the joke.
The fault I find with this reputation is that the sparrow is in many cases an exceptional role-model for our lives, spiritually and otherwise. How many people would have more peace in their souls if they took a few poignant lessons from the sparrow!
When I think of a sparrow, I think of a jolly little ball of feather and fuzz, humbly yet attractively decked out in mottled and muted browns, chirping away and bouncing about in a most joyous fashion. He is understated amongst other birds, yet watching them as they prance about in search of these “paltry crumbs” I think even the coldest heart would be hard-pressed to say that the sparrow is in the least concerned, much less distraught, by its lot in life. Certainly to me, with its bouncing, playful manner, it comes across as one of the most unassuming and joyful birds you’re likely to see scavenging on your lawn.
Permit me to say that within our daily lives, certainly within the life of the church, we tend nowadays to value altogether too highly the idea of power and position. We appreciate it when Proverbs 28:1 tells us the righteous are “bold as a lion”. We like thinking of ourselves as lions. But then we take things too far, in our “lion-like boldness” we find ourselves brazenly speaking out, not of the saving Gospel of Christ that extends mercy to the world, but on all matters as though we were God’s self-proclaimed prophet and judge of the world, insisting in all realms, personal, social and political our own understanding of God’s will for mankind, even tearing at the throats of our Christian brothers who disagree with our conclusions. In this way we exhibit less the fearlessness of the lion and more the ferocity; an attribute of the lion that the Bible applies not to the righteous, but to the most unrighteous of all: Satan himself, a “roaring lion, seeking someone to devour.” (1 Peter 5:8)
Perhaps it is the result of Western thought and philosophy, perhaps merely human-nature, but pride and power are often at the forefront of our actions, even when we fail to recognize it in ourselves. Ought we to be bold as a lion, fearless in the face of opposition? Yes, but only when we are “righteous” as the scripture says. Unfortunately, "righteous" man may choose to act unrighteous at any point in time. When our actions are unrighteous, that boldness which we value as “princes of the all-mighty King” becomes the servant of the Devil himself. That lofty view that our image of the eagle offers us, the rising up above our problems and circumstances as described in Isaiah 40:31, can become our excuse for looking down on the world, on the tiny lives of the people below us, proud like Satan was proud before being cast out of heaven.
Now consider the sparrow, the small, insignificant bird that embodies none of those traits which we value so highly. He is not a paragon of strength or majesty; he does not fly high above the problems of the world. He hops about on the ground in search of crumbs, flies in the face of danger and lives a humble life altogether void of the extraordinary heights of fancy to which we give ourselves. Yet in spite of this, perhaps because of it, the sparrow is a wonderful example of what the true Christian ought to embody in life and heart.
The messiah, the “Lion of Judah” who Israel expected to come marching in glory as the conquering King of the world, did not come marching in power and majesty as the “Son of God”, but came in meekness and lowliness, a servant of all, the “Son of Man”: humble, never exalting himself but solely seeking, in all his actions, to exalt the Father who sent him. The King of the world did not march into Jerusalem on a mighty warhorse, sword drawn, ready to do battle with the forces of Rome and establish an earthly kingdom, but he came “humble and mounted on a donkey” (Zechariah 9:9). He came to serve, and instructed his apostles to do the same.
Nowadays we like to emphasize the fact that Christ is risen, seated at the right hand of the Father, then take the position that as Christ now rules over all in Heaven, we, his servants, heirs of the Father and therefore the rightful princes of Heaven, are filled with power and might to subdue the earth. We conclude that we are imbued with a divine right to exhibit power and prosperity, to live lives which are outwardly worthy of our position as the adopted sons of God.
I consider this to be one of the most harmful theological fallacies to have infected Christian thought in our time. Are we the adopted sons of God? Certainly. Joint-heirs with Christ? So the Bible says in Romans 8:17. Yet it also makes note in the same passage that we must “suffer” with Christ if we are to be later “glorified” with him. But suffering is an unpleasant thought, and we make glory about now, not later. We want the inheritance now. We see it as our divine right as sons, but it is not so. Suffering must come first, and afterward the weight of glory. In James 1:12 we read “blessed is the man who remains steadfast under trial, for when he has stood the test he will receive the crown of life, which God has promised to those who love him.” One must first experience trials, then comes the crown. God even reiterates this point in Revelation 2:10, saying “Be faithful unto death, and I will give you the crown of life.” Jesus, though always the only-begotten Son of God, walked out this pattern in his earthly life, serving, suffering, dying, then receiving glory at the hand of God. In Matthew 10:24,25 Jesus said “A disciple is not above his teacher, nor a servant above his master. It is enough for the disciple to be like his teacher, and the servant like his master.” We desire well enough to be like Jesus in his glory, but in his suffering, we balk, we water it down to mere trials of conscious, of mild social intolerance which we exalt as our due persecution as believers, and then proclaim our triumph and authority over all.
In anything but Western thought, such interpretation of our position as believers would surely not fly. How does one explain such sentiments to the impoverished, pain-stricken champions of Christ who live quiet lives of faith at the expense of all earthly comfort, of family, of friends, often giving up their lives in horrible tortures that we in our “civilized” world cannot conceive of? Is it a lack of faith, of true utilization of their authority as the princes of God that these men, women and children suffer so? Certainly not! What incredible faith in God it must take to stand up under such great pressure, loss and torment! It is these people who are truly the self-evident children of God, not those of us who endure so little and yet talk so much! How many of us, like the apostles, could be physically beaten and yet rejoice that we “were counted worthy to suffer dishonor for the name.” (Acts 5:41)?
So how should we live? Proudly strutting, fancying ourselves lions, looking down upon the world from the perspective of the eagle? It is those who laid down their lives for Christ who understood what it meant to stand as bold as a lion. They also understood the peace Paul spoke of in Philippians 4:11 when he said “I have learned in whatever situation I am to be content.” Paul had endured a lifetime of miseries at the hands of those who wished to silence the Gospel, but remained content, whether his present circumstance offered him little or much. Indeed, Paul could be said to be much like the oft-derided sparrow, living on “paltry crumbs”, continually hunted by the predatory hawks of the world, yet always, like the little, song-filled sparrow, he could say “rejoice in the Lord always; again I will say, rejoice.” (Philippians 4:4)
If more Christians would make it their aim to live their lives with the contentment and joy modeled by the humble sparrow, God would be all the more glorified because of it.
My Testimony
I was listening to a man on a Christian radio station as I drove home one day, and he made a joke about “building a testimony” and it got me to thinking that, in the way we commonly think of it, I don’t HAVE a testimony. What I mean by that is this: I have no great story about how God pulled me out of dark times and riotous living and picked me up when I was at the end of my rope, thereby showing His great mercy and love. In a way, one might consider this to be an evangelical handicap; who is going to be inspired by the awesome love of God in a life that He DIDN’T evidence so dramatic a change?
I’m sure nobody would actually say that in conversation, but let’s face it, the attitude is there. We like dramatic, hell-defying stories. That’s what strengthens faith and builds churches, after all.
But as I was driving home with this thought on my mind, it also caused me to consider that I DO have a pretty significant testimony. The key is, I’m not the focus of it: My parents are.
The testimony that I think my past most clearly shows, given an outward look, is not the grace of God towards someone who jumped off the cliff’s edge of morality, only to be caught by God before crushing themselves against the rocks of Hell, but of someone who never made the jump, not through any act of his own virtue, but from that of a man and a woman who were determined to keep him from doing so, and by the grace of God given to them, succeeded.
Trust me, the lack of big, dramatic events of sin and moral crisis in my past is through no act of my own. Growing up, even beyond my college years I had times when left to myself, things would have gotten pretty bad. I have things in my past that I will not discuss here, not because they are terrible acts of wickedness, but because they were terrible acts of disrespect and disregard towards my parents, and it is to my shame that they are there. But despite those times of rebellion against them, my parents strove always to raise me in an uncompromisingly godly manner. Not only did they suffer the occasionally shocking times of disrespect on my part for their efforts, but they have had to put up with the scorn and mocking of friends, family and others who felt they were “too strict” as parents, in some cases even going so far as to accuse them of being the cause of rebellion on account of this strictness.
I’m going to stand up and be counted as saying that this is absolutely not the case. I was not raised in a strict, legalistic home. But I was raised in one that held strictly to the idea that God and sin must never be taken lightly. I never rebelled against my parents because they were strict. I rebelled because I hold within myself the same sin nature as every other man and at various times I desired to act upon it. It was not strictness that spurred me on, no; it was strictness that held me back. I thank God that my parents did not listen to myself nor the people around them with regards to this matter, because if they had, I have no doubt that I would now be telling you quite a different testimony, one about how I WAS saved from the brink of Hell, assuming that I wouldn’t have fallen in.
If my testimony is anything, it is a testimony to the grace God will give to parents who determine to live their lives and rule their households according to Joshua 24:15: “as for me and my house, we will serve the Lord.” As Adam and Eve fell though they had the heavenly Father for their parentage, this is no guarantee that children will grow up to honor God. But I do think that it would result in fewer “dramatic” testimonies,and that’s not a bad thing at all.
Self-Denial
“If anyone would come after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross and follow me.” –Matthew 16:24
When people think of denying themselves, often what comes to mind amounts to giving up a luxury, much like one gives something up for Lent. But in the above passage, Christ isn’t talking about denying ourselves some trivial (or even important) pleasure or comfort of life. The cross of Christ is not the giving up of temporal pleasures. Jesus did not die on a cross of fasting, and he does not burden us with the same.
In fact, Jesus says that his burden is “light” (Matthew 11:30). The cross of Christ isn’t something he presses down on our backs…it’s something we pick up for ourselves so that we can follow in his footsteps. The burden of that cross? Identification with him. We do not find ourselves nailed to a physical cross…that burden Christ bore for us. Nor does Christ compel us to give up pleasures and live in monasteries like Buddhist monks. True he commands us to reject sinful pleasures, but sinful pleasures always steal their joy from true pleasures we can only experience when we follow Christ.
So what is the burden of the cross we take up? What must we deny ourselves in order to follow Christ? Consider: it is in the very act of associating ourselves with Christ, of bearing the symbol and truth of his sacrifice in our lives, that we open ourselves to the scorn of the world. “Remember the word that I said to you: ‘A servant is not greater than his master.’ If they persecuted me, they will also persecute you.” (John 15:20) The burden of following Christ, a burden which requires self-denial on our part, is not a burden which God places on our shoulders to weigh us down, but a burden which the world offers us, persecution and scorn that is leveled at the believer for his insolence in rejecting its ways, refusing to indulge in and approve of its wickedness. For this, pressure is placed on the believer to deny his savior, and by nature it is only in denying ourselves this false sense of comfort, approval and pride that the world offers to its own that we are able to follow Christ. To refuse to deny ourselves in this regard is, then, to deny Christ, to drop the cross of identification with him, to turn our backs to him and to say “Enough of this, Jesus. Having your approval is no good to me if I cannot have the approval of the world.”
The Old Testament Apocrypha
Perhaps the worst part about all of that is that the reasoning largely seems to lay, not in the content of the books in question, but in the idea, during the conflict between Catholics and protestants following the reformation (which became quite ugly and violent), that the Apocrypha was “Catholic” and therefore unworthy of respect, distribution or study.
As to what the Apocrypha actually is, it is a series of books which were written during the “inter-testamental” period, or the period of time between the writing of the Old Testament and the events of the New. This period spans a few hundred years, during which a lot of significant Jewish history took place, some of which (such as the conquering and attempted overthrow of the Jewish nation and religious practices by the Greeks and, in particular, the Greek ruler Antiochus IV Epiphanes) had been clearly prophesied by Daniel. Several historical and educational books written during this period were included in the Greek translation of the Old Testament called The Septuagint. These books consisted of wisdom literature, historical narratives and in a couple of cases religious fiction designed to teach morality and devotion to God. In the reformation, as these books were translated from Greek and the Latin Vulgate into the common tongues of the reformers, they were set apart from the rest of the Old Testament owing to their later, non-Hebrew origin (as compared to the rest of the Old Testament) and though still distributed as important works they were not accepted as part of the divinely-inspired canon of Scripture. Possibly contributing to their eventual rejection and loss in protestant circles was the Catholic church’s decision at the Council of Trent in 1546 to affirm that many of these books (with few exceptions, those that were included in the Latin Vulgate) are inspired and therefore canon. Within about 100 years, the attitude amongst protestants with regard to the Apocrypha was largely hostile.
This is extraordinarily unfortunate because, as the earliest reformers attested, these books are highly valuable both for historical context and because they were written by godly men during an uproarious period of Jewish history who sought to turn their brothers and sisters toward God, asserting God’s provision and care of his people and affirming the hope of salvation. Take, for example, the following passage from The Book of Wisdom (sometimes referred to as The Wisdom of Solomon), which speaks of how the unwise and the wicked regard the righteous: “’Let us lay traps for the upright man, since he annoys us and opposes our way of life, reproaches us for our sins against the Law, and accuses us of sins against our upbringing. He claims to have knowledge of God, and calls himself a child of the Lord. We see him as a reproof to our way of thinking, the very sight of him weighs our spirits down; for his kind of life is not like other people's, and his ways are quite different. In his opinion we are counterfeit; he avoids our ways as he would filth; he proclaims the final end of the upright as blessed and boasts of having God for his father. Let us see if what he says is true, and test him to see what sort of end he will have. For if the upright man is God's son, God will help him and rescue him from the clutches of his enemies. Let us test him with cruelty and with torture, and thus explore this gentleness of his and put his patience to the test. Let us condemn him to a shameful death since God will rescue him -- or so he claims.' This is the way they reason, but they are misled, since their malice makes them blind.” –Wisdom 2, NJB
Compare that passage with the accounts of the crucifixion in the Gospels. Historically this passage has often been taken as prophesy of the suffering of Christ. It certainly follows it very closely, even to the statements the Pharisees made while mocking Him.
Now, whether this passage is or is not prophesy has little to do with whether the book should be accepted as part of the Old Testament cannon. If we regarded it as canonical scripture every time God gave a message to someone, the Bible would be a library of books authored by countless millions of pastors, evangelists and lay-persons. But it IS theologically orthodox and a beautiful exposition on a scriptural truth. And the Apocrypha as a whole is filled with such passages.
The point, then, is that we ought to respect and study the works of Godly authors throughout history. I myself have a particular fondness for the works of C.S. Lewis and G.K. Chesterton, two devote men of 20th century England, one Anglican, the other Catholic. But if we have regard for authors who wrote within resent history and provide such insight into scripture, should we not have equal regard for those works that came before, which shine a light on the Old Testament as well as the New? I do not argue for the canonization of the Apocrypha, but I do argue that it ought to be respected as an excellent, worthwhile piece of Biblical literature to be read and studied and benefited from, much like the works of Lewis and Chesterton.
Monday, May 19, 2014
Introduction
Allow me to introduce myself. My name is Christopher Ables, I'm a reformed Baptist who happens to be working as a Children's Pastor in a charismatic church for reasons that I can't fully explain. It's a path I've been journeying down since I first felt the call to enter ministry when I was graduating high-school.
If anyone desires a direct doctrinal statement from me, I point you to the Nicene Creed:
I believe in one God,
the Father Almighty,
maker of heaven and earth,
and of all things visible and invisible;
And in one Lord Jesus Christ,
the only begotten Son of God,
begotten of his Father before all worlds,
God of God, Light of Light,
very God of very God,
begotten, not made,
being of one substance with the Father;
by whom all things were made;
who for us men and for our salvation
came down from heaven,
and was incarnate by the Holy Ghost
of the Virgin Mary,
and was made man;
and was crucified also for us under Pontius Pilate;
he suffered and was buried;
and the third day he rose again
according to the Scriptures,
and ascended into heaven,
and sitteth on the right hand of the Father;
and he shall come again, with glory,
to judge both the quick and the dead;
whose kingdom shall have no end.
And I believe in the Holy Ghost the Lord, and Giver of Life,
who proceedeth from the Father [and the Son];
who with the Father and the Son together
is worshipped and glorified;
who spake by the Prophets.
And I believe one holy Catholic and Apostolic Church;
I acknowledge one baptism for the remission of sins;
and I look for the resurrection of the dead,
and the life of the world to come. AMEN.
-Christopher Ables
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